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How deliberate mis-kicks changed one of sport’s strangest positions

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Darren Bennett played for more than 10 years in the NFL. For some, that does not make him a footballer.

The 6ft 5in Australian tells the story of when he was introduced to a great Green Bay Packers linebacker, who asked him what position he played.

“I said ‘punter’,” says Bennett, who moved to the United States as a 29-year-old after a successful career as an Australian Rules footballer.

“Ach,” replied the linebacker, a two-time Super Bowl winner. “You’re not even a real football player.”

“And he just walked away,” laughs Bennett, who spent most of his NFL career with the San Diego Chargers in the 1990s. “I had no credibility with him at all.”

Thirty years later and attitudes remain much the same towards one of sport’s strangest positions and the players used in the specific instance when a team kick the ball away to clear their lines.

On average, an NFL match features 153 plays, with a punter being called upon for eight of them.

The players may only spend about three minutes on the field, which is not really much time to get noticed – even if you are a history-maker.

“I go walk down in Baltimore and nobody knows who I am,” says retired punter Sam Koch, who played a franchise-record 256 games for the Baltimore Ravens.

Out of the 250 or so players drafted every year, maybe one or two are punters. They are one of the lowest paying positions in the sport and only one punter has ever been drafted in the first round.

Such is the anonymity accompanying the position that during the 2012 draft the selection of a punter in the third round prompted disbelief and a leading US sports broadcaster to deliver a message to the American people: “Punters are people too.”

That message soon became a meme and became emblazoned on merchandise.

But while people haven’t been caring, punting has been changing.

During a game in the primetime Sunday night slot 10 years ago Koch – inspired by Bennett’s Aussie Rules-style punts – transformed it.

But at the time it looked to the 20 million TV viewers like he was just playing very, very badly.

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‘I’m not afraid of dying’: The pioneering tennis champion who told the world he had Aids

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In 1988, World Aids Day began with the aim of raising awareness and understanding of a disease that had struck fear in communities around the globe. That same year, US tennis legend Arthur Ashe learned of his own diagnosis. In History looks at the dilemma that faced Ashe, when, after years of secrecy, he once again became a groundbreaking campaigner.

In April 1992, Arthur Ashe made his way into a packed conference room, where the media were poised with cameras rolling. This time he wasn’t being asked about his role as the first black tennis player to be selected for the United States Davis Cup team, or about his pioneering victories at Wimbledon, the US Open or the Australian Open. He had cemented his name in history as the first black winner of a major men’s singles championship, but after a heart attack that led to multiple surgeries, he had retired from the sport 12 years earlier, at the age of 36.
His intelligence, composure and sportsmanship had made him a popular figure, on and off the court. But the press had heard rumours about his health, at a time when the world was still full of fear of an incurable epidemic. USA Today sports journalist Doug Smith, a childhood friend, confronted Ashe about a tip-off he had received. The next day, keen to control his own story and beat the press, Ashe reluctantly told the world the secret that he and his inner circle had kept since 1988: he had Aids.

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WATCH: ‘Maybe there is no cure for Aids in time for me, but certainly for everybody else’.
He believed that he had contracted the illness from a contaminated blood transfusion during surgery in 1983, two years before blood donations were screened for the HIV virus in the US. The devasting news shocked the nation, but it quickly led to a debate around personal privacy and the ethics of an invasive press. At the conference, Ashe read a statement: “I am angry that I was put… in the unenviable position of having to lie if I wanted to protect my privacy.” He added that “there was certainly no compelling medical or physical necessity to go public with my medical condition”. In his memoir, Days of Grace, Ashe wrote: “More than 700 letters reached USA Today on the issue of my right to privacy, and about 95% vehemently opposed the newspaper’s position.”

Some Aids activists criticised Ashe’s desire for secrecy around his health, as they wanted public figures to broaden discussion beyond the focus of the LGBT+ community. Some felt that he would have been the perfect spokesperson to raise awareness, particularly amongst heterosexuals and minority groups: one letter went as far as to say that Magic Johnson, the NBA player who revealed his HIV diagnosis just five months earlier, could have been saved had Ashe spoken up sooner.
When asked at the news conference why he didn’t go public in 1988, Ashe said: “The answer is simple. Any admission of HIV infection at that time would have seriously, permanently, and – my wife and I believed – unnecessarily infringed upon our family’s right to privacy.” When the subject turned to telling his five-year-old daughter Camera about having the disease, emotion overcame Ashe, and his wife Jeanne read on his behalf.

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Welsh Rugby Union to appoint women’s lead in 2025

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The yet-to-be appointed new coach of Wales women will report into a women’s rugby lead, a role the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) intends to establish in 2025.

That new role is being created in the wake of Nigel Walker’s departure as the governing body’s executive director of rugby. Before his exit, Ioan Cunningham left his role as Wales women head coach.

The governing body stated: “The high profile role will directly manage the Wales women head coach as well as set and implement strategy for the women’s and girls’ game across Wales and form an integral part of the WRU’s high-performance team”.

Walker stepped down following what the WRU described as a “meticulous and far-reaching review” into the high-performance element of the men’s game, with Warren Gatland continuing as head coach of the Wales men’s side despite a record 12-Test losing run.

Walker, chief executive Abi Tierney and chair Richard Collier-Keywood have overseen a turbulent period in the WRU’s history, with Welsh rugby’s governing body saying in November it would apologise for its handling of contract negotiations with the senior women’s team after admitting “serious failings”.

Collier-Keywood said that Walker, who was involved in the initial negotiations, had accepted “things should have been done better”.

The row came less than a year after a damning independent review into the WRU’s culture following a BBC Wales investigation found it was sexist, misogynistic, racist and homophobic, with those aspects not properly challenged.

The WRU has now published its full report into its governance of the women’s game.

As a result, the governing body also announced:

Changes to the way future negotiations are constructed, maximising transparency and enabling all parties to be properly represented. This includes the idea that players may need and require independent third-party involvement during negotiations and an acknowledgment that pathway players need to also be provided for in future.

A central premise is to be established where contracted players are treated as primary employees of the WRU, even where other club or employment contracts are also present.

To assess values and culture in the Women’s squad, reset professional working practices and put in place engagement work (‘Have a Voice’ sessions have already started) which helps support the mental and physical well-being of all colleagues

To continue to benchmark the WRU’s progress against other governing bodies, rugby leadership and performance management

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Slam success & ranking rises – how British tennis thrived in 2024

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For almost two decades, Andy Murray has been the benchmark of British tennis success.

The former world number one hanging up his racquet has allowed others to grab a greater share of the limelight.

As the nation’s leading players prepare for the new season, BBC Sport reflects on the British success stories in 2024 – and you can choose the player who has impressed you the most.

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