Latest news with #Crowther


USA Today
12-07-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Alabama reportedly lands commitment from SEC transfer pitcher
Ashton Crowther(@Ashtoncrowther2), a Top 100 pitcher in the portal, commits to @AlabamaBSB. Another impressive addition to a Top 10 class for the Tide. Best of luck to him in '26! Following an announcement on social media Friday night, the Alabama Crimson Tide have now reportedly landed a commitment from left-handed pitcher Ashton Crowther. Crowther, who previously entered the NCAA transfer portal back in June, comes to Alabama from within the SEC at South Carolina. This past season, Crowther made a total of 19 appearances for the Gamecocks, two of which were starts. Over that span, the left-hander owned a 2-2 record with a 4.38 ERA and a 28:10 K:BB ratio across 37 innings pitched, while also collecting one save. Prior to the 2024 season, Crowther originally began his collegiate career in the ACC at Miami where he spent two seasons with the Hurricanes. Crowther will be entering his redshirt junior season in 2025. Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion.
Yahoo
27-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Trio set to return for Wire's Cas clash, but two to miss out
WARRINGTON Wolves look set to welcome back some of their experienced campaigners for Friday night's Super League clash with Castleford Tigers – the last game before the Challenge Cup Final at Wembley. Head coach Sam Burgess said scrum-half Marc Sneyd and hooker Sam Powell are in line to play, and he indicated there is a strong chance of a return for second-rower Lachlan Fitzgibbon too. He also said Paul Vaughan and Toby King are 'tracking well' and added: 'Whether I play them or not I'll see.' However, such is life at The Wire at the moment, it is a couple in and a couple out – with neither Oli Leyland or Jordan Crowther in consideration. Both Leyland and Crowther were scheduled to have scans this afternoon. Leyland limped out of the action against Hull KR last Friday after 10 minutes with a knee injury and Crowther succumbed to an ankle issue in the late stages. While ruling both out of contention this week, Burgess remains hopeful that Crowther could regain fitness in time for Wembley. The news does not look good for Leyland though. 'They're both getting scanned this afternoon. With it being a bank holiday Monday, we could only get them in today. 'Jordy's actually pulled up pretty good, so that's good. He won't play this week but depending on what the results say, he's a chance for next week which is good. 'Oli's not looking great, he's not presenting very well, but let's wait and see what the results of the scans say.' More: What Sam Burgess said after George Williams trained today Sneyd and Powell both missed the Round 12 defeat to table toppers Hull KR and Burgess said the decision to leave them out was more than for precautionary measures. 'We had a five-day turnaround from the Wakey game. Sneyd took a bang on the head and it just didn't feel he'd recovered quickly enough,' said Burgess. 'And Sam couldn't quite make it. I reckon if we'd had an eight-day turnaround he'd have played, but it was just too hard on a five-dayer. 'They wouldn't have been able to do a good job and it would probably have injured them further. 'It's a bit of a balancing act. 'But we're getting a couple back now so we'll be a little bit stronger. 'It's nice to get a couple in because we've been really thin the last few weeks. 'We get some senior players back which will be good for the group.'


Scoop
22-05-2025
- General
- Scoop
Tauranga Councillor Optimistic Ōtūmoetai Pool Could Be Saved
The community has 'won the battle' to save the Ōtūmoetai Pool from closing, the suburb's ward councillor Glen Crowther believes. 'Reading between the lines, presumably it will play out this way,' Crowther said. But there was always a chance the council could make a different decision when the report on the pool was brought to them in June, he said. In 2023, the commission governing the council decided to decommission the Ōtūmoetai Pool in 2027 once the revamped Memorial Park aquatic centre was open. Reasons for the pool's closure were its age at 57 years, geotechnical issues, and the 'unsustainable' cost to keep it operating. The community opposed the closure and the Save The Otūmoetai Pool - Project STOP campaign was launched. Crowther said the information he had since received showed the geotechnical issues were not as serious as first thought. 'As the pool got older, it developed some cracks, but they could shore it up.' The council would also have to decide what to spend to keep the pool running and whether they wanted to upgrade it, he said. Crowther believed it was important to keep the pool so the community had somewhere to learn to swim. 'I'd personally like to get a better environment for those littlies learning to [swim], to upgrade it slightly so you can have a warmer section.' There was also the practicality of having the pool close to Ōtūmoetai Intermediate and College. The principals had told Crowther it would cost too much to transport their 3000 students to the Memorial Park aquatic centre. 'The principals are saying it's not likely to happen,' said Crowther. 'The schools and the students would benefit immensely from keeping it open.' Ōtūmoetai did not have other council facilities like a community centre or hall, Crowther said. 'There's basically nothing much here that is council other than just sort of parks and reserves. 'If you take away our only significant facility … we're not getting any benefit and we're losing our one facility we've got of any significance.' Keeping the Ōtūmoetai Pool could work out cheaper for ratepayers because the council could use more development contributions for the Memorial Park facility, he said. Late last year, the council put plans for the $105m Memorial Park aquatic centre revamp on hold to look at other design options. The $105m plan had included a bombing pool, splash pad, toddler pool, eight indoor swimming lanes and two outdoor lanes. It would replace the outdoor pool and the QEII Youth Centre at Memorial Park. Suzie Edmonds, who started Project STOP, said she would be ecstatic if the Ōtūmoetai Pool was saved. 'I'm really thrilled that we've come to this point. People have done a lot of work to get here.' There was a public meeting, a working group with the council was formed, and people did leaflet drops to raise awareness. 'A lot of time and effort and energy and fundraising and all those sorts of things have gone into that pool.' It would be interesting to see how the council voted, but she hoped the pool would be saved. Mayor Mahé Drysdale said it was too early to say if the Ōtūmoetai Pool had been saved. The council was looking at Tauranga's aquatic strategy as well as the network of sports fields and courts, he said. The city had an infrastructure deficit and most of what the council built was 'catch up', he said. If the council was delivering new facilities, then growth could pay for more of those through development contributions, he said. 'One of our principles is growth pays for growth.' Keeping the Ōtūmoetai Pool was one of the options the council was considering that could enable it to use more development contributions toward the Memorial Park aquatic centre, Drysdale said. The council would look at options for the Ōtūmoetai Pool and Memorial Park aquatic centre at a meeting in June.


NZ Herald
20-05-2025
- General
- NZ Herald
Tauranga councillor optimistic Ōtūmoetai Pool could be saved
Reasons for the pool's closure were its age at 57 years, geotechnical issues, and the 'unsustainable' cost to keep it operating. The community opposed the closure and the Save The Otūmoetai Pool - Project STOP campaign was launched. Crowther said the information he had since received showed the geotechnical issues were not as serious as first thought. 'As the pool got older, it developed some cracks, but they could shore it up.' The council would also have to decide what to spend to keep the pool running and whether they wanted to upgrade it, he said. Crowther believed it was important to keep the pool so the community had somewhere to learn to swim. 'I'd personally like to get a better environment for those littlies learning to [swim], to upgrade it slightly so you can have a warmer section.' There was also the practicality of having the pool close to Ōtūmoetai Intermediate and College. The principals had told Crowther it would cost too much to transport their 3000 students to the Memorial Park aquatic centre. 'The principals are saying it's not likely to happen,' said Crowther. 'The schools and the students would benefit immensely from keeping it open.' Ōtūmoetai did not have other council facilities like a community centre or hall, Crowther said. 'There's basically nothing much here that is council other than just sort of parks and reserves. 'If you take away our only significant facility … we're not getting any benefit and we're losing our one facility we've got of any significance.' Keeping the Ōtūmoetai Pool could work out cheaper for ratepayers because the council could use more development contributions for the Memorial Park facility, he said. Late last year, the council put plans for the $105m Memorial Park aquatic centre revamp on hold to look at other design options. The $105m plan had included a bombing pool, splash pad, toddler pool, eight indoor swimming lanes and two outdoor lanes. It would replace the outdoor pool and the QEII Youth Centre at Memorial Park. Suzie Edmonds, who started Project STOP, said she would be ecstatic if the Ōtūmoetai Pool was saved. 'I'm really thrilled that we've come to this point. People have done a lot of work to get here.' Advertise with NZME. There was a public meeting, a working group with the council was formed, and people did leaflet drops to raise awareness. 'A lot of time and effort and energy and fundraising and all those sorts of things have gone into that pool.' It would be interesting to see how the council voted, but she hoped the pool would be saved. Mayor Mahé Drysdale said it was too early to say if the Ōtūmoetai Pool had been saved. The council was looking at Tauranga's aquatic strategy as well as the network of sports fields and courts, he said. The city had an infrastructure deficit and most of what the council built was 'catch up', he said. If the council was delivering new facilities, then growth could pay for more of those through development contributions, he said. 'One of our principles is growth pays for growth.' Keeping the Ōtūmoetai Pool was one of the options the council was considering that could enable it to use more development contributions toward the Memorial Park aquatic centre, Drysdale said. The council would look at options for the Ōtūmoetai Pool and Memorial Park aquatic centre at a meeting in June.


BBC News
24-04-2025
- Automotive
- BBC News
Farmer blames parking chaos for pregnant sheep's death
A farmer who was blocked from saving a pregnant ewe by illegally-parked cars near a popular beauty spot has said the situation has become "ridiculous". Angela Crowther, who farms by Dovestone Reservoir in Saddleworth, Oldham, could not access the fields where her sheep were lambing on Easter Sunday due to cars left strewn across the entrance. She said she discovered one of her flock had died the next day and called on local authorities to do more to tackle the Council, which runs a car park by the reservoir, has been contacted for comment. Ms Crowther said the reservoir was becoming increasingly busy during school holidays and on sunny weekends, with cars regularly spilling out of the designated car park. She said she "couldn't get anywhere near" her fields and had to give up trying until the next day."Cars were parked right outside the gate and all the way down the road," she said."There's too many people and only a tiny car park, so people are bound to park where they can."Security guards and a traffic warden are employed by the council to manage the situation, but Ms Crowther said a fine would not have solved her problems of gaining said: "It happens every weekend, as soon as the sun comes out we're blocked out of our own fields, it's just ridiculous."We have people walking through leaving gates open, letting sheep out, we had lambs run over, lambs stolen, it's shocking, nearly every weekend now through till the summer, it'll be the same."The farmer has called on Oldham Council, United Utilities and the RSPB to find a bigger car park for the area. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.