Friday, 4 December 2015

Tiger Woods will explain marriage mistakes to his kids

Tiger Woods
Tiger Woods says he has a fantastic relationship with his former wife and will be the one to explain to his children the reasons for their divorce.
Woods and Elin Nordegren split in 2009 after he admitted to a number of affairs and the pair's six-year marriage came to an end in 2010.
The pair have two children, daughter Sam, eight, and son Charlie, six.
"I want it to come from me so that when they come of age, I'll just tell them the real story," said Woods.
"I've taken the initiative with the kids and told them up front, 'guys, the reason why we're not in the same house, why we don't live under the same roof is because daddy made some mistakes'.
"I just want them to understand before they get to internet age and they log on to something or have their friends tell them something."

Manu Tuilagi: Leicester Tigers centre agrees new contract

Manu Tuliagi
England centre Manu Tuilagi has agreed a new contract with Leicester Tigers, BBC Radio Leicester reports.
Tuilagi, who was set to be out of contract next summer, had been linked with moves to several clubs, including Saracens, Worcester and Toulouse.
He has been out with a groin injury for 13 months, ruling him out of the World Cup, but is now close to a return.
The 24-year-old has won 25 caps for England, having made his debut against Wales in August 2011.
Leicester director of rugby Richard Cockerill had previously said he believed rivals were offering "huge amounts of money" to lure the Samoa-born back away from the club.
Worcester had been reported to have offered him £1.6m over three years, although those rumours were subsequently denied by Warriors director of rugby Dean Ryan.

Alex Lees: Yorkshire Vikings appoint new one-day captain

Alex Lees
Yorkshire batsman Alex Lees has been appointed as the county's captain for 50-over and Twenty20 cricket.
The 22-year-old will be the White Rose's youngest skipper since limited-overs games were introduced in 1963.
Lees led the side for the last few games of last season after Championship skipper Andrew Gale stood down.
"After considering a number of candidates, we feel Alex is the right fit for us as captain," coach Jason Gillespie told the county's website.
"He learnt a lot on the job last season and we think he can develop as a leader further. We are delighted to afford him this opportunity and believe that he will do a fantastic job for our club."

Wednesday, 2 December 2015

David Lloyd wants change at 'poor' LTA after Andy Murray criticism

Great Britain Davis Cup squad visits 10 Downing Street
British tennis is "a mess" and the Lawn Tennis Association must make changes, says former player David Lloyd.
He added that "the buck must stop" with LTA chief executive Michael Downey, who he says has done "a poor job".
Following Great Britain's Davis Cup victory, Andy Murray said that speaking to the LTA about the future of British tennis is a waste of his time.
"The LTA do not run the game very well. They haven't for many, many, many years," Lloyd told BBC World Service.
"They have poor management, poor systems."
The former Davis Cup captain and successful businessman said the LTA had invested millions "but not in the right places".
LTA boss Downey said in a statement on Tuesday: "We value the opinions of all of our players on how we grow the game in Britain and our door is always open to Andy, Dan [Evans], Dom [Inglot], James [Ward], Jamie [Murray] and Kyle [Edmund] to hear their views and work collaboratively with them and all of our partners."

Eddie Jones: Visa wait prevents England coach taking office

Eddie Jones
Eddie Jones has been delayed in taking up office as England head coach because he is waiting for a work visa.
Jones, appointed as the replacement for Stuart Lancaster on 20 November, was scheduled to begin work on Tuesday.
The Australian has been able to start carrying out his duties, but is having to do so from Tokyo because his visa application is still being processed.
Rugby Football Union officials hope that Jones' paperwork will be approved before the end of the week.
Jones, who coached Japan at the recent World Cup, was able to attend a press conference at Twickenham on the day of his appointment because he had a visitor's permit to enter the UK.
The 55-year-old then travelled to Los Angeles to carry out work for World Rugby, the game's global governing body, at a conference for tier two nations, before returning home to Japan, where he has been waiting to be granted a visa.
To take up the England job, he left his role as head coach of South African franchise the Stormers - who he only joined in September.
Before that, Jones led Japan to a shock victory over South Africa at this year's World Cup, having guided Australia to the 2003 final before helping South Africa win the 2007 tournament by working as their technical director.

Bath coach Mike Ford unsurprised by Neal Hatley England job links

Neal Hatley and Mike Ford
Bath rugby head coach Mike Ford says he is unsurprised the club's forwards coach Neal Hatley is being linked to a role with England.
New England boss Eddie Jones is in the process of recruiting his backroom staff, with Hatley linked to a role as scrum coach.
"Our scrum is one of the best in Europe," Ford told BBC Points West.
"So no, it does not surprise me he is being linked with an international position."
Under Hatley's guidance, Bath's scrum has become one of the most feared in the Premiership, with the club also reaching the domestic final last season.

"I think the proof is in the pudding and he has been outstanding," added Ford.
"We all know how much work he does on scrum analysis and he finds ways of making them a better scrumager."
However, Ford warned that a role with England would not necessarily be a good career move for Hatley, who signed a new four-year contract at the club in September,
"I think I've got great experience of being an assistant coach with England and it's not necessarily the next step," he said.
"Neal is also in charge of our defence and is developing here and his ultimate ambition is to be head coach of an organisation somewhere down the line.
"So you have to be careful that if you go back to being a specialist coach for only 10 games a year, it's not necessarily the best step for you."

County Championship: Yorkshire start season against Hampshire

Yorkshire county champions
Yorkshire's attempt to win a third successive County Championship title will begin with a home fixture against Hampshire on 17 April.
The Championship starts a week earlier on 10 April with promoted Surrey facing Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge.
The White Rose county will launch the season on 20 March when they play against the MCC in Abu Dhabi.
The NatWest T20 Blast starts on Friday, 20 May and the Royal London One-Day Cup on Sunday, 5 June.
Opening round of Championship fixtures - 10 April
Division OneDivision Two
Durham v SomersetEssex v Gloucestershire
Nottinghamshire v SurreyWorcestershire v Kent
Hampshire v WarwickshireNorthamptonshire v Sussex
The basic format for the summer remains unchanged, with most Championship fixtures starting on Sundays and the majority of T20 Blast games on Friday evenings.
One big change will see the mandatory coin toss scrapped in both Championship divisions with the visiting captain being offered the opportunity of bowling first.
If he declines, the toss will take place as normal. If he accepts, there will be no toss.
The opening round of Championship games will also see 2008, 2009 and 2013 champions Durham take on Somerset and Hampshire, who avoided relegation on the final day of the 2015 season, play Warwickshire in Division One.
In Division Two, relegated Worcestershire face Kent at New Road, and Sussex, who also went down, travel to Northants.
Essex, who will begin the season under a new head coach followingPaul Grayson's departure in September, play Gloucestershire at Chelmsford.
The second round of Division One games sees Yorkshire play Hampshire at Headingley, while Lancashire get their campaign under way against Nottinghamshire who will have Australian fast bowlerPeter Siddle available.
Yorkshire, who were the last side to win three titles in a row from 1966-1968, face Lancashire in the first Roses match of the summer at Headingley on 29 May, with the reverse fixture at Old Trafford beginning on 13 August.
Lancashire, the reigning T20 Blast champions, start their defence of that trophy against Derbyshire on Saturday, 21 May, with the two nine-team North and South groups unchanged from 2015.
Beaten finalists Northants, who will be without England all-rounder David Willey following his move to Yorkshire, face a trip to three-time Twenty20 winners Leicestershire.
The final round of 14 group games takes place on Friday, 29 July, with the quarter-finals taking place from 8-11 August.
Edgbaston will play host to finals day for the eighth time on Saturday, 20 August, nine days earlier than this summer.
Lancashire T20 Blast champions
Lancashire beat Northants by 13 runs in the 2015 T20 Blast Final
The group stage of the 50-over One-Day Cup will be split over a couple of fortnights - one between 5-15 June and the other from 24 July - 2 August - with the groups made the same as those in the T20 Blast.
The final at Lord's, which saw Gloucestershire beat Surrey by six runs in 2015, is on Saturday, 17 September.
It comes before the last round of Championship fixtures, starting on 20 September, in which Yorkshire visit Middlesex - the only side to beat Jason Gillespie's men in first-class cricket in 2015.
Fixtures by competition
CC Division OneCC Division Two
One-Day-CupT20 Blast
Fixtures by county
DerbyshireMiddlesex
DurhamNorthants
EssexNottinghamshire
GlamorganSomerset
GloucestershireSurrey
HampshireSussex
KentWarwickshire
LancashireWorcestershire
LeicestershireYorkshire

Royal London One-Day Cup groups

Group A: Warwickshire, Durham, Yorkshire, Lancashire, Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Worcestershire, Northants.
Group B: Kent, Essex, Sussex, Hampshire, Middlesex, Surrey, Gloucestershire, Somerset, Glamorgan.

NatWest T20 Blast groups

North: Birmingham Bears (Warwickshire), Durham, Yorkshire, Lancashire, Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Worcestershire, Northants.
South: Kent, Essex, Sussex, Hampshire, Middlesex, Surrey, Gloucestershire, Somerset, Glamorgan.