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Ireland men's sevens cut 'nothing short of a disgrace'

Ireland men's sevens cut 'nothing short of a disgrace'

Yahoo15-05-2025
Former World Rugby sevens player of the year Terry Kennedy says the decision to cut the Ireland men's sevens team at the end of the 2024-25 season is "nothing short of a disgrace".
On Wednesday, the Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) confirmed the cessation of the men's sevens programme as "part of a broader strategic effort to ensure long-term financial sustainability".
In November, the IRFU's financial results showed an 18m euro (£15.1m) deficit for the 2023-24 season.
Kennedy, who competed in the Tokyo and Paris Olympics men's sevens, was critical of the IRFU's decision.
"Absolutely shocking from the IRFU. The way they've handled the whole situation is nothing sort of a disgrace," he said in a statement on social media.
"So disappointed the current group of players as well as the younger players coming through won't be afforded the same opportunities that myself and the lads have because of the short-sightedness of a couple of old guys running the game here."
Players' union 'immensely disappointed' as Ireland men's sevens cut
Kennedy opted to take a break from sevens after Ireland's quarter-final exit against Fiji at Paris 2024.
He missed what proved to be the men's sevens' last tournament in Los Angeles earlier this month, when they finished 11th and suffered relegation in the World SVNS Series.
"The financial/cost-cutting excuse is complete smoke and mirrors, masquerading the fact that every Rugby World Cup year unions run at a major loss due to a lack of November match revenue," continued the statement from the wing, who won the World Rugby award in 2022.
"Between funding from World Rugby for being on the World Series, Sport Ireland funding from Olympic success and sponsorship funding, no other programme outside the men's 15s brings in anywhere near the revenue."
Kennedy was also critical of the money being spent by the likes of Leinster on short-term contracts in the men's 15-a-side game.
Leinster brought in New Zealand international Jordie Barrett this season and are set to add international team-mate Rieko Ioane after the November internationals.
"No mention of the millions paid to bring foreign players over on short-term contracts and the budget to pay for committee members travelling to Six Nations games and tours with lunches and dinners – far more than the whole 7s budget," Kennedy added.
"The disrespect that the IRFU have shown to Sport Ireland and the Irish Olympic Committee after all their years of funding, utterly disgraceful."
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The secret to Sparks star Cameron Brink's success after her ACL injury? Vision boards
The secret to Sparks star Cameron Brink's success after her ACL injury? Vision boards

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The secret to Sparks star Cameron Brink's success after her ACL injury? Vision boards

Each morning before Cameron Brink pulls on her Sparks jersey, she scans a taped-up collage in her closet. Olympic rings, a WNBA All-Star crest, snapshots with her fiancé and a scatter of Etsy trinkets crowd the board. The canvas is a handmade constellation of who Brink is and who she longs to be. Between magazine clippings and scribbled affirmations, Brink sees both the grand arc and the small vows that tether her: to show up as a teammate, a daughter and a partner. 'You have a choice every day to have a good outlook or a bad outlook,' said Brink, the Sparks' starting forward. 'I try to choose every day to be positive.' That choice seemed to matter most when the future felt furthest away. The practice emerged in the thick of a 13-month recovery from a torn anterior cruciate ligament. Brink — the Stanford star and Sparks No. 2 draft pick — was forced to measure life in the tiniest ticks of progress after injuring her left knee a month into the 2024 season. Sparks veteran Dearica Hamby recognized how rehab was grinding down the rookie. One afternoon, she invited Brink to her home, where the dining table was set with scissors, glue sticks, stacks of magazines and knickknacks. 'I've always been taught growing up that your mind is your biggest power,' Brink said. 'So I've always been open to stuff like that. I heavily believe in manifesting what you want and powering a positive mindset.' Hamby had been building vision boards for years and believed Brink could use the same practice — both as a pastime and as a mechanism to combat the doubts that surfaced during her lengthy and often lonely rehab. 'If she can visualize it, she can train her mind the opposite of her negative thoughts and feelings,' Hamby said. 'When you see it, you can believe it. Your brain is constantly feeding itself. And if you have something in the back — those doubts — you need something to counter that.' Read more: Cameron Brink returns but Aces end Sparks' winning streak The board dearest to Brink wasn't crowded with stats or accolades. She crafted what she calls her 'wonderful life,' layering in snapshots of her fiancé, Ben Felter, and framed by symbols of family and team. 'You're a product of your mind,' Brink said. 'Everything in my life, I feel like I've fought and been intentional about.' Fighting was what the year demanded. However inspiring the boards looked taped inside her closet, the reality was gradual and often merciless. From the night she was carried off the court last June to the ovation that greeted her return in July, Brink's progress unfolded in inches — from the day she could stand, to the day she could walk to the day she touched the hardwood again. 'It's been such a journey,' Sparks coach Lynne Roberts said. 'Cam's mentality was just trying not to freak out. She was really focused on not being anxious about it.' 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Now we're betting on the Little League World Series? Sports gambling has gone too far
Now we're betting on the Little League World Series? Sports gambling has gone too far

San Francisco Chronicle​

time37 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Now we're betting on the Little League World Series? Sports gambling has gone too far

Little League International made a public plea Thursday: 'We feel strongly that there is no place for betting on Little League games or on any youth sports competition.' Wrong. There is a place for betting on Little League games. Panama. U.S. sports books can't take bets on the Little League World Series, but a website 'in' Panama does. Not that it's easy. You can place bets on the kiddies only if you have access to a cell phone or a computer, so that limits the field of potential bettors to … humans who breathe. Panama, incidentally, has a team in the Little League World Series, so if you want to bet on the series, maybe you can simply hand the cash and your betting slip to one of the Panamanian players? I'm not sure. The rules are complicated. This much is not complicated: People are betting on the LLWS. That Panamanian site boasted to USA Today that the site will take more bets on LLWS games in the next two weeks than on any pro tennis or soccer match. This frosts the folks at LLI, who said in their scoldy proclamation, 'No one should be exploiting the success and failures of children playing the game they love for their own personal gain.' They added, 'We now return you to our wall-to-wall coverage of the Little League World Series on ESPN and ABC, sponsored exclusively by T-Mobile.' LLI didn't really say that last part. But the successes and failures of this year's World Series children are being nationally televised, every game, for somebody's personal gain. As far as I know, the players aren't getting paid. Juice boxes don't count. One goal of Little League baseball is to teach life lessons. So now LLI itself has learned a life lesson: If you televise a sport, people will bet on it. Another lesson LLI will learn very soon: Of all the effective ways to discourage gambling, shaming the gambler ranks about No. 653. I checked out that Panamanian betting site. You can bet on all the major sports. 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Prop bets, also called microbets, are a growing issue. If you bet on the Red Sox and they lose, you're mad at the team. If you bet on Bregman to strike out twice and he strikes out only once, you can zero in on the cause of your misfortune. A National Basketball Players Association spokesperson told ESPN that players 'are concerned that prop bets have become an increasingly alarming source of player harassment, both online and in person.' It's also a growing problem in the WNBA, where, as general fan interest picks up, so does betting action. A recent study showed that women's basketball players get three times as much online abuse as do men's basketball players. Good luck with eliminating or even reducing prop bets. They are candy. If you put controls on prop bets on U.S. gambling sites, hey, all the more action for the folks in Panama. But don't blame all trouble on the Panama propmeisters. 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The secret to Sparks star Cameron Brink's success after her ACL injury? Vision boards
The secret to Sparks star Cameron Brink's success after her ACL injury? Vision boards

Los Angeles Times

time37 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

The secret to Sparks star Cameron Brink's success after her ACL injury? Vision boards

Each morning before Cameron Brink pulls on her Sparks jersey, she scans a taped-up collage in her closet. Olympic rings, a WNBA All-Star crest, snapshots with her fiancé and a scatter of Etsy trinkets crowd the board. The canvas is a handmade constellation of who Brink is and who she longs to be. Between magazine clippings and scribbled affirmations, Brink sees both the grand arc and the small vows that tether her: to show up as a teammate, a daughter and a partner. 'You have a choice every day to have a good outlook or a bad outlook,' said Brink, the Sparks' starting forward. 'I try to choose every day to be positive.' That choice seemed to matter most when the future felt furthest away. The practice emerged in the thick of a 13-month recovery from a torn anterior cruciate ligament. Brink — the Stanford star and Sparks No. 2 draft pick — was forced to measure life in the tiniest ticks of progress after injuring her left knee a month into the 2024 season. Sparks veteran Dearica Hamby recognized how rehab was grinding down the rookie. One afternoon, she invited Brink to her home, where the dining table was set with scissors, glue sticks, stacks of magazines and knickknacks. 'I've always been taught growing up that your mind is your biggest power,' Brink said. 'So I've always been open to stuff like that. I heavily believe in manifesting what you want and powering a positive mindset.' Hamby had been building vision boards for years and believed Brink could use the same practice — both as a pastime and as a mechanism to combat the doubts that surfaced during her lengthy and often lonely rehab. 'If she can visualize it, she can train her mind the opposite of her negative thoughts and feelings,' Hamby said. 'When you see it, you can believe it. Your brain is constantly feeding itself. And if you have something in the back — those doubts — you need something to counter that.' The board dearest to Brink wasn't crowded with stats or accolades. She crafted what she calls her 'wonderful life,' layering in snapshots of her fiancé, Ben Felter, and framed by symbols of family and team. 'You're a product of your mind,' Brink said. 'Everything in my life, I feel like I've fought and been intentional about.' Fighting was what the year demanded. However inspiring the boards looked taped inside her closet, the reality was gradual and often merciless. From the night she was carried off the court last June to the ovation that greeted her return in July, Brink's progress unfolded in inches — from the day she could stand, to the day she could walk to the day she touched the hardwood again. 'It's been such a journey,' Sparks coach Lynne Roberts said. 'Cam's mentality was just trying not to freak out. She was really focused on not being anxious about it.' Brink came to practice with her game on a leash, her activity hemmed in by doctors' timelines. While teammates scrimmaged, she studied sets from the sidelines. Roberts praised her patient attitude as 'great,' a skill Brink sharpened by the ritual of opening her closet and trusting the journey. Kim Hollingdale, the Sparks' psychotherapist, worked closely with Brink during her recovery. While bound by confidentiality, she spoke to how manifestation tools can anchor an athlete through the mental strain of long recovery. 'Being able to stay in touch with where we're ultimately trying to get to can help on those days when it's feeling crappy,' Hollingdale said. 'Visualization helps us be like, 'OK, look, we're still heading to that vision. This is part of the journey.' It gives purpose, direction and a little hope when you're in the mud of recovery.' That sense of purpose, she added, is about giving the brain something familiar to return to when progress stalls — a way for the mind to rehearse what the legs can't. For Brink, that meant keeping her game alive in pictures she ran through her head. Putbacks in the paint became reruns in her mind, and Hollingdale said the brain scarcely knows the difference: If it sees it vividly enough, the muscles prime themselves as if the movement truly happened. What mattered wasn't just mechanics. Tuning out noise became essential as Brink was cleared to return as a WNBA sophomore by calendar yet a rookie by experience. What could have been crushing pressure was dimmed by the vision boards — the 'mental rehearsal,' as Hollingdale labeled it. 'I didn't want to focus on stat lines or accolades coming back from injury,' Brink said. 'I learned the importance of enjoying being out there, controlling what I can control, always having a good attitude — that's what I reframed my mindset to be about.' During Brink's return against the Las Vegas Aces on July 29, she snared an offensive rebound and splashed a three-pointer within the first minute. And since, she has posted 5.9 points and four rebounds an outing, headlined by a 14-point performance through 11 minutes against Seattle. Hollingdale tabbed Brink's return a rarity. She often prepares athletes to weather the gauntlet of 'firsts' — the first shot that clangs, the first whistle, the first crowd cheer — without expecting much beyond survival. But upon Brink's return, those firsts weren't looming unknowns. They were rehearsed memories. 'That is a testament to her being able to manage herself, her emotions and her anxiety and all the stress and pressure,' Hollingdale said. 'To come out and make a meaningful difference to your team straight away speaks to the ability to stay locked in and cut out the noise.' By refusing to sprint through recovery, Hamby said Brink insulated herself from the pressure that shadows young stars. The vision boards, Hamby added, became a tangible expression of Brink's decision to trust herself. 'She's done it differently,' Hamby said. 'For her, it's more of a mental thing than a physical thing. She took her time, not listening to people tell her she should have been back sooner.' When Brink shuts the closet door and heads to Arena for game day, she's already spent the morning tracing the steps of the night. On the next blank corner of her canvas? 'Being an All-Star and going to the Olympics,' she said.

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