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Posts Tagged ‘rugby’

Another British Royal Wedding: Queen Elizabeth’s Granddaughter Zara Phillips Engaged!

Prince William and Kate Middleton aren’t the only posh Brits getting hitched in the New Year: Will’s cousin Zara Phillips has joined the club! Phillips, the eldest granddaughter of Prince Phillip and Queen Elizabeth II, is engaged to wed her rugby star boyfriend Mike Tindall. The two have been a couple since 2003. Tindall, 32, [...]

Watch Live Rugby World Cup Online Posted By : Paddy Chang

Live Internet TV | Online TV technology allows you to watch over 4,500 HD channels right on your PC.

Watch Rugby Online On Your Computer Posted By : Paddy Chang

Live Internet TV | Online TV technology allows you to watch over 4,500 HD channels right on your PC.

Mickey Rourke to play gay rugby star in new movie

American actor Mickey Rourke is set to play the role of gay British rugby star Gareth Thomas in a new biopic. Rourke thought Thomas would be the ‘perfect model’ for a movie after reading a report about him ‘coming out’. Rourke and Thomas met for dinner after Rourke appeared as a guest on Jonathan Ross’ [...]

Twin Uganda bombings kill 74 at World Cup parties


KAMPALA (Reuters/AFP) – Somali rebel group Al-Shabaab said on Monday they had carried out two bomb attacks in Uganda that killed 74 soccer fans watching the World Cup final on television, Al Jazeera television reported.
The explosions in the closing moments of Sunday’s match ripped through two crowded venues in the capital Kampala — an Ethiopian-themed restaurant and a rugby club.
Al-Shabaab rebels in Somalia have threatened to attack Uganda for sending peacekeeping troops to the anarchic country to prop up the Western-backed government.
“At one of the scenes, investigators identified a severed head of a Somali national, which we suspect could have been a suicide bomber,” said army spokesman Felix Kulayigye.
“We suspect it’s Al-Shabaab because they’ve been promising this for long,” he said on Monday.
An Al-Shabaab commander in Mogadishu praised the attacks but admitted he did not know whether his group was behind them.
“Uganda is a major infidel country supporting the so-called government of Somalia,” said Sheikh Yusuf Isse, an Al -Shabaab commander in the Somali capital.
“We know Uganda is against Islam and so we are very happy at what has happened in Kampala. That is the best news we ever heard,” he said.
Burundi, which also contributes troops to the Somalia peacekeeping mission, has stepped up security, an army spokesman said in the capital, Bujumbura.
One American was among those killed and President Barack Obama, condemning what he called deplorable and cowardly attacks, said Washington was ready to help Uganda in hunting down those responsible. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also condemned the attacks on “innocent spectators.”
One bombing targeted the Ethiopian Village restaurant, a popular night-spot which was heaving with soccer fans and is frequented by foreign visitors. The second attack struck the Lugogo Rugby Club also showing the match.
Twin coordinated attacks have been a hallmark of Al-Qaeda and groups linked to Osama bin LadenÂ’s militant network.
“Right now the official figure is 74 dead,” government spokesman Fred Opolot said. “There is a white woman, one person of Indian descent, 10 Eritreans or Ethiopians.”
The US State Department confirmed that one American citizen was killed and five injured. The US charity Invisible Children said one of its members, Nate Henn from Wilmington, Delaware, had been killed in the rugby club blast.
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni visited the rugby club.
The blasts come in the closing moments of the final between Spain and the Netherlands and left shocked survivors reeling among corpses and scattered chairs.
“We were watching soccer here and then when there were three minutes to the end of the match an explosion came … and it was so loud,” witness Juma Seiko said at the rugby club.
Heavily armed police cordoned off both blast sites and searched the areas with sniffer dogs while dazed survivors helped pull the wounded from the wreckage.
In Kampala, Somali residents voiced fears of a backlash.
In Washington, US National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said Obama was “deeply saddened by the loss of life resulting from these deplorable and cowardly attacks.”
“The United States is ready to provide any assistance requested by the Ugandan government,” said Hammer.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned Monday bomb blasts in the Ugandan capital Kampala.
A statement issued by BanÂ’s office said the United Nations secretary general had expressed hope the perpetrators of the attacks would be brought to justice and prosecuted.
Ban “strongly condemns the vicious bombings in Kampala that claimed the lives of dozens of people and left hundreds wounded among Ugandans and other nationalities at establishments where they were watching the World Cup final,” it said.

Charlotte Church Calls It Quits With Rugby Star Gavin Henson

Welsh songbird Charlotte Church and her longtime beau Gavin Henson have reportedly split, just two months after announcing wedding plans.The singer-and-TV star and her rugby player fiance have children Ruby, two, and 16-month-old Dexter. Sources tell England’s News of the World the couple called it quits after months of constant bickering. “It is an incredibly sad [...]

‘Invictus’ star Morgan Freeman says he’s no rugby fan

Hollywood star Morgan Freeman insists he’s not a rugby fan, despite starring in a new film based on the sport.
The 72-year-old Oscar winner starred as Nelson Mandela in Invictus, a film about the sport’’s famous 1995 World Cup in South Africa, directed by Clint Eastwood.
Freeman says he still knows ”little to nothing” about rugby.
””I wasn”t [...]

New Clint Eastwood-Matt Damon-Morgan Freeman trailer!

Here is the new trailer for a very special movie about Nelson Mandela and the South African rugby team. It deals with sports, politics, and the racial struggles that the country went through during the 1995 rugby World Cup Championship.
The film is directed by Clint Eastwood and is starring Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon. Enjoy!

***Originally [...]

Russell Crowe takes blame for rugby team scuffle

Hollywood star Russell Crowe has apologised and taken the responsibility for a tussle between his rugby team members during the end-of-season party.
The 45-year-old actor, who co-owns Australia’’s South Sydney Rabbitohs club, has blamed himself for failing to talk to his team’s coach and letting the situation get out of hand.
In a letter printed in the [...]

Towering talent finds new role a tall order

Three years after retiring from professional rugby league, Wayne McDonald is back among the bruises.  The former Leeds Rhinos, St Helens, Hull and Wakefield Hull prop is one of the driving forces behind the Emirates National Rugby League (ENRL), which was inaugurated at its first AGM last week.Three years after retiring from professional rugby league, Wayne McDonald is back among the bruises. The former Leeds Rhinos, St Helens, Hull and Wakefield Hull prop is one of the driving forces behind the Emirates National Rugby League (ENRL), which was inaugurated at its first AGM last week.

England will host 2015 World Cup

Wembley Stadium

England are favourites to be awarded the right to stage the 2015 Rugby World Cup on Tuesday.

The International Rugby Board (IRB) will announce the hosts of the 2015 and 2019 events in Dublin.

England are being heavily tipped to land the event after the competition’s organisers recommended their bid to the IRB council.

South Africa, Japan and Italy are also in contention for 2015, with Japan being recommended as hosts for 2019.

The Rugby Football Union (RFU) claims England would lay on the biggest World Cup to date, generating a surplus at least £60m bigger than that of the other bids.

It says three million people would watch the games live at stadiums that would include Wembley, Anfield, Old Trafford and Twickenham.

The RFU also hopes to stage matches at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, even though Wales would not be co-hosts for the tournament.

To be successful, England must win at least 14 votes from the 24-strong IRB council. The bid received a major boost last month when they were declared as the preferred bidder of Rugby World Cup Limited (RWCL), the body inside the IRB which organises the tournament.

Japan, aiming to be the first Asian country to host the Rugby World Cup, narrowly lost out to New Zealand in the voting for the 2011 event.

RWCL believe that having the World Cup in England would generate sufficient revenue to allow the IRB to take it into the emerging market of Japan four years later.

"I think we have done everything we could. But our campaign will continue until midnight in the hotel bar on Monday," said Nobby Mashimo, Japan’s bid chief.

In the past, Rugby World Cup votes have been blighted by accusations of horse-trading, with claims that nations have swapped votes for the right to stage lucrative matches.

England was a co-host of the tournament in 1991 and 1999, while South Africa won the event on home soil in 1995.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown says the 2015 Rugby World Cup would form part of a "golden decade" of sport in the UK, sandwiched between the 2012 Olympics and the football World Cup, which the Football Association is hopeful of bringing to English soil in 2018.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Threat to England’s World Cup bid

• RFU remain confident they will be hosts
• Springboks believe process was biased

South Africa will today attempt to torpedo England’s chances of hosting the 2015 rugby World Cup by arguing that the bid process was flawed and weighted in Twickenham’s favour.

The tournament’s hosts are due to be named today when the International Rugby Board’s council meets in Dublin. England has been recommended to the council as the preferred choice of the Rugby World Cup Ltd (RWC) board. But South Africa and Italy, the two countries who lost out, were lobbying furiously yesterday to try to derail England’s bid.

If they can persuade the council not to rubber-stamp a recommendation which would make England the 2015 hosts and take the 2019 tournament to Japan, a decision on where those events will be played will be determined by a vote of the council members. South Africa and Italy, together with England and Japan, would make their pitch to the council before the vote is taken.

South Africa’s challenge to the English bid is less against the decision that was made than the way it was done. They claim the tender specification was twice changed, once to England’s clear benefit when the condition that bids had to be underwritten by a government guarantee for the £80m demanded by RWC was dropped. England, unlike South Africa, had no such guarantee.

South Africa also believe that the process favoured Twickenham from the start because the IRB needs a cash-rich tournament in 2015, with the 2011 World Cup in New Zealand set to bring in the lowest return for 12 years. It was an open secret that IRB officials wanted England to make a bid to help make up for the shortfall expected in New Zealand.

The IRB has held off negotiating some commercial deals, such as television rights, for 2011 in the hope of getting more lucrative deals on the back of its announcement of the 2015 hosts. The board believes a World Cup held in England could make a profit close on £200m. South Africa struggled to sell tickets for the recent Lions tour and the opening Tri-Nations match against New Zealand on Saturday.

“Time will be set aside for us to state our case,” said Johan Prinsloo, the chief executive of the South African Rugby Union. “We are concerned about the process that was followed before the recommendations were made. We said as much in a letter to the IRB but, unfortunately, I cannot be specific. We have also spoken to the people we needed to because there were issues and we made sure we went through the right channels.

“We believe we must arrive at the right rugby decision. We have a strong case. We wouldn’t go to these extremes if we didn’t think we had a chance.”

South Africa’s seven-strong delegation arrived in Dublin on Sunday. Key unions in the vote, such as Australia, New Zealand, Scotland, Ireland and France were being lobbied yesterday in a five-star Dublin hotel. The new tendering process, which left it to the RWC to make a recommendation to the council, had been designed to avoid this but some council members are upset at effectively losing some of their power.

The RFU is confident its bid will be approved. “We were delighted to be recommended for 2015 but we know that it is not the end of it,” said the RFU’s commercial director, Paul Vaughan. “Our bid was based on maximising revenue with the New Zealand World Cup not likely to be particularly brilliant from a financial aspect. We expect to sell enough tickets to be able to give RWC a surplus, on top of all they will take from the commercial arrangements. Our bid would give them the maximum amount to distribute throughout the game over the following four years.

“That will be our argument to the council. We are not going to lobby for votes in the traditional way by offering this or that: we are simply going to show that a World Cup in England in 2015 would be the best for the world game. That is something, at a time of economic recession, that should be paramount in the minds of everyone. The IRB makes its money from World Cups and ours will deliver.”

A decision on the 2019 hosts is also due to be made today and Japan have been proposed to stage that event. South Africa and Italy have pitched for both tournaments but are mainly interested in 2015.

England and Japan need 14 votes to get the recommendation through. The council is 28-strong, but two, the vice-chairman, Bill Beaumont and the chairman, Bernard Lapasset (unless it is the casting vote) do not have votes. The four home unions, France, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand have two votes each; Italy, Japan, Argentina and Canada one each and the continental unions – Africa, Europe, North America, South America, Asia and Oceania – also having one each.

Japan hosting the latter tournament is seen by the IRB as not just a way of exploiting the potentially lucrative Asian market but helping the Board in its bid for rugby to become an Olympic event in October.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Toulon warms to Jonny Wilkinson

• Fly-half ready for debut in pre-season friendly against Brive
• ‘Special person’ already making a big impact in adopted city

With temperatures nudging 35C, the beaches bulging with holidaymakers, and fires in the hills above nearby Marseille, the French rugby season, and arguably an important part of England’s as well, kicks off on the Côte d’Azur tonight.

Toulon versus Brive at the Stade Félix-Mayol is the first of the season’s friendlies and between them the clubs share so much English talent that Martin Johnson could make a decent argument for a couple of days by the Mediterranean. After the spring signing season Brive now have Riki Flutey, Jamie Noon and Shaun Perry on their books alongside Andy Goode and Steve Thompson, while Toulon did the biggest deal of the lot, persuading Jonny Wilkinson to switch from Newcastle.

For English rugby, the deal was seismic. Forget the money, forget the injuries, forget that he is now 30, Wilkinson commands attention like no other player. Much rides on the deal struck between Toulon’s colourful owner, Mourad Boudjellal, and the man who kicked the points that won England the World Cup, but so far things look better than promising.

Wilkinson says he feels a “decade younger”, and it looked that way last night when Toulon went through their final training session before tonight’s kick-off. After summer he looks tanned and super- fit and if the early start to the season and the heat are strange he seems unworried. “It’s a little different to rugby in England,” he says. “In England, we start [the season] at the beginning of September. Here, it’s a little earlier but the friendlies will be important for the team and for me in terms of finding form before the season starts.”

Wilkinson and his girlfriend Shelley Jenkins have found a house which the club will rent and the two cars that came as part of the contract worth about ¤750,000 (£645,000) a year arrived this week. Club and city are clearly satisfied with what they have seen. “He’s a special person,” says the team manager Tom Whitford. Ask around at one of the many harbourside restaurants and you will hear how important it was that Wilkinson had started his French lessons long before signing on M Boudjellal’s dotted line.

From day one Wilkinson has impressed everyone here. More than 5,000 turned out for his first training session and they have since heard him say repeatedly – and in French – that while he is a proud Englishman and very happy to be back in Johnson’s elite squad, it is Toulon and the start of the season proper, the 14 August game against Stade Français, that is dominating his thoughts.

He is even hinting at an early departure from the England training camp in London next month. “As far as I know at the moment, I’ll be going to the training camp in England. It’s a great pleasure for me. I’m very proud to be there with that team but I will be able to finish the camp a little early to be back here in plenty of time to prepare.”

That was what Toulon wanted to hear. The port city, home to France’s Mediterranean fleet, was once a rugby stronghold as well. They were champions three times, the last time in 1992, before a hole was found in the club’s books and in 1999 they became the first to suffer relegation for financial irregularities. Since then they have been unable to stay up when promoted to the Top 14.

Boudjellal, a rugby-mad son of Toulon who made his money from comic books, took over four seasons ago, launching into a series of high-profile signings. Coachloads of galácticos, some at the wrong end of their careers, were hired and others like Dan Carter were approached. Victor Matfield, George Gregan, Jerry Collins and Anton Oliver did not hang around long. Oliver checked in the second half of his two-year contract. “Madness? Yes, that’s a good word for it. It’s a train wreck,” said the former All Black hooker, while exonerating his former New Zealand captain Tana Umaga, then still the coach, from blame. “It’s not a reflection on Tana, but powers greater than that.”

Wilkinson and his advisers looked closely before agreeing a deal which is for one year, but which could extend to three. After 12 years with Newcastle he did not sign until Toulon were guaranteed promotion and by then it was known that Umaga would be making way for Philippe Saint-André as head coach, with the former All Black captain looking after the backs.

In fact, Saint-André has been steering Toulon since before Christmas which accounts for the more level-headed signings of the summer. From Saint-André’s Sale, Toulon brought Juan Martín Fernández-Lobbe and Sébastien Bruno, while Felipe Contepomi moved from Leinster along with Premiership stalwarts Tom May, Rory Lamont and Kris Chesney.

Whitford says Wilkinson’s arrival offers more to the project than a quality No10. “He’s the perfect professional. He not only works hard at his own game but we’ve got a 19-year-old fly-half [Romain Barthélémy] on our books and he has been working with him every day.” In Pierre Mignoni, the 32-year-old scrum-half from Clermont Auvergne, Wilkinson clearly sees a soul-mate. “I have always been a perfectionist but now my definition of perfection has changed. When I was younger I had specific aims and goals to achieve, but now I just want to get the best out of myself every time I train or play. It’s not as goal-orientated as it was.

“He [Mignoni] is motivated by the same things as I am, be it working hard, wanting to be the best and wanting to win. It doesn’t take much effort to play with someone like him because he’s very professional. He’s very precise and he’s got a habit of doing the important things all the time, day after day.

“I need to learn a lot here but I am fit and it’s not hard to play with these guys.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Falcons ready for revenge

The EmiratesThe Emirates’ national rugby league representative team, the UAE Falcons, host English side Saddleworth Rangers tonight, but they will be without five try scorers who crossed the line during their last outings against Liban Espoir. Dubai Exiles’ Josh Sherrin and Luke Sinclair, along with Josh

IRB sevens calendar revealed

The countdown to the 2009 Dubai Rugby Sevens can now officially get under way after the International Rugby Board released the dates for the eight events that comprise the 2009-10 IRB Sevens World Series.  The UAE has once more been charged with kicking off the new season when the sporting andThe countdown to the 2009 Dubai Rugby Sevens can now officially get under way after the International Rugby Board released the dates for the eight events that comprise the 2009-10 IRB Sevens World Series. The UAE has once more been charged with kicking off the new season when the sporting and

Lions must show more bite in Joburg

Anyone doubting the physicality of modern-day rugby union must only look at the British and Irish Lions tour of South Africa as witness to the brutal demands made on playersAnyone doubting the physicality of modern-day rugby union must only look at the British and Irish Lions tour of South Africa as witness to the brutal demands made on players’ bodies. After last Saturday’s second Test 28-25 loss against the Springboks, four Lions ended up in hospital with three