Thursday 31 March 2011

Liverpool's sponsor wants the club to sign Asian stars

Liverpool's sponsor wants the club to sign Asian stars to help tap into commercial opportunities in the region.


Standard Chartered sponsorship chief Gavin Laws cited Manchester United's signing of Park Ji-sung as an example of connecting with the Asian market.

"The real power Liverpool could do for us, and for the Premier League, is if there was a way they could nurture foreign players from Asia," said Laws.

He added that the bank wanted Kenny Dalglish to stay as Liverpool boss.

"I'd like to see Kenny as the long term manager - I'm sure the club would," commented Laws.

"They are going to be talking to him if they aren't talking to him already.

"The Kenny magic is all around the world, everybody believes Kenny can take the club [forward] and that means they stay focused and that means they stay in the newspapers around the world... we are looking for brand awareness."

Liverpool signed an £80m, four-year shirt sponsorship deal with Standard Chartered in September 2009.

And while the company is based in London, much of its income comes from the Asian market.

Speaking at the SoccerEx conference in Manchester, Laws added: "The markets in Asia and the Middle East are so nationalistic, they are very proud about their countries.

"One appearance from a player, say from Dubai in the Premier League, and you'd have the whole of Dubai watching it."

'I would have thought that Liverpool have had more exposure around the world this season than anybody else ' Gavin Laws.

Laws felt that the exposure would be commercially beneficial to his company as well as to Liverpool.

He continued: "You see what Park Ji-sung does for Manchester United."

Liverpool are unlikely to finish in the top four and so are set to miss out on the riches of the Champions League for a second successive season - however, they could still qualify for the Europa League.

With eight more matches remaining this season, Dalglish and his men find themselves sixth in the Premier League, four points adrift of fifth-place Tottenham, having played one game more, and eight behind Manchester City in fourth.

However, Laws thought it was "not that important" if Liverpool once again miss out on a place in European club football's most prestigious competition because matches are played when the bank's target audience in Asia is asleep.

He also said that the club's struggles on and off the pitch this season had actually benefited his company.

"I would have thought that Liverpool have had more exposure around the world this season than anybody else......without the turmoil at the club there wouldn't have been [the publicity]," he said.

"They are a mid-table team with an outside chance of getting into the Europa League again."

Homeless World Cup, Paris August 2011 - Sponsorship Opportunity.

SportTrades are very excited to be asked to help with the Homeless World Cup, to played in Paris during August.  Our instruction is to search for a sponsor for the documentary being made.  SPORT INSPIRES - BE PART OF IT!

First, here is the story of the Homeless World Cup

The Homeless World Cup uses football as a catalyst to encourage people who are homeless to change their lives; and to change the attitudes of governments, media, public and key influences to create better solutions to homelessness around the world.


We do this with a world-class international football tournament uniting teams of people who are homeless to take a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to represent their country. And by triggering and developing grass-roots football programs in over 70 nations currently engaging 30,000 homeless players all year round.


In 2005 the Homeless World Cup Foundation was set up to develop the grass roots football programmes and our mission is to engage one million players in 75 nations in the benefits of football and be the most reputable organisation using sport for social change in the world.


The inaugural Homeless World Cup kicked off in Graz, Austria, uniting 18 nations. Since then it has gained great momentum in Gothenburg, Sweden (2004), Edinburgh, Scotland (2005), Cape Town, South Africa (2006) and Copenhagen, Denmark (2007). In Melbourne, Australia (2008) 56 nations were united for the
biggest Homeless World Cup ever, including the first Women’s Cup and a legacy of 30 street soccer programs across Australia. Next Milan 2009,  Rio 2010, potentially Asia 2012 and Poznan 2013. This years tournament will be held in Paris during August.


Research consistently demonstrates that over 70 per cent of players experience a significant life change. They come off drugs and alcohol, move into homes, jobs, education and training,repair relationships and even become coaches and players.


Founded by world-leading social entrepreneur Mel Young, the Homeless World Cup is supported by UEFA, Vodafone Foundation, Nike, Global Ambassador Eric Cantona and international footballers Didier Drogba and Rio Ferdinand.


It’s everyone’s game, What does it take?


These are our underlying policies:


• Responsiveness and commitment to social inclusion and impact


• Accountability by measuring our social impact


• Focusing on core competencies and win-win partnering with the best organisations in specific areas as a key driving force


• Enabling grass root programs to deliver, reach their full potential and be inspired and able to grow


• Social enterprise, a can do ambitious attitude, social purpose and profit


What will the Homeless World Cup look like in 2012?


This is our vision:


• An established operational headquarters with 10 key personnel


• Recognised global social enterprise and brand using football to make a real difference, applying innovative solutions to a global issue


• Annual core funds exceeding £10 million GBP


• One million fans united


• Established Women’s Homeless World Cup


• A strong ambassador programme with 20 leaders of their field lending talent and passion to create change


• 10 key international football partners e. Inter Milan, Manchester United


• 75% of players change their lives significantly


• Grass roots football projects in 75 nations


• One million players involved in the benefits of football


• Regional hubs set up in North America, South America, Africa, Europe, and Asia


• Global research with leading institutions co-ordinated by QMU, Edinburgh


The Opprtunity to Sponsor the Documentary
The Documentary
 Our clients aim is to make a 90 min documentary for the Homeless world cup with a focus on this years Haiti team. Our client explains all about the documentary.


The film will be distributed through film festivals, limited cinema release and Video on demand (Itunes for example) sites.


The legacy of the Homeless world cup is an important part of what we see the documentary being about. What happens to the players after the World Cup, where did the Haiti players end up, what effect did being involved in this game have on there lives? We want to show how the homeless world cup has a positive impact on not just the individual but the community they are a part of.  Haiti has been at the forefront of the world’s mind over the last year (and since writing this piece New Zealand and Japan) after the arthquake that destroyed so much of the country. This year is the first year aiti have played in the homeless world cup and we would like to follow the preparation of the team and there matches over the world cup and what happens to them when they get back to Haiti.


The moving and emotional stories of the individual players are truly amazing, we want to focus on these and really show how the players have over come great tragedies in their own lives to get to a position where they can engage in the World Cup. How did they come to being picked, what do they have to sacrifice to be part of the tournament. Does this give them an escape from their lives. Will it change them for a positive or is it just a brief escapism before they have to return to their everyday routines.  A focal point for our film is to highlight the effect this competition has on the individuals. The tournament itself is a driving force but we want to make it about the personal stories on and off the field, the participation/ the team work, the personal journey to get to where they are and how they got there. How they interact with their teammates, how their stories interact. Why are they getting involved? Why do they want to play football. Are they playing to win the tournament, or do they want to be recognized and prove a point to themselves and others, is this their moment to shine.


Our plan is to bring the tournament to a wider audience, through a feature film documentary spanning the whole spectrum of the event not just the games. We want to tell the personal stories and focus on how the world cup has helped them to change their lives for the better. We want to take it from the passing conversation to a tournament that countries can be patriotic about supporting.


We want to make it a very personal film talking to the individuals and really highlighting the great work that the World cup promotes, we would like to interview the ambassadors about why they are involved, people at Nike and other sponsors about why they support the Homeless World Cup. How do
they pick the teams, players who are the coaches?


The Team

Matt Brown, Producer/DOP (BECTU member)


8 years of work in the film


Winner of Scottish BAFTA for Technical Excellence 2008.


Currently working as a Freelance Producer/DOP.


BBC radio 4 comedians storm the royal mile, produced and shot with a large team covering


Produced and shot 2 series of the talk of the fest with Paul Provenza covering over 120 comedians.


Produced and shot 48 shows over the Edinburgh fringe festival 2007


The Gobi Desert followed a group of ultra marathon runners across the Gobi desert for 3 weeks.


3 hours of live comedy on the royal mile.


David Lumsden, Director (BECTU member)


http://davidlumsden.com/


7 years work in Film and Television


Currently working as a Freelance Director/Editor/Cameraman


Directed Documentary Selected for EIFF Saltire Award 2005


Directed Short Films have won awards and been selected for Best of Scottish Shorts 2008


Directed BBC radio 4 comedians storm the royal mile,


Edited Lynedoch South Africa Short Film Series for the LEXI Cinema in London.


The Sponsorship Opportunity


A single logo holding screen at the end of the production


Logo and information about the sponsor on the film’s website


Interview / mini featurette with the sponsors representative for inclusion in the DVD release.


Product placement throughout the film


References in interviews and articles in all press releases.


The producer is also willing to discuss the best way for the sponsor to have involvement and the most effective way for their brand to be associated with and portrayed by the film


Sir Alex Ferguson has stated that this is a great cause and is allowing the producer to use any positive quotes that he has made about the Homeless World Cup.


With the BBC and Sky potentially coming on board there is an opportunity for the sponsors brand to be seen by large audiences and attain immense CSR benefit by association.


To make the film the producer is looking to raise £175,000, to cover all costs of the production plus getting it to the distribution stage.

For further information please contact us rob.mcavoy@sporttrades.co.uk or jason.beazley@sporttrades.co.uk.


Wednesday 30 March 2011

Flat Season Starts today, On Monday why not have your day at the races.

Our friends at Folkestone Races have a fantastic offer.  Why not have a day at the races on Monday 4th April.  Enjoy it more by sponsoring the entire meeting or individual races.  You will be able to present the winners with the trophy, your company or event will be promoted throughout the course via 'on-course T.V'.  The meeting itself will be featured on At The Races, so great exposure for your organisation.

Sponsorship for the entire meeting will be £2,300 or £495 for individual races.  This offer is available until tomorrow evening, so please contact jason.beazley@sporttrades.co.uk to take advantage of this incredible opportunity.

We do have other race days available at a number of racecourses.  Sport Works, advertising works - back a winner, CONTACT US NOW!

Fix 'n' Mix: A busy weekend for the Diamond geezers.

I must apologise for the lack of this feature last week, no other reason than all staff required to work on a number of our projects. I know, they had to do their day jobs, bless them. This week will not include Harpenden Rugby, who have the weekend off from league duties. You still will be able to catch a match at Redbourn Lane, as the 1st's have a friendly and the other teams will be playing.  In Basketball, Hull Wasps season ended 2 weeks ago, they finished 5th in the league, just missing out on the play-offs.

We are fast approaching the business end of our 'March to the Arch' campaign.  This weekend, in the F.A.Vase, Coalville take a 3-0 1st leg lead to King's Lynn Town, in the 2nd leg of the Semi Final.  In the F.A.Youth Cup, Aston Villa host Sheffield United in the 2nd leg of their Semi Final.  The blades take a 1-0 lead to the Villa.

In European football, the boys from St Pauli travel to FC Schalke 04 on Friday night.  Kult & Punk had last weekend off, due to internationals, they used their time wisely and both scored personal bests on the 'table top' Space Invaders in Zoe's Bar.  UD Lanzarote hope to continue the impressive push for the title.  They hope to extend their lead in the league, but they have a tough trip to Santa Brigida.

Rugby League: London Skolars search for their first win of the season. They entertain the famous Whitehaven on Sunday at New River Stadium, kick off 3pm.  A great day out, go on pop along with your Mum for Mothers Day.

On Saturday, Hainault Bulldogs open their clubhouse at their new home.  Details can be found on their website, go along and support them if you're in the Dagenham area.

In Super Rugby, the Rebels travel to Perth on Saturday, to take on Western Force.  Melbourne go there on the back of a fabulous home win last time out.

In Speedway, Newcastle Diamonds have the toughest weekend.  The lads have had a perfect start to the 2011 season.  On Friday they open their league account with a trip to Scunthorpe Scorpians. They then travel to Hertfordshire on Saturday to take on Rye House Rockets in Hoddesdon.  On Sunday, they then head back to the North East, to entertain Edinburgh Monarchs in the Premier Shield.

In Ice Hockey, Chelmsford Chieftains also have fixtures this weekend, but we will provide more information on these later this week.  The Ice Man cometh - so beware.

As always please check with clubs featured to confirm time, date and venue - HAPPY SPORTING.

Tuesday 29 March 2011

Sol y Futbol: Los Rojillos tighten their grip on the Championship

Ian Lane reports on another great win for UD Lanzarote, as they continue their impressive season.

LANZAROTE 3 U.D. GUÍA 0


The Rojillos cruised to victory against a poor Gran Canarian side and tightened their grip on the Championship by opening up a seven point lead at the top.

Lanzarote dominated possession early on but with the visitors sitting behind the ball and packing their defence it was a frustrating start to the match for the Conejeros (locals).

The breakthrough came in the 36th minute. A free kick whipped in by Jotha took a deflection and midfielder Javi Betancort reacted brilliantly with a glancing header which flew into the bottom left hand corner giving his side a deserved 1-0 lead.

Four minutes later and the Rojillos doubled their lead. Rosmen received the ball on the edge of the area and with the defenders backing away he decided to give it a crack. What a good decision it turned out to be as his powerful low strike beat the keeper at his near post and sent his side into the half time break with a commanding 2-0 advantage.

Ten minutes after the restart and Rosmen thought he had scored the third. His clever back header found the net but the goal was disallowed for a dubious offside decision.

The tall striker only had to wait a further five minutes for another crack at the whip. Left back Guayo curled in a delightful cross and Rosmen used the pace of the pass to volley home in spectacular fashion from eight yards and record his 14th strike of the campaign.

The Rojillos had barely needed to get out of second gear to find themselves 3-0 up and with the game won and 30 minutes left to play they began to play some neat football.

A great move orchestrated by Capain Rubén Rodríguez found Rosmen, the striker full of confidence back heeled to the alert Toñito but his goal bound strike hit a defender and a wonder move ended in nothing.

The away side offered nothing in return and the Rojillos went on and picked up their 26th point out of the last 30 available.

Nearest rivals Las Palmas B could only manage a draw so the Rojillos enter into their final seven matches with a seven point lead though the Gran Canarian side does have a game in hand.

Lanzarote now face their biggest challenge to date this season with two consecutive away fixtures both in Gran Canaria. First up is Villa Santa Brigída who are currently in fifth position and are desperate for a top four finish to qualify for a play off spot and next will be the title decider against Las Palmas B.

The club is organizing a trip to Las Palmas on the 10th April for the title clash. The cost for residents is 63 Euros and includes flights and bus to match. If anyone is interested call Yuni at the club on 928 812787 (Spanish speaking only) or let me know.

GOALS

1-0min 36 Javi Betancort
2-0min 40 Rosmen
3-0min 60 Rosmen


Fiona McGee looks ahead to the 2011 Women's World Cup

Free Lions is the newsletter produced by our friends at the Football Supporters Federation.  To join the FSF is free please visit http://www.fsf.org.uk/ and JOIN NOW. for more details on the Federation and the Women's World Cup contact FSF helpline: +44 7956 121314



Free Lions stalwart and Fans’ Embassy veteran Fiona McGee brings us this special feature on the 2011 FIFA Women’s World Cup.

So, the clocks have gone forward and the long summer nights will soon be upon us. Most people are starting
to get excited about the prospect of lazy afternoons spent soaking up the sun on a beach or in a pub garden
somewhere. But for those of us who love our football, this sense of anticipation can be tempered by the knowledge that this is one of those stupid odd-numbered years, when mid-May to mid-August represents a
period devoid of competitive football and the withdrawal symptoms have kicked in before June has begun.

However, before you start getting too downcast, there is help at hand, in the form of the sixth Women’s World Cup finals, which will be taking place in Germany from 26 June to 17 July. With 515,000 World Cup tickets sold, 285,000 more are still available. Prices start at just 10euros, with tickets available first come, first served from the official online shop www.FIFA.com/germany2011.

No matter if you’ve never been to a women’s game before, anyone who went to the World Cup in 2006 can vouch for how much fun a football tournament in Germany can be. Impressive stadiums, friendly locals, great beer and more sausages than you can shake a stick at – what’s not to like? So, set aside your prejudices about women’s football (should you be foolish enough to have any).

“It means a lot to have England fans out there. We relish playing in front of a crowd. It would give the team an added boost if their family, friends and football fans came out to support them.” – Hope Powell, England coach

“This will be, without doubt, the best World Cup there’s been. We’d love the support of football people, for them to come out and support us.” – Faye White, England defender.

Road to Germany

After initially struggling to make an impact in tournament football (is this just some kind of English
thing?), the England women’s team are now developing into one of the major forces in the game and currently sit ninth in he official FIFA rankings. They finished runners up in the 2009 UEFA Championship, beaten 6-2 by, of course, the Germans.    

In their 2011 World Cup qualifying campaign, England were unbeaten, dropping just two points and conceding only two goals in eight matches. Finishing fi rst in their group, they then had to face Switzerland in a play-off, where they won both legs - 2-0 and 3-2 – for a 5-2 aggregate victory to seal their place in this summer’s tournament. They have now been drawn in Group B, along with Japan, New Zealand and Mexico.

Saturday 26 March 2011

Speedway: Diamonds make it 3 out of 3, with win in Edinburgh

Edinburgh Monarchs 44  Newcastle Diamonds 46.

Match report courtesy of our friends at Diamonds media unit.

(Premier Shield 1st leg)

The Sapphire Engineering Diamonds were on a mission last night – to gain revenge over the team they saw as stealing their Premier League Title from under their noses, the Edinburgh Monarchs, and succeeded in fine style to win on the night by a thrilling two points.

Most pleasing was the slow return to form of Rene Bach who has struggled so far this season, but with an excellent win in Heat Five, holding off massive pressure from the rear from Craig Cook in a 2-4 to the Diamonds, levelling the match at 15-15.

Man of the match, Stuart Robson took Heat Seven ahead of one of last season’s sensations, Kalle Katajisto in another 2-4 to put the Tyneside outfit ahead by two at the match’s mid-point.

Cook was none too pleased to lose out earlier and looked set to lose another in the ninth with Mark Lemon leading from the tapes, but Cook cut sharply back coming into the second bend to surprise the Aussie with a hard inside pass for three points in a 4-2 that again levelled the match, 27-all.

Andrew Tully’ s excellent chase behind Lubos Tomicek paid dividends for the Monarchs as he also performed a superb inside pass under the Czech off bend two on the last lap, but with Kyle Newman falling, it was a gifted 4-2 with Edinburgh now leading 37-35 with three races left.

Lemon nudged his way round Katajisto in the 13th for three points with Bach fending off Kevin Wolbert behind for another match-tying 2-4 (39-39), and with Robson winning Heat 14, a shared heat it was all on the last race of the evening to decide the winners of this first leg event.

Robson led from the gate, chased hard by Matthew Wethers and Cook with Lemon behind, but on the first bend of the last lap both Lemon and Cook fell completely separately, with the Diamond taking the opportunity to whip back into the saddle and speed off for a match-winning third placed point in a shock 2-4.

Team Manager George English said afterwards: “This was an excellent all-round performance with Stuart Robson deserving special mentions, but it was also pleasing to see Rene Bach start to score good points again including a win which will only boost his confidence too, and therefore the Diamonds benefit as well. Sweet revenge tonight – very satisfying!”

Friday 25 March 2011

Rugby Union: Rebels fight back to defeat the Hurricanes in Super Rugby.

AAMI Park hosted another Super Rugby epic on Friday night as the Melbourne Rebels roared back from a 17-point deficit to claim a bonus point 42-25 victory over the Hurricanes.


The comprehensive scoreline seemed unthinkable when the Hurricanes raced into a 17-0 lead inside 15 minutes but the Rebels forwards built a platform and, roared on by a 16,809 strong Rebel Army, outscored their opposition six tries to four.

The Rebels forwards, who collectedly dominated the game, scored four tries between them. Debutant, Rodney Blake, scored the first, Al Campbell scored twice, with Michael Lipman also crossing. Copper Vuna and Nick Phipps collected the other 5-pointers, with an uncharacteristically inaccurate Danny Cipriani kicking 12 points.

The first half started with a blur and saw the Hurricanes three tries up before everyone had taken their seats.

Scrumhalf Chris Eaton got things up and running after just six minutes. He was fed by Conrad Smith down the Hurricanes’ left but the opportunity came from a cheap Rebels turnover just inside their own 22.

5-0 quickly became 10-0 when Victor Vito’s barnstorming run took him through, and at times over, the Rebels’ midfield into the same left corner that Eaton found earlier. The only good news for the Rebels in the opening quarter was that Daniel Kirkpatrick did not have his kicking boots on, missing both early conversions.

Fortunately for the Hurricane’s five-eighth, he was wearing his running boots. After 17 minutes he waltzed through a broken Rebels defence to score the New Zealanders’ third try. The 22-year-old added the extras from in front of the posts.

The Rebels inched back into the match on 24 minutes, with their first meaningful attack. After finally building a series of attacking phases, debutant Rodney Blake drilled his way over from close range. The TMO was called upon to adjudicate with the grounding but the big Wallaby prop would not be denied his five points. Danny Cipriani’s extras pushed the Rebels closer to parity.

A Kirkpatrick penalty seemed to have quashed any hopes of the Rebels shifting the momentum their way but the determined Rebels pack would not be denied. Another dominant spell of forward possession resulted in a ferocious tussle on the edge of the Hurricane’s line. As each Rebel joined the maul they forced the ball forward before Al Campbell finally peeled off and touched down, with the aid of the supporting Hugh Pyle.

To a man, the Rebels seemed to grow in confidence, and a minute before halftime the third Rebel forward crossed. It was the returning Michael Lipman who went over for the score to drive the Rebels squarely back into the contest.

Cipriani missed both conversions but struck an imperious 49-metre penalty on the halftime siren to take the sides to the break level at 20-20.

Incredibly, after being so far behind so early, another 40-metre plus Cipriani penalty gave the Rebels the lead.

Even more incredibly, Al Campbell scored his second try of the night on 49 minutes, converted by Cipriani, to give the Rebels a 10-point lead and a four-try bonus point. The Rebels pack, which had dominated the opening of the second half went on drive after drive en route to the Hurricane’s line and after first Lachlan Mitchell, then Stirling Mortlock looked destined to score, it fell to the big second-rower to haul himself over the line and the TMO to confirm the score.

The Rebels, rampant now, extended their lead further. A clinical counter-attack, led by the incisive Phipps resulted in Cooper Vuna one-on-one with Ma’a Nonu on the left wing and the former NRL star did not stand on ceremony as he straightened to score.

Cipriani missed the extras, and then a long-range penalty, but they were quickly forgotten as the Rebels notched their sixth try of the night. Cooper Vuna was again at the heart of it; his bulldozing run close to the left whitewash created space inside for Nick Phipps, who Vuna found with a terrific looping pass. The young scrumhalf did the rest, with Cipriani converting to stretch the lead out to 22 points.

The Hurricanes threw everything they could at the Rebels thereafter but the home side held firm until the 78th minute when reserve hooker, Dane Coles earned the Wellington-based side a bonus point.

The Rebels would not be denied though and the AAMI Park crowd went wild as the home side made it two wins from their opening six rounds.

RaboDirect Rebels

1. Rodney Blake, 2. Ged Robinson, 3. Greg Somerville, 4. Alister Campbell, 5. Hugh Pyles, 6. Jarrod Saffy, 7. Michael Lipman, 8. Gareth Delve (vc), 9. Nick Phipps, 10. Danny Cipriani, 11. Cooper Vuna, 12. Stirling Mortlock (c), 13. Lachlan Mitchell, 14. Luke Rooney, 15. Richard Kingi

Reserves: 16. Luke Holmes, 17. Laurie Weeks, 18. Adam Byrnes, 19. Tim Davidson, 20. JP Du Plessis, 21. Peter Betham, 22. Afusipa Taumoepeau

Head Coach: Rod Macqueen

Hurricanes

1.John Schwalger, 2. Andrew Hore (c), 3. Neemia Tialata, 4. Jeremy Thrush, 5. Jason Eaton, 6. Faifili Levave, 7. Jack Lam, 8. Victor Vito, 9. Chris Eaton, 10. Daniel Kirkpatrick, 11. Andre Taylor, 12. Ma’a Nonu, 13. Conrad Smith, 14. Julian Savea, 15. Cory Jane.

Reserves: 16. Dane Coles, 17. Anthony Perenise, 18. James Broadhurst, 19. Serge Lilo, 20. Tyson Keats, 21. Aaron Cruden, 22. Jayden Hayward.

Head Coach: Mark Hammett

Referee: Jaco Peyper

RaboDirect Rebels v Hurricanes

7.40pm, March 25 2011

AAMI Park

Report with thanks to our friends in the Rebels Media Unit.

Tuesday 22 March 2011

Rugby League: First home game of the season, Skolars go down fighting.

London Skolars 22 Doncaster RL 42


Report on the first home game of the season, from our friends at www.skolarsrl.com

Skolars fell to the second defeat of the league campaign, despite three early tries that put them into a 16-6 lead after a quarter of an hour. That was followed by 6 unanswered tries for the visitors who took advantage of a series of Skolars’ errors when in possession.

Skolars had taken the lead after two minutes, with Luke May racing onto a Dylan Skee kick to score. The Dons soon went ahead with Scott Spaven converting his own try, which came from a break from acting half-back. That was against the run of play and Skolars regained the lead when Austen Aggrey’s pass found Jason Hart running on at pace to score under the posts – his first try for the club. Aggrey and Skee then combined to send Gareth Honor over.

That was Gareth Honor’s 30th try for Skolars, putting him second in the Skolars try scoring list in the professional era, moving ahead of Rubert Jonker and Ashley Tozer.

Then came three unanswered tries for the Dons before half-time. Nev Morrison’s pass set up Mick Butterfield’s try then Craig Fawcett’s pass opened up the defence for Ryan Steen to score. After Jy-Mel Coleman’s 40-20 kick, Skolars couldn’t hold possession and the Dons punished them with Spaven adding his second try; going over from dummy half just after Kyle Kesik had gone close trying the same move.

Two tries early in the second half for Chris Green sealed the game for Doncaster. The first saw him push off four defenders on his way to the line, the second was a little easier, but again came as Skolars coughed up possession. Adam Scott also made a strong run for the Dons, but the defence was quick to swoop.

Ade Adebisi might have collected a hat-trick, but good defence forced him into touch feet from the line for the first, then forward passes from Skee and May to the winger saw Skolars miss any chance of a comeback. The last of those errors was punished the most severely, with a break from the ensuing scrum leading to a 70 metre Stu Sanderson run to the tryline.

After Ade Adebisi clashed with the Don’s Dean Colton, a fight broke out on the touchline. The incident was put on report. Skolars had one piece of consolation on a bad day for the game in the capital with Austen Aggrey showing pace to the line to score against his old club. That try saw him move to within 2 tries of a half-century for the club.

LONDON SKOLARS

1 Neil Thorman
30 Olu Iwenofu
17 Dave Arnot
4 Luke May
5 Ade Adebisi
6 Jy-Mel Coleman
7 Dylan Skee
31 Austen Aggrey
9 Gareth Honor
10 Jason Hart
14 Jason Cook
15 Olly Purslow
13 Stephen Ball

Subs (all used)

23 Liam Prescott
8 Tony Williams
16 James Simon
35 Cariern Clement-Pascall

Tries: May (2), Hart (12), Honor (14), Aggrey (73)

Goals: N Thorman 3/4

Sending off: Mbu (73) – fighting


DONCASTER

1 Mick Butterfield
5 Dean Colton
4 Shaun Leaf
30 Nev Morrison
2 Stu Sanderson
7 Craig Fawcett
19 Scott Spaven
20 Jamie Bovill
13 Jack Ely
17 Adam Scott
29 Chris Green
12 Ryan Steen
16 Mike Emmett

Subs (all used)

9 Kyle Kesik
15 Craig Robinson
22 Carl Hughes
8 Matt Carbutt

Tries: Spaven (7,36), Butterfield (19), Steen (26), Green (43,56), Sanderson (63)

Goals: Spaven 7/7

Sending off: Williams (73) - fighting

Other Stats:

Penalty count: 4-5
Half-time: 16-24
Referee: Peter Brooke
Attendance: 326

The Mall Wood Green man of the match: Austen Aggrey

Sol y Futbol: Lanzarote stay top and 5 points clear of 2nd place.

Ian reports on another fine win for Lanzarote, as they maintain their 5 point gap at the top of the table.  Remember, if you are visiting Lanzarote soon, pop along and watch a game. Most hotels will have information about fixtures and times, alternatively, go along to Teguise Market.  UD Lanzarote have a couple of official stalls there, and on away games Ian himself will be present.  He will be more than happy to chat to you about the club and sell you merchandise. Please remember the only official club market stalls, are in Teguise. 

PLAYAS JANDIA 0 LANZAROTE 2


Two goals in two minutes by Captain Rubén Rodríguez midway through the second half saw Lanzarote briefly go eight points clear at the top but a 2-0 home victory for Las Palmas B closes the gap to five points.

The first half was dominated by the home side but with poor finishing and some superb goalkeeping by Alejandro the Rojillos went into the break with the game scoreless.

Many times this season the Rojillos have not played a particularly good first half and then completely changed the face of the game in the second half as this was the case late on Saturday afternoon in Fuerteventura.

The Rojillos began the second period confidentially; nevertheless it was still the home side creating the better chances. In the 71st minute and with the Rojillos mounting the pressure a penalty was awarded for the visitors with striker Caliche being accused of handling inside the area. In form Rubén Rodríguez calmly stepped up and slotted home giving his side a 0-1 lead.

Only a couple of minutes later and Rubén Rodríguez controlled the ball inside the box and from a narrow angle beat keeper David Alemán and the Rojillos found themselves with a very pleasant 0-2 advantage.

Seven minutes from time and recently returned centre back Eliot received his second yellow card and the Rojillos were forced to play the closing minutes with only 10 men. The home side had run out of ideas as Lanzarote strolled home recording their seventh win in their last nine outings.

Rojillos manager Quico de Diego will be delighted with this away win and also the return to form of Captain Rubén Rodríguez but will be disheartened with his defensive problems. Regular Centre back Adrián Martín will be out at least till the end of the season with a bad knee injury and now fellow centre back Eliot will be suspended for a couple of matches.

Next week Lanzarote host U.D. Guía. The Gran Canarian side are just a point clear of relegation but have been in good form of late picking up seven points in their last three games.

GOALS

0-1min 71 Rubén Rodríguez (penalty)
0-2min 73 Rubén Rodríguez

Monday 21 March 2011

Kult & Punk. Defeat to Frankfurt and back into the relegation zone

The boys were so unhappy after this game, they allowed a Frankfurter to write the report. What silly sausages they are (do you know, that was nearly a whole season to write in that gag -and still not funny). The boys consoled themselves with a game of table top space invaders and a darts match, against Dangerous Pierre and the Nancy Boys.  The visiting French team (you made your own jokes there - I know you did!) were soundly thrashed (there you go again). Back to the football, St Pauli are now firmly in relegation play-off spot, work needs to be done.

Eintracht Frankfurt 2-1 FC St Pauli


Theofanis Gekas made a timely return to scoring form, bagging both goals for Frankfurt in their vital relegation dogfight with St. Pauli. The victory, Frankfurt's first of 2011, moves them up to 14th, two places and three points ahead of the vanquished guests, who remain third bottom on the back of their fifth straight loss.

The match did not begin promisingly for the home side, whose current lack of confidence was very much on show in an error-strewn opening phase. St. Pauli by contrast started well, Gerald Asamoah just failing to get on the end of a Max Kruse cross (6') and both he and Dennis Daube pulling saves out of home keeper Ralf Fährmann midway through the half. In the 33rd minute Alexander Meier tested Thomas Kessler with a long-range effort at the other end and a minute later, the St. Pauli keeper was squaring up to Gekas from the spot after Daube had hauled down the Greek frontman inside the area. Gekas won the resultant contest, bagging his 15th goal of the season and putting a welcome end to 706-minute personal drought.

Gekas back on song

Meier had another effort scrambled off, or possibly from just behind the line by Kessler five minutes before half-time and instead of being 2-0 up Frankfurt found themselves pegged back to 1-1 a couple of minutes later. Charles Takyi fired in a free kick that took a deflection off Georgios Tzavellas on its way past Fährmann and into the net.

Frankfurt's nervousness remained evident as the game progressed through a scrappy second half but their luck finally turned with just under quarter of an hour remaining. Gekas latched onto a long ball forward from Marco Russ, taking advantage of a slip by St. Pauli defender Markus Thorandt, and coolly dispatched his own second past Kessler to seal a valuable and perhaps confidence-enhancing win for Eintracht.

Speedway: Diamonds beat the Bandits to win Tyne Tweed Trophy

The speedway pre season got under way, with loads of regional trophies.  The Super diamonds took part in the Tyne Tweed Trophy.  Here are the two match reports covering the Diamonds first piece of silver.

Tyne / Tweed Trophy – 1st leg

Berwick Bandits 43  Newcastle Diamonds 50

The Newcastle “Sapphire Engineering” Diamonds went seven points up away at the Berwick Bandits on Saturday, leaving them in pole position for Sunday’s second leg of the 2011 Tyne / Tweed Trophy against traditional season openers from the Scottish / Northumbrian Borders.

A remarkably sharp-from-the-gate septet of Diamonds left the Bandits snoozing on the starting line far too many times, and despite the home side throwing a good number of thrilling passes into the equation, the number of points they could haul back was no where near enough to get back on terms with rampant Newcastle.

The “tale of the tapes” told a deeply-dark story for Berwick who could only win five races compared to Newcastle’s 10, and even a thrilling 8-1 to the home side in Heat 12 could not tip the balance away from the Geordie side.

Newcastle were in control from the off with Derek Sneddon, stand-in Diamonds’ skipper scorching away from the gate to take a famous victory ahead of his own Tyneside Dane, Rene Bach and Berwick’s new International Dane, Charlie Gjedde in a Diamond’s 1-5 heat result.

Richie Worrall, until this match – a complete unknown in the are, stunned the crowd with an excellent Heat Two win over the vibrant Jade Mudgway, and all this in his very first race ever on the Shielfield Park track.

Bandit’s thrill-a-minute new boy from Australia, Kozza Smith was would up like a watch spring, and lunged at the tapes in a nervy debut ride in Heat Three ending up off a 15 metre handicap, a deficit too great to overcome despite some excellent chasing throughout.

9-15 down Josef Franc, returning to his parent club, hit the power-button and grabbed a stack of grip on coming off the second bend to fly past the rapid starting Sneddon to take a decisive race win in Heat Five – his second and the club’s second in the match to hold the deficit at six points.

Stuart Robson and Lubos Tomicek shot out from the tapes in Heat seven, but the 1-5 was rescued to a degree for the home side with Lee Complin taking the Tyneside Czech comfortably off bend four on the opening lap as the score progressed to 17-25.

Mudgway squeezed his way between Sneddon and Worrall on the second bend of Heat Eight, and with Hynek Stichauer passing Worrall a lap later, Berwick had pulled two back with the score now at 21-27.

Come Heat Ten and Berwick were somewhat fortunate not to have another 1-5 hit against them as Robson’s engine blew on the third lap when in a maximum position with Tomicek, losing out with the resultant 3-3 with Gjedde taking second.

Bach and Sneddon didn’t suffer the same back luck in the 11th though as they gated hard over the sleepy Complin and new reserve from Hungary, Tamas Sike to take an easy 1-5 and push the score to 28-38.

With Berwick now trailing by 10, team manager Ian Rae used his tactical ride option on Smith in Heat 12, who slotted into second passing Tomicek on lap two, followed by his own observant partner Mudgway who let him through for his 6 doubled points in the Berwick 8-1 to narrow the gap to 36-39.

A Newcastle 2-4 in the 13th followed by a Robson win in the 14th over Mudgway and Franc and the win on the night belonged to the Diamonds, but there was still Heat 15 to go, a race finished 40 minutes later.

As Smith, Franc, Robson and Lemon came up to the tapes the paramedic was called away to deal with an emergency in the crowd to deal with a fan who had fallen ill, but once he returned things still didn’t run smoothly.

Robson became the meat in a Bandit first bend sandwich at the first attempt, falling to the ground with the referee ordering an all-4-back re-run, in which Robson was back on the deck when a wild inside attempt of a pass by Smith inside the Diamond on the first bend of lap sending both riders into the fence.

The referee had no option but to exclude Smith, but Robson could not take his place in the next re-run due to a pain in his foot, although thankfully it is expected he’ll be fully fit for Sunday’s second leg.

Newcastle’s team manager George English was keen to point out afterwards that all his team deserved praise, saying: “All my team deserved credit for the success tonight and I was particularly please with the manner our new reserve lads went about their job.

“Richie Worrall was brilliant, and even though Kyle Newman only scored one, he was still right in there in the thick of the action and deserved a lot more for his efforts.

“I think the way we rode the Bandits were fortunate not to be a lot further behind after their first leg, as our lads were on fire tonight although the most fortunate Diamond is Stuart who was lucky to escape serious injury in the Heat 15 crash with Smith who really didn’t have to make such a potentially disastrous move to gat past, it really was frightening to watch and thankfully Stu seems to have survived with very light injuries, indeed he should be riding in the second leg tonight – although he blew one motor early on and had his second one severely bashed about in Heat 15, so we’re not sure what he’ll be riding just yet.”

Tyne / Tweed Trophy – 2nd leg

Newcastle Diamonds 49 (99)   Berwick Bandits 44 (87) )

The Newcastle “Sapphire Engineering” Diamonds started last night’s second leg of the Tyne Tweed Trophy against in pole position having taken a seven point lead at Berwick on Saturday, but there was one concern – would new star Stuart Robson be fit.

At Shielfield Park 24 hours previously the Sunderland-born racer was taken into the fence by Bandit, Aussie Kozza Smith who got into bother trying an inside pass under Robbo in Heat 15 resulting in an ambulance ride complaining of a pain in the foot.

Thankfully come the start at Brough Park yesterday Robson had declared himself fit to ride, taking his place in Heat Three which he took in excellent form, passing the track expert that is Czech Josef Franc, now a Bandits’ heat leader taking the score on the night to 11-7, strengthening the Diamonds’ grip on the overall lead to 61-50.

Berwicks new number one, Dane Charlie Gjedde had a quiet Saturday night, but blew Brough Park apart taking two decisive wins in his opening races, whilst Czech Hynek Stichauer forced his way round fellow countryman, Lubos Tomicek on bend two only inches from the fence in a Heat Five 2-4, tightening the match to a 16-14 Newcastle lead.

Lee Complin took the Newcastle pair wide and high in Heat Six to take a solid lead in a shared 3-3 race with Tamas Sike drifting wide on bend four, losing his place to Derek Sneddon to maintain the two point difference, Newcastle still leading by nine for the trophy.

Heat Eight took three attempts to run, with controversy reigning when Jade Mudgway was excluded for a first bend fall, which for all intense and purposes looked like an active assist off the bike from Richie Worrall, but in that re-run without the Bandit, Stichauer split the home pair for a 4-2 with the score now 26-22.

Tomicek confounded the experts in Heat Nine to lead from the off and take a well-deserved three points, but behind both Tamas Sike and Complin passed Robson, the Diamond managing to regain one place in the 4-2 (30-24).

Both Bach and Sneddon went past Smith in tight formation down the back straight in Heat 10, only for Franc then to power up and battle hard with Bach to the end, the Bandit just stealing the second placed points in the 4-2 whilst Stichauer shocked the form book to the core in 11, taking the win having passed Gjedde and Lemon in the process and take a famous victory in the 3-3 which moved on the score to 37-29.

A second excellent win from Tomicek in Heat 12 put the Diamonds on and unassailable 90 points overall to clinch the title for the fourth season running.

Pride was still to play for over the last three races, and Berwick pushed one final effort in the 14th with the Bandits’ team manager Ian Rae nominating Franc as a tactical ride for double points, but with Robson gating and in front Newman fall alarmingly at the back on bend four resulting in a re-run without the new reserve.

In the re-run Robson failed to make the gate and ended up in third place with the tactical double out in front, and despite a super-human effort from the Diamond, Franc won for his six points in the 2-7, tightening the match at 46-41.

Team manager George English said: “We started last season with a good win in this competition and then went on to take three major national titles, so this all bodes well for the coming season and as ever this time it’s the League title we’re after.

Reports and pictures thanks to our friends at Newcastle Diamonds Speedway.

Friday 18 March 2011

Rugby Union: Rebels ravaged by the Reds in Super Rugby

Melbourne Rebels thrashed in Brisbane against the Reds. Report taking in full from the Rebels website www.melbournerebels.com.au


Reds 53 Rebels 3

The Reds ran out comprehensive bonus-point winners at home to the Melbourne Rebels on Friday night, triumphing 53-3 at Suncorp Stadium.

The Reds, coming off a bye-week, looked threatening from the off and had the game well within their grasp inside 20 minutes. The Rebels, disappointing at the set-piece, looked like a side missing the seven injured squad members unavailable for selection. Unable to consistently secure their own ball, the Rebels restructured backline also failed to spark, despite looking to run as frequently as possible.

The game began scrappily, with both sides making early mistakes. Danny Cipriani made the Reds pay for theirs after five minutes, opening the scoring with a 40-metre penalty.

The Reds hit back immediately with Anthony Faingaa crossing in the left corner after great improvisation from Quade Cooper. The Wallaby five-eighth claimed his own steepling Garryowen, switched play to the left with a glorious missed pass and after good support play Faingaa stretched over. Cooper’s conversion attempt hit the post.

During the early exchanges the Rebels made a concerted effort to run the ball as often as possible from defence. Unfortunately, they were barricaded in their own territory on more than one occasion by a red wall. Lachlan Mitchell was caught on one such run, conceded a penalty and Cooper extended the lead to 8-3.

After surviving what seemed a certain Rod Davies counter-attacking try, Adam Wallace-Harrison did punish the Rebels after 20 minutes, forcing his way over after the Reds elected to kick for the corner rather than accept a penalty attempt. Cooper’s conversion gave him two from three in the opening quarter and cemented the Reds’ early ascendancy.

This sparked the Rebels into life and for a brief period the game was up for grabs but a series of mistakes close to the Reds line denied them the much-needed score. Chief amongst these errors was Greg Somerville failing to hold on to a Cipriani feed with the line at his mercy. The scoreboard had almost ticked from three to eight but the experienced All-Black could not finish off the move.

This proved to be a defining moment in the half as Cooper released the mounting pressure with a 45-metre penalty. This was compounded by Scott Higginbotham crossing, supporting some excellent work from Leroy Houston who wrestled his way close to the Rebels line after taking the ball from the back of a five-metre scrum. Cooper’s conversion made the half-time score 25-3.

The likely bonus-point try arrived ten minutes into the second-half. A stolen Rebels lineout was picked off by Will Genia and from the resulting breakdown Ben Daley muscled his way over the line.

A bad night for the Rebels got much worse shortly after the hour mark as Michael Harris nabbed an opportunistic brace. A series of missed tackles gifted the substitute the Reds’ fifth try before he was first to a kick through after Nick Phipps lost the ball in contact to notch the sixth.

As both sides utilised their interchange benches the game began to fracture. There was still time however for Luke Morahan to score the final try of the night and Harris to kick the extras to extend the Reds’ lead to their record ever margin.

The Reds will be pleased with their promising start to 2011, racking up three wins in their first four fixtures, all against Australian opponents. The Rebels, with one win from their first five, will have to quickly regroup ahead of a crucial home fixture against the Hurricanes at AAMI Park next Friday.

Melbourne Rebels

1. Nic Henderson, 2. Ged Robinson, 3. Greg Somerville, 4. Alister Campbell, 5. Adam Byrnes, 6. Jarrod Saffy, 7. Tom Chamberlain, 8. Gareth Delve (vc), 9. Nick Phipps, 10. Danny Cipriani, 11. Cooper Vuna, 12. Stirling Mortlock (c), 13. Lachlan Mitchell, 14. Afusipa Taumoepeau, 15. Julian Huxley

Reserves: 16. Heath Tessmann, 17. Laurie Weeks, 18. Hugh Pyle, 19. Tim Davidson, 20. Richard Kingi, 21. Peter Betham, 22. Luke Rooney

Head Coach: Rod Macqueen

Reds

1. Ben Daley, 2. Saia Faingaa, 3. James Slipper, 4. Rob Simmons, 5. Adam Wallace-Harrison, 6. Scott Higginbotham, 7. Beau Robinson, 8. Leroy Houston, 9. Will Genia, 10. Quade Cooper, 11. Digby Ioane, 12. Anthony Faingaa, 13. Ben Tapuai, 14. Rod Davies, 15. Ben Lucas

Reserves: 16. James Hanson, 17. Greg Holmes, 18. Radike Samo, 19. Ed Quirk, 20. Liam Gill, 21. Michael Harris, 22. Luke Morahan.

Head Coach: Ewen McKenzie

Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane

Wednesday 16 March 2011

Fix 'n' Mix: Sports Pulse new boys up against the Bandits.

Welcome, Newcastle Diamonds Speedway team, to Sports Pulse.  The Diamonds compete in the National Premier League.  The League season is still a few weeks away, however, this weekend sees the Tyne Tweed Cup.  On Saturday, the Diamonds travel to the border country to take on Berwick Bandits - tapes up 7pm.  The return leg is on Sunday, starting 6.30.

In Rugby Union, Harpenden have the weekend off. Melbourne Rebels represent Sports Pulse in the 15 code.  The Rebels travel to Brisbane on Friday, to take on the Reds in Super Rugby.  At this point, I would like to wish England good luck in their quest for the Grand Slam. To all our Irish readers, happy St Patricks Day.  To the super Falcons, good luck against Gloucester in the LV Cup Final on Sunday.

Rugby League: London Skolars play their first home Co-Operative Bank League 1 game on Sunday. They welcome Doncaster to the New River Stadium, kick off 3pm. This comes on the back of a heavy defeat at the paws of the Cougars last week.

Football:  'March to the Arch' continues this busy period, as all our trackers reach the business part of the competitions.  This Saturday sees the 2nd legs of the F.A.Trophy Semi Finals.  Our boys, Mansfield Town, take a 1-0 lead to Luton Town on Saturday.  Hope my mate Cloughie makes the whole game THIS Saturday, missed the first half of the Hatters visit to Cambridge on Tuesday.

In Sol y Futbol the super UD Lanzarote travel to Pajara Playas. Following last weeks derby victory, Los Rojillos lie 5 points clear at the top of the league..

Kult & Punk witnessed St Pauli drop into the relegation zone last Sunday.  The boys have no easy task this weekend, as they travel to Eintracht Frankfurt.

Hockey:  Jesmond Parish Churches have a busy weekend. The Men entertain Hartlepool Caled, while the Ladies travel to take on Newcastle Medics. That could get very messy.

Basketball:  Hull Wasps host Stockport Falcons this weekend, tip off 1930 on Saturday. This is the final regular season game for the Wasps.

Ice Hockey:  Chelmsford Chieftains have a double weekend.  On Saturday they travel to Bracknell Hornets face off 1740, returning home on Sunday to play Oxford City Stars face off 1830.

As always please check with the clubs featured to confirm time, day and venue of all above fixtures.

Before we go this week, please stop for a moment and pray for all who have lost loved ones and are suffering in Japan. Our thoughts are very much with you.

I would like also to remember a very good friend of SportTrades, on the 3rd Anniversary of his passing. Andrew 'Turkish' Cassidy, was a very good friend and colleague, truly missed. Here's to the fantastic memories.  We have made tomorrow Celebrate 17 Day.  17 was a significant number during his life, so if you wish to join in, please donate 17p. £1.70, £17, (you get the idea) to a charity of your choice. McMillan Nurses, Local Hospices or C.R.Y are our suggestions, but whatever you see fit. Thank you.

Tuesday 15 March 2011

Speedway: The Pulse is following those Diamond Geezers from Byker

More two wheeled sport heads too Sports Pulse.  The brand new speedway season is upon us. As always Sports Pulse will shy away from the top division, the Elite League is fantastically covered by our friends at Sky Sports.  We will be following the Premier League and in particular, the mighty Newcastle Diamonds.

Action starts this very weekend.  The Diamonds will meet Berwick Bandits in the 1st leg of the Tyne Tweed Cup.

Keep it here for the match reports and follow the progress of the team throughout the season.

Rugby League: Cougars teach the Skolars a lesson.

Keighley Cougars 66 London Skolars 6

After last week’s tryfest, Skolars were on the receiving end of a heavy defeat in their opening league game. When James Anthony picked up an injury in training, coach Joe Mbu had to re-organise just before kick-off with Aaron Small coming into the team minutes before kick-off.

Both sides failed to control the ball initially, but two quickfire tries put the home side ahead, the first for Scott Law, the second saw Luke Helliwell throw a dummy to open a gap near the line.

Olly Purslow made a good break, but couldn’t quite get a pass out in space. Cougars attacked again and started to dominate. Will Cartledge ran though a big hole in the defensive line and when Neil Thorman made an uncharacteristic error from a kick through, Danny Lawton took full advantage. Lawton added a second soon afterwards and when Gavin Duffy scored in the corner, Keighley were 34 points up before the half hour mark. By that point Skolars were missing Jamie Boston who took a knock to the neck which led to a trip to A&E.

A Dylan Skee break was continued by Purslow but Ade Adebisi didn’t have enough space to go for the line and was bundled into touch. Skolars finally got onto the scoreboard when Jy-Mel Coleman made interception from 35 metres out, with Neil Thorman converting.

Danny Lawton completed his hat-trick just before half time and his 9 conversions left him with a 32 point haul.

Skolars looked to have gained some scant consolation after moving the ball to the wing after the final hooter had sounded, but Ade Adebisi was adjudged offside and the try was denied.

Monday 14 March 2011

Sol y Futbol: Rojillos win in the Lanzarote derby in Arecife

Ian is very much back on the case. He files his report from the weekends local derby well before the next game.  With all the Factor 10 wiped from between the buttons on the keyboard, there will be no stopping the Chap now.  Reporting Los Rojillos is a dirty job and Mr Lane is our man.

LANZAROTE 1 MARÍTIMA 0


A single goal by Captain Rubén Rodríguez was enough to claim all three points in the local derby match which sends the Rojillos five points clear at the top of the Tercera division (fourth tier).

Once again this game will not be remembered as a classic but with just one defeat in the last 14 games Lanzarote are in the prime position with just nine matches remaining. No team in this league are guaranteed automatic promotion but the league Champions would only have a two leg one match play off with the winners of that being promoted to Segunda B (league 1).

Even if a team loses this match they would still have another opportunity by joining the three other teams in the play offs. Another incentive for finishing top is that you automatically qualify for next seasons Copa Del Rey (F.A.Cup) and if you wish to see Lanzarote´s love affair with the Cup just click onto History.

The opening 20 minutes were fought mainly in the centre of the pitch with both sides showing each other a little too much respect and with neither side forcing the play.

In the 26th minute Lanzarote´s first attack of any meaning was to prove fruitful. Toñito raced down the left wing and cut the ball back to an unmarked Rubén Rodríguez. The Captain back in form following his two month injury absence calmly planted the ball wide of the Marítima keeper Kevin into the bottom right hand corner giving his side a 1-0 advantage.

On the half hour the Rojillos should have doubled their lead. Danger man Toñito set up Rosman, his initial strike was well saved but the rebound fell back in the path of Lanzarote´s top marksman and his second effort was brilliantly beaten away to safety by the Marítima keeper.

The Rojillos had settled and were dominating proceedings whereas the Rojinegras (red and blacks) lacked ideas and were fortunate to go into the break with just a one goal deficit.

Five minutes after the break and the Rojillos had another opportunity to strengthen their grip on the match. A cross from the right was controlled by Ayoze but the normally ever reliable midfielder scuffed his shot wide.

The away side then entered into their best stage of the match though were restricted to long range efforts all of which failed to test the Lanzarote keeper Alejandro. In the 65th minute Rosman was put through but again the Marítima keeper kept his team in the match by saving with his feet.

With the game not yet won the away side pushed a defender up front leaving a skeleton defence. In the 92nd minute a fierce drive from sub Francis Torres found its way through a host of players but the Lanzarote keeper had his eye on the ball all the way and saved with ease.

Moments later and with the last action of the match Ayoze set up Rosman. The Marítima keeper once again excelled producing a brilliant save with his feet to deny the Lanzarote striker for the umpteenth time.

It proved to be a great weekend for the Rojillos as their closest rivals Las Palmas B lost 0-1 against their fiercest rivals Tenerife B. Lanzarote open up a five point gap though Las Palmas B do have a game in hand and are yet to host Lanzarote. For both teams the fight for the Championship lies in their own hands.

Lanzarote will cross the 10km stretch of water to Fuerteventura next week as they take on mid table side Playas Jandia.

GOALS

1-0 min 26 Rubén Rodríguez

Kult & Punk: Stuttgart snatch late victory in this basement battle.

The boys traipsed along to the relegation battle, only to be disappointed.  St Pauli are beaten 2-1 and Kult and Punk are thrashed at table top Space Invaders by some Stuttgart crew. Guest Ale at Zoe's Bar this week was Brewers Armpit, an aromatic and cheeky  little number.

VfB Stuttgart moved out of the bottom three for the first time since mid-November as Sven Schipplock's late strike secured a vital 2-1 victory away to fellow strugglers FC St. Pauli.


It was a harsh turnout for the Kiezkicker, who had been the more adventurous for much of the game and deservedly went in front through Fabian Boll's opener. However, after Zdravko Kuzmanovic had equalised with a fierce strike soon afterwards, the home side were punished for failing to convert any of their chances inbetween when Schipplock fired in two minutes from the end

Pauli with more of the game

The Swabians' early strategy afforded the home side plenty of room on the freshly laid Millerntor pitch and they were almost left red faced with 14 minutes played when Charles Takyi was sent into the clear, only to be denied by the offside flag. Kuzmanovic hit a rasping free-kick narrowly wide at the other end moments later, but still it was no major surprise when St. Pauli took the lead shortly afterwards.

Boll became the first ever St. Pauli player to score against Stuttgart in the Bundesliga when he chested down Fin Bartels' chip into the box before finishing against the runs of the lunging Serdar Tasci and goalkeeper Sven Ulreich. The visitors soon drew level, however, as Kuzmanovic took aim from distance and fired an arrowed low shot through a crowd of players and into the bottom left corner.

Stuttgart invite pressure

Further chances for Tamas Hajnal, Christian Gentner and Georg Niedermeier all pulled St. Pauli keeper Thomas Kessler into action, but it was the hosts who went closest to finding the target before the break as Gerald Asamoah crashed a superb volley against the underside of the crossbar. The former Germany international was convinced he'd scored, but replays showed the officials had made the right assertion that the ball had not bounced over the line.

As in the first half it was again St. Pauli who began the brighter after the restart. Bartels fizzed a shot from the right channel which was too hot for VfB keeper Ulreich to handle on 49 minutes, and Stuttgart continued to invite pressure onto themselves with countless misplaced passes and aimless clearances.

Super sub Schipplock

Kuzmanovic threatened to provide a release for Bruno Labbadia's laborious side when he crashed another well-hit free-kick through the wall, but Kessler was again well placed to turn the ball around the post. At the other end the Kiezkicker continued to press, with VfB grateful for a superbly-timed Tasci tackle to stop Max Kruse in his tracks after the midfielder had been released by Dennis Daube.

There was always a danger that Pauli could be made to pay for their various missed opportunities, and the first cracks in an otherwise decent performance appeared when Timo Gebhart attempted to catch out Kessler with a quick free-kick. The St. Pauli keeper reacted well on that occasion to parry away, but he was helpless two minutes before the end as substitute Schipplock strode forward on the counter before striking a low shot into the left corner from just outside the box. It was a cruel blow to the home side who now find themselves in the relegation playoff place. Stuttgart meanwhile jump three places to 13th, giving their season a deceptively shinier gloss.

Line-ups:

Pauli: Kessler - Volz, Thorandt, Gunesch, Bruns (Sukuta-Pasu 73') - Boll, Daube - Kruse (Ebbers 81'), Takyi (Naki 73'), Bartels - Asamoah

Stuttgart: Ulreich - Träsch, Niedermeier, Tasci, Molinaro (Celozzi 52') - Gentner, Kuzmanovic - Harnik, Hajnal, Okazaki (Schipplock 83') - Pogrebnyak (Gebhart 63')

Goals: 1-0 Boll (19'), 1-1 Kuzmanovic (24'), 1-2 Schipplock (88')

Sunday 13 March 2011

Rugby Union: Rebels have no bite to finnish off the Sharks

Report taking in full from the Rebels website.

Rebels 32 Sharks 34

The Rebels fell agonisingly short of their second consecutive home win as they went down 34-32 to the unbeaten Sharks.

The game swung dramatically in favour of both sides but it was the Sharks who prevailed to preserve their perfect start to the 2011 season.

Bismarck du Plessis’ try was the platform for the South Africans to take an early 13-3 lead but tries from Cooper Vuna, Julian Huxley and a dazzling solo effort from Danny Cipriani wrestled the Rebels into a 25-13 lead shortly after half-time. Despite some incredible resilience in defence, the home side could not withstand the ensuing Sharks onslaught and tries to Lwazi Mvovo, Meyer Bosman and Ryan Kankowski took the game back the way of the Durban-based outfit.

Jarrod Saffy’s late try did not alter the final standings but did earn the Rebels bonus points for scoring four tries and being within seven points of the Sharks at the final siren.

Another raucous crowd of 15,126 willed the Rebels on throughout, on a pulsating night of Super Rugby, with bullish cries of ‘Rebels’ carrying into the Melbourne night.

Concerns that the Rebels set piece would not stand up to the test of the fearsome Sharks pack proved unfounded. Even without Kevin O’Neill, who withdrew after the warm up with a recurrence of the calf-strain that ruled him out of the previous round, the Rebels played with aggression and intensity. O’Neill’s replacement, Hugh Pyle, was a standout, as the Rebels dominated their own lineout ball and pressurised the Sharks scrum.

It wasn’t just the forwards who raised their games after last week’s disappointment in Hamilton. The backs were far more cohesive, with intricate midfield interplays and halfback run-arounds a feature.

True to their pre-match words, the Rebels matched the Sharks for intensity in the early stages. Both sides smashed each other at the contest with Cipriani’s teasing kicks for the corner the only early subtlety.

A Pat Lambie penalty after 12 minutes got the scoreboard ticking over in the Sharks’ favour, a kick that prefaced a period of forceful Sharks possession with multiple phases stretching the Rebels.

Eventually, Bismarck du Plessis was fed on the burst from the edge of a ruck, careered through a pair of tackles and burrowed his way over the line. Lambie’s extras gave The Sharks a 10-0 lead with a quarter-of-an-hour gone.

Cipriani and Lambie exchanged penalties as The Sharks began to flex their significant muscles. The Rebels would not be cowed though and fought hard for both field position and possession as the half wore on.

That said, Cooper Vuna’s try after 31 minutes took everyone by surprise.

A Mark Gerrard counter attack drove the Rebels down the left wing. Nic Henderson received quick ball from the breakdown and fed the flying winger 20 metres out. That was all the invitation the powerful former NRL star required as a he executed a classic show-and-go to draw one tackle, hand-off another and score near the posts. Cipriani ensured the conversion was a formality and the Rebels had a foothold back in the contest.

The foothold became much firmer shortly afterwards as the maligned Rebels scrum forced the feted Sharks pack into conceding a penalty 45 metres from goal. Cipriani made the distance with ease and with sufficient accuracy to level the scores.

The momentum was well and truly in the Rebels favour and the incredible turnaround continued when Julian Huxley crossed after 38 minutes. The Rebels attacked at pace and as the ball passed through the hands of the backs under the direction of Stirling Mortlock, Julian Huxley was offered the chance to stretch his legs and race into the left corner. Cipriani missed the conversion but that mattered little to the Rebel Army as the home side went into the break 18-13 to the good.

Within seconds of the restart that had become 25-13 as the Rebels momentum threatened to become an avalanche thanks to the individual brilliance of Danny Cipriani.

From quick lineout ball near halfway, the fly-half took the second pass, threw an outrageous dummy and waltzed his way through the broken Sharks line. As he advanced on the posts a glorious running sidestep bamboozled the remaining defenders and allowed the Englishman to dive under the posts.

As the Rebels threatened to run riot, the Sharks hit back. Flanker, Willem Alberts broke through the Rebels line and safe hands cycled the ball out wide for Lwazi Mvovo to cross, with Lambie maintaining his 100 per cent success rate with the boot.

Both sides passed up opportunities to score during the next ten minutes as the game began to fracture. The Sharks, in particular, looked certain to score on 50 minutes but Cooper Vuna intercepted. The big winger was sent to the sin-bin shortly afterwards, penalised for being persistently offside as the Sharks took a series of tap penalties to pummel the Rebels defence.

The Rebels defence held firm in Vuna’s absence, with the Melbourne forwards putting in a memorable shift to repel wave after wave of Sharks attacks.

As the clock ticked towards the 70-minute mark both sides became increasingly desperate: the Sharks to find a breakthrough and the Rebels to snuff out any opportunity of a comeback.

As the pressure built, a Sharks try looked inevitable, and from a scrum five metres out Willem Alberts seemed to have done enough but his lunge towards the line, with Mortlock in tow, was denied on television referral. That simply delayed the inevitable, however, as that decision prompted another penalty, from which Ryan Kankowski bludgeoned his way over to level the scores. Lambie’s straightforward conversion took the Sharks back into the lead with just nine minutes remaining.

The South Africans took the game out of Rebel reach shortly afterwards in unfortunate circumstances. Adrian Jacobs kicked on a missed pass in the Rebels backline and as the ball bounced towards the right touchline it refused to roll out. A second Jacobs kick squirted the ball infield but the covering Cipriani was on hand to mop up. In desperation to return his side on the attack, however, the fly-half’s loose pass failed to find a Rebel jersey, landing instead for Meyer Bosman to plunge gleefully onto under the posts.

The indefatigable Rebels would not accept defeat and continued to push for a result. The dream looked possible when, just a minute from time, Jarrod Saffy was pushed over as a stirring rolling maul overwhelmed the Sharks defence.

That proved to be the last action of the match however, as there was no more time to offer a repeat of the late heroics against the Brumbies.