Showing posts with label historic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historic. Show all posts

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Will Greenwood: Back England to secure historic Grand Slam in Cardiff

"For the first time in a while I am struggling to stop myself chucking my boots in the car, driving to Cardiff and trying to persuade Stuart Lancaster to give me a game."

Back England to win by under 12.5 points at 2.35/4

Betfair Ambassador Will Greenwood is excited for the last weekend of the Six Nations and he fancies England to squeak past a difficult encounter at the Millendium Stadium...

We had a nice 2.47/5 winner last week when Toby Flood stroked a penalty over the posts to open the scoring against Italy at Twickenham. Admittedly, England didn't produce the steamrolling, barnstorming display we predicted as Italy's defence held up quite well, and the entire team appeared buoyed by the return of the great Sergio Parisse.

It seemed to me like some of the England lads had one eye on a trip to Cardiff and their play against Italy was a bit lateral; it lacked the ingenuity and intensity going forward and, while Italy were defensively very solid, it was easier for them than it should have been. I remember playing against Italy in the McAlpine Stadium back in 1998 ahead of a more important game and we ended up scraping the win by just eight points. These things can happen from time to time; if you know you're likely to playing the biggest game of your career in a fortnight's time, it's very tough not to think about it.

All of which brings me on to this Saturday's crunch game. A final match in Cardiff for England to win their first Grand Slam in ten years ahead of a Lions tour? It does not get bigger than this.

It's tempting for everyone to think that all the pressure ahead of this tie is on England, but that's not strictly true. Wales know that if they win by at least seven points they can secure a defence of their Six Nations crown, and what's more, Welsh rugby fans most certainly do not like to see their boys lose to England at any time, let alone at Cardiff in a crunch game. They'll be feeling it just as much as England, mark my words.

Ahead of Lions selection, it's important that the players involved play the game and not the occasion. A lot of the England team won't have played in Cardiff before, but I don't think that'll be as much of a factor as has been reported for two reasons. Firstly, this team has shown it can handle different types of pressure; both the expectation of a routine win (the game against Scotland at Twickenham, for example) and the in-your-face pressure of a physical, unattractive tie in Ireland. Secondly, England's coaching setup has been everywhere and experienced just about everything. They'll be adept at passing on their experience to the players and should be able to keep them focused.

I will be especially interested in how the battle of the centres plays out. Much has been made of the Tuilagi-Barritt/Twelvetrees v Roberts/Davies battle in there but England will do well to remember that a lot of the threat will come from behind, with North and Cuthbert lending support and giving them plenty more to think about. It's vital England stay robust defensively in the face of that hard running and pressure.

This will be the last game a lot of these Welsh players play before Lions selection, so they'll be desperate to make it count. This will be a tight game, a barn-burner of a match. For the first time in a while I am struggling to stop myself chucking my boots in the car, driving to Cardiff and trying to persuade Stuart Lancaster to give me a game. As a pro, these are the games you live for. Everything's at stake, and it's the finest of margins that will settle it: one missed tackle, one scrappy line-out or one line break could decide where that trophy ends up. Do not miss it.

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Earlier in the week, I tipped England to nick this game by a small margin, so I think I'll have to stick with that. 2.35/4 is currently the price for England to win by under 12.5 points and, in my view, they can weather the Welsh storm and secure an unforgettable Grand Slam. Hold on to your hats though, because this is going to go to the wire.

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Friday, March 30, 2012

Dubai World Cup: Mott eyes historic win

News RSS / / 29 March 2012 / Leave a Comment

Royal Delta will take her chance in the Dubai World Cup.

Royal Delta will take her chance in the Dubai World Cup.

“She's got many things going for her. The one thing we don't know is whether she is good enough..."

There will be a certain sense of symmetry if Royal Delta wins Saturday's Dubai World Cup for her American trainer Bill Mott...

After all, Mott saddled the winner of the inaugural running, two-time American Horse of the Year Cigar, in 1996 and now has Royal Delta striving to be the first filly or mare to triumph in the world's richest race.

The 58-year-old Mott has put a lot of thought into Royal Delta's attempt to enter the Dubai World Cup record books.

Even before Royal Delta was proclaimed America's champion three-year-old filly of 2011, Mott was planning a Dubai assault.

And when Benjamin Leon, who races under Besilu Stables, spent US$8.5 million to buy Royal Delta at auction last November from the estate of her breeder, the late Saudi Prince Saud bin Khaled, Mott shared his vision with the owner.

"As her trainer, I told him up front that the Dubai World Cup would be the perfect place to take her," said Mott, a US Hall of Fame inductee 13 years ago.

"She's got many things going for her. The one thing we don't know is whether she is good enough.

"The distance doesn't seem to be a factor; she's won over 2000m. She's won races on a synthetic track. She's won under the lights and she doesn't need any medication to speak of.

"She's jumped through a lot of the hoops that you have to clear to win here."

After the purchase Leon decided to leave the filly with Mott rather than transfer her to another trainer and it did not take him long to embrace the idea of trying to win the Dubai World Cup.

"He spent a lot of money for her and obviously the filly is a champion. But he's an owner who is clearly willing to take risks. It didn't take much convincing to talk him into it," Mott said.

Royal Delta, the seventh female performer to run in the World Cup, is training with the same enthusiasm she displayed prior to her victory in last year's Breeders' Cup Ladies' Classic at Churchill Downs, according to Mott.

"She's quite determined, and she uses it to her advantage," Mott said.

Royal Delta, rated 124 by Timeform, can currently be backed at [14.5] for the Dubai World Cup with current market leader So You Think trading at [3.4].

............
Top jockey Ryan Moore is the latest big name to join's Betfair's roster of regular columnists. Click HERE to read the classic-winning rider's first blog entry.

The kiwi representation in Saturday's Group 1 Rosehill Guineas (off 06:10 GMT) over 2000m is one of the strongest in recent memory with NZ Derby-winning filly Silent Achiever leading the charge, writes Timeform Australia's Gary Crispe......

With Japanese runners filling the first two places in last year's Dubai World Cup, the country's three representative's in Saturday's $10-million race run over 2000m on Meydan's tapeta surface will be worth serious consideration......

The draw for the Dubai World Cup was made on Wednesday afternoon with ante-post favourite So You Think handed stall number four......


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