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The Roar s 2020 Tri Nations and Bledisloe Cup end-of-year awards A Set the default text size A Set large text size
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Only by a matter of weeks, but the southern hemisphere international rugby season is done for 2020, wrapping up a season that we were incredibly lucky to see at all, given how much rugby – and sport in general – was lost to the global pandemic this year.
And with a jolly a red fellow now cleared to land in our part of the world, the timing feels right to hand out some gongs, as a way of wrapping up and putting a bow on the rugby year.
The Wrap: All of 2020’s rugby memorables and unmentionables A Set the default text size A Set large text size
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When it comes to rugby in 2020, that we got a season at all is cause for celebration.
That is something worth remembering every time frustration kicked in for Wallabies fans, at Michael Hooper ignoring the posts in favour of the sideline.
Super Rugby Aotearoa was a blast. The sight of a full Eden Park was a timely reminder of the potential for professional franchise rugby to reconnect with the masses, if handled correctly.
Former Wallabies captain David Pocock calls for national anthem discussion, action on climate change
SatSaturday 12
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SatSaturday 12
David Pocock called for stronger leadership on climate and the national anthem.
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Former Australian rugby great David Pocock says the Wallabies Indigenous anthem rendition was a great gesture, but the issue with Advance Australia Fair is not the language it is sung in, but the lyrics themselves.
Key points:
Pocock said the singing of the Australian national anthem in Eora was a great gesture
Pocock called politicians morally bankrupt when it came to action on climate change
Wiradjuri woman Olivia Fox led the rendition of the national anthem in Eora language, with the Wallabies players noticeably joining in behind her.
Live and let live â and let us die how we damn well choose
Opinion
December 12, 2020 â 11.00pm
December 12, 2020 â 11.00pm
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The NSW Independent MP Alex Greenwich is, as we speak, drawing up plans for voluntary euthanasia legislation, which â if passed â will see NSW arrive in the 21st century, joining other states around the country in legalising assisted dying for terminally ill patients. It will be supported by such admirable groups as Dying With Dignity NSW, politicians across the various parties and â to judge by polls on the subject â about 85 per cent of the public. It would mean terminally ill patients, who are medically judged to have less than six months to live, could choose to die at a time of their choosing, rather than at the agonising end of natureâs ravages.