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Prop Palframan renews deal at Newcastle until 2027

Prop Palframan renews deal at Newcastle until 2027

BBC News19-02-2025

Newcastle Falcons prop-forward Richard Palframan has agreed a new two-year deal with the Premiership club.The 31-year-old has made 51 appearances for the Falcons since joining from Worcester Warriors in 2021, with the South Africa-born forward having previously played for London Irish and London Scottish.Director of rugby Steve Diamond told the club website, external: "Palf has done a great job for us on the tight-head side, and I was always keen to extend his time with the club."He's a fantastic character who offers a lot to us on and off the field, and I'm glad that he will be with us as we look to move the club forward over the next few years."Palframan said it was "a privilege" to be part of Newcastle and said he was "grateful for the chance to keep doing what I love, playing alongside a great bunch of lads and working with the fantastic staff"."The club has been through some tough times over the last few years but it really feels like we're in a better place now, and heading in the right direction."Palframan follows fellow front-rower Murray McCallum in agreeing a new contract in the last 24 hours.McCallum also signed a new two-year deal on Tuesday.

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Joining Larne was the best move I made, but I'm home for my daughter, says ex-Accies ace
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Joining Larne was the best move I made, but I'm home for my daughter, says ex-Accies ace

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You've got to keep everyone positive, chat to media, keep the team aligned. But I've been very lucky that there haven't been too many of those moments. When they have cropped up, the playing group bands together and makes us stronger.' This week marks the first Test that Australia have played at Lord's since the drama two years ago when England were chasing a big total with an inspired Ben Stokes and a pugnacious Jonny Bairstow at the crease. The last ball of the 52nd over flew harmlessly into the gloves of the Australian wicketkeeper Alex Carey. Bairstow thought he had made sure he was in his crease before strolling down the pitch. Carey threw the ball and hit the stumps, Australia appealed and the umpire, who hadn't called for the end of the over, raised his finger. There was outrage in the ground and the Long Room where the florid anger of many MCC members was accompanied by booing and shouts of 'shame' as the Australians walked past. Warner and Usman Khawaja were even confronted by heated England supporters. 'It was a series with such high emotion,' Cummins says. 'Everyone was so wound up but my gut reaction was pretty similar to what I feel now. If you take all the emotion away it's just a simple out and you don't need to make it any bigger. It's out, move on. I've seen it happen before.' When Cummins missed the Champions Trophy this year his stand-in, Smith, withdrew a run‑out appeal after Afghanistan's Noor Ahmad ambled out of his crease in a group game. It suggested some kind of change in Australian attitudes, but Cummins says: 'I can't remember that specifically. Sorry. I think it was slightly different circumstances but, look, we want to play hard and fair and I think over my tenure we've got it right just about every time.' Would he do it again? 'Yes,' Cummins says firmly of Bairstow's stumping. The view in the Australian camp is that England would do the same and they 'tried it three times' previously. All this is said calmly, five months before Ashes hostilities resume in Australia. Cummins is vague about England's excitement around Jacob Bethell – he has heard the talk 'a little bit,' adding: 'When he batted [on his Test debut in New Zealand] was it three? I haven't seen much.' He also glosses over England's current uncertainty around their injury‑riddled bowling attack. 'I don't really care. It feels so long away.' Cummins admits that his all-conquering team are approaching the end of an era. 'Yes. No doubt. We've got quite a few players who are past their mid-30s and there seems to be a natural attrition rate into the late‑30s. If you'd asked me a year or two ago I would have said: 'It's going to be a huge change. There's a little bit to be worried about.' But we've seen Josh Inglis, Sam Konstas, [Nathan] McSweeney debut throughout [Australia's] summer. [Beau] Webster's come in plus a few others have debuted in white-ball cricket. I don't think the transition will be as jarring as we first thought.' Does he have concerns about the future of Test cricket – the format he loves most? 'Yes and no. In Australia, no. Each summer it seems to get stronger and stronger. The ticket sales for the Ashes are just berserk the last week. But that's not the reality for many Test-playing nations and one of the beauties about Test cricket is playing in totally different conditions with different challenges. I'd hate Test cricket to turn into only a couple of nations.' In 25 years will Australia and England still be playing Tests against Pakistan, West Indies and South Africa? 'It's really hard to say. I hope so. But if we just let things play out, probably not. There needs to be some intervention and finding a way – maybe its dedicated windows for franchise cricket. I really hope so because they are cricket-loving nations as well. They're always going to have good players and [offer] a tough challenge.' Can Cummins play for another five years? 'Yes, I'd hope so. Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood are a couple of years older than me, but they don't show any signs of slowing up. I'm trying to look after myself and I'd love to play in my mid-30s. I feel great and physically as good as I have in a few years. I love the job and just want to keep doing it – particularly in Test cricket. I want to keep playing for a long time and do it with good people while making it fun and hopefully winning along the way.'

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