Shaun Edwards left out of Lions coaching staff

Edwards agony as Lions call up England coach Farrell for tour of Australia

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UPDATED:

22:30 GMT, 12 December 2012

Once Warren Gatland had confirmed his
Lions coaching line-up on Wednesday, he spoke of his ‘agonising’
decision which left long-term sidekick Shaun Edwards stunned and
shattered.

Of all the
potential candidates, he had to choose between two close friends, two
men from the same town in northern England, two ex-rugby league players
who had competed side by side for club and country so many times.

It all came down to Andy Farrell
versus Shaun Edwards and Gatland chose Farrell over the man who helped
him guide Wasps and Wales to titles and glory.

Lionhearts: (From left to right) Andy Farrell, Warren Gatland, Andy Irvine, Rob Howley and Graham Rowntree

Lionhearts: (From left to right) Andy Farrell, Warren Gatland, Andy Irvine, Rob Howley and Graham Rowntree

Lionhearts: (L-R) assistant coach Andy Farrell, head coach Warren Gatland, tour manager Andy Irvine, assistant coaches Rob Howley and Graham Rowntree

When the management team for the tour
of Australia was unveiled, there was no dissent about the re-appointment
of Graham Rowntree and Rob Howley. As the men in charge of the forwards
and the attacking game, they will pick up where they left off in South
Africa in 2009. The talk was all about Gatland’s deliberation between
the former Wigan stalwarts from the 13-man code.

‘It
was pretty agonising really,’ said Gatland. ‘There was a lot of
speculation — people talking about Shaun. For me, that was the most
difficult decision to have to make. He is a world-class coach who has
been very, very successful. But I felt that, from a selfish point of
view, I wanted someone fresh who I haven’t worked with, who would
challenge me.

Left out: Edwards (above) had been hoping to embark on another Lions tour with Gatland (below left)

Left out: Edwards (above) had been hoping to embark on another Lions tour with Gatland (below left)

Left out: Edwards (above) had been hoping to embark on another Lions tour with Gatland (below left)

‘I told Shaun a few days ago —that’s
when I spoke to him about my final decision. He appreciated the call but
at the same time he was very, very disappointed. It wasn’t the easiest
decision in the world to make. But I have to make those hard calls.’

Howley knows Edwards well through
their work together on behalf of Wales. When asked if the former Wasps
coach would be disappointed by this news, his reaction was revealing.
He thought long and hard, looked intently at the questioner and
replied: ‘Very.’ No more words were needed. The force of that one hung
in the air.

Farrell, 37, is an international
coaching novice with only nine England Tests under his belt, but Gatland
said: ‘Having spoken to coaches and players who’ve worked with Andy,
he comes highly recommended.’

Pointing the way: Gatland has opted to take Farrell to Australia with him

Pointing the way: Gatland has opted to take Farrell to Australia with him

FIXTURES

Click here for all the fixtures for the 2013 tour of Australia

The New Zealander did not reach a
final verdict until after the autumn Tests — which meant Farrell’s input
into England’s win over the All Blacks was a factor.

Gatland
revealed: ‘I am excited by that. He brings something different in terms
of his background, as the youngest captain of Great Britain’s rugby
league team. People who have been involved with him talk about his
ability to motivate players and make them want to play for him.’

For Farrell, inclusion in the Lions
hierarchy maintains a year of scarcely credible personal advance. Back
in January he was busy learning his trade at Saracens, then Stuart
Lancaster asked if he could help out with England’s interim coaching
set-up. He did such a good job that the RFU pursued him and after a
brief hiatus, the union got their man.

Scrum's the word: Rowntree will be responsible for coaching the pack

Scrum's the word: Rowntree will be responsible for coaching the pack

Now he has been given the chance to take the ultimate step.

‘It’s
been a hell of a year, it’s been unbelievable,’ he said. ‘I feel very
fortunate to have an opportunity like this so early in my coaching
career. It’s something I’m very proud of.

‘I
class myself to be a similar type of character and competitor to Shaun
and we’ve both won things. We’re good friends and we’ll speak.’

The coaching team

ANDY FARRELL

Born: May 30, 1975 in Wigan, England.

Tests (as player): 8 (all in 2007).

Position: Centre.

Club(s): Saracens, Wigan RL.

Coaching career: Saracens (from 2009), England (2012-).

Lions background: none.

Other: Made Great Britain rugby league debut at age of 18 and was youngest-ever captain at age of 21. Won five championships and four Challenge Cups in successful Wigan side. Former world Player of the Year in league.

Crossed codes in 2005 but missed a whole season through injury. Part of England (union) squad which reached Rugby World Cup Final 2007.

ROB HOWLEY

Born: October 13, 1970 in Bridgend, Wales.

Tests (as player): 61 (from 1996-2002).

Position: Scrum half.

Club(s): Wasps, Cardiff, Bridgend.

Coaching career: Cardiff Blues, Wales (from 2008).

Lions background: Toured South Africa in 1997, but injury ended his tour early. Toured Australia in 2001, playing in two Tests. Served as attack coach under Sir Ian McGeechan in South Africa in 2009.

Other: Captained Wales 22 times in 1998 and 1999. Welsh Player of the Year in 1996 and 1997. Famously won 2004 Heineken Cup for Wasps with last-gasp try against Toulouse at Twickenham.

GRAHAM ROWNTREE

Born: April 18, 1971 in Stockton-on-Tees, England.

Tests (as player): 57 (from 1995-2006).

Position: Prop.

Club(s): Leicester.

Coaching career: Leicester, RFU national academy, England (from 2008).

Lions background: Toured South Africa in 1997, but unable to break into Test squad. Toured New Zealand in 2005 and played in two Tests. Served as scrum coach under Sir Ian McGeechan in South Africa in 2009.

Other: Part of the 2003 Grand Slam-winning England squad but overlooked for World Cup. Played 398 matches for Leicester from 1990-2007, winning two Heineken Cups and four Premiership titles.

Kevin Pietersen retires from ODIs: Could battle of wills end with KP all out?

Could battle of wills end with KP all out ODI retirement puts Test future in doubt

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UPDATED:

20:48 GMT, 31 May 2012


Run out: Kevin Pietersen put himself on a collision course with England by quitting one-day cricket

Run out: Kevin Pietersen put himself on a collision course with England by quitting one-day cricket

There have been severe cracks in the volatile union between Kevin Pietersen and England ever since his brief spell as captain came to an acrimonious end and what has always been a marriage of convenience has taken a big step towards the divorce courts.

A battle of wills between Pietersen and his employers has ended with England's star batsman gaining his long-held wish to abandon 50-over cricket, but at the expense of the Twenty20 format — at least internationally — that he sees as his long-term future.

Only the timing of Pietersen’s retirement from all limited-overs cricket, with the defence of England's World Twenty20 crown only four months away, came as any sort of surprise. He wanted to turn his back on what he sees as the most tired of the three formats, one-day internationals, after the World Cup last year but ultimately was stopped from doing so by the implications for his central contract.

What has changed is that Pietersen secured an astonishing contract with the Delhi Daredevils of the Indian Premier League, worth a maximum of 1.3million a year, and that marked the beginning of the end of him as an England player.

What Pietersen said…

After a great deal of thought and deliberation, I am today announcing my retirement from international one-day cricket.

With the intensity of the international schedule and the increasing demands on my body, approaching 32, I think it is the right time to step aside and let the next generation of players come through to gain experience for the ICC World Cup in 2015.

I am immensely proud of my achievements in the one-day game and still wish to be considered for selection for England in
Test cricket.

In many ways he can hardly be blamed. Such are the ridiculous demands of the international schedule that something has to give for any player who sticks around for long, and Pietersen has always been adamant that it was not going to be his Indian cash-cow.

The great frustration is that the latest conflict to envelop a man whose mercurial career has been full of flashpoints will undermine England’s attempt to defend that World Twenty20 title in Sri Lanka in September.

Quite why a retirement that has been looming for 15 months could not be delayed a little longer comes down to stubbornness from both parties. But Pietersen wants to make it clear that he has not stood down from Twenty20s. It is just that England say that he cannot pick and choose and they would not select him.

Pietersen could point to the precedent set by Andrew Strauss when he ‘retired’ from Twenty20s in 2009 but was allowed to carry on in ODIs until the World Cup last year. The subtle difference is that Strauss was told he would not be picked again for short-form cricket and was permitted to say that he was standing down. Alastair Cook does not play T20 cricket, either, but he would like to.

Test of nerve: Pietersen insists he wants to continue in the five-day game

Test of nerve: Pietersen insists he wants to continue in the five-day game

One look at England’s 50-over schedule in the months ahead makes it clear why any father of a young son would have concerns over the time he could spend at home.

As well as one-day series against West Indies and South Africa this summer, England are also are playing five games against Australia — in a non-Ashes year — and, most controversially of all, a full international against Scotland in Edinburgh between the South Africa second and third Tests. Complete madness.

Pietersen will not be there for any of them which, in theory, frees him up to play for Surrey, but it remains to be seen how often he appears at The Kia Oval. Truth is, he has little or no appetite for county cricket and has far more affinity for Delhi than Surrey.

Now he will be able to play for his third IPL side in the Champions League without any concerns over clashes with England and will hope to spend more time at IPL 6 next year, even though he will still have to return early for the first Test next summer.

Enlarge

Pietersen: His ODI record

Or will he The announcement will accelerate his Test demise and, like Chris Gayle, he will become a familiar face, not to mention a much richer one, at the various Twenty20 competitions springing up around the world. It is a question of when that happens, rather than if.

Let us hope it is later rather than sooner. Pietersen is a rare talent capable of flashes of greatness, as he again showed with a brilliant match-winning Test century against Sri Lanka in Colombo two months ago.

At moments like that you feel bad for ever criticising a man who can also be an exasperating talent and still manages to divide opinion more than any other in the England team.

I was moved to call him ‘dumber than the dumbest person from Dumbfordshire’ when he gave his wicket away at a crucial point of the first Test against Pakistan in Dubai, for heaven’s sake. But we have all learned to live with the rough of Pietersen because the smooth is so aesthetically pleasing.

At the peak of his powers: Pietersen remains England's star batsman

At the peak of his powers: Pietersen remains England's star batsman

Approaching his 32nd birthday, Pietersen insists he still wants to score 10,000 Test runs and score 30 Test centuries. I sincerely hope he means it because I want to watch him do just that.

Then again, he also sat in a small room at the ICC academy ground in Dubai during England training on that same tour of the United Arab Emirates earlier this year and said he wanted to play 50-over cricket until the next World Cup in 2015. It did not ring true then and it certainly does not now.

Hugh Morris, the most diplomatic and mild-mannered of administrators in public, said he was ‘disappointed’ by the timing of this development which, in Morris-speak, is close to total apoplexy and indicates that feelings are running high at Lord’s.

Yet, Andy Flower is nothing if not pragmatic and knows England are a better team with Pietersen in it. There will be no desire to show him the door before next year’s back-to-back Ashes series, however uneasy the peace, especially as he is at the peak of his powers.

It is just a pity that peak will be spent in one-day colours other than the blue of England.

Racing trainer Henrietta Knight retires

Knight calls it a day: Three time Gold Cup-winning trainer retires from racing

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UPDATED:

09:31 GMT, 24 May 2012

Three-time Gold Cup-winning trainer Henrietta Knight has announced her retirement.

Knight, 65, will give up her National Hunt licence to spend more time with her husband, Terry Biddlecombe, who suffered a stroke last October.

Moving on: Henrietta Knight has announced her retirement from racing

Moving on: Henrietta Knight has announced her retirement from racing

The handler will forever by synonymous with Best Mate, who won three consecutive Gold Cups at the Cheltenham Festival between 2002-04.

Knight said on www.henandterry.com: “After much deliberation, and largely due to my husband Terry Biddlecombe's continued ill health, I have decided to hand in my trainer's licence.

'I have been incredibly lucky to have experienced some wonderful moments since I first began training in 1989.'

Based in Wantage, Oxfordshire, Knight has saddled over 700 winners.
She is due to relinquish her licence next month.

Mick Channon, who trains in nearby West Ilsley, will assume control of the majority of Knight's string.

Knight said: 'I am hugely grateful for the backing that I have received over the past years from my family, my loyal owners, my dedicated staff and from numerous top jockeys.

'Likewise the press and media have always been tremendously supportive.

'I would like to thank everybody who has helped me enjoy so many happy days.

'However, despite the above mentioned decision, I still intend to retain links with the racing world.

'My neighbour and close friend, Mick Channon, has agreed to continue to train the majority of the horses which are currently in my care.

'He, too, enjoys the National Hunt scene and is already making his presence felt in that sphere with recent good winners from only a handful of National Hunt runners.'