
Plumber to sail round world to mark 60th birthday
Bob Brown had long held a desire to take part in what is described as the world's toughest endurance challenge.But it was not until deciding how to mark his 60th birthday in March that he decided to take the plunge and join up.Mr Brown, from Leicester, had initially planned a trip to Australia to watch the British and Irish Lions rugby tour but said he could not justify the cost on a "lads' trip away".Instead, the plumber has signed up to be a crew member in the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race, a 40,000 nautical miles (74,080km) challenge which starts in Portsmouth at the end of August.
The 10 participating crews in the race will make six ocean crossings and call into 14 ports across the globe as part of the 11-month route.Mr Brown, who is originally from Northern Ireland, said he had planned to watch the Lions after going on tour 20 years ago.He added: "I looked at the cost and I suppose if you chuck everything in, it would be about £20,000, and I thought 'can I justify spending £20,000 on what was a rugby tour? A lads' trip away'. "I've followed the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race from afar for quite a long time and my inbox was getting bombarded with information from Clipper and I thought 'that would be something to tell the grandkids about'."
The race, crewed mainly by non-professional sailors, was founded 30 years ago by Sir Robin Knox-Johnston.Participants complete four weeks of training ahead of the race, in which each paying crew will be accompanied by a fully-qualified skipper and first mate.After being selected, Mr Brown, who considered himself a novice sailor before joining up, said he thought he had "one chance" to take part in the challenge.
He added: "It has always been an itch, an adventure I wanted to do. And now things have aligned with family and work. "I am of a certain age where I may not be able to do it in a few years, so now was the ideal opportunity."
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Times
an hour ago
- Times
Henry Pollock's tackling needs work but this artist with attitude is the real deal
A croissant, a cup of tea and a cold, clear-headed analysis of the game the day before. Please let there be some resemblance to the match you watched live on Saturday and to your column in The Sunday Times. In the main my prayers are answered . . . in the main. This Sunday morning I hazarded to mention Henry Pollock to the sports desk before setting off for the office. The columns offered included a tactical feature on a dog-legged Lions defence, one on restarts (Alex Lowe is handling that particular fiasco) and . . . 'OK, I'll go through Pollock's performance, start to finish'. Online, in print, it's impossible to escape his name. The British & Irish Lions are the stuff of myth, legends who are determined to remain relevant in an age where professionalism — theoretically — should have killed them off. In reality, they are a brand, a marketing monster. They sell satellite packages for Sky and, yes, they sell newspapers. The hottest commodity finds its way into the headlines and, right now, Pollock is scorching. The first two Sunday papers in front of me to catch a stray croissant flake were proclaiming him to be a potential Test starter, the star act in the Australian tour opener against Western Force. It doesn't matter whether he is good or bad, everyone — certainly in English rugby circles — is talking about him. The old-timers can't stand his showboating, the new age of fan is in thrall. Like Bob Dylan (not Vylan) sang 60 years ago, 'Everybody's shouting, which side are you on?' Desolation Row, if you are wondering. In terms of Pollock's readiness for Test rugby, my review over a croissant would be revealing. When you know how the play ends it is easier to focus on the actors and their performance. And then there's the rewind button, too. The numbers tumble into the Barnes notebook. Tackles, carries, offloads and so on. There are plenty of rugby sites online to confirm the statistics, the bald facts. For example, Josh van der Flier was the top tackler with 21 to his name. Pollock wasn't far behind on 17. God knows, these sorts of statistics are quoted without a second, let alone a first, look. The Northampton Saints back-row forward ticked the tackle box but attackers were half-tackled and able to carry beyond the gainline. They were hung on to, they were grabbed by one leg, hopping their Western Australian way on to the front foot. In stark contrast, Van der Flier, the Ireland open-side flanker, was much more definitive. So too Joe McCarthy. In the main, when they made tackles, the opposition's attack came to a juddering halt. In the Test arena there's a world of difference between crossing the gainline in the tackle and being knocked backwards. Pollock was unconvincing in the tackle. That could cost him a stunning starting berth. On the carry he was again incredible. The marketing man's dream, the Lions brand brought to life as he produced a pair of Pollock specials to set up Tomos Williams for a try in the first half and McCarthy in the second. How many viewings online of Pollock the try-creating marauder? He went viral; he's showbusiness. But he does the hard yards, too. Garry Ringrose's second-half try was a thing of beauty, as Finn Russell and friends manipulated the blind side. Lots of replaying well-timed and overhead inside passes but, for once, Pollock's role is ignored. In the immediate lead-up to the sweet passing, he is hit hard by a defender. There is a momentary pause. If the ball-carrier goes backwards, only one metre, the defence takes the initiative. If the carrier breaks the gainline by the same distance, the phase ball is fast and the attackers have the front foot. These odd metres win and lose you Test matches. Pollock didn't — and rarely does — reverse as a carrier. It's one of those microscopic elements of his game that gives way to the Fancy Dan open-field action. When he is anonymous in an area of strength, the detractors love to magnify his youthful flaws — or 'flaws', as far as some are concerned. He has a habit of strutting his stuff when he or a team-mate scores. It winds up the opposition, which is no bad thing. In Perth he was at the heart of a small rumpus as Elliot Daly dived in for the third Lions try. But the croissant watch completely vindicates Pollock. In the build-up to the brilliant Russell quick tap, Pollock is cleverly/cynically tripped from behind by Force's Tom Robertson. If that isn't irritating enough, as the back-row forward sprints into a position from where Russell could pop him a scoring pass, Hamish Stewart, the Force centre, subtly shoves him in front of Russell. Beyond the ball, on the floor, unable to score. Tripped and pushed, why wouldn't he jump to his feet and give the nearest opponent a piece of his mind and the merest of gesticulations? Nick Champion de Crespigny, the home side's flanker, then reacted to Pollock's legitimate reaction. The speed with which McCarthy sprinted to the mêlée in defence of his team-mate most definitely suggested the players have a soft spot for 'the kid'. If the spat was erroneously perceived as proof of immaturity, so too the yellow card brandished his way at the end of the first half. I'll confess, in The Sunday Times, I took the detractors' position. Warned by the referee, Ben O'Keeffe, he was the man who went offside 23 minutes later. 'No clear release,' O'Keeffe shouted. But his was an individual yellow card for a collective warning. Being 20 is a boon for Pollock. There is nothing he feels he cannot do. He may never be this liberated again. His freedom is a bonus but, in the gnarled world of the breakdown, it takes weary back-row warriors to convince the referee they would never go off their feet, come in at the side or — as on Saturday — offer no clear release. It takes a lifetime to become Richie McCaw. TV commentators like to talk of flankers 'painting pictures'. Andy Farrell has to be sure that the picture Pollock ends up painting won't be similar to those of his namesake, Jackson. But Jackson Pollock, for all the seeming randomness of the finished work, was an artist in command of his craft. Trusting to facts alone, Pollock is an unlikelier contender for the Test series. The worries about his dominance in the tackle may mean his role is that of impact replacement. But make no mistake, this is an artist with attitude. Pollocks to the branding and the marketing, he is the real deal.


Times
4 hours ago
- Times
Lionesses put seven past Jamaica in final Euros warm-up: what we learnt
England tuned up for Euro 2025 in style, hammering Jamaica 7-0 in a 'send-off' friendly at the King Power Stadium. Although the result was rarely in doubt against a side ranked 40th by Fifa and missing important players, Sarina Wiegman can feel satisfied as England turn attention to their Euros opener against France this Saturday. From key figures proving their fitness to starting spots getting sewn up, there was plenty to take away from the final dress rehearsal. Lauren James made her comeback from a hamstring injury on Sunday, and it took her eight minutes to reinforce how she offers an unmatched level of attacking threat. Having come off the bench in the 63rd minute, James was immediately cruising around the turf in typically effortless style, and then provided a brilliant assist in the 71st. Occupying the inside-right position, the Chelsea forward controlled a pass on the stretch, sharply cut onto her 'weaker' left foot, and clipped in a delightful cross to the far post. Alessia Russo could not miss. With that flash of brilliance, James proved that she is fit enough to make an impact against France, be that from the beginning or as an impact substitute while she rebuilds her fitness. Either way, her return is amazing news for England. She's that good. There were two spots — left back and the third midfielder — up for grabs in England's first-choice XI going into this game. Jess Carter and Ella Toone started in those roles in Leicester, and neither could have done much more to stake their claim. Carter was outstanding in the first half, with her attacking play particularly eye-catching. She is competing with Niamh Charles for the left-back place, and the consensus is that Carter is better defensively, while Charles is superior going forward. However, Carter was a regular presence in attack on Sunday. She was responsible for England's first big chance by playing a neat one-two with Georgia Stanway, drifting infield and forcing a good save from Liya Brooks. And after half an hour, having again ghosted towards the centre of the pitch, Carter supplied a superb cross with her stronger right foot that Lucy Bronze, her fellow full back, headed home. Carter's defensive showing was less surprising, but similarly strong. She contained the lively Kayliss van Zanten in a one-on-one early on, before executing a perfectly-timed challenge on the stretch to thwart Kameron Simmonds. The left-back spot for the France game is surely Carter's to lose. She has the tools to neutralise France's pacey attackers and, in more revelatory news, can pose the French back line problems too. Charles did show her threat when she came on, assisting Aggie Beever-Jones to make it 6-0. As for Toone, she got the nod ahead of Grace Clinton and Jess Park in Wiegman's midfield three, which will also include Keira Walsh and Stanway as long as they are available. The 25-year-old opened the scoring with a deflected effort, and then made it 3-0 with a glorious, left-footed strike that curled in via a post. With proven big-name nous in both England and Manchester United colours, Toone looks capable of delivering another pivotal contribution next Saturday. Toone was not the only midfielder to shine. Stanway played her first full game of 2025 against Jamaica, having sustained a serious knee injury last December, and looked close to her roaming best. She got England's fourth with an emphatic finish. While Millie Bright's withdrawal from Euro selection contention hampers the title defence, England still have a terrific centre-back duo in Leah Williamson and Alex Greenwood. Williamson's abilities are no secret, but Greenwood possesses comparable leadership and reliability. Because she barely played at Euro 2022, Greenwood, 31, is not quite a household name. However, she has 99 caps, captains Manchester City with aplomb, and defended well against Jamaica. Perhaps most notably, she is an excellent foil for Williamson. Greenwood is England's only left-footed defender and therefore provides much-needed balance to England's back line. On one occasion in the first half on Sunday, she bailed out Bronze by instinctively controlling and clearing a poor pass with her left. As well as England played, that they seemed to complete the game without any player getting injured was more important. Beth Mead took a couple of knocks, creating at least one heart-in-mouth moment, but was able to play the full 90 and made it 7-0 in second-half stoppage time. It is tough to find fault in such an emphatic victory, but England were let off the hook while only 1-0 up. In the 19th minute they were undone by a fairly elementary corner routine, which involved four Jamaica players lining up horizontally near the edge of the area. Allyson beat Carter to the low delivery at the near post, Kayla McKenna got in front of Mead, and McKenna's shot went through Hannah Hampton. England were bailed out, though, with Kalyssa van Zanten adjudged by VAR to have impeded Hampton's view while in an offside position. This was just about a fair call, but England's group opponents will have taken note. Some funky set-piece routines could be under construction in the France, Netherlands and Wales camps. Hampton did not cover herself in glory even if her view was blocked. However, it will take far more than a small error for Wiegman simply to consider picking a different goalkeeper. Euro 2025, Group DSaturday, 8pmTV ITV1 England (4-1-2-3): H Hampton — L Bronze (N Charles 75min), L Williamson, A Greenwood (E Morgan, 63), J Carter — K Walsh (G Clinton 75) — G Stanway, E Toone (L James 63) — B Mead, A Russo (A Beever-Jones 75), L Hemp (C Kelly 63). Jamaica (4-4-2): L Brooks — T Cameron, C Swaby, A Swaby (N Cardoza 45), A Van Zanten — K Van Zanted (R Blades 63), L Ingleton (J Bailey 89), A Primus (N Thomas 62), K Simmonds (R Walker 89) — K McKenna, O Adamolekun (V Sampson 46). Booked Cardoza. Referee F Wildeuer (Germany). Attendance 25,088.


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
'Lions must take it in their stride,' insists Scotland captain Sione Tuipulotu after Aussie jibes
Sione Tuipulotu insists the British and Irish Lions must continue to shrug off any provocation during their tour of Australia. The Scotland captain is one of eight players in Andy Farrell's squad who were born, raised and educated in the southern hemisphere, and he was among those caught in the crosshairs by the Tannoy announcer at Optus Stadium before Saturday's 54-7 rout of Western Force. 'Another Aussie at No 12, Sione Tuipulotu,' was how the centre was introduced when the team was read out for the Lions' opening match on Australian soil. Mack Hansen, James Lowe and Pierre Schoeman were also referenced by the nation of their birth rather than their adopted country, for whom they have qualified either through residency or family heritage. It continued a theme from the hosts that began when Wallabies head coach Joe Schmidt described Tuipulotu and New Zealand-born Ireland international Bundee Aki as a 'southern-hemisphere centre partnership' in the build-up to the defeat by Argentina in Dublin. Tuipulotu emphasised the words 'good humour' when brushing aside the jibes that he expected on his return Down Under. 'I knew there would be some 'good humour' coming back home to Australia. These are all things we've got to take in our stride,' he said. 'To not announce the elephant in the room, I am from Australia. I was born here. I don't know how funny that gag is to everyone! 'I'm loving my rugby playing for the Lions and I'm really passionate about it. Andy's brought the group together so well.' Finn Russell was at the heart of the onslaught in his first outing of the tour and the Scot's instinctive play drew approval from Farrell, who said: 'He's ready to go. And that's good.' Tuipulotu, who expects to be firing by the Test series as he continues his comeback from a significant ankle injury, said: 'We're taking ideas from all the nations. Obviously, the coaching style is very Ireland dominant and there are a lot of ideas that we're getting from the Irish coaches, but then those ideas are being sprinkled on. 'We're still growing, there's a lot of growth left in us but the identity at least, you could see how we try to play the game out there.'