Sports events cancelled in New Zealand after devastating terrorism attack

17 March 2019 - 00:00 By Reuters and AFP

New Zealand's worst peacetime mass killing rippled through the country's top-class sports yesterday with two high-profile events cancelled and the first-class cricket title being decided without a ball being bowled in the final round of matches.
The shootings resulted in the cancellation of the third cricket Test between New Zealand and Bangladesh, whose team were on a bus approaching one of the mosques, and the Super Rugby clash between the Otago Highlanders and Canterbury Crusaders in Dunedin.
The Test was to start at Hagley Oval in Christchurch yesterday, but the Bangladesh team left New Zealand less than 24 hours after the shooting and about an hour after the initial scheduled start time.
The Canterbury cricket team, one of six first-class sides in New Zealand's domestic Plunket Shield competition, also chose to abandon their final-round match in Wellington, which gave the title to Central Districts.
Canterbury Cricket CE Jeremy Curwin said his organisation had consulted players, who were given an opportunity to decide whether to play the final game.
"The team showed a united front in terms of the decision," Curwin said. "It is clear that this tragedy will affect people in different ways, and Canterbury Cricket is here to support our players however we can.
"We fully respect their decision, and I am incredibly proud of how they conducted themselves throughout this process."
New Zealand internationals Martin Guptill and Lockie Ferguson, who play first-class cricket for Auckland, also withdrew from their team's match with Otago in Dunedin.
"Both Martin and Lockie felt personally uncomfortable making the trip to Dunedin given the events in Christchurch, and also, the feelings and concerns of their partners and families," Auckland's high-performance manager Simon Insley said. "We understand that at times like this, families come first."
While the Highlanders and Crusaders match was called off, the Waikato Chiefs and Wellington Hurricanes had played their match in Hamilton on Friday, but All Blacks scrumhalf TJ Perenara admitted the players' minds had also been elsewhere.
"Today was bigger than rugby," the Hurricanes' Perenara told reporters after the 23-23 draw on Friday. "Regardless of how that result went, that wouldn't have been the most important part of my day."
• In Tokyo yesterday Hamish Stewart nailed a last-minute penalty as the Reds produced a superb comeback to beat Japan's Sunwolves 34-31 and post their first win of the season.
The Aussies trailed 21-5 at halftime, but their bench provided an instant impact after the break for the visitors, scoring four tries in 16 minutes, two of them by Brandon Paenga-Amosa...

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