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SATURDAY’S WOMEN’S SIX Nations meeting between Italy and Ireland has been moved to Dublin after Italy agreed to give up home advantage in order to allow the game to go ahead.

The sides were set to meet in the Stadio Lanfranchi in Parma this weekend in the third/fourth-place playoff, but Covid-19 quarantine requirements have seen it moved to Donnybrook’s Energia Park (kick-off 12 noon).

Under current Irish policy, Adam Griggs and his squad would have been required to go through mandatory hotel quarantine or an equivalent arrangement on their return from Italy.

However, Italy can be granted an elite athletes’ quarantine exemption from the Irish government to travel to Dublin for the fixture.

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“The change has been made as the Ireland team would not have been able to fulfil the current requirement to isolate for 14 days on their return from Italy,” the IRFU confirmed in a short statement.

In respect of world ranking calculations, the match will now be recorded as an Ireland home fixture.

“We wish to really thank the Italian Federation and the Italian Women’s team for accommodating this significant change to their plans by travelling to Ireland instead of playing at home,” Six Nations Rugby CEO Ben Morel.

“Both Italy and Ireland have played some fantastic rugby already in this competition. We’re looking forward to a great match and a brilliant start to Finals Day.”

Italy finished as runners-up in Pool A, bouncing back from their heavy opening defeat against England to secure a comfortable bonus-point win over Scotland.

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Unfortunately, Ric Flair’s medical condition will not allow him to fly to Vegas this weekend. Of course, that means his Meet & Greets are canceled and we have begun the refund process with EventBrite. We expect all refunds to be submitted by the end of this week.
The Roast of Ric Flair will be postponed to a later date yet to be determined. As such we will also be refunding the Open Bar bracelets for the Roast that were purchased.
Ric also had Meet & Greets with the Horsemen. These will be refunded as well but we will have an alternative option available during that same time: put on a real Ric Flair robe, hold the original Big Gold Belt, and have your picture made with the Horsemen against what looks like the old WTBS set. To be clear, the current Meet & Greet with the Horsemen will be refunded. But this new experience will be made available for purchase tonight at 8 PM Eastern and offered at a greatly reduced price from the original Horsemen Meet & Greet.
Steamboat will also have an option to get your photo with him against that same WTBS backdrop, with the Big Gold Belt, and you wearing a Ric Flair robe. Again the original Flair/Steamboat meet and greet will be refunded. But this new experience will also be available for purchase tonight at 8 PM Eastern.
Of course, there is no replacing the Nature Boy but we believe these are truly unique experiences we hope you will enjoy.
We can’t thank you enough for your continued support!
-Starrcast
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LEINSTER’S ROWAN OSBORNE will be a Munster player next season.

Osborne’s switch, which was first reported by The42 last month, has been confirmed this afternoon.

The 24-year-old scrum-half will leave his home province this summer to link up with Johann van Graan’s squad on a one-year contract.

“I am delighted to be joining Munster next season, one of the biggest clubs in Europe with a great fanbase and history,” Osborne said.

“I am hugely looking forward to working with and learning from a really talented group of players and a great coaching ticket and working hard to help bring success to the club.”

With Nick McCarthy moving in the opposite direction by returning to Leinster for the 2021-22 campaign, Osborne will join Conor Murray, Craig Casey and Neil Cronin as an option for the southern province’s number nine shirt.

Osborne, who attended Clongowes Wood College, represented the Ireland Schools team in 2014 but did not advance to the Leinster academy.

After becoming a key player for Trinity in the All-Ireland League, he first linked up with Leinster during the summer of 2019 and impressed while on trial. He made his professional debut that October against the Ospreys, before scoring a try a week later off the bench against Edinburgh.

The Kildare native, who has made a total of 10 appearances in the Guinness Pro14, said: “I would like to sincerely thank everyone in the Leinster Rugby community – fans, players, coaches and staff – for the past two years. It has been a privilege to represent my home province.

“I have learned an incredible amount and have had the opportunity to work and play with some of the best people in rugby, as well as making life long friendships. There is, of course, still work to do and trophies to win this season.”

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IT WAS THE summer of ’18. Ross Byrne took his seat in the middle aisle at Sydney for the long trip home.

Up there in the processed air of the thrumming tube, Byrne had time to think. They’d stop off in Abu Dhabi for a couple of hours before taking the last leg of the journey back to Dublin; 21 hours of flight-time, more than enough for someone to figure out what they’re going to do next.

Around him Ireland’s internationals were in end-of-season party mood. Thirty-two of them boarded that flight, 31 of them able to reflect on their contribution to a successful Australian tour. The odd one out was the man in the middle aisle, the only member of the travelling squad not to get a minute’s action.

In life, everyone has a choice. Good guys can become bad guys; reality TV stars can get a proper job; unused subs can become sour. Alternatively, they can step off an aeroplane on a sunny Monday morning in Dublin Airport and decide they want to become Johnny Sexton. You just have to believe in your own storyline.

The Ross Byrne story begins a little earlier. It’s the second week of December, 2016. Sexton has gone down injured, so too Cathal Marsh. Leo Cullen checks his spreadsheet and remembers he has only one fit out-half registered with the EPCR. He turns to his fourth-choice ten, scribbles his name on a form and sends it away to the offices in Geneva.

In all the previews to Leinster’s game against Northampton that week, Ross Byrne is barely a footnote, filed away under the section: in other news. Sixteen minutes in, Joey Carbery goes off with an ankle injury, and the player whose name was prefixed ‘medical swap’ is introduced for his European debut. Almost straight away, he fires a crossfield kick for Rory O’Loughlin to score. Leinster win 37-18 in Franklin’s Gardens.

Byrne’s crossfield kick against Saints in ’16. Source: Inpho/Billy Stickland

Five years on, it’s a bigger European game Byrne is preparing for this weekend, his 100th in a Leinster shirt, his 11th Champions Cup start for the four-time winners. Leinster, by the way, won the previous 10.

Some commentators are saying this represents a changing of the guard. The king is dead. Long live the king. But it is not quite that simple and not just because Sexton is the type of character who could reappear out of the coffin to kick a winning penalty. “Anyone who writes Johnno off is crazy,” said Darragh Fanning, the former Leinster winger. “He’s plenty of rugby left in him.”

But there’s another truth. Cullen has been changing the guard back-and-forth for four years; Byrne playing almost 30 more hours rugby than Sexton for Leinster in that timeframe. This year alone, Sexton has started only five games for his province, going off injured in four.

It all means that the guy who many observers believe isn’t even the best out-half in his family has done a lot more than just serve an apprenticeship. He has become the unlikeliest and most unheralded star in recent Leinster history. “Ross is about to play his 100th game for Leinster,” Fanning says, “and let’s be blunt here, you can’t be lucky 100 times. He’s vastly underrated.”

There’s evidence to back up that assertion. It is two years now since Leinster lost a game with Byrne as their starting 10, a run that includes two successive Pro14 finals. If he had a different personality, he’d shout loudly about that. But he doesn’t court publicity according to colleagues of his within the Leinster camp and has been known to turn down endorsement opportunities.

Byrne and Sexton celebrate the Pro14. Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO

This opportunity is different, though. This is a Champions Cup semi-final, Leinster’s biggest game in two years and a match that could propel Byrne’s career onto a different level.

“What I see in him is the unspectacular; what I mean by that is that he does not do anything outrageous for the sake of it, a bit like Ollie Campbell back in the day,” says Eddie O’Sullivan, the former Ireland coach. “That’s something you look for as a coach because a No10 in modern day rugby is a bit like a quarterback in the NFL. The load has got heavier because they have so many decisions to make.

“I’ve been through this. I had Rog and Humps (Ronan O’Gara and David Humphreys) when I was Ireland coach, so I was lucky. In other jobs, I wasn’t so fortunate with my outhalves and trust me playing without a proper 10 in the modern game in rugby is an absolute nightmare. If you said to me, what is the first name on your list, I’d go 10. Without a 10, you aren’t going anywhere.”

Three weeks ago, in Sandy Park against the defending European champions, Exeter, Leinster were without a 10. Worse again, when Sexton went off, they were 14-7 down. It was their No22, Ross Byrne, who helped turn it around.

“Again, I go back to the Ollie Campbell comparison because Ross Byrne is that type of player,” says O’Sullivan.

Ollie Campbell in 1982. Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO

 “Every time he goes out, he has done a good job. He’s assured, he kicks well. The transition is seamless to the extent that no one is saying Leinster won’t win in La Rochelle because Johnny Sexton is not playing. Instead they are saying; Leinster could win this because, with Ross Byrne, you have someone who is not going to cause a blip.

“At the end of the trail here, he has huge potential, to the extent that he could become the de-facto Ireland No10 once Sexton goes. And that’s putting Joey Carbery into the loop as well. He has come to the No10 position with Leinster and Ireland, and has come to it in a funny way, in the sense that he has been the bridesmaid in Leinster effectively.

“So he has had to set out his stall as a bridesmaid to Sexton – and no would argue that it should be otherwise – but despite living under that shadow, he has managed to get capped for Ireland which is a hell of an achievement because if you go back through Irish rugby history, when has this sort of thing happened before, where a back-up out-half at provincial level gets capped for their country?

“Byrne has come through the Leinster crucible, a club where it is very hard to get a gig at. Worse again, every time he got a Leinster jersey and went on the field, he was compared to Johnny.

“People might say that there’s less pressure on you when you are a back-up – but I’d say the opposite because you are judged against this guy every time you touch the ball.”

It was all well and good when Sexton was the only person Byrne was being compared with. But then Harry – his younger brother – came along. Harry has a step. Harry has the X-Factor. Harry has Brian O’Driscoll singing his praises. Harry could get a gig modelling Peter Mark’s hair products if he wanted one.

Harry Byrne has emerged in the last year. Source: Gary Carr/INPHO

“He’s certainly a good player, Harry,” says Andy Dunne, the former Leinster and Harlequins out half. “But so is Ross and we shouldn’t be shy making that point because I feel he has been undervalued. He certainly does things to make life easier for the players around him.

“If I think to my own career, I was the total opposite in terms of style; I was probably a bit more egocentric, wanting to pull a rabbit out of a hat to turn a game which was fine if it worked; the opposite if it didn’t. Ross, in contrast, never does things that would be unhelpful to the team and his ability to bring others into the game is a big attribute. I rate him highly.”

Plenty don’t. Pundits, both on television and in print, have been unconvinced by his performances, particularly for Ireland. Again, there is a reason for this. Twice he has started for Ireland, each time at Twickenham and each time Ireland have lost, 57-15 in 2019; 18-7 a year later.

“Right, let’s deal with that 2019 game,” says Dunne. “Joe Schmidt said Ireland overtrained on purpose ahead of that match, part of their overall preparation for the World Cup. So, the pack had the shit kicked out of them and the starting 10 – Ross Byrne – got absolutely no protection.

“It’s always the case that the nine or the 10 on a losing team gets unfairly blamed when the result goes south; and gets an undeserved percentage of credit when the team wins. That day, Byrne got too much criticism when the problems were elsewhere.”

Worse than being criticised, he got overlooked, not making Schmidt’s World Cup squad. So back he went to Leinster. He has played 28 times for the province since that Twickenham disaster, Leinster winning every game he has started.

“Those statistics are instructive,” says Dunne. “It shows he has a lot of toughness, plenty of resolve. Like, the guy never gets injured.” Sexton, in contrast, does – lasting just 28 minutes against Exeter in the Champions Cup quarters.  

Enter Byrne. “The transition was seamless,” says Dunne. “In fact, I felt Leinster improved significantly as that game went on.”

A week after Exeter, Fanning caught up with his former team-mate. He remembers the diligent youngster who was always one of the last to leave the training field, recalls an A game where he was on the end of one Byrne’s trademark crossfield kicks and remembers the summer of 2018 when there was all this fuss about Carbery leaving for Munster. “It says a lot about Ross that Leinster didn’t let him go,” says Fanning.

“And I can see why they didn’t. He’s your perfect pro, never injured, always giving his all, whether he’s the No22 in the squad or the starting 10 and he deserves this chance today because as I said, there is a reason why you get to play 100 times for Leinster. It isn’t because you’re lucky. It’s because you are good.”

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ENGLAND PROP KYLE Sinckler fought back the tears today as he reflected on missing out on selection for the British and Irish Lions.

The Bristol Bears tighthead was one of the most surprising omissions in the 37-man squad named by Warren Gatland to tour South Africa this summer.

Sinckler travelled to New Zealand with the Lions in 2017 and featured in all three Tests against the All Blacks, but failed to make the cut this time around as Gatland opted for Ireland duo Tadhg Furlong and Andrew Porter, along with Scotland’s Zander Fagerson.

Sinckler responded to the setback with a man of the match display for Bristol as Pat Lam’s side powered to a 40-20 win at Bath in the Gallagher Premiership on Saturday.

And speaking to BT Sport after the game, Sinckler admitted it has been a difficult week, thanking his friends and family, as well as life-coaching programme Saviour World, for their support.

“I’m not going to lie, I’m quite emotional right now,” Sinckler said. “It’s been tough. It means so much to me.”

“I’m just lucky that I had my mentor at Saviour World and we actually broke it down, and I understand why and the reasons why, and I think in a year or two’s time I’ll look back on it and it will all make sense, but obviously at the moment, right now, it doesn’t kind of make sense. 

“But what I wanted to try and do was lead by example and show the kids, you know? Like, how easy would it have been for me to play the victim and say how bad it is, throw my toys out the pram…

“It’s been so tough. I’ve never experienced something like this in my whole life, let alone my career. I’m just lucky I’ve got a good support team around me.

“I just wanted to show the kids and everyone at home how much it means to me and lead by example. Not just throw your toys out the pram, do the tough stuff, get on with it. Use that anger. 

“I’ve got so much anger inside me right now, but actually (try) use it in a positive way and do what is best for the team and do all the unselfish stuff, and I think I did that today.” 

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DAN McFARLAND SAYS Robbie Henshaw’s unpunished tackle on Robert Baloucoune wasn’t the decisive factor in Ulster’s Rainbow Cup defeat to Leinster, even though the in-form centre went on to score the crucial third try for the home side.

Henshaw floored Ulster wing Baloucoune with a huge tackle in the first half, which was examined by referee Mike Adamson following a captain’s challenge from Iain Henderson. 

Adamson gave the tackle a second viewing but decided against showing Henshaw a card, to Henderson’s clear disbelief. Henshaw was removed for a HIA following the incident, but returned to play a central role in Leinster’s powerful second half display, and scored the game’s decisive score as the hosts came from behind to power to a 21-17 win.

“I couldn’t hear what Mike Adamson said,” McFarland explained.

“The view that we have, it looked to me that if had been a collision with the body and then up to the head, it should have been a yellow card. However, I’m not privy to all the angles and I wasn’t watching that closely. Mike made the decision there and it is what it is.

“I don’t think it was decisive anyway, but it meant that we lost our captain’s challenge, which was disappointing.”

Overall McFarland said he was encouraged by Ulster’s performance, particularly given the manner of their defeat to Munster at Thomond Park last week.

“I’d be really happy with our defence,” he said. “The lads really got stuck in this week. They drove it themselves and I thought the effort out there was absolutely outstanding, and for a lot of that game we kept one of the best attacking sides in Europe very quiet.

“In terms of creating things I thought we probably did a better job, in terms of finishing things we definitely didn’t do a better job. 

“I thought our scrum went well, we got the try off big pressure on their ball. There were a lot of really good attacks, certainly through the middle of the park where we created a lot of opportunities, but unfortunately we couldn’t finish those off.

“There were far too many turnovers that were really of our own doing.”

Leinster head coach Leo Cullen also pinpointed his side’s accuracy as an area in which they can look to sharpen up in the coming weeks.

His team now head into two weekends off – enviously watching next Saturday’s Champions Cup final between La Rochelle and Toulouse from a distance – before taking on Glasgow and the Dragons.

“I thought the scramble was good, defensively. Ulster came out wounded I guess,” Cullen said.

“You knew they would after their last few weeks. We knew it was going to be a real tough, physical battle out there today.

“I thought the intent was good, we probably just lacked a bit of accuracy and a number of facets of the game, but it’s a good win against a team that we knew would be highly motivated. 

“Overall, it’s a good win. Ulster were pretty motivated. A bit frustrating from our end, we scored our third try around 60 minutes in, so still a good 20 minutes to go and we can’t quite kick on.

“Our accuracy levels left us down, so unfortunately we weren’t quite good enough today. I think the effort was good but accuracy definitely needs work.”

Source: The42 Rugby Weekly/SoundCloud

Bernard Jackman, Garry Doyle and Gavan Casey discuss the interpros and, inspired by new Ospreys signing Jack Regan, the need for Irish rugby to expand its methods for producing talent.

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6/25/19 WWE Smackdown Viewership

September 30, 2022 | News | No Comments

Smackdown this week drew 1,921,000 viewers, up 36,000 viewers from last week’s broadcast. It’s the third week in a row that the show failed to pass the two million viewer mark. The show was #1 in the top 50 cable chart among the 18-49 demographic and #8 in the overall viewership for the night on cable.
(Ratings credit: Showbuzzdaily.com)
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In an interview with Sporting News, Roman Reigns said that he wants the fans to react to him however they want, because he’s going to perform the way he wants and do it for them. Here are highlights:
On how the fans react: “I want the fans to do what they want to do. I want to do what I want to do and that’s perform for them. That’s the relationship. That’s what’s so beautiful about our entertainment: We do it together. It’s not like we make it, we work on it, we send it out. No. We make it with the audience. As long as they are achieving what they set out to do when they come to these shows and that’s to have a good time, to get lost in it – whether it’s cheering or booing – as long as you’re having an emotional connection, that’s all I care about because I don’t want you to pay your money and then come here and sit on your hands,” Reigns added. “I want you to go nuts whether it’s in a good or a bad way. I want you to go crazy and have a great time and disconnect from the world and escape with us.”
On his personal story getting involved in storylines: “For me, it rearranged my perspective because I still enjoy creating. I love to go out there and tell a story through wrestling and sports entertainment, but we’re in a place now where we’re not just performers. We are people. I’ve always wanted to have just a little more of a purpose than just being that entertainer and I think now with my story and the things I’ve gone through, people can connect with me and they can see where I’m coming from and the struggles I’ve been through and it gives them a little better taste of the person I am. If they can connect with Joe a little more than Roman, then I think I’m doing a better job at my career and my life than I was before.”
On letting the world about his leukemia: “With my career, being a bit of a polarizing character, you just never know how people are going to take it. And, on top of that, it’s my personal business. Like everyone else, I have the right to my privacy, but I think, in my head, with all the support that I have received and even with, beforehand, a crazy, polarizing reaction, there were still so many supporters, so many people that have always had my back and always had my best interest out for me and have been by my side. When a lot of people were hating and talking down on me, those people were backing me up. I just felt like it was my responsibility to let them know what was going on. That way, they didn’t have to make their own assumptions. They didn’t have to buy into the rumors or the dirt sheets or whatever anyone is saying. They just hear it from me and they know, ‘Alright guys, this is what’s going on with me.’ It’s been a bit of something I’ve already gone through and I never felt the need to share it, but I want you to know that I’m going to be fine.’”Click Here: vodacom bulls rugby jersey