Italy captain Michele Lamaro wanted to say something as @Federugby press conference wrapped
"I want to emphasise that the referee, Hollie Davidson has been outstanding. It's, obviously, the first time ever for a woman referee in @SixNationsRugby, and I want to congratulate her"
Australia’s Tom Hooper is turning Greg Fisilau into future England No8
@kinson88@JWDrennan@OBBY001@tomdecent
…Or future Wallabies No8. Surely that has to be upside of changed strategy by RA?
https://t.co/eGqOyUnF0E
Gee, I’m up for this if no replacements allowed save at start of each Q. Genius solution to the dreadful final 30 mins of most games as constant replacements add to the already delayed flow of TMO and out of play time.
TRY OF THE SEASON? TRY OF THE DECADE?! 🤯
The Waratahs go end-to-end over 100 metres in one of the best team tries you will ever see 🔥
#SuperRugbyPacific | #WARvCHI
RIP Oleg Gordievsky, arguably the greatest man I have ever met.
I collect books about espionage, as well as politics. I have signed volumes by numerous prime ministers and presidents as well as Allen Dulles and J. Edgar Hoover, even one paperback that used to reside on the shelves of Aldrich Ames, the CIA/KGB double agent.
When it comes to spying, though the prized volume is the book written by Christopher Andrew, who taught me at Cambridge, and Gordievsky on the history of the KGB. I was lucky enough to meet Oleg when he came to address students on the intelligence history paper I was studying.
Oleg was the most important source MI6 ever recruited. In 1983 he helped prevent nuclear war. In 1984 he helped both Mikhail Gorbachev and Margaret Thatcher understand each other ahead of a summit which convinced them they could do business with each other.
@BenMacintyre1's marvellous book, The Spy and the Traitor, gives a gripping account of how Oleg, in his day job for the KGB and his secret work for SIS schooled them both. It's one of the most extraordinary stories of the Cold War. The final 100 pages of that book, which recounts Oleg's escape from Russia is among the most thrilling passages of non-fiction I've ever read.
When you met Oleg his face, his eyes in particular - watchful and sad - told you this was a life lived at its limits, a man who has looked death in the face and bore its scars. In that sense he reminded me a lot of John McCain, whose arms couldn't lift a coffee cup all the way to his lips because of the torture he suffered in Vietnam. They were both stubborn as mules but decent, singular men who ploughed their own furrows.
In Oleg you saw the emotional scars. He was a man who made decisions he could not retract and who lived with both the honour of what he had done to destroy a system he despised and who had paid a terrible personal price. It destroyed his marriage and his family.
When I think of Oleg, I think of that scene in the West Wing where Leo's wife tells him that their marriage is more important than his job as White House chief of staff. He replies: "No it isn't. Not for the next four years it isn't." Oleg put belief and principle and the safety of his adopted country before his own safety and happiness.
I am profoundly sad he has died, profoundly grateful that he lived and profoundly honoured to have met him.
Ben has a brilliant piece here which is well worth a read: https://t.co/1NsvbAdp8j
@TalksRugby@TalksRugby Walkabies training camp started today (allowing Joe to tell players first) and journos all very quiet so expecting they are ready to be briefed if not late tonight, tomorrow I’d suggest there should be media conference. My hunch.
@TalksRugby@TalksRugby Walkabies training camp started today (allowing Joe to tell players first) and journos all very quiet so expecting they are ready to be briefed if not late tonight, tomorrow I’d suggest there should be media conference. My hunch.
@TalksRugby@TalksRugby Walkabies training camp started today (allowing Joe to tell players first) and journos all very quiet so expecting they are ready to be briefed if not late tonight, tomorrow I’d suggest there should be media conference. My hunch.
@TalksRugby He’s already said he’s spending a week in Dublin after the game which is an opportunity for him and his family (wife and kids) to discuss what works best for them. In addition to his wife he mentioned his brother will be there so clear he’s got the process to decide in place
We are proud to announce that we are establishing a new campus within the Brisbane CBD at the historic Treasury Building. Opening in 2027, it will be a hub for our Business, IT, & Law disciplines, alongside postgrad and executive education.
https://t.co/EYrp8XeuQE
Vidya Makan has taken the stage as Eliza in @HamiltonMusical at Sydney's Lyric Theatre for its final Australian season. Having studied Musical Theatre at the Queensland Conservatorium, Makan said she's never felt more 'herself' in a role.
https://t.co/Ov2Te02Z3x