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New Zealand has clinched the Constellation Cup with one match to go, beating the Diamonds for the first time in Australia since 2019 with a dominant 18-goal victory in Perth.
Australia went into the game needing a win to stay alive, but the defence could not find a way to stop goal shooter Grace Nweke, and a stunning third term where New Zealand scored 18 to Australia's nine all but finished the game.
The Silver Ferns won 61-43, led by a 47-goal performance by Nweke at 94 per cent. The victory secured the Cup for New Zealand for only the third time in 14 series.
The final game will be played in Melbourne on Wednesday.
Coach Stacey Marinkovich made three changes for game three, with Keira Austin, Kate Moloney and Jo Weston dropped after the first two losses.
Sophie Dwyer started at goal attack, while Jamie-Lee Price shifted to wing defence to make room for Paige Hadley at centre. Sarah Klau moved to goal defence while Courtney Bruce started at goal keeper.
There were no changes from the Silver Ferns.
The Diamonds needed a quick start after the opening two losses, but the Australians found themselves down 7-3 before fighting back to level the scores 13-13 at quarter time.
The hosts were changing things up tactically, making repeated use of the bounce pass to get round the NZ defence.
The pressure was growing on New Zealand, and Australia had a chance to go two goals up, but they missed a shot and the Silver Ferns answered through Ekenasio to draw level and led 28-26 at the half-time break.
The Australians' tough, physical defence was causing frustration for the Silver Ferns, however this started to turn once the umpires caught wind of it and the Diamonds started to rack up penalties.
The Silver Ferns came out firing in the third period, racing to a five-goal lead before Rudi Ellis — brought on for Courtney Bruce — won a one-on-one contest with Nweke to stem the flow of ball.
With the game slipping, Marinkovich brought on debutant Georgie Horjus at wing attack to huge cheers from the crowd.
Unfortunately her injection couldn't stop the Silver Ferns' momentum and by three quarter-time the Diamonds trailed 46-35, leaving them a mountain to climb.
Australia tried to turn things around in the final term, but they couldn't make inroads and as the game turned into a celebration for the visitors, they piled on the goals to extend the margin.
Kate Heffernan was named as the Player of the Match after sending her direct opponent and Diamonds captain Liz Watsom to the bench for a second time this series.
Her 20 centre pass receives and six feeds also helped New Zealand get a head start in attack, bringing the ball down court so her teammates could flood forward.
Silver Ferns skipper Ameliaranne Ekenasio also deserves praise for the supporting role she played alongside Nweke at goal attack, finishing with 14 goals at 83 per cent.
The Diamonds now have a bit of thinking to do before the final game in Melbourne on Wednesday in three days time if the team hopes to avoid an ugly piece of history.
As they have never lost a Constellation Cup series 4-0 before.
In the men's series, the Kelpies beat the Net Blacks in Canberra on Saturday to claim the trophy 3-0 with one game to come.
Look back at the action as it unfolded on the live blog.
That's it from Perth
An interesting night! It's just been confirmed that a whopping 13,048 people turned out to game three at Perth Arena.
We expected a big crowd because we know West Australians love their netty, but in terms of the result ... that was a surprise! Given the Diamonds track record on home soil.
Well done to the Silver Ferns on another epic performance. So curious to see what happens on Wednesday night. If the Diamonds are feeling fatigued, then we're not sure they'll be able to fix the issues in just three days between games. But let's see how it all pans out!
Plus the Kelpies will be back playing a double header with the women's. Looking forward to seeing them lift the Trans-Tasman Cup after they clinched the series 3-0 in Canberra yesterday.
Interesting that in the men's it's been a clean sweep so far for Australia and the same goes for New Zealand in the women's! Just flipped results.
We'll be back to live blog the final games at John Cain Arena in Melbourne on Wednesday. Catch you then.
Mistake-ridden Diamonds look fatigued
Australian head coach Stacey Marinkovich has fronted the media after the loss and been honest about the Diamonds' form.
"The gap between our best and our [worst] is too far. We took a step forward in this game in terms of energy in the first half, but it's the unforced errors and repeated nature of that in close proximinity that sees us lose confidence and puts us in chase mode. Silver Ferns put pressure on us right across the court."
Marinkovich said it has been a challenging series for her team as the current crop of Diamonds aren't used to being in chase mode for such long periods in a game. That there was a lot of 'perceived' pressure impacting the players, as well as fatigue after playing a series against England and then having some time off before coming back into the Constellation Cup set-up.
Looking for positives, Marinkovich also said they need to keep their eyes on the bigger picture. Such as the Commonwealth Games in 2026 and the Netball World Cup in Sydney in 2027.
"We're trying to get as much information as we can. This takes me back to my first Con Cup series in charge in 2021 and it's about ... when things don't go your way ... making sure you get as much information as possible so that you get your build right towards your marquee events."
"As challenging as it is to see those scorelines, there's a lot we've been able to take that are going to shape the direction of how we need to train, the strategies that we put in place, the way in which we refresh. I think that we are a bit mentally fatigued at the moment. There's things within the program that I think we can freshen up. Players also need to be able to take accountability and we pride ourselves on our honesty and having those conversations and it's something we'll need to do."
NZ have their say
As you can imagine head coach Noeline Taurua is absolutely thrilled with her team's performance:
"It's been a long time between drinks. I'm elated. Beyond the win, the manner that we're actually playing with and the level of performance and toughness that I'm seeing out there, and that wanting desire. We've talked about this for many a years, so to be able to see that and people demonstrate that out on court is next level. It's beautiful netball. Stunning netball ... Having a bit of passion, heart, backbone. It's a cool story. For us to win here is confidence building and that scoreline is massive for us. We're heading in the right direction."
Silver Ferns captain Ameliaranne Ekenasio says the biggest change in the team's manner has been the way they treat each other on court and that extra support has proved to be a huge difference in the way they play.
"It was a really tough time for us, we felt super frustrated as a group. We just felt like we weren't even scratching our full potential. We were hitting it at training but it wasn't coming through in the games. So we needed to get really honest with each other and it was all about backing each other out there on court. We haven't changed anything drastically on court. It's just been the way that we're treating each other that has been a big shift for us ... I've never been in a position where we've won three in a row against Australia."
So what does this result mean?
Well, for New Zealand they can finally get some people off their back. They've been copping it for the past couple of years about their slipping standards and now they've shown against the world's number one team that they still do have what it takes to match it with the best. Our only question would be how much of it comes back to Nweke?
As netball fans will know. Next year Nweke is headed to Australia to play in the Super Netball league in the Swifts red and blue dress. This means she sacrifices her Silver Ferns eligibilty to further her individual career.
When New Zealand lost Nweke to injury midway through the 2023 Netball World Cup in Cape Town it was a nail in the coffin. They didn't win a medal from there. So what happens in 2025 when Nweke isn't around to spearhead that circle? She has played all 60 minutes of every game so far. It's got them the result, but can their up-and-coming shooters fill her shoes once she's gone for a solid 12 months?
Meanwhile for Australia, this is a bit of a shock. The last time they conceded the Constellation Cup was when they blooded a host of debutants and didn't get to play a single game on their home turf. That was back in 2021 when the entire four-game series was hosted in New Zealand because of COVID restrictions. So to lose like this in front of a huge Perth crowd is a big deal.
We said at the beginning of our coverage that we liked the bold changes Marinkovich made for game three, but did she run too many untrialled combinations? Also running Price at centre alongside Dwyer in goal attack does feel a bit questionable, considering the Giants finished dead last in Super Netball this year. Part of the reason is that they couldn't get their attacking combos right. Plenty to think about for the head coach ahead of game four. It's just the second series the team has lost since she took over in 2020.
Right call by the officials
Aussie Diamonds in total disarray. So disappointing. But maybe if we’d got the centre pass as we should have at start of 3 rd quater things might have not gone this awry
Still Diamonds should be experienced enough to move on . NZ deserved their win
- Jennifer
I've just gone back to double check. The officials got it right, it was supposed to be a NZ centre pass to start the third quarter. The Diamonds had the last centre pass of the second period, where Dwyer missed a shot.
Assistant coach Nicole Richardson was spotted chatting with the umpires and bench before they started the third quarter because she believed it was Diamonds ball. But not sure why she got confused, because it was New Zealand's fair and square.
Agree with you though that the Diamonds are in disarray. They were heavy favourites leading into this series and there hasn't been a single player other than Jamie-Lee Price that I can think of that has really tried to fight their way back into the contest. They have looked like a different team these past three games. Seriously concerning. Not the way they'd like to finish 2024.
Seems there's a bit of work to do to get this line-up ready for a Commonwealth Games and home World Cup without the likes of Steph Fretwell or Ash Brazill in the mix. Now those players have retired it seems Australia needs to find it's way again. Particuarly in the shooting circle. And when a player like Kiera Austin has excelled all year in the Super Netball league, but now can't execute for the Diamonds. We have to question what's impacted her preparation?
First time NZ win it on Aussie soil
We mentioned already that this is the third time the Silver Ferns have ever won the Constellation Cup, but they've never been able to win it on Australian soil until now. What an effort!
Full-time statistics
To be honest, statistics read very similar to the way they did at half-time. The Diamonds had way too many penalties 64 and as a result, stood out of play spectating the game rather than winning back the ball. The Silver Ferns did a wonderful job of keeping off the body and staying effective in defence.
However there is a huge difference here on the gain to goal rate. In the first 30 minutes, the Diamonds were converting 75 per cent of their defensive efforts and the Silver Ferns were at just 43 per cent. It's almost the total opposite by the end of the 60 minutes. Showing how much ball the Aussies threw away towards the end and just how clinical the visitors were to finish.
The Diamonds accuracy slipped to 78 per cent as well. New Zealand remaind composed under the post to remain in the 90s percentile. Grace Nweke finishing as the highest scoring player on court with 47 goals.
Huge upset
Star blogging as usual, Brittany. Thanks for your hard work on the blog. Sorry we couldn't pull it off this time