Sunday, 27 March 2016

Ronaldo in Portugal Penalty Miss


Brazilian-born Marcelinho scored on his Bulgaria debut while Cristiano Ronaldo missed a penalty for Portugal as the visitors pulled off a shock 1-0 friendly win over the Euro 2016 finalists.

Marcelinho, born in a small town in the Amazon region of Brazil and making his first international appearance at the age of 31, struck in the 20th minute of a game almost totally dominated by Portugal.

The hosts were repeatedly foiled by the Bulgaria goalkeeper, Vladislav Stoyanov, who capped an outstanding display by diving to his right to save Ronaldo’s penalty, awarded for handball, in the 69th minute. Ronaldo, who has missed three penalties this season for Real Madrid, also turned the rebound wide.

His unhappy night began when he fired over with the goal at his mercy from an unmarked position in the seventh minute. He also had four attempts at goal from long-range free-kicks, two hitting the wall and the others forcing saves from Stoyanov.

The visiting goalkeeper made six stops in the first 10 minutes alone, including one excellent effort denying Nani, as Portugal threatened a goal spree.

Bulgaria then went in front when Marcelinho, who qualified for them after spending five years with Ludogorets Razgrad, forced his way past two defenders and poked the ball past Anthony Lopes.

After that the game became predictable as Portugal poured forward and played plenty of neat football around the Bulgaria area but either lacked the killer pass or were foiled by Stoyanov. The goalkeeper completed his evening’s work by making a superb stop to turn away a close-range header by a frustrated Ronaldo with five minutes left.

“We are not satisfied with the result. We started brilliantly. In the first 15 minutes we were strong, consistent and the goalkeeper make some fantastic saves; and then we lost some concentration,” said the Portugal coach, Fernando Santos.


Martin Finishes Third Volta a Catalunya


Nairo Quintana has become the third Colombian to win the Volta a Catalunya, with Great Britain’s Chris Froome finishing eighth overall.

Sunday’s final stage through Montjuic Park in Barcelona was won by Alexey Tcatevich but Froome finished the stage in 19th.

The reigning Tour de France champion, 30, battled through the final stage, attempting to put some distance between himself and Quintana and was clear in front for a period of the race before being pegged back by the chasing pack. The Colombian follows in the footsteps of his countrymen Álvaro Mejía and Hernan Buenahora, who won the race in 1993 and 1998 respectively

Froome’s compatriot Hugh Carthy finished the competition in ninth with Team Sky finishing third.

Dan Martin, the 2013 winner, finished third overall, 17 seconds behind Quintana and on the same time as defending champion Richie Porte of Australia.

Quintana, who took the lead at the end of the fourth stage of the week-long race in Spain, said: "There's a lot of emotion to have been able to beat my rivals. It gives me confidence that we are working well."

Final Classification
1. Nairo Quintana (Col/Movistar) 30hrs 50mins 19secs
2. Alberto Contador (Spa/Tinkoff) +7secs
3. Daniel Martin (Ire/Etixx - Quick-Step) +17secs
4. Richie Porte (Aus/BMC Racing) Same time
5. Tejay van Garderen (US/BMC Racing) +27secs
6. Romain Bardet (Fra/AG2R) +31secs
7. Ilnur Zakarin (Rus/Katusha) +42secs
8. Chris Froome (GB/Team Sky) +46secs
9. Hugh Carthy (GB/Caja Rural) +1min 01secs
10. Rigoberto Uran (Col/Cannondale) +1min 16secs


Saturday, 26 March 2016

Connacht v Leinster - Preview


Peter Robb will make his Pro12 debut for leaders Connacht while Luke Fitzgerald returns for Leinster for Saturday's top-of-the-table contest.

Connacht's two changes from the win over Edinburgh see Robb, 21, and Niyi Adeolokun replacing Craig Ronaldson and Danie Poolman in the backs.

Ireland centre Robbie Henshaw is named in the Connacht replacements.

Fitzgerald's inclusion after injury is one of eight Leinster changes from last Friday's defeat by Glasgow. The wing missed Ireland's entire Six Nations campaign because of a medial ligament injury.

Fitzgerald is joined in the backline by Ian Madigan and Fergus McFadden who both featured as replacements in Ireland's win over Scotland.

Richardt Strauss, Cian Healy and Rhys Ruddock will also start for Leinster in Galway after being introduced by Ireland last weekend while another of Joe Schmidt's Six Nations players Josh van der Flier is named in the back row.

A strong Leinster bench includes Ireland players Jamie Heaslip, Jack McGrath, Mike Ross, Devin Toner, Sean Cronin and Eoin Reddan.

Henshaw is joined in the Connacht replacements by another Ireland squad member Finlay Bealham.

Nathan White, who featured in all five of Ireland's Six Nations games, will start in the Connacht front row while youngster Sean O'Brien is again named in the back row alongside Jake Heenan and skipper John Muldoon.

Connacht go into the Sportsground contest a point ahead of Leo Cullen's Leinster side.

Connacht
T O'Halloran; N Adeolokun, B Aki, P Robb, M Healy; AJ MacGinty, K Marmion; D Buckley, T McCartney, N White; Q Roux , A Muldowney; S O'Brien, J Heenan, J Muldoon (capt) 
Replacements: D Heffernan, R Loughney, F Bealham, A Browne, E McKeon, C Blade, S O'Leary, R Henshaw.

Leinster
I Nacewa (capt); F McFadden, G Ringrose, B Te'o, L Fitzgerald; I Madigan, L McGrath; C Healy, R Strauss, T Furlong; R Molony, H Triggs; D Ryan, J van der Flier, R Ruddock
Replacements: S Cronin, J McGrath, M Ross, D Toner, J Heaslip, E Reddan, N Reid, Z Kirchner


Australia Beat Ireland in Dehli - Womens T20


Australia beat Ireland by seven wickets in Delhi to move closer towards clinching their place in the semi-finals of the Women's World Twenty20.

Ireland, who were already eliminated after losing their first three group games, could not score quickly enough and slipped from 75-2 to 91-7.

Elyse Villani made 43 to help Australia win with 40 balls to spare.

Australia have yet to clinch their semi-final place but will go through if New Zealand beat South Africa later.

England will look to join them in the last four by beating Pakistan in their last Group B game in Chennai on Monday.

Ireland's openers failed to score from the first 11 deliveries, but Clare Shillington broke the shackles with a six and then hit three successive boundaries before falling for 22.

Cecelia Joyce hit three fours in her 22, but the Irish managed only two boundaries in the last 15 overs.

Kim Garth top-scored with 27, but took 46 balls to do so, and in total there were 65 dot balls in the innings.

Ciara Metcalfe dismissed Australia's Alyssa Healy for six, courtesy of a superb one-handed catch by skipper Isobel Joyce.

Garth saw off Meg Lanning, the top-ranked international women's batter, but Villani stroked six boundaries in her 43 from 35 balls, before being well caught by Lucy O'Reilly off Garth with just seven required.

Ellyse Perry finished unbeaten on 29 as Australia eased home.


O'Connell to Join Jackman in Grenoble - Reports


Paul O'Connell will begin a new chapter in his rugby career this week when he teams up with former international team mate Bernard Jackman at Grenoble.

The Limerick man was forced to cut short his playing career in February on medical advice following the severe hamstring injury he suffered in Ireland victory over France in last October's Rugby World Cup.

Speculation has been rife that O'Connell has been earmarked for the new Director of Rugby role at Munster but further rumours of a potential move to Grenoble are looking more concrete.

Canal Plus are reporting that O'Connell will join the Grenoble backroom team as a 'freelance' for a week to work with the club's forwards.

Jackman is the head coach at the Top-14 club and, more importantly, his former Young Munster and provincial team-mate Mike Prendergast is the skills coach.

Before his move to Toulon was confirmed last year, the Ireland, Lions and Munster great was linked to a possible move to Grenoble.