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Fagg wins in Canada

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Kirk Michael co-driver Rob Fagg made a late call-up to compete across the Atlantic worthwhile as he and Subaru Canada driver Pat Richard scored a two-minute victory on Saturday’s gruelling opening round of the Canadian Rally Championship, Rallye Perce-Neige Maniwaki in Quebec.

With the temperature around -20c they grabbed the lead on stage three of 15 as reigning champion Antoine L’Estage retired his Mitsubishi with a blown engine.

‘Crazy’ Leo Urlichich (Subaru) overhauled the pair by service after SS6, as a battle brewed, until Richard and Fagg broke 20 seconds clear on the 10th of the snowbound stages as darkness fell.

Urlichich punctured on the next stage leaving Steve Hobbs’s Subaru the nearest challenger, almost a minute down.

Richard and Fagg swept through a marathon 50km penultimate stage in 42 minutes, pushing the advantage to two minutes, which they held to the finish with another stage win to round off the victory.

‘It’s been an amazing adventure,’ said Fagg shortly after the finish. ‘I’ll never work as hard as that in a rally car, ever!’


Crellin wins on his debut

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LOCAL solo ace Nigel Crellin scored a win in his British Sidecar Trials Championship debut when he and experienced passenger Chris Molyneux took victory in the Andy Smith Trophy Trial on Saturday.

The Gas Gas pair dropped 27 marks for 32 sections in the north of the island to beat reigning champions Robin and Sam Luscombe by a margin of two.

Rupert and Chris Kimber of Rochester finished third on 33, while Jamie Teare and Jane Birchall nursed their Beta home fourth on 37.

Visitors Daryl Dale and Hannah Etherington won the intermediate class of the Peveril MCC event on a loss of 45, while Glen Roy father and son Stephen and Sam Corlett were the surprise winners of the clubman class, squeezing home one mark ahead of Robert Head and Aaron Jacobs.

The Luscombes put in a spirited late charge to win round two of the championship 24 hours later in the west of the island after escaping the worst of the time penalties. The Yorkshire pair finished the newly named David Craine Trophy Trial on 59 marks, including three time penalties, while Saturday winners Crellin and Molyneux were next on 60 (including eight on time).

Teare and Birchall were best on observation with a score of 50, but dropped an additional 14 on time to slip to third.

Dale and Etherington completed a double in the intermediates, while Head and Jacobs moved up to the top step in the clubman class in the absence of the Corletts.

Full report and pictures in Thursday’s Manx Independent.

House in Glen Vine sells for £370,000

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A PROPERTY in King Orry Road, Glen Vine has fetched £370,000.

This and other property transactions recently recorded at the General Registry in Douglas are as follows:

Martin Keith Whiteway and Julie Anne Whiteway sold 50 King Orry Road, Glen Vine, Marown, for £370,000 to Christopher John Keown and Suzanne Alexia Keown, 7 Albert Terrace, Douglas.

John Martin Murray and Michelle Marie Murray sold 16 Thorny Road, Douglas, for £261,000 to Brian Patrick Stephen Glynn, Ormonde Hall Brunswick Road, Douglas.

Adrian Leslie Key and Lynda Margaret Key sold 20 Thornhill Close, Port Erin, for £218,000 to Stephen Michael Beard, 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, Caen Barracks, BFPO.

Colin Andrew Jones, Alexander Mark Bromiley, Adele Jane Jones and Louise Catherine Mitchison sold 13 York Road, Douglas, for £185,000 to Malcolm John Cafearo and Amanda Jayne Cafearo, 22 Church Avenue, Onchan.

David William Wilson and Paula Vivian Harrison sold 2 Victoria Terrace, Laxey, for £150,000 to David Marshall Payne and his wife, Lhergy Gretch Veg, Minorca Vale, Laxey.

Shore Investments Gansey Ltd, Tara, High Street, Port St Mary, sold The Barn, part of Ballagawne Estate, Rushen, for £100,000 to Susan Elaine Rathbone-Scott, Tara, Flat 2, 18/20 High Street, Port St Mary.

• We publish details of all house sales unless we receive a written request from the police or probation service.

Sponsored by Cowley Groves. Follow them on {http://twitter.com/#!/|CowleyGrovesiomTwitter} and {http://www.facebook.com/CowleyGrovesiom|Facebook}.

Book review: Jasmine Nights by Julia Gregson

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It’s 1942 and amidst the violence and chaos of a terrifying warfront on the vast landscape of North Africa, two young people are fighting their own personal battles.

One is a woman who has joined ENSA to sing for the troops... the other is an RAF pilot facing the demons that haunt him after he was badly burned when his Spitfire crashed.

Their story, and the story of a war that shattered lives and devastated countries, forms the exciting and evocative backdrop to an extraordinary novel of love and adventure from former journalist Julia Gregson, author of the bestselling East of the Sun.

Exotic and alluring, steeped in the atmosphere of combat and the garish glamour of Cairo and Alexandria, Jasmine Nights is a captivating and beautifully imagined thriller played out in a panoramic theatre of war.

The romance at its heart is a side show to a tangibly real, decadent, dangerous world of soldiers, spies, diplomats and double agents where a wrong word or a false move can mean the difference between life and death.

Saba Tarcan is half Welsh and half Turkish and it is not only her dark, sultry beauty that is striking. She also has a singing voice that gets her noticed, particularly by Dom Benson, a young pilot recovering in a London hospital from burns to his hands and face.

Still haunted by the death of members of his crew when his Spitfire crashed in Suffolk, a chance meeting with Saba at the hospital helps to assuage the dark guilt.

‘Half imp, half angel,’ her voice and joie de vivre represent youth, spirit and hope for the future.

What he doesn’t know is that headstrong Saba is at war with her parents who adamantly oppose her dream of joining the Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA) and performing for the troops in Europe.

When Saba defies her parents and auditions for ENSA, Dom turns up and their romance blossoms but Rommel is heading for Egypt and Saba is dispatched to North Africa to entertain the troops.

Saba’s journey unexpectedly takes her from the faded glories of Cairo to the heat and opulence of Istanbul because it’s not just her voice that is wanted now. Her looks and background make her perfectly placed for some dangerous espionage.

Meanwhile, Dom knows that flying again is the only way to conquer his demons and manages to get posted to the Desert Air Force in the hope of meeting up again with Saba.

But when they are eventually reunited, love does not take the course Dom had originally planned...

Jasmine Nights is an engrossing and moving love story which powerfully captures a sense of time and place as well as providing a fascinating slant on an extraordinary and epic episode of the Second World War.

Saba is a captivating leading lady, an innocent abroad who comes of age in a perilous and pulsating baptism of fire. Her fortunes are inextricably linked to the dashing but damaged Dom, a character of more depth and complexity than she could ever have imagined.

Gregson surrounds them with heroes and villains, from the clandestine double dealers to the eclectic cast of ENSA entertainers, and all around them is a world in turmoil, where values are changing and where there is a lot more at stake than just the love between two young people.

Prepare to be swept away...

(Orion, paperback, £7.99)

Hansard Global reveals strong growth results

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THE outlook for growth remains positive for specialist long-term savings provider Hansard Global.

That’s the message from chief executive officer Gordon Marr, based at the company’s offices in Lord Street, Douglas.

He said: ‘We have recorded a strong new business performance in the second quarter of this financial year, showing positive momentum for the group. The initiatives and investments we have made in distribution, infrastructure and new products continue to bear fruit.

‘We remain confident that the outlook for growth remains positive for the group.’

Second quarter sales generated £44.3m on the basis of present value of new business premiums (PVNBP), 13.3 per cent ahead of the first quarter.

Hansard said an overall new business margin of 12.1 per cent reflected an increase in volume and proportion of regular premium business, in line with the group’s stated strategy.

Regular premium new business in the first half was at £66.8m PVNBP, driven by growth in the markets of the Far East and Latin America.

Hansard Global is a full member of the London Stock Exchange and employs around 170 people.

The figures are contained in Hansard Global’s new business results for the six months ended December 31, 2012, ‘which demonstrate continuing success in the Group’s strategy to source regular premium new business from international growth markets and to drive significantly higher new business margins.’

In an overview Hansard Global added: ‘We believe that our strategic decision to focus on non-EU markets, and the Far East and Latin America in particular, has been vindicated given the continuing instability in the eurozone’.

The Group is also continuing to develop Hansard Online to implement new business initiatives.

Douglas council’s recycling message

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Douglas Borough Council’s recycling efforts were bolstered after more than eight tonnes of chippings were made from natural Christmas trees brought to the council’s collection locations at the end of the festive season.

Environmental services advisory committee chairman Councillor Ritchie McNicholl said: ‘I am greatly encouraged that so many households made the effort to bring their Christmas trees for recycling, the chippings from which, processed by council staff, will be left for a few weeks before being spread on council-maintained shrub beds across the borough.

‘Clearly the council’s “reduce, reuse, recycle” message is beginning to hit home.

‘With the government’s withdrawal from local authorities of its £5.7 million annual waste subsidy and gate fee charges set to rise by 64 per cent from this April, it is all the more crucial that as much domestic waste as possible be recycled. I would therefore urge all those households in Douglas which have yet to subscribe to the kerbside collection of recyclables service, the council operates in partnership with Braddan Commissioners, to do so soon as possible.

‘It is only through measures such as this that we can gradually move away from being a throwaway towards becoming a zero-waste society.’

Peel food park project ‘is on schedule’

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A MULTIMILLION-pound project to develop a Food Park in Peel is ‘on schedule’.

Environment, Food and Agriculture Minister Phil Gawne MHK was keen to spell out the benefits of the development at the Mill Road yard following criticism last week from one tenant.

Security fencing and gates have been installed and the old pump house at the entrance to the park has been restored to create ‘The Hub’ – which will provide facilities for the business in the Food Park, including administration and meeting rooms.

Public and private funding will see the development’s next stage, which will include major infrastructure improvements such as power and drainage, and the building of new processing units, creating up to 80 jobs.

A later phase will see other new units becoming available and the creation of up to 80 new jobs.

Mr Gawne said: ‘The ongoing regeneration of the Food Park can only be of benefit to Peel and the Isle of Man as a whole.

‘The combination of government and private sector investment is not only creating jobs but is helping food producers to meet the exacting and high level of standards of production for the producers’ main customers, most of whom are in mainland Europe.

‘This in turn makes the product more attractive to even more customers, increasing turnover as we open up more export markets.’

Peel commissioner Ian Davison, who produces and sells Davison’s ice cream, spoke out last week, saying the gates were narrow and awkwardly angled, and lorries had collided with them.

Mr Gawne said ‘teething problems’ ‘have been addressed or are being dealt with as they arise’.

He said: ‘This should, however, not detract from recent successes.’

Farming for tomorrow

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THE search is on to find the very best farmers in the island.

The Tomorrow’s Farmers Award recognises and rewards farmers who are committed to the future of food and farming in the Isle of Man.

The Department of Environment, Food and Agriculture has launched the nomination process for this year’s award, which is sponsored by Shoprite.

DEFA Minister Phil Gawne MHK said: ‘This award not only aims to showcase the best farmers in the Isle of Man but provides an opportunity to share best practice, to inspire others and to let people know more about the hard work that goes into producing the quality produce that we can all enjoy every day.

‘The award is a chance to celebrate all that is good about Manx farming and give individuals the chance to shine. We have some excellent Manx farmers so we look forward to receiving plenty of nominations.’

Gareth Cromie, fresh market place manager at Shoprite, said: ‘This award is very important for the Isle of Man as it recognises the farmers who provide great quality, fresh produce which Shoprite prides itself on stocking in its stores and which our customers want to buy.

‘In addition, it should encourage future generations of farmers on the Isle of Man by demonstrating that there is demand for local produce and therefore a future in the industry. Supporting local production is beneficial to the Isle of Man as it contributes to the local economy as well as providing long term sustainability and traceability in our food supply.’

Last year’s winners were Derek Kermeen and family from Ballaterson Farm, Maughold, and Neil and Vicky Masson, Ballacricket Farm, Ronague. These farmers cannot be nominated for the award this year.

The judges will be Mr Gawne, John Speakman from Shoprite, DEFA agricultural adviser Chris Kneale, vice president of the Manx NFU Brian Brumby and the president of the Royal Manx Agricultural Show Brian Caley.

The winners will be revealed at the award ceremony, which will take place at the Royal Manx Agricultural Show, on Friday August 9.

But what are the judges looking for?

The DEFA says the aim of the award is to find farmers who focus on tailoring their farming enterprises to meet the needs of customers now and in the future.

This was admirably demonstrated by Derek and Allison Kermeen.

Derek has a focused, innovative and diversified farm business.

Faced with difficulties in sustaining good returns from his beef cattle, he looked at his land and the opportunities for doing things differently. Recognising that he had good quality permanent pasture, he set about reducing his cattle and invested instead in Lleyn sheep. This breed is known to efficiently convert grass into good quality lamb, thus providing great tasting meat for consumers. Derek bought his stock from an organic farmer and is building up his flock using as few chemical inputs as possible.

After winning the Tomorrow’s Farmer award in 2012, Derek said: ‘I am a firm believer that the world is constantly changing and that the only way to a profitable future is to respond to that change – doing what we’ve always done is really not an option. It’s inspiring to learn from others and I hope that there will be many nominations for the award this year.’

The judges’ special award for a young farmer in 2012 went to Neil and Vicky Masson at Ballacricket Farm, Ronague.

Neil and Vicky had been farming in their own right for several years and when Neil’s father Johnny gave them the chance to take on the dairy farm at Ballacricket, they grabbed it enthusiastically.

In order to be able to produce quality milk at a profit from limited grazing, they have focussed on high standards of animal husbandry and quality livestock. They also produce pedigree blue-faced Leicester sheep for sale as breeding animals to other farmers both on and off island, a business whose success is equally dependent on attention to detail.

Neil and Vicky said: ‘Winning this award was very encouraging and gave us a great sense of achievement. We also enjoyed showing the judging panel around the farm and explaining what goes on behind the scenes of our business – farming nowadays is a complex business and you have to focus on what you want to achieve if you are to make a profit as well as enjoy the business.’

Nominations should be made before March 29, giving a brief reason for the chosen nomination and describing how the farmer meets the awards’ selection criteria which are:

Efficient and profitable farming

Meeting consumer demands with their produce

The promotion of locally produced food

Innovative farm diversification

Farming in ways that conserve the environment for the future

Nominations should be sent to Audrey Fowler, Marketing Officer, DEFA, Thie Slieau Whallian, Foxdale, Isle of Man IM4 3AS or email: {mailto:audrey.fowler@gov.im|audrey.fowler(at)gov.im}


Book review: A Treacherous Likeness by Lynn Shepherd

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He was one of England’s great Romantic poets, she was the celebrated creator of Frankenstein, and their illicit love affair scandalised early 19th century society. But did the lives of Percy and Mary Shelley harbour secrets more dangerous and more deadly than we could ever have imagined?

It will take two generations of a fictional detective family to lift the lid on a mystery that has been bubbling below the surface of history for nearly 200 years.

Back to pursue the gaps in our literary heritage is Lynn Shepherd and her daring duo, Charles Maddox senior and Charles Maddox junior, whose thrilling investigations in Murder at Mansfield Park and Tom-All-Alone’s brought their author fame and acclaim.

A Treacherous Likeness is the third outing for the Victorian Maddoxes whose cerebral sleuthing has already solved mysteries inspired by the great Jane Austen and Charles Dickens’ Bleak House.

In her latest foray into the classics, Shepherd exploits the treachery, turbulence and tragedy that dogged the lives of the Shelleys, the notorious poet Lord Byron and those unfortunates whose fates become bound up with these flawed geniuses.

It’s a tale of passion told with passion – a shocking story of cruelty, unrequited love, betrayal, cover-up, abandonment (in every sense of the word) and premature death.

Shepherd’s complex but compelling crime puzzle weaves between the dying days of 1850 and the early years of that century to unravel secrets from the past and offer a dark, new and excitingly authentic version of a literary enigma.

As always, Shepherd undertakes the task with style, harnessing the facts, taking some very credible liberties, adding atmosphere and colour, and turning an old mystery into something refreshingly readable.

While Charles Maddox, once one of London’s greatest ‘thief-takers,’ lies semi-conscious, ravaged by age and mental incapacity, his great-nephew and namesake, and also a detective, reluctantly takes on a new case.

His clients are the ineffectual Sir Percy Florence Shelley, only surviving son of the famous Shelleys, and Lady Jane Shelley, his brusque, haughty wife who has turned their home into a shrine to the long-dead poet.

The widowed Mary Shelley, now very much a recluse, is being blackmailed over lost ‘letters’, claim her son and daughter-in-law, and young Charles’ job will be to find whether the missing, and probably incriminating, memoirs really do exist.

When Charles tracks down Mary Shelley’s step-sister Claire Clairmont, a former lover of Lord Byron and a leading player in the Shelleys’ misadventures during their travels abroad, he soon finds himself being drawn into the bitter battle being waged over the poet’s literary legacy.

And as he learns more about the scheming, single-minded Mary Shelley and her ruthlessly ambitious father, political journalist and philosopher William Godwin, Charles makes a chance discovery that raises new doubts about the death of Shelley’s first wife, Harriet Westbrook. Did young Harriet kill herself, or was her death far more sinister than suicide?

The tangled web of the past continues to yield up more disturbing secrets and Charles faces the shattering possibility that his own great-uncle is implicated in a conspiracy to conceal terrible truths...

With an inherently charismatic cast and an all-seeing narrator to provide 21st century rationale, possessing an extensive knowledge of literature and the Romantics is not essential to enjoy and appreciate this beautifully executed novel.

A Treacherous Likeness is undeniably a new spin on an old story but it is also intelligent, revealing and exciting in the sheer power of its possibility.

Immaculately researched, gripping and often unsettling, this is the kind of storytelling to set the grey matter in motion, help us reflect on the nature of genius and question the veracity of literary legacies.

We might even feel encouraged to consider that maybe, just maybe, Lord Byron was not the only member of that ‘dazzling but doomed’ generation who was ‘mad, bad and dangerous to know.’

(Corsair, hardback, £17.99)

DHSOB beat Saints

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DOUGLAS High School Old Boys produced a battling performance to beat St Mary’s 1-2 at the Bowl on Saturday despite playing nearly 50 minutes of the match with just 10 men.

David Quirk’s two first-half goals had put the Blackberry Lane outfit in the Canada Life Premier League fixture’s driving seat, but Tommy Miller’s contentious dismissal just before the half-time break for two bookable offences breathed new life into the lacklustre Saints.

Steven Priestnal 66th-minute strike raised home hopes of a comeback, but it wasn’t to be as Brian Gartland’s visitors held firm to secure their sixth league win in a row.

A series of weather-induced postponements had meant Old Boys had only played once in the last five weeks, but they showed no signs of rustiness in the fixture’s opening throes.

Indeed they were the team on the front foot, deservedly taking the lead after just three minutes when David Quirk rose highest to head home Karl Gartland’s cross from the left.

Sam Kenny and Mark Gorman’s home side eventually woke from their early slumber and an open and entertaining game began to unfold.

Marc Priestnal was presented with a golden opportunity to draw his side level seven minutes later after he latched on to a bungled clearance by the Old Boys’ defence. However, the St Mary’s forward lacked his usual composure in front of goal and his scuffed shot from a matter of yards out was easily dealt with by DHSOB keeper Sam Holliday.

At the other end of the pitch, the Stewart brothers and Darren Hudgeon were proving a handful for the Saints’ defence.

Super Cooper gives Braddan the blues

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Seven-time GH Corlett Woods Cup winners Colby moved comfortably into the first round of this season’s competition following a convincing 4-0 victory over Braddan at the new Station Ground on Saturday afternoon.

The tie was originally scheduled as a home fixture for the Blues but was switched late in the week because of concerns about the Victoria Road pitch.

Their victory means that the in-form southerners now face league leaders Michael United in what promises to be the plum tie of the first round.

It was the Douglas side, however, that made the more impressive start on Saturday, pinning the home side back in their own half during the early stages of the contest. But once Nick Leece’s side found their feet the momentum began to swing their way as they applied severe pressure on the Swans back four.

The dead-lock was broken after just seven minutes when the talented Jack Snidal delivered a clever ball into the box that allowed the highly promising Eddie Cooper to out-smart the visitor’s defence and score.

As the half progressed the Colby side played some neat and tidy football and the lively Harry Best drew a fine save from Braddan’s agile keeper Craig Hardie.

Then minutes later the same player produced a superb shot on the turn which required an equally fine stop from the Braddan custodian.

The Swans found it difficult to pose a real threat to home defence but were clearly disappointed, late in the half, when referee Dave Hughes waved away their appeals after the busy Tony McKay went down in the box.

The home side, though, made a dramatic start to the second half with a goal inside the first minute when Cooper raced away down the left before delivering a cross that was slammed against the crossbar by Best and smartly converted by Adam Fretwell.

There was simply no stopping the Black and Whites as Fretwell provided another superb delivery that was converted in some style by the irrepressible Cooper.

Five minutes later it was four when Fretwell fashioned yet another inviting cross which Snidal firmly headed home.

Then remarkably, four goals up, the home team appeared to run out of steam. Suddenly it was Braddan that looked quicker to the ball and opportunities began to appear. Skipper Will Smith advanced on the Colby goal before firing over before sub Jack Murphy rattled the crossbar with a smartly-taken effort from just inside the box.

But it was clearly not the visitors’ day as McKay was desperately unfortunate to see another well struck effort rebound off a Colby upright. The home side regrouped in the closing stages and sub Ari Ludford-Brookes watched a well-struck effort fly inches wide of the Braddan goal.

TEAM CHECK

Colby: Jay Gandy, Chris McKenna, Harry Best, Kevin Kniveton, Josh Gardner, Oliver Swales (Liam Dixon) Jack Snidal, Adam Fretwell, Sam Renshaw, Steven Leece, (Ari Ludford-Brookes) Eddie Cooper (Steven Kelly)

Braddan: Craig Hardie, Lee Ramsden, Peter Dunne, Michael Hegarty (Dean Corlett), Rob Shaw, (Steven Robertson) Paul Ramsden, Tony McKay, Will Smith, Michael Shimmin, Sean Shimmin (Geoff Murphy) John McMullin

Referee: David Hughes

Assistants: Stuart Kneen and Mark Todd

Man of the Match: Eddie Cooper (Colby) - enjoyed a fine game up front, but there were a number of candidates from an impressive Colby side

Match rating: HHHII

Attendance: 33

Late Shimmin header seals bragging rights

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CHRIS Shimmin’s late header sealed a dramatic derby win for Rushen United against Castletown to ensure local bragging rights in the Canada Life Premier League on Saturday afternoon.

An impressive Town side went ahead in the first half through the lively Mike Edge who capitalised on a defensive mix-up to shock his former club.

However, Rushen skipper Aaron Hawley equalised 10 minutes into the second half with a glancing header before Chris Shimmin netted a thumping header late on to seal the points for the Spaniards.

The hosts flew out of the traps from the first whistle and almost took the lead inside the opening minute when Ashley Sansbury’s cross reached the unmarked Tom Charmer whose header landed in the side netting.

Sansbury again turned provider a couple of minutes later when his corner found the head of Edge but his effort was tipped over the bar by Rushen goalkeeper Thomas Strivens.

Soon after, a long throw-in from the right travelled all the way to the opposite side of the area where Alex Crawley was lurking but the striker blasted his effort well over the bar.

The Reds weren’t to be denied for too much longer though. With first-choice centre-backs Adam Cregeen and Michael Baker both missing for Rushen, their replacements Gareth Lloyd and Ryan Denham suffered a lack of communication with Strivens, allowing Edge to steal in and sidefoot the ball into the unguarded net for 1-0.

The goal failed to spark the Spaniards into life straightaway and it wasn’t until after the half-hour mark that the visitors mustered up a notable effort on goal. Alex Maitland surged forward from his right-back berth before playing a neat one-two on the edge of the area with Stephen Riding but his fierce drive was repelled by Castletown custodian Jake Sansbury.

Kevin Caine and Lee Davenport then linked up in similar fashion at the other end of the pitch for Town but the latter’s effort was saved by the feet of Strivens.

Rushen slowly began to find their feet as half-time approached and would have been level but for an outstanding save by Jake Sansbury.

A quick throw-in found Riding who worked his way into the box and to the byeline before cutting the ball back to the lurking Aaron Hawley who directed the ball goalwards. The equaliser looked certain until, somehow, the keeper flung himself across the face of goal to tip the ball away in superb style to keep his side ahead at the interval.

However, there was nothing the Town No1 could do to prevent Rushen levelling the scores 10 minutes after the break. The visitors were awarded a free-kick on the left wing and Riding’s setpiece found Hawley whose glancing header wrong-footed the keeper and nestled in the top right corner of the net.

Castletown tried to respond to the setback and almost regained the lead just after the hour mark when Davenport and substitute Jack Charmer linked up well down the right but the latter’s strike was parried by Rushen’s shot-stopper.

However, the rebound fell kindly to Karl Staniford who had ventured forward but, just when it looked like he would score, Rushen threw bodies on the line to deny him a certain goal.

Edge went close to netting his second of the game when he was sent racing clean through on goal but a heavy touch allowed Strivens to smother the ball, while at the other end of the pitch Gareth Lloyd’s cross was met by the head of Jack Saxon but his effort flew narrowly wide.

The same player went close again a few minutes later when the ball fell kindly to him just outside the box but his venomous half-volley flashed agonisingly just past the post.

Saxon then turned provider when he surged down the left and crossed to Hawley but the skipper was unable to get a clean connection and Jake Sansbury gratefully grasped the ball.

Just when it looked like the match would end all square, the impressive Riding escaped one more down the wing and delivered an inviting cross to Shimmin who planted a superb diving header past the dispairing dive of Sansbury to seal all three points for Rushen.

TEAM CHECK

Castletown: Jake Sansbury, Brett Allcote, Ashley Sansbury, Karl Staniford, Tom Charmer, Kevin Caine, Max Perry, Tom Doherty (Martin Charker 40m), Lee Davenport, Alex Crawley (Jack Charmer 45m), Mike Edge. Sub not used: S. Butterworth

Rushen United: Thomas Strivens, Alex Maitland, Gareth Lloyd (Matt Lamb 86m), Ryan Denham, Alex Guy, Jordan Watterson (Ryan Crawley 70m), Harvey Neale, Chris Shimmin, Jack Saxon, Aaron Hawley, Stephen Riding

Referee: Peter Lewis

Assistants: Dave Murphy and Andy Lodge

Booked: Maitland and Saxon (Rushen)

Man of the Match: Stephen Riding (Rushen)

Match rating: HHHHI

Last-minute winner for Vikings in Cup

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Western Vikings’ made a successful Manx Cup comeback with a narrow 20-17 win over Castletown at QEII on Saturday in the competition’s preliminary round.

The weekend’s victory books the westerners a winner-takes-all showdown with Southern Nomads next week with a place against Douglas in the Manx Cup semi-final up for grabs.

Vikings led 5-0 at half time through a Chris Williamson try. Two tries in the second half from Martin French, including his first try for Vikings, plus a Tony Grundy conversion saw the hosts build a 17-0 lead.

However, a spirtied Castletown hit back with tries from Mike Condra, Lee McIver and Gary Stephenson and when Stephenson added a conversion the game was tied at 17-17.

This was the cue for Vikings’ skipper Mike Sheeley to enter the fray and in the final minute he kicked a penalty from wide out on the touchline to bag the win. Don’t tell his surgeon mind!

l In the Manx Plate, Vagabonds B beat Emerging Nomads comfortably 62-13 at Ballafletcher and booked themselves a home semi-final in the Manx Plate where they will play either Western Vikings or Southern Nomads.

l Vagabonds women’s side’s clash away at Northwich in NC North One on Saturday was postponed with the West Cheshire outfit unable to secure an alternative pitch with their own ground water-logged.

The game will be played later in the season, but only of it affects promotion or relegation.

SATURDAY’S Results

Shimmin Wilson Manx Shield

Douglas B 7-8 Southern Nomads

Manx Cup Preliminary Round

Western Vikings 20-17 Castletown

Manx Plate Preliminary Round

Vagabonds B 62-13 Emerging Nomads

CRINGLE: Spring signals

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Yes, it has been a wretched winter so far . . .

First of all the weather. Gale force winds, with an icily cold steel edge to them thrusting you through the body.

Rain persisting down in record-breaking style. Not to mention snow, zero temperatures and flooding.

We have also had the Department of Infrastructure on the rampage with their digger-pokery all over the place.

If they’re not digging up the roads they’re digging up the pavements. There’s been no hiding place.

And if this lot isn’t bad enough, the members of the Council of Ministers are back stalking the land by night again, with baleful public promises of savage repression of the citizenry in order to stave off economic disaster.

But, for me at least, the dawn of February last week brought blessed relief.

I woke up to find a mysterious radiance in the morning sky. I switched Manx Radio on to find out what this threatening presence was.

There was a man from the Met Office on to calm our fears.

It was, he said, the sun.

We asked him how to spell that.

But this wasn’t all. Also that very morning, I am delighted to say, Phil came back to me, back to the bijou residence.

Now I don’t want any misunderstandings here. Phil is a handsome cock pheasant which throughout last summer made his home in the semi-rural environs of my residence at Blackberry Lane. But, when winter came, he disappeared.

I was distraught. I was afraid he had been croaked.

But it seems he himself was fearful that I would make a joke like that at his expense and decided last week to announce his return to the fold.

I heard him first. Then I looked through the bedroom window and there he was, standing to the rear of the house, near to where Douglas High School Old Boys has its playing field.

I had to assume he was wanting to make sure of his place on the touchline for the next home game.

Otherwise he was in fine voice; oh very well . . . he was in fine croak. Certainly he was enjoying the what-do-you-call-it, the sun.

In case anybody is wondering about my calling him Phil, it is nothing to do with anthropomorphism.

I am not endowing him with human qualities. He’s a bird for God’s sake.

But last summer I noticed he was alone. No lady friend, a co-habitee to enliven the nest in the dark of night.

I was wondering if he was having some kind of gender crisis and he was not sure which way to stick the wallpaper up.

I thought he should be able to abandon Phil and go for Philomena if necessary.

All birds should be allowed to wing both ways if they want to.

• KEN Johnson, of Grosvenor Road, Douglas, says when Martin Brunnschweiler was being interviewed on Manx Radio about winning back the Douglas Corporation contract to run the TT tent on the seafront, he remarked that there had been all sorts of occasions there like weddings, engagements – and ‘the scattering of ashes’.

That sounds like a grave offence under the Corporation bye-laws Martin.

• JEFF Kirby tells me that a story in the Examiner about Phil Crellin, vice-chairman of Port Erin village commissioners, had him saying: ‘If it is a vote of no confidence in me for not towing the party line . . .’

As Jeff says: ‘He’s not in it for the long haul then.’

• KARL Campbell is back with more Manx crossword clues. First: Disparage stunner securing current Tourist trophy (8). BELITTLE (Times Jumbo Cryptic).

We’re on target to put public finances on an even keel

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The Isle of Man is going through some big political and economic changes in the wake of the changes brought about after the VAT agreement was altered in the UK’s favour. Chief Minister Allan Bell writes for iomtoday about the challenges his government is facing.

The Isle of Man is going through a period of change. It is natural that when the process becomes controversial people will focus on the headline issues of the day and perhaps lose sight of the wider context. The public rightly expect change to be fair, to be even-handed and reasonable in the circumstances.

They expect the effects of change to be balanced across all levels of society, with a clear impact inside government as well as on the service users outside.

When a particular issue comes to a head it is an understandable response to ask why other matters are not being addressed first.

I agree entirely that the overall pattern of change should be fair and balanced. I have made it clear that there should be no sacred cows as we explore all options to rebalance the island’s public finances following the reduction in our share of VAT revenue.

However, the nature of government – its diversity, complexity and role in the local economy – does not allow a simple, single solution to our problems. Change is progressing on a variety of different fronts and at different speeds, which can make it harder to see the broader picture.

It might be helpful, therefore, to provide an overview of some of the areas where change is happening.

Nearly three years have passed since the island first began to feel the impact, in the financial year beginning in April 2010, of revisions to the VAT sharing arrangement with the UK which reduced the Manx government’s projected income by about one-third.

That first year did see a 2 per cent increase in the top rate of income tax, but with the recognition that further tax rate rises were not the way forward if the island was to remain competitive as an international business centre.

The central plank of the budget rebalancing strategy is to contain government’s own costs, the largest single component of which is employee costs totalling more than £300 million. In real terms we have saved more than £50 million under this heading with staffing reduced by 400 posts and 300 actual staff. There is further to go on this front and the Scope of Government exercise also carries implications for the size of the salary bill.

As in the private sector, wage settlements have fallen behind inflation which has meant an effective pay cut for civil servants amongst others. Staff are also paying more towards their retirement as a result of reforms to make public service pensions more sustainable.

Government is now reviewing public sector redundancy packages to make them more realistic, and has tightened up on staff sickness absence. The dispute over ending paid lunch breaks for bus drivers shows that we are serious about tackling terms and conditions which can no longer be justified.

The Transforming Government initiative is improving efficiency and bringing significant savings through the centralisation of internal functions in such areas as finance, human resources, procurement and estates.

The modernisation of the island’s criminal justice system, meanwhile, is expected to streamline operations in a complex, costly but vitally important area.

When talking about government expenditure it is helpful to appreciate the difference between revenue and capital spending. Revenue spending is on committed ongoing costs such as pay and benefits, and is funded from taxation income. Capital spending is on one-off projects, usually investment in the public infrastructure such as building work, and is funded from a central pot.

The capital budget has been trimmed back but this type of spending, particularly the bricks and mortar element, is vital to support jobs in the construction industry as well as to maintain the infrastructure.

I do sympathise with the public’s confusion when they see an expensive capital project being rolled out at the same time as a revenue service is facing cuts. However it is misleading to argue that scrapping one could save the other, and politicians who suggest this should know better.

In relation to the Scope of Government we are committed to the principle that government should be smaller, simpler and less bureaucratic. Services are being reviewed across government to identify those which could be better delivered through alternative structures. Pre-school education along with the mobile and children’s libraries have of course already been transferred to private operators.

The potential role of local authorities in the realignment of services will also be examined, particularly in housing and in waste collection and disposal. On the last point, government’s decision to phase out the £5.7 million annual subsidy for waste disposal should encourage local authorities to develop their collaborative working in the interests of efficiency and the environment.

An island which must keep taxation down for the sake of its economy and employment cannot also sustain the generous universal welfare provision that was the traditional model of high-tax countries.

This fundamental truth is nowhere more obvious than in the field of social policy, where government’s strategy is to target resources towards those most in need. Its logical consequence is that those who can afford to pay for themselves, and who enjoy the advantages of a benign tax regime, will benefit less from public funds.

Reform of social policy is much more than a cost-cutting exercise. It is one of a number of areas where the fiscal challenge created by the VAT revenue reduction has highlighted difficult issues and anomalies that needed to be addressed in any event. In the case of social policy major outstanding matters include the demands of an ageing population and the importance of helping individuals, particularly young people, to take responsibility for their own lives.

At the same time we are stepping up our support for the economy so that young people will still have employment opportunities. Amid the global turbulence of recent years the island’s economy has proved remarkably resilient, thanks to the diversity and enterprise of our business community. But the international environment is changing radically, the most striking example of this being the emergence of FATCA-style automatic exchange of information as the new global benchmark in tax co-operation.

The island has a strong record of recognising and adapting to changes in the wider economic climate. But we cannot take continued growth for granted, and we must drive forward with the economic development and diversification that is needed to generate the jobs of the future. That means being bold, imaginative and open to new ideas.

I believe that the island’s success in maintaining economic growth, combined with the fact that the budget rebalancing process so far has not been as painful as some expected, may have led to a degree of complacency about the scale and seriousness of the financial challenge facing the government.

Let us not forget that in the budget for the current financial year spending on public services is propped up by £55 million – more than £1 million a week – taken from reserves. That is all part of the budget rebalancing plan, but this unprecedented subsidy does demonstrate the gravity of the situation.

The rebalancing strategy is on target to put our public finances back on to an even keel. Government’s overriding responsibility to the people of the Isle of Man is to make sure that this happens.


Back-to-back wins for Cav in Qatar

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MARK Cavendish recorded his second successive victory for new team Omega-Pharma Quick-Step on Wednesday to take the overall lead in the Tour of Qatar.

After producing a typically explosive finish to seal victory at the end of the 143 kilometre stage from Al Wakra to Mesaieed ahead of Barry Markus (Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team) and Orica GreenEdge rider Aidis Kruopis on Tuesday, it was a similar story at the end of Wednesday’s stage, a 160km race from Camel Race Track to Al Khor Corniche, when the same two riders occupied the top two steps of the podium.

After a three-man breakaway had threatened to escape the chasing pack, the peloton finally reeled it in with 8km to go and the Quick-Step leadout train did its job delivering Cav to the line where he delivered another devastating burst of speed to claim victory.

Speaking after the race, Cavendish said: ‘Zdenek Stybar did a perfect job with 5km to go, and then Matteo Trentin put me in perfect position in the last roundabout at the 1.5 kilometre point.

‘Niki Terpstra found me with a kilometre to go and moved me into the top 15, and I used the same tactics I did last year when I won on the same stage. The wind came from the right, everyone goes right, so I went left, and was shielded. So, I got the perfect position and acceleration in the sprint to get the win.’

Final salary scheme must stay

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SCRAPPING final salary pensions for new recruits to the civil service would compound its financial problem, MHKs were told.

The call to end the final salary scheme to new entrants was made in the House of Keys by Peter Karran (Lib Van, Onchan), who described the current arrangement as a ‘pyramid selling scheme’ which was building up bigger problems of affordability for future generations.

But Chief Minister Allan Bell said ending final salaries would just make the situation worse.

He explained: ‘It is a basic principle that a “pay as you go” scheme relies on the contributions paid in by employees to meet the outgoing costs of our ex-public service employees who are now pensioners. The pension project came about because the legacy schemes were numerous, complex, costly to administer and the incoming contributions were not meeting all of the outgoing costs – that was the problem we had to find a solution for.

‘Closing the scheme to new members would mean that incoming receipts dwindle and that would further compound the funding problem. Meanwhile an employer would also have to contribute funds to the new member’s defined contribution scheme.’

He explained that the new unified scheme introduced in April last year had improved protection for the taxpayer from rising costs.

Mr Bell told the Keys: ‘Having brought together most of the public service under one scheme to reduce costs and improve fairness, I would not wish to see different rules introduced for one part of the organisation, such as the civil service and I would not want to see a divisive policy for new recruits to the wider public service. I certainly would not want to see the current financial position made worse by closing the scheme when it is only 10 months old. I am satisfied that the pension offered allows us to attract professional new recruits to run our public services and the costs are being brought under control.’

Kate Beecroft (Lib Van, Douglas South) pointed out that ‘virtually nobody’ in the private sector could afford a final salary scheme.

Roadworks won’t delay firefighters

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EMERGENCY response times will not be affected by 80 weeks of proposed roadworks on one of the busiest routes in and out of Douglas, fire chiefs insist.

Douglas station commander Mark Christian spoke out to reassure the public after details of a £4.3 million scheme to reconstruct Peel Road were unveiled.

Motorists and businesses face a year and a half of disruption if, as planned, one of the biggest roadworks schemes seen in recent years gets under way in the spring.

Tynwald funding approval will be sought for a £4.3m scheme to reconstruct a two thirds of a mile stretch of the cracked and subsiding Peel Road, all the way from Quarter Bridge roundabout to the Brown Bobby junction with Circular Road.

If approval is given, the main arterial route will be made one-way only – for traffic heading into Douglas - from Quarter Bridge to Pulrose Road for the duration of the works.

At the same time, the section from Pulrose Road to the Brown Bobby will be reduced to two lanes, one in each direction.

Access will be maintained for businesses on Peel Road while the scheme is carried out.

Station commander Mr Christian insisted fire engines would still be able to turn left and right out of their Peel Road base - so there would be no delays in responding to emergency call-outs.

He explained that although the road would be one-way to Douglas-bound traffic only, fire appliances would be able to turn left onto the lane otherwise reserved for access for contractors’s plant and other works vehicles.

‘For the last six to nine months we have been heavily involved with the Department of Infrastructure and their engineers over our concerns that the scheme does not delay our operational turn-out and get staff in,’ he said.

‘The DoI have been fantastic. There will no delays at all - there will be no impact on service delivery whatsoever. We are able to turn right out of the station but we will also be able to turn left using the works lane.’

He said a right turn only for emergency vehicles would have caused ‘unacceptable’ delays to response times to incidents in north Douglas and Farmhill.

Mr Christian said the only issue now would be the narrow lanes on the stretch between Pulrose Road and the Brown Bobby, although this was unlikely to be a big problem.

Director of highways Richard Pearson said Peel Road, which has had no major repairs for more than 25 years, has ‘demonstrably the worst ride quality of any strategic route in the island’. The road surface is severely cracked, the concrete slab sub-base has shifted and there is significant subsidence, he explained.

l Email opinions@newsiom.co.im

Linking up with elderly

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A GROUP of 18 sixth-form students from St Ninian’s High School, Douglas, have completed a training programme with the Isle of Man Live at Home Schemes.

It means the volunteers, aged 16-17, are now qualified to visit an older person in the community for an hour a week for a cup of tea and a chat.

Visiting in pairs to members from North Douglas, South Douglas and Onchan Live at Home Schemes, it is hoped they will form a friendship and help relieve some of the lonelieness and isolation older people can feel.

North Douglas Live at Home Scheme manager Jo Dixon said: ‘As little as one hour a week can make a huge difference to someone’s life and can really relieve the loneliness someone can feel, especially at this time of year.’

The eight-week programme covered communication and effective listening, confidentiality and data protection, boundaries and body language, health and safety and risk assessment, first aid training with the British Red Cross and vulnerable adult training with Karen Winter of the Department of Social Care.

It follows the successful launch of the initiative last year, which saw 19 students from St Ninian’s complete the programme and start volunteering.

Jo said feedback showed that both the students and members involved had found the experience ‘very positive’.

And she described both sets of students as ‘fantastic’.

‘Student volunteers get to engage with someone in the community who is of a different generation,’ she said.

‘They get to improve their communication skills, particularly their listening skills.

‘And they get to learn about someone’s wonderful and varied life.’

The experience can also be included on UCAS and job application forms.

There are six regional Live at Home Schemes in the island which support more than 300 members.

They focus on reflecting the needs of the community in which they are based.

As well as befriending, services include assisted shopping, social groups and coffee afternoons.

Jo said: ‘Everything we do is about enhancing someone’s independence for people living in their own homes.

‘With the best will in the world, we want to live at home as long as possible, with the right level of support.’

Recruitment of volunteers of all ages is on-going.

Anyone interested in volunteering should call Jo Dixon on 373083 or email northdouglaslah@manx.net

Tower sponsors charity calendar

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TOWER Insurance is sponsoring The Children’s Centre’s calendar for the seventh successive year.

Thanks to the sponsorship all the money raised from sales of the 2013 calendar will go directly towards supporting The Children’s Centre’s charitable projects which help families and children across the island.

The calendar can be obtained for a minimum donation of £1 and is available from The Children’s Centre, Woodbourne Road, Douglas; Philip Christian Centre, Derby Road, Peel; and from the charity’s Action, Songs and Rhymes sessions.

All of the images used in the calendar are photographs taken by a young person who was in the care of The Children’s Centre for several years and is now studying for a degree in photography.

Peter Gallagher, managing director of Tower Insurance, said: ‘We’re pleased to continue our support for The Children’s Centre by sponsoring the calendar again.

‘Buying the calendar is an excellent way for everyone on the island to show their support for The Children’s Centre and to contribute to funding charitable projects which help so many families in our community.’

John Knight, chief executive of The Children’s Centre, said: ‘Tower Insurance has been a loyal supporter of The Children’s Centre for several years and we are delighted that they have decided to sponsor our calendar again. We’re extremely grateful for their continued support.’

The Children’s Centre develops, manages, and pioneers a variety of community initiatives and services aimed at enabling children, young people, and families to realise their full potential.

It is an independent Manx charity – undertaking its own projects and working with others – to put children, young people, and families first.

The Children’s Centre is the Isle of Man’s leading children’s charity and works directly with more than 1,000 children, young people and families each week.

It runs 15 vital services across the island including play groups, nursery care and after school clubs.

For more information go to www.thechildrenscentre.org.im

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