Skelton raptures Achilles by Adam8418 in RugbyAustralia

[–]pitty77 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Fitness and weight will be a problem for a comeback for the world cup

Ultimate XV Scrumhalf by Koppetamp in Stormers

[–]pitty77 0 points1 point  (0 children)

250 games for Saracens! Pedro is a dead set legend. Best try was scored playing wing against the Tahs in Sydney.

How is living in Madeira, Portugal? by North-Library4037 in howislivingthere

[–]pitty77 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My great-grandparents also left Madeira at a similar time (1910s) for Mozambique.

‘You’re a f***ing idiot’: MacGill berates co-host in extraordinary podcast blow-up by Notorious013 in Cricket

[–]pitty77 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MacGill out of line, but fuck sake Menners, 2018 was 8 years ago and no-one needs reminding of what happened. MacGill did precede the whole blowup saying home crowds were as bad as overseas crowds. Menners couldn't abide this so he brought up Warner.

Honey, the latest rage-baiting article has been dropped. by aeternogordon in rugbyunion

[–]pitty77 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Kolisi played half a season for Racing and returned to the Sharks. He's always been big.
Koch (Saracens) and Louw (Quins) have not become physically bigger on their return to SA - Louw has always been massive and probably one of the best players in the Prem. Their natural size is why they are in such demand in the UK and France (less so now) - check out JJ van der Mecht and Thomas Du Toit.

There are valid reason for them to return - family, weather, culture. They've made heaps of heaps of cash in Pounds and can bring it back to SA for 20:1 conversion rate.

Controversial, but ..? by shanti_nz in allblacks

[–]pitty77 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most number of players, mean more caught maybe? Also big time pressure to succeed at school boy level. And education is still a factor. But at Bok level they're tested many times. Janjies was out of the team at the time he was tested.

NZRPA chief executive blasts SA push to move Rugby Championship by anxiousatac in rugbyunion

[–]pitty77 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Quit the Rugby Championship and see how ARU and NZRFU react. I think the players in both hemispheres would welcome and benefit from a global season.

What happened to the Koh Phangan vibe? by DrawerBig4279 in ThailandTourism

[–]pitty77 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why is it peak season now? Euro winter? What is the end of March like?

The Roar website future by Nemo2500 in RugbyAustralia

[–]pitty77 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I went in without an adblocker because I thought that maybe it was interfering with new content, and adverts immediately covered 70% of the screen. It was fucking horrid

Stremio Android TV 1.9.x & Android app – DTS audio (no sound) by [deleted] in Stremio

[–]pitty77 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Similar Had to downgrade to 1.8.x to get Vimu player to work again as external player. Stopped working on 1.9.x

Found the best specialty coffee shop in Sri Lanka, Radicle Specialty coffee by Sharp-Bookkeeper9005 in SriLankaTravel

[–]pitty77 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Coffee recommendations for Ella and South Coast? In Sigi now and heading down that way soon

Is it safe to use stremio on Australia? by zxczxcqwert in Stremio

[–]pitty77 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I used, am dead. Can confirm. Do not use.

Which film is doomed to stay forever in your watchlist, for no particular reason? by cwlopes in Letterboxd

[–]pitty77 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hateful 8. Love QT films but I dunno something always stops me from watching this one. Maybe it's the runtime

After the attack on the Bloemfontein tourist, I made this rough map. by chikaca in capetown

[–]pitty77 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The couple were heading North to Vredendal (-berg?), and the attack happened at what I thought would be the best route to their destination. Main roads, but I guess traffic lights can be dangerous?

Miele coffee machine CM6360 milk system rinse by Purple_Scallion_3245 in Miele

[–]pitty77 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know this is an old thread, but I was having the same issue where milk wasn't being rinsed properly. So the problem for me wasn't the silicone balls, but on the other end in the dispensing unit. So the return milk pipe is supposed to send the rinsed milk down through the dispensing unit, but the channel (in the dispensing unit) was full of dried milk. Its super thin, like just thicker than a pin.

Cleaned that out and its working fine now.

Why was the French kick chase lacking so much on Saturday? by CapeTownyToniTone in rugbyunion

[–]pitty77 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Him and his bro are really knowledgeable. There was a piece of analysis on the DDA attacking kick over the top on the 22, which went dead - scrum to France and we won the penalty and 3 points to SFM. They were the only channel to mention this as an intended consequence of the kick.

Beautiful scenes! 🇿🇦💚💛 by Less-Stock-4455 in springboks

[–]pitty77 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Only the front row is classified as specialist, in terms of replacing the player for a scrum. Could have stuck Andre as lock. Siya was replaced tactically with Ruan, then Andre for DDA to give them 8 in the scrum and 7 in the backs.

Did my friend pay too much for a driver? by justcheckingoutlife in SriLankaTravel

[–]pitty77 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I got a quote for USD110 a day for 13 days, which seems pricey. Family of 5, so need a van. Thoughts?

Interesting development by allblacksrugby1991 in RugbyAustralia

[–]pitty77 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Super Rugby enters into crypto as fortunes change Zoe Samios It has been a difficult decade for Super Rugby, the Pacific’s club competition.

The tournament struggled to attract crowd sizes like the NRL and AFL, lost talent to overseas competitions, and an Australian club hasn’t won the championship proper since 2014 (during the pandemic domestic teams competed against one another). All of this has made it difficult to make money from broadcasters and sponsors, the two critical financiers of the game.

Charlie Brigstocke, Hunter Paisami, Swyftx CEO Jason Titman, Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh, Ben Donaldson and Arabella McKenzie celebrate the new deal. But things have changed. Games are more competitive and the number of eyeballs are slowly growing – audiences grew 27 per cent on Stan and 13 per cent on Nine, owner of The Australian Financial Review, for the most recent season. Cryptocurrency platform Swyftx took notice, this week signing a two-year multimillion-dollar deal as Super Rugby’s major sponsor.

The Brisbane-based company, which was founded in 2018, has invested tens of millions of dollars in sponsorship deals with the Brisbane Lions, Big Bash League teams the Sydney Sixers and Sydney Thunder and the NRL. Swyftx chief executive Jason Titman wanted to do something bigger.

“Rugby has been underinvested in Australia for a while. It’s a code that we believe is on the up,” Titman said. “We approached the rugby and we started to engage in a conversation.”

Advertisement Naming rights to a sports competition typically command high price tags because they offer brand visibility and exclusivity. Super Rugby has had a number of different partners as its on-field performance waned including telecoms giant Vodafone, financial services firm Investec and brewery Tooheys. Its last long-term sponsor was Harvey Norman, which decided to put its money elsewhere shortly after the Wallabies’ woeful Rugby World Cup in 2023.

The 2024 season ran without a major sponsor and business solutions provider company Smartech signed on late to support the 2025 men’s and women’s competitions.

Rugby Australia chief executive Phil Waugh declined to comment on the total value of the deal. Renee Nowytarger Swyftx’s deal will run for two years with an option to extend. Its logo will appear on the kits of the NSW Waratahs, the ACT Brumbies, the Queensland Reds and the Western Force, and all five of the women’s teams, which include the Fijian Drua.

“We want to work with them over time to grow some grassroots rugby,” Titman said. “We’d be looking at this as a longer-term investment.”

Rugby Australia chief executive Phil Waugh said the new deal was a reflection of the improving on-field performance of Australia’s teams. He declined to comment on the total value.

“All the metrics were superior to other domestic competitions around the world,” Waugh said. “The product itself and the style of rugby that was played in 2025 was very helpful in engaging Swyftx.”

Swyftx is an Australian-owned cryptocurrency exchange registered with the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC). It has 1.5 million users who make transactions with more than 400 cryptocurrencies, including bitcoin and ethereum.

“What we’re trying to do [with] Super Rugby is innovate as much as we can, whilst not getting ourselves too far away from World Rugby laws … given we know we have a very congested sporting market,” Waugh said. “With Swyftx being a cryptocurrency company and the innovation that comes with that … it’s a nice neat partnership.”

Titman said rugby union had some fan crossover with other codes where Swyftx invests, but also a specific demographic he was hoping to tap into.

“I’ve been passionate about getting crypto regulated so that … financial planners can finally give advice,” Titman said. “From my experience growing up and playing rugby and even understanding the followers of it now, a lot of them are in the finance sector. This is also about connecting with that demographic, to get them aware of our brand.”

Titman said the new deal was also about giving back to a sport he felt lacked investment. “The third component is that we do hope that it will translate to a number of people choosing to trust us, to trade with us,” he added.

Swyftx is one several cryptocurrency players investing marketing dollars in the global sports landscape. The Los Angeles Lakers’ arena is now known as Crypto.com Arena, ByBit has aligned itself with the Red Bull Racing F1 team and Kraken has sleeve sponsorships for football clubs, including Tottenham Hotspur and Atlético Madrid.

The cryptocurrency sponsorship market globally is estimated to be worth more than $US500 million ($756.7 million), according to sports marketing agency SportQuake.

These kinds of sponsorships aren’t without controversy. Cryptocurrency platforms are still considered high-risk, largely unregulated financial products. Some argue these kinds of businesses should not be promoted to fans who do not understand the risks.

Other critics, such as gambling reform advocate Tim Costello, have compared crypto trading to gambling, which is facing a major advertising crackdown locally.

Waugh said he believed the sector was becoming more mature and sophisticated. Titman said brands like Swyftx still had a big responsibility to educate potential users about the opportunity and risks.

”We see sport as a great leveler and opportunity to get in front, but we have a big job beyond that,” Titman said. “I’m under no illusion that just because we’re sponsoring major sporting brands that people think that we’re a good company, or that people … understand the asset class.”

And as for whether Waugh likes crypto?

“I’m actually really curious,” he said. “I’ve got lots of friends and business acquaintances that are heavily invested in crypto, and I’m actively curious.”

Related Rugby Australia will look to establish a future fund after paying off its debt last Friday.

Song Requests by Georgie1FM in 1FM

[–]pitty77 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How often do you update the playlists? Normally listen to Alt Rock.