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Michigan football head coach Sherrone Moore says 'no more flag planting' for Wolverines
Michigan football head coach Sherrone Moore says 'no more flag planting' for Wolverines

USA Today

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Michigan football head coach Sherrone Moore says 'no more flag planting' for Wolverines

Michigan football will no longer plant or run on field with team flag after games The vitriol between Ohio State and Michigan may have never been at a higher level than what it is today, and that's saying a lot since Woody Hayes and Bo Schembechler had it at the nuclear level during the "ten-year war." The Wolverines beat the Buckeyes for the fourth-straight time last season, and after the game, men with grudges and axes to grind met at midfield when Michigan tried to plant a Block M flag in the middle of the field inside the 'Shoe. That was after the Buckeye players allowed the same to happen after a 2022 win by the maize and blue. And, might I add, that team heard about it from former players and from fans alike on allowing that to happen on the banks of the Olentangy. So, that wasn't about to happen again, and instead, tempers got the best of both sides. The Michigan flag was ripped off its pole by Jack Sawyer, pepper spray was used by Columbus's finest, and both teams were fined $100,000 for their part in the postgame Donnybrook that ensued. Michigan head coach Sherrone Moore addressed the incident immediately following the game, calling for both sides to be better going forward, and has decided to take it further after being asked about it at Big Ten media days. He is putting a stop to flag planting as we know it. 'We definitely addressed it. There'll be no more flag planting. There'll be no more grabbing the flag," Moore said. "Our new tradition -- what we do when we win a game -- it's go meet the band, go sing our Victors, and stay over there until after the other team departs. That's how we'll operate. Shake hands after the game, show sportsmanship, be cordial. A lot of guys in college football know each other. All these guys, they're kids. At the end of the day, they're 17 to 22-year-old kids, and most of them are friends. A lot of them talk before the game. So let them have that, but then as a team, go be together as a team and leave as a team.' This is a good move and one that college football should adopt going forward. Rivalries are great and there's always going to be some tempers that flare, but creating a situation that can instigate further emotional responses don't need to be a part of the game. Sportsmanship can say a lot about the culture of a coach, player, and team, and sometimes that has to be displayed in winning and losing. Let's hope that it's Ohio State that has to refrain from doing unsportsmanlike things after beating Michigan and putting an end to the four-game skid the program has against That Team Up North. Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes and opinion. Follow Phil Harrison on X.

The moving target that is RTÉ's woes
The moving target that is RTÉ's woes

Irish Times

time29-05-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

The moving target that is RTÉ's woes

If there were one thing to be gleaned from Wednesday's Oireachtas media committee session with RTÉ 's leadership team, it is that the political focus has well and truly moved on since last summer. One of the big talking points to come out of last June's session with director general Kevin Bakhurst and co was the issue of outsourcing. The former BBC News editor was forced at the time to deny that the national broadcaster's transformation plan – a central plank of which is a contentious move to increase spending on outsourced, 'independent' productions – was tantamount to privatisation of in-house programming. All this after he was peppered with questions on the matter by members of the committee. Very little oxygen was expended on that issue on Wednesday. Instead, attention had largely shifted to RTÉ's latest financial foul-up: the €3.7 million or so written off on a troubled capital spending project to replace a legacy IT system in the organisation. But outsourcing has not gone away. Just last week, RTÉ announced plans to switch production of some religious programming – specifically, 'Christian worship content', as the broadcaster put it in a statement – to outside producers. It means Masses will no longer be broadcast from Donnybrook and will, instead, be produced by churches nationwide. READ MORE Asked briefly about it on Wednesday, Bakhurst said RTÉ hopes to get a 'different and a better product' out of the move and denied the broadcaster is phasing out religious programming. [ Ryan Tubridy has not repaid RTÉ €150,000 he received for Renault deal, Bakhurst tells media committee Opens in new window ] That will be cold comfort for staff, who are already concerned about the outsourcing of flagship programming such as Fair City and the Late Late Show, as announced last year. RTÉ's group of unions has reportedly written to the organisation's head of HR to request a meeting about last week's announcement. Asked on Wednesday about morale within RTÉ, Bakhurst diplomatically noted that it was 'very mixed'. Change is 'very difficult', he said, and there remains 'a very high level of anger and disappointment' about the 2023 secret payments scandal. In some areas of the organisation, however, morale is 'very good', the director general claimed. Against a backdrop of redundancies and outsourcing, it is difficult to imagine where these pockets of good feeling might be.

Former AIB Donnybrook branch primed for restaurant or retail use at €2.5m
Former AIB Donnybrook branch primed for restaurant or retail use at €2.5m

Irish Times

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

Former AIB Donnybrook branch primed for restaurant or retail use at €2.5m

Jones Investments, the property development group headed by Chris Jones, has engaged Savills and Agar Commercial Property as joint agents to offer the former AIB building in Donnybrook, Dublin 4, for sale at a guide price of €2.5 million. The property, at 69-71 Morehampton Road, is alternatively being made available to let at an annual rent of €180,000. Located at the junction of Morehampton Road and Marlborough Road, the property comes to the market with the benefit of two grants of planning permission in place. The first of these approvals permits the use of the building for grocery retail with ancillary off-licence and stores. The second permits restaurant/cafe use and upper-floor medical/office use. The property occupies a prime trading position within Donnybrook village with 17.5m of frontage on to Morehampton Road and a total of 365 sq m (3,928 sq ft) of space distributed across ground and first-floor levels. The subject property has a rear yard, which is accessed off Marlborough Road. [ AIB weighs sale of more problem loans with face value of €500m Opens in new window ] The building has had bespoke feature glazing installed by the owner and is being offered to the market in shell condition, ready for fitout by a new owner or occupier.

Permission for 10-storey Donnybrook village apartment development quashed by High Court
Permission for 10-storey Donnybrook village apartment development quashed by High Court

Irish Times

time13-05-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

Permission for 10-storey Donnybrook village apartment development quashed by High Court

The High Court has quashed planning permission for a 10-storey build-to-rent apartment development in Donnybrook, Dublin. Red Rock Donnybrook Ltd had received permission from An Bord Pleanála to redevelop the Circle K-occupied site at the junction of Donnybrook Road and Brookvale Road, opposite Donnybrook stadium, for 67 apartments. Dublin City Council had refused permission for Red Rock's original application, envisaging a 12-storey 84-apartment development, for reasons including that it would result in excessive height and mass, provided for insufficient car parking, and may prejudice the future provision of public transport infrastructure. Red Rock appealed to the board and in doing so revised the original application to reduce the height by two storeys and the number of apartments to 67. READ MORE The board inspector recommended refusal for failure to comply with urban building height guidelines, that it constituted overdevelopment and would have an unacceptable negative visual impact on a prominent site within Donnybrook Village. However, the board in August 2022 granted permission for the revised development. The Eglington Residents Association and Ramleh Villas resident David Clarke then brought a High Court challenge against the board to that decision. Red Rock was a notice party. The residents argued, among other things, that the permission was invalid because of the failure of the board to attach a condition requiring a financial contribution in lieu of the 10 per cent open space requirement for new developments. It was also invalid for failure to consider whether or not the development, without such a condition, materially contravened the City Development Plan, they said. Ms Justice Emily Farrell, in a judgment published this week, quashed the decision. She said that, in this case, the provision of public open space was a significant and relevant policy within the plan and no rationale for contravening this policy was readily apparent or had been suggested. There was no provision in the policy for the option suggested by the board that permission may be granted for a development that does not satisfy the 10 per cent open space requirement and which does not require a financial contribution in lieu, she said. It was necessary either to comply with the public open space policy or consciously depart from it if that was what it did, she said.

Donnybrook village apartment development quashed
Donnybrook village apartment development quashed

BreakingNews.ie

time13-05-2025

  • Business
  • BreakingNews.ie

Donnybrook village apartment development quashed

The High Court has quashed planning permission for a 10-storey build-to-rent apartment development in Donnybrook, Dublin. Red Rock Donnybrook Ltd had received permission from An Bord Pleanála to redevelop the Circle K-occupied site at the junction of Donnybrook Road and Brookvale Road, opposite Donnybrook stadium, for 67 apartments. Advertisement Dublin City Council had refused permission for Red Rock's original application, envisaging a 12-storey 84-apartment development, for reasons including that it would result in excessive height and mass, provided for insufficient car parking, and may prejudice the future provision of public transport infrastructure. Red Rock appealed to the board and, in doing s,o revised the original application to reduce the height by two storeys and the number of apartments to 67. The board inspector recommended refusal for failure to comply with urban building height guidelines, that it constituted overdevelopment and would have an unacceptable negative visual impact on a prominent site within Donnybrook Village. The proposed development is on the Circle K-occupied site at the junction of Donnybrook Road and Brookvale Road However, the board in August 2022 granted permission for the revised development. Advertisement The Eglington Residents Association and Ramleh Villas resident David Clarke then brought a High Court challenge against the board to that decision. Red Rock was a notice party. The residents argued, among other things, that the permission was invalid because of the failure of the board to attach a condition requiring a financial contribution in lieu of the 10 per cent open space requirement for new developments. It was also invalid for failure to consider whether or not the development, without such a condition, materially contravened the City Development Plan, they said. Ms Justice Emily Farrell, in a judgment published this week, quashed the decision. She said that, in this case, the provision of public open space was a significant and relevant policy within the plan, and no rationale for contravening this policy was readily apparent or had been suggested. Advertisement There was no provision in the policy for the option suggested by the board that permission may be granted for a development that does not satisfy the 10 per cent open space requirement and which does not require a financial contribution in lieu, she said. It was necessary either to comply with the public open space policy or consciously depart from it if that was what it did, she said.

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