Tuesday, February 10, 2015

#OnThisBoroDay 2012: Boro's game with Ipswich is abandoned after 37 minutes


Ipswich is a long way to go to watch a game of football, never mind to only get to see 37 minutes.


So it was understandable that the travelling Teessiders at Portman Road were left frustrated when Boro’s game with the Tractor Boys was abandoned in the first half on this day in 2012.


But the referee had no choice. In truth, the game should never have kicked off in the first place.


With overnight temperatures dipping as low as -13C in arctic East Anglia and not expected to rise above freezing all day, the chances of the Portman Road pitch thawing out were slim.


But the hosts had done everything possible for the game to get the green light.


It’s not too often an away team will arrive at a ground to be greeted by a huge hot air balloon suffocating the pitch. But the heat-protected bubble was Ipswich’s way of trying to ease out the rock solid pitch and get the green light for a game of Championship football.


Game on but not for too long.


Tony Mowbray at Ipswich ahead of the game in 2012 which was abandoned after 37 minutes


A chorus of boos met Dean Whitestone’s decision following lengthy discussions with both managers and the fourth official shortly before the break. But the fact the linesman was forced to run inside the touchline due to the state of the turf told the story.


“In the end, it was probably the right decision to call it off,” admitted Mogga.


“It’s easy to say with hindsight that it shouldn’t have started because we haven’t got it finished.


“Most of the players were happy and the middle of the pitch seemed fine.”


“As the sun went behind the stand the pitch began to crisp up.


“Was it the right decision? I think ultimately it was.”


Mogga’s opposite number Paul Jewell was frustrated but reluctantly admitted an early finish was the only option.


“When it becomes dangerous, it becomes a bit of a farce,” he said.



“As the game went on, the pitch became unplayable.”


For the record, it was goalless when the referee called an end to proceedings.


But there’s no doubt Boro benefited more from the abandonment having spent the majority of the first period camped in their own half.


And they looked set to grab a rare victory at Portman Road when the teams went at it again the following month.


Lukas Jutkiewicz put Boro ahead until a soon-to-be familiar face in Grant Leadbitter grabbed a leveller to ensure the spoils were shared.



Developer applies to serve booze at 17th Century Acklam Hall


Middlesbrough’s only Grade I listed building has applied for a booze licence.


Acklam Hall is being developed into a business and conference centre, restaurant and function space for weddings.


The refurbishment of the hall and a housing development on the grounds of the 17th century building have proved controversial - with several objections being made.


Acklam Hall Ltd submitted the application for a premises licence to Middlesbrough Council.


The licensable activities applied for are: plays, films, live music, recorded music, performance of dance, and anything of similar description, provision of late-night refreshments and supply of alcohol.


The hours applied for are Monday to Thursday 10am to 11pm and Friday to Sunday 10am to 2am for licensable activities. For the sale of alcohol, the hours applied for are Monday to Thursday 9am to 11pm and Friday to Sunday 9am to 12am.


The hall, built in 1680, boasts original intricate clay features of rosebuds, birds and dragons along the ceilings which have been carefully patched up and replicated.


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The last part of the hall to be built, in 1912, is ready to be fitted and will be the main formal dining area.


A spokesman for Middlesbrough Council said: “We can confirm we are in receipt of an application in respect of a premises licence for Acklam Hall. Any member of the public wishing to make representations should do so by Tuesday, February 24.”


A record of the application can be inspected at the licensing officer at Vancouver House.


Anyone wishing to object to the application should write to Middlesbrough Council, Licensing Office, Vancouver House, Central Mews, Gurney Street, Middlesbrough. Representations must be made in writing and no later than 28 days from the date of application.



Major factory fit-out for Stockton's Odyssey Systems


Odyssey Systems has completed one of its biggest projects to date - including the creation of a Wi-Fi zone the size of three football pitches.


The Stockton-based telecommunications specialist won a major contract with food packaging manufacturer Coveris Rigid UK to provide services for the company’s Chester-le-Street factory.


Work carried out included the 264,000 sq ft Wi-Fi zone - and 31 kilometres of cabling.


As part of the conversion of the Coveris Rigid UK’s Drum Park facility, Odyssey installed a 100MB lease line and phone extensions that are integrated with the company’s other UK and European sites.


The factory was fitted with a whole-site roaming Wi-Fi network throughout, to provide consistently strong Wi-Fi connections in all office, manufacturing and warehouse locations and allow staff to move throughout the building using devices without losing connection to the network.


The system will be of particular benefit to Coveris’ logistics partner, Stiller Warehousing and Logistics, to enable its staff to interact with the company’s IT systems using mobile devices.


A team of 10 Odyssey engineers delivered the project over five days.


Once the building is complete, the company will begin producing its range of food packaging products, distributing around 1.7bn units a year across the UK.


Mike Odysseas, Managing Director of Odyssey Systems, said: “We are very proud to have completed this significant project for Coveris, which not only demonstrated our ability to deliver jobs of this scale to very tight deadlines, it enabled our engineers to apply innovative solutions to meet our customer’s requirements.


“The connectivity we have brought to the site will support Coveris’ productivity drive and enhance the interaction between the company and its logistics partner.”


Ian Donal, Operations Manager and Drum Project Manager from Coveris Rigid UK, said: “Odyssey has played a key role in establishing the communication infrastructure at Drum Park and will enable our employees to maximise the use of technology to manage and operate our business. “The large Wi-Fi network will be of particular benefit to our operations as the consistency of its signal strength throughout the factory will support a wide range of technology-based systems designed to boost productivity.”


Odyssey Systems was founded by Mike Odysseas in 1987 and employs around 30 people.



Offical approval for £70k lottery cash to restore Thornaby Town Hall


Official approval has been given for nearly £70,000 Heritage Lottery Fund cash to support the restoration of Thornaby Town Hall.


As reported, the lottery windfall will go towards the long-awaited renovation of the 121-year-old Grade II listed building.


Thornaby Town Councillors Ian Dalgarno, Glenn Eastick and Steve Walmsley travelled to Newcastle to receive the official approval, accompanied by the project manager for the restoration, Dave Nicholson.


Mr Nicholson said: “The Heritage Lottery Fund have been fantastic. But now the work really starts and we must put together a business plan and systems in place to demonstrate community inclusion and sustainability.”


In November 2012 Thornaby Town Council (TTC) became the new owner of the freehold of the town hall after exchanging contracts with previous owners Stockton Council.


The sale of the town hall was approved by Stockton Council’s Cabinet - for what is believed to be £100,000 - after it was put on the market in 2011.


The town council is working with Middlesbrough-based Green Lane Capital to redevelop the old town hall annex.


The restoration is expected to take two years and will see the town hall and adjoining buildings become home to up to 26 small enterprises. The buildings will include a heritage centre and offices. The main council chamber will also be restored.


Serviced apartments could also be created in the upper floors of the adjacent building to provide short-stay accommodation for business professionals or parents of students.


Mayor of Thornaby, Councillor Sylvia Walmsley, said: “This is for our community. The town hall means so much to everyone. It is such a beautiful building but has fallen on hard times in the last 40 years or so.


“However, if we all pull together and prove that our dream is worthy of HLF support, the building which is such an architectural gem can be restored to the pristine condition that it was in its heyday.”


The funding has been rounded off to £71,800 with a contribution from TTC.


Meanwhile The Roseworth Big Local project has recently completed the final assessment stage of a £1m application to the Big Lottery Fund and has been awarded the money.


Now the group is looking to Roseworth residents for ideas on what the money should be spent on.


The money, spread over 10 years, is designed to help local people and organisations to make a massive and lasting difference to the community.


The management committee has appointed Martin Landers as the Big Local Development Officer, and are now urging people to contact him for funding support or to share and develop ideas.


Karen Harley, Big Local Chair said, “We have undertaken many consultations to get us this far, but the time for action has arrived. Pick up the phone and give Martin a call”


If you have an idea, a passion or want to get involved with Big Local, give Martin Landers a call on 07709 804580 or email him on martin.landers@catalyststockton.org.



Three points: Promotion is in Boro's hands, AK's selection paid off and a memorable night for Woodgate - what we learnt from the win over Blackpool


One minute Boro were going top of the table, the next they were dropping points to the basement boys and then Kike popped up when it mattered most.


If Boro do win promotion this season, and they’ve put themselves in the perfect position to achieve exactly that, they’ll look back at this game as a pivotal moment in the campaign.


The importance of that late winner can’t be over-stated.


With Bournemouth and Derby playing out a 2-2 draw at the Goldsands this was Boro’s chance to take advantage, to reach the summit.


They did exactly that. A glance at the league table this morning won’t fail to bring a smile to your face.


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Now Boro need to stay there.


And if they show the grit and determination they demonstrated at Bloomfield Road last night they’re more than capable of keeping a firm grip on top spot.


It wasn’t pretty, it was by no means vintage Boro. But just like they did against Brentford, Boro found a way.


That’s five league wins on the bounce now. One defeat in 19. It’s the form of a team that are showing no signs of slowing down.


Here’s what we learnt from the win over Blackpool


Promotion is in Boro’s hands


The inevitability of looking at the full-time results and seeing that Bournemouth and Derby had won yet again was just as frustrating week in, week out.


But it was the fact that those two sides were going head to head last night that made Boro’s game against Blackpool so important.


Regardless of the result at the Goldsands, if Boro won they were going into the top two.


A draw, as it finished, would send AK’s men top providing they picked up all three points.


Middlesbrough's Enrique Garcia (Kike) celebrates scoring his side's second goal


It wasn’t easy against the bottom club, as the boss had warned, but they got the job done.


And now Boro at last find themselves in a position where promotion is in their own hands.


Keep winning and Boro will be back in the big time. No longer are Karanka's men relying on other sides to slip up.


They’re leading the pack now, it’s Boro’s to throw away.


Middlesbrough's Enrique Garcia (Kike) (right) celebrates scoring his side's second goal with Middlesbrough's Lee Tomlin


Granted, there’s a long way to go and Boro have some extremely testing games still to come.


But this is the best position Boro have found themselves in since the heartbreak of relegation six years ago.


Their destiny is in their own hands.


AK’s team selection gamble paid off


Hands up those who predicted that starting XI?


Thought not.


With a flurry of February fixtures to come and a trip to the Emirates on Sunday, Karanka was always going to make full use of his squad.


That said, nobody expected him to ring the changes as he did at Bloomfield Road.


Seven changes and a new set-up. The ‘Karanka’ given a night off, replaced by 3-5-2. Louis van Gaal would be proud.


Aitor Karanka


Boro’s squad depth is quite remarkable this season for a Championship squad. To make all those changes and still have players such as George Friend, James Husband, Muzzy Carayol, Ryan Fredericks and Emilio Nsue not in the squad shows what’s available to Karanka.


But the boss would have had some quite awkward questions to answer had Boro failed to pick up the points last night.


His selection and the faith in his squad was once again vindicated. The decision to play an extra man in midfield to make sure Boro won the battle on a pitch he described as “impossible to play on” worked - in the end.


Lee Clark said Boro showed their versatility at Bloomfield Road.


That and their spirit, their battling qualities, their ability to grind out a result.


Boro got three points and will now have Lee Tomlin, Patrick Bamford, Grant Leadbitter and co. fresh for the trip to Arsenal on Sunday.


The FA Cup game was the least important of the week for Boro but they can go to north London and enjoy it. And there's no reason they can't pull off yet another shock.


What a night for Jonathan Woodgate


It was hard not to get a lump in your throat reading Jonathan Woodgate’s interview in the Times recently.


“Make no mistake, if I play again for this club, it’ll be the biggest game of my career, 100%,” he said.


Why? Because he feared it could be his last.


The chances are Woodgate will play for his hometown club again before the season is out. He certainly showed last night he’s still got something to offer.


Middlesbrough's Jonathan Woodgate scores Boro's first goal


But the club captain played like it was his last game. Heart fixed on his sleeve, the experienced defender came in from the cold for his first start since August and performed admirably well.


Let’s not forget the state of the turf and the importance of the game. Woodgate must have been rusty but he put any concerns and nerves to one side to lead the team in impeccable fashion.


His goal looked to have won it. Thankfully, Boro did win it.


Middlesbrough's Jonathan Woodgate (right) celebrates scoring his side's first goal


“People need a smile on their faces,” said Woodgate in that interview as he spoke of the importance of Boro winning promotion this year.


His smile couldn’t have been wider after that goal. Neither could that on the faces of Boro fans at the full-time whistle.


What a night for Jonathan Woodgate.



Sharia: An Afterthought of Counter-Terrorism Strategy — on The Glazov Gang


obama[Subscribe to the Glazov Gang’s YouTube Channel and LIKE it on Facebook .]


This week’s Glazov Gang was joined by Dr. Moorthy Muthuswamy, the author of Defeating Political Islam: The New Cold War.


Dr. Muthuswamy came on the show to discuss To Undermine Sharia, analyzing how and why the West needs to spearhead the effort to undercut the Sharia narrative.


Don’t miss this week’s second episode with Michael Cutler, former Senior INS Special Agent.


Mr. Cutler discussed Sleeper Cells in America, analyzing the immigration component of the threat the U.S. faces.


Subscribe to Jamie Glazov Productions and LIKE Jamie’s Fan Page on Facebook.


To watch previous Glazov Gang episodes, Click Here.



How Jon Stewart Gave Us Obama


jonstewart Generation Xers mourning Stewart’s departure ought to be thanking the man who made the awkward comedian’s long tenure of pulling faces while making snide remarks possible; President Bush.


George W. Bush made Jon Stewart. Even Stewart has admitted that his show came into its own when Bush did. A world in which a President Gore spent eight years sonorously lecturing Americans about his love for the trees is also a world in which Jon Stewart would be out there doing pizza commercials.


It was Bush’s victory that took a flailing cable show hosted by an irritating little standup comedian with more neurotic tics than a flea-bitten Woody Allen and turned him into the voice of liberalism. Stewart’s nervous smirk and his passive aggressive mockery became the zeitgeist of urban Democrats nervously responding to Bush’s popularity and the rise of American patriotism after September 11.


The Democratic Party was out of ideas. The politicians who would become some of Bush’s most fevered critics were still following the president’s cues. A newly serious America was confronting a world war.


Stewart’s disingenuousness, veering from ironic detachment to self-righteous hectoring, undermined real sincerity with fake sincerity. The Daily Show’s audience of hipster yuppies cheered their newfound faith in sincere cynicism while the calculated ironic distance of his comedy kept him safe from critics. Even while he attacked the media’s dishonesty, his own routine was the most dishonest of them all.


His fake news was real news, biased and spun with punch lines. It was fake news that was real and just as fake as the rest of the news. The truth was that the lie was still a lie.


What Stewart offered a party dragged down by a morose Gore and Kerry was the promise of cool. Their former figurehead had started out playing the saxophone on the Arsenio Hall Show only to decay into a bloated red-faced mess. With towers burning and wars rising, Stewart was to be their bridge to a cooler and younger 21st century that an aging Democratic Party no longer seemed able to grapple with.


Jon Stewart didn’t actually have cool, but he could offer it up inversely by way of mockery. Like a school paper’s drama critic, he might not be cool, but by railing against others, he could deny coolness to them.


Stewart wasn’t funny and knew little about politics. Unqualified to be in politics, journalism or even comedy, he straddled the line by casting himself as a critic of the media and politics. In his new role, he just had to be funny by the standards of politics and politically knowledge by the standard of comedians. It was a low bar that he just managed to limbo under. All he had to was to go after the right targets.


Audiences in retro glasses clapped like electroshocked seals at his every grimace and the media declared that his fake news was what real news should be. And worst of all, they meant it.


The media found Stewart refreshing not because he kept them honest, but because he encouraged their worst partisan instincts for dishonesty. The news anchors at their desks wished that they could say the things that he said. And some of them began to say them. Today the line has blurred so much that NBC News was thinking of offering Stewart a gig on Meet the Press.


While Bush may have made Stewart, Jon Stewart then made Obama. Barack Obama was a political version of Jon Stewart; a dishonest entertainer turning politics into a joke and then faking a theatrical sincerity while throwing out every possible distraction to cover up his dishonesty and bad faith.


Stewart provided a counterpoint to Bush’s real sincerity with fake sincerity. It was a joke that Stephen Colbert would polish into a single mindless routine. The flip side of the routine was that flippancy equaled sincerity. If the sincerity of patriotism and the devoutness of faith were a joke, then anyone who was joking was bound to be sincere. Those were the clown shoes to be filled by hope and change.


Obama’s fake self-awareness made him seem authentic in a social media society composed of reflective levels of personality. What Stewart offered Democrats was an evasive viewpoint without accountability. And nothing quite appeals to the cowardly instincts of a political hack like being able to take a political position without being held accountable for it. But it was Obama who truly embraced politics without accountability, transforming every issue into a joke or referencing it back to his own biography.


While he may have come out on the stage with a unique personal story, what kept Obama competitive was his skill at refracting everything through layers of irony and self-awareness. His approach was to borrow Stewart’s own routine without any of its ambiguity. Stewart’s pretense of triangulation became Obama’s obsession with turning his radical left-wing politics into an imaginary middle ground.


Stewart and Obama had come out of a political movement trying to respond to September 11 without having the first idea how to do so. Stewart’s comedy paved the way for minimizing the threat while inflating the absurdity of those trying to fight it. It is an approach that Obama continues to embrace.


Both men have pretended that they aren’t ideologues. They have acted as if the left is a third way, rather than the same old way, selling that dishonest message through style, not substance.


Jon Stewart did not offer an alternative to the media. He was what the media was becoming. The merging of opinion and reporting along with the overlay of cynical humor over every story have become ubiquitous. Stewart didn’t pave the way for a better media. He paved the way for Buzzfeed, Vice, Politico and Vox. He turned the news into a joke with an agenda… which is exactly what it is now.


Obama was an equally fake alternative. He didn’t offer inspiration, but manipulation. His new ideas were the same old ideas packaged around his personality, around new styles and designs fed through social media and media appearances. Unwilling to connect with opponents, reporters and even voters, he then settled for digging in on his grievances and breaking the rules by ruling the country unilaterally.


Generation X cynicism fused with millennial brand awareness to create a political monster who might not be able to lie to the people all the time, but who cynically made the existence of his lies irrelevant.


Stewart’s Daily Show had offered an antidote to the Bush era of patriotism, sincerity and decency. Its antidote was passive aggressive ridicule and political satire as sincerity. After the Bush era ended, Stewart and his fellow comedians had little left to do except take on the job of defending Obama, while occasionally critiquing him. They had become the official court jesters of the Democratic Party.


It’s no wonder that Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart, anticipating eight more years of Hillary, have chosen to move on. The genre has long since outlived its original response to 9/11 sincerity. It now exists only to feed on itself. To act as a comedic Media Matters churning out viral videos slamming opponents for some sin against the left while pretending to be part of mainstream consensus.


Jon Stewart gave us the era of Obama. As that era of bad faith comes to a close, so does his own.


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Shut Up, Because the Crusades


Obama-National-Prayer-Breakfast-620x435 This week, President Obama spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast, where he proceeded to inform an audience of Christians that they ought not judge radical Muslims currently engaged in beheading journalists, defenestrating gays, crucifying children, and engaging in mass rape of women. Why, pray tell, should Christians remain silent? Because, Obama informed them with Ivy League pride, “Unless we get on our high horse and think that this is unique to some other place, remember that during the Crusades and Inquisition, people committed terrible deeds in the name of Christ. In our home country, slavery and Jim Crow all too often was justified in the name of Christ. So it is not unique to one group or one religion.”


At some point in our collective history, our ancestors engaged in tribal warfare and cannibalized their fallen enemies. So shut up about the Nazis, you hypocrites.


Forget Obama’s historical ignorance, if you can, for just a moment. Forget that the Crusades, for all their brutality and horror, were a response to Islamic aggression; forget that the Inquisition was an attempt to systematize legal punishment for anti-Christian activity rather than leaving it to the heated mob; forget that all abolitionist leaders were devout Christians; forget that hundreds of thousands of Christians marched to their deaths during the Civil War singing the words “as He died to make men holy, so we die to make men free”; forget that the chief leaders of the civil rights movement were Christian leaders like Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.


Focus instead on the fact that President Obama felt the necessity to defend radical Islam at all. Why defend radical Islam? What is the point?


Obama defends radical Islam because he does not think in terms of ideology, but in terms of power dynamics. If radical Muslims commit terror, it is because they feel helpless and hopeless. If they feel helpless and hopeless, it is because Westerners made them feel that way.


If Westerners made them feel that way, it is because Western ideology must be exploitative and evil.


In other words, Obama cites the Crusades as justification for shutting Christians up because the Crusades caused all of this. If Christians had just kept their pieholes shut several thousand years ago, none of this would have happened. Obama’s ignorant and bigoted gloss on Christian history isn’t a throwaway line: it’s the centerpiece of his philosophy. Radical Islam isn’t the problem because Christianity is. And we know that Christianity is the problem because radical Islam is violent. In this skewed version of reality, modern Christianity’s fantastic record is a direct outgrowth of its disreputable past.


Obama extends this bizarre philosophy to every part of life. Those who murder Jews in Israel aren’t motivated by radical Islam: They were exploited by those evil, non-murdering Jews. Those who riot in Ferguson aren’t motivated by a corrupt ideology of victimhood: They were exploited long ago by those who cower in their stores, trying to prevent the looting. Those who sire children they abandon, drop out of school and refuse to hold down jobs aren’t predictable refuse of a broken philosophy: They are victims of those who get married, stay in school and hold down jobs. Success is the ultimate indicator that your philosophy is evil. Failure is the ultimate indicator that you are a victim, regardless of your ideology.


Obama’s philosophy is the philosophy of failure. No wonder radical Islam holds a cherished place in his heart, while Judeo-Christian religion find itself in his doghouse.


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Picture gallery: Boro fans in the stand at Blackpool as they watched their side go top of the league


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The 1,738 Boro fans who made the trip to Bloomfield Road won't forget this match in a hurry.


The travelling Teessiders were in fine voice throughout and sent the temporary away stand that houses the away fans rocking when Boro scored the late winner.


The chances are they'll have been singing all the way back to Teesside?


Were you at Bloomfield Road? Have a flick through our gallery of Boro fans in the stand.



As his side go top of the league, a delighted Aitor Karanka beams: 'This is one of my best days as Boro boss'


Aitor Karanka said beating Blackpool was one of his “best days”.


Boro overcame limited but spirited opponents to claim the points and climb to the top of the Championship.


It was a far from easy task with Bloomfield Road's gluepot pitch proving problematic for the visitors.


After a tense battle for supremacy, Boro finally grabbed the opening goal through Jonathan Woodgate who, in his first start since August, headed in a Grant Leadbitter corner in the 81st minute.


Blackpool equalised five minutes later when Ben Gibson headed into his own net. But Kike Garcia headed in the winner in the 88th minute to secure three priceless points.


With Bournemouth drawing 2-2 at home to Derby, Karanka's team moved from third to first.


And the Spaniard, who made seven changes before kick-off, was delighted with the win.


“For me it could have been one of my best days,” said the Boro boss.


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“It was very important to beat Manchester City but for us to win this kind of game is unbelievable.


“We played on a pitch that was impossible to play on and I think it's a lack of respect to everybody who plays for a ticket to watch games here.


“But it is a very good day for us and I am very proud of my players.”


Dani Ayala picked up an injury during the match and with a Blackpool player also limping off, Karanka claimed the Football League should take action to stamp out such poor surfaces.


“My players can feel it in their backs and their legs,” he said. “The Championship is amazing but it is difficult to understand that teams have to play here.”


Karanka made seven changes before kick-off and lined his team up in a three-five-two formation.


He confirmed that regular left-back George Friend missed the game through illness but insisted that he was planning to use a back three long before the defender was sidelined.


On going top of the league, Karanka refused to get too excited.


“We are all very happy of course but there is a long, long way to go.”



Picture gallery and five observations from Philip Tallentire on Boro's win at Blackpool


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They couldn't have done it the simple way, could they?


Not that it matters, Boro are top of the league.


Aitor Karanka's side climbed to the top of the Championship with a hard-fought victory over basement boys Blackpool.


The Gazette's Boro editor Philip Tallentire offers five observations from the game:


1. Jonathan Woodgate made his first start since the Capital One Cup tie at Oldham in August and was his usual calm, assured self. He may be in his mid-30s but he hasn't lost that remarkable positional sense that marked him out as a natural defender.


2. In his first Boro start, Adam Forshaw looked like a pocket dynamo , buzzing about the midfield, closing down the opposition and trying to instigate attacking breaks.


3. While Aitor Karanka said he wouldn't be using the state of the pitch as an excuse, there's no doubt Boro struggled to adapt to the conditions. They tried to play their usual passing game but Blackpool's constant pressing denied the visitors time on the ball.


4. The injuries are stacking up. Dani Ayala limped out of last night's game and with Ryan Fredericks and George Friend also on the sidelines, the medics will have their work cut out getting everybody fit for Arsenal on Sunday.


5. Karanka confirmed that he decided to use a back three at Blackpool even before Friend was ruled out through injury.



Was Kike your man of the match after his late strike? Rate the players after the win over Blackpool


Boro climbed to the summit of the Championship table with a dramatic win over Blackpool at Bloomfield Road.


Jonathan Woodgate looked to have won it for the hosts when he headed home with less than 10 minutes to play before Ben Gibson diverted the ball into his own net just five minutes later.


But Kike spared Boro's blushes against the bottom club with a late winner to sent Karanka's men top.


Was the Spanish striker Boro's best on the night? Rate the players here.






  • Dimi Konstantopoulos


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  • Tomas Kalas


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  • Jonathan Woodgate


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  • Daniel Ayala


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  • Dean Whitehead


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  • Adam Clayton


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  • Albert Adomah


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  • Adam Forshaw


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  • Kike


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  • Jelle Vossen


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  • Adam Reach


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  • Substitutes


  • Ben Gibson


    0




  • Grant Leadbitter


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  • Lee Tomlin


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  • Submission / Results





Blackpool 1 Boro 2: Full-time match report


CLICK STATS TAB ABOVE FOR MATCH OVERVIEW (desktop website only)


Boro left it late to claim a nervous win over rock bottom Blackpool that took them to the top of the Championship table.


They scrapped away on a muddy pitch but struggled to make a break through – then just squeezed home in a frantic fuinish.


They made the breakthrough on 81 minutes and had the travelling fans singing about the summit as Jonathan Woodgate slammed home a header.


But it looked like they had shot themselves in the foot soon after as Ben Gibson headed an own goal to silence the fans.


Then in a dramatic finale Kike put a close range header in off the bar to snatch a crucial victory on a night when rivals Bournemouth and Derby drew 2-2.


Aitor Karanka made seven changes to the side that had beaten Charlton 3-1 on Saturday with Dean Whitehead, Adam Reach, Tomas Kalas, Adam Forshaw, Kike, Daniel Ayala and Jonathan Woodgate all starting in a 352 formation.


It was club captain Woodgate's first start since a League Cup win at Oldham in August.


Boro had some early possession but the ball was bobbling about badly on a heavily chewed up surface.


Blackpool showed first as Perkins tricked into space in midfield then slotted a pass into the box but it was too far ahead of Dunne and he stretched to poke a weak shot that Dimi Konstantopoulos saved easily.


Blackpool's Clarke was booked on five minutes for climbing over Kike in the centre-circle.


And Boro almost scored from the free-kick as Adam Clayton chipped over the crowded box to the far side where new boy Forshaw sent a low cushioned effort inches outside the far post.


Boro then had to defend as a Kalas blocked conceded a corner that was headed away then two crosses were cleared and on nine minutes Ayala had to be alert to hook a bouncing ball into the box over his shoulder as Clarke closed in.


Boro went close on 11 minutes as crisp passing move from side to side saw Clayton pick out Adomah on the right and he sent a low ball into the box that forced the keeper to come off his line and dive in to collect before Jelle Vossen could connect eight yards out.


Blackpool threatened on 13 minutes as Davies played a quick low ball forward for Cameron to chase but alert Kalas tracked back and put in a timely tackle as he reached the box.


Boro continued to pass and probe as they came to terms with the rapidly chewing up surface.


They almost broke through on 19 minutes as a long patient move sent Adomah down the right to cross and although Kike couldn't connect with a header it fell to Adam Reach at the far post but he was crowded out before he could find an angle for a shot.


Blackpool broke out to win a corner that was easily cleared them Adomah charged down an attempt to play the loose ball back in.


Then Boro had to clear two corners and two free-kicks as Blackpool knocked the ball into the box.


But Boro almost made the breakthrough on 28 minutes as a routine cross fron Vossen sailed across the face of goal and defender O'Dea put in a needless header that just flashed wide then from the resulting corner Ayala's downward header sent the keeper full length to save at the foot of the post.


Then Clayton sprayed a superb ball wide down the right for Adomah but his cross was charged down.


Once again Boro were forced onto the defensive for a spell as Blackpool pressed forward and first O'Hara then Cameron had to be stopped with timely tackles by Woodgate and Ayala after weaving into the box.


They threatened on the break on 40 minutes as Whitehead pumped a quick ball forward that sent Kike racing forward but the alert keeper dashed well out of his box to just beat him to the drop.


HALF-TIME: BLACKPOOL 0 BORO 0


Blackpool were forced into an early substitution after the restart as Maher replaced injured Dunne on 48 minutes.


And Boro put on Ben Gibson for Ayala on 50 minutes.


Boro almost broke through on 51 minutes as Adomah cut in from the right and slotted a ball into the box for Kike but the last defender stretched to just cut it out.


Straight up the other end Blackpool threatened as Davies touched a ball into the box towards Cameron but Woodgate cleared.


Then on 55 minutes Orlandi pushed a ball down the left for Telford to cut into the box but his low ball towards the near post was cut out by Woodgate.


Boro launched a quick raid on 58 minutes as a ball was played out of defence for Clayton to control and wriggle forward then threaded into the box for Kike but his angled shot was weak and straight at the keeper.


On the hour Boro put on Grant Leadbitter for Whitehead while Blackpool put on ex-Hurworth Acadamy lad Gary Madine for Davies giving him his debut after arriving on loan from Sheffield Wednesday today.


Boro again cut through with a quick counter-attack on 63 minutes as Leadbitter and Reach combined to send Kike to the edge of the box but he dragged his shot just wide under pressure.


Then on 67 minutes from a Kalas ball forward Vossen flicked on and Kike pushed it wide for Reach to lay it back for Clayton but his 20 yard effort sizzled just over.


Soon after, another sweeping move found Clayton again just outside the box and this time his shot was on target but charged down in a crowd.


On 73 minutes Blackpool put on Delfouneso for Cameron.


The game was being frantic and twice Boro balls into the box caused scrambles then on 77 minutes a neat Leadbitter flick into the box set up Kike to backheel goalwards but it was blocked on the line by the keeper.


And a minute later another threaded Leadbitter pass found Kike in the box but as he tricked and turned and looked for angle to shoot a sliding tackle by O'Dea cleared the danger.


And as the pressure mounted Forshaw fired over from 20 yards.


On 80 minutes Boro put on Lee Tomlin for Vossen.


Boro finally made the breakthrough on 81 minutes as they won a corner and when Leadbitter curled it to the near post JONATHAN WOODGATE arrived to power in a header.


But as Boro fans chanted they were top of the league Blackpool levelled on 85 minutes as corner from the left was flicked on at the near post and BEN GIBSON headed into his own net as he attempted to clear.


But determined Boro soon had the fans singing again as they regained the lead on 88 minutes as Tomlin swung in a cross for KIKE to power in a header that came down off the bar and bounced onto the line and in.


There was a nervous last few minutes and six minutes of stoppage time and Blackpool threw some high balls into the box and Madine cut in to fire an angled effort straight at Konstantopolus but Boro stayed calm and held on.


BORO: (352): Konstantopoulos, Kalas, Woodgate, Ayala (Gibson 50), Adomah, Whitehead (Leadbitter 60), Forshaw, Clayton, Reach, Kike. Vossen (Tomlin 80). Subs: Meijas,Ledesma, Omeruo, Bamford.


BLACKPOOL: Lewis, McMahon, Perkins, Clarke (Maher 48), Dunne, Orlandi, O'Hara, Telford, Cameron (Delfouneso 73), O'Dea, Davies (Madine 60). Subs: Parish, Aldred, Rothwell, Waddington.


Ref: Chris Kavanagh (Manchester)


Att: 10,806 (1,738 Boro)



Recap: Blackpool v Boro at Bloomfield Road


As Bournemouth face Derby, Boro go to Blackpool looking to extend their unbeaten run to nine matches and climb into the top two.


Blackpool sit bottom of the Championship, but have won their last two home matches over Millwall and Brighton, both ending 1-0.



Bryan Hockaday stars as Tees Valley Mohawks weather Storm


Tees Valley Mohawks chief Steve Butler reserved special praise for Bryan Hockaday after the American ace inspired his side to a vital victory.


The Mohawks beat Hemel Storm 97-86 at Teesside University’s Olympia Building to record back-to-back EBL National League Division One victories for only the second time this season.


And crucially it hoisted them out of the relgation places to fourth-bottom and just two places adrift of a play-off berth.


Hockaday was Mohawks’ MVP with 24 points, 13 rebounds and five block shots and coach Butler said: “I can’t speak highly enough of Bryan - sometimes he is unplayable for defences. I’m so pleased to have him as part of the team and to be working with him.”


Butler had told his players to treat every game between now and the end of the season as a cup final and they rose to the challenge.


With confidence raised after their win over Westminster Warriors last time out, they started brightly with guard Romonn Nelson and big man Hockaday causing Hemel’s defence problems from the off.


It was still tight at 16-14 midway through the first quarter but a change in defence by the visitors allowed sharp shooter Charles Rhodes to get in on the act with back-to- back three-pointers as the session ended with the score at 26-21.


Butler’s men produced played some fantastic offensive play during the second quarter with Lloyd Samuels and Hockday scoring freely.


And thire ball movement ensured the visiting defence had to work hard to try to stop the flow.


Mohawks led 52-43 at half-time but the third quarter saw the Storm guards take the limelight by hitting an impressive 17 points.


In similar situations this season the Mohawks offence has ground to a halt, but with Rhodes and Jonny Foulds hitting some important shots they weathered the storm and and held a seven-point advantage going into the final period.


Mohawks kept their opponents arm’s reach for the remainder of the game and increased their lead to 13 points with a powerful dunk from Hockaday which had the crowd up on its feet.


“We controlled the game from start to finish and we are finally putting teams to bed after controlling the game for long periods,” said Butler.


“In November and December we allowed teams back into games but our offence was fantastic this time and we shared the ball better.


“Charles, Romonn and Bryan were exceptional but it was a team effort as the players off the bench really contributed well.


“We have to continue this unselfishness, keep going and head to our primary goal which is a play- off spot.”


“Next week we are at Bradford Dragons and it’s going to be a very tough game but if we continue to play like this I will really look forward to the next couple of months of basketball.”



Call-in to Middlesbrough Council to re-examine decision to form partnership with Norse is rejected


Plans to overhaul environmental services such as bin collections and street cleaning will not go back to the drawing board.


Middlesbrough councillors submitted a Call-in to the council over a decision made by the Executive to form a Joint Venture Company (JVC) with Norse, owned by Norfolk County Council. This meant the overview and scrutiny board must reconsider whether it should it be sent back to Executive.


Cllr Len Junier submitted the Call-in - backed by six other councillors - saying the plan was being rushed through. Other reasons for the Call-in were that such a massive move from in-house services and proposals were “wrong in principle”. He called for a “Norse Tees” but council officer Tom Punton said that a joint authority approach locally had been “informally” discussed but was not an option.


Cllr Nicky Walker, chair of the overview and scrutiny board which met today, stressed the move was not privatisation and a detailed business plan would be presented at a later date.


Cllr Mick Thompson proposed to refer it back to Executive but nine voted against. The proposals for environment, property and commercial services is part of the council’s Change Programme to tackle budget cuts of more than £5m over the next three financial years.



A South Bank school has been left without a roof after thieves stole three tonnes of roofing felt


Thieves have stolen three tonnes of roofing felt worth £9,000 from a school where it was being stored to repair the building’s roof.


Police are appealing for information after the felt was stolen from inside a secure shipping container that was within the grounds of St Margaret Clitheroe School in South Bank.


The felt, which was going to be used to replace the school’s existing roof which is in a state of disrepair, is an unusual type imported from America.


In total, 90 rolls of the felt, each secured with tape labelled with “Garland”, and each costing around £100, were stolen some time between 3pm on Friday and 10.30am Monday from the school in St Margaret’s Grove in South Bank.


St Margaret Clitheroe School head teacher Nicky Jamalizadeh said: “Our roof was at the point where you couldn’t repair it. It needed to be replaced, so the only option was to secure funding from somewhere.


“We were extremely fortunate to secure an academy grant from the Department of Education. The roof really was in a state of disrepair and we were really pleased to have been given enough to fix the entire roof.


“We had the materials stored in a container on site, someone must have known it was there and that it was worth taking.”


“I’m hoping that they are insured - it was a significant amount. If they aren’t covered then that would really be a spanner in the works.


“We really need the roof replacing for health and safety of the children in the school.”


The container that was used to store the felt has since been removed from the school grounds.


Police believe a vehicle used to transport the felt was parked near the bridge or the grass area beside it on the Trunk Road near Cleveland Retail Park on Skippers Lane.


Officers are asking for anyone with information to contact PC Mike Pilbeam via the non-emergency number 101. Alternatively information can be passed to Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.



Show Home: Take a look inside Ladgate Park estate's new-build homes


Three new show homes have been unveiled at the new Ladgate Park development in Marton, Middlesbrough.


And The Gazette can bring you a peek inside.


From warm and welcoming family rooms to boutique inspired bathrooms, the trio of properties at the Bett Homes development are now open to househunters keen to view the lifestyle on offer.


Ladgate Park, on Ladgate Lane, features a collection of three and four-bedroom family homes with prices ranging from £229,995 to £289,995.


Show homes are the Rosebury, the Pendlebury and the Morton.


Features in the four bed Rosebury include a designer dining kitchen with integrated appliances and a large living area with extensive bi-fold doors that let light flood in.


The family bathroom boasts features including waterfall taps and hidden storage, chrome heated towel rails and full-height tiling by Porcelanosa.


The four bed Pendlebury has an open plan designer kitchen and family area, with two sets of bi-fold doors leading to the rear garden whilst the Morton has three bedrooms, an open plan layout and spacious kitchen.


Call 08442 579010 for more information or click HERE.


The marketing suite and three showhomes are open Thursday to Monday, 11am-5pm.


Want the latest news direct to your phone? Download our app HERE!



Meet Max - the little boy born with half-a-heart now living life to the full!


A little boy born with half a heart is proving he’s made of tough stuff after surgeons “plumbed in” a new heart for him.


In his short life four-year-old Max French, from Hartburn, Stockton, has undergone three open heart surgeries - the first just five days after he was born.


Since Max’s last major surgery at the Children’s Heart Unit in Newcastle’s Freeman Hospital in August, he has been enjoying a new lease of life.


And looking at him now he seems no different to any four-year-old boy, racing around and living life to the full.


Prior to the last operation Max’s heart was so weak he was constantly blue, lacking in energy, unable to fight off common colds and minor infections and constantly tired.


He couldn’t even climb the stairs.


Max French with the Clown Doctors


But just six weeks after having his life-saving surgery, the youngster started at the nursery at Hartburn Primary School.


“He now has heaps of energy and is a totally different child,” said his mum, Leah Hanson.


“His longer term future is unknown and it is likely that, at some point in the future, he will need a heart transplant. But he might not.”


Leah, 28, a Stockton social worker who also has a two-year-old daughter Ruby French, knew before Max was even born that he was suffering from a heart defect.


After her 20 week scan at North Tees she was referred to the RVI in Newcastle for full antenatal tests and then to the Freeman.


Five hours after Max was born up in Newcastle he underwent his first operation where surgeons “replumbed his heart”.


Max French's wound after his last surgery


“Max was born with Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) - a particular condition that basically means he was born with half a working heart,” said Leah.


“Over the last four years his surgeon has worked to create him a new heart, although he still has only one ventricle. It’s been a gradual process since he was born.


“But if he had been born 25-30 years ago he couldn’t have undergone this procedure.


“He’s perfectly well at the moment, but how long will the heart work, we just don’t know?”


Max French


Max stopped running around earlier today just long enough to tell the Gazette he loved his new school and his favourite part was “model making”.


Now he can actually run or scooter all the way to school - a feat his mum and dad Gary, a 38-year-old HGV driver, could barely imagine a year ago.


Leah said her son’s surgeon Massimo Griselli and all the staff at the Freeman Children’s Heart Unit had been “absolutely unbelievable”, and also thanked his new new school for their support.


On Friday Hartburn Primary School is asking pupils to go to school wearing red to acknowledge CHD Awareness week.


As well as raising awareness of the condition the day will also raise money for the Children’s Heart Unit Fund (CHUF) at the Freeman Hospital in Newcastle. Click HERE to donate to the charity.



Cleveland Police commissioner drops legal fight to recoup £500,000 from sacked chief constable


The police commissioner has dropped a legal fight against sacked chief constable Sean Price to recoup more than £500,000.


A civil court hearing was due to take place next month but the case has been withdrawn after an agreement has been made between Cleveland Police and Crime Commissioner Barry Coppinger and Mr Price.


Mr Price, who was fired by the force in October 2012 for gross misconduct, was sued for the cash by the police commissioner after his office replaced the former Cleveland Police Authority.


Mr Coppinger said today he did not “shy away from legal action” but due to budget cuts to the force he decided it was the “best course of action” to settle.


Mr Price has previously branded the move by his former employer “vindictive”.


The force was suing Mr Price for £450,000 of alleged unlawful salary and bonus payments it says he was not entitled to - plus interest.


But the former chief constable says he was given the “golden handcuffs” deal over several years to keep him in post.


And after a preliminary hearing at Newcastle Crown Court in October he accused Cleveland Police of wasting taxpayers’ money.


He said his legal costs of the claim had already reached £50,000.


Today Mr Price, from North Yorkshire, said it was a “difficult” decision to settle as he had a “strong case that the payments were lawful and should not be repaid 10 years later”.


“However the case has cost me several thousand pounds already and the public a great deal more,” he said.


“The only people benefiting have been lawyers.


“I made the decision that the best course of action was to settle now to prevent the costs escalating further.


“Not withstanding our differences, I would like to pass my best wishes to all at Cleveland Police in dealing with the financial challenges facing the force in the future.”


Barry Coppinger, Police & Crime Commissioner for Cleveland Barry Coppinger, Police & Crime Commissioner for Cleveland


Mr Coppinger said today: “I can confirm that this matter has been settled and the case has been discontinued.


“In reaching this decision I took into account the chances of winning the case. I also considered the potential six figure cost implications to the force if we were to go to court and lose or go to court and win but be unable to recover our costs.


“I will not shy away from legal action where I believe it is in the best interests of Cleveland Police but the stark reality is that any money spent on litigation, means less money for frontline policing.


“The force has had to manage the extremely difficult task of losing 350 policing posts and £37m from the budget since 2011 and there is every possibility of further budget cuts.


“I have concluded that, in this case, the best course of action is to agree to settle this matter and for the force to move on.”


Father-of-two Mr Price was arrested in August 2011 and sacked in October 2012 - the first police chief to be fired in 35 years - after a disciplinary hearing found he had lied about the role he played in the recruitment of former police authority chairman Dave McLuckie’s daughter. Mr Price has denied any wrongdoing.


When he took up his role as chief constable in 2003, his original salary of £125,000 included a £32,000 car allowance, £4,000 a year towards private school fees for his son, and £1,000 towards private health insurance. By 2011, he was on £191,000-a-year.



'We need to know he’s safe, we need closure': Dad still missing after SIX WEEKS


Saturday marks six weeks since dad-of-one Paul Kerrison went missing - and his family are now re-appealing for help to find him.


Paul, from Eston, has not been seen since the evening of Saturday, October 25, in the Birkdale Road area of New Marske.


His mum Susan reported the 30-year-old missing after he failed to return to their home on Jubilee Road after a night out.


At the time of his disappearance leaflets were handed out by Cleveland Police - who said they believed Paul may have attempted to seek refuge in a garden or outbuilding within the New Marske area.


And sister Georgina Carr has again appealed for anyone with any information as to his whereabouts to contact police.


“The last six weeks has been torture for us,” said Georgina, 22.


Georgina Carr Middlesbrough family are concerned about their missing family member Paul Kerrison


Middlesbrough family are concerned about their missing family member Paul Kerrison

“We feel like efforts to find him have slowly stopped so we are hoping to jog peoples memories of him any way we can.


“It is difficult to carry on with normal daily life and we are all struggling with not knowing if he is safe.”


Paul, who is dad to five-year-old Kieren, had been released from prison three weeks prior to his disappearance.


He is also epileptic and requires daily medication.


Georgina added: “Paul is very outgoing and friendly. He would stop and talk to anyone, and that we why we would hope someone must have spoken to him.


“When he went missing he wasn’t his usual self, I don’t think he was mentally all there.


“We have never been a really close family, but since Paul’s disappearance we have come together.


Paul Anthony Kerrison


"He would always ring our mum, he knows the number off by heart so there would be no reason for him to not get in touch.


"We need to know he’s safe, we need closure.”


Paul, a former St Peter’s School pupil and dad to five-year-old Kieren, is described as around 6ft 3ins tall, of slim build with short, with brown hair and was last seen wearing a black tracksuit top and bottoms and Nike Air Max trainers.


He also has distinctive tattoos on his upper arms.


Detective Superintendent Mick Hunt said: “As part of the ongoing search for missing Paul Kerrison we have a team of officers working from a dedicated incident room and are carrying out more than 330 actions.


“Officers have carried out large-scale and extensive area searches with the advice and guidance of a national search advisor, and enlisted the assistance of specialist resources from neighbouring forces and Mountain Rescue colleagues.


“We have also distributed leaflets to the local community in the area where Paul was last seen and appeals have been carried out locally and nationally in order to make people aware that he is missing and to encourage anyone who may have seen Paul to contact us.


“Support has been provided to his family and we are in regular contact with them.


"The concern for Paul remains a priority and the search for him remains absolutely active.”


Anyone with information should contact police on 101.



£10,000 grant helps put Redcar Boating Lake on course for revival


Redcar’s seafront boating lake is on course for relaunch after a £10,000 grant helped buy the first in a long line of new equipment.


The Boating Lake Ltd, which has signed a deal to operate the Coatham lake until 2021, has been granted the money by the Coastal Communities Fund.


And with plans to offer rowing boats, kayaks and electric launches for hire, including an adapted rowing boat for disabled people, as well as developing a crazy golf course and a tea room around the lake perimeter, work is progressing at a high rate of knots.


A slated first sailing over the Easter weekend will mark a key achievement in a two year programme of investment to ensure the lake will be shipshape for years to come. It is hoped the new attractions will allow visitors to practise kayaking and paddle boarding on calmer waters than they would get in the North Sea.


Also benefiting from the redevelopments will be the Redcar Sea Cadets, who will have access to the lake and the equipment, and long-time lake users, Redcar Model Boat Club.


Over the winter, the Majuba Road lake was dredged to allow for improvement works.


Councillor Mark Hannon, Redcar and Cleveland Council’s Cabinet member for economic development, said: “This is another brilliant example of the Coastal Communities Fund making a difference in the local area and supporting a business which can be of benefit to the wider borough.


“We have seen in the past just how popular the boating lake is with visitors and hopefully with the new management in place, we can see it making waves once again.”


In a statement on its Facebook page, The Boating Lake Ltd said: “This is a privately funded project and success will be very much dependant on people using the venue. With support we can continue to invest to create a great venue which will create jobs, bring people and money to Redcar and resurrect what used to be an iconic Redcar landmark.”



Live: Blackpool v Boro at Bloomfield Road


As Bournemouth face Derby, Boro go to Blackpool looking to extend their unbeaten run to nine matches and climb into the top two.


Blackpool sit bottom of the Championship, but have won their last two home matches over Millwall and Brighton, both ending 1-0.



Joy for Amelia Lily as she joins cast of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat


Teesside singer Amelia Lily is set to follow in her brother’s footsteps by appearing in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.


Bill Kenwright Productions announced today that the 20-year-old singer from Nunthorpe will take the part of The Narrator in a new tour of the popular musical penned by Sir Tim Rice and Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber.


And it’s a case of keeping it in the family for Amelia.


Her brother, Lewis Bradley, came third in the BBC’s 2007 show, Any Dream Will Do, which aimed to find the new star of a Joseph stage production.


He went on to star as Joseph in the West End for five weeks in 2008 and appeared in another hit musical, Wicked.


Amelia, who finished third in X Factor 2011, will star alongside fellow X Factor finalist Lloyd Daniel Joseph from February 17 at the Edinburgh Playhouse.


The touring production will then head off around the country, performing week-long stints in 13 different venues. The tour ends with a five-day stint at the Regent Theatre, Ipswich, between June 2-6.


The nearest venues to Teesside are The Dome in Doncaster (March 10-15) and The Spa in Bridlington (March 17-21).


Katie Lunn


Amelia Lily

Amelia takes over the role from another X Factor alumni, singer Marcus Collins, who left the production last week.


It’s a notable achievement for the former Teesside High School pupil, who was mentored by former Destiny’s Child singer Kelly Rowland during her X Factor stint and enjoyed chart success with debut single You Bring Me Joy, which reached number two.


The Middlesbrough-born singer almost missed out on becoming an X Factor finalist after she was eliminated early on in the competition, much to the shock of the viewers.


She was brought back in after a fellow contestant was disqualified, and was reinstated by a public vote, earning her the nickname the “Comeback Kid”.


No stranger to the bright lights, Amelia was the support act for Girls Aloud’s farewell tour in 2013, and for Olly Murs at the Intro Festival.


Her comeback single, California, was released last year to good reviews, but it stalled at number 83 in the charts.


She joins what promoters are calling a “colourful retelling” of the biblical story about Joseph, his 11 brothers and the coat of many colours.


The score features several hit songs, including Jacob and Sons, Close Every Door and Any Dream Will Do.



Simon Fallaha: Pulling the handbrake off - Why Mavericks are a must for Boro


It was interesting to read the post-match comments of Aitor Karanka, Charlton manager Guy Luzon and the match reports both online and in the newspapers following Boro's 3-1 win over Charlton on Saturday.


Luzon felt that the margin of victory was “flattering” and Ron Clarke of The Sunday Times believed that Boro “struggled to subdue a poor Charlton”.


They were only half right.


Forget Manager Of The Month curses and all that. Boro were victims of their own success at the back, as you'd expect from a team who'd only leaked one goal in 802 minutes of football. It's also become common, all too common, for a Patrick Bamford strike within the first ten minutes to pave the way for an easy victory, as it already has against Rotherham, Norwich and Derby.


So you could have been forgiven for thinking that the promotion contenders, once a goal up and monopolising both possession and chances, would have chalked up a landslide. Wrong!


Seconds after poor Milos Veljkovic dislocated his shoulder (on his Charlton debut!), his new team sneaked their way back into a match that really ought to have been beyond them with a Johann Berg Gudmunsson special, out of the blue. Big Boro had mistaken that Little Charlton would be a walk in the park, and had been given the wake up call of an equaliser or going behind for only the second time in more than two months.


Boro's Dimi Konstantopoulos fails to stop Charlton's equaliser.


With rivals Derby and Bournemouth well on their way to clinically disposing of their opposition, what were a side suddenly snapped out of their cruise control play supposed to do? Re-establish it, that's what. The A and M in the SAM Index discussed in my last column (adaptation and mentality) came into play in the half time team-talk, which I imagine went something like this:


“You're not used to conceding a goal. I know. But now you have. Nothing can be done about it. So just go out there, pretend it didn't happen and re-assert the calm, controlling dominance that earned you your lead.”


What AK actually said was that the worst thing Boro could have done was score in the first five minutes, as that led the team to believe everything was done. So rather than adapt tactics or playing personnel, he adapted Boro's mentality for the second half. And it worked, with the most maverick of Boro's front men – Jelle Vossen and Lee Tomlin – taking the plaudits at the start and the end of the second half.


Enough has been seen of AK's Boro by now to know that his teams don't deal direct, devastating blows in quick succession like Bournemouth and Derby would do. He prefers patient penetration in tandem with solidity, a formula tailored for success at the highest level. This makes Boro look, out of all the sides in the Championship's top six, the best equipped to deal with the Premier League but not necessarily the best equipped to get the right results in this division.


That's not really a weakness, however, if Boro can be more clinical. What Boro do need is more intervention from their mavericks – the most unpredictable and daring of their attacking personnel, who can create something out of nothing and aren't afraid to take on defenders when they're expected to pass the ball. The kind of player Lee Tomlin and Jelle Vossen now are, Albert Adomah used to be, and we hope Muzzy Carayol still is.


Boro's Albert Adomah in action against Charlton


Consider Tomlin's volleyed goal against Charlton which clinched Saturday's game for us. One suspects that had Boro tried to clinch the game with a controlled team goal, as the national team of AK's homeland were wont to do with tiki-taka a few years ago, there would have been too much over-elaboration towards the perfect cross, the perfect pass or the perfect goal-scoring opportunity which would have wasted time and left the game on the edge.


Sometimes, it's necessary to encourage players to simply “have a go”. To trust fully in the match-winning capabilities of individuals. And while I'm happy to see that this is starting to happen consistently with Tomlin, it needs to happen more often still. With more players.


Onto Blackpool tonight then. The stadium where the Cherries won 6-1 is not a happy hunting ground for Boro; it took a trio of defeats, including 3-0 and 4-1 thrashings under Tony Mowbray before a late Carayol double gave AK victory on his first trip to Bloomfield Road.


Same again, then? Here's hoping. Of course there will be no Muzzy this time, as AK has wisely decided not to rush him back from injury, but we can almost certainly look forward to the return of Daniel Ayala in central defence now his suspension is complete. What's not so certain is whether or not AK will rotate further up to pitch – will he dare to give Adam Forshaw his first start at Adam Clayton's expense? To replace Albert Adomah with another Adam, Reach? Or to give Kike a start in place of Vossen?


All questions which I am, and I'm sure you are, looking forward to being answered.


Up The Boro!



Your Club Zi Shiying - Tang Soo Do


VIEW GALLERY


Club name: Zi Shiying – Tang Soo Do


Address: We train at The Forum and The SRC Sports Centre in Billingham.


Tell us about your club: We are a not for profit, friendly family club which aims to ensure that all students are taught a self defence system that is tailored to them at minimal cost. Tang Soo Do is a fantastic self defence martial art and we focus on teaching students in a supportive way. We teach all ages the life skill that is self defence and we raise funds for the Anti-Bullying Alliance (ABA). For any person wanting to have fun, get fit and learn this versatile martial art please just turn up or contact us on.


How often does your club meet? We train twice a week: Wednesday - Billingham Forum - 7.30-8.30pm for juniors/beginners and 8.30-9.30pm adults/seniors; Saturday - SRC Sports Centre - 11am-noon for juniors/beginners) and noon-1pm for adults/seniors.


No. of people in club: 50.


When did the club start? January 2014.


What are the club’s key achievements or have you or your members won any awards? Building a sustainable not for profit club; engaging with a local school to raise awareness and money for ABA; gaining approval for teaching the self protection method The Approach, giving back to the community and raising money for ABA.


Any other information you want to include? We have recently been nominated for Club of the Year by Stockton Borough Council and would like to thank Neil Russell and Jade Mulhearn from the council for their support. We are happy for all persons to attend – first class is free. We have a parents’ committee where we encourage all members to attend our quarterly meetings. Information flows both ways in our club and we are happy to listen to all students, parents and guardians. We also show the parents’ committee our cashflow to ensure there is absolute transparency of what comes into the club and what goes out. For any person wanting to have fun, get fit and learn this versatile martial art just turn up or contact us on info@tangsoo.org.uk.


Contact name and number: Craig Moat, chief instructor, on 07824 995908.


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Your Club: Tennis World, Middlesbrough


Your Club: Our Version of Events ULO, Billingham


Your Club: Norton Archers


Your Club: Teesside Skate Invaders


Your Club: Teesside Stroke Club


Your Club: Middlesbrough Roller Hockey Club


Your Club: Idance4me, Hardwick


Your Club: 1st Loftus Rainbows, Brownies & Guides


Your Club: 1st Wolviston Brownies


Your Club: Redcar Running Club


Your Club: Billingham Silver Band, Norton


Your Club: 2nd Redcar Brownies


Your Club: 15th Trinity Middlesbrough Guides