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Ryder Cup rescheduled for September 2021

The PGA of America, Ryder Cup Europe and the PGA Tour jointly announced that both The Ryder Cup and the Presidents Cup have been rescheduled and will now be played one year later than originally planned.

The 43rd Ryder Cup, scheduled for the week of September 22-27 at Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wisconsin, USA, has been rescheduled for the week of September 21-26, 2021.

Likewise, the 2021 Presidents Cup, initially scheduled for September 30-October 3, 2021 at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, will now be played September 19-25, 2022.

Guy Kinnings, Europe’s Ryder Cup Director, said of the decision:

“The Ryder Cup is rightly celebrated as one of the world’s greatest sporting occasions, made special and totally unique in our sport by the fervent atmosphere created by the passionate spectators of both sides.

“While that point is significant, it is not as important as the health of the spectators which, in these difficult times, is always the main consideration. We considered all options including playing with a limited attendance but all our stakeholders agreed this would dilute the magic of this great occasion.”

Irish golfer Pádraig Harrington, Captain of the European Ryder Cup Team, spoke about the change of date for the event, admitting:

“Rescheduling the Ryder Cup was never going to be an easy decision given the many factors to take into consideration. But I believe it is the right assessment given the unprecedented circumstances we are facing at this time.

“When you think of the Ryder Cup you think of the distinctive atmosphere generated by the spectators, such as around the first tee at Le Golf National two years ago. If that cannot be responsibly recreated at Whistling Straits in September, then it is correct that we all wait until it can be.”

For Ryder Cup qualifying, both the United States and European teams will revisit their respective selection processes in the near future.

Tickets purchased for The 2020 Ryder Cup via rydercup.com will be automatically valid for the corresponding day(s) in 2021.

With the decision to play The 2020 Ryder Cup in September 2021, all subsequent Ryder Cups after Whistling Straits will also shift to odd years: 2023: Marco Simone Golf and Country Club (Rome); 2025: Bethpage Black (Farmingdale, New York); 2027:Adare Manor (Co. Limerick); 2029: Hazeltine National Golf Club (Chaska, Minnesota); 2031: Europe (to be determined); 2033: The Olympic Club (San Francisco); 2035: Europe (to be determined); 2037: Congressional Country Club (Bethesda, Maryland).

Champions Cup Final moved from Marseille

The Champions Cup Final has been moved from Marseille. The EPCR confirmed the news on Thursday and have said a new venue is still to be decided on.

The European Professional Club Rugby organisers have said that the Champions Cup and Challenge Cup Finals will not take place at the Stade Velodrome in Marseille. Both finals were due to take place on the weekend of 16th of October, but a new venue will now be required to host the games.

However, it is not all bad news for Marseille, as they will get the chance to host the finals in 2021. The EPCR have also announced that the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London will host the 2022 finals. The tickets for this years final will be valid for the 2021 showpiece in Marseille according to the tournament organisers. A refund can also be given if fans can’t travel.

In a statement the EPCR said, “Due to the many uncertainties created by the Covid-19 pandemic, it has been decided that the 2020 Heineken Champions Cup and Challenge Cup finals will not now be held in Marseille as planned and the matches will be played at a new venue or venues,”. It continued, “With tens of thousands of fans scheduled to travel to the south of France, the Board of EPCR and the local organising committee have agreed that insufficient safeguards are currently in place during the public health crisis to stage two high-profile matches at the 67,000-capacity Stade Vélodrome”.

“As a consequence, EPCR is currently working with its shareholder leagues and unions to secure an alternative venue or venues for the two finals which will be played on the weekend of 16/17/18 October, and details will be announced as soon as practicable.”

Irish sides Leinster and Ulster are due to play their Champions Cup quarter-finals in September, against Saracens and Toulouse. It is thought the finals will still go ahead on the same weekend of 16th of October.

Taylor looks set for rematch with Persoon

The pride of Bray Katie Taylor looks set for a rematch with Delfine Persoon. The fight although not confirmed will be a rematch of the 2019 bout between the pair, a fight which Taylor won.

The rematch with Persoon looks inevitable with the boxers promoter Eddie Hearn tweeting a link to the Persoon fight last summer, under which Katie Taylor commented “Let’s Go”. Taylor has already been confirmed on the same card as Dillian Whyte v Alex Povetkin on August 22nd. However, her opponent has yet to be announced for this. Katie who was a gold medalist at the London Olympics in 2012 was also due to fight Amanda Serrano in May, however, the deal and arrangement fell through.

Speaking to Sky Sports Eddie Hearn said, “We are working hard on the Taylor versus Persoon rematch for August 22,”. He continued, “Katie wants the biggest fights out there and when [Amanda] Serrano pulled out, Katie immediately asked about the Persoon rematch”. “The first fight was one of the best I’ve ever seen live and as a fan I would love to see it again. Whyte versus Povetkin and Taylor versus Persoon 2 is an epic double header – let’s see if we can get it done.”

Eddie Hearn has said in a recent interview that he and his team have made three offers to Persoon for the fight.” We’ve made three offers to Delfine Persoon. It’s close, it’s close.” Hearn continued, “It’s a much bigger fight because of the controversy from the first fight,”.

He said,” Katie Taylor is a legacy fight. When you look at the world, the only thing I can guarantee Katie Taylor if we can get Persoon over the line is, we can do it now. Can we do it in October or November? I don’t know. But I know we’ve got a slot in August. I think she’ll be up for it.”

 

Betindex.bet: Guardiola is confident that City will participate in the Champions League next year

Pep Guardiola is confident that Manchester City will win the appeal against the two-year ban outside European club tournaments.

The “Citizens” are waiting for the decision of the Sports Arbitration Court (CAS) on July 13. The club was banned outside Europe for two years by UEFA in February after being found guilty of violating the Financial Fair Play rules. Their case was heard by the CAS last month, but the decision was postponed to mid-July. “We’re ready. I have great confidence and trust in the people who will be allowed to play in the Champions League, because we want to participate in the tournament in the coming seasons. On July 13, we will understand the decision, I hope, for the club, all employees, players and staff – to continue to grow as a club in the coming seasons, “said the Spaniard.

 

Beyond these problems, City continue in this year’s edition of the Champions League, which will be renewed in August. The team has a 2-1 lead against Real Madrid after the first round of 16 at the Santiago Bernabeu. It is still unclear exactly where the rematch will take place – the second match will be played in Portugal if City cannot accept the match at the Etihad, but Guardiola is determined to keep the team in the best possible shape for the clash with the Royal Club. Betindex.bet reminds that Manchester City was dethroned by Liverpool in the Premier League, but the teams’s form after the resumption of the season after a three-month break due to the coronavirus is excellent. On Thursday, they convincingly defeated the newly crowned champion with 4: 0 and Guardiola believes that this is a positive sign.


“Every game is different, but I can’t deny that beating Liverpool 4-0 in the way we did was great. Football is about feelings, moments. Sometimes your mood rises, sometimes you are disappointed, but we can safely conclude that we beat probably the best team in the world at the moment. So we can do it. But every match is different. Arsenal, which is our rival in the semifinals for the FA Cup, Real Madrid – they all play differently. What I want is to enter the matches in the best possible conditions and then to show mental resilience on the field. These matches are not won with tactics or ideas, but with passion. We want to do it. ”Guardiola concluded before visiting Southampton on Sunday.

Sheridan named as Waterford FC boss

Waterford FC have named John Sheridan as their new manager for the up and coming season.

The former Republic of Ireland international made 34 appearances and played a part in the 1990 and 1994 World Cups. He is not unknown to management. He has managed Oldham, Plymouth, Newport, Notts County, Fleetwood and Carlisle. Sheridan also had two spells at Chesterfield who operate in the National League. His last spell of management at the club ended in January 2020.

Sheridan made over 600 appearances for various sides in England. The majority of them appearances coming for Leeds United and Sheffield Wednesday. The league is set to begin on July 31st.

Speaking to Waterford.fc.ie, Sheridan said he was “under no illusions of the task I hand”. He continued, “Speaking to [chairman] Lee [Power] and others around the club, I am more than aware of what the club means to fans, and those involved”. He said the club will be “looking to hit the ground running” and getting sharp again ahead of the league resumption.

Sheridan stated that him and the chairman have met a couple of times and have set goals and will now look to pushing the players to make sure they achieve these goals. Chairman of the club Lee Power said he was delighted with the appointment. He said, I’ve known John for over 20 years and am delighted that he has agreed to help me and the club out.

Power continued, “To have someone with John’s calibre managing the club is fantastic for the supporters and the city and will also put to bed a number of silly rumours that have surrounded my families commitments and ownership of the club.”

Stephen Kenny has also finalised his backroom staff

Ahead of the return to international football in the autumn, Ireland manager Stephen Kenny has also finalised his backroom staff as he counts down to September and UEFA Nations League games against Bulgaria, in Sofia, and Finland, in Dublin.

Ennis native Gary Seery has been appointed Assistant Analyst and makes the step up from the Irish Under-21 squad to work with Head Analyst Ger Dunne. The FAI Development Officer for Offaly, Gary is a UEFA A Licence holder and has also coached with the Clare District League representative side and St Kevin’s Boys Academy.

Danny Miller will join Kevin Mulholland as a Chartered Physiotherapist with the Senior squad for the new campaign with Colum O’Neill and Sam Rice joining the set-up as Athletic Therapists.

The current Dundalk FC physio, Danny is an Associate Lecturer at University College Dublin and completed his Masters Degree in Manipulative Physiotherapy in 2001 at Curtin University, Perth. He achieved the Musculoskeletal Physiotherapists of Australia Student of the Year Award (Manipulative Therapy) and the Vice-Chancellors Prize for Most Outstanding Research Project.

A graduate from the University of Ulster, Derry man Colum O’Neill moves up to his new Athletic Therapist role from a similar position with the Ireland Under-21 squad. Colum has also worked as a physiotherapist with Finn Harps, Derry City and Dunfermline Athletic.

Like Danny Miller, Termonfeckin native Sam Rice worked alongside Stephen Kenny at Dundalk for four years and with the Irish Under-21 squad for the Toulon Tournament. A graduate of Dublin City University, Sam has studied and worked in Ireland and Australia.

Completing Stephen Kenny’s backroom staff are Shamrock Rovers equipment manager Mal Slattery, on the Equipment and Kit Team where he is joined by Under-21 team kitman Fergus McNally. Mal has also worked with Shelbourne while Fergus has been kit manager with Bohemians and Longford Town.

Eligibility Process begins for Rotherham winger Chiedozie Ogbene

Rotherham United winger Chiedozie Ogbene has expressed his desire to represent the Republic of Ireland at international level to national team boss Stephen Kenny.

The FAI have now begun the paperwork on the eligibility process for 23-year-old Ogbene who was born in Lagos, Nigeria, but moved to Cork aged seven with his family in 2005.

Chiedozie played schoolboy football in Cork with College Corinthians, Kilreen Celtic, Tramore Athletic and Everton before he was signed by Cork City in 2015 and then moved to Limerick in January 2017. After a move to England and Brentford in 2018, Ogbene spent a season on loan with Exeter City before a transfer to Rotherham in August 2019.

A mainstay of Rotherham’s successful push for promotion in the season just ended, Ogbene was an ever present for the Millers in the shortened campaign and scored one goal as they finished runners-up in League One.

Irish ‘Amateur’ Olympic Boxing in crisis – who is to blame?

Boxing has long been Ireland’s most successful Olympic sport, especially in the last 25 years

Yet the ‘best’ young Irish boxers – the ‘future’ Katie Taylor’s, Michael Carruth’s, Mick Conlan’s, Paddy Barnes’s, Joe Ward’s, John Joe Nevin’s have deserted the sport to seek better rewards in the Pro game.

A  few will make the grade but most will not and end up having to persuade ‘family & friends’ to buy tickets and subsidise travel costs to tournaments, increasingly in the UK, in the United States and further afield.

A worrying number of young boxers have left the ‘amateur’ sport and the IABA in recent months, far too many to name but just a few include Regan Buckley Daly, whose club in Bray is shut since landlords sold the premises without even telling the club. Similar events have happened elsewhere. That apart he was not on funding anyway so how could he have thrived with no income, no club premises?

Of those who have turned pro let’s just name but a few – Monaghan’s  U.S based McKenna brothers, Aaron and Stevie, Gary Cully, Lewis Crocker, John Joyce, Paddy O’Donovan, Jason Harty, Pearce O’Leary and Conor Wallace Then there’s Athy’s Willie Donoghue, one of the country’s greatest prospects who won many International  AIBA medals/trophies at different age groups. I could name another ten or more – not all would have made the grade at Elite level internationally of course but many would, according to experts.

So what is the problem and what does the future hold? Andrew Duncan President of the Leinster ABA and a member of the IABA Board of Directors believes that the system must be overhauled and quickly. As he said at the weekend: the drop-out rates are akin to a “haemorrhage, as he explained to Sean McGoldrick at the weekend.

The REAL problem is how the available funding is distributed and who by.? As we have reported on SportsNews IRELAND so often in recent years there is no ‘love lost’ – to put it mildly-  between the IABA, Central Council and its  Board of Directors and the  Abbotstown-based HPU. with disputes at other levels too. Duncan believes that the system can be – and hopefully – will be – quickly reassessed with Sport Ireland who funds the sport anyway taking overall control of the HPU’s  Abbotstown team and the IABA funding all other tiers of the sport since they too have had adequate funding from Sport Ireland which they have never passed on directly to boxers up to now.

September’s International AIBA rankings 2020 have a few Irish boxers included but few in the world’s top 10. Worse still only one boxer – Kurt Walker – is ranked as high as no.2. and he has NOT even qualified, yet, for Tokyo 2021. Surprisingly Brendan Irvine – our only qualifier thus far is “unranked” – the AIBA rankings never cease to amaze! Let’s hope for Irvine’s sake that they re-issue another more up to date list pre-Tokyo. Let’s be clear that the Tokyo Olympics boxing will be controlled by the IOC Task Force since the AIBA’s “suspension” will not be lifted before Tokyo – if indeed it ever will be, thus the”Task Force’  will use the latest AIBA rankings

The Irish female squad (no one has yet qualified)  has three in the top 10, Kellie Harrington ranked 3 at 60kg with Christina Desmond at 9th in 69kg and Aoife O’Rourke at 10th (75kg) – others lower down in the rankings include Michaela Walsh, (15),  Grainne Walsh (19th) and Amy Broadhurst (25th) in their respective weight categories.

Time for Sport Ireland’s “big hitters”, who control the purse strings, John Treacy, Kieran Mulvey and Paul McDermott to be joined by Olympic Council President and I.O.C delegate Sarah Keane and take control of what is now an increasingly worrying situation in Irish boxing. If not the future of Irish boxing is “dark”, “very dark”

Rowe facing tough call on AFL future

RTE Sport state that AFL footballer Sarah Rowe is facing a tough call on her AFL future. She says she will have to think and may a tough call on her AFL future. A return to the AFL with Collingwood would mean little hope of lining out for Mayo in 2021.

Rowe has had a spectacular two season thus far in the AFL. She has come back to Ireland though the past two seasons to feature for Mayo in the championship. She was named AFLW Irish Player of the Year in April. RTE report that under normal circumstances Rowe would come home in the Spring to train with Mayo but the Covid 19 pandemic has put a halt to this meaning Mayo will likely now be playing in the winter months, when Collingwood incidentally begin their pre-season training for 2020 campaign.

Mayo manager Peter Leahy has sent out a warning that he will no longer pick player who combine inter-county football and Australian rules. Speaking to Midwest Radio, Leahy said,”We’ve made a decision that anyone who wants to go to Australia or whatever, we’d have to omit from the panel and carry on regardless because [it’s] what’s best for Mayo”. “There’s no other sport that I know of that you can play both in the same season. The demands of inter-county football is so high.”

Speaking to RTE Sport, Rowe is still uncertain what to do. She said, “The signing date for AFL is between 1 and 17 August so I have a bit of time yet. I don’t even know if they’re allowed to have conversations yet with people because everything is so unforeseen”. She continued, “It’s very up in the air as to what the future holds. For me at the moment, I’m just focusing on my club… then I’ll focus on Mayo, and then I’ll turn my sights to whatever the future holds for me but at the moment it’s all very uncertain”. “Peter has to do what he thinks is best for Mayo and what’s best for Mayo is best for me. It just means it is now more of a decision going forward.

However, Rowe is loving been back home with her club Kilmoremoy. She told RTE Sport,You really miss that side of things,” she said.  “You can train as much as you want on your own but it’s never the same as the way you train when you’re with a group of people. You’re pushed that bit harder as well. She continued, “To be back with your club is a lovely thing to do as well. “It’s very refreshing because normally you’re coming in off the back of an inter-county season, you haven’t really been there as such but now you’re with them group of players, starting with them from the start of the season, you can build that good team culture”.

Alonso to return to F1 with Renault in 2021

Fernando Alonso will return to F1 with Renault in 2021. The Spaniard, who is a two time World Champion and will be 39 later this month has signed off on the deal and will be confirmed soon.

Alonso will return to Renault whom he won his World Championships with in the past. He left F1 in 2018 to pursue other adventures, but he is due to make a third bid to win the Indianapolis 500 with McLaren in August. BBC Sport report that a spokesperson for Renault “declined to comment on the rumours”. When the news is confirmed Alonso will partner French man Esteban Ocon, with Australian Danny Ricciardo leaving Renault to move to McLaren next season.

Many will probably ask why is Alonso coming back to sport seen that he said “he felt he had nothing else but achieve in the sport”. However, he obviously now feels he has plenty more to achieve if he is signing to Renault. He also said, “It’s time to achieve bigger things outside of F1”. However, we reported in May that Alonso was in talks with Renault since November 2019. With the Spaniard’s advisor Flavia Briatore stating that Alonso was “motivated and ready to return to F1”.

As the old saying goes though never turn your back on something your good at and Alonso’s record speaks for itself. In addition to his 2 World Championship titles, he has amassed 32 Grand Prix wins. Since leaving F1 he has gone to become a two time winner of Le Mans 24 hours, he has also competed in the Dakar Rally. He has also race in the Indy 500 and has set himself the target of winning this.