Friday 31 January 2014

Rugby League project breaks the cycle of youth offending


Your Sporting Chance, a Keighley based social enterprise that uses rugby league as a tool to break the cycle of youth offending, is launching a new project – ‘Winners 2!’ – following a £16,000 grant from the UK’s largest Sport for Development charity, Sported.


Your Sporting Chance specialise in engaging difficult and challenging young people. All participants of its programme are at a high risk of, or already are, undertaking anti-social behaviour and low level crime. The aim is through providing early, non-time limited intervention, the project can break the cycle of repeat offending and keep such young people out of prison.


Uniquely, Your Sporting Chance uses the power of sport and the profile of youth workers and rugby league professionals (Cougars’ duo Brendon Rawlins and James ‘Buster’ Feather) to engage vulnerable young people in the Keighley area.


Rawlins has worked for Your Sporting Chance for almost five years, and he finds the job very rewarding.


“I wouldn’t say I enjoy it as much as playing, but it comes very close.


“I love working with the kids and sharing my experiences.


“If you have a kid that hasn’t been to school for a year, but then help them get back on the right track, it’s a special feeling.”


It was the past success of a six-week joint project between the West Yorkshire Police, Incommunities and Your Sporting Chance that led to the £16,000 grant from Sported to fund the continuation of the programme for another two-years through its ‘Winners 2!’ project.


Sported (www.sported.org.uk) is a UK-wide charity which provides funding and business support to community groups which use sport to change the lives of disadvantaged young people. As part of the charity’s goal to develop the capacity and sustainability of community sport groups around the UK, it provides free volunteer business mentors to help its members overcome their challenges, learn new skills and become better equipped for the future.


Article source: http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/rugby-league-tuqiri-joins-rabbitohs-052049383--spt.html


Rugby League project breaks the cycle of youth offending

Rugby League - Finn eager to grasp final chance

Ireland’s World Cup captain thought his top-flight days were over when he turned 30 during the autumn but he did not hesitate when he got the call from his old Featherstone boss Daryl Powell to follow him to Castleford.


Finn is older and wiser as he gets ready for the big time once more, even if his decision to quit his day job as an electrician effectively means taking a pay cut.


“It’s very exciting,” he told Press Association Sport. “I certainly didn’t expect it. It really has given me a spring in my step. Hopefully I can do the opportunity justice.


“When I got the offer my reaction was ‘when do I start?’.


“The only thought I had to put into it was ‘can I afford to look after my family?’ If it was realistic, then I was doing it.”


Finn left with the best wishes of his old employers as he took the huge gamble over his future.


He said: “I handed my notice in and they said ‘all right, fantastic, good luck. Give us a ring when you’ve finished your rugby career and we’ll see what we can do’.


“It was nice to be told that but it’s still a bit of a risk because I’ve walked away from a steady number there. It was a bit of an empty promise because, at the end of the day, if they’ve got no work on, there won’t be a job.”


Finn has been given only a 12-month contract and, with relegation returning to Super League this year, the stakes are high but the goalkicking half-back is prepared to back himself.


“I completely understand where the club are coming from with the 12-month deal,” he said. “It’s probably best for both parties.


“Hopefully I can make an impression when I get an opportunity and prove to the coaching staff that I’m up to it and repay their faith.


“I never gave up hope but I never really thought it would happen. You don’t see experienced Championship players getting an opportunity in Super League very often.


“Clubs from the top end of Super League have a bit of a cushion to take on the young ones but for the rest it is a genuine risk to put Championship players out there. It’s a sort of sink-or-swim type situation.”


Finn was just 18 when he made his Super League debut for his home-town team Halifax, who were the rubbing rags at the time and were relegated after winning just one of their 28 matches, and he quickly found himself playing part-time rugby in the second tier with Featherstone.


“I probably didn’t grasp my opportunity,” he said. “Maybe I didn’t always do the right thing as a young player, I was probably a little bit quick to go out on loan and drop down to the Championship.


“There were a lot of young players at Halifax playing Super League through necessity. It probably made us think we were Super League players when we weren’t.


“In an ideal world we wouldn’t have been in that situation so early but the club were in dire straits and there was nowhere else they could turn. We were lambs to the slaughter.”


Finn, who had a brief stint in Super League with Wakefield in 2004, was the last of Castleford’s nine new signings to join the club and he is one of five players battling for the two half-back spots but he is up for the challenge.


“There’s certainly a lot of competition for half-back places and that’s going to be a benefit from a training and game perspective,” he said.


“At some point there are going to be a few noses put out of joint and it’s how those players react to that. Whether it’s me or someone else, if you react in the right way, then you’re going to get another positive effect from that.”



Article source: http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/rugby-league-tuqiri-joins-rabbitohs-052049383--spt.html


Rugby League - Finn eager to grasp final chance

Rugby League: Leeds Rhinos star Ryan Bailey loves to be hated



“I am one of those guys who people love or hate and there is no in-between, but it motivates me when crowds get on my back”


Ryan Bailey



“People usually get love and hate tattooed on their knuckles but I’m a bit of a weirdo and wanted to be different.


“I’d been told your eyelids are the most painful part to have tattooed so I thought I would test it out. They were right, but I like a bit of pain.”


Bailey, 30, has appeared in 18 finals and won six Super League titles since coming through his hometown club’s scholarship.


Tonight he kicks off his testimonial year when Leeds take on London Broncos at Headingley.


It’s a landmark achievement that delights Bailey, who served time in a young offenders institution for fighting a decade ago.


He said: “It’s a bit surreal because when you are young you do not think this far ahead.


“But this is my second family. We have had ups and downs but we have always stood by each other and been loyal.”


* SUPER LEAGUE has agreed a new deal with Sky Sports, believed to be worth more than £200m in total.


The deal, which runs until the end of 2021, will include Championship games from next year.


Article source: http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/rugby-league-tuqiri-joins-rabbitohs-052049383--spt.html


Rugby League: Leeds Rhinos star Ryan Bailey loves to be hated

Aled Blake: Rejoice, rugby"s cultural monopoly in Wales is at its end

To say tomorrow marks an epoch-making moment in Welsh culture would not be to underplay what’s happening.


An overstatement? I don’t think so. Why?


At the same time in our capital – give or take half an hour – two home teams will kick off important matches. One is Wales’ rugby side as they begin their annual Six Nations campaign, the other is Cardiff City – kicking off their latest Premier League match.


In the one stadium there’ll be empty seats, as embittered, embattled, priced-out fans turn their back on their national team; in the other stadium there’ll be a thrilling, pounding atmosphere in a ground filled with passionate supporters, as players begin the battle to stay in the top flight of English football.


This is a watershed moment, a generational shift, a change in culture when the sport that we’re told defines us begins to crumble under the crushing, compelling truth – that rugby has lost its place at the top of Wales’ cultural tree.


And the obsession with it from certain elites – we in the media, those in government circles, business leaders and whoever else with a modicum of power and influence – is dated and irrelevant.


In fact it is only relevant to people wanting to go on all-day drinking sessions with friends donned in cowboy hats and dressed up as daffodils and the few people who can afford, or who can be bothered to afford, tickets to actually go to the ground and watch the game in the first place.


This time last year some flak came my way because I said I didn’t care about Wales playing rugby, that the importance of the Six Nations is lost on me, that I’d close the curtains if the Welsh side played in my back garden.


My piece on WalesOnline, had some wonderfully insulting comments left by bemused rugby supporters who questioned everything from my existence as a person, to my journalistic credentials.


There’s only ever been one winter sport for me, and I’ve never understood why anyone would ever go out of their way to watch the oval-ball game; its complexities, nuances and – most fundamentally – rules are completely lost on me.


This is the reality for many, not only football fans, but people who don’t give two-hoots about any sport in the first place. As the influence of heavy industry and language diminish on communities, we’ve needed other things to define ourselves.


We’ve used the sport of rugby as a totem, it’s become the thing that the Welsh supposedly obsess about – the national game that binds us. Not only is this a lie, it’s also an unhealthy mistruth.


A people cannot be defined by a sport their national team is fleetingly good at.


A people cannot be defined by a game that is only of import for a couple of months at the beginning of each year.


That’s what we’ve allowed to happen, despite the reality being its slow, interminable decline in the communities where it truly did once matter thanks to the over-ambitious and unsustainable professionalisation of the game.


The recent troubles in rugby in Wales illustrate just how detached it has become from the people and the clubs who really matter.


To say the grassroots of a sport are its lifeblood may be a cliche, but cliches are almost always true.


As Wales’ regional clubs have battled with the Welsh Rugby Union over power and money – and it takes a better, more informed person than me to understand what’s been going on the past few months – the real rugby clubs which serve communities around the country endure their irreversible deaths.


Their financial struggle is not being helped by punitive regulations over their last source of guaranteed revenue, tickets for the Six Nations at the Millennium Stadium.


While Welsh rugby self-cannibalises, Welsh football experiences its renaissance.


The contrast between the two could not be more stark.


Our southern cities all have successful teams with sell-out crowds watching every game.


The Welsh regions can barely muster together the average total Cardiff City attendance at all their home games put together.


The rugby clubs are being financially out-muscled in importance to their parent cities by the football clubs, which are now more and more the places to do business, to network and to be seen.


Tomorrow, for the first time I know of, Wales and Cardiff City play at the same time a mile or so apart from one another.


We never thought it could happen, those times at Ninian Park when we were forced to play on Friday nights because of Wales clashes in the Five or Six Nations.


Sometimes we’d kick off early on a Saturday so people could go home and watch the rugby on the telly if Wales were away.


No, no more is that the case.


For while rugby may still be a national game, its position as national pastime is now over.


A generation is emerging to realise there’s much more to Wales than 15 blokes chasing an egg round a muddy field.


And this will be a better place to live for realising that.


Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


Aled Blake: Rejoice, rugby"s cultural monopoly in Wales is at its end

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Wigan Warriors: Grand Final winners can be seen on Sky Sports until at least the end of the 2021 season


Wigan Warriors: Grand Final winners can be seen on Sky Sports until at least the end of the 2021 season


Rugby Football League chief executive Nigel Wood has welcomed the new five-year television rights deal with Sky Sports.


The new deal from 2017 will take the partnership between Sky and the RFL beyond 30 years.


The agreement will guarantee Sky Sports viewers live rugby league for at least eight more seasons and also over 100 matches a season from 2015 when a new league structure will mean coverage of matches from a 12-team Championship alongside the 12-club Super League.




Former F1 star Mark Webber talks about his passion for Rugby League ahead of the new Super League season.


Under the new deal commencing in 2017, only on Sky Sports will viewers be offered over 80 live Super League matches including Magic Weekend featuring every team, every Play-Off and the Super League Grand Final, live coverage of selected Challenge Cup matches, live coverage of Championship matches and live coverage of the World Club Challenge.


Delighted


Wood, who is also chief executive of Super League, said: “I am delighted that we have been able to agree a new contract with Sky Sports that will extend our hugely successful partnership until the end of the 2021 season.


“The association with Sky Sports has enabled rugby league to realise many of its ambitions over the last two decades and this new contract will allow the whole sport to grow still further as we enter an exciting chapter in our history.


“Throughout our negotiations it was clear that Sky were genuinely excited by the league structures that we are putting in place from 2015 onwards.


“Whilst the new contract does not come into effect until 2017, it allows for the return of live Championship action to Sky Sports from next year which will complement their first class coverage of the First Utility Super League and capture the thrills and drama of new-look competitions where every match matters.


“Following on from the success of Rugby League World Cup 2013, the forging of significant commercial partnerships around the First Utility Super League and the decision by the clubs to embrace the new league structures, this is another momentous day for the sport.”


Barney Francis, managing director of Sky Sports, said: “This really is a fantastic time to be a rugby league supporter.


“This new deal is great news for Sky Sports and our customers, who will enjoy at least eight more years of live rugby league and an exciting new structure for the sport in the UK.”





Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


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Six Nations 2014: The hard-hitting facts behind the rugby tackle


With thanks to Dr Simon Foster,

Imperial College London, Ezio

Preatoni
, University of Bath and John

Dams
, Harlequins RFC.



Data: IRB, Opta, BBC




Six

Nations tickets
are available at Telegraph Tickets.


Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


Six Nations 2014: The hard-hitting facts behind the rugby tackle

Rugby star Duncan will start for Scotland

Cambuslang man Duncan Weir will start Scotland’s 2014 RBS Six Nations campaign on the field.


The 22-year-old, who has eight international caps, will start at fly-half against the Irish this weekend.


Scotland coach Scott Johnson named Duncan, along with former King’s Park residents Richie and Jonny Gray, in his pool for the forthcoming games against Ireland on Sunday, England on February 8, Italy on February 22, France on March 8, and Wales on March 15.


Duncan is in the Scotland Six Nations squad for the third season running, since making his debut at Murrayfield in a 17-23 defeat by France in 2012. He made his first start for Scotland against Wales last year.


Former Cathkin High pupil Duncan endured a tough start to the season with the Glasgow Warriors, after being ruled out for months with a broken fibula in April last year, but returned to action to play in the autumn internationals.


Duncan kicked a conversion on his debut, and scored his first try for Scotland in the opening viagogo autumn test of 2013, in Scotland’s 42-17 victory against Japan.


Meanwhile, former Cambus player and ex-King’s Park resident Jonny was handed the surprise honour of captaining the Scotland A team. He will lead the side against England Saxons at Scotstoun this Friday evening.


The 19-year-old younger brother of Richie made his full international debut in an autumn test last year, in a 28-0 defeat at the hands of South Africa.


Jonny said: “I’m a wee bit surprised but I’m very grateful and looking forward to the opportunity.


“The coaches asked me to be captain and I’m very privileged and very honoured.


“The game at Scotstoun is a chance for me and the other players to showcase ourselves. It’s a massive opportunity to make a point to Scott Johnson.


“It’s a privilege to be in the squad again and it is another milestone in my career if I’m involved in the Six Nations — but I know there’s a lot of hard work to be done if I’m going to play.”


Cambuslang Rugby Club captain James McLaren, who played alongside Duncan and Jonny at Coats Park, said: “Everyone at the club wishes Jonny and Duncan all the best.


“We’ve always got people through from the club to cheer them on at Murrayfield, and we’re all delighted to see them doing so well.


“We knew they would go on to big things when they left Cambuslang, and we couldn’t be happier to see them in the Scotland team.”


Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


Rugby star Duncan will start for Scotland

Six Nations: Ulster Rugby"s Luke Marshall given nod for Ireland v Scotland


Luke Marshall will start against Scotland on Sunday

/
Luke Marshall will start against Scotland on Sunday

– 31 January 2014



Ulster centre Luke Marshall will start Ireland’s RBS 6 Nations opener ahead of 75-cap stalwart Gordon D’Arcy.


Head coach Joe Schmidt has propelled 22-year-old, four-cap Marshall into his starting line-up, despite D’Arcy’s impressive performance in the 24-22 November defeat to New Zealand.


Marshall joins three other Uslter names in thet starting line-up: Andrew Trimble, Rory Best and Chris Henry.


Dan Tuohy and Paddy Jackson have been named as replacements.


Marshall has been rewarded for fine club form as Ulster blasted through to the Heineken Cup quarter-finals with a flawless six wins in pool stage action.


Former Ireland and British Lions captain Brian O’Driscoll will win his 129th cap, breaking Ronan O’Gara’s all-time record.


Ireland host Scotland on Sunday before taking on Wales in Dublin just six days later, and Schmidt’s initial midfield selection may well have a strategic element.


The former New Zealand schoolteacher can reasonably be expected to unleash a fresh D’Arcy on the Welsh in round two, after previously admitting the short turnaround between the two fixtures would need careful negotiation.


Further Reading


Six Nations: Cian Healy ready to lead Ireland from front


Six Nations: Ireland’s replacement props putting the pressure on


Six Nations: New look U-20 side aim to rock the Scots 


Marshall will operate as a second playmaker alongside fly-half Johnny Sexton, with Schmidt intent on adding width to Ireland’s attack.


Ulster wing Andrew Trimble starts ahead of Fergus McFadden, winning his first cap since last summer.


Dave Kearney wins his first Six Nations start, alongside older brother and full-back Rob.


Luke Fitzgerald was likely to start but picked up an injury in midweek, while Tommy Bowe and Keith Earls are longer-term casualties.


Chris Henry slots into the back-row for Sean O’Brien as expected, with the Leinster openside out for four months following shoulder surgery.


Lock Dan Tuohy has been given the nod over Iain Henderson on the bench, and Paddy Jackson has been preferred to Ian Madigan as replacement cover for fly-half Johnny Sexton.


Emerging Leinster prop Martin Moore will make his Ireland debut on Sunday after winning a slot on the bench.


The 22-year-old tighthead prop has been named as a replacement for the Scotland clash and will join the fray for the final quarter when Schmidt empties his bench.


Moore and Leinster team-mate Jack McGrath have impressed senior front-rowers in Ireland training this week, notably in scrummaging sessions.


Both will be tasked with adding impetus in the closing stages on Sunday, with Schmidt underlining his high regard for the fast-developing Leinster duo.


Ireland team to face Scotland


Ireland team to face Scotland in the RBS 6 Nations fixture at Aviva Stadium, Dublin, on Sunday:


R Kearney, D Kearney, B O’Driscoll (all Leinster), L Marshall, A Trimble (both Ulster), J Sexton (Racing Metro), C Murray (Munster), C Healy (Leinster), R Best (Ulster), M Ross, D Toner (both Leinster), P O’Connell (capt), P O’Mahony (both Munster), C Henry (Ulster), J Heaslip (Leinster).


Replacements: S Cronin, J McGrath, M Moore (all Leinster), D Tuohy (Ulster), T O’Donnell (Munster), I Boss (Leinster), P Jackson (Ulster), F McFadden (Leinster).



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Cian Healy is thrilled to be back in the heat of the action

More in Six Nations (2 of 20 articles)


Six Nations: Cian Healy ready to lead Ireland from front Read More


Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


Six Nations: Ulster Rugby"s Luke Marshall given nod for Ireland v Scotland

Wales handed Jonathan Davies boost


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  • Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    Wales handed Jonathan Davies boost

    RBS Six Nations: Wales launch their bid for hat-trick of titles in opener ...

    RBS Six Nations: Wales launch their bid for hat-trick of titles in opener against Italy


    Wales are aiming for a hat-trick of Six Nations titles


    We can’t go into our shells on the pitch, we have to go out and walk the walk.



    Jamie Roberts
    Quotes of the week



    Did you know …


    Italy have faced Wales 21 times, losing 17 and winning just twice in Rome.



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    Wales will be aiming to make an immediate statement of intent when they launch their bid for an unprecedented Six Nations hat-trick on Saturday.


    Warren Gatland’s side have been beaten just once in the last 10 games in the tournament and are red-hot favourites against Millennium Stadium visitors Italy this weekend.


    The hosts will be looking to put down an early marker with sterner tests awaiting against Ireland in Dublin on Saturday week and then England at Twickenham in early March.



    The Welsh have never lost at home to the Italians, winning eight of their nine meetings in the principality and drawing the other. They have also won the last three matches on home soil by a combined total of 83 points.


    However, the Italians won’t be pushovers, having opened up last year’s tournament with a 23-18 win over France before finishing up by beating Ireland 22-15.


    “We have to go out in our first game and express ourselves like champions,” Wales centre Jamie Roberts said. “Warren has spoken about having a little bit of a strut in our stride and really being quite confident.


    “We can’t go into our shells on the pitch, we have to go out and walk the walk.”


    Warburton on bench


    Regular captain Sam Warburton is on the bench because he’s not yet fully match fit following a shoulder injury, so Wales will be led by lock Alun Wyn Jones, who also deputised as skipper for the flanker in the final Test for the British and Irish Lions against Australia in Sydney last year.


    Meanwhile, Dan Lydiate, another Lions star on that tour, is all set to take his place in the pack following the birth of his first child during the week.



    Behind the scrum, Lydiate’s Racing Metro and Lions team-mate Jamie Roberts returns at centre, after missing last year’s November Tests due to injury, with Gatland’s most contentious choice coming at fly-half where the Scarlets’ Rhys Priestland has edged out Dan Biggar.


    With points machine Leigh Halfpenny at full-back and winger George North also included, Wales ought to have more than enough pace and power to beat their opponents.


    The Azzurri are plagued by injuries and coach Jacques Brunel has decided to give Benetton Treviso winger Angelo Esposito his debut, while also starting inexperienced Michele Campagnaro, Leonardo Sarto and Tommaso Allan.


    Veteran flanker Mauro Bergamasco will become Italy’s longest serving player overtaking the legendary Sergio Lanfranchi.


    Among those absent through injury are Wasps full-back Andrea Masi, Zebre wing Giovanbattista Venditti and La Rochelle centre Gonzalo Canale.


    Wales: 15 Halfpenny, 14 Cuthbert, 13 S. Williams, 12 Roberts, 11 North, 10 Priestland, 9 Phillips; 1 Tipuric, 2 Lydiate, 3 Wyn Jones (capt), 4 Charteris, 5 A. Jones, 6 R. Hibbard, 7 James, 8 Faletau


    Replacements: 16 Owens, 17 Bevington, 18 Jones, 19 Coombs, 20 Warburton, 21 Webb, 22 Hook, 23 Williams.


    Italy: 15 McLean, 14 Esposito, 13 Campagnaro, 12 Sgarbi, 11 Sarto, 10 Allan, 9 Gori; 1 Bergamasco, 2 Zanni, 3 Bortolami, 4 Geldenhuys, 5 Castrogiovanni, 6 Ghiraldini, 7 Rizzo, 8 Parisse (capt)


    Replacements: 16 Giazzon, 17 De Marchi, 18 Cittadini, 19 Furno, 20 Minto, 21 Botes, 22 Orquera, 23 Iannone.



    Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    RBS Six Nations: Wales launch their bid for hat-trick of titles in opener ...

    Welsh Rugby: Regions are waiting for European Cup money

    Wales’s rugby regions have not received their latest instalment of cash for playing in the Heineken Cup.


    The Ospreys, Scarlets, Dragons and Blues expected to be paid £800,000 on Wednesday by European Rugby Cup (ERC), the company which runs the tournament.


    But the money has not arrived and the regions have had to make alternative arrangements to pay wages.


    However, ERC say the money was not due to be paid until after a board meeting on 5 February.


    ERC claims the decision was made at a board meeting in September, when the regions – Ospreys, Scarlets, Cardiff Blues and Newport Gwent Dragons – were represented by Regional Rugby Wales (RRW) Chief Executive Stuart Gallacher.


    The ERC statement says: “At the start of the season (September 2013) the board of ERC decided that each instalment of the ERC distribution payments should be approved by the board before they would be released to the shareholder countries.


    “The first instalment was issued to the six shareholder countries in October with board approval.


    “The next board meeting is on Wednesday, 5 February, when the release of the second instalment will be considered.”


    The board of ERC is made up of club and union representatives from England, France, Ireland, Italy, Wales and Scotland.


    Gallacher, who was at the September board meeting, has since resigned from the ERC board.


    The money from European competitions is actually paid to the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU), who then distribute it in full to the regions.


    The WRU supports the ERC version of events.


    The WRU and the regions are embroiled in a bitter dispute over how the game is run in Wales; competitions and the exodus of players for higher salaries in England and France.


    A proposed legal agreement between both parties remains unsigned.


    Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    Welsh Rugby: Regions are waiting for European Cup money

    Jack Nowell, son of a Newlyn fisherman, set for England rugby debut

    THE SON of a Newlyn fisherman who started playing rugby in Penzance at the age of 5 looks set to make his England debut in this weekend’s Six Nations.


    Jack Nowell flew to France with the England squad earlier this week, hoping to make his debut in Paris on Saturday in front of his parents, Michael and Louisa, and younger brothers, Henry, 14, and Frankie, 11.




    1. ​Jack Nowell, centre, pictured in Newlyn with his family, from left, Michael, Henry, Frankie and Louisa.



      Jack Nowell, centre, pictured in Newlyn with his family, from left, Michael, Henry, Frankie and Louisa.




    2. ​



      Jack lifts the U20s World Cup with Exeter teammates Sam Hill, left, and Henry Slade.




    3. ​



      Jack as a toddler.




    4. ​



      Jack as a schoolboy.




    5. ​



      Jack Nowell as a 17-year-old representing Redruth.




    6. ​



      Jack, right, with his sister Ella, Henry and Frankie.




    7. ​



      Jack pictured with his parents Michael and Louisa after winning the Junior World Cup in Vannes last year.




    8. ​



      Jack Nowell, fourth from left, enjoys his first visit to Twickenham as a youngster with team-mates from the Pirates’ junior section.




    9. ​



      Jack, right, messing around with mates Luke Cowan-Dickie and Ben Brooks.




    If the 20-year-old former Pirates youngster does make an appearance on the field, he will be the first west Cornwall rugby player to play for his country at the top level for more than 30 years.


    His dad Michael, a trawler skipper, and Louisa, a cook, try to watch most of Jack’s club matches when he plays on the wing for the Exeter Chiefs and were also in France last summer when they witnessed their son helping England Under 20s lift the World Cup in Vannes.



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    They paid tribute to the dedication and hard work he puts in to being a success as a rugby player.


    “Away from rugby he’s pretty laid-back and he likes to get home to switch off and relax,” said Louisa.


    “But we know how hard he works – how he has missed out on holidays and nights out; he had only one day off for Christmas and had to go back up to Exeter on Christmas evening. When he was selected for the England elite squad, I had hundreds of texts from friends congratulating us but it’s all been down to him.


    “Rugby definitely comes first for Jack – he is the one who has been determined and focused; he won’t allow himself to be distracted.”


    Jack’s emergence as one of England’s brightest young talents has been meteoric. He has played the game since the age of 5 – going through the Pirates’ mini-junior age groups under the watchful eye of coaches Nicky Brooks, Dave Elliott and Peter Lug. But it was only since leaving Mounts Bay School to join Truro College and then playing a season of senior rugby with Redruth at the age of 17 that his ability really shone through.


    After that breakthrough season, Jack joined the Exeter Academy and he has been a full-time rugby player ever since. And despite his swift elevation through the rugby ranks, Jack is not overawed by the opposition – no matter who he is playing against.


    “When he was Frankie’s age, his heroes were Jason Robinson and Jonny Wilkinson,” said Michael.


    “So when Exeter played Toulon recently I asked him if he felt any extra nerves playing against Wilkinson but he said, ‘no, I just go out and try to play my game’.”


    Michael believes that playing for Exeter has given him a great boost. “I think that Exeter’s style of play helps him with the England set-up.


    “He’s not the fastest wing around but he is powerful, has a good step and is strong defensively and Exeter play in a similar style to England.”


    Henry and Frankie are both following Jack through the Pirates’ youth set-up and Frankie, who Michael believes is a better player than Jack at the same age, is very keen to follow in his brother’s footsteps.


    As The Cornishman interviewed Michael and Louisa on Tuesday, the Nowells were busy trying to organise their trip to Paris and joining them at the Stade de France, if Jack is selected, will be Nicky Brooks who, Louisa says, is “like a second dad”.


    Having coached Jack from the age of 5 to 16, the former Pirates’ stalwart, who takes credit for teaching Jack his renowned tackling technique, said that what made Jack stand out was “a great attitude”.


    “When he was coming through you would have said that his team mates Chris Nicholas, Andrew Tester and Luke Cowan-Dickie were all better players,” he said.


    “I never expected him to become a winger but he excelled at centre and then we felt he would get more room to show off his ability so we switched him to full back.


    “He didn’t like it at first but recently he thanked me for making him play there. He was never big-headed or arrogant – although he liked a joke in the changing room – but he was a good listener and had an abundance of natural talent.


    “I feel so proud that I’ve had a hand in where Jack and Luke have got so far,” he added.


    See back page.




    Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    Jack Nowell, son of a Newlyn fisherman, set for England rugby debut

    Win a signed England rugby union shirt


    Finally in this week’s Team Behind The Team the Team Operations Manager, Tom

    Stokes, goes behind the scenes and gives fans an insight into the

    preparation that goes into keeping the England squad ticking in and out of

    the International season.



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    Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    Win a signed England rugby union shirt

    Six Nations 2014: It is about time France showed England some respect


    The two sets of forwards are well matched, so there is no worry about being

    inferior in that department, while behind the scrum, I think these are the

    10th set of half-backs that Philippe Saint-André has used since taking over

    in 2011.



    I used to go over there with the mentality that not only I am not going to

    speak French to anyone before the game but I am not going to be cordial to

    anyone either.



    Then, you get stuck into them during the game, have a fight and then after the

    game, it is all entente cordiale. I would urge England to do the same this

    weekend.



    Both sides have been hit by injuries, so both have been forced to be somewhat

    cavalier in their selections. And there are one or two surprises on each

    side too. I am really surprised about Billy Twelvetrees.



    While he has been playing OK, he has hardly set the world on fire. He makes

    decisions too early. You will see him sidestep, maybe five metres before his

    marker is on top of him, and I just do not think that gets him anywhere.



    If you contrast that with what Brad Barritt gives you. Barritt plays very,

    very straight whereas Twelvetrees is too side-to-side for my liking.



    Maybe Lancaster wants to play a wider game bringing in Jonny May and Jack

    Nowell and believes that Twelvetrees’ pass, which is better than Barritt’s,

    will help.



    However, with Wesley Fofana, Yoann Huget and Maxime Médard playing in the France

    back line, we run the risk of one or two interception passes from the 12

    position. But after the autumn games England are desperate for more width.



    It is often the thought of a coach who has not played in a back line that you

    gain width with a 12 who can distribute. I disagree with that. Sometimes it

    works, as it did with Mike Catt but sometimes it is actually to the

    detriment of the game, especially if that 12 is running sideways.



    You can greater width from the 13 channel if your 12 remains parallel to the

    touchline.



    When I look at the French selection, I see some genuine stubbornness on the

    part of Saint-André.



    François Trinh-Duc has been playing very well this season and two years ago,

    when he played, England were not really in control until he was substituted.

    After his departure, France went to pieces. He brings that element of

    control and an attacking flair too.



    With Jules Plisson, however, if England give him any space at all, he will run

    them ragged. They have to make his life hell.



    But let’s forget that for a minute and focus on what these young bucks can do

    for England. If they can get a win this weekend, imagine what that will do

    for the confidence, especially of young lads such as May and Nowell.



    It is their chance to put a marker down in terms of the World Cup too.

    However, they need to recognise the enormity of the challenge too. I know

    only too well what it is like to be stood beneath a towering kick, with the

    entire French pack bearing down on you.



    First and foremost, they have to play with control. The Stade de France is

    also a massive stadium, one of the biggest the players will ever play in.

    They have to use that to their advantage and not get distracted by the big

    screens.



    Just concentrate on what your opposite number is doing. Also, they need to get

    involved in the game early. Often these England v France games can just end

    up as a battle between two sets of eight players trying to beat each others’

    heads in!



    Nowell carries the ball more than any other winger in the Aviva Premiership,

    so he needs to do that, while May needs to show his counter attacking skills

    early too.



    It promises to be a great weekend and personally, I can’t wait for this one.

    Come on England!



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    Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    Six Nations 2014: It is about time France showed England some respect

    Irish rugby team to play Scotland - Kick off 3pm Sunday

    irish rugby players

    There are three changes to the Irish rugby team to play Scotland that played New Zealand – Trimble, Marshall and Henry come in for Bowe, D’Arcy and O’Brien. Kick Off 3pm Sunday.


    Brian O’Driscoll and Rob Kearney will both reach significant career milestones when they line out against Scotland at the Aviva Stadium on Sunday afternoon.


    O’Driscoll will earn his 129th cap on Sunday and in doing so becomes Ireland’s most capped player of all time while Kearney will claim his 50th cap for Ireland.


    Paul O’Connell captain’s the side and will be partnered in the second row by Devin Toner. The front-row is made up of Leinster duo Cian Healy and Mike Ross with Ulster’s Rory Best at hooker.


    The backrow sees Chris Henry come in at openside with Munster captain Peter O’Mahony on the blindside and Jamie Heaslip at No.8.


    Conor Murray partners Johnny Sexton at half-back with Luke Marshall and Brian O’Driscoll partnered in the centre.  The back three sees Rob Kearney at fullback and Dave Kearney and Andrew Trimble on the wings.


    Highlights from today’s press conference can be viewed on IrishRugbyTV.


    IRELAND Team Replacements v Scotland, Aviva Stadium, Dublin, RBS 6 Nations Championship, Sunday, February 2nd kick-off 15.00 GMT



    Player/Club/Province/Caps 


    15. Rob Kearney (UCD/Leinster) 49

    14. David Kearney (Lansdowne/Leinster) 2

    13. Brian O’Driscoll (UCD/Leinster) 128

    12. Luke Marshall (Ballynahinch/Ulster) 4

    11. Andrew Trimble (Ballymena/Ulster) 50

    10. Jonathan Sexton (Racing Metro 92) 38

    9. Conor Murray (Garryowen/Munster) 22


    8. Jamie Heaslip (Dublin University/Leinster) 60

    7. Chris Henry (Malone/Ulster) 9

    6. Peter O’Mahony (Cork Constitution/Munster) 19

    5. Paul O’Connell (Young Munster/Munster) 88 capt

    4. Devin Toner (Lansdowne/Leinster) 10

    3. Mike Ross (Clontarf/Leinster) 34

    2. Rory Best (Banbridge/Ulster) 70

    1. Cian Healy (Clontarf/Leinster) 42


    Replacements

    16. Sean Cronin (St. Mary’s College/Leinster) 30

    17. Jack McGrath (St. Mary’s College/Leinster) 3

    18. Martin Moore (Lansdowne/Leinster)*

    19. Dan Tuohy (Ballymena/Ulster) 7

    20. Tommy O’Donnell (UL Bohemians/Munster) 2

    21. Isaac Boss (Terenure College/Leinster) 17

    22. Paddy Jackson (Dungannon/Ulster) 5

    23. Fergus McFadden (Old Belvedere/Leinster) 21


    Click to bet with Boylesports.com for the Six Nations


    Wales 2/1


    England 5/2


    France 11/4


    Ireland 5/1


    Scotland 40/1


    Italy 150/1


    To win the Grand Slam


    No Winner 8/13


    Wales 6/1


    England 13/2


    France 13/2


    Ireland 10/1


    Scotland 100/1


    Italy 500/1


    Matches


    1st February                                                                Home  Draw   Away


    Wales V Italy                                                               1/20     50/1     11/1


    France V England                                                        4/7       20/1     13/8


    2nd February                                                               Home  Draw   Away


    Ireland V Scotland                                                       1/7       33/1     11/2


    Handicap


    1st February                            Draw  


    10/11 Wales (-19)                   25/1                 Italy (+19) 10/11


    10/11 France (-4)                    20/1                 England (+4) 10/11


    2nd February                           Draw              


    10/11 Ireland (-12)                 25/1                 Scotland (+12) 10/11




    Comments


    Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    Irish rugby team to play Scotland - Kick off 3pm Sunday

    Ireland rugby team to face Scotland to be named at 12.30pm

    Sport


  • Rugby

  • International Rugby

  • Six Nations



  • Updated: Friday, 31 Jan 2014 13:05 | Comments





    Andrew Trimble and Chris Henry will start against ScotlandIreland play Scotland in the Aviva Stadium on Sunday at 3pm




    Andrew Trimble and Chris Henry will start against Scotland



    Ireland play Scotland in the Aviva Stadium on Sunday at 3pm



    Video


    Audio


    By Brendan Cole


    Ireland head coach Joe Schmidt has named Ulster trio Andrew Trimble, Chris Henry and Luke Marshall in his starting team to face Scotland on Sunday (kick-off 3pm).


    Trimble replaces the injured Tommy Bowe in the starting line-up, with Dave Kearney retaining his place on the other wing after starting Ireland’s heartbreaking defeat to New Zealand.


    Rob Kearney is named at full-back and will earn his 50th cap. 


    Replacing Marshall with D’Arcy is perhaps the biggest surprise.


    The Leinster man was a standout performer against the All Blacks, while Marshall lost his place in the team after a high-profile defensive error against Australia.


    Henry replaces the injured Sean O’Brien in the starting team.


    The team is as expected elsewhere.


    Cian Healy is named at loosehead after proving his fitness with some eye-catching displays for Leinster in recent weeks.


    Rory Best, also having shown his form after a recent return from injury, and Mike Ross complete the front-row.


    Devin Toner retains his place alongside captain Paul O’Connell in the second row with Henry, Peter O’Mahony and Jamie Heaslip named at openside, blindside and number eight respectively.


    Conor Murray and Jonathan Sexton are paired at half-back while Brian O’Driscoll, who will become Ireland’s most capped player with 129 caps, will play alongside Marshall in the centre.


    On the bench, Leinster trio Jack McGrath, Sean Cronin and Martin Moore will supply front-row cover.


    Dan Tuohy, perhaps with half an eye on testing trips to take on heavyweight packs in London and Paris, is the second row sub, while the versatile Tommy O’Donnell will cover the back row positions.


    Donnacha Ryan could also come into contention for a place in the second row later in the tournament.


    Isaac Boss, man of the match against England Saxons last week, is the scrum-half substitute with Eoin Reddan ruled out due to injury while Paddy Jackson is Sexton’s back-up at out-half. Fergus McFadden covers the rest of the backline.


    Luke Fitzgerald was not considered due to injury. 


    The starting selection contains seven Leinster, four Ulster and three Munster players with Jonny Sexton of Racing Metro the only non-Ireland-based selection.


    Leinster dominate the bench selection with five representatives, with Ulster having two and Munster one.



    “Luke made a couple of really good telling breaks against the Australians in the autumn”



    “It was a very, very close call,” said Schmidt, regarding the selection of Marshall over D’Arcy. 


    “I think part of it was that Gordon had a little bit of a stomach bug at the start of the week.


    “Because it was a tight call, Luke got a little bit more of the training time and would feel a little bit more comfortable.


    “Luke made a couple of really good telling breaks against the Australians in the autumn, then Gordon D’Arcy played as well as I’ve seen him against the All Blacks.”


    Schmidt added that he was unsure how long Eoin Reddan will be out with his calf problem, and Luke Fitzgerald with a hip complaint.


    “They are both in the same basket,” said Schmidt.


    “I guess we won’t know until next week whether either will be right for the second round, against Wales.


    “The one thing we felt with Luke was that if we tried to push too hard this week we might lose him for more than next week anyway.”


    Ireland: Rob Kearney, Andrew Trimble, Brian O’Driscoll, Luke Marshall, Dave Kearney, Johnny Sexton, Conor Murray; Cian Healy, Rory Best, Mike Ross, Devin Toner, Paul O’Connell (c), Peter O’Mahony, Chris Henry, Jamie Heaslip. 


    Replacements: Jack McGrath, Sean Cronin, Martin Moore, Dan Tuohy, Tommy O’Donnell, Isaac Boss, Paddy Jackson, Fergus McFadden.


    LIVE: U20 SIX NATIONS


    Live television coverage of the U20 Six Nations meeting of Ireland and Scotland from 19:00 on Friday 31 January on RTÉ Two and RTE.ie (Ireland only). Live radio coverage on Saturday Sport (14:00) and Sunday Sport (14:00) on RTÉ Radio 1 and RTÉ.ie (Worldwide).


    LIVE: WOMEN’S SIX NATIONS

    Live video streaming of the Women’s Six Nations meeting of Ireland and Scotland from 19:25 on Friday 31 January on RTÉ.ie and irishrugby.com. Live radio coverage on Game On from 19:00 on RTÉ 2fm and RTÉ.ie (Worldwide).



    LIVE: RBS SIX NATIONS

    Live television coverage of the opening weekend of the RBS Six Nations from 14:00 on Saturday 1 and Sunday 2 February on RTÉ Two and RTE.ie (Ireland only). Live radio coverage on Saturday Sport (14:00) and Sunday Sport (14:00) on RTÉ Radio 1 and RTÉ.ie (Worldwide).






    Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    Ireland rugby team to face Scotland to be named at 12.30pm

    Marshall, Trimble and Henry set to start for Ireland

    Ulster’s strong form in Europe when securing a first Heineken Cup home quarter-final since 1999 with a return of six wins from six appears set to be reflected in Joe Schmidt’s first Six Nations starting XV and replacements which will be announced at lunchtime today for Sunday’s game against Scotland at the Aviva Stadium.


    In a couple of relatively surprising selections, sources have indicated that Schmidt will name Luke Marshall at inside centre ahead of Gordon D’Arcy, despite the latter’s superb performance against New Zealand last November, and also recall Andrew Trimble to the wing. Marshall’s exclusion from the Wolfhounds game last Saturday was a pointer towards his selection.


    Whole-hearted commitment
    In the absence of Tommy Bowe, Keith Earls and now Luke Fitzgerald, Trimble had been well down the pecking order in November, but his consistent form for Ulster, whole-hearted commitment and, perhaps bearing in mind Sean Lamont’s presence in a big Scottish side, his physicality all look like earning him the right-wing slot ahead of Fergus McFadden.


    The latter started against Samoa and Australia, but, despite growing into the game when the Wolfhounds beat the Saxons, will have to be content with a place on the bench.


    Furthermore, in the only other change from the starting XV which faced the All Blacks, Ulster openside Chris Henry (whose autumnal involvement was curtailed by a first-half injury against Samoa) has been chosen to fill the void left by Seán O’Brien’s absence on foot of his fine form with the province.


    Tactical kicking
    With McFadden covering across the three-quarter line, it would also appear that Paddy Jackson has won a recall to the bench as a more like-for-like back-up for Johnny Sexton than Ian Madigan. Jackson has also had more frontline rugby than Madigan this season, and although Ruan Pienaar had assumed the place-kicking duties, Jackson had been kicking reasonably well while his distribution, tactical kicking and tackling have all been top notch.


    Perhaps more surprisingly, Dan Tuohy’s improved workrate and energy around the pitch appears set to earn him the role of back-up lock ahead of Iain Henderson, a player with more ballast as a carrier and who can also cover blindside.


    Although now more of a specialist openside, the one-time multi-purpose backrower Tommy O’Donnell has earned a place on the bench ahead of Rhys Ruddock and Jordi Murphy.


    POSSIBLE IRELAND XV (to face Scotland); Rob Kearney (Leinster); Andrew Trimble (Ulster), Brian O’Driscoll (Leinster), Luke Marshall (Ulster), Dave Kearney (Leinster); Johnny Sexton (Racing Metro) , Conor Murray (Munster); Cian Healy (Leinster) , Rory Best (Ulster), Mike Ross (Leinster), Devin Toner (Leinster), Paul O’Connell (Munster, capt), Peter O’Mahony (Munster), Chris Henry (Ulster), Jamie Heaslip (Leinster). Replacements: Jack McGrath, Sean Cronin, Marty Moore, Dan Tuohy, Tommy O’Donnell, Isaac Boss, Paddy Jackson, Fergus McFadden.


    Article source: http://www1.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12504/9119972/six-nations-chris-robshaw-re-appointed-england-captain


    Marshall, Trimble and Henry set to start for Ireland

    Thursday 30 January 2014

    Rugby League - Mossop sidelined for two months

    Mossop, who arrived in Sydney this week to take up a three-year contract with the Eels, is set to sit out the first nine games of the 2014 NRL season after undergoing shoulder surgery.


    Mossop, who played for England in the 2013 World Cup, told Parramatta officials he had been carrying the injury for the last two years.


    “I’m hoping for about round 10, about that time,” Mossop told parraeels.com.au.


    “When I realised I was signing for Parramatta, I sat down with the coach after the World Cup and in 2011 I had a shoulder injury which I played with for two years and I could’ve quite easily played again for this season without having a surgery.


    “But I spoke with (coach) Brad (Arthur) and (football general manager) Daniel Anderson and we all agreed that from my point of view, I wanted to come over and although I was playing, I wasn’t able to play at my full potential which I thought was important.


    “The big thing for me is I’m hoping to be at Parramatta for the long term and I think now before I start it was better off to get that fixed up so I could go into the season all guns blazing and hopefully give it my best shot.”


    Mossop, 25, who got married in Wigan during an extended lay-off after the World Cup, has followed his former Wigan team-mate Sam Tomkins into the NRL, where other England team-mates Gareth Widdop, James Graham and Tom, Sam and George Burgess already ply their trade.


    “As a player you want to test yourself more and more and I’d been at Wigan since I was 16,” he said. “So almost eight years now and I felt in hindsight, we just won the Challenge Cup and the Grand Final up there, so it was the perfect time to leave.


    “It was just that new challenge. And when the approach come from Parramatta, they couldn’t speak highly enough of the club.


    “The club is building and the team’s going to better places and it was something I was really excited to be a part of. And I thought, why not? It’s perfect timing.”



    Article source: http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/rugby-wood-heads-new-deals-quintet-155919976--spt.html


    Rugby League - Mossop sidelined for two months

    Coach Sergio Parisse says Italian rugby is "more complete" and "grown-up"

    Since ending the last Six Nations, Italy have lost heavily to Samoa and narrowly to Scotland in a summer tournament in South Africa, shipped a half-century to Australia and also lost at home to Argentina in the autumn. The only relief came in beating Fiji.


    “We lost something in June and November, so the obvious aim is to restore ourselves to the standard we reached a year ago,” said Parisse. “Since about 2008 all the questions were about our good scrum but we showed then how different things are now.


    “We are more complete as a team and have shown we can play in our backs, use another kind of rugby. We beat Ireland and France playing that way, not just by dominating in the forwards, and now this season we have a group of new young players coming into the team.”


    Prime among them is Tommaso Allan, an Italian-born Scottish age-grade cap playing for Perpignan who was raised in South Africa and has thrown in his lot with the mother’s country rather than his father’s.


    In 11 years of trying Italy have never found a decent fly-half successor to Diego Dominguez, like Parisse an Argentine exile with Stade Francais, but 20-year-old Tommy may finally be it.


    “Tommaso needs all the support we can give him,” said Parisse. “The No10 position is one where we have had a lot of players who have never played consistently, never for more than three or four games, and we have been looking for a genuine long-term prospect. We have faith that in Tommaso we have the answer.”


    Article source: http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/rugby-wood-heads-new-deals-quintet-155919976--spt.html


    Coach Sergio Parisse says Italian rugby is "more complete" and "grown-up"

    Rugby legend Jonah Lomu brings muscle to sevens" Rio Olympics campaign



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    Jonah Lomu enjoyed a stellar rugby union career which saw him become one of the sportJonah Lomu enjoyed a stellar rugby union career which saw him become one of the sport’s all-time greats. The New Zealander shot to prominence as a teenager competing in the 1994 Hong Kong Sevens and continued to play the short-form version until 2001.


    Lomu starred at the 1995 Rugby World Cup in South Africa. The winger scored seven tries tries as New Zealand reached the final, though the All Blacks lost to the hosts.Lomu starred at the 1995 Rugby World Cup in South Africa. The winger scored seven tries tries as New Zealand reached the final, though the All Blacks lost to the hosts.


    This image of Lomu bulldozing through the tackle of hapless England fullback Mike Catt as he scored one of his four tries in the semifinal in Cape Town has become one of the most iconic moments in rugby history.
    This image of Lomu bulldozing through the tackle of hapless England fullback Mike Catt as he scored one of his four tries in the semifinal in Cape Town has become one of the most iconic moments in rugby history.


    In 1995 Lomu was diagnosed with a rare kidney disorder, which required him to have a transplant in 2004.In 1995 Lomu was diagnosed with a rare kidney disorder, which required him to have a transplant in 2004.


    Lomu played for the All Blacks between 1994 and 2002, winning 63 caps and scoring 185 points.Lomu played for the All Blacks between 1994 and 2002, winning 63 caps and scoring 185 points.


    He recovered and played top-level rugby for last time during a spell with the Cardiff Blues in the 2005-06 season, playing 10 times for the Welsh club. He also made three appearances for a French amateur team in the 2009-10 campaign.He recovered and played top-level rugby for last time during a spell with the Cardiff Blues in the 2005-06 season, playing 10 times for the Welsh club. He also made three appearances for a French amateur team in the 2009-10 campaign.


    The 38-year-old Lomu says that as much as he loves 15-a-side, sevens is the future of rugby.The 38-year-old Lomu says that as much as he loves 15-a-side, sevens is the future of rugby.



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    (CNN) — One of rugby’s global stars is returning to the public eye to help promote sevens ahead of the sport’s Olympic debut at Rio 2016.


    New Zealand great Jonah Lomu, a veteran 63 caps for the All Blacks in the 15-a-side form of the game, will act as an ambassador for next month’s HSBC Sevens Worldwide Series event in Wellington.


    The giant winger became a worldwide star after an electrifying series of performances on the wing for the All Blacks at the 1995 World Cup, but the second half of his career was blighted by serious kidney problems that required a transplant in 2004.


    “He is a legend in the game of fifteens, and more importantly, he’s a legend in the game of sevens,” Sevens Wellington general manager Marty Donoghue said in a statement.


    “He’s also a legend in Wellington, so to be able to bring all of those things together and have him be a part of the tournament is incredibly special.”




    The history of rugby sevens




    What is rugby sevens?




    A rugby sevens master class


    “With the sport of sevens set to make an appearance at the 2016 Rio Olympics, we also look at this as an opportunity for Jonah to be an advocate for the next generation of sevens athletes.”


    Read: “Like Mardi Gras and the Olympics” — Rugby sevens in Las Vegas


    Before becoming the youngest player to be selected for an All Blacks Test match in 1994, Lomu shot to prominence with his performances at that year’s Hong Kong Sevens event.


    “It is a privilege more than anything else to be part of this tournament,” the 38-year-old said in a statement.


    “I’m on board with anything that encourages homegrown rugby and showcases Wellington at its best. This is our nation’s capital city, and in my eyes, this is the best tournament in the world.”


    Lomu eventually retired from professional rugby in 2007, having made a brief comeback following his transplant, and later made a handful of appearances for a French amateur team.


    He was scheduled to take part in a charity boxing event in 2011, but had to withdraw due to his continued kidney problems.


    Wellington is of special significance to Lomu after he spent three years playing for the regional Hurricanes team in the southern hemisphere’s Super Rugby competition, while also representing the city in provincial competition.


    Despite his many triumphs, sevens success in Wellington evaded Lomu.


    “As much as I was born an Aucklander, Wellington has always felt like home, so for me, this feels like I’m coming home,” he explained.


    “I’ve played all the tournaments, and the one tournament that slipped through my fingers, was this one.


    “So every time the Kiwi boys win here in Wellington, I always feel proud. Even more than that, it’s just amazing to watch how Kiwis get in behind the tournament itself.”


    Lomu is convinced that sevens can help attract new players to the sport of rugby.


    “When you’re looking towards the future and where things can really grow, sevens is your game,” he added.


    “With it now being an Olympic sport, there is no bigger stage, and being there will take it to another level.”


    Read: Fastest man in rugby joins NFL


    Read: Sports biggest party?




    Article source: http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/rugby-wood-heads-new-deals-quintet-155919976--spt.html


    Rugby legend Jonah Lomu brings muscle to sevens" Rio Olympics campaign