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Chelsea rocked by disappearance of £30,000 worth of equipment from Blues' Cobham training ground as police called in

Chelsea rocked by disappearance of £30,000 worth of equipment from Blues' Cobham training ground as police called in

The Irish Sun6 hours ago
CHELSEA have been rocked by the disappearance of £30,000 of camera equipment from their training ground.
The Blues called Surrey Police after the gear was reported missing from their Cobham HQ.
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Police were called to Chelsea's training ground this week
Credit: GETTY
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The Blues rang the old bill after over £30,000 worth of camera equipment went missing
Credit: GETTY
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It remains unclear whether the hi-tech video equipment has just been mislaid and will come to light once all staff have returned from holiday.
But the incident is suspicious enough for the club to have involved the police.
Top football clubs like the world champion Blues make extensive use of video footage from training and matches to help players' physical, technical, tactical and mental performance.
Chelsea declined to comment about the timing and circumstances of the discovery that the equipment was not where it should be.
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But if a crime has been committed, it won't be the first in the leafy Surrey suburbs to affect the club.
A number of Chelsea players have been the victims of break-ins at their mansions near the club's training base.
Raheem Sterling's home was targeted in December 2022 while he was with England at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, with a group of burglars stealing £300,000 of designer watches.
Sterling flew home from the tournament to comfort his family before returning to the Middle East.
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Albanian Emiliano Krosi was later jailed for more than 11 years for his part in the raid and 32 other burglaries across the South East.
Sterling was the fourth Chelsea player to have his home burgled in a relatively short space of time.
Drake hints Cole Palmer is inspiration behind his new album name as he shares brilliant video of Chelsea star
Current club captain Reece James slammed the 'cowardly thieves' who broke into his house in December 2021 while he was playing for the Blues in the Champions League.
The burglars got away with a safe that contained James' medal from Chelsea's Champions League win of that year, as well as the Euro 2020 runners-up medal he earned with England.
At least two other unnamed Chelsea players were understood to have suffered similar experiences around the same time
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Jim Williams recalls Munster move: 'It was one of the best decisions I ever made'
Jim Williams recalls Munster move: 'It was one of the best decisions I ever made'

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Jim Williams recalls Munster move: 'It was one of the best decisions I ever made'

A visit to Australia by the British & Irish Lions always offers former Wallaby Jim Williams an opportunity to reflect, both on his experience of playing against the tourists and the doors it opened for a career-defining move to Munster. It is 24 years ago that Williams captained a Brumbies side including Stephen Larkham against a Lions team featuring Munster icons and soon-to-be clubmates Ronan O'Gara and David Wallace and then tasted victory over Graham Henry's 2001 tourists in an Australia A jersey. Two months later, having been overlooked for the Test series after 14 caps and a place in the 1999 World Cup-winning squad, the No.8 was making his debut in red in a pre-season friendly for Declan Kidney's side at Musgrave Park against London Irish. Williams played 74 times for Munster, became the province's captain before transitioning to an assistant coach under Kidney in the historic 2005-06 season at the end of which the Heineken Cup was lifted for the first time. By the time he left for home to take up the same role with the Wallabies at the end of the 2007-08, 'Seamus' was a Munster icon in his own right and now 56 he has not forgotten the impact his seven years in Ireland has made on him. Williams is no longer involved in rugby, choosing lifestyle over coaching professionally with a career change to a government job and moving south of Sydney to Woolongong. Yet the 2025 Lions tour drew him back in once more, if only from his sofa. "It's been excellent," he told the Irish Examiner before settling down for the final Test last Saturday. "I mean I love the Lions tours, doesn't matter where they are and where they're playing, it's always something that I try not to miss." Shane Horgan, Leinster, in action against Munster's Jim Williams, 6, and Ronan O'Gara in the Celtic League Final 2001. Pic: Matt Browne, Sportsfile Playing against the 2001 Lions was a significant moment for Williams. "It was my first introduction to Ronan O'Gara and guys like that. It certainly holds special memories, and the game down in Canberra (with the Brumbies) was excellent. "We got really close to beating them that night, great atmosphere, and all those special memories certainly of that Lions tour when they came out in 2001. "And I joined Munster straight after that Lions tour.' Williams credits a young adult life as an amateur player for helping him to settle so successfully at Munster. He joined the Australian Army at 17, also worked as a plumber and had a season in English club rugby at West Hartlepool in the mid-nineties. "I didn't play professional rugby until I was 30, with the Brumbies. I suppose that might have helped a little bit, being a little bit more mature, and moving with my partner at the time wasn't a big deal because it was the two of us. "So it wasn't a massive move, but I certainly did take the time, and I had a lot of advice from John Langford at the time about Munster. "I did have a few other offers in France and I just thought basically going to an English-speaking place over in Europe was probably on my mind. "And the fact that it was Munster and John Langford had been there and had raved about it an had been so well accepted and had been successful himself, it really wasn't an issue about where I was going to go after that. "It was always going to be Munster from there on in, and certainly it worked out that way. It was just a wonderful time of my life." For Munster supporters, memories of Williams the powerful ball carrier and tackler with excellent leadership qualities tend to stand out, yet the man himself equally cherishes the dressing room camaraderie he felt as a player and his time as a coach under Kidney, when the province finally lifted the Heineken Cup. "Winning those from a coaching perspective, my first year of coaching and having the likes of Declan Kidney back and that kind of thing, that was wonderful from that perspective. And to be able to do it in 2008 as well, that was very special. 'Obviously as a player, you always want to win those titles, but I think from a coaching perspective, it was extremely rewarding. "It's not easy to go from a playing environment to a coaching environment, especially with guys that you've just done so much with. "As a player, I just had the right environment around me, I had the right coaching, I had the right players, and the right support outside of rugby as well to be able to succeed while I was there. "I can't pick out one game. I mean, people pick out the Gloucester game, the Miracle game and all that kind of thing but I think every time I got on the pitch with those boys, the likes of Ronan O'Gara, Paul O'Connell, Donncha O'Callaghan, Anthony Horgan, those type of guys, it was always something that I was going to try my best at. "I didn't need to think about it. I didn't need to do anything different from what I normally do. I did the work during the week and I knew all these boys would. "You didn't always win games, things didn't always work out, but I knew the effort was always there and I think that was probably the most enjoyable thing from a playing perspective. "I always knew these guys were always going to put it in every time they went out and from a coaching perspective, I think to coach that and see that from outside was just as rewarding. "I suppose just the experience that I had playing with the guys and being able to coach them, I think it's probably the most special thing that I can take away from my time at Munster. "I had success playing with them. I probably had more success being part of the coaching staff and being able to be a part of those two titles that we got, I think it was just wonderful. It's just something that I'll never forget." Williams thinks Australia should send more of their players overseas to experience different environments, conditions and team cultures and cites Will Skelton's current spell under O'Gara at La Rochelle as a prime example of the benefits to Wallaby rugby. And he cited his only visit to the redeveloped Thomond Park with the Australians on the November tour of 2016 as the perfect example of a collective lack of experience as Munster defeated the touring Wallabies 15-6 on a typically wild cold and stormy winter's night in Limerick. 'I've been back to the stadium once with Australia which wasn't a happy hunting ground That was a wild night. I've seen conditions like that before and I wasn't surprised. "The team that went out that night, the coaches that went out that night, the looks on their faces, they hadn't been a part of conditions like that. 'I had no illusions about the conditions that were going to happen and full credit to Munster that game, they just played the conditions perfectly and that's more or less what won them the game and they thoroughly deserved it. "That's the beauty about playing overseas and going overseas and playing. Obviously playing in different countries but playing in different environments and playing in different conditions. "You've got the likes of Nic White who have come back and guys like Will Skelton who I think is a better player for the fact of playing overseas and understanding what it's like to play in different conditions and different arenas and different styles of football. "It should be a wonderful learning experience to go overseas with the Wallabies on the Spring tours. Yes, they want to play and they want to play well and they want to win but they want to learn from those aspects about playing overseas and playing in different conditions and weather that's not conducive to running rugby and adjusting your game and adjusting the mentality about what you do and how you do things to win games. 'It's certainly an honour playing over in Europe and playing in different conditions and it's just something that I'm so glad I did, when I had the opportunity to do it. It was one of the best decisions I ever made."

When Shamrock Rovers moved lock stock to Boston
When Shamrock Rovers moved lock stock to Boston

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

When Shamrock Rovers moved lock stock to Boston

I think it is fair to say that football has finally taken off in the United States. With a World Cup on the horizon and steadily increasing attendances, the sport that always eluded the adoration of the US sporting community has begun to embed itself in the culture of young sports fans across the Atlantic. A lot of effort and some strange ideas have gone into the countless attempts by different individuals to get the world's most popular sport into the heart of the US public. There has always been a very American approach to the philosophy around growing the sport in the US. Get the big stars in and surround them with pageantry and hype and the celeb-crazed American public will lap it up. In 2025 it is Lionel Messi, in 2007 it was David Beckham. Some people of a certain vintage will remember in the 70s when it was Pele. However, in the 1960s it was Shamrock Rovers. Well, not quite, but stay with me. Following the fanfare around England's 1966 World Cup triumph, there was a growing interest in the US around building a professional football league in a country where the sport barely registered with the general public. Two rival football associations emerged - The National Professional Soccer League (NPSL) and the United Soccer Association(USA). The United Soccer Association, otherwise known as The USA (confusing, I know) took an audacious shortcut to build up their league and their credibility. Instead of spending years registering teams, building squads and recruiting players they decided to import entire clubs from Europe and South America and gave them new identities in order to kickstart their new league. Some recognisable names set sail to the United States for the inaugural USA League in 1967 including Wolverhampton Wanderers, Aberdeen, Cagliari and Shamrock Rovers. Teams were renamed and placed in a city relevant to them which led to Shamrock Rovers being stationed in Boston due to Boston's large Irish community. They were renamed 'Boston Rovers'. Boston Rovers pin badge. 'Going to the States in the sixties was fantastic,' according to Mick Leech, the Shamrock Rovers legend who was just 20 when he boarded that transatlantic flight. 'Dublin and Ireland at the time was a dreary, gloomy place. The whole trip was Disneyworld.' Rovers played their home games in the Manning Bowl in Lynn, a suburb 10 miles out of downtown Boston. It was a baseball stadium that was not necessarily decked out for soccer due to its square playing surface. Around 7,000 spectators went to see Rovers nab a 1-1 draw in their opening game on May 28 against the Detroit Cougars, better known to you and I as Glentoran FC from Belfast. The following week saw a 3-1 victory over the Houston Stars but things quickly went downhill after that and positive results on the pitch were few and far between. Rovers suffered a heavy 5–0 defeat to the Chicago Mustangs and a 4-1 loss to Dallas Tornados. The glamour of a trip abroad to America would not have been complete without a few celebrity encounters. Leech talks about an encounter with a young musician in an elevator in Toronto who turned out to be a 17-year-old Stevie Wonder. The squad also met with Maureen O'Hara, the Irish film icon from Dublin who was a diehard Rovers fan her entire life. Boston Rovers finished dead last in the league with two wins, three draws and seven losses. At the same time the whole project was failing quite spectacularly. 'They were interested in promoting soccer, but it was a business situation,' Leech says. 'The crowds were poor, there was no money to be made.' The players began to notice the quality of their food and accommodation diminishing as well as their spending money being reduced. The league received modest coverage in the American press but was basically not reported on at all back home in Ireland. The plug was pulled and the project was over only a couple of months after it had begun. Of the 12 teams who competed in the league, only the Dallas Tornados (Dundee United) would exist to see the beginning of the next decade. In 1968, the USA and NPSL merged into the North American Soccer League which would later use the same guiding principals to draw in global stars such as Pele, Cryuff and Beckenbauer. The Rovers squad returned home to Dublin and the Boston Rovers renamed themselves the Boston Beacons before folding one year later. In hindsight, it was always unlikely that a country with no interest in football was going to have its passion for the sport ignited and set ablaze by the likes of Shamrock Rovers and Stoke City, but the efforts of the USA league was the first attempts of a tactic that would remain as a means to increasing the sports popularity for decades to come and one which has ultimately worked. In other words, Shamrock Rovers walked so that Inter Miami could run. Though there were few great on-field moments or iconic games to talk about, it was an opportunity for young Dublin footballers such as Mick Leech to travel to America and see the world at a time when this was unaffordable to most. It also gave somewhat of an international reputation to clubs like Shamrock Rovers and, who knows, maybe there's a few fifth generation Irish Americans who retained their interest in the hoops long after Boston Rovers were gone.

Shelbourne FC beat Croatian champions away in Europa League
Shelbourne FC beat Croatian champions away in Europa League

The Journal

time4 hours ago

  • The Journal

Shelbourne FC beat Croatian champions away in Europa League

Uefa Europa League (Third qualifying round, first leg) HNK Rijeka 1 Shelbourne 2 GOALS FROM SAM Bone and John Martin saw Shelbourne stage a remarkable come from behind victory to record perhaps their greatest away night in Europe, stunning Croatian champions Rijeka in their own backyard on the Adriatic coast. Ahead of this first leg, head coach Joey O'Brien spoke of there being no Plan B in talking up his side's ability to come and win the game. And that they did, showing admirable organisation and shape under Rijeka's dominance of the ball and commendable composure and intent when they had it. It's now very much all to play for ahead of the second leg at Tolka Park next Tuesday. The rewards for getting through are huge. The winners advance to the Europa League play-off round with the parachute guarantee of Conference League league phase and its minimum €3.8 million prize fund. Greek side PAOK or Wolfsberger of Austria await in the play-off round of the Europa League. Defeat for the League of Ireland champions could see a repeat of their Champions League first round clash with Linfield in the Conference League play-offs, should the Irish League kingpins come through their third tier tie against Vikingur of the Faroe Islands. Joey O'Brien celebrates winning. Aleksandar Djorovic / INPHO Aleksandar Djorovic / INPHO / INPHO O'Brien made five changes from last week's Champions League loss at Qarabag, setting up in a defensive 5-3-2 formation with Mipo Odubeko and Sean Boyd both starting in attack. As expected, Rijeka enjoyed plenty of possession as they worked for openings early on before an injury to Boyd forced Shelbourne into an early change with Martin coming into the fray in a straight swap up top. Despite their dominance of the ball, it was 22 minutes before the home side threatened, Amir Gojak's low drive comfortably held by Wessel Speel. The well-positioned Speel ably dealt with a strike from Niko Jankovic before Shelbouren enjoyed their first spell of possession. Rijeka finished the first 45 back on the front foot, creating their only clear opening of the half. Again it was Jankovic who got sight of goal, his low drive bringing a fine save down to his right from Speel. Advertisement But an unforced error from Speel would all but gift Rijeka the lead 11 minutes after the interval. The recently signed on loan Dutch goalkeeper took a heavy touch from Bone's back pass and then tripped inrushing Congolese winger Merveic Ndockyt. The impressive Jankovic sent Speel the wrong way from 12 yards. The lead lasted just two minute, however, as Shelbourne levelled with a terrific set-piece goal from their first corner of the game. Kerr McInroy worked a one-two from the flag kick with Harry Wood to cross. James Norris nodded the ball back across goal where Bone arrived to head it over the line. Sam Bone scores Shelbourne's first goal. Aleksandar Djorovic / INPHO Aleksandar Djorovic / INPHO / INPHO The game really having opened up now, Speel redeemed his error for the penalty with a superb tip-over save to deprive Simon Butic while, at the other end, Martin surged forward to rifle a shot just over the crossbar. Shelbourne then silenced the home crowd with a brilliant winner on the night on 70 minutes. Milan Mbeng fed Wood on the right whose arced cross had plenty of pace on it for the negligently marked Martin whose firm header found the top corner to the delight of the boisterous Shelbourne support in the caged away end. Rijeka pressed for much of the remainder of the game as Shelbourne defended tenaciously, epitomised by a brave block by captain Paddy Barrett on a shot from Tiago Dantas. Then came a late scare in stoppage time when a VAR penalty check was needed after a shot from Jankovic struck Bone's arm by his side. But when the Spanish referee blew his whistle it was for full-time. HNK Rijeka: Zlomislic; Orec, Majstorovic (Husic, h-t), Radeljic, Devetak (Lasickas, h-t); Jankovic, Gojak (Menalo, 69), Dantas; Ndockyt, Juric (Cop, 69), Butic (Tanjov, 76). Shelbourne: Speel; Mbeng (Gannon, 87), Bone, Barrett, Ledwidge, Norris; McInroy (Coyle, 87), Lunney, Wood (Chapman, 77); Odubeko (Kelly, h-t), Boyd (Martin, 19). Referee: Ricardo de Burgos (Spain). Written by Paul Buttner and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here .

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