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Boks kick off international season with clash against Barbarians in Cape Town
Boks kick off international season with clash against Barbarians in Cape Town

Eyewitness News

time6 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Eyewitness News

Boks kick off international season with clash against Barbarians in Cape Town

CAPE TOWN - The highly anticipated clash between the Springboks and the Barbarians has kicked of at the DHL Stadium in Green Point, Cape Town. The match marks the start of the Springboks' five-month international season. Saturday evening's game against the British-based invitational rugby union club, renowned for bringing together top players from various clubs and countries, serves as the curtain-raiser for the Boks' busy season. The Boks' last victory over the Barbarians date back to December 2000 in Cardiff, where they secured a 41-31 win. EWN spoke to Bok fans, all brimming with excitement to watch the thrilling encounter. "My score prediction for this game will be Springboks 32, Barbarians, 14," said one fan. "I'm sure the excitement is felt across the entire country, I'm just a little concerned with the wet weather that we're experiencing in Cape Town today, Go Springboks," said another. "Glad rugby season is finally back, confident because you know we're playing on home turf, reigning world champions so I know the opposition is intimidated." This Sprinboks-Barbarians clash is the first of two significant rugby fixtures to be hosted in Cape Town. The Boks are also expected to do battle with Australia at DHL stadium on 23 August as part of their defence of the Rugby Championship.

Derby-winning jockey becomes latest British-based rider to move to Hong Kong
Derby-winning jockey becomes latest British-based rider to move to Hong Kong

Daily Mirror

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Daily Mirror

Derby-winning jockey becomes latest British-based rider to move to Hong Kong

A week after adding to his Royal Ascot laurels with success in the Commonwealth Cup, it has been announced that Richard Kingscote will join Andrea Atzeni and Harry Bentley on the lucrative circuit Derby-winning jockey Richard Kingscote is to become the latest British-based rider to move to Hong Kong. The 38-year-old has ridden more than 1,600 winners across the world including five at Group 1 level. His biggest success was achieved on the Sir Michael Stoute-trained Desert Crown in the 2022 Epsom Derby on only his second ride in the Classic. He scored his latest of five Group 1 victories at Royal Ascot last week when he steered Time For Sandals to win the Commonwealth Cup. ‌ He has also ridden the winners of the Irish St Leger, on the Michael Owen-owned and bred Brown Panther, and the Champion Stakes. ‌ Kingscote has ridden 36 winners in 2025 but the quality of his mounts has been reduced by the retirement of Stoute at the end of last year. He had only four rides at the five day Royal Ascot meeting. Nevertheless he took advantage of an unexpected opportunity to visit Hong Kong earlier this year when he accepted an invitation to ride as an emergency replacement for ten meetings after a spate of falls in Hong which hospitalised four jockeys, including local stars Zac Purton and Vincent Ho. He rode four winners and signed off with a treble at Sha Tin, winning on all three of his mounts. Kingscote told Mirror Racing: "I am very much looking forward to it and it's a good opportunity. I am lucky that I do well here in Britain but this is a chance to try something new and if you don't try you never find out." Kingscote has been granted a part-season licence by the Hong Kong Jockey Club which will start on July 17 and run up to February 17 2026, after which it could be extended. He will join established former British-based jockeys Andrea Atzeni and Harry Bentley in one of the most competitive weighing rooms in the world. Atzeni has ridden 54 winners in the current season and is third in the jockeys' championship while Bentley has 30 wins.

Vale The Back Page, a rare and beautiful exception to Hunter S Thompson's TV dictum
Vale The Back Page, a rare and beautiful exception to Hunter S Thompson's TV dictum

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Vale The Back Page, a rare and beautiful exception to Hunter S Thompson's TV dictum

'The TV business is uglier than most things,' Hunter S Thomson famously wrote. 'It is normally perceived as some kind of cruel and shallow money trench through the heart of the journalism industry, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs, for no good reason. Which is more or less true. For the most part, they are dirty little animals with huge brains and no pulse.' Harsh, I know! But there are many exceptions. One of them was The Back Page, the sports panel show which has finished up this week after a 29-year run. As one who was on it for its first decade and a bitty, I have been inundated with emails, texts and calls this week, from those lamenting its demise. Inevitably, many of the obits have focused on its latter years – which is fair enough because, to my amazement, it has been bloody successful for the last two decades, too, and really was a great show. With its latter-day incarnation hosted by Tony Squires and boasting panellists such as Crash Craddock, Adam Spencer and Candice Warner, the thing was still working and doing great box office. I have no clue why Fox Sports has cut it off at the knees, save the possibility its new owners, the British-based DAZN, intend to channel more foreign content to this small outpost on the other side of the planet at the expense of local content. But I digress. For my obit, let me focus a little on the first decade, when The Back Page proved the antithesis of Thompson's dictum. It was a terrific show because we all really liked each other, and were close friends well beyond whatever we put to air. The show was the idea of the veteran sports producer Saul Shtein. Knowing that Mike Gibson, the iconic sports broadcaster from Wide World of Sports, would be at the Atlanta Olympics at the same time as me, Saul asked me to duchess him on the idea of the show, after Mike had politely rejected his first approach. Mike and I got together one day at the beach volleyball, when Australia had just got the gold medal, and I pitched again.

Vale The Back Page, a rare and beautiful exception to Hunter S Thompson's TV dictum
Vale The Back Page, a rare and beautiful exception to Hunter S Thompson's TV dictum

The Age

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

Vale The Back Page, a rare and beautiful exception to Hunter S Thompson's TV dictum

'The TV business is uglier than most things,' Hunter S Thomson famously wrote. 'It is normally perceived as some kind of cruel and shallow money trench through the heart of the journalism industry, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs, for no good reason. Which is more or less true. For the most part, they are dirty little animals with huge brains and no pulse.' Harsh, I know! But there are many exceptions. One of them was The Back Page, the sports panel show which has finished up this week after a 29-year run. As one who was on it for its first decade and a bitty, I have been inundated with emails, texts and calls this week, from those lamenting its demise. Inevitably, many of the obits have focused on its latter years – which is fair enough because, to my amazement, it has been bloody successful for the last two decades, too, and really was a great show. With its latter-day incarnation hosted by Tony Squires and boasting panellists such as Crash Craddock, Adam Spencer and Candice Warner, the thing was still working and doing great box office. I have no clue why Fox Sports has cut it off at the knees, save the possibility its new owners, the British-based DAZN, intend to channel more foreign content to this small outpost on the other side of the planet at the expense of local content. But I digress. For my obit, let me focus a little on the first decade, when The Back Page proved the antithesis of Thompson's dictum. It was a terrific show because we all really liked each other, and were close friends well beyond whatever we put to air. The show was the idea of the veteran sports producer Saul Shtein. Knowing that Mike Gibson, the iconic sports broadcaster from Wide World of Sports, would be at the Atlanta Olympics at the same time as me, Saul asked me to duchess him on the idea of the show, after Mike had politely rejected his first approach. Mike and I got together one day at the beach volleyball, when Australia had just got the gold medal, and I pitched again.

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