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Ukrainian Heraskevych loses appeal against Olympics disqualification
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Italian biathlete Passler cleared to compete at Olympics despite positive test
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Macron slams 'antisemitic hydra' as he honours 2006 Jewish murder victim
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Germany's Merz urges US to repair ties with Europe
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Sophie Adenot, the second French woman to fly to space
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New Zealand and Canada to face off in Women's Rugby World Cup semi-final
Reigning champions New Zealand will face Canada in the last four of the Women's Rugby World Cup after the two nations enjoyed contrasting quarter-final wins on Saturday.
New Zealand, the record six-time World Cup winners and unbeaten at the tournament since 2014, were given a scare by a South Africa side appearing in their first quarter-final as the Springboks defied all pre-match expectations to be level at 10-10 come half-time.
The Black Ferns replied with 29 unanswered points in a match they eventually won 46-17 in Exeter.
New Zealand captain Ruahei Demant admitted the team had been on the receiving end of some strong words at the interval.
"We got a bit of a ruck-up in the sheds (changing rooms), particularly us backs," she said. "Our accuracy wasn't good enough and it wasn't the standards that this jersey demands."
Turning to the semi-final with Canada, second in the world rankings with the Black Ferns third, she added: "We played them this year at home in Christchurch and the game ended in a draw, so we know that we will have not a lot of room for error. Our performance will need to be bang-on."
It was Springbok captain Nolusindiso Booi's final game after the veteran second row announced she would retire following the World Cup.
"I'm so emotional right now but I am also proud of the progress of our team," said the 40-year-old Booi.
Canada overwhelmed Australia 46-5 in Bristol, with the North Americans 31-5 ahead at the break after running in five tries in the opening 40 minutes.
They will return to Bristol's Ashton Gate on Friday for a clash with New Zealand, who have beaten England in five of the last six finals.
"You can't be over-confident but for sure we are confident," said Canada coach Kevin Rouet. "We battle against them (New Zealand) a lot so it is going to be a tight game."
- 'Adaptable' England -
Sunday's quarter-finals are all European, with top-ranked England taking on Scotland and fourth-placed France up against Ireland, who are fifth in the standings.
The Red Roses -- unbeaten since losing the 2022 World Cup final -- are bidding to break their own record of 30 straight Test wins. They face a Scotland side who last beat their border rivals in 1999.
England will be buoyed by the return of captain Zoe Aldcroft from injury but will be without full-back Ellie Kildunne after the 2024 world player of the year suffered a concussion against Australia last week.
The Red Roses thrashed the Dark Blues 59-7 in this season's Six Nations, although forecast bad weather in Bristol on Sunday could bolster Scotland's chances.
England coach John Mitchell said: "We believe that we can adapt to all weather conditions," adding: "We don't need to be scoring 10 out of 10."
Bryan Easson, the outgoing Scotland coach, said: "We came to qualify for the quarter-finals. We've got the quarter-finals; we're top six in the world so I would say we're making real progress."
The most intriguing of all the quarter-finals is the clash between France and Ireland, with victory for either side in Exeter a realistic possibility.
France won 27-15 when the teams last met in the Six Nations with Ireland prop Linda Djougang saying: "We came so close. We know the challenge ahead of us."
Ireland suffered a 40-0 hammering by New Zealand in their concluding pool match, but France captain Marine Menager said: "We expect Ireland to come at us hard, and we'll have to deliver a massive performance."
V.F.Barreira--PC