Woolhope show bowls prowess to win LEH Two Counties trophy
WOOLHOPE continue to prove that they are the club to beat across Herefordshire and Gloucestershire as they produced a strong performance to beat St Martin's 47-30 in this year's LEH Two Counties trophy final.
Held at Upton Bishop the competition sees two teams of ten go head-to-head across four disciplines of singles, pairs, triples and fours with each player playing once.
The final represented another step on St Martin's journey from newborn short mat club to Herefordshire Short Mat Bowls Association stalwarts where a tough path to the final saw them overcome two Gloucestershire teams in Forest of Dean (93-63) and Kingsway (82-60) as they looked to do what both Gloster Knights and Gorsley Chapel were unable to do in the two years previous and turnover a seemingly unstoppable Woolhope side who themselves faced a difficult path with wins over Defford (84-64), Ross (96-64) and Lea/Llangarron (74-67).
The stage was set for an intriguing final and a brilliant first half of bowls lay ahead with Woolhope's Bryan Watkins taking on St Martin's Phil Ladd in the singles and Dawn Cox & John Mills taking on Jo Millington and Jim Knowles in the pairs.
Any nerves were soon put to one side for St Martin's as both mats capitalised on a sluggish start for the defending champions to put them both 7-1 up with four ends played.
However, a spirited fightback from those in blue and red ensured the crowd were treated to a tense finish.
A thrilling contest between Watkins and Ladd saw the momentum shift dramatically at the halfway mark, with Watkins edging ahead 12–9 going into the final end, holding his nerve and conceding just a single shot to give Woolhope a two-shot advantage after the opening discipline.
A very similar story played out in the pairs with both sides playing to the very best of their abilities.
Ultimately it was Cox and Mills who came out on top with 12-8 win putting them six shots up overall at the halfway stage with everything to play for ahead of the second half.
The second half required a strong start for St Martin's but it was Woolhope who flew out of the blocks, taking a lead in both the triples and fours.
As the ends ticked on, Woolhope used all their experience and exhibited flawless game management across both mats.
The Woolhope triple of Carole Crisp, Graham Watkins and Anthony Rogers held off a strong comeback from Keith Jones, Kim Wooden and Pete Goulding to finish up with a 10-8 victory and give their rink an eight-shot buffer as they headed into their eighth end.
Ultimately, the team of Shirley Cox, Steve Crisp, Matt Baker and Becci Cox did not need to rely on their eight-shot overall advantage as they produced the result of the night against St Martin's Hazel Vaughan, Irene Healey, Phil Smith & Alan Link with a 13-4 win, giving Woolhope their third LEH victory in a row.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
17 hours ago
- USA Today
Thunder trace ties to tight-knit fan community to 1995 Oklahoma City bombing
Thunder trace ties to tight-knit fan community to 1995 Oklahoma City bombing Most Thunder players weren't born when the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City was bombed 30 years ago. But everyone in the organization knows how the tragedy shaped the city. OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault was just 10 years old at the time of the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995. Just two players on the Thunder's roster had been born at that time – Alex Caruso had just turned 1, and Kenrich Williams was 4 months old. But they all have knowledge of the crime and tragedy because every Thunder employee – from the business side to basketball operations, from first-round draft pick to a player on a two-way G League contract – visits and tours the Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum. 'I was on that tour within a month of working here,' said Daigneault, who was hired as the franchise's G League coach in 2014. 'There's literally no one that's ever put a logo on their chest that has not been through there because it's just such a big part of the story of the city and the kindness, the compassion that the city has and this community has not only for the team but for one another.' April 19 marked the 30th anniversary of the bombing, and the memorial and museum has conducted several events honoring victims and their families and sharing history. There is no question the bombing shaped the city and region, contributing to its resolve, strength and sense of community. The memorial and museum are one mile north of the team's arena in downtown Oklahoma City, and about 500,000 people visit the sacred ground annually. The memorial is marked by solemnity and a reminder of evil. On a recent morning, visitors walked through the outdoor portion of the memorial. At one end, the 9:01 Gate 'represents the innocence before the attack' – the bombing happened at 9:02 – and the 9:03 Gate 'symbolizes the moment healing began.' The 168 chairs represent each of the people killed in the bombing, the survivor wall – a remnant from the explosion – and the survivor tree, 'a living symbol of resilience,' are part of the outdoor memorial. Kari Watkins is the president and CEO of the Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum and has had a significant role in creating a space that honors and teaches through a variety of storytelling methods, including interactive exhibits. Watkins, one of USA TODAY's 2025 Women of the Year, was the memorial and museum's first employee. She said Thunder executive vice president and general manager Sam Presti reached out to her. 'I met with him, talked to him and took him through (the memorial and museum), and we've become good friends,' Watkins told USA TODAY Sports. 'He is more than a GM to me. He is a friend.' Presti is on the memorial and museum's executive committee. 'We have this term called the Oklahoma Standard,' Watkins said. 'It was a term that (Tom) Brokaw coined the first night of his broadcast in 1995 talking about how Oklahomans were a little different. They were cowboy tough, they were resilient, they were strong, and they had set the standard he had never seen before. … 'I'll never forget one board meeting, I don't know, 10 years ago, eight years ago, Sam said, 'You guys take this for granted. You think everybody takes care of their neighbors.' Everybody steps up, and it says so much about the people of the city. They just go and do things. They serve others, they help others. And there's a kindness level here, and we've worked on that harder because of Sam's influence.' OPINION: How Pacers coach Rick Carlisle helped Thunder GM Sam Presti break into NBA C-suite USA TODAY Women of the Year: Pacers CEO Mel Raines relishes building community through sport On Friday, June 6, Watkins led NBA Commissioner Adam Silver and Thunder owner Clay Bennett on a tour. 'I was telling the commissioner the reason I think it's so important is because we are starting to see the same dehumanization and hear the same anti-government rhetoric, and we're hearing all those same noises we heard in 1995, and we've got to stop it,' Watkins said. 'We've got to figure how to sit down and listen.' Caruso, the Thunder's key reserve guard, started his professional basketball career with the Thunder's G League team in 2016. That's when he visited the memorial and museum for the first time. 'The cool thing about the organization is no matter how big, small, what your role is on the team, you make a trip out there just to learn about the history of it and how it did impact the community and understand why the relationship is so tight between this team and organization and the community,' Caruso said. Said Watkins: 'What the perpetrators sought to do in 1995 was to divide our city. And if you're here, you see a city that's united. And so those were the lessons we learned, and we just want to keep, we're passing them on to thousands of school kids a year. 'But when you wear the words Oklahoma City on your jersey, you are an ambassador for your city. And so when they come through, they learn the story. Most of them don't know it. They weren't alive. And unless they've Googled it or seen it somewhere, they don't know the story.' They now know the story, woven into the heart and soul of the city. Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
US Open '25: DeChambeau's sand save an all-time memory at golf's most punishing major
FILE - Bryson DeChambeau holds the trophy after winning the U.S. Open golf tournament Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Pinehurst, N.C. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart, File) FILE - Bryson DeChambeau shows the trophy to fans after winning the U.S. Open golf tournament Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Pinehurst, N.C. (AP Photo/George Walker IV, File) FILE - Bryson DeChambeau hits from the bunker on the 18th hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Pinehurst, N.C. (AP Photo/Matt York, File) FILE - Bryson DeChambeau hits from the bunker on the 18th hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Pinehurst, N.C. (AP Photo/Matt York, File) FILE - Bryson DeChambeau holds the trophy after winning the U.S. Open golf tournament Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Pinehurst, N.C. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart, File) FILE - Bryson DeChambeau shows the trophy to fans after winning the U.S. Open golf tournament Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Pinehurst, N.C. (AP Photo/George Walker IV, File) FILE - Bryson DeChambeau hits from the bunker on the 18th hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Pinehurst, N.C. (AP Photo/Matt York, File) It only feels right that the reigning titleholder at the golf championship that, at least in theory, anyone can win is the player who leans into the role of the sport's most relatable everyman, Bryson DeChambeau. And it only feels right that at the U.S. Open — a tournament built to humble and punish the best in the game as much as celebrate them — DeChambeau earned his title by hitting a shot that virtually no man can hit. Advertisement A plaque now sits outside the bunker on the 18th hole at Pinehurst No. 2, enshrining the spot where DeChambeau placed his name in the history books with what he called 'the shot of my life' — a 55-yard blast from the sand to 4 feet with the trophy hanging in the balance on Sunday at last year's Open. Defense of the title begins Thursday at Oakmont, getting ready to host its record 10th U.S. Open and a course with a longtime reputation for being as difficult as they come. All of which seems to suit the 31-year-old pro golfer/social media star just fine. His first U.S. Open title came in 2020 at Winged Foot, the course best known for producing the 1974 'Massacre at Winged Foot' along with Phil Mickelson's meltdown in the trees and trash cans more than 30 years later. Advertisement Then, last year, that bunker at Pinehurst. What would golf's everyman say to his millions of YouTube followers who someday might encounter their own version of the 50-yard bunker shot, widely recognized as one of the most difficult in the game, even under normal circumstances? 'The best piece of advice I give them is, just practice in weird, unique situations for maybe an hour a week, 20 minutes, whatever,' DeChambeau said. 'But try to be different and don't just hit the same stock shot every time.' A history-making shot in a tournament that does not produce them All the major championships have their own personalities. Advertisement The Masters produces roars through the pines during back-nine charges on Sunday. The British Open is a brittle links-style test where players have to think differently about getting from Point A to Point B. America's golf championship has a reputation for forcing the best players to suffer like the rest of us. As a result, the list of 'greatest shots of all time' at the U.S. Open is a short one: — Ben Hogan's 1-iron on the 72nd hole that helped force a playoff at Merion in 1950. — Arnold Palmer's lash with driver to the first green at Cherry Hills in 1960. — Jack Nicklaus' 1-iron that hit the flagstick on No. 17 at Pebble Beach in 1972. Advertisement — Tom Watson's chip from the rough on the same hole 10 years later to beat Nicklaus. — Tiger Woods' 12-foot putt at Torrey Pines in 2008 to force a playoff he eventually won over Rocco Mediate. And now, there is DeChambeau's bunker shot. 'When he took this big swing, the amount of confidence that you have to have to hit it that close to the golf ball and not accidentally catch too much ball and send it on top of the clubhouse, it's a very fine line," said NBC golf analyst Smylie Kaufman, whose biggest brush with pressure came when he played in the final group Sunday at the 2016 Masters. 'They work every single day, every week at these facets of the game in hopes they will have an opportunity to try it,' said Notah Begay, also of NBC. 'I think one of the most overlooked things about professional golf is all the calculation that happens on the fly in evaluating certain shots, which way the grass is lying, where the ball's going to land, and on top of all the normal things.' Advertisement A tournament for everyone could come down to Bryson, Rory, Scottie Maybe the biggest irony is what the U.S. Open officially sells itself as, versus what always ends up happening. More than 10,000 players signed up to qualify for the U.S. Open which is, officially, open to any professional, or amateur with a handicap of 0.4 or lower. There will be good stories to tell among those who went through qualifying to make the 156-man field: a 17-year-old high schooler from Georgia, a dentist in Indiana who used to caddie at Oakmont. The cold facts: The last man to run the gauntlet of local and sectional qualifying to win the title was Orville Moody in 1969. (Lucas Glover went through sectional qualifying only when he won in 2009.) By the time the sun starts going down on Sunday, the tournament almost certainly will come down to a handful of players who virtually all golf fans have heard of. Advertisement Though Scottie Scheffler is playing the best right now and Rory McIlroy recently won the Masters to complete the career Grand Slam, it's plausible to think that DeChambeau captures the attention of more of those fans than anyone. He recently surpassed 2 million subscribers on his YouTube channel. He is making golf feel like everyman's sport, posting videos in which he makes a hole-in-one with a wedge shot over his house, plays with off-the-rack clubs to see how they stack up and tries to beat a scratch golfer while playing left-handed. All of it sounds nutty, but it all goes back to that piece of advice he offered when asked how to replicate the improbable under impossible circumstances — i.e., a 50-yard bunker shot with the U.S. Open on the line. Advertisement 'Once you get a stock shot down and you're comfortable with it, go have some fun,' DeChambeau said. 'Do a chipping contest with your amateur friends and throw it in the bunker from 50 yards, or throw it in a bush and see if you can get out. Stuff to that extent has suited my game very well.' ___ AP Sports Writer Ben Nuckols contributed to this report. ___ AP golf:
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Yahoo
Robbie Fowler names Premier League striker as ideal summer signing
Robbie Fowler Backs Proven Premier League Striker for Liverpool Role When a striker of Robbie Fowler's pedigree speaks, people listen. The former Liverpool great, whose 183-goal tally puts him among the pantheon of Anfield legends, has identified one name he believes could lead the line for the Reds—Aston Villa's Ollie Watkins. Photo: IMAGO Speaking candidly during a fan Q&A on social media, Fowler replied to a supporter's query about Liverpool's striker options with a typically succinct endorsement: 'I'd take Ollie Watkins… works hard, got goals in him.' That sentiment, shared by Robbie Fowler, reflects more than just nostalgia or sentimentality. It underlines a pragmatic view of what Liverpool may need this summer if Darwin Núñez departs. Watkins brings goals and graft Watkins' Premier League output is no accident. He has scored at least 11 league goals in each of his five top-flight campaigns, a feat that speaks to his consistency. His 17 goals in all competitions for Aston Villa last season were bettered by only Mohamed Salah and Cody Gakpo in the Liverpool squad. Photo: IMAGO Fowler earlier described Watkins as 'a tremendous player and established and experienced in the Premier League,' underlining the blend of quality and know-how he could offer. Importantly, Watkins is also robust. While Diogo Jota's recurring injuries have disrupted Liverpool's attacking rhythm, Watkins has been a near ever-present for Villa. Age profile versus proven ability At 29, Watkins sits outside the usual FSG recruitment profile, where value and resale potential are prized. Yet, this may be a summer of exceptions. Arne Slot's Liverpool is emerging from a transitional period, and while the club is reportedly investing heavily in Florian Wirtz and Jeremie Frimpong, having a guaranteed goalscorer ready to plug straight into the starting XI could be vital. Photo: IMAGO Moreover, Watkins qualifies as homegrown and wouldn't need time to acclimatise to the pace and rigour of English football. With Darwin Núñez reportedly considering a fresh start, and the forward line yet to find its post-Klopp rhythm, the argument for a reliable No. 9 grows stronger. Financial challenge ahead As Fowler hints, landing a player like Watkins won't come cheap. With Aston Villa unlikely to welcome offers below premium market value, Liverpool would likely have to shell out a significant fee. Advertisement Still, if Liverpool are serious about growing the gap at the top and reasserting domestic dominance, they may need to revisit their transfer rulebook. Watkins, by all accounts, looks like a ready-made solution. Our View – Anfield Index Analysis There's a strange tension at Anfield these days: one part looking forward under Arne Slot, another still clinging to echoes of the Klopp era. In that space, the idea of signing Ollie Watkins feels both logical and jarring. Logical because he guarantees goals, runs himself into the ground for the team, and is Premier League-proven. Jarring because, at 29, he's not the shiny, untapped gem FSG usually pursue. Advertisement It's hard not to see the appeal. Watkins doesn't need adaptation time. He won't hide in big games. He doesn't miss two months with a hamstring strain. And if Núñez is heading out, we can't afford to be sentimental or naive in our pursuit of a replacement. But the concern is whether FSG would be willing to spend £60 million-plus on someone without resale value. If we're already investing heavily in Wirtz and Frimpong, would they go that far? In truth, it's not about age. It's about what the squad needs. And if Robbie Fowler is pointing toward Watkins, maybe it's time the club listened—not just to data models, but to those who've worn the shirt and scored the goals.