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MAY 10, 2012
SWORDS • BALLBRIGGAN • APPLEWOOD • BOROIMHE • AIRSIDE • RIVERVALLEY
INSIDE: Ghana Union Inauguration and Dinner Dance P8-9
Soccer: Trapattoni the guest of honour at Swords Celtic Page 32
Rowing: Olympic dream comes true for Kinsealy rower Page 30
ALSOINSIDE: GALLERIES ......................8 BUSINESS .................... 19 MOTORS ....................... 20 TRAVEL......................... 22 ENTERTAINMENT ........ 24 CLASSIFIEDS ............... 26
TREATY: Senator Darragh O’Brien
on why FF wants a Yes vote See Page 6
Casino set to create 50 new jobs I NATALIE BURKE
THE opening of a brand new contemporary casino in Swords is set to create 50 jobs in north county Dublin. The Penthouse Casino and Card Club will be Ireland’s first luxurious casino and will be opened by KaiRo International in Airside South Quarter, Swords, on Friday, May 18. While the job creation is welcomed by Mayor of Fingal,
Cllr Gerry McGuire (Lab), he admits he has concerns for vulnerable people in the area. “Going back a number of years ago, there was a big outcry over gambling casinos so I would be concerned that some people who may have a gambling addiction could be affected by it but I would certainly welcome the job component of it,” he said. Full story on Page 2
On the ball: Trap’s trip to Swords to launch new book REPUBLIC of Ireland manager, Gio-
vanni Trapattoni, was on hand to help launch, 50 years of Football, by Swords Celtic Football Club at Balheary Football Grounds, Swords, recently. Back in 1962, little was it realised the way the club would progress to its present size. The fact that some founder members are still around to see the transfor-
mation is testimony to their dedication. Today, club membership is over 600 and includes 31 schoolboy and girls’ teams, three senior teams, four fullsize and three schoolboy pitches, an all-weather pitch and state-of-the-art clubhouse. Pictured at the launch with the Ireland manager is Cathaoirleach, Cllr Gerry McGuire, (Lab).
2 SWORDS GAZETTE 10 May 2012
EVENT: AUTISM ACTION
Pharmacy to hold autism evening I NATALIE BURKE
AN “Autism and Nutrition” event is set to take place in Swords next week, when McCabe’s Pharmacy hosts an awareness and information evening for parents and children with autism, in association with Irish Autism Action. The event will feature a number of special presentations by a range of expert speakers, who will discuss the role that diet and nutrition can have in the progress of children with autism as well as highlighting the difference that occupational therapy can make in their development. The event is free of charge and will take place at 6pm on Thursday, May 17 at the Carlton Hotel, Dublin Airport. Guests speaking at the event will include CEO of Irish Autism Action, Kevin Whelan, UK Nutritionist Tim Gaunt, occupational therapist, Marie Murphy, and Marese O’Brien, a pharmacist at McCabe’s Pharmacy. Discussing the event, Ciara McCabe of McCabe’s Pharmacy, said: “We are delighted to be hosting the autism awareness event, which is being run in partnership with Irish Autism Action and will offer advice and information for parents and families. There are significant links between the development of autistic children and their nutritional health so the event will feature input from nutritional experts who will share their advice.”
R1
SPRING CLEAN First years learn the huge benefits of recycling
Students leave local area spic-and-span I NATALIE BURKE
LOCAL first year students from Fingal Community College learned a few things about recycling recently when they took part in National Spring Clean Month a r o u n d t h e Swo r d s area. The 26 students came up with the idea for the local spring clean as
part of the initiative run by An Taisce, which ran for the month of April, and with the help of their teacher, Siobhan Lynch, started to clean up the area around their school. “We decided as a school to participate in the An Taisce programme and it was my first year Civic, Social and Political Educa-
tion class that decided they would like to do a spring clean,” said Siobhan, CSPE and art teacher at Fingal Community College. “We divided into four groups and had our green, yellow and blue bags to collect recyclable materials. We cleaned up around the Seatown Road, Colmcille’s Church, North
Street and Main Street of Swords before we came back to do a survey on what materials we found most of.” Ms Lynch’s class discovered recyclable paper made up the majority of rubbish found in the area, and included mostly sweet wrappers and car parking tickets. “There was great feedback from mem-
bers of the public during the spring clean and a lot of residents came out of their houses to commend us for doing a great job. They seemed really impressed that students were cleaning so it was nice to be doing something for the local area,” she continued. The class followed the spring clean up
with a visit to their local recycle centre, where they learned about the importance of recycling both at home and at school. “It was a nice way of making students aware of littering and that it’s not nice to have to go back and pick it up so I think everyone, including the students, appreciated the project.”
Casino is set to open in Swords I NATALIE BURKE
Carer of the year: Sharon’s service to her mother lands her award from association SHARON Salem from Swords, pictured here
with her mother Margaret, has been named as this year’s North Dublin Carer of the Year 2012. Each year, The Carers’ Association invites members of the public to nominate family carers to recognise the wonderful service they provide to family members who need extra support. The association received a very moving nomination from Margaret Salem nominating her daughter. Sharon, an only child, returned from her new life
in Australia without a moment’s hesitation when Margaret was diagnosed with cancer. Margaret told of Sharon’s sacrifice in leaving her job in Australia to become her full time carer. “I wasn’t always an easy patients” she wrote “but Sharon never wavered.” Thankfully Margaret is now in remission and Sharon’s dedication was acknowledged when she received the North Dublin Carer of the Year Award in The Bracken Court Hotel in Balbriggan this week.
THE opening of a brand new contemporary casino in Swords is set to create 50 jobs in north county Dublin. Ireland’s first luxurious casino and private members club will be opened by KaiRo International in Airside South Quarter, Swords, on Friday, May 18. The international gaming, leisure and entertainment firm will be employing 50 people when The Penthouse Casino and Card Club first opens but is set to increase its workforce to 70 within six months. The objective of the company is not just to provide jobs but to empower employees with lifetime career skills. Training will be a huge focus for the company, which has already created a training school in Swords specifically to teach skills in the various casino games such as American roulette, blackjack, and different versions of poker. While the job creation is welcomed by Mayor of Fingal Cllr Gerry
McGuire (Lab), he admits that he has concerns for vulnerable people living in the area. “I’m concerned about the impact it may have on people who may have an addiction problem. Going back a number of years ago, there was a big outcry over gambling casinos so I would be concerned that some people who may have a gambling addiction could be affected by it but I would certainly welcome the job component of it.” Commenting on the opening of the new casino, development director of KaiRo International, John Loudon, said he was delighted to be opening a casino in Ireland. “The future prospects are very exciting and the new legislation is well under way which will open up an exciting new field for employment opportunities. “The casino is built to very high standards and will certainly be setting the standard for future operations in Ireland, both technically and from a well-trained locally sourced workforce.”
10 May 2012 SWORDS GAZETTE 3
IRELAND SHOW Businesses’ succeed at trade fair
Fingal’s finest secure €51k export orders I LAURA WEBB
BUSINESSES from Fingal’s Finest are coming back from the US with smiles on their faces after securing direct export orders of $66,500 (€51,180) and over $329,569 (€253,569) projected for the next year. Eight small craft companies from across Fingal, known as Fingal’s Finest, signed multiple deals in New Jersey last week. The companies secured direct export orders of €51,180 with €253,569 in combined export orders projected for the year ahead. Fingal’s Finest, led by Fingal County Enterprise
Board, went to New Jersey for the Ireland Show to showcase their products and secure direct and potential sales from US buyers. Last year, six Craftspeople and Designers from Fingal’s Finest secured €154,005 in advance orders. Oisin Geoghegan, CEO of Fingal County Enterprise Board, highlighted the increasing importance of trade fairs to small Irish businesses, saying: “The Ireland Show in New Jersey is one of the biggest and most commercially important trade shows in the US for companies involved in the craft and gift markets. The eight
small businesses from Fingal made excellent retail and wholesale contacts during the show and we anticipate very substantial sales orders for them all, as a direct result of their involvement this year.” Liam Caulfield, from Swords-based company Crystal Eire, secured substantial orders for his range of cut crystal, while Maura O’Rourke from Oldtown secured commissions for her original art of Irish landscapes. Meanwhile, other Fingal businesses had similar success stories. Killian O’Driscoll from Heraldic Gifts in Sutton, signed up a number of new retail outlets for his com-
Liam Caulfield, director, Crystal Eire, Swords
memorative gift plaques. Greg and Mary Whelan, owners of Castleknock business, the Irish Linen House, met with high-end retailers, securing orders for their embroidered table-runners, placemats and napkins. Philip Gaffney from O’Gowna Studios in Naul, launched a range of Titanic memorabilia and wall plaques at the
show, marking its centenary. Michael Fahy and Patrick McCartin from Privatmark in Baldoyle, re-launched the Mullins Map of Ireland which sold over 100,000 copies since its original launch back in the 1960s. Making their Ireland Show debut was Teresa Gaffney from Exclusively Irish, in Naul, selling handmade cards and
block mounted prints, and jewellery-designer, Sinead Cooke from Lusk. Geoghegan went on to say that such international trade shows were proving to be “vital sales platforms for small companies”. “An increase in export sales orders will help to sustain and create more jobs locally, which will in turn give a welcome boost to our local economy.”
HEALTH
Plans for new hub mooted MINISTER for Health, James Reilly, has not yet commented on recent media reports that claim a massive new €1.2bn medical hub may be on the cards for a greenfield site near Dublin Airport. Recent reports claim that the project is being seriously considered by Minister Reilly as being a solution to the children’s hospital predicament and as part of a larger health, business and education campus. A spokesperson for the Department of Health confirmed the Minister has established a review group to consider the decision of An Bord Pleanala to refuse planning permission for the National Paedriatric Hospital. It is, however, the Minister’s intention to await completion of the work of the review group before making any further comments on the matter.
4 SWORDS GAZETTE 10 May 2012
SCHEME Council to extend successful policy
Smoke-free playgrounds get green light
More Pie? The gang are reunited, but have they left the charm behind?
M
I LAURA WEBB
ENTERTAINMENT PAGE 24
Millennium Playground, Blanchardstown. Picture: Courtesy of Fingal County Council
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THE success of a pilot scheme in one Fingal playground has led the county council to roll out a smoke-free playground policy across all its 50 public playgrounds. Fingal County Council is proposing to adopt a council wide no-smoking policy for public playgrounds across the county following the success of its pilot scheme in Blanchardstown last year. According to a spokeswoman for the council, the proposal is set to go on public display “very soon”, with the public consultation process taking six weeks. Once complete, it’s hoped to adopt the scheme as council policy by councillors at the July full county council meeting. T he spokeswoman said: “It’s important to understand that the current scheme that applies in Millennium Playground, Blanchardstown and, hopefully, soon to all of the 50 or so public playgrounds in Fingal is based on research, best practice and the pilot study. It arose from an initiative of the HSE who approached us to discuss areas of health promotion
and it was out of this that the idea of the smoke-free playgrounds as a health promotion initiative came about. “We partnered with the other agencies to carry out the pilot in Millennium Park Blanchardstown and the findings of the pilot showed clear and measurable advantages to the denormalisation of smoking to children and --------------------------
‘Support for reducing secondhand smoke exposure had increased from 87% to 95%’ --------------------------
young people. First hand primary data (the results of the pilot) showed there was a significant reduction in smoking among the young people who visited the playground and a significant reduction in litter,” she added. The smoke-free initiative was put in place at the playground in Millennium Park on May 27, 2011, and aimed to encourage people from smoking in a children’s environment and to denormalise tobacco use and reduce litter
from cigarette butts. During a presentation to representatives on the Strategic Policy Committee in April, the council outlined how it is important to protect children and others from secondhand smoke. It said that such smoke was a significant cause of death and disease with pregnant women and children being particularly vulnerable. Key findings pre and post the pilot smoke-free initiative showed numbers in favour of no smoking in the playground had increased from 77% to 95%. Support for reducing second-hand smoke exposure had increased from 87% to 95%. The percentage of smokers who smoked in the playground had decreased from 50% to 20% and the number of smokers disposing of litter in the bins increased from 17% to 75%. The council decided to pilot the initiative at Millennium Park because of its size, the fact that local park rangers were assigned to it, the frequent use of the playground and its proximity to Connolly Hospital which became a smoke free campus in May 2009.
Free consultations on offer to public FREE private consultations with Invisalign will be taking place at Swords Dental Practice this month, where members of the public can meet with the dentist and avail of special discounted offers on the day. Invisalign is the metal-brace alternative designed to help its customers achieve a winning smile and is used by many celebrities world wide including Oprah Winfrey, Cheryl Cole and Michelle Obama. The Invisalign technology moves teeth gradually until they have
straightened to the final position prescribed by your dental practitioner and consists of a series of subtle, almost invisible, custom-designed removable aligners that are changed every two weeks. The treatment can correct 98% of tooth alignment issues with little interference to your daily life and benefits can be seen early on in the treatment. The free consultation event will be held on Saturday, May 19, and appointments can be made with the Invisalign team on 1890 989 500.
10 May 2012 SWORDS GAZETTE 5
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TREATY Pact ‘will not cure all our economic woes’
Voting Yes provides a more secure future
SENATOR DARRAGH O’BRIEN (FF) explains why his party believes the Stability Treaty will give Ireland more growth opportunities and employment THE vote on May 31 on the Stability Treaty is extremely important for Dublin, for Ireland and for Europe. The treaty sets out a new framework for countries so that the crisis of budget deficits and high debt can’t threaten the Eurozone in the future. I will be honest and say that the treaty will not cure all our economic woes of today, but it will definitely allow Dublin and Ireland to have a more secure foundation
for our future. By voting yes, we will have access to the funds needed for our public services at a lower interest rate. We will be sending a message that Irish people want to have a strong voice at the European table when growth opportunities and investment in job creation are being discussed. We need to maintain strong ties and influence in Europe and make sure our voices are heard and we will do this by voting Yes. There has been much
debate in my party about this treaty and what it means for Ireland and Europe. At the Fianna Fail Ard Fheis, 50 years ago in 1962, Sean Lemass told delegates that the alternative to joining would be that “Ireland would be an isolated unit on the fringe of a dynamic European confederation”. The last thing Ireland needs to do today is to retreat to the fringes of Europe. The European Union will play a central role in Ireland’s recovery.
That is why Fianna Fail is vigorously campaigning for a Yes vote. This fiscal crisis has been a crisis of globalisation. It has crossed borders and many other countries, not just Ireland, are facing unprecedented pressures in controlling budgets and raising the money to fund public services. A crisis of this massive scale requires collaboration, co-operation and a joined up approach to achieving solutions amongst the countries of Europe. Fianna Fail has consistently been calling for three principal issues to be addressed: changing the mandate of the European Central Bank; increasing the central funding of the EU; and federalising financial regulation. If the euro is to be saved and if it is to retain democratic legitimacy, these measures must be taken up and Fianna Fail will continue to press this. Many of the problems facing people in Ireland are shared by other countries. The budgets in capital cities around Europe, like Dublin, are under huge pressure. It makes sense, therefore, that the best way to tackle them is for countries to work together. This treaty reinforces the rules to make sure that budgets are better controlled so that major debt is avoided. In return for agreeing these controls, countries will find it easier to raise money to fund public services, like the ones we benefit from in the city every day, our buses, gardai, schools and hospitals. It provides a more secure future for our country.
Senator Darragh O’Brien (FF): “EU will play central role in Ireland’s recovery”
In fact, had this new emergency funding system and other new policies been in place years ago Ireland would never have required a bail-out. Its support programme is based entirely on targets that were already proposed by the then Irish government, and Ireland’s debt is due to top out at a level of less than that of Italy today or Greece after all their adjustments. In the 2009, referendum on the revised Lisbon proposal, public support for a Yes vote
actually rose during the campaign. This was because we worked hard to bring a positive message directly to people. That referendum changed the nature of EU debate in Ireland and this is what is reflected in the current large majority indicating an intention to vote Yes, including 70% of my party’s voters. One of the key reasons for Ireland’s attractiveness is its export platform to the rest of the EU. Today nearly 100,000 people are directly employed in over 600
US firms in Ireland. US companies have a $190 billion cumulative stock of investments in Irishbased operations. I really believe that Ireland’s full and active membership in the EU is critical for stability and investment across Dublin. I believe Dublin needs a strong Yes vote on May 31 to secure stability and economic recovery.
Darragh O’Brien Fianna Fail Senator for Dublin North and Seanad Spokesperson on Finance
10 May 2012 SWORDS GAZETTE 7
RETAIL Retailer to create 20 new jobs for area
New Lidl store is set to open in Swords I NATALIE BURKE
SWORD’S first discount food store is set to open its doors next week. Popular retailer Lidl will be opening the long-awaited new store on the Rathbeale Road for the first time at 8am on Thursday, May 17, creating 20 new jobs for the area. The new store will offer a total of 76 car parking spaces to local shoppers but with the store’s location situated on the site of the former Rathbeale service station along one of the busiest roads in Swords, Mayor of Fingal, Cllr Gerry McGuire
(Lab) admits it remains a topic of concern for locals already suffering from traffic in the area. “I have my doubts about the level of traffic, but I have to accept the advice given by the traffic management team. They told us people shopping in Lidl will spend at least 20 minutes shopping whereas people going into the petrol station might have only been in there for five minutes and there was a greater turnaround of vehicles,” he said. “They’re saying that traffic flow won’t be as great but the Rathbeale Road has become very busy and I think it could
add to the congestion.” Despite his worries about the level of traffic the new store could generate, Cllr McGuire believes it will be good for Swords to have a discount food store. “I think competition is good. JC’s supermarket is very competitive already and has a very trustful line of customers over the years but I don’t think it will do any harm to have a little more competition in the area.” The new Lidl branch will be providing Swords and the surrounding areas with “great quality food for less” with its range of award-winning own-brand products.
Mayor of Fingal, Cllr Gerry McGuire (Lab), says Lidl will be good for Swords
The new-look store will feature an innovative new baking facility and will be featuring many Irish suppliers in the production of its own brand products. Speaking in advance of the opening, Chris Bell, sales operations man-
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ager for the new Swords branch, said the store looked forward to welcoming Swords locals to the new supermarket and have a fun-filled day planned for the official launch. “We look forward to being part of the town.
We have so many exciting activities planned for the opening. There really is something for everyone and it promises to be a great local event for families and anyone else who wants to come along and join the fun!”
MUSIC Plenty of high notes for Naul A NUMBER of events is set to take place over the coming weeks at The Seamus Ennis Cultural Centre, Naul, Fingal. Rock singer Hazel O’Connor starts the season off and returns to her soul-folk roots when she performs an acoustic set with celebrated Irish harpist, Cormac DeBarra, in a captivating, intimate one-off performance on Friday, May 11. Three influential and creative musicians, Donal Lunny, Padraig Rynne and Sylvain Barou, will be returning from a successful trip to Paris to perform a traditional Irish music evening on Friday, May 25, while native Texan, Kimmie Rhodes, performs a selection of her top selling songs in a special trio show on Saturday, May 6. For more information on tickets and events, visit www.seamusenniscentre. com.
8 SWORDS GAZETTE 10 May 2012
EVENT The Carlton Hotel in Tyrrelstown hosts the Ghana
Dining and dancing HE Carlton Hotel in Tyrrelstown hosted a very special event recently when it hosted the Ghana Union Ireland Inauguration and Dinner Dance. The event celebrated all things African and a large number of African ambassadors were in attendance with the guest of honour, His Excellency, Prof Kwaku Danso-Boafo (Ghana High Commissioner UK/Ireland) visiting. Guests enjoyed some great food and drink and were entertained with some fantastic music. Fingal Mayor, Cllr Gerry McGuire (Lab) was also an honoured guest.
T
Randy Asante, Owusu Agyeiwa and Joan Asante. Pictures: James Devon
Erica Birch-Abban and guest artist, Twi Teacher
Richard Mtow and Jacqueline Mtow
Ahenfie Drummer Group
10 May 2012 SWORDS GAZETTE 9
Union Ireland Inauguration and Dinner Dance
Aba, Cassandra, Sharon, Gizzella, Emmanuella and Gabriella
Gerry McGuire, Fingal County Council mayor attended
Nigerian ambassador to Ireland, Felix Y Pwol, and Ghana High
the event to show his support
Commissioner, Prof Kwaku Danso-Boafo
Rose Yeboah, Ghana Union Letterkenny
Dr Nana Yao with children
10 SWORDS GAZETTE 10 May 2012
EVENT 2012 Dublin Gala Rose Ball in the Carlton Hotel
David Farrell and Shauna Lawes
Setting the ball rolling
Eleanor Hession, Jennifer Ward, Nicola O’Donoghue and Sinead Grant
Alan McEvoy, Ellen OBrien, Carleen Stringer and Shane Collins
Darragh McGrath and Siobheal Nic Julie Beathie, Ciara Ross and Aoife McManus
Eochaidh, Rose of Dublin 2011
HE Carlton Hotel Blanchardstown hosted the 2012 Dublin Gala Rose Ball on April 27. The event was a great occasion for potential Dublin Roses to meet and greet guests and chat to former Dublin Roses. There was plenty of excitement as the Roses themselves spoke about the forthcoming 2012 Dublin Rose of Tralee Selection which will also take place at the hotel from May 18 to May 20. Over the course of the event, all Dublin Rose contestants will enjoy a complimentary three-night stay including breakfast and dinner at the Carlton Hotel.
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Peter Richardson, Christina Ryan, Ann Ryan and Thomas Ryan
Fionan Henry and Tara Talbot, Rose of Tralee 2011
Susan Dowdall, Sarah Fitzgerald and Grace Nixon, Mark Nixon and Mel O’Conghaile
Saoirse Bardin, Paige Bardin, Monijka Bardin, Mary Bardin and Shannon Bardin
Mark Dowdall
10 May 2012 GAZETTE 11
12 GAZETTE 10 May 2012
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SNAPSHOT The local stories of the day
Summer Wedding Open Day THE Castle Arch Hotel in Trim will host its Summer Wedding Open Day on Sunday, May 13, from 2 to 5pm. The Castle Arch is one of the leading wedding venues in County Meath and this event will be one of their best open day’s with the hotel set up as it would be on the bride and groom’s special day.
Experience The management team have years of experience with weddings and will be on hand to guide you through the planning of your special day. T heir hallmark is attention to detail at all times by experienced staff in the art of creating a perfect wedding. The Castle Arch loves
weddings and this is obvious from the attentive service you receive from the initial enquiry through to departure the next morning after your perfect wedding. The Emmet Suite is the hotel’s dedicated wedding suite and will be set up with beautiful chair covers and a choice of sashes, as well as luxurious floral arrangements on each table and a fairylight backdrop.
Civil wedding The hotel is also registered for civil wedding ceremonies and the Arch Suite will be decorated as it would be on the special day with linen chair covers, flowers and candles. Contact the hotel directly for more information on packages. Contact Ruth Traynor o n 0 4 6 - 9 4 31516 o r Ruth@cusackhotels. com
The Emmet Suite
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10 May 2012 GAZETTE 13
EVENT Charity lunch at Brasserie 15
Encouraging healthy eating
Bressie’s boost to mum’s support centre I LAURA WEBB
lwebb@gazettegroup.com
HE has fast become a household name after judging, and mentoring the winning act of the Voice of Ireland, but his new found fame hasn’t inflated his ego, as he uses his celebrity status to fundraise for charity. Earlier this year, Bressie, aka Niall Breslin, was named the ambassador of LARCC (Lakelands Area Retreat and Cancer Centre) a cancer support centre located just outside his hometown of Mullingar in Co Westmeath, where his mum, Mandy, is the director. To help raise funds for the centre, he hosted a charity lunch in Brasserie 15 in Castleknock, Dublin 15 last week.
His best friend helped get the venue and he brought the entertainment, with thanks to his protegee, the Voice of Ireland winner, Pat Byrne. Speaking to the Gazette this week, he talked about his involvement in the charity and what’s next for the singer/songwriter and producer. Respected
“ I t ’s a ve r y we l l known national charity. It is very well respected. A lot of cancer charities deal with the physical aspect of cancer; this is looking more at the emotional and psychological aspect of it. It is a residential treatment centre where parents can go for a week with the family, and that
INITIATIVE: PROMOTING FRUIT AND VEGETABLES
Bressie with mum Mandy. Picture: Ania Sherlock
is unique – there is nowhere in the whole country where you can do that. “The HSE has cut funding by 50-60% and a lot of people don’t realise there is an emotional side to cancer, so people don’t really dedicate money to it. “There was no way I was going to let it lose out. I thought I could bring something to it, but then the show [The Voice] started and then I knew I could really bring something to it and it has. “We are starting with
this event, and then there will be a big event in the summer and we are not talking about trying to keep one open, we are talking about opening others – that is where I am going with it,” he said. Joining Bressie at the lunch was fellow Voice judge, Brian Kennedy, who said he was only too happy to be part of the charity event. Although he won’t be on our screens every Sunday night with the Voice, Bressie is still ver y much involved
in it as he gets ready to work with his winning act Pat Byrne, and also help his other act, Conor Quinn. “Pat hasn’t even got a day off yet. He asked about it, but I quickly told him – you’re in the music business now, there is no such thing,” he joked. “ We h ave s t a r t e d writing for the album for Pat. Then I will work with Conor and then work on my own. It’s a busy time.” For further information on LARCC log onto www.larcc.ie
STUDENTS across the country will be kept busy throughout May as Agri Aware’s Incredible Edibles Healthy Eating Month challenges students to record their daily intake of potatoes, fruit and vegetables. Launched in Family Farm, which was developed by Agri Aware and Dublin Zoo, Minister of State Shane McEntee (FG), was on hand to commence the monthlong initiative which will see students note their consumption of these foods in a special healthy eating diary as part of the overall Incredible Edibles initiative. With childhood obesity levels in Ireland reaching epidemic proportions, Agri Aware’s Incredible Edibles is a healthy eating initiative that encourages primary school children to eat more potatoes, fruit and vegetables. The project, now in its fourth year, is delivered by Agri Aware and is supported by Bord Bia, the Irish Farmers’ Association (IFA) and the Irish horticulture industry. The sponsors of the Incredible Edibles project will deliver healthy eating awareness activities, demonstrations and food tastings as part of Incredible
Edibles Healthy Eating month at Family Farm, Dublin Zoo during May. Students nationwide are collecting the Incredible Edibles tokens and/ or the Bord Bia Quality Mark from Irish potatoes, fruit and vegetables to win some amazing prizes for their class. The public are encouraged to help out by collecting the tokens and/or the Quality Mark from Irish potatoes, fruit and vegetables in support of their local schools participating in the project. Speaking at the launch, Minister McEntee commented: “In light of the current levels of obesity, especially in our younger population, and the overall need to increase fruit and vegetable consumption, I am very pleased that the Incredible Edibles has evolved to have a stronger emphasis on the need to increase consumption; I see Healthy Eating Month as a key part of this process.” Encouraging a positive attitude to healthy eating, Bernard Donohue, chairman of Agri Aware, said: “Incredible Edibles Healthy Eating month is a great opportunity for parents and teachers to communicate the importance of healthy eating to children.”
14 GAZETTE 10 May 2012
GazettePETS PETS
Brought to you by Miriam Kerins of the DSPCA
THE FACTS: YOUR CAT’S DIET MAY NEED AN OVERHAUL AS SHE GETS OLDER
Helping kitty stay fit and healthy as she gets older H yes, it’s a cool for cats kinda time right now because it seems readers just can’t get enough of our feline friends… well, if your calls to the shelter are anything to go by. So, this week, I
A
thought I’d continue my, ahem, CAT-alogue of kitty columns and delve a little into the world of the senior feline and her specific dietary needs and requirements. You see as Kitty gets older, her nutritional needs will start to
change. She may have a slower metabolism and gain a few pounds, she may become less active and wish to stay indoors more therefore to help her stay fit and healthy into her senior years, you, as her parent, will need to give her diet an overhaul. However, I must add, always check with your vet before you change your pet’s diet, especially if there are specific health problems that need to be addressed.
Levels of Activity Some cats go out and hunt and are pretty active, others are pampered and lie around the house all day. It makes sense then that the less active Kitty may require 10% less maintenance energy. T his is also quite dependent on the weather. For example, keeping the body warm or cooling it down will use up more energy, so keep in touch with your vet in the event the temperature plummets and the same goes if we ever manage to get a heatwave… although the latter hardly ever occurs in Ireland.
As your cat gets older, her nutritional needs will start to change
Health Status If Kitty’s had surgery or an illness, she may have increased nutritional requirements in order to help her heal. Again, keep in contact with your vet who will best advise regarding periods of illness and recovery. Portion Control is Important Work with your vet to ascertain which senior cat food provides the best nutritional balance for Kitty. To help her maintain her recommended weight, measure out the portions as per manufacturer’s/veterinarian’s instructions.
Dividing the Spoils Usually it’s recommended you feed your cat two meals per day using portion control. Divide the amount suggested as per your vet or food manufacturer advice and allocate them approximately eight hours apart. As cats require taurine, (an amino acid important to maintain normal heart function, reproduction and vision) and… here’s a little tip; most mammals can make taurine, but cats can’t, it’s important to feed Kitty animal-based protein which means a meat-based diet in order
to meet her nutritional requirements. Remember you may need to adjust intake according to your cat’s level of activity or your vet’s recommendations.
Temperature A senior cat’s sense of smell may diminish slightly, so try to offer her food at room temperature to make it easier for her to be attracted to the aroma. Water Only Forget the saucer of milk, it’s bad for Kitty. Cats cannot process enough lactase in order to break down lactose
in milk, therefore allowing Kitty to drink milk or milk-based products will cause her to vomit or experience diarrhoea. Give water only and make sure you encourage her to drink it often, as some senior cats may be prone to medical problems such as urinary tract infections and an increased water intake may reduce the risk of this. It will also reduce the risk of dehydration. So, following the all clear from your vet, make sure Kitty gets enough gentle exercise in the form of some play with toys or a little potter around the garden while you’re tending to the plants. The above is written as a guideline only, so if you’ve got a senior cat, why not pop her along to your vet today for a quick check up because with his/her help, there’s no reason why you and Kitty can’t enjoy the golden years together and optimise her health and wellbeing. For more information,
log onto www.dspca.ie or contact your vet or email me at miriam.kerins@ dspca.ie
10 May 2012 GAZETTE 15
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GazetteGROWING GROWING
In association with
TASTE: NO NEED TO ROOT AROUND FOR A GREAT TREAT
Can’t beet this THIS month, we will be harvesting the first of our new-season beetroot. Okay, so they will be no bigger than golf balls, and will have been grown in the polytunnel – but they will be all the tastier and more tender as a result. I was turned off beetroot as a kid because the only way I ever saw it presented was pickled and floating in vinegar – fresh beetroot plucked straight from the soil and baked to retain all the goodness is a different matter: earthy, tender, wonderful and incredibly good for you. Interesting to note that we also still have about half a dozen beetroot from last year in a box of sand in the shed – they were sown in July, lifted for storage in October,
and we’ve been eating a couple a week since. They have held up well. They are an altogether hardier affair than the new season ones – about the size of large oranges, and not quite as tender, but they still taste pretty good and make a useful addition to salads (raw, grated). To my mind, this brings home why beetroot is the perfect GIY crop – it can be difficult to source fresh in the supermarket, it’s easy to grow, doesn’t demand much space and, with a little planning, it can be enjoyed fresh all year round. By the way, if you are heading to Bloom in the Phoenix Park (May 31 to June 4), come and visit us at the GIY Zone.
We will be showing people how to sow seeds and generally spreading GIY joy. We’re also aiming to break a Guinness World Record for the most people sowing seedlings at the one time, and creating a giant seedling mosaic!
Tip of the week: Best way to sow beetroot Beetroot likes a deep, sandy soil, manured the previous winter. Apply organic fertiliser about a week before sowing. Germination is in about 10 days, and you will have roots to eat in about three months. I always sow beetroot in module trays and then carefully transplant them about a month after sowing.
They should be planted four inches apart, in rows about 12 inches apart. Bear in mind that a beetroot seed is actually a “cluster” of up to five seeds, so even if you sow just one seed, you may end up with a small cluster of plants – thin them out to just one seedling. Sow every two weeks from April until July (for a continuous supply of young beets), although you can start even earlier (March) in a greenhouse or polytunnel. Sow another batch in July, which will be ready to lift in October for winter storage.
Michael Kelly is a
freelance journalist, author and founder of GIY Ireland
Recipe of the Week BEETROOT, walnuts and goat’s cheese make ideal bedfellows for a salad. This delicious salad serves four. Ingredients: • 12-15 baby beetroot • Two TBSP lemon juice • 80ml extra virgin olive oil • One TSP Dijon mustard • 70g baby spinach leaves and some small beetroot leaves • A bunch of flat-leaf parsley leaves, roughly chopped • 100g soft goat’s cheese, crumbled • 75g toasted walnuts TWIST off the leaves from the beetroot (don’t cut, this causes them to bleed), leaving about two inches
of stalk attached to the beet. Wash them well and pat dry. Place them in a tinfoil parcel, and bake in a hot (220C) oven for about 35-45 minutes. They will be very tender when cooked – pierce with a knife to check. Take a beetroot and rinse under a cold tap (so you can handle it), then quickly remove the skin by rubbing with your fingers – if it is well cooked, it should come off easily. Repeat with all the beetroot and cut them into quarters. Whisk the
lemon juice, olive oil and mustard together in a small bowl. Season to taste. Place the spinach, beetroot leaves and chopped parsley in a large bowl. Add half the dressing and toss well. Divide among four serving plates (or leave in the large bowl, if desired), then scatter with beetroot, goat’s cheese and toasted walnuts. Garnish the salad with some parsley, drizzle with the remaining dressing and serve immediately.
DublinGazetteNewspapers Advertising Sales Professionals Dublin Gazette Newspapers is Dublin’s fastest growing community weekly regional publisher, with 8 titles covering the M50 from Swords to Dun Laoghaire. We are currently looking to recruit: We are now seeking experienced media sales executives to work in our advertising dept in our Lucan head office on a number of Dublin Gazette titles. Experience in newspaper advertising sales is preferable. Full clean driving license and own car required; fluent written and oral English essential. Excellent package on offer to suitable candidates. If you can work on your own initiative within a team environment, are motivated, enthusiastic with an excellent work ethic, please send your cv to: mmcgovern@gazettegroup.com
16 GAZETTE 10 May 2012
GazetteBEAUTY BEAUTY The essential
A designer gift from Lancome
LANCOME announces its June 2012 designer gift collaboration with luxury design house, Jenny Packham. This is one of Lancome’s most exciting designer collaborations to date. The style of the make-up purse has a vintage feel to it, featuring romantic floral designs created exclusively by de Gournay for the Jenny Packham Lancome bag. From June 2012, Lancome customers can own this unique bag by simply purchasing two Lancome products (one to be skincare) from a Lancome counter. Available nationwide from June 8, 2012, whilst stocks last.
et’s face it, the sooner we go on holidays to catch a few rays from that shiny ball in the sky, known as THE SUN, the sooner faces will be smiling again. The travel season is among us and Gazette Beauty is on a mini mission to give readers an idea of some of the essential products that should take up space in that 20kg bag. Forget packing luggage to the brim with flip flops and sarongs, you know you won’t use, think about items that you can’t live without on a sun holiday. Helping to take the stress out of travel this summer is Burt’s Bees and its mini kits. The kits have mini-
L
Enjoy the summer holiday season but take care while in the sun with an appropriate sun screen to prevent burning
ature versions of all it’s full size favourites with Tips and Toes Kit, Head to Toe, Radiance Healthy Glow and the Essential Burt’s Bee Kit – our favourite. This essential Burt’s Bee’s kit (€16.99) contains soap bark and chamomile deep cleansing cream, hand cream, nourishing milk and honey lotion, coconut foot cream and beeswax lip balm. Of these, the lip balm is a must to keep with you at all times to avoid dry lips while sun bathing. T he coconut foot cream gives great relief after a day’s walking, or a night’s dancing and the coconut scent boosts that happy holiday feeling – available at health
stores and pharmacies nationwide. Take care while in the sun, and so it’s not unusual that we say sun factor is a MUST for everyone. Don’t let skin burn – red is not a sun-kissed colour, it’s sun-kissed pain. Apply sun factor as often as you can. If money doesn’t matter, Piz Buin is a favourite here as it is great for sensitive and dry skin, and works on building a glowing natural tan. Saving pennies? Then try out Lidl’s very own range from Cien. The range is available in various sun protection factors to suit every need from factor 8 to factor 50, kids to adults, it has the lot. Here’s something eve-
10 May 2012 GAZETTE 17
Edited by Laura Webb
products for a spell in the sun tecting hair from everyday wear and tear, a must when out and about this summer – Aussie hair products are available at Boots nationwide. Rub away your stress and worries with the new Spa Collection Absolute Calm Massage Oil, €8/100ml from Marks & Spencer. This non-greasy massage oil has been specially formulated with sweet almond oil to condition and nourish the skin whilst a soothing blend of essential oils of mandarin, chamomile and lavender help relax and unwind. This is perfect for trying to unwind after a day sightseeing. Also available in this range is the Spa Collection Absolute Calm Bath Essence, €5.50/300ml and Spa Collection Absolute Calm Pillow Mist, €5.50/50ml. Now obviously we are not saying take all these essentials with you, because if you do, that 20kg will be full before you get a chance to put in any summer shorts, so just take in our advice and then find what best suits your top five travel essentials.
Help take the stress out of travel with Essential Burt’s Bees Kit
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Dead Sea Skin Magik Brushing Salts (€17.95). This is a mix of Dead Sea salts and coconut oil, perfect for pre beach exfoliation and a great treatment for cellulite, also available at Nelson’s Homeopathic Dispensary. Take care of your hair when away. The Aussie hair care range, not only smells fantastic but works wonders for dry/ damaged hair. Tried and tested by Gazette beauties, the range recommended this summer is the Miracle Moist Range. This range makes hair soft, shiny and fabulously conditioned. It brings moisture to dry damaged hair, which is often a result of sun exposure. Miracle Moist Shampoo is used to lock moisture in all day long. After that, use Miracle Moist Conditioner for some serious moisturising. But the one thing we advise not to leave behind is its Miracle Hair Insurance. This leave-in conditioner is a little miracle for detangling hair by conditioning and nourishing it, while also pro-
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ryone should know – sun protection factor (SPF) refers to how long you can stay in the sun without getting burned. The higher the factor the longer you can stay out without burning. The Cien range is priced between €2.99 and €4.99. Another essential is, of course, after sun. One suggestion from Gazette Beauty for a good after sun, essential for soothing is Green People After Sun (€15.99). This product is made with cooling peppermint and helps to maintain a healthy tan – available at Nelson’s Homeopathic Dispensary, Duke St, Dublin 2. Travelling can take its toll on some stomachs and so a travel sickness preventative is worth bringing along, helping you enjoy your summer rather than loath it because of travel sickness. Our recommendation is, also available from Nelson’s, is Travella, a homeopathic preparation to aid with symptoms of travel sickness, this costs €7.25. Exfoliate before heading to the beach with
All of your latest local news, sport, features and pictures are now just a click away Lidl’s very own range from Cien has factors to suit every need
18 GAZETTE 10 May 2012
GazetteMUSIC MUSIC FastTunes with Radio Nova’s Dee Woods SHE’S been called one of the most controversial women in rock, and I think Courtney Love whole-heartedly deserves that crown. Brawls, court cases, drugs...this woman has stared the usual rock cliches in the face (and in some cases, punched it), but only she could continue the on-again off-again relationship with her fella, 18 years after his death. Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain died in 1994 and the rights to his image were in
the hands of his wife. Although tumultuous, their relationship was one that seemed to survive all sorts of challenges...until Courtney needed a quick buck, it seems. It’s emerged the Hole singer gave up her rights to Cobain’s name, likeness and appearance in exchange for €2.1m. Surely, she wouldn’t be so shallow... I hear you ask, where is she getting the money? Oh, that’d be from her teenage daughter, Frances Bean
Cobain’s, trust fund. So, Courtney gets the loan of a couple of million, but until she can pay it back, will no longer be head of the company that looks after the Cobain cashflow: Frances Bean is. The 19-year-old is taking over her 47-year-old mother’s job and giving her a loan? Talk about role reversal. In fairness to Courtney, she’s doing her best to earn a few quid in the meantime. Her first art show was launched in New York last week. It featured drawings and lyrics by the Hole frontwoman and the piece de resistance: a designer gown which she claimed was to be worn to her marriage to Ed Norton that never happened. Now, there’s a woman with an appropriate surname - what’s not to Love?
Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys had an influence on a generation of music fans
All our love and respect to the end I ROB HEIGH
WHEN it was announced last week that Beastie Boy Adam Yauch had died after a three-year battle against cancer, the wave of genuine shock and sadness that passed through the world of music was palpable. Although the portents were not good when he was unable to attend the band’s induction to the Rock N Roll Hall Of Fame in April, there was still hope that this essential part of one of the most influential and beloved bands of the past three decades would beat the disease that afflicted him. Yauch’s gravelly rasp counterpointed Diamond’s pally vibe and Horowitz’s amped craziness on the mic. Their skills combined to create a unique bouillabaisse – a Beastie Boys record was instantly recognisable, not only because of their rhyme styles, but because you felt that the way their personalities were right there on the track. Every record, which never sold less than a
million copies on release, was a new adventure in sound – the Beasties took the influences of their world, mashing up Japanese pop, Jamaican dub, old-school hip-hop, soul and hard rock riffs and made something uniquely their ow n. At the same time, they wrote some of the most memorable, quotable, referential and – don’t forget or underestimate this – fun rhymes in rap. The fact that the band seemed like a band of brothers, transmitting a genuine enjoyment in what they did, never appearing po-faced or serious, even in the face of serious illness in the last three years, defines why the Beastie Boys meant so much to so many people. They loved what they did, and they wanted you to be a part of the party they fought for the right to throw. You were invited, and welcome – the door was open and theirs was not a closed world of gangsta mores or outrageous bling that you had no access to. They opened a whole new world of music to
this impressionable teen – the Beasties were the link to Run-DMC, to Public Enemy, to NWA, and on, and on… Not only to their contemporaries, but also to the artists they sampled on their tracks, too innumerable to mention, especially on their best album, Paul’s Boutique. Creating some of the most memorable moments in music video history – Intergalactic, Body Movin’, So What’cha Want – was another of Yauch’s talents that was most immediately on display in the public domain, but his activism and charitable work for Tibetan freedom and the recovery of New York in the wake of 9/11 were other aspects of the work he did, which underlined his humanity and humanitarianism. There has been nothing but the Beasties finest moments on the playlist since last Friday, and they will always be one of of my most dearly loved, and missed, musical heroes. T hank you, Boys. Thank you, Adam. Namaste.
10 May 2012 GAZETTE 19
GazetteBUSINESS BUSINESS
Supported by AIB
Interview: Tracy Leonard, DAS Academy in Lucan and Rush
Helping people achieve their dreams
MORTGAGE RELIEF Q – We bought my first house in 2004, bought the second in 2010, as the family grew. We could not sell the first, as it was in negative equity and rented it out in 2010, losing the mortgage interest relief. Should we still qualify after recent changes ? The rent doesn’t cover the mortgage capital and interest repayments. Colin – Terenure A - Measures brought into effect last Budget would have meant that, had you stayed in your first house, you would now be enjoying 30% mortgage interest relief until 2017 ! Unfortunately, moving meant that you lost out on being a first-time buyer and, therefore, precludes you from receiving the new life changes announced in the last Budget. At
INTERNATIONAL singer and actress Tracy Leonard runs a new stage school in Lucan and Rush, known as DAS Academy (Dancing, Acting, Singing Academy). Tracy trained at the Gaiety School of Acting, Dublin and the Royal Academy of Music, London on its world renowned Musical Theatre Course and has worked professionally in Ireland, the UK and on a cruise ship as the main singer for Broadway style shows on the US high seas. Tracy loves to perform on stage and has done so since a young age, she now wants to help new up-and-coming actors, singers and dancers achieve their dreams or even just enjoy it as something to help them gain more confidence in themselves in everyday life. International singer and actress Tracy Leonard runs a new stage school in Lucan and Rush
Q&A When you were a kid, what did you want to be? A singer. What was your first job? Farmer’s daughter and then helping run a video shop when I was 15. I didn’t want to get muddy anymore!
soon as you started renting your former home. There are so many people who were forced to rent out their homes because of their inability to maintain repayments, but did not stop the TRS. This could come back to haunt them. Presumably, you are also making the usual offsets against the rental income tax liability: • 75% of the mortgage interest • Service charges (including block insurance) • Repairs and maintenance • 12.5% of furniture and fixtures (keep receipts) for each of the first eight years • PRTB fees • Property management fees • Contents insurance if contents are your own The NPPR and household charges are not allowable for offsetting against your rental income tax
What part of your working day do you “delegate”? I leave the dancing to Thomas…we work on production pieces together, but when it comes to choreography, I have a cuppa… What sport do you follow? I like rugby.
And your first pay check? I remember wanting these runners and thought if I work for two weeks, I’ll be able to get them. It made me feel great to be able to get them myself.
What sport can you play? I used to play camogie and Gaelic football, but now I just walk a lot and run around after my toddler…keeps me fit to say the least!
When did you start your present job? August 2011 with the stage school and singing forever it seems. Before that for weddings, shows and events.
What is your guilty music, TV or movie pleasure? I just love Sky Plus. I get to watch it all after baby is in bed and I can wind down with the soap stories, a nice cuppa and some choccy.
What is the best thing about your job? The kids. Seeing them achieve a dance move they couldn’t do before or hitting a note that seemed out of reach, not being shy to read out or “act” in front of their peers.
least you stopped the TRS (tax relief at source) as
What music/pictures/movies do you have on your iPod/iPad? Everything from Heads Shoulders Knees and Toes to Rhianna for DAS Academy classes.
Who do you follow on Twitter/ Facebook? Just friends and family really, as my husband is American, so I keep in touch with all my friends and in-laws that way. It’s great for sharing photos and stories. Describe your dream meal? Cooked oysters and then a big, thick medium-rare steak and cheesy potatoes. Where do you enjoy spending money frivolously? On my son and my husband – online. That way it’s a surprise when it arrives. I’m not a complete martyr though, I do get myself stuff too. How many pairs of shoes do you own? Mmm, let me think … about 40. BUT can’t wear half of the really high heels at the moment. I do intend wearing them again in the future, so refuse to throw them out (not sure if I’m in denial or not though!)
What was your worst holiday experience? My last trip to California (where my husband is from). The holiday wasn’t the problem, the travel was! Dublin to London to San Franciso was so long and my son was only six months old at the time. He was great on the flights but I hate flying! So, while hubby and son snoozed away, I was envisioning all sorts of scary airplane movies! Describe your dream holiday? Me, hubby and son by a pool with a maid to do all the cooking and cleaning. What would be your dream job? Singing/acting a couple of days a week and teaching the DAS Academy kids a couple of days a week too – I have done both, but not together yet. What do you plan to do when you retire? IF I retire, which will probably only ever be part-time retirement, as I love singing, acting and teaching. I will travel, relax and spend time with my son and future children and me and my husband’s family.
liability. As regards tax relief on your second home, the original allowance of seven years has now expired – the last two years being at 20% tax relief. Contact John with your money questions at
jlowe@moneydoctor.ie or visit his website at www.moneydoctor.ie. John Lowe, Fellow of the Institute of Bankers, is founder and managing director of Money Doctor
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20 GAZETTE 10 May 2012
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GazetteMOTORS MOTORS
New Astra lives RoadSigns Road Signs CORMAC CURTIS
Eircom calls on Kuga for its new fleet IRELAND’S leading telecom services provider, Eircom, has taken delivery of 20 new Ford Kuga Commercial vehicles for its national team of radio site engineers. The Kuga is powered by Ford’s efficient 2.0-litre TDCi diesel engine and has fourwheel drive capability, enabling the Eircom teams to gain easy access to off-road sites. Michael Lynch, head of transport and logistics for Eircom, said: “Our teams need a tough, reliable vehicle in their daily work and the initial reaction to the new Kuga has been very positive. The Kuga has the right mix of style, versatility and toughness.” Ford Ireland’s commercial vehicle sales and Marketing manager, Ciaran McMahon, said: “Our Kuga Commercial is the ideal stylish package for any business user who needs that little bit more muscle in their daily work. And with prices from €26,604, it truly is a great value package”.
Volkswagen claims number one spot VOLKSWAGEN Ireland has claimed the number 1 position in the Irish motor industry during April, with 867 registrations, a market share of 12.9%. So far this year, Volkswagen has registered 6,513 vehicles representing a market share of 12.3%, up 0.5% (on 2011). This performance places Volkswagen immediately behind Toyota, and suggests it is closing the gap. Commenting on the figures, John Donegan, head of sales and marketing for Volkswagen Ireland said: “We are delighted with our performance during April and credit must go to our dealership network and their exceptional efforts. “With a gap of just 200 registrations between Volkswagen Ireland and the top spot we will be doing our utmost to continue this strong performance in the second quarter of 2012 and maximise a strong order bank.” Volkswagen Ireland’s strong performance is against the backdrop of an overall motoring industry that year to date is 7.2 % down on 2011 with April down 22% on April 2011.
EAR in, year out, car companies the world ove r t e a s e u s with incredible concept designs that they promise indicate the direction their latest models are following. Unfortunately, year after year, what eventually rolls off the assembly line doesn’t quite live up to our, admittedly juvenile, expectations. A certain part of every driver’s psyche (well, mine at least) wants to see a car that breaks the rules and doesn’t apologise for it. I have an insatiable appetite for a car that has all the charm, character, looks and power of a James Bond villain, just in motoring form. Something that really has a menacing personality. So, when Opel released their concept images of the newest incarnation of the Astra GTC at the Paris Autoshow in 2010, not too many members of the motoring press held their breath in anticipation of the final product matching the beauty of the concept. How wrong were we? Very. With the exception of the alloys and the racing seats featured in the pre-release images, the Opel Astra GTC is almost exactly as promised. A s m a ny w i l l b e aware, the Astra hatchback has been held close to the hearts of many a young boy racer over the years. And, as those boy racers have matured, Opel have kept a close eye on how the Astra has developed to match the needs and, indeed, the desires of their customers. This time, though, the design team led by
Y
SPECS: OPEL ASTRA GTC 2.0-LITRE DIESEL SRI Engine: 2.0 CDTI Economy: 49.6mpg CO2 emissions: 127g Price: €27,995
Opel’s vice-president of design, Mark Adams, has produced something wonderful. You simply can’t help but grin from ear to ear when you lay eyes on this car. The contours appear to have been modelled on the lines in a speed tunnel, making the car’s profile similar to a cross section of an aeroplane’s wing. This thing looks like it’s moving when it’s standing still. External chrome has been kept to a stylish minimum – only appearing on the front grille and as a highlighting arc over the side windows. The front lights have all the subtlety of a snarling panther, and, at night, the effect is exaggerated with some beautifully designed illumination. Let’s just say you’ll notice this car from a mile off – and you will feel like giving it plenty of space and avoiding eye contact. This Astra is also the first Opel coupe that offers an option of 20” alloy wheels the model I tested was sporting this option, and I couldn’t imagine the car without them. The biggest issue for my kids is rear seats – do they have enough room, and can they buckle themselves in to their booster chairs? In the Astra GTC, this was, surprisingly, absolutely no problem. Not only that, but, both kids could even flip the front seats for ward themselves to get out. Practicality reaches further back in to the
The Astra GTC is well worth a test drive if you can drag yourself away from the beauty of the outside
car, as the boot provides between 380 and 1,165 litres of volume – over 200 litres more than some of the competition. I was impressed with the high-quality materials that feature in all GTCs, and with the attractive chromeedged instruments in deep-set binnacles that give drivers clear and well laid-out information. Standard on all GTCs are DAB stereo and USB functionality, while the SRi gets an onboard computer and leather-rimmed steering wheel. My test car came in a beautifully striking Morello Red, and featured the
new premium leather trim, and a six-way adjustable driver’s seat. I was relieved that the sports seats in this car were forgiving enough to allow me to drive in incredible comfort – which is not always the case with figure-hugging sports seats! This car would not be complete without some serious performance ability – and the 2.0CDTi packs 165PS with an exceptionally strong 350Nm of torque from just 1,750rpm. This helps it to a c h i e ve a 0 - 6 0 m p h time of just 8.4 seconds and 50-70mph in 6.4 seconds, together with a combined fuel consumption of 58.9mpg
and emissions of just 127g/km. In short, enough poke for some laugh-out-load fun on the road. Driver comfort is further enhanced as the engine is bolted in position via hydraulicallydamped mountings that minimise vibration through the body structure. Opel’s Start/ Stop system is fitted to all 2.0-CDTi models as standard and works nicely. So, there is a lot going on in the new Astra GTC, and it won me over quicker than it can reach 60mph. It’s well worth a test drive if you can drag yourself away from the beauty of the outside!
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up to expectations
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GazetteTTRAVEL
Edited by Mimi Murray
Enjoy non-stop Las Vegas casino action
Cancun is one of the most beautiful beaches in the world
Enjoy the crisp ocean air in Cape Cod
AMERICA: BEAUTIFUL BEACHES, FANTASTIC THEME PARKS AND CARIBBEAN CRUISES
Get away to the USA hether you’re looking to see the beauty of Cape Cod, get Mickey Mouse’s autograph, or chance your luck in the casinos, American Holidays have some great US offers at the moment.
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Orlando and Clearwater Beach
Stay 10 nights at the 4-star Crowne Plaza Universal Orlando and four nights at the 4-star Hilton Clearwater Beach Resort, with 14 nights car hire included, from only €1,049pp. The Crowne Plaza Universal Orlando Hotel, located on Universal Boulevard, is just a quick walk from Orlando’s world-renowned International Drive. It offers an outdoor pool, fitness and business centres, and offers high-speed and wireless internet access. Complimentary shuttles
whisk visitors from the hotel to SeaWorld, Wet ‘n’ Wild, and the Disney and Universal Orlando theme parks. Overlooking the Gulf of Mexico, the Hilton Clearwater Beach Resort stands on 10 acres of white-sand beach in Clearwater Beach and Pier 60, positioned adjacent to the resort, hosts nightly sunset celebrations. The Show Queen Riverboat is docked two blocks from the hotel. Price includes: Return flights from Dublin to Orlando, 14 nights accommodation and 14 nights car hire with fully inclusive insurance. Price based on two adults and two children sharing. Boston and Cape Cod
Spend three nights in the 3-star Midtown Hotel Boston and four nights in the 3-star Cape Codder Resort and Spa Hyannis from only €1,219pp
Centrally located in downtown Boston, the Midtown Hotel blends comfort and convenience with affordability. This moderately priced hotel, nestling in the heart of Boston’s Back Bay, puts the city at your doorstep. Boston is an exciting city to visit and the Midtown Hotel is the place to stay. At the award-winning Cape Codder Resort and Spa, enjoy the crisp ocean air and rolling sand dune scenery, providing numerous attractions, shopping and dining for its guests. Comfortable lodgings and excellent restaurants are available as is fun for all the family in the complex’s amazing indoor wave pool. Price includes: Return flights direct from Dublin to Boston with Aer Lingus, seven nights accommodation and four days car hire. Prices based on two adults sharing.
Orlando Stay and Western Caribbean Cruise
Stay five nights in the 3-star Rosen Inn Pointe Orlando Hotel and seven nights aboard Royal Caribbean’s Freedom of the Seas from only €1,329pp. Take the family to Orlando this Christmas and stay in the Rosen Inn Pointe Orlando Hotel on the famous International Drive, within driving distance of Universal Orlando, Sea World, Walt Disney World Theme Parks and many other Orlando attractions. The hotel also provides a complimentary scheduled shuttle transportation service to each of these attractions. The newly-enhanced Freedom of the Seas is a marvel of maritime engineering, packed with awesome innovations to stir your imagination. Catch a first-run movie in the 3D theatre or poolside under the stars on the outdoor movie
screen. Infuse colour into your cruise with the artworks of the BRITTO Gallery or with the frosted confections of the Cupcake Cupboard. Plus, enjoy all the revolutionary features Freedom of the Seas has always been known for - FlowRider surf simulator, rock climbing wall, ice-skating rink, Royal Promenade, cantilevered whirlpools, mini-golf course, H2O Zone water park, and much more. Price includes: Return flights from Dublin to Orlando, five nights accommodation in Orlando, seven nights full-board cruise and taxes. Excludes gratuities. Terms and conditions apply. Price based on two adults sharing. Las Vegas and Cancun
Stay three nights in the 3-star Excalibur Hotel and seven nights in the 3-star Viva Wynham Maya in Cancun, Mexico from only €1,479pp.
Stay in royal accommodations in the Excalibur Hotel in the heart of the Las Vegas Strip. Excalibur offers everything you’d expect from a Las Vegas hotel - from top-notch dining and entertainment, to non-stop Las Vegas casino action. Surrounded by pristine beaches and submerged among coral reefs, the Viva Wynham Maya is enchanted by ancient Mayan ruins. The all-inclusive resort experience shines with a seemingly endless array of exciting possibilities. Dine at one of seven restaurants, offering a tempting array of cuisines in a variety of beautiful settings. Price includes: Return flights, internal flight, 10 nights accommodation and airport transfers in Cancun. Prices based on two adults sharing. Call American Holidays to book on 01 6733800.
10 May 2012 SWORDS GAZETTE 23
24 SWORDS GAZETTE 10 May 2012
GazetteENTERTAINMENT ENTERTAINMENT !
FOR ALL THE LATEST THEATRE, CINEMA, GAMING AND TECH NEWS
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Seann William Scott and Jason Biggs explain to the rest of the gang what it felt like to have a career beyond the American Pie films. Out of shot, Chris Klein plots Rollerball 2.
This slice is stale Thirteen years after their first adventure, the American Pie gang are reunited, but they’ve left the charm behind I PAUL HOSFORD
AVENGERS Assemble may have announced the arrival of summer in cineplexes, but another reluctant team are coming together this week to fight off their own demons and play dress up. Unfortunately for the cast of American Pie: Reunion, Joss Whedon didn’t work his magic on the fourth (or eighth, depending on whether you class direct to video sequels) instalment of the series. Because, whereas the characters you know and love are back, they are basically the same people. Sure, Jim (Jason Biggs) and Michelle (Alyson Hannigan) are now parents of a two-year-old, Oz (Chris Klein) has become a sports caster with a blonde girlfriend ( 3 0 R o c k ’s K a t r i n a Bowden).
FILM OF THE WEEK: American Pie: Reunion ### (15) 113 mins Directors: Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg Starring: Jason Biggs, Seann William Scott, Alyson Hannigan, Chris Klein, Tara Reid, Eugene Levy, Mena Suvari, Jennifer Coolidge
OUR VERDICT: ONLY nostalgia gets this film such a high score. A film without characters as warmly built and easily recognised may have dipped below three stars. That said, there are genuinely funny parts and some that are laced with the good-hearted sweetness that made the series so successful. It is definitely worth a watch, but not worth rushing to.
Kevin (Thomas Ian Nicholas) has settled into the life of a househusband, Finch (Eddie Kaye Thomas) is a welltravelled man of the world, Mena Suvari’s Heather is a doctor, Stif ler’s (Seann William Scott) still Stifler, and Tara Reid’s Vicky is... living in New York, which is all we learn, but that’s ok because her character was the worst. So, 13 years after their graduation, the gang are back in town for a reunion and all ruminating on how their
lives haven’t gone as expected. It’s an odd fit, trying to make a mid-life crisis comedy of a franchise that got famous for its unconventional use of baked goods. So, we have the gang wistfully looking at the kids these days, wondering where their own youth has gone and alternately being their usual selves, which is the film’s biggest flaw. Jim will have his customary mishap, Finch will become obsessive about a toilet, Oz and Heather will look at
each other doe-eyed, Stif ler will scam on younger girls and get the best lines, while Kevin and Vicky will continue to be massive, lumberingly unfunny, millstones around the neck of the franchise. Directors Hur witz and Schlossberg created the Harold and Kumar series, itself a race-concious homage to American Pie, so you would feel that this project was right in their wheel-house. Unfor tunately, the pair seem to have mistaken watching the first film for making the fourth. Most of the jokes are callbacks to the original instalment, and nothing more than that. The only character given room to grow is Jim’s Dad, played with typical dryness by Eugene Levy. With his wife, Jim’s Mom, dead, his attempts
to get back into the dating game are peppered with brilliant Levy dialogue. Of course, there is the inevitable meeting with Stifler’s Mom (Jennifer Coolidge) and the two play off each other magnificently. But, this all feels like an afterthought. Like somewhere through filming, someone pointed out that Levy and Coolidge are two gifted comedians and the fans would probably like to see them get together. The actors struggle manfully with the material and, to an extent, seeing characters that you have built a genuine affection for back on the screen isn’t the worst way to spend two hours, but that alone just isn’t enough. This is why reunions are short-lived affairs; after the initial buzz of being back together, you realise why you left.
10 May 2012 SWORDS GAZETTE 25
GazetteGAMING GAMING Blackberry’s battle SHANE DILLON
IT’S not that long ago when the (then) ubiquitous Blackberry was half-jokingly referred to as the “Crackberry”, given its near-addictive hold over its owners, and their seemingly constant need to be toying with it, checking up on their emails. Flash forward a few short years, and Blackberry’s maker, Research in Motion (RIM) faces terribly civilised barbarians at the gate, in the form of Apple and Samsung – but barbarians, nonetheless, threatening to hack and slash what remains of the Blackberry’s collapsed share of the mobile smartphone/ internet phone market.
In a bid to beat back its rivals’ ever-advancing pincer movements, RIM’s alchemists have emerged with the Blackberry 10 – an almost all-ornothing device that RIM hopes is the secret weapon it needs to guarantee its survival, or, at the very least, provide some market breathing space. Of course, as an awful lot of current-gen Blackberry owners will tell you, there’s nothing very “wrong” with their devices – it’s just that the general expectation of the mass market for what their phones (at heart) can do has shifted, incrementally, with the public perception that, foot by foot, RIM has been left behind on the way to the all-conquering peak of
Research in Motion (RIM) chief, Thorsten Heins, unveils the Blackberry 10 (inset) at RIM’s annual BlackBerry World gathering in Orlando, last week
market dominance. And so, the Blackberry 10 has a number of contemporary features, with de rigueur touchscreen helping to maximise a new OS aimed at keeping pace with its peers (assuming, of course, developers row in behind the new OS – given the
comparative paucity of Blackberry apps, they have to). However, what’s most striking, from the prototype, is that the iconic ke y b o a r d h a s b e e n ditched, in line with modern smartphone stylings, helping to retool the Blackberry into a more
streamlined smartphone. With shareholders fielding blows to stock values, profit warnings and its first quarterly loss, coupled with other woes, RIM’s bosses must be praying Blackberry 10 can beat back the hordes, or the Blackberry’s very future could be axed ...
Bytesandpieces Puppets string out a fun Fable FROM chicken-kicking to lute-playing, the Fable series of games has always had much more to do than merely saving the kingdom, for those looking for a dash of fun with their adventuring. Now, building on the wellestablished world seen throughout the series, we’re presented with Fable Heroes, a not-entirely-obvious (but fun, nonetheless) title launching on XBox Live Arcade, priced 800 Microsoft points. Adding to the rush of quality titles winging their way to Live Arcade, Fable Heroes sees bright, colourful and intensely competitive multiplayer action rolling out across the land of Albion, with puppet heroes joining forces to battle evil, level up their characters, unlock ever-greater weapons and powers and compete for gold rewards. As for any chicken-kicking – well, play the game to see ... Anticipated with some puzzlement by the gaming press, the silly, cheeky and intense battles are lots of fun, presented with a gorgeous art style in the instantly memorable land of Albion. Boss battles, party games and side-scrolling action are certainly fun reasons to sally forth with your hero.
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26 SWORDS GAZETTE 10 May 2012
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GazetteSPORT
WONDER WARD:
Portmarnock’s Ireland star on his hopes for Euro 2012: Page 29
GOLF: KELLOGG’S SKILLS COMPETITION TO TEST THE BEST OF COUNTRY’S GOLFERS
Challenge is set for Dublin’s golfing stars sport@gazettegroup.com
GOLFERS all over the city are being called upon to show their skills in a new initiative from the Golfing Union of Ireland and Kellogg’s. The Kellogg’s NutriGrain Golf Skills Challenge competition, which is being run to mark a new partnership between the organisations, aims to find Ireland’s most skilled golfers.
There are seven skills involved in the challenge — driving, 135metre shot, pitching, up-and-down, bunker play, difficult lies and putting. There will be a number of regional qualif ying events, from which qualifiers will progress to a national final. These include qualifying events at Donabate Golf Club on Friday, June 22 and Hollystown Golf Club on Friday, August
10, prior to the national finat at the GUI National Golf Academy at Carton Demense. Ireland rugby player and Kellogg NutriG r a i n a m b a s s a d o r, Rob Kearney, attended the launch of the new partnership at the GUI National Golf Academy, and said: “As a professional athlete, I fully appreciate the need to practise basic skills and drills day in, day out. If I could bring the disci-
Rob Kearney (right) with pro at the GUI Academy, Kenny Fahey, and Jim McNeill of Kellogg Ireland
pline and time I devote to r ugby to my golf game, I’m sure I could drop another few shots off my handicap.” Speaking on behalf of the GUI National Golf Academy, Alan Kelly
said: “T he Kellogg’s Nutri-Grain Golf Skills Challenge presents golfers from around Ireland the opportunity to challenge themselves and really make all their practice pay off.
T he idea of skills challenge came about after we saw the reaction to our short game clinics over the last couple of years, and now we have the opportunity to establish the challenge
in golf clubs.” The competition is open to all golfers over the age of 18, who have an official GUI or ILGU handicap. Online entry is available at w w w. learntogolf.ie.
28 SWORDS GAZETTE 10 May 2012
GazetteSport Sport
Ciara McGrane and Charleigh Kavanagh at the celebration
Mayor Gerry Maguire and Giovanni
Giovanni Trappatoni arrives to great acclaim at Balheary for the Swords Celtic book launch
Celtic celebrate Swords say Ciao to Trap at Balheary BIG crowd of players and parents turned out at Swords Celtic last weekend for the visit of Republic of Ireland manager, Giovanni Trappatoni. He was at the club launching the club’s 50th anniversary book. The book documents the history of the club since its foundation in 1962, and includes many photographs of sides past and present. While at Balheary, Mr Trappatoni took time to sign autographs for the children and posed for lots of photographs, which was greatly appreciated.
Players assemble in a guard of honour for the arrival of the Republic of Ireland manager
A
Walter Galvin, George McGrane, Johnny O’Sullivan, Robbie Byrne Derek Evans, Ray Kelly and Frank Monaghan
and Frank Monaghan
10 May 2012 SWORDS GAZETTE 29
Green manifesto for Euro glory
FastSport
Stephen Ward is set to put a tough season behind him when he travels to Poland with Ireland for Euro 2012, writes STEPHEN FINDLATER AT TIMES, Stephen Ward has to pinch himself. His most vivid childhood memories were defined by Ireland’s appearance in major international tournaments, but now he stands ready to take his European championships bow. As a four-year-old, he remembers “causing carnage” at street parties in 1990. In 2002, his parents “allowed” him to skip a fifth-year engineering exam to watch Robbie Keane strike late for a 1-1 draw against Germany in the World Cup. Now, it is the Portmarnock man’s time to shine on the international stage.
Stephen Ward
Wolves’ relegation from the English Premier League means his focus is already firmly trained on Poland and, hopefully, Ukraine, with the time to create new memories on the agenda.
but I can still remember street parties, no cars and tables up the road. I knew something big was going on. “From there, I remember where I was for all the games in 1994 and 2002.
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‘There are still a lot of players over here that could make it in England but it’s just about a manager taking a chance on you’
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“Your best memories are when Ireland are in major tournaments,” he said at the launch of the FAI Summer Schools this week. “I was only four in 1990
It’s a dream come true. For kids growing up now, hopefully, this will be part of their memories and we can give them some of the highlights.” Having such a carrot has offered some respite for Ward. He has played every minute of Wolves’ ultimately doomed campaign this term, one of the club’s top performers in an ultimately forgettable campaign. Such setbacks, indeed, do not always lead to a loss of form. In 2002, Matt Holland bounced back from relegation with Ipswich to score for the Republic in their opening World Cup game against Cameroon. It is an irony not lost on Ward when reminded of the stat: “I’d take that! It’s not nice going as a relegated player. “It’s been devastating, but the writing has been on the wall for a few weeks, so we’ve had a bit
of time to reflect on what has happened.” Terr y Connor has offered Ward a chance to rest in recent weeks but is keen to finish off a complete season and build toward Poland. It is quite the position to be in for the former Bohs’ man who opted to stay in Dublin at the start of his professional career rather than move across the water in his mid-teens, owing a lot to club mate, Kevin Doyle. “I certainly don’t feel I’d be where I am today if it wasn’t for the League of Ireland.
Opportunity “It definitely helped me grow up. Hand on heart, I don’t know how I would have reacted going away at 16, moving to an environment where everyone is trying to make it. “Doyler opened a door for a lot of people with how easy he took to it in his first season. He keeps telling me I owe him! It is true, though. “If he hadn’t gone over and done as well as he did, we wouldn’t have this opportunity. There are still a lot of players over here that could make it in England but it’s just about a manager taking a chance on you.” Ireland manager, Giovanni Trapattoni was another to take a chance on Ward, and he has become a key player on the left in recent time.
So much so, he is now in a position to emulate the vintage of Jack Charlton’s 1-0 victory over Italy in 1994 – one Ward watched enthralled with 15 family members in his house. “No one gave us a chance in that game, and no one will do that against Spain. I know it’s a different scale, but you look at what Chelsea did to Barcelona, it can happen – these teams can be beaten. In the last World Cup, Spain lost to Switzerland and went on to win it. “They can slip up and, hopefully if they do, it will be against us. I think we can shock a lot of people. Not many people will give us a chance of getting out of our group. I think that will suit us. “We always seem to do well with an underdog tag. We’re going there with a world-class manager. Qualifying is down to him and the way he prepares us. Obviously there are better technical teams in the tournament – Spain and Italy are among the best teams in the world. But when it comes to 90 minutes, we can make it really tough for anyone. “The first game will be vital but if we’re still in contention coming into the Italy game, we’ll have a great chance of progressing. After that, you just hope you can go as far as possible.”
GOAL calls on Transition students to get active TRANSITION year students throughout Dublin are being challenged to take on their teachers as part of a new annual multi-sport challenge taking place during May in aid of humanitarian agency, GOAL. Launched nationwide last week, the GOAL Sports Challenge provides all schoolchildren — from junior infants right up to Leaving Certificate level – with the opportunity to compete against each other in a wide range of popular sports and games. The event is aimed at boosting fitness levels amongst children and teenagers, and raising money and awareness for some of GOAL’s programmes for vulnerable children throughout the developing world. Teachers are also being encouraged to participate, by either taking part in as many events as they can, or by arranging and supervising games for the younger children. “We expect the students versus the teachers event, in sports like rugby, soccer, Gaelic football or hurling to capture the imagination of most schools, but we have proposed a number of other games, such as skipping, hula-hoop rolling, long puck and long kick events, GOAL miles and relays as types of events that will suit boys and girls of all ages and fitness levels,” said GOAL’s development education officer, Maeve Seery. “However, schools are more than welcome to come up with their own ideas, too. “We have also suggested Friday, May 11, as a day to hold the GOAL Sports Challenge, but it may be easier for schools to run the event at another time, whether it is during a sports day, a lunch break, or even a PE class.” Participating children and teachers are being encouraged to donate whatever they can afford towards GOAL. For more information, including tips and guidelines for individual games, students and teachers should log on to www.goal.ie, or call Maeve at GOAL on 01-2809 779.
30 SWORDS GAZETTE 10 May 2012
GazetteSport Sport FastSport
AFL: WEST DUBLIN SIDE REVERSE RECENT RUN WITH VICTORY
Get your spot picked out for Star Saturday THIS year, the UEFA Champions League final and the first all-Ireland Heineken Cup final both take place on May 19. This sporting feast of a day will deliver exhilarating viewing experiences for rugby and soccer fans alike, and key sponsors, Heineken, are inviting fans to catch both finals at specially prepared venues on what they are describing as Star Saturday. In a monumental day for Irish rugby, two Irish provinces meet in the Heineken Cup final for the first time. Leinster clash with Ulster in Twickenham at 5pm and, with both provinces having tasted Heineken Cup glory in the past, they will be keen to recreate their respective heroics to claim the coveted trophy once more. In the UEFA Champions League final, Bayern Munich will look to use their home advantage and lift the famous trophy in front of their adoring fans. However, they face a stern test against a rejuvenated Chelsea team that recently eliminated Barcelona. This huge fixture kicks off at 7.45pm. Throughout Ireland on May 19, Heineken will host Star Saturday in participating pubs, with competitions running across nine venues, allowing fans to win some special prizes. The action-packed day is set to be filled with sporting drama, and Heineken are inviting fans to get down to participating pubs to enjoy the action with friends, and snap up the best seats to both finals. Fans can locate their nearest Heineken Star Saturday venue on www.heineken.ie/starsaturday.
West Dublin Rhinos faced off against Dublin Dragons at ALSAA last weekend. Picture: Lynn Walsh
Dragons fail to fire at home sport@gazettegroup.com
DUBLIN Dragons were unable to capitalise on an under-par performance by West Dublin Rhinos at ALSAA last week to help revive their IAFL season with a much-needed win. Coming off the back fo three losses on the bounce, Rhinos looked like they were big-game fodder for the Dragons, but they proved able to fight fire with fire on their D as the northsiders threatened. Rhinos made hard work of what many had thought would be a routine win, when their offence failed to fire. But their defence
led the way, and the 8-6 win put them back into the play-off hunt. T he game star ted brightly enough for the Rhinos, with penalties and some solid running putting them within 20 yards of a score. However, Dragons intercepted Stephen Macken on the goal line. With the defence taking the field with a long field to defend, the Rhinos rampaged, forcing falsestart penalties and ferocious tackles, before an errant snap led to a safety that put Rhinos 2-0 up. From there, the game entered a familiar pattern, with the Rhinos O start-
ing and stopping, the D making big plays and not allowing the Dragons an inch. After a long drive, the Rhinos managed to punch the ball in late in the second quarter, with Robert Pops slaloming through the Dragons D before stretching out to pierce the goal line. Pops played like a man possessed all day and his touchdown was reward for his effort. A high snap meant the point after wasn’t kicked and the subsequent pass was dropped at the back of the endzone. That left the Rhinos with an 8-0 at the break,
and the Dragons still very much in the game. On the first drive of the second half, Macken was picked off, leading to a six-point runback and the Dragons given a chance to tie the game. The Rhinos D, as it would all day, stood firm and stopped the run, leaving the visitors just two points ahead. That settled a pattern in the game, with the Rhinos trying to figure out ways to move the ball, while the Dragons were wondering what hit them. Adam Skelly ripped a ball clean from a Dragon receiver, Dan Breslin picked off Murphy, Nick
Newby stripped the ball out to force a fumble and the Rhinos were getting production all over the D. However, a late deep pass left the Dragons with nothing but endzone, and a win, in front of them. That was before a magnificent strip by Dan Breslin turned the ball over just 18 yards from the line. The Rhinos were able to chew up some clock from there, but a late Dragons surge forced the Rhinos to give one last stand. That was achieved as Barry Bolton made a huge tackle to seal the win and keep the Rhinos hopes of the post-season alive.
Puspure reaches Olympic standard sport@gazettegroup.com
K I N S E A LY r e s i d e n t Sanita Puspure showed her Olympic potential when she finished fifth at last weekend’s World Cup regatta in the single scull event in Belgrade to qualify for the London Games. The 30-year-old – a former Latvian Under-23 international, who has since settled in Ireland and who became an Irish citizen in the past year
– started strongly, running in second after 500 metres, but the worldclass field reeled in to see her finish the race in fifth. It came a day after she produced one of her best performances on Saturday in the semi-final in a heat featuring Xiuyun Zhang of China and world champion Mirka Knapkova of the Czech Republic. They zipped clear, a feat they managed again
in the final, but Puspure stayed strong to stay ahead of Estonia’s Kaisa Pajusalu to nab the third qualification place. It came just two weekends before the Olympic qualifiers in Lucerne with Puspure seeking one of the three remaining spots left at the Games in the single scull. Nine rowers are already qualified for the Games, with just 12 places available in the final list.
Sanita Puspure has qualified for London 2012
10 May 2012 SWORDS GAZETTE 31
FOOTBALL: THIRD NATIONAL TITLE IN A DECADE
CLUB NOTICEBOARD FINGALLIANS OUR celebration and awards night
Colmcilles and then beat Erin’s Isle
took place on Sunday night in the
in the semi-final.
club hall. The hall of fame award went to the very popular Nellie and Wally Galvin.
A special word of thanks to man-
Flynn after an extraordinary year.
ager John Williams and his back-
The Footballer of the Year was Gary
room team of Alan Comiskey, Aiden
Donnelly; Hurler of the Year was
Harford, Declan Brady and Kevin
Peter Daly; Ladies Footballer of the
O’Brady. Dublin U-21 footballers claimed
David Gahan; Inter Footballer of
their third All-Ireland with a very
the Year was Fiachra Hoey; Junior
strong finish in Tullamore last Sun-
Footballer of the Year was Bengi
day afternoon.
Gallagher; and the Junior Ladies
Croke Park Stadium is currently
Footballer of the Year was Aoife
recruiting voluntary stewards to
Johnson.
work on match day and for other
Dublin secure AllIreland U-21 crown I sport@gazettegroup.com
CASTLEKNOCK’S Ciaran Kilkenny played a key part for the Dublin U-21s part for the Dublin Under-21s when they helped Dublin to claim the county’s third Clark Cup with victory over Roscommon in Tullamore last Sunday, adding to the Sky Blues’ success at this level in 2003 and 2010. The Dubs finished like a freight train to capture the title, with manager Jim Gavin becoming the first Dublin manager to lead the county to two All-Ireland glories, having managed the team in 2010. Dublin led 1-5 to 0-6 at the interval thanks in part to the clinical accuracy of Paul Hudson. Indeed, it was the Thomas Davis sniper whose goal in added time in the first half that proved
to be the only major of the first half, after he skillfully jab-lifted the ball before rifling to the roof of the Roscommon net. The goal arrived in the 32nd minute when John Kelly’s delivery was broken down by Ciaran Kilkenny, and Hudson showed terrific guile to find the net. The Dubs could really have held a stronger advantage, but failed to convert possession into scores, and were guilty of not combining to telling effect up front as the Rossies dominated territory and possession for the first 30 minutes. Roscommon threw caution to the wind after the restart and were rewarded with four points without reply as the lively Donie Smith (two), Cian Connolly and Colin Compton were all on target. But when his side needed him most, Emmet O’Conghaile
regained a foothold for the Dubs at centrefield, while the introduction of Paddy O’Higgins, like nearly all the substitutions, helped to turn the balance of power the way of Gavin’s men in a frenetic second half. At the back, the likes of team captain, Kevin O’Brien, and Sean George kept their opponents at bay with some heroic defending. Now on the front foot, Dublin began to open up Roscommon with some direct running from the likes of Gary Sweeney and sub Harry Dawson and, over the concluding ten minutes, Dublin hit 1-6 without reply as they turned on the turbo drive to finally shake off a very committed Roscommon side. Ciaran Kilkenny put in an excellent last ten minutes, while centreback John Kelly’s points summed up the “never say die” attitude of the Dublin team as they
selected events.
lians who started the day off with
To be part of the match day action
three wins against Lucan Sars-
and hosting of concert events, log
fields, St Monica’s and Whitehall
on to www.crokepark.ie.
ST MARGARET’S
Dublin manager Jim Gavin and team captain Kevin O’Brien with the All-Ireland trophy
2-12 0-11
Hard luck to Donall Keane as the
Minor Footballer of the Year was
Feile weekend: Well done to Fingal-
Dublin Roscommon
final.
Club Person of the Year went to Paul
Year was Catherine Keaney.
ALL-IRELAND U-21 FINAL
The winning run came to an end on Sunday against St Vincent’s in the
stretched themselves to the limit to capture victory. Deep in injury time, Paul Mannion raised Dublin’s second green flag after being denied at the original attempt, to add All-Ireland glory to Dublin’s provincial success.
St Margaret’s GAA extends its deep-
There is a €80 and €150 annual lotto
est sympathy to the O’Connor family
ticket available this year. Please check
on the recent loss of Mona, Ar dheis De
the website for full details, or contact
go raibh a hanam.
Mary Madigan.
There is an adult committee meet-
Club membership for 2012 is now
ing this Thursday at 9pm. There are no
overdue. Players are now not insured
competitive fixtures this week.
if not paid up, furthermore only paid up
No lotto numbers available at time of notes.
THE past week was dominated by the
Ireland champions when they beat
intermediate championship second-
Roscommon last Sunday.
round match versus Fingallians, which
We have a date for your diary with
the lads won by a single point in a very
the Annual Fun Day taking place on
exciting finish.
Sunday, June 17.
The Under-14s took part in the foot-
We remind members that outstand-
ball Feile last Saturday, and had no
ing membership fees must be paid as
luck at all in the three matches, nar-
soon as possible.
Our Under-12s had a good win in the Under-12 blitz. Congratulations to the Dublin Under21 footballers who were crowned All-
The Lotto jackpot was €4,800 and the numbers drawn were 8, 11, 15 and 18. There was no winner. The €50 winners were David Malone and Darren O’Loughlin.
FINGAL RAVENS THERE was a great win in Junior D championship last Thursday against
DUBLIN - JB Carthy; S George, K O’Brien, M Concar, L Fletcher, J Kelly, J McCaffrey, E O’Conghaile, C Reddin, G Sweeney, D Byrne, M Schutte, P Hudson, P Ryan, C Kilkenny. S u b s : P M a g u i re fo r Schutte (ht), G Seaver for Byrne (34), H Dawson for Ryan (41), P O’Higgins for Reddin (42), P Mannion for Hudson (58).
tickets this season, no exceptions.
ST FINIAN’S
rowly losing out in each match.
SCORERS: Dublin: P Hudson 1-4, C Kilkenny 0-4 (0-1f), P Mannion 1-0, P Ryan, J Kelly, G Seaver, H Dawson 0-1 each. Roscommon: D Smith 0- 4 (0-2f ), C Compton 0-3 (0-1f), D Keane, C Connolly 0-2 each.
members can apply for Dublin match
St Brigid’s. Well done to all the lads. They now face our close neighbours, Ballyboughal, in the next round on Sunday, May 20, at 3pm in Rolestown. Senior team play Na Fianna in Garristown on Wednesday, May 16, in the senior championship.
let Declan know on 086 267 3630. Under-14 Feile was a great day, thanks to everyone who helped out; hard luck to the lads, and well done to Cuala. Thanks to everyone who supported our poker classic last Thursday. Well done to the winner, Pat Keane. We are running our predictions for the Provincial Championships again.
We are hosting a senior champion-
Entry costs only €5, and forms are
ship game in Rolestown on Friday,
available from your mentor or com-
May 18, Skerries vs St Anne’s.
mittee member or can be download-
Anyone that can help out, please
ed from www.fingalravens.com.
ALL OF YOUR SWORDS SPORTS COVERAGE FROM PAGE 27-31
ROWING FOR LONDON: World Cup performance takes Puspure to Olympics P30
MAY 10, 2012
MAKING MEMORIES: Ward spies potential Euro surprise package P29
GazetteSPORT
Republic of Ireland manager Giovanni Trapattoni receives a commemorative plaque from Swords Celtic founder member, Walter Galvin. Picture: Una Williams
Swords celebrate their golden jubilee Giovanni Trapattoni on hand for Swords Celtic’s club celebrations as they toast 50 years of football swordssport@gazettegroup.com
SWORDS Celtic celebrated their 50th anniversary last Sunday with Giovanni Trapattoni launching a special book for the occasion at a ceremony in Balheary. The event saw throngs of members from the club, many from their schoolboy section, on hand to pay tribute to the greats of the club formed by Warlly Galvin, Oliver Dignam, Jim Rogers and George McGrane back in 1962. Since then, the club has grown massively, moving to its Balheary home in 1974 as McGrane and Frankie Monaghan organised a lease from the then north eastern health board. It came as part of the club’s expansion from a two-team senior entity to one which had introduced a schoolboy section in 1972 – again with Monaghan to the fore – but grew beyond all recognition a decade later after amalgamating with St Cronan’s Boys. The club now plays host to 31 underage teams and three senior elevens with a clubhouse, an all-
weather and high quality main pitch among their prize efforts. Plans are on hand to resurface the current allweather in due course but club secretary Eddie Darcy said there has always been a will to take on such challenges. “Great football clubs aren’t built on people who can run a great schoolboy team for a year and have a winning season,” he said at the ceremony. “Great football clubs are built by people who have vision and people who are prepared to put huge work in to achieve that vision. “At times, the club has been lucky to always have people with this vision. Like George [McGrane], Frankie [Monahan], people who have put their life and soul into the club. “It was a hard, tough struggle. The reality is, those men did put their own houses on the line in terms of raising the money to build that initial club. Their wives probably don’t even know about that so I won’t mention any names. They were dedicated to this club and put them up as collateral for it.” “People had the vision to say that’s an old dirty
reservoir down there, full of rubbish. We can turn that into an all-weather pitch. We needed to raise €300,000; well, they went out there and they did it. “Our latest development is our pitch number one. Again, to get a pitch of that standard, we needed €100,000. We had people with enough dedication to do that. What this club needs going forward is people to have that vision to say we want to make this a club the people of Swords and north county Dublin can be proud of. A club where every player who plays for it can be proud to say they play for Swords Celtic and be able to say the same in 20 years’ time. “That’s what the club is about, creating that sort of feeling. What the club needs going forward is people of vision, not just to run teams, but to get involved behind the scenes to make this one of the best clubs in North County Dublin and Ireland.” He paid tribute to the FAI for their support and Trapattoni who signed autographs for the many children who were in attendance whilst a commemorative plaque was also unveiled.