Ireland lost to Belgium by the only goal of the match, the Irish women’s team is preparing for World Cup qualifiers.
An early goal gave Bekgium a 1-0 win over Republic of Ireland in Brussels but that did not tell the full story of this international friendly.
Vera Pauw chose this opponent as she wanted to test her Irish team. Well that certainly worked as a Belgium side ranked 17th in the world provided a tough contest in the King Baudouin Stadium.
Ireland matcher their hosts in all areas but their failure to score – as well as conceding one – ultimately saw them fall short in terms of the result, but score high in terms of the performance.
The deadlock was broken on 14 minutes when Tine De Caigny reacted quickest to get in front of her marking and direct an in-swinging free-kick in from close range.
There was little between the two teams up to that point but Belgium were dangerous on the counter attack as they pushed their wing-backs forward at every opportunity.
Ireland had passage of good play and should have benefitted from a breakaway at the half-way line, but Ruesha Littlejohn was fouled before she could play the decisive pass.
The offside flag then denied Kyra Carusa after breaking in behind the Belgian backline but the best chance on goal came from Heather Payne on 39 minutes when she cut inside and fired directly at the opposition goalkeeper.
Almost straight after the restart Katie McCabe could have earned a penalty when she tumbled under pressure inside the box, but the referee opted not to award a spot kick.
On 61 minutes, Courtney Brosnan pushed a shot from De Caigny wide when the same player should have converted an earlier chance. It was a rare moment when Ireland looked under real pressure.
Littlejohn forced the best from Belgian goalkeeper Odeurs with a curling free-kick on 78 minutes with what was Ireland’s best chance up to that point.
Denise O’Sullivan set substitute Rianna Jarrett free in the final passage of the game but the Wexford native was unable to get enough power behind her shot. And with that Ireland slipped to a narrow defeat.
Belgium: Odeurs; Deloose (Wijnants 65), De Neve (Onzia 20), Tysiak; Cayman, Missipo, Biesmans, Vanhaevermaet, Delacauw (Vanmechelen 65), De Caigny; Wullaert.
We have video highlights of Hideki Matsuyama winning the 2021 US Masters Golf championship by one shot over Will Zalatoris.
Sorry, there was a YouTube error.
Matsuyama closed with a 1-over 73 and a one-shot victory that was only close at the end, and never seriously in doubt after Xander Schauffele’s late charge ended with a triple bogey on the par-3 16th.
Moments before Dustin Johnson helped him into the green jacket, Matsuyama needed no interpreter in Butler Cabin when he said in English, “I’m really happy.”
So masterful was this performance that Matsuyama stretched his lead to six shots on the back nine until a few moments of drama. With a four-shot lead, he went for the green in two on the par-5 15th and it bounded hard off the back slope and into the pond on the 16th hole.
Matsuyama did well to walk away with bogey, and with Schauffele making a fourth straight birdie, the lead was down to two shots with three to play.
The next swing all but ended it. Schauffele’s tee shot on the par-3 16th bounced off the hill left of the green and dribbled into the pond. His third shot from the drop area went into the gallery. It added to a triple bogey, and his third close call in a major.
Never mind that Matsuyama bogeyed three of his last four holes, the first Masters champion with a final round over par since Trevor Immelman shot 75 in 2008.
All that mattered was that uphill walk to the 18th green, needing only to blast out of the bunker and take two putts for the victory.
And that’s what he did, soaking in the moment with a few thousand spectators on their feat to celebrate a career-changing moment — for the 29-year-old Matsuyama, and he hopes for an entire country.
“Hopefully, I’ll be a pioneer and many other Japanese will follow,” Matsuyama said.
Will Zalatoris, the 24-year-old Masters rookie, holed an 18-foot par putt on the last hole for a 70 and was runner-up. It was the best performance by a first-timer to the Masters since another Dallas kid, Jordan Spieth, was runner-up in 2014 to Bubba Watson.
Spieth had a few fleeting thoughts of coming from six shots behind except for too many missed putts early and missed opportunities late. He bogeyed his last hole for a 70 and tied for third with Schauffele, who shot a 72 with a triple bogey and a double bogey on his card.
Matsuyama finished at 10-under 278 for his 15th victory worldwide, and his sixth on the PGA TOUR.
He becomes the second man from an Asian country to win a major. Y.E. Yang of South Korea won the 2009 PGA Championship at Hazeltine over Tiger Woods.
Returning to the 18th green for the trophy presentation, he again put on the green jacket and raised both arms in triumph. Augusta National allowed limited spectators, believed to be about 8,000 a day, and most might have remembered him from a decade ago.
He won the Asia-Pacific Amateur to earn an invitation to the Masters, and he was low amateur — tied with defending champion Phil Mickelson that year — to earn a trip into famed Butler Cabin. He won in Japan as an amateur, and four times after he graduated college and turned pro. His first PGA TOUR victory was at the Memorial Tournament in 2014, prompting tournament host Jack Nicklaus to say, “I think you’ve just seen the start of what’s going to be truly one of your world’s great players over the next 10 to 15 years.”
That moment came Sunday.
Matsuyama is not big on emotion, and he speaks even less even when cornered after every round by the large contingent of Japanese media.
Most of the media was absent this year due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, and Matsuyama had said on the eve of the final round that it has been a lot less stress.
There was plenty on the golf course, right from the start.
Matsuyama sent his opening tee shot into the trees right of the first fairway. He punched it under the trees from the pine straw, hit a soft pitch that rolled down the slope away from the pin and was happy to leave with bogey. Two groups ahead of him, Zalatoris opened with two straight birdies.
Just like that, the lead was down to one.
No one got any closer until the final hour. Matsuyama made birdie from the front bunker on the par-5 second hole. He didn’t make another birdie until the par-5 eighth, and it didn’t matter because no one could put any pressure on him.
Zalatoris misjudged the speed on No. 3 and three-putted for bogey from just off the back of the green. Schauffele was within three of the lead going to the third hole, only to go bogey-bogey-double bogey on the toughest three-hole stretch on the course.
Matsuyama delivered what appeared to be a knockout punch with a nifty up-and-down from right of the green on the eighth for a tap-in birdie, and a lob wedge to the dangerous left pin on the ninth that rolled out to 3 feet. That sent him to the back nine with a five-shot lead.
For the longest time, it looked as though Matsuyama couldn’t wait to get to Butler Cabin and see how he looked in green.
Schauffele, however, rammed in a 20-foot birdie putt from behind the 12th green. He two-putted from 10 feet for birdie on No. 13. He nearly holed out from the fairway for a tap-in birdie on the 14th. And with he nearly holed his greenside bunker shot on the par-5 15th for a fourth straight birdie.
And then all that that worked ended when his ball disappeared below the surface of the pond.
Matsuyama could afford a few bogeys, and all that affected was the final margin. He is the Masters champion, a major that defines his elite status in the game and gives Japan the biggest week it has ever had in April. The week started a week ago Saturday when Tsubasa Kajitani won the second Augusta National Women’s Amateur.
Matsuyama wasn’t around to see it, but he was well aware of it. All he wanted was to follow her path and made Japan proud. His play spoke volumes.
The draws for the semi-finals of the 2020/21 Heineken Champions Cup and Challenge Cup took place on Sunday with Leinster drawing La Rochelle away.
Sorry, there was a YouTube error.
Champions Cup draw:
La Rochelle v Leinster Rugby, Stade Marcel Deflandre
Toulouse v Bordeaux-Bègles, Stade Ernest Wallon
Challenge Cup draw:
Leicester Tigers v Ulster Rugby, Welford Road
Bath Rugby v Montpellier, The Rec
The matches will be played on the weekend of 30 April and 2 May with the exact dates to be confirmed soon.
Ulster will travel to Welford Road to face Leicester Tigers on the weekend in the Challenge Cup semi-finals.
This afternoon’s Heineken Champions Cup semi-final drawsaw La Rochelle – who feature in the semi-finals for the first time – facing off against Leinster, who O’Gara has fond memories of taking on in the last four of Europe’s elite club competition.
European Rugby’s top points scorer was at his brilliant best in the 2006 semi-final between his Munster side and Leinster, scoring 20 points including a 77th minute try as Munster marched to a 30-6 victory at Lansdowne Road.
That win sent the Irish province into a final with Biarritz Olympique, a match they would edge 23-19 with O’Gara kicking 13 points on that occasion.
La Rochelle secured a spot in the Heineken Champions Cup semi-finals after a 45-21 win over Sale Sharks on Saturday afternoon, whilst Leinster saw off Exeter Chiefs 34-22 in a gripping clash at Sandy Park.
The semi-final fixtures, which will be played on the weekend of 30 April – 1/2 May, are confirmed as follows:
La Rochelle v Leinster Rugby, Stade Marcel Deflandre
Toulouse v Bordeaux-Bègles, Stade Ernest Wallon
The semi-finals will be broadcast live on BT Sport
The West Ham loanee scored a brace today in a 3-2 win.
If someone told you that Jesse Lingard would become the most in-form player in the Premier League a couple of months ago, you’d probably have called them mad. Rightly so, too. Lingard’s playtime (and form) for Manchester United had gradually declined over the years, resulting in zero Premier League appearances for the club this season.
Obviously, this would have been a frustrating experience for Lingard given the fact he should have been in his prime at the age of 28.
After months of sitting on the bench and – more often than not – being excluded from the matchday squad, West Ham made a move for him in January on a season-long loan deal.
Since then, Lingard’s form has been nothing short of outstanding resulting in a career renaissance. The England international scored 2 goals today in a 3-2 win for West Ham, taking his tally to an incredible 12 goal contributions in just 9 Premier League games. West Ham currently sit in a Champions League spot with just a handful of games remaining to be played this season.
Lingard’s form has naturally attracted attention from a host of clubs. Arsenal are reportedly one of the clubs interested in Lingard’s services, as well as Italian Serie A club Roma. West Ham are also, of course, interested in retaining the midfielder.
But would Manchester United be willing to let Lingard go once he returns from loan?
Obviously, it would make sense from a financial viewpoint, but Lingard has shown in the past that he’s capable of performing at a high level for Manchester United. He was particularly impressive at times during the 2017/18 season, where he managed 14 goal contributions in 33 Premier League appearances for The Red Devils.
Whatever happens, his performances can only be a good thing for Manchester United. They’ll either receive substantial financial compensation for the sale of the midfielder or he’ll *presumably* return with a newly-found confidence that could propel him into the starting XI for the 2021/22 season.
Éire Óg GAA Club in Roscommon are running a campaign called www.winanewcampervan.ie and you guessed it, they are raffling a brand new 6 Berth Camper Van valued at over €70,000.
The New Peugeot Boxer Compass Avantgarde 196 6 Berth is being supplied by Donaghy Motors in Letterkenny Co. Donegal.
There is no doubt, but that staycations are going to be the holidays for Irish people for the next few years. What better prize is there than your own holiday home for life with the freedom to travel wherever and whenever suits you. No more booking apartments, cramped hotel rooms, or lugging suitcases around the place.
Tickets for the draw are just €25 or people can buy 3 tickets for €66 or 5 tickets for €100. Click www.winanewcampervan.ie to buy a ticket
Éire Óg GAA Club was founded in 1984 and from our first days right up to today they are to the fore in our parish community of Loughglynn, Lisacul, and Gorthaganny in West Roscommon.
The club grounds were opened in 1991 and are dedicated to the memory of James Timothy a footballer with our club who was tragically taken from us in a traffic accident in 1985.
They need to complete a total renovation of our existing playing pitch and hope to include an enhanced all-weather playing surface to ensure that the club can continue to provide our youth and adult players with games throughout the year.
In addition, they intend to add a lighted walking/jogging track around the perimeter of the grounds to provide the greater community with a badly needed safe area to use for exercise and recreation.
They have further plans for improvements to the club grounds, including the parking and training areas, hopefully, we will be in a position to raise sufficient funds to help us achieve this goal.
Éire Óg players of note over the years include Pat Doory Roscommon Full Back from 1984 until the mid-1990s, Cathy McCann Roscommon Ladies of the early 2000’s Niamh Ward Roscommon Ladies 2010s and Rebecca Finan of the present ladies’ team while the Roscommon Goalkeeper Colm Lavin and Roscommon’s Allstar nominee in 2019 Conor Cox are other Éire Óg players.
Ireland’s Arthur Lanigan-O’Keeffe stepped up his bid to qualify for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games with a respectable result in his first elite final in 13 months.
The Kilkenny pentathlete finished 22nd at UIPM 2021 Pentathlon World Cup Sofia (I) to get back on track after a tough start to the Olympic season. So tight was the race that Lanigan-O’Keeffe finished only 53sec behind the winner, Korea’s Woongtae Jun, with his score of 1,404.
Though not quite reaching the heights of the bronze medal he won in Cairo in 2020 just before the COVID-19 pandemic was declared, the result was a big improvement on the 2021 season-opener in Budapest where he failed to reach the final.
The 29-year-old will have another opportunity next week, in the second half of a double-header in Sofia, to improve his standing in the UIPM Olympic World Rankings and push for a place at the Pentathlon World Cup Final in May.
After a solid swim – 2:04.04, the sixth-fastest time of the day – Lanigan-O’Keeffe struggled to find his rhythm in fencing. With only 14 victories from his 35 bouts, the two-time Olympian was ranked 32nd but showed his character to add three points in the bonus round and edge up the overall standings.
A typically composed performance in riding enabled Lanigan-O’Keeffe to make greater inroads on the leaderboard, and after dislodging just one obstacle for a score of 293 he earned a starting place of 21st in Laser Run.
In the final event, a time of 11:18.40 enabled Lanigan-O’Keeffe to just about maintain his position and he crossed the line in 22nd.
Irish team-mate Sive Brassil finished 27th in the women’s final on Friday, and the pair will be reunited with Natalya Coyle for Pentathlon World Cup Sofia (II) next week.
For live competition coverage visit UIPM TV, the UIPM website or download the “UIPM Central” app.
We have a full video replay of Connacht Eagles easily beating a young beat Leinster A side at the SportsGround
Connacht Eagles 38
Leinster A 27
Colm Reilly, Abraham Papali’i, Australian Ben O’Donnell, and Diarmuid Kilgallen scored tries for Connacht in the first half. Cian Prendergast and Shane Jennings got the second-half tries.
Leinster try scorers were J Boyle twice, R Russell, A Abdaladze and D Sheehan.
CONNACHT EAGLES: O McNulty; P Sullivan, D Kilgallen, C Forde, B O’Donnell (S Jennings 72); C Fitzgerald, C Reilly (H Gilvary 77); M Burke (J Duggan 61) J Murphy (D Tierney-Martin 53), D Roberston-McCoy (C Kenny half-time); N Murray, C Prendergast; C Booth (D McCormack 75), O McCormack (D Boyle 60), A Papali’i.
LEINSTER A: C Cosgrove; N Comerford, M O’Reilly, J Osborne (M Kiely 75), R Russell; T Corkery, B Murphy (C Foley half-time); M Hanan (J Boyle 66), D Sheehan (J McKee 66), A Abdaladze (G McGrath 63); J McCarthy, A Soroka (A Coleman 61); L Barron (A Coleman 70), M Hernan, S O’Brien.
Super TRY from Shane Jennings secures a 38-27 win for Connacht Eagles over Leinster A. @CGarbally had five players involved. pic.twitter.com/2WOxipyTIp
Cloth Cap could be set for Wind op after Grand National disappointment after Tom Scudamore said he heard a gurgling noise.
Jonjo O’Neill on Cloth Cap (PU 28TH, 11/2 Fav) – “Tom (Scudamore) said he was going away grand and he just started gurgling a little bit and he did the right thing and pulled him up. He was having a great run and everything was going grand then he stopped. We will get him checked out but we will look at his wind. Tom just said he got slower and slower but he did the right thing.”
Nicky Richards Takingrisks, (PU 17TH) “He went a circuit then pulled up. It’s a difficult start and we wanted to get up in the first quarter of them but we were playing catch up from the gate.
“Our race was over in the first part. He was getting no light and he didn’t get in any rhythm and he kept getting little knocks. His race was over in the first furlong. “I’m glad Sean (Quinlan) pulled him up. We will run him until Christmas next season and see if the first is still burning.”
Paul Nicholls Yala Enki (UR 20th)
“Yala Enki unseated and came down in the country. The horse seems fine but I’m not sure about Bryony.” Give Me A Copper (PU 29th) He said: “Give Me A Copper just plodded round and he gave Sean a nice round and the horse did what I thought he would do. He didn’t jump well enough but he ran okay.”
Nicky Henderson OK Corral (PU 21st) He said: “He baulked at the first and that was about the end of it. Derek (O’Connor) said he jumped the first brilliantly but just landed on a loose horse. He was totally on the backfoot from then.”
Lisa O’Neill =
Farclas (5th) – She said: “Farclas jumped and travelled really well and Jack (Kennedy) seemed happy with him. You need a lot of luck in a race like this so he ran a solid race.” Shattered Love (10th) – She said: “It was a bit of an unknown today and we didn’t know what would happen with her but she is a class filly. She ran okay.” Alpha Dea Obeaux (11th) – “Alpha Des Obeaux ran his race but was not good enough.” Milan Native (PU 29th) – “Jamie said he was unsure about off the fences and frightened himself a small bit.”
Video Highlights of the Leinster Rugby come back from 14-0 down to defeat Heineken Champions Exeter Chiefs 34-22 in an entertaining clash at Sandy Park.
A brace from Jordan Larmour as well as a try from James Lowe and 17 points from the boot of Ross Byrne proved enough for the four-time winners to dethrone the defending champions who led 14-0 inside ten minutes through a pair of Tom O’Flaherty tries.
The first of them tries came from a stunning bit of individual play, beating the tackle of Hugo Keenan before slipping past three more Leinster defenders and scoring at the posts.
His second shortly followed as Henry Slade put Heineken Star of the Match Robbie Henshaw away before finding O’Flaherty and he fended off another tackle before running clear to the line.
Leinster responded on the 20-minute mark, as Keenan was tackled out wide by two Exeter players but freed his hands expertly to release Lowe on the sideline who could cut back inside and score.
Before half-time, the visitors were level when a line-out on the left allowed Leinster to stretch Exeter in defence, with Byrne attracting attention before the ball found Larmour who was quick enough to dive over in the corner.
Two Byrne penalties before the break left Leinster six points in front, before Exeter responded after the break with a powerful Dave Ewers driving maul and score to trim the gap to a single point.
The sides then traded three-pointers before Leinster took a grip on the match on the hour mark as Larmour managed to beat Stuart Hogg, ride the tackle of Sam Simmonds and dot down in emphatic fashion.
Leinster’s lead then was stretched out to 12 points as Byrne popped over a simple penalty, and despite Exeter pressure, the Irish province held on for a famous victory and a spot in the semi-finals.
Grand National-winning jockey Rachael Blackmore’s achievement was hailed as “history in the making” by retired jockey Katie Walsh, who previously held the best record in the race.
Walsh finished third on the Ted Walsh-trained Seabass in 2012 and rode in the Grand National on a total of six occasions, completing the course on all but one of those outings.
She said: “It’s absolutely unbelievable. It really was a great result for racing – it was a great result all round. It was history in the making, very few people were there to see it but I was there! I’m delighted that I was lucky enough to be there to witness it and it really was absolutely brilliant.
“It is huge. It’s the first woman to win the National. It’s history, but I suppose this has been coming over time. There’s been more women riding in the National over the last couple of years.
“There were maybe two or three women riding in it and the rest were men so they were always outnumbered really, so it all happened today – it all worked, it all clicked.
“This is the most watched race in the world, there are people who are going to hear about this in all different parts of the world and it’s just brilliant for horseracing and I’m delighted for Rachael. She’s an inspiration to male and female jockeys and she’s inspiring. The result couldn’t have been any better.
“It’s just a great day and I just look at it like the way she’s looking at it, that it’s unbelievable and that she’s the person who won the Randox Grand National this year and it’s just a great result.
“It is history without doubt, but I don’t think this needed to happen to encourage women into sport or to show people on the outside that we’re level, because that’s been shown for the last decade I’d have thought.
“She’s a star. She’s so tactically aware, she’s as hard as nails both mentally and physically, she can take the ups and the downs and she deserves this. This isn’t just pot luck or a fluke, she’s worked hard to get this and she deserves it.”
Referring to her no longer being the best-placed woman in a Grand National, Walsh added: “I wasn’t bothered in the first place! It didn’t even enter my head in a million years, not at all. It was just a great result. That thought never crossed my mind to be honest with you. It didn’t cross my mind when I crossed the line on Seabass and it hasn’t crossed my mind since. I finished third but I didn’t win it and Rachael won it – and it’s all about winning at the end of the day.”
AP McCoy, who until today had ridden JP McManus’s only Grand National winner when triumphing on Don’t Push It in 2010, also praised Blackmore.
He said: “Look it’s a brilliant thing for horseracing that she’s won. She’s an amazing rider and she proved that at Cheltenham, but to win the biggest horse race in the world is great for the sport.
“It’s great for her but it’s brilliant for the sport as well. It gives every young girl hope of winning the biggest race in the world and winning any racing for that matter – she can do it all. It’s a brilliant achievement and JP will be delighted. To win this race is very special and for her to do it on one of his horses is great.”
Paul Nicholls, the 11-times Champion Trainer, hailed Blackmore’s achievement as “great for racing”.
He said: “It’s been a fantastic day. What a brilliant ride Rachael Blackmore gave that horse in the National – it’s great for racing.
“She’s had a fantastic year, is a brilliant rider who works for a brilliant trainer, and it’s positive publicity for racing, which is what we want. She’s a credit to the sport and a credit to herself.”
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