Kiwi women’s cricket captain rated among world’s hottest female athletes

Auckland, Apr 27(ANI): New Zealand women’s cricket captain Aimee Watkins has been rated among the world’s 64 hottest female athletes alongside American skier Lindsay Vonn, Aussie swimmer Stephanie Rice and Czech tennis player Nicole Vaidisova.

Watkins admitted the ratings by Yahoo!Xtra came as surprise, as she does not consider herself as one of the world’s sexiest sportswomen.

“I didn’t know anything about it. I’ve seen it now,” Stuff.co.nz quoted Watkins, as saying.

“Mum gave me a call and she was pretty excited and told me to go on and have a look. Since then I’ve had a bit of stick, but oh well. It’s all a bit foreign to me,” she added.

Meanwhile, talking about her team’s preparations for the Twenty20 World Cup, which starts in the West Indies on May 5, Watkins said the White Ferns are confident of a good show after a clean sweep of Australia in this year’s Twenty20 Rosebowl series.

“To beat Aussie 5-0, we’re pretty happy with our Twenty20 form and our plans. We’re pretty clear on what we need to do,” Watkins said.

The New Zealand women’s team fly out on Thursday. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice steals Schipper”s 100 m butterfly title

Sydney, Mar 19(ANI): Australian swimmer Stephanie Rice booked a place at the 2010 Commonwealth Games to be held in New Delhi when she hit top form by upsetting former world champion Jess Schipper in the 100m at the selection trials in Sydney.

Rice (57.71secs) claimed her first national 100m butterfly title, mowing down Felicity Galvez (58.20) and Schipper (58.41) on the last lap of the final at Sydney Olympic Park.

The win ended the recent domestic dominance of Schipper, who had taken four of the last five national titles.

“I”m really happy with that time. It”s around the same time as this time last year but in that was in a (Speedo LZR) Racer so it”s just sort of brings to the fold more than anything that I”m in really good shape,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Rice, as saying.

“It”s giving me a lot more confidence for the 400IM,” he added.

Rice said she viewed 2010 as her best chance for butterfly success with Schipper not in peak form.

“I don”t think she”s in 100 per cent form. I think more than anything this is going to spur her on for Commonwealth Games and Pan Pacs,” Rice said. (ANI)

Rice holds off Seebohm

Olympic champion Stephanie Rice reasserted her dominance in the 200 metres individual medley at the Commonwealth Games selection trials in Sydney on Tuesday.

Rice, backing up from finishing fourth behind Blair Evans in the 200m freestyle less than an hour earlier, sealed her spot on the team for New Delhi by clocking 2 minutes and 10.07 seconds to finish ahead of fellow Queenslander Emily Seebohm (2:10.75) and Alicia Coutts (2:11.97).

The 17-year-old Seebohm, who beat Rice in the event at the New South Wales titles last month, went out hard, putting the triple Olympic gold medallist in the unfamiliar position of having to come from behind.

But Rice showed her class in overpowering Seebohm in the final 50m, although she could not help but acknowledge after the race her younger rival was becoming an increasingly dangerous threat.

“0.7 (seconds) is not a big difference and for someone so young, who is always improving, she (Seebohm) has been on my radar for the last two or three years,” she said.

“She has really come through.

“The 200IM is probably going to become one of her main strokes and it is great to have some real depth in the medley swimming in the country.”

Rice, who described her earlier swim in the 200m freestyle as “average”, says she enjoyed having something to catch after dominating so many races in recent years.

“It was nice to sort of play catch up and it was a different race for me, I’m usually further in front at the 100,” she said.

“I think I just stuck to my own race plan. I knew she’d go out hard but I didn’t let it faze me.”

Seebohm’s coach Matt Brown says it is inevitable his swimmer will improve as she matured further.

“She is not a little girl any more,” Brown said.

“You still have to remember, when she first burst on the scene she was 14 and 14-year-old girls can be quite immature and she is only now starting to get a bit of muscular structure to her body.

“The stuff she is doing in the gym is like an adult rather than a kid.”

In other results, the controversial Nick D’Arcy added another national 200m butterfly title to his collection, winning the final in 1:54.61, while rising distance star Robert Hurley triumphed in the 400m with a time of 3:47.67.

- AAP

Stephanie Rice finally celebrating birthday with a bang today

Melbourne, Sep 19 (ANI): Australian swimming beauty Stephanie Rice is all set to celebrate her 21st birthday today-almost two months after her actual birthday-in a grand bash.

The Olympic star had to postpone festivities because of the world champ meet in Rome in July.

But, today, she will start her birthday celebrations at the Marriot Hotel, and roam across town with her gang in a giant luxury Hummer.

The party will swing over to Portside at Hamilton, where she will be cutting her birthday cake, reports the Courier Mail.

The swimmer celebrated her real birthday with a single piece of cake at a family do back on June 17.

According to reports, Rice has sold the rights to cover the bash to New Idea magazine. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice spotted partying with the Wallabies

Melbourne, Sep 7 (ANI): Aussie swimming ace Stephanie Rice was recently spotted partying with rugby champs-the Wallabies.

The Wallabies had smashed the Springboks in a match on Saturday night, and then headed for a celebration.

Jubilant Berrick Barnes, Matt Giteau, Drew Mitchell, James O’Connor, Adam Ashley Cooper, and “fashionable male” Quade Cooper went for a VIP function in their honour at Friday’s Glamour Bar.

And the boys were joined by the likes of swimming champs Bronte Barratt and Stephanie Rice.

They all drank Moet and Jamaican cocktails and partied until 5 o’clock in the morning.

“Everyone was good and well behaved, just happy about the victory over the Boks last night,” the Courier Mail quoted celebrity events manager Kelvin Ralph as saying. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice strips down for Who magazine

Melbourne, Sep 4 (ANI): Aussie swimmer Stephanie Rice has shed her clothes for Who magazine’s Bodies Issue.

And despite her hour-glass figure, the sexy lass has said that she is a hearty eater who doesn’t deny herself good food.

Featuring alongside a pregnant Toni Pearen and a slim Natalie Bassingthwaighte, Rice has even revealed her solution to “fat days”.I like to go for a run to cleanse. I like to have a really good shower – exfoliate and wash my hair and just chill,” the Courier Mail quoted her as saying.

She added: “Those days I don’t feel skinny, I’ll wear baggy clothing and the best thing you can do is not worry about it.” (ANI)

Ex-couple Stephanie Rice and Eamon Sullivan strip for undie ad

Melbourne, Sep 1 (ANI): Olympic swimmers Stephanie Rice and Eamon Sullivan might have parted ways, but the former couple showed a remarkable chemistry when they had to strip down to their undies for a photo shoot.

The couple, who had a very public pre-Olympics split, claimed that there was no animosity between them.

And now, the ‘friendly’ duo have pouted and posed together on their third campaign shoot for the Davenport label on Monday.

“We have a lot of fun together. We had two years together so we are friendly,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Rice as saying.

Currently, Rice, 21, is in a relationship with fellow swimmer Ashley Delaney, but Sullivan is still single.

Although the duo is no longer a couple, they are still seen as a hot team for the underwear giant, which signed both for a further 12 months. .

Sullivan said that one year after his first modelling gig, he had become more comfortable shooting scenes with a team of models along with Rice for the ’80s influenced campaign.

“It’s been exciting and fun and has been my favourite shoot so far,” said Sullivan.

Even Rice agreed that his moves had definitely improved.

They also laughed their way through a game of Twister, which they hope fans will join in at Bondi Beach on Saturday. (ANI)

Rice to test controversial Jaked speed suit

Brisbane, June 28 (ANI): Australian swimmer Stephanie Rice will test the controversial Jaked speed suit this week in order to switch from the Speedo LZR suit, which she used to claim three gold medals at Beijing Olympics last year.

Rice could be the first member of the Australian team to alter her suit in order to showcase a better performance in next month’s world championships in Rome.

“I’m going to give it a go. I’ll trial it in training and see how it goes, but looking at everyone that has been wearing that suit it has been pretty amazing, hopefully I’m the same in it,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Rice, as saying.

“But there’s also a lot of extra things that come into it. It comes down to personal preference. I’ve heard from a few different people that they don’t like it or it doesn’t fit them as well,” she added.

Rice is unlikely to make a swimsuit deal before the world championships.

However, if the Jaked fall shorts of her requirements, she may resort to the LZR.

“We all thought it would just come down to the Lazer at Rome, so that’s something I’m comfortable with and I don’t need to trial. But in terms of all the other suits, I didn’t want to wear them if they weren’t going to be an option for us in Rome. Now that they have become an option, everyone is in this last-minute panic trying to get their hands on the suits and trial them in training,” Rice said.he 200m and 400m gold medallist specified that testing suits was the last thing the Australian team needed a month before the world championships.

“It’s just a big time-consuming thing. Especially because you really don’t want to miss any training just to trial suits. It’s something that has to be done after sessions. And getting a suit on and off takes almost half an hour. It’s a lot of extra time that you don’t want to waste this late in the preparation,” said Rice. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice can’t find the ‘perfect’ swimsuit!

Melbourne, May 17(ANI): It looks like triple Olympic gold medallist Stephanie Rice has become a bit choosy when it comes to her swimming suits.

Rice has offers of more than 1 million dollars to wear certain brands of speedsuits.

However, the swimming sensation feels none of them meet her requirements and could even slow her down.

After six months of testing suits of every type, Rice is no closer to an answer.

Rice is said to have already turned down an offer well over seven figures from one swimsuit manufacturer.

She remains without a personal swimwear sponsor and is unlikely to strike a deal ahead of July’s world championships in Rome.

“I don’t want to rush into anything, especially if it’s such an important contract,” News.com.au quoted Rice as saying.

“I’ve got a few different suits I’m going to try over in the States but otherwise I’m trying not to think about it too much.

“Everyone is making such a big deal out of all the new brands,” she added.

Rice has also confirmed that she would use Speedo’s LZR Racer suit if she was unable to make a decision by the world championships.

“A lot of people have different views about the suits; some people like certain suits and they work better,” Rice said.

“With me being in the medley and having to wear it for all different strokes and all different distances, it’s a much bigger decision.

“I know the LZR works and I love it, so at the end of the day if I don’t find anything that I like then … I’ll be wearing that in Rome,” she added. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice named World’s Sexiest Sportswoman

Melbourne, May 03 (ANI): Swimming sensation Stephanie Rice has been named the sexiest sportswoman in the world.

Rice came in at No.30 in FHM magazine’s 100 sexiest women in the world in 2009, pipping Serbian tennis starlet Ana Ivanovic (32) for sport’s top spot.

The men’s mag says Rice has ‘a body honed to perfection’, reports the Daily Telegraph.

Soccer and cricket star Ellyse Perry was placed at No.82 by the magazine’s readers, and Jelena Dokic at 93.

Rice is the best-known swimmer in the world without a personal swimwear sponsor, and would be in a winning position during the world championships in July.

The International Swimming Federation’s newly formed commission assembles in Lausanne next week to decide which hi-tech swimsuits will be legal for the world titles in Rome, after an influx of new brands and new technology destabilised the sport in the past year.

On the advice of her coach Michael Bohl, Rice deliberately refrained from taking the money on offer from the manufacturers to an athlete of her stature.

Bohl believes that she is now in the perfect position to respond to the changing conditions for the world titles. (ANI)

Triple Olympic gold medallist Rice well placed in swimsuit wars

Melbourne, May 2 (ANI): Triple Olympic gold medallist Stephanie Rice is the best known swimmer in the world without a personal swimwear sponsor, and would be in a winning position during the world championships in July.

The International Swimming Federation’s newly formed commission assembles in Lausanne next week to decide which hi-tech swimsuits will be legal for the world titles in Rome, after an influx of new brands and new technology destabilised the sport in the past year.

On the advice of her coach Michael Bohl, Rice deliberately refrained from taking the money on offer from the manufacturers to an athlete of her stature.

Bohl believes that she is now in the perfect position to respond to the changing conditions for the world titles.

“I said all along that she didn’t want to pigeonhole herself because we don’t know what the rules will be,” The Australian quoted Bohl, as saying.

“I think Speedo and Arena are both very keen to sign her, but I think signing early would have been crazy. She probably won’t sign a deal now until after the world championships where they will decide what the rules are for 2010,” he added.

Rice tested a range of brands, including Arena, Adidas and Blue Seventy. She set both of her world records in Speedo’s LZR Racer at the Beijing Olympics and will consider all brands before deciding what she will wear in Rome. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice took Ian Thorpie’s advice on how to deal with fame

Melbourne, Mar 16 (ANI): Swimming sensation Stephanie Rice has revealed that she turned to Ian Thorpe for advice on how to deal with her rapid rise to stardom.

Rice won millions of hearts following her triumph at last year’s Beijing Games but such was the scrutiny on the young Queenslander that every aspect of her life post-Olympics became news from partying to constant speculation about boyfriends.

Rice admitted that that she sought out advice from Beijing teammates Grant Hackett and Libby Trickett but found that five-time Olympic champion Thorpe particularly connected with her.

“I think people deal with it in different ways and Ian was really great because I think I could sort of relate my stories better to him and I think they hit him more emotionally rather than anything else,” the Age quoted her, as saying.

“So it was good to see how he handled it emotionally and how he got through all the scrutiny and that really helped me out,” she said.

Rice said that Thorpe advised her to not to pay too much attention to the media.

“He was just telling me that it is important to know who you are as a person and not to get wound up and don’t read the media and that because it does sort of … it is hard to read bad stuff about you and (to) let it go. You always want to fire back and say something,” she said. (ANI)

What it takes to become a champ, by Stephanie Rice

Melbourne, Mar 15 (ANI): Swimming sensation Stephanie Rice, who won millions of hearts with her success at last year’s Beijing Olympics, has now given an insight into what it takes to become a champion.

Clocking more than 10km a day in the pool, Rice starts and finishes her day smelling of chlorine.

Her pool sessions, each morning and evening, are fast becoming legendary within the swimming community.

“I’ve been told her sessions have to be seen to be believed,” the Daily Telegraph quoted swimming Australia chief executive Kevin Neil, as saying.

Rice’s schedule is relentless. Her days are punctuated by yoga and pilates classes, physiotherapy and massage, meetings with her management, sponsorship appearances, interviews and autographs.

Rice said: “It’s a busy day and busy workload. I remember when I was at school … I don’t even know how I got through.”

“I would love to study and I would love to have a job, but I also really want to swim well and that’s my No.1 goal. I love swimming and I love everything about it,” she added. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice cuts back on butterfly training to take care of shoulder injury

Melbourne, Mar 04 (ANI): Olympic gold medallist Stephanie Rice is currently looking after her shoulder injury to make certain that it doesn’t worsen.

Rice cut back on her butterfly training in a bid to avert aggravating an inflamed right shoulder.

However, her coach Michael Bohl is confident the problem is not serious, and will not prevent Rice from contesting her heavy program at the trials, starting in Sydney on March 17.

“It just flares up from time to time,” the Daily Telegraph quoted him as saying.

“We have just got to keep an eye on it. We have had to adjust things a little bit because of it. She is not doing quite as much fly as we would like, but it hasn’t interrupted her too much. Hopefully it should be right. We have just got to make sure she is getting the right physio and getting the right treatment for it,” he added.

Bohl even revealed that Rice had the same problem with her shoulder leading into the Beijing Olympics, but it had settled with physiotherapy.It has been lingering a little bit, she has had it on and off. It (the bursa) gets inflamed and causes a little bit of aggravation when she recovers,” Bohl said.

Meanwhile, Rice has entered seven events at the trials: 200m and 400m individual medley, 200m freestyle, 100m and 200m butterfly, 100m freestyle and 100m backstroke.

She is unlikely to race all of the 100m events beyond the heats. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice fed up of ‘party girl’ tag

Melbourne, Feb 19 (ANI): Olympic golden girl Stephanie Rice is fed up of the party girl tag, and the agony is giving her an extra motivation for the upcoming championships.

The 20-year-old triple Olympic gold medallist now aims to put to rest the criticism she attracted with her performance at the world titles in Rome to be held in July.

“I haven’t been out basically since Christmas and New Year, but I continue to be called a party girl and it’s just gone too far now,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Rice as saying.

“When I first saw the headlines calling me wild and a party animal, I just thought it was a bit over the top. But for it to continue when I’m back training and competing is untrue and it’s got to the stage where enough is enough,” she added.

Rice has now resumed full-scale training and is geared up for next month’s world title trials in Sydney. (ANI)

Kim Beazley, Stephanie Rice and Marcia Hines get Australia Day Honours

Melbourne, Jan 26 (ANI): Australia’s former Labor Party leader Kim Beazley, Olympic swimming champ Stephanie Rice, and singer Marcia Hines are among those that are being awarded at this year’s Australia Day Honours.

This year 536 Australians, 369 men and 167 women, were awarded for their achievements in arts, education, business, law and sport, with a majority of the recognition going to those involved in community work, reports News.com.au.

Beazley was awarded the highest honour, Companion in the Order of Australia (AC), along with indigenous rights activist Faith Bandler and patron of the arts Marilyn Darling.

With the Beijing Olympics last year, 22 Olympians along with gold medallists pole-vaulter Steve Hooker, swimmer Stephanie Rice and diver Matthew Mitcham have been awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in the general division.

John Bell, an actor, founder and artistic director of the Bell Shakespeare Company, was made an Officer in the Order of Australia (AO), along with Fairfax Media director John B. Fairfax, barrister and refugee rights advocate Julian Burnside QC and retired federal court judge, scholar, author and law reform advocate Ronald Sackville QC.

Retired Sydney TV newsreader Brian Henderson, singer Marcia Hines, former ABC sports commentator Norman May and Luca Belgiorno-Nettis, who is joint managing director of Transfield Holdings and a number of other known faces were made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM).
Human rights lawyer Marion Le, retired champion netballer Liz Ellis, former rugby union Wallaby Tim Horan, champion surfer Wayne “Rabbit” Bartholomew and former National Farmers’ Federation president and executive chairman of PrimeAg, Peter Corish, were also made an AM.

The man who found the HMAS Sydney, the Australian navy battle cruiser sunk off the coast of Western Australia during World War II, Edward Graham, has been made an AM while Commodore Robert Trotter, who contributed to the search, was awarded an OAM.

Wendy Whiteley, artist and one-time wife of the late Brett Whiteley, has been awarded an OAM for her contribution to art and philanthropy as has actor and philanthropist Rebel Penfold-Russell.

The honours list is announced twice a year on Australia Day and the Queen’s Birthday and are the result of nominations put to the Council for the Order of Australia. (ANI)

Stephanie Rice says it is time to get ‘boring’ again

Stephanie Rice says it is time to get ‘boring’ againSydney, World-record holding swimmer Stephanie Rice said that it was time for her to head back from the party floors to the pool, and get ‘boring’ again.

The ace swimmer, who won three gold medals at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, revealed that she was eager to hit the pool again and concentrate on winning more medals.

The 20-year-old admitted that she was “looking forward to that whole side of things calming down and what I love doing (swimming) to become the focus again.”

“I”ve had all this time socialising and having a good time with friends but once I do get back into training and have a set routine going, there won”t be as much media surrounding that,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted her as saying.

“It”s going to be pretty boring,” she added. (ANI)