Wednesday, February 11, 2015

#OnThisBoroDay 1998: Boro sign Colombian striker Hamilton Ricard


Bryan Robson was a man on a mission, desperate to bolster his attack as Boro looked for an immediate return to the Premier League.


But while Marco Branca arrived at Boro on the back of a sterling career in Italy at the start of 1998, Boro’s Columbian addition on this day 17 years ago was a largely unknown quantity.


Hamilton Ricard was a Colombian international who boasted an impressive goalscoring record in his homeland, 77 goals in 160 appearances for Deportivo Cali.


A powerful, battering-ram of a centre-forward, we were assured.


The £1.6m fee was a considerable outlay for a second tier club but Boro didn’t see it like that. If Ricard could reproduce his goalscoring record for Boro, it would be a snip.


“He’s strong, powerful and quick and has experience at the top level,” said a delighted Bryan Robson.


“He will bring some real quality to the squad.


“He can play anywhere across the front. All our scouts and coaching staff have been impressed with him.


“We have been quoted ridiculous fees for good players in this country, which is why I have looked throughout the world.”



Boro were sending out a message to the rest of the First Division.


They had lost just twice in their last 17 games but Robson was keen to strike while the iron was hot and strengthen a squad already boasting some real quality.


Branca arrived from Inter Milan and highly-rated Alun Armstrong joined from Stockport as Boro carried out some potent goal-getting business.


All that was required now was for Ricard to be granted a work permit.


A fee had been agreed and both parties had settled on the finer points of the contract. Ricard was said to have jumped at the chance to join Boro but now faced an anxious wait for his work permit to be given the green light.


He needn’t have worried. The deal got the go-ahead and Ricard headed for Teesside.


And although he didn’t make an instant impact like the other two strikers who joined Boro early in 1998 - Ricard scored just twice in nine appearances during the promotion run-in - he went on to establish himself as a key player in Boro’s Premier League squad, smashing 18 goals in his first season at the top level.



Boro defender Jonathan Woodgate can feel buzz around Boro


Woody can feel the Buzz growing around the town.


And the Nunthorpe lad, a life-long fan, believes Boro are set to go to infinity and beyond.


Veteran stopper Jonathan Woodgate scored the crucial opener as Boro won 2-1 at Blackpool in midweek to go top of the Championship table.


And on the whistle the club captain was quickly over to celebrate with the travelling fans who had just before been declaring that he “is a red.”


“You’ve got to celebrate a bit when you go top of the league haven’t you?” he asked


“I always celebrate as a fan anyway so I would have been like that with a late winner even if we were fifth in the league. “


And Woodgate, who turned 35 last month, says there is no escaping the feelgood factor among the fans right now.


“You can feel there is a real around the town and the club right now,” he said.


“It’s great to feel that, especially with me being from Middlesbrough. It’s fantastic.


“And especially when you see the fans celebrating like that. The Boro away fans are tremendous and they are the best in the country by far.


“This club needs to get to the top league again quickly and we’d have a lot more of that


- but there’s still a long way to go,” he warned.


Middlesbrough's Jonathan Woodgate is congratulated on scoring his team's 1st goal


“Let’s not be getting carried away and too excited yet because there’s we’ve got so many games to come.


“We are pushing in the right direction and we’re doing really well, but we can still improve and get better.


“We are top and that’s great and that’s where we want to stay, but there’s a long way to go. We are top now but it means absolutely nothing.


“I don’t even think we will look at the table. I know many people will. Maybe towards the end we will have a little glimpse, but for me I won’t even look at it or think we are top.


“There’s no pressure. We’ll just keep playing like we have been and plough on.”


Woodgate was making his first start since a 3-0 Capital One Cup win at Oldham at the end of August and getting his first pitch minutes all season.


But he insists that far from being frustrated he is delighted that good display by other players are keeping him out.


“No one likes not playing but I am at the age now where I look at the bigger picture,” he said. “It’s not all about me, it’s about the team. The young lads – Ben, Ken, Dani – whoever is playing at the back is doing fantastic.


“I don’t deserve to play when they are playing that well so I’ve got no complaints.


“They are doing their job and if Middlesbrough get in the Premier League, job done. If I don’t play, I don’t play.


“Just because I’ve played at this club or that club or wherever it doesn’t mean that I demand a start. No way. And I wouldn’t expect that. I’m 35 now. The young lads are doing great and I hope it continues.


“You get disappointed, of course, But it’s all about the bigger picture. I just want the team to go up, whoever plays. And they’ve been playing well


“I understand that. We’ve all on the same wavelength. And it’s just good to be part of the team and the club.”



In the Obama White House, Echoes of Neville Chamberlain Loom


Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks live on television after casting his ballot in the Iranian presidential election in Tehran By now it should be readily apparent to all concerned parties that the United States, led by Barack Obama will not resort to the military option to thwart Iran’s nuclear ambitions nor will he employ economic sanctions. In dealing with the Islamic Republic there are essentially three options and Obama has foreclosed two of them.


Option one favors a trilateral approach involving diplomacy coupled with crippling sanctions and the credible threat of use of force should sanctions fail to persuade the mullahs to change course. This option enjoys bipartisan support in congress and is favored by many notable policy analysts.


Option two involves immediate military action to destroy Iran’s vast nuclear program. No one doubts that the United States either acting alone or in coordination with Israel can accomplish this task. Nonetheless, few but the most hawkish of hawks believe that this option represents responsible foreign policy.


On the opposite side of the spectrum is option three which involves classic appeasement in the spirit of Neville Chamberlain and it is this approach that is favored by the Obama administration. Thus far, the torturous P5 +1 negotiations with Iran have dragged on endlessly enduring at least two unwarranted extensions all while the Iranians feverishly pursue their nefarious ambitions.


Two notable and egregious Iranian violations during the interim period have lent credence to the notion that the Iranians are acting in bad faith. The first involves Iran’s heavy water plutonium facility at Arak where the Iranians were caught purchasing materials for the bomb-making plant, a clear violation of United Nations-imposed restrictions on such activity. In the second instance, the mullahs were caught feeding UF6 gas into the more advanced IR-5 centrifuges, an act clearly prohibited under the November Joint Plan of Action agreement. In both cases, the transgressions were smoothed over and the Iranians were given a mere slap on the wrist.


The lack of any meaningful US response to these serious breaches demonstrates with utmost clarity that the administration no longer seeks to prevent Iran from becoming a threshold nuclear power. The deal that appears to be emerging is one that allows Iran to retain its centrifuges and other critical infrastructure necessary for production and delivery of weapons of mass destruction.


The Iranians have handedly outmaneuvered the Obama administration, something that former secretary of state George P. Schultz warned would occur if the Obama administration adopted a lackadaisical approach to the negotiations. In an interview with the BBC, Schultz correctly noted that Iran is today’s premier state sponsor of world-wide terror and that the mullahs are good at “smiling, encouraging you on and then cutting your throat.” Unfortunately, Obama failed to heed the secretary’s advice and the world has become a much more dangerous place because of that.


For Israel, a nation accustomed to routine Iranian threats of annihilation, the prospect of nuclear weapons or infrastructure capable of developing such weapons in the hands of apocalyptic mullahs is a non-starter. Moreover, such a scenario would instantly spark a nuclear arms race in the Mideast turning an already volatile region into a powder keg. Egypt and Saudi Arabia would naturally feel compelled to arm themselves with similar weapons as a hedge against an increasingly imperialistic and aggressive Iran wishing to expand its hegemony and foment unrest well beyond its borders.


Europe would not be immune either. Iran has been feverishly developing and testing a new generation of increasingly sophisticated ballistic missiles. Indeed, an Israeli Eros B commercial satellite recently uncovered compelling evidence of a new Iranian intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capable of reaching Europe and beyond. Satellite imagery displayed a missile of some 27 meters in length on a launch pad. The missile, which had never before been seen in the West, is said to be capable of delivering conventional and unconventional payloads.


Aside from the United States, the nation most capable of delivering a decisive blow to Iran’s nuclear program is Israel. With its formidable air force, rated as the best in the world, advanced air refueling capabilities and potent land and sea-based surface-to-surface missile platforms, Israel is in a unique position to launch a successful and devastating strike on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure.


Aside from Israel, no other nation in the world has successfully carried out a strike on an enemy nuclear bomb-making facility. Ironically, Iran attempted to do so during the Iran-Iraq war and failed miserably. Israel has already successfully carried out two such operations. In 1981, its F-16 fighters destroyed Iraq’s French designed nuclear reactor known as Osirak situated near Baghdad. Israel was widely condemned for its actions at the time but over the years, many, including those initially critical of the Israeli operation, came to appreciate the prescient nature of Israel’s actions. And In 2007, in an action dubbed Operation Orchard, Israeli F-15s attacked and destroyed Syria’s Al Kibar nuclear complex reducing the facility into radioactive rubbish.


Should Obama conclude a deal with the Islamic Republic, one that leaves Iran’s nuclear infrastructure intact, Israel will have no choice but to initiate a military operation as it did in 1981 and 2007. In the past, the administration has perfidiously done its best to thwart Israeli military initiatives aimed at preserving regional stability. In 2012, the Obama administration inexplicably sought to sabotage a burgeoning strategic alliance between Israel and Azerbaijan and in 2013, administration officials heightened regional tensions by leaking information linking Israel to a series of strikes against Syria aimed at preventing the flow of arms to Hezbollah.


Notwithstanding Obama’s appeasement efforts, a deal with the Islamic Republic is not a foregone conclusion. The president must still overcome strong bipartisan congressional objections, a prospect which seems unlikely given the strong views of ranking members within his own Democratic party. However, as we’ve seen countless times, from his unauthorized release of al-Qaida operatives in Guantanamo to his irresponsible immigration and healthcare policies, Obama has developed a penchant for lying to the American public, flaunting the Constitution and circumventing congress.


Any deal which attempts to circumvent congress and allows the mullahs to retain their toys will almost certainly set off a constitutional crisis. It will also set into motion an inevitable conflagration that will make the world a lot less safe.


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The Saudi Influence over Egypt


saudi-prince-salman-bin-abdul-aziz-al-saud-MADRID In 1744, a pact between the ruler of Diriyah Prince Muhammad bin Saud, and radical preacher Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, paved the way for an alliance between sword and religion, acting as a founding charter for the nascent Saudi State, and combining the ultraconservative Wahhabi faith of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab with the militant ideology of bin Saud. The marriage of bin Saud to the daughter of ibn Abd al-Wahhab sealed this alliance between blood and ideology. As they waged war on the Arabian Peninsula, they used the threat of Takfir (labelling non-Wahhabis as apostates or infidels) as key weapon. Muslims were forced to choose between conversion to Wahhabism and paying Zakat (alms) to bin Saud, or death, seeing their children enslaved and their wives married to others without a divorce.


They committed gruesome massacres during their attack on Karbala in 1802, where thousands riding on camel backs vandalized Shiite holy shrines, killing four thousand people with the sword, and disembowelling pregnant women and leaving the fetuses over the corpses of the slain mothers. Next, Mecca fell into their hands in 1803, and bin Saud razed its mosques to the ground, destroying the shrines of venerated holy men and heroes. There was another bloody carnage in Taif, as 367 men were bound along with their children and wives, taken up the hill, and shot dead in a mass execution that was meant to terrorize the city. They managed to subdue the entire coast of the Persian Gulf from the city of Basra in the north to the Gulf of Oman. In 1805, they seized the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas, which is currently considered an important Iranian military port. Thus, the first Saudi State became the largest country in the Arabian Peninsula since the time of Prophet Muhammad.


The Ottoman Empire was greatly concerned as Wahhabis expanded their reign and took control of the holy sites. It commissioned Muhammad Ali of Egypt#* to bring down their state, and in return Ali and his descendants would be granted the right to rule Egypt. Thus, eight thousand Egyptian fighters engaged the Wahhabis in battle in 1811. The Egyptian troops were accompanied by a number of Al-Azhar clerics, making it clear that Al-Azhar denounced Wahhabism as a heresy and a departure from the true faith. But, Abdullah bin Saud managed to defeat the Egyptian forces which fled to the sea coast. Nevertheless, the Egyptians remained determined to return and resume the fight under the leadership of Ibrahim Pasha—an accomplished military commander and Muhammad Ali’s son. In November 1818, the army of Ibrahim Pasha defeated the first Saudi State, razing its capital Diriya to the ground, and reclaiming Mecca, Medina and Jeddah. They removed the ears of four thousand Wahhabi and sent them to Istanbul, along with the disgraced Abdullah Bin Mohammed Bin Saud and one of his ministers, where they were humiliated, beheaded, and their remains were thrown to the dogs…Thus came the end of the first Saudi State.


In 1825, Abdul Rahman Bin Hassan Al-Sheikh, the grandson of Ibn Abd al-Wahhab, advocated a return to true Islam, and called on the tribes to join him. In the meantime the grandson of bin Saud, Turki bin Abdullah bin Saud, who fled from the Egyptian attack, returned in 1823 to rule over a second Saudi State, until he was assassinated in 1832. He was succeeded by his brother Faisal as governor of Riyadh, but the Egyptian troops captured him in 1838, and he was incarcerated in Cairo. However, the British brought down Muhammad Ali’s fleet in 1841, and Faisal made his escape from Cairo two years later, and went back to governing the Second Saudi State. In 1850, he occupied Qatar until it embraced Wahhabism. Fifteen years later, the second Saudi Sate collapsed as a result of the conflict between Faisal’s sons after his death.


In 1902, the young great-grandson of bin Saud, Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman bin Faisal bin Abdullah bin Saud, returned from exile in Kuwait. He reclaimed the city of Riyadh, the capital of his ancestors, from the Rashidi regime, and went on to establish the third and current Saudi State, which assumed its present form by 1932. The restoration of the Saudi State rekindled the bond between the descendants of ibn Abdul Wahhab and bin Saud. Trust renewed, they followed in their ancestors’ footsteps with Abdul Aziz bin Saud marrying Tarfa, the daughter of Abdullah bin Abdul Latif, and great-granddaughter of ibn Abdul Wahhab. The fruit of that marriage was a son who later became King Faisal, and who contributed to the spread of Wahhabism across the world.


The Army of Abdul Aziz bin Saud consisted of groups of extremist Wahhabis named “The Brotherhood”. While he enlisted the different tribes to join the Brotherhood, his ally ibn Abdul Wahhab urged Brotherhood members to submit to bin Saud and pay him the zakat. More than 300,000 Muslims were killed at the hands of the Brotherhood in their quest to establish the current structure of the Saudi State. Their ruthlessness gained them the label “The White Terror”, which was coined by a Soviet historian, in allusion to the white turbans they wore.


Aware of the threat that Egypt represented, the Saudis recruited Rashid Rida (1865-1935), to infiltrate the Egyptian religious life, and proselytize Wahhabism. In later years, Hafiz Wahba, the adviser of Abdul-Aziz bin Saud, admitted that Rida was receiving funds from Saudi Arabia on a regular basis, including a lump sum of six thousands English Pounds awarded by bin Saud. Rida wrote a book singing the praises of the radical sect, but the real danger came when, in 1928, he inspired his follower Hassan al-Banna (1905-1949) to name his fledging society “The Brotherhood” after the Wahhabi Brotherhood movement, and to embrace the Takfir ideology…. and so Wahhabism gained its first foothold in Egypt through Rashid Rida and Hassan al-Banna.


In 1953, Abdul-Aziz bin Saud passed away, and his eldest son Saud assumed power. However, the Wahhabi sheikhs objected to Saud until he was deposed on November 2nd, 1964, and replaced by his brother Faisal (Faisal bin Tarfa Al-Sheikh, who grew up in the household of his Wahhabi grandfather after the death of his mother when he was only 6 years old). Thus began a new chapter in the history of international Wahhabism, and in the ongoing conflict with Egypt. Faisal, supported by Muslim Brotherhood leaders who fled from Abdel Nasser, is considered the real founder of the phenomenon of contemporary Islamic terrorism.


The sixties saw the beginnings of a serious conflict between Arab nationalism led by Abdel Nasser and the tide of fundamentalist Islam led by Saudi Arabia. The conflict, dubbed “The Cold Arab War” at that time, intensified when Abdel Nasser toppled al-Imam regime in Yemen. It escalated to a point where, in one of his speeches, Abdel Nasser said that there is more honour in the shoes of Egyptian soldiers who died in Yemen than in the crown of King Saud!


Meanwhile, Faisal attracted radical Brotherhood members from all over the world, in addition to radical members of the Pakistani-Indian groups led by Abu Ala Mawdudi, and together they set the foundation for global Islamic fundamentalism, which turned into a huge network of contemporary terrorist organizations.


In another turn of events, Abdel Nasser lost the Arab-Israeli war in 1967, and ended up accepting Saudi support and funds from King Faisal during the Khartoum Arab summit in August 1967. This spelled the end of the Egyptian role, and gave Saudi Arabia free reign in the region.


The second and more dangerous Saudi infiltration of Egypt took place under Sadat. At the end of 1974, Faisal asked Intelligence Chief Kamal Adham to act as an intermediary between Sadat and the Brotherhood. The negotiations leading to that reconciliation proved to be disastrous to Egypt in every way, as Sadat granted the Brotherhood full rights to engage in advocacy and preaching according to their radical approach, and secured the return of their leaders who had fled to Saudi Arabia. He also granted their request to hold the deanship of the colleges of Education in Egypt (the teachers’ colleges, as a mean to influence the educational system), and did not hinder their access to al-Azhar. Furthermore, he assigned them political posts, such as the appointment of Mohammed Osman Ismail, a Muslim Brotherhood leader who had fled to Saudi Arabia, as governor of Assiut. Ismail launched a movement focusing on the creation of Islamic groups in Egyptian universities, particularly in the governorates of Assiut and Minya in upper Egypt, dispensing weapons to students, as reported by Newsweek magazine at the time. This heralded a troubling period in Egypt’s history, with the emergence of dozens of terrorist organizations under the umbrella of the Muslim Brotherhood.


Saudi Arabia did not content itself with planting Brotherhood members in Egyptian institutions, but was pumping funds copiously in Al-Azhar institution, to seduce it into embracing Wahhabism, awarding its clerics unbelievable compensation on occasional visits and sometimes even when there were no visits. It also assisted Muslim Brotherhood leaders in infiltrating the institution. After Faisal’s death and the creation of an award in his name, the prize was awarded to the most radical figures in Al-Azhar, such as Muhammad al-Ghazali who was rewarded for his denunciation of the “infidel” intellectuals, and his efforts to radicalize Algeria. The award was also given to the late Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, Gad al-Haq Ali Gad al-Haq, who called Jews and Christians infidels and heathens who should be fought against. In the year 2000, Al-Azhar itself was the recipient of that award.


Saudi funds did not only sustain Egyptian terrorist organizations, but found their way to a significant numbers of writers and intellectuals, buying the conscience of political parties and entire media institutions. A dark Saudi influence swept over Egypt then, as renowned extremists returned from Saudi Arabia back to Egypt, including icons such as al-Shaarawy, al-Ghazali, Zaghloul El-Naggar, Mohammed Hassan, Safwat Hegazy, Ayman Alzawahri, Abu-Ishaq al-Hewini, along with Muslim Brotherhood leaders. It is worth mentioning that the champions of radicalism in Egypt have all lived in Saudi Arabia for a number of years.


The Saudi influence was even more overwhelming during Mubarak’s era, given that Mubarak, in my opinion, was merely a follower of Saudi Arabia. The deluge of Saudi funds and extravagant bribes took away Mubarak’s ability and willingness to stand up to Saudi Arabia. He even granted the late Saudi Minister of Interior, Nayef bin Abdul Aziz, access to the Egyptian State Security Investigations “SSI” confidential documents and files, as well as the right to give instructions to SSI leaders as if he were the head of the Egyptian state.


On the other hand, al-Sisi was quite fortunate that Saudi Arabia “broke up” with the Muslim Brotherhood, over the movement’s apparent betrayal of Saudi Arabia and its new intimacy with Qatar—a conduct which was considered hostile by King Abdullah, and provoked his ire at the Movement. Furthermore, in the aftermath of the so-called Arab Spring, the Muslim Brotherhood came close to seizing control of the political landscape of the region, resulting in Saudi Arabia’s visible hostility at their former protégé, which seemed intent on subjugating the entire region at the expense of the Saudi presence, and prompting their subsequent support of al-Sisi.


With the death of King Abdullah, the conservative Saudi wing, led by Salman Bin Abdul Aziz, gained the upper hand in Saudi Arabia. King Salman seems to be walking away from the legacy of his brother, the late Abdullah, as he chose to appoint radical figures in the Saudi royal family to major positions. Egyptians are starting to fear that Salman may opt to reconcile with the Brotherhood at Egypt’s expense.


I personally estimate that Egypt’s recovery will remain out of reach unless this destructive Wahhabi infiltration is eradicated. The Saudi era had a devastating impact on Egypt and the Middle East, and its effects may have even reached the farthest corners of the world…. Egypt needs to completely shake off this dark influence, so that it can finally reclaim its soul.


For more details, please see:


Dore Gold: Hatred’s Kingdom: How Saudi Arabia Supports the New Global Terrorism.


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Ormesby win Table Tennis British League again and keep hold of the Butterfly Bowl


Led by a 100% record from Karina Le Fevre, Ormesby won the Women’s British Table Tennis League for the third successive year in Doncaster as they finished a successful season with a string of victories over the rest of the field.


Playing at No 1 in the team, Le Fevre won all of her eight sets in the final round of matches in South Yorkshire.


In the fixture against the club’s main rivals, Draycot East Midlands, she beat current leader of the English Grand Prix series Abbie Milwain 3-0 and her England team colleague Emma Vickers 3-1.


Le Fevre was supported strongly by the rest of the team.


Maria Tsaptsinos won nine of her 10 sets including all straight games victory over Vickers in the opening set of Ormesby’s win in the Draycot match.


She also helped the team with a win over Yolanda King the No 1 player for YHL of Devon who finished in third position in the final table.


Tsaptsinos triumphed 3-2 after trailing 4 -1 in the decider, winning at 11-6.


Sarah Berge was a tower of strength at No 3 for Ormesby, finishing with an unbeaten record in Doncaster including straight games wins over highly rated Guernsey international Alice Loveridge and Milwain, both with convincing straight games scorelines in the Draycot match.


Chloe Whyte played her part in winning twice against Leicester team Knighton Park.


Ormesby won their first four matches of the weekend by six sets to nil beating Knighton Park, Halton of Merseyside, Burton and YHL.


In the final match against Draycot, Ormesby won 5-1, with the East Midlands team’s only victory being Loveridge over Tsaptsinos by three games to one.


Le Fevre finished with an unblemished record of 16 wins from 16 sets throughout the season.


Tsaptsinos and Berge both had 95% records with 19 wins out of 20 while Whyte also had a 100% return with four from four.


Ormesby have now lifted the Women’s British League title five times in the last seven years including each of the last three.


Le Fevre and Whyte have been an important part of the squad throughout the whole of that period.


The trophy, the Butterfly Bowl, was presented to the Ormesby team by the chair of Table Tennis England, Sandra Deaton.



Major improvements due to start on busy Ingleby Barwick roundabout


Pedestrians in Ingleby Barwick will soon benefit from £100,000 to improve pedestrian crossing facilities on Myton Way.


It comes after two schoolchildren were injured in accidents in the area of Quarry Farm Roundabout in the last 12 months.


A staggered Zebra Crossing will be installed on The Rings and a staggered Puffin Crossing will be created on Myton Way - both near to the roundabout.


The pedestrian improvements form part of works to ease congestion and increase capacity on the busy roundabout which is due to start on Monday.


Stockton Council is carrying out the improvements to prevent the build-up of traffic at peak times.


The improvements will increase the roundabout’s capacity before works to dual Ingleby Way and Myton Way commence later this year.


Once complete the enhanced roundabout will allow two lanes of traffic to travel straight ahead.


The scheme will then see the additional pedestrian crossings installed.


£100k of pedestrian improvements secured in Ingleby Barwick £100k of pedestrian improvements secured in Ingleby Barwick


Ingleby Barwick Independent Society (IBIS) ward councillors Kenneth Dixon, David Harrington and Ross Patterson have worked closely with residents from The Rings and Stockton Council officers to secure £100,000 for the safe crossing points.


Councillor Harrington said: “These crossing points are desperately needed for the community, especially children.


“A little boy came off a school bus and had an accident there last September. His parents contacted us and said they didn’t want it to happen again.


“But we then witnessed a little boy being knocked down on his bike trying to cross from one side of Myton Way to another.


“The boy was fine, but the two sets of parents have been instrumental in getting this funding.”


The roundabout improvement works are due to be completed by the end of June. During the work lane restrictions will be in place from 9.30am to 3.30pm with more disruptive works scheduled to take place at weekends to minimise disruption.


Stockton Council’s Cabinet Member for Regeneration and Transport, Councillor Mike Smith, said: “Quarry Farm Roundabout is a busy roundabout. This is further investment into our highway network to reduce peak congestion and provide capacity for the future. Every effort has been taken to minimise inconvenience to motorists and passengers but we would like to ask people for their patience while the improvements take place.”


For more information and to view a site plan visit http://bit.ly/16TF1Gg



WATCH: Dinosaur gives schoolkids a fright at Billingham library


Youngsters from a Teesside school enjoyed a day of jurassic japes when a T-Rex visited their local library.


The Roseberry Primary School pupils met the prehistoric dinosaur after dropping into the newly-built Billingham Library on Kingsway.


The friendly giant was there to promote a new show at Billingham Forum Theatre on March 20 and 21.


A prehistoric T. Rex dinosaur paid a surprise visit to new Billingham Library, and met pupils from Roseberry primary school VIEW GALLERY


A spokeswoman for the show said: “Jurassic Adventures aims to transport families to a magical island where they follow the adventures of Professor McCoy and a team of explorers who believe dinosaurs could still be alive.


“This is a brilliant show for all the family - full of fun, thrills and screams.”


Call 01642 552663 for tickets.



Song written to 'stick up' for Stockton used in Benefits Street campaign


A proud Stocktonian has penned a song to highlight the town’s best bits.


And now the song has been picked up by a campaign fighting against the possible stigma brought by Benefits Street, filmed in the town's Kingston Road on the Tilery estate and believed to be airing on Channel 4 next month.


The song's co-writer Dennis Bailey, 57, explained: “It came a long time before Benefits Street - it was when a lot of people were talking negatively about the High Street in Stockton.


“My message was to ‘look up’ to above the fascias at the buildings - but not just that. It’s also about looking up at the people, the past and the future.”


The song Look Up (Stockton Town) was co-written by Joe Hamill of local band Cattle and Cane - and now the pair are hoping artists will cover the song and spread the message.


Local artist Dom Donnelly has had a go at singing the song in Stockton record shop Sound It Out Records, in Yarm Street.


Plastic Jesus - Look Up Look Up from James Donnelly on Vimeo.


Organisers of the Psst... (Positively Stockton-on-Tees) campaign have shared the video on the Facebook page.


Dennis, who is a self employed consultant living in the Fairfield area of Stockton, said: “We have sent it to Stockton Council and are encouraging different local bands and musicians to do their own version of it, even just a chorus or a verse.


“If the campaign uses it then that can only be a good thing.


“Benefits Street is something I’m very much against.


“I will not watch a minute of it or give it any of my time."


For more about the campaign visit this link.


Keep up to date with all the latest Benefits Street news here.



Woman driving mobility car crashes through Redcar shop window


A woman driving a mobility car crashed through a shop window in Redcar.


Emergency services were called to Redcar High Street this afternoon after reports of a car crashing into a shop front.


The fire service attended at 4.07pm and treated a woman at the scene before an ambulance arrived. It is not believed the woman suffered serious injuries.


The incident is believed to have happened at the Lifeline Redcar & Cleveland office on the High Street.



Purple Pig restaurant chain named as one of 100 industry 'leading lights'


A Teesside restaurant chain has been named as one of the top 100 eateries in the industry.


The Purple Pig, which has restaurants on Linthorpe Road in Middlesbrough and on Yarm High Street is listed in Casual Dining magazine’s Industry 100 in the publication’s February edition.


Despite launching its first restaurant in Yarm only around a year ago, the company, owned by Som Emadi, is listed alongside not only other small local companies, but also large nationwide chains including Pizza Hut, Nandos and Jamie Oliver’s chain Jamie’s Italian.


Casual Dining magazine’s industry 100 “details the plans and performances of some of the finest operators in the market”.


It says the businesses picked are those “pushing forward in today’s bustling industry”, adding: “Each business is far from complacent about the position it’s currently in, with many displaying a huge sense of ambition and expansion potential for 2015 and beyond.”


Som, who also has restaurants in Hull and Harrogate, has plans for further restaurants to be developed in York, Darlington and Newcastle.


“I think we’ve done the Boro proud," he said.


“I knew nothing about it. A friend who works in London said to me ‘Have you heard the news?’ and I was like ‘What news?’


“I’ve told the managers and staff. I said ‘look at what you’ve achieved’ - everyone is over the moon.”


Of The Purple Pig, the magazine writes: “Plans are in place to open up in Darlington, in the Feethams leisure development, and to expand further north into Newcastle.


“Emadi Ltd, a Teesside restaurant company, was behind its venture in Middlesbrough last year, with a £250,000 investment needed to realise the project.”


It hasn't all been plain-sailing, though. In November, Som took to Facebook to tackle 'whispers' about the Yarm restaurant's hygiene rating.


It also agreed to close earlier - if more customers could drink on the premises.



'Utterly remorseful' duo walk from court after admitting 'ferocious' attack


These two vicious attackers - who laid into a defenceless man on the ground - walked free from court laughing and celebrating their freedom.


Corey Savory and Thomas Vernon were sombre in the dock and Savory appeared to be in tears at times during their sentencing hearing.


The 23-year-olds’ mood changed abruptly once they learned their fate.


They left Teesside Crown Court grinning with arms aloft and thumbs up, unable to contain their delight at receiving suspended jail terms for a “ferocious” assault.


Just minutes before a judge had accepted they showed “genuine remorse” for their crime.


The victim was smoking, chatting and waiting for a friend outside a pub on Redcar High Street when he was hit to the face.


The bleeding man turned and saw stranger Vernon, the only person near him, after the “completely unprovoked” strike.


He protested and shouted at Vernon as he was shocked, upset and angry at being attacked.


The man followed Vernon and his friend Savory, who were gesturing at him, as they ran to a home on High Street.


Redcar High Street


He wanted to know why he had been hit and threatened, said prosecutor Jenny Haigh.


He repeatedly kicked the door after the pair went inside.


Seconds later, a third unknown man came up behind him and hit him, knocking him to the ground.


Savory and Vernon then attacked him at about 11.35pm on March 30 last year.


He said he was kicked to the head and he believed he lost consciousness.


In the courtroom, Savory put his head in his hands and did not watch as CCTV footage of the assault was played.


Ms Haigh said Savory kicked the victim’s torso and punched him three times as he tried to defend himself, then Vernon punched him four times.


He was treated in hospital for a two-inch cut to his forehead which needed stitches, along with bruising and swelling.


The man later said he had a permanent scar which was a “constant reminder” of the attack.


He said the assault contributed to him losing his job and he felt as if people stared at him in the street.


He told how he feared another attack as friends of his assailants had called him a “grass”.


Vernon, of Wilton Bank, Saltburn, and Savory, of High Street, Redcar, admitted assault causing actual bodily harm.


Vernon denied kicking the victim and Savory said he tried to kick but it did not connect.


Defence advocates described their behaviour as unacceptable, reprehensible and “utterly inappropriate”.


Thomas Vernon


Graham Brown, defending Vernon, said it was a “minor spat” and “Mexican stand-off” during which Vernon called the police.


It escalated when the random, unconnected third party felled the victim, he told the court.


The two men did not expect this but took advantage of the situation in a joint assault which lasted 30 seconds.


Mr Brown said Vernon had seen the victim in the 11 months since and there had been no trouble.


He said Vernon was a single man doing offshore training and he was “petrified” by the court process.


Prison would have a “lifelong impact” on him and he could be a constructive member of society, added the defence advocate.


The Probation Service said he was a “medium risk” of reoffending.


Corey Savory


Uzma Khan, defending Savory, said: “They were provoked into reacting and defending their property.


“That went too far and it was perhaps opportunistic when the victim was lying on the floor.


“There was no premeditation. They never set out to cause any injury.”


She said Savory never wanted trouble but claimed the victim made comments to him in a pub.


He said Savory tried to defuse the situation and the victim became the “aggressor” when the pair retreated to the house.


Savory never expected it to go beyond verbal abuse, added Ms Khan.


She said he was “utterly remorseful” and willing to consider restorative justice with a direct apology to the victim.


He suffered from depression and there was a risk of self-harm and suicide.


Savory had moved away from a criminal lifestyle in recent years and was supported by his family.


Teesside Crown Court Teesside Crown Court


The judge, Recorder Sarah Mallett, did not accept that the victim was the aggressor.


She told the two: “You could simply have returned to your home, shut the door and stayed there.


“You could have and should have retreated back inside. But you didn’t do that.


“He was already on the floor and he wasn’t doing anything provocative.


“They are nasty injuries.


“This was a ferocious attack by two men who had the advantage of having their victim put on the ground for them by a third party.”


She gave each an eight-month prison sentence suspended for 18 months with supervision.


Each was ordered to pay £100 compensation to the victim.



Middlesbrough a 'subject desert': Pupils unlikely to take exams that could be vital to job prospects


Pupils in Middlesbrough are unlikely to take exams that could be vital to their job prospects - such as sciences and languages - becoming a “subject desert”, a study has found.


The town has the lowest proportion of children studying at least one foreign language of all local education authorities in England – on average, only one child in every four in the town takes a language GCSE.


Additionally, Middlesbrough is in the bottom 20 local education authorities when it comes to pupils enrolled in triple science at GCSE, despite 86% of the town’s schools offering it as an option.


The Open Public Services Network, an independent assessor of public sector performance data, examined GCSE statistics from 2013.


Concerns were raised that limited subject choices could harm social mobility, including by Sir Peter Lampl, chairman of the Sutton Trust education charity, who called the findings “very worrying”, adding: “One important reason why bright children from low and middle income pupils miss out on the best universities is that they don’t take the right subjects at school. These new findings highlight even more the bleak correlation between educational opportunities and geography.”


The report found children in Kensington, London, were four times more likely to be enrolled for a language GCSE than children in Middlesbrough.


Data released in January showed that in 2014 in two Middlesbrough secondary schools - Ormesby School and Unity City Academy - only 1% of pupils achieved the English Baccalaureate (EBacc), which is awarded when students achieve A*-C grades in five core academic GCSE subjects, selected as those most valued by universities and employers.


Just 11.9% of Middlesbrough pupils achieved the EBacc, compared with the national state schools average of 24.2%. Stockton’s figure was 23.8% and Redcar and Cleveland’s was 16.9%.


If pupils cannot take triple science - which leads to three separate GCSEs in physics, chemistry and biology - it can make it more difficult to take A-level science subjects needed for careers such as medicine.


Modern languages are also seen as valuable for widening job opportunities.


Middlesbrough Council declined to comment on the report.



Your School: Badger Hill Primary - Brotton


VIEW GALLERY


School:  Badger Hill Primary School


Address:  Marston Road, Brotton TS12 2XR


Head teacher:  Heather Rowe


What are your school aims/policies?  Our motto is: Creating Our Future, We strive to ensure that all children are equipped with the confidence and skills to enable them to be successful now and in the future.


What were you rated in your last Ofsted?  Good. They said: “Pupils are courteous, have good attitudes, form positive relationships and show great keenness to do well in their work. They achieve well and clearly enjoy their learning”.


Do you have a school council? If so, what are they currently working on? We have house captains and Rights Respecting Schools Representatives who work on a variety of initiatives both in school and in our Community. Our Rights Reps have joined with other schools to form the East Cleveland Children’s Council which will help children in East Cleveland and Guisborough to have a say in what happens in our communities.


The Rights Reps choose a Unicef Right of the Child each month. They introduce the Right in Assembly and display signs around school to help everyone understand and remember the right. This helps us to make sure we promise to show the behaviour that ensures other children in school have their right met as well as helping other children around the world to have that right through fundraising. Our house captains help children in their houses to be the best they can be in school. They are there to set a good example, motivate people in their houses to get house points, support everyone in their house and to help staff to deliver the house assemblies.


What after-school clubs do you run?  Lego, football, netball, reporters, maths challenge, dance, gymnastics - it changes each term.


Tell us something we didn’t know about your school?  Our Year 1 children are performing their dance in front of a large audience at the Sports Partnership awards. We have just appointed some Better Badgers from our Y3,4,5 and 6 children to help children who are feeling lonely at playtimes.


Our houses are named after explorers: Hilary - mountaineer; Sharman - space; Cook - sailor; Shackleton - land.


The children raised lots of money through sponsored reading to send a cow, donkey, sheep, goat and four chickens to a village in Africa so families there can produce food and earn money so they can afford to let their children go to school.


Our caretaker, Mr Shimwell, awards the Golden Broom to the class with the tidiest cloakroom each week. Our lunchtime supervisors hand out Golden Tickets to people showing excellent behaviour. In assembly the tickets are picked out to see who will be on the Lunchtime Golden Table for that week.


Tye, Y6 said: We are really kind.


Liam, Y2 said: People don’t know that there is a secret button to let visitors out of school!


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'I WAS on the police authority, but WASN'T at the meeting when chief constable's bonuses were agreed', commissioner insists


Cleveland's Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) has denied involvement in the “mistake” to pay Sean Price bonuses of £450,000 - which his office then tried to claw back.


Labour's Barry Coppinger was a member of the police authority when it approved the bonus and salary payments for Mr Price at the time he was chief constable.


But Mr Coppinger, a former deputy chair of the authority, was not present at the meeting when the decision was made, his spokesman told The Gazette today.


It has emerged the case to try and have the bonuses repaid has cost the cash-strapped force around £43,000 of taxpayers' money in barristers’ and in-house solicitors’ fees.


The authority made the payments “by mistake of law” and decided to try to reclaim the cash, plus interest, from Mr Price.


But as reported, the case was abandoned yesterday and a compromise settlement of just £23,000 was accepted.


Mr Coppinger declined to speak to the Gazette directly but a spokesman confirmed he was a member of the police authority at the time when Mr Price received the bonuses.


The PCC "inherited" the decision to lodge the legal case against Mr Price when elected in 2012, his spokesman added.


In a statement, Mr Coppinger said after taking office, he “considered all of the circumstances and legal advice” and determined that “if the action were to continue it be on the following basis:


* That it be brought by the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner and not him personally,


* That costs would be managed and controlled as appropriate, and


* The action could be halted at any time he deemed appropriate.


He said the decision to discontinue the case was made after taking into account the chances of winning.


“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,” he said.


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 denied any wrongdoing.


He had branded the decision to take him to court “vindictive”, claiming he had no way to pay back the cash even if the force proved that the bonuses should never had been received.



Barry Faulkner's home for sale - take a look inside ex-Empire boss's property


VIEW GALLERY


Set on a river’s edge in a pretty village this property looks like the perfect rural idyll.


However take a look inside the Great Ayton property and the decor hints more toward hedonistic flamboyance than the quiet country life!


“It’s lovely in the summer,” says 66-year-old Barry Faulkner who owned Middlesbrough nightspot The Empire for 30 years.


“It’s also lovely and quiet,” says the now-retired nightclub owner who has put his own stamp on the listed cottage with his signature grand style.


John Newhouse is the managing director of the estate agents marketing the property - and says the extravagant decor reflects Barry’s personality.


He said: “It very much reflects his personality.


Barry Faulkner pictured when he retired from The Empire in 2008.


“It’s a very, very attractive looking house.


“Most people comment on the photos - and most people who view it like it.


“It has a great enclosed garden and there is plenty of space.”


Dating back to 1730, Baxter Cottage is a Grade II-listed stone residence - which John says has previously featured in The Times.


The five bedroom property has been refurbished by Barry and now includes an ‘Amdega’ conservatory and a custom made ‘Smallbone of Devizes’ kitchen.


There are three bathrooms, three reception rooms and accommodation to three sides of an interior courtyard accessed via remote controlled security gates.


Other luxurious touchers include a terrace with hot tub and gazebo.


Living accommodation also includes a laundry, cloakroom and cloaks cupboard, kitchen and breakfast area open plan to family room and conservatory.


The master suite includes a bathroom and dressing room and two other bedrooms have en suites.


Barry is now looking to move a bit more centrally - and has considered Norton, Nunthorpe and Eaglescliffe.


“I like a little bit more going on,” says Barry, whose son, also Barry, 42, now owns the Empire on Corporation Road with business partner Ashley Wem.


The Empire in 2004


He has now lived in the Great Ayton home for 12 years - after moving on from The Grove in Marton.


“I’ve been searching all over the place!” he said.


The property is on the market with a guide price of £760,000.


For more information about the property on Low Green contact Roseberry Newhouse in Stokesley on 01642 711111.


:: Can you see similarities with The Empire’s decor? Take a look here.



Motorcyclist breaks arm in Stockton crash


A motorcyclist suffered a broken arm after a crash in Stockton.


Police are now appealing for witnesses to the collision, which took place on the A177 Durham Road at the roundabout junction with Hardwick Road in Stockton at around 1.50pm on Sunday.


It involved a Peugeot 107 and a Ducati motorbike.


A 35-year-old male motorcyclist suffered a broken arm and muscular damage.


He was taken to the University Hospital of North Tees in Stockton, before being transferred to Arbroath Infirmary.


Any witnesses are asked to contact PC Mark Pearson from the Cleveland and Durham Specialist Operations Unit on the non-emergency number 101, quoting event number 021834.



Steve Agnew: 'We'll go to Arsenal with confidence and belief, we're capable of winning'


Steve Agnew says Boro deserve to be handed the FA Cup straight after the game if they manage to pull off another mighty shock at Arsenal this weekend.


But the assistant manager says buzzing Boro will head to the Emirates with confidence and belief and are capable of springing another surprise.


Agnew has fond memories of the FA Cup having made it all the way to the final with Hull City last season before the Tigers surrendered a two-goal lead to Arsenal.


Boro’s second in command comes up against the Gunners again on Sunday and although he admits he was a little disappointed with the fifth round draw, he says the trip to the Emirates is another experience for the players to cherish.


“The players are all focused on the job this season - a return to the Premier League is the most important thing on all our minds,” said Agnew.


“But a cup game is a chance to take a break from the league.


“With the likes of Ramsay, Alexis Sanchez, Olivier Giroud, Theo Walcott and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Arsenal have got class all over the pitch.


Steve Agnew


“To see Boro drawn against them was a little disappointing, as we might have preferred a home draw against a lower league team.


“But let’s enjoy it and go there with some confidence and belief, especially after what we did at Manchester City.


“You need a bit of luck when you go somewhere like the Emirates but with the players we’ve got we’re capable of winning.”


Boro will be backed by more than 5,000 fans in north London on Sunday after the allocation of away tickets sold out in less than 48 hours.


It’s nothing new this season with travelling Teessiders backing the team in force up and down the country, something Agnew was aware of even before he replaced Craig Hignett as Aitor Karanka’s number two.


“Boro supporters seem to have really got the feeling for going away and supporting the team,” said Agnew in his blog on the Ramsdens website.


“When I was at Hull City earlier this season, we had a Monday night game against West Ham. We finished training on Saturday morning so in the afternoon I took the opportunity to go to Boro’s game at Huddersfield Town.


Steve Agnew and Aitor Karanka


“I was in the directors’ box at 2.55pm and I saw every seat in the away end full with nearly 4,000 travelling Boro fans. I thought ‘wow, this smacks of a really good feel about the way the club’s going’.


“I could tell, even back then, that the fans believed that this season could be the one.”


“Shortly after I rejoined the club we took 7,000 fans to Blackburn and we also had big support for the FA Cup third round game at Barnsley a few weeks later.“


At City the fans were fantastic again and once we scored the first goal they almost sucked the ball in for the second to finish the game off.”


Meanwhile, January addition Adam Forshaw made his first start for Boro at Blackpool on Tuesday night, putting in an impressive display in the middle of the park, and Agnew believes the midfielder will play a big part in Boro’s promotion run-in.


“Adam always took the eye when I saw him play for Brentford,” admitted Agnew.


“I’ve seen him play twice more this season and he’s a terrific technical footballer, much like the other players we’ve got in that central area, such as Adam Clayton, Grant Leadbitter and Dean Whitehead.


“Hopefully Adam can help push us on towards promotion, which is what we’re all focused on.”



Aitor Karanka: 'If we start thinking everything is done now we are making a very big mistake'


Aitor Karanka insists it would be a “mistake” for his players to think they have achieved their goals despite Boro going top.


Tuesday night’s 2-1 victory at Blackpool moved the club up from third to first in the Championship.


And while it wasn’t the most convincing display of the season so far, the result means Boro have won six games on the spin and eight of the their last 10 fixtures in all competitions.


Karanka’s mantra from the day he arrived in the North-east has been to focus on the next match and ignore all other distractions.


VIEW GALLERY


With only a third of the season remaining, fans can be forgiven for dreaming about life in the Premier League again, but the Boro boss only has eyes for Arsenal and Sunday’s fifth round FA Cup quest.


Asked if his team could stay in top spot for the remainder of the campaign, he said: “We are working to but this league is very difficult.


“It is hard to be in this position, there are other teams fighting like us, but we have a very good squad and a very good atmosphere in the team.


“We have to think about the next game. If we start thinking everything is done now we are making a very big mistake.”


In the aftermath of Tuesday’s game, Karanka preferred to praise his players, putting the nervy victory down to the strength of the squad.


To cope with Blackpool and the notorious Bloomfield Road pitch, the Boro head coach switched to a 3-5-2 formation and made seven changes from the team that started against Charlton on Saturday.


It was a move that paid off.


“It was a massive win because we say in Spain on pitches like Blackpool’s you can achieve your biggest successes,” said Karanka.


“It was an important win, especially when we have used six or seven different players and that means the squad that I have is brilliant.”



Former Redcar and Cleveland mayor who resigned from Labour party will stand as independent


A former mayor of Redcar and Cleveland Council who resigned from the Labour Party has confirmed he will stand again as an independent.


Councillor Vic Jeffries was one of 10 Labour councillors who resigned their membership in a protest outside the office of Anna Turley, Labour’s candidate for Redcar in the General Election.


The resignations came after Cllr Jeffries, along with council leader George Dunning, deputy Sheelagh Clarke, and cabinet member Cllr Mark Hannon became the latest councillors to be told by Labour that they could not stand again in their wards in May’s elections.


Cllr Jeffries, who was the authority’s mayor last year and represented the Longbeck ward, said: “I have always felt that party politics should not come into local elections and this decision against me has proved me right.


“In the four years serving as your councillor I have been very proud and privileged to have been elected as mayor, but that was only secondary to me because the people of Longbeck voted for me to work and represent them as their councillor. In may, in the local elections, I will be standing as an independant councillor and if you feel you have the trust and faith in me to represent you, I will endeavour to work for the needs and the good of the people.”


On Monday, Cllr Doreen Rudland, the current deputy mayor, also resigned from the Labour party.


It leaves them with 18 councillors ahead of Thursday’s full council meeting, where council leader George Dunning faces a call to stand down.



Pancake Day 2015: When is Shrove Tuesday this year?


It’s a delicious date for the diary - but one that often causes confusion.


So when IS Pancake Day this year?


Like Easter it’s one of those dates that changes each year.


This year Teessiders will be doing their best to keep their creations from sticking to the roof (and floor...) on Tuesday, February 17.


The next day is Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent.


Lent consists of 40 days and nights of fasting and prayers before Easter.


Last year Pancake Day - also known as Shrove Tuesday - was on March 4 in 2014.


Pancakes were a way to use up the last of the fat or lard from the cupboards before Lent.


Shrove comes from the word shrive, meaning ‘confess’ - so Shrove Tuesday is traditionally when Christians consider what wrongs they need to repent and what areas of their life they need to ask God’s help with.


Here’s a quick recipe:


100g plain flour


2 large eggs


300ml milk


1 tbsp sunflower or vegetable oil, plus a little for frying


Directions:


Mix flour, eggs, milk and a pinch of salt in a large bowl - and whisk to a smooth batter.


Set a medium frying pan over a medium heat and pop in a small amount of oil.


When hot, pour in your mixture and cook your pancakes for one minute on each side until golden,


Have fun with your toppings - and enjoy!



George Friend can't wait to renew partnership with returning wide man Mustapha Carayol


George Friend says he’s just as excited about Mustapha Carayol’s imminent first team return as the Boro supporters.


The full-back forged an effective left-flank partnership with Carayol last season which ended when the winger suffered a serious cruciate knee ligament injury at Bournemouth in March.


Friend can’t wait to renew the partnership but admits it won’t be easy for the 26-year-old former Bristol Rovers wideman to replace recent occupants of the left-wing berth, including Adam Reach and Patrick Bamford.


He said: “Muzzy’s a fantastic talent, he glides when he’s on the ball and he glides when he’s not on the ball.


“He’s a superb athlete and it’s fantastic to see him back fit. He’s a fantastic guy and he’s a player that excites the fans and he excites us as well with what he can do.


“Last season, before he got injured, I had a fantastic relationship with him. He got injured and Reachy came in and I’ve built a relationship with him now so it’s good that we’ve got so many options and it means the manager has a difficult decision to make.”


Carayol ended his 10-month injury hell a fortnight ago when he played 58 minutes for the Under-21s at Brighton, and will be eager to get further minutes under his belt in the next few weeks.


Aitor Karanka is hoping to include him in a first team squad before the end of the month and, if he does, Friend believes it will be like having a new signing.


“It really will be,” he said. “Our squad - I said it at the start of the season - I wouldn’t swap it for anyone else’s.”


Asked about recalling Carayol, Karanka admitted it had been tough to get the player the required amount of game time with Boro’s Under-21 development team.


He said: “He has been out for 10-11 months and it looks like he is fit but it is difficult because of the timing of the games and training.”



Robbers armed with rusty axe enter terraced house and steal cash and phones


Burglars armed with a rusty axe have struck at a North Ormesby house.


Police are appealing for information following an aggravated burglary in North Ormesby.


A terraced home on Dorothy Street was raided at around 6.40pm on Sunday.


Two suspects entered the property with a rusted hand axe with a wooden handle and stole a small amount of cash and mobile telephones.


A 21-year-old man and a 34-year-old man who were inside the property were not harmed.


The first suspect is described as a white male with a pale complexion, around 5ft 10” tall, between 22-24 years old, wearing a grey hooded top with a black hood and grey jogging bottoms.


The second is described as a white male, around 6ft 2” tall, of slim build and wearing a two-tone blue waterproof jacket.


Any witnesses or anyone with information is asked to contact DC Sarah Green from Middlesbrough Major Crime Team on the non-emergency number 101 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.



Lee Clark: 'Boro showed their versatility, they're a very, very good side'


Blackpool boss Lee Clark felt Boro showed their versatility at Bloomfield Road but believes his side deserved at least a point against a “very good team”.


Aitor Karanka sprung a surprise ahead of kick-off, making seven changes from the side that beat Charlton at the weekend and adopting an unfamiliar 3-5-2 system to help cope with the horrendous Blackpool pitch.


And it worked - just - as Boro picked up all three points thanks to Kike’s late winner.


With Blackpool now 10 points adrift at the bottom of the Championship, Clark admitted even a point wouldn’t have been enough as the Tangerines look to stage an unlikely survival act.


But he was left frustrated after Boro snatched all three points in a dramatic finale.


“Points aren’t enough but it would have been a good point against a very, very good team,” said the deflated Blackpool boss.


Blackpool's manager Lee Clark shouts instructions to his team during the game with Boro


“They showed their versatility because they’ve changed their team around to adapt to the conditions and to the style of the pitch and they’ve done it very well.


“It shows the quality they have. Good players can adapt to any sort of surface.”


Aitor Karanka left Lee Tomlin, Patrick Bamford, Grant Leadbitter and Ben Gibson out of his starting line-up while George Friend was missing with illness.


With Bournemouth and Derby sharing the spoils in their crunch clash on the south coast, it was a huge opportunity for Boro to take advantage.


But they had to dig deep in a game that was scrappy for long periods against the basement boys.


VIEW GALLERY


Jonathan Woodgate looked to have scored the winner with less than 10 minutes to play but Blackpool drew level when Ben Gibson diverted the ball into his own net.


But the defender’s blushes were spared thanks to Kike’s late winner to send Boro top.


“I think we went toe to toe with them in every aspect,” said Clark.


“The disappointing thing for me is we’ve conceded from a throw-in and a corner kick which is always disappointing.


“We didn’t deserve to lose the game, whether we deserved to win it was another thing.


“I’m frustrated because it’s a blow that we’ve lost the game.”



Take Me Out: Looci Sohma on her ex picking her - 'I felt so lucky we'd been given a second chance'


Take Me Out’s Looci Sohma was as stunned as anyone when her ex Nick Knight came down the love chute.


The pair, along with host Paddy McGuinness, were gobsmacked but the tattooed beauty left her light on and he couldn’t resist picking her, even though she broke his heart a year ago.


Now Teessider Looci, 26, has opened up about the accidental reunion and their trip to the Isle of Fernando’s in Tenerife for their official Take Me Out date.


Speaking to New! Magazine, she recalled how the pair first met in a club in Leeds when Nick was working behind the bar.


The two went on a few dates but he decided to go back to his ex after they started seeing each other and dumped Looci, from Hartburn.


Circus performer and fire breather Looci Sohma VIEW GALLERY


“Months later, he called me and told me he was sorry,” she explained. “I was hurt and wary after he’d dumped me, but Nick was persistent.


“He’d call every few months trying to get me to go out with him again and finally, after two years, I realised I’d forgiven him and still liked him. So, very slowly, we started seeing each other again.”


The pair stayed together for more than two years until they started rowing about the future: Nick wanted to stay in Pontefract, while Looci was based in Leeds and planned to travel the world after going to circus school.


She said: “We started arguing about little things and I realised Nick wasn’t always supportive of my career, often getting jealous of blokes in the audience when I performed at shows.”


The couple called it a day and Looci admits she broke Nick’s heart but decided enough was enough and tried to move on.


The dark-haired stunner dated a handful of guys but always compared them to her ex, who she thought she’d never see again - UNTIL she went on Take Me Out.


“When Nick came down the lift, I felt like I’d been hit by a truck. I recognised his t-shirt before he’d even stepped onto the studio floor,” she said.


“My heart was pounding and when Paddy came over to me, my mouth felt dry with nerves. I knew Paddy’s catchphrase ‘No likey, no lighty’ - meaning if you didn’t fancy the male contestant then you switched off the light on the podium in front of you.”


The audience and Paddy gasped when she kept hers on and explained hairdresser Nick was in fact her ex.


“I thought if I don’t give Nick another chance I’ll regret it,” Looci explained.


Nick had to pick between her and another girl and ended up going with his ex, who he kissed on the lips as they were reunited while emotions ran high.


The pair were whisked away separately and told not to contact each other until they arrived in Tenerife where they went on their date.


“It took all my self-control not to call him ‘babe’ like I used to,” she admitted. “We held hands as we caught up. I told Nick about the house I’d bought in Leeds. I wasn’t surprised to hear he was still living in Pontefract.”


Nick told her he’d had two girlfriends since her but they didn’t work out, explaining to Looci it was “because they weren’t you.”


She said she was thrilled she kept her light on and Nick had picked her - thinking it might have been fate.


Looci added: “Our date was amazing, and I couldn’t believe what an incredible time we had together. I felt so lucky we’d been given a second chance at love.”


Fans of the show and new found followers of the couple will have to wait until next week’s show to see if Nick is willing to leave Pontefract to make it work.


Guisborough girl Emily Symington, also bagged herself a date during the episode.


The 23-year-old former Laurence Jackson School and Prior Pursglove College student told The Gazette the show was “an experience too good to miss.”


Take Me Out is on ITV on Saturday.



Teessider Danny Johnson out to star against ex club Hartlepool


Deadly striker Danny Johnson says he will be returning to Hartlepool a much-improved player with Stevenage on Saturday.


The Teessider was released by Pools as a teenager and dropped out of pro football altogether following a brief spell in Spain.


Johnson earned a summer move to Cardiff City last summer however after ripping it up in the Northern League with a club record 59 goals for Guisborough Town.


He has continued to terrorise defences in Wales with 15 goals in 17 games for Cardiff’s Under-23 side, and notched his first professional goal - a Johnstone’s Paint Trophy winner for Tranmere at Bury - while on loan at Prenton Park in November.


The 21-year-old from Nunthorpe is now back in League Two after completing a one-month loan move to Stevenage on deadline day.


And after making his debut in Stevenage’s 1-0 weekend defeat at Mansfield ahead of last night’s clash at home to Bury, he will be aiming to impress against Pools.


“Every aspect of my game has improved since joining Cardiff,” Johnson told Guisborough’s Town’s ‘The Priorymen’ matchday programme.


“I’m even surprising myself with some of the things I’ve been able to do.


“Everything has improved, especially my finishing because goalkeepers are coached privately day in, day out.


“I’m a lot stronger and fitter, which adds to my style of game.


“My hold-up and link-up play has also come on due to the pressure you get put under and speed of the game.


“My movement has also improved and I’m learning and improving every day.


“I’m living the dream after signing for Cardiff, and I’m loving every minute of it,” he added.



Croft Circuit reunion: Faces from yesteryear sought


Former riders, drivers, mechanics and anyone else interested from days gone by are being sought to attend a Croft Circuit reunion.


The event is for anyone who was involved in motorsport at the circuit, near Darlington, from 1964-1982.


It’s being organised by Middlesbrough and District Motor Club and will take place at their headquarters at Coulby Newham on Sunday, March 1 from noon until 4pm.


It’s being described as a totally informal affair and an opportunity just to turn up, meet old friends and enjoy a few hours of chat.


Long-time sponsor and current club committee member Russ Armstrong is one of the organisers.


He said: “It is for all two, three or four-wheel enthusiasts.


“We did this three years ago and over 100 people were present.


“We hope we can beat this in March.”


Anyone interested or requiring more information call call Russ on 07866 843192.



'I could look at the table all night': Well-known Boro fans celebrate going top


Read all the Gazette's coverage of Boro going top of the league HERE


Famous faces took to the net to air their delight as Boro’s win at Blackpool took their club to the top of the league.


Middlesbrough FC were victorious at Bloomfield Road last night to secure their place at the top of the Championship table.


And it was an instant hit on Twitter, with thousands of fans taking to the site to tell the world of their pride.


Kay Murray, who hosts The Express Extra sports show on US network beIN SPORTS, was tweeting throughout the game and ended with: “TOP OF THE LEAGUE!!!!!!.”


Kay Murray / Twitter TV presenter Kay Murray dons her Boro shirt in celebration of Boro's 2-0 FA Cup win at Manchester Cuty. Pic from Kay's Twitter feed


TV presenter Kay Murray

Elsewhere, legendary Boro striker - and Gazette columnist -Bernie Slaven wrote: “Well done Boro!


"Top of The League (Magnificent) results are more important than performance at this stage of the season - UTB.”


Loftus-born actress Faye Marsay also caught up in it all, saying: “YESSSSS! WE ARE TOP OF THE LEAGUE! @Boro #UTB #Teesside.”


And Teesside speedway hero Gary Havelock went one step further - tweeting a picture of the league table with the words: “Oh to behold, it’s such a beautiful sight. I could look at this all night #UTB.”


Gary Havelock Gary Havelock


Some of the players themselves got in on the action, with Patrick Bamford tweeting at the end of the game.


The 21-year-old loanee said: “What a win!!! Nice to be on top but still a long long way to go! Support was excellent. #UTB #boro”


And Ben Gibson, who scored an own goal to level the score at 1-1, aired his thanks to Kike for reigning back the win just minutes before the final whistle.


“I (heart) Kike,” he wrote - before adding three kissy face icons.


Boro hung on for a tense seven minutes of injury time - prompting fans to take to Twitter for some virtual nail-biting:



Michelle Arnett beats the boys to clinch club championship


Autograss champ Michelle Arnett is set to seek a new challenge this year.


The Eaglescliffe driver was crowned Yorkshire Dales AC club champion after a glittering 2014 season with the Thornborough-based club.


But after racing with - and beating - the men, she’s going back to competing in the ladies’ section in 2015.


Michelle has spent 22 years on the autograss scene, rising out of the junior ranks into the ladies’ classes and winning every possible title along the way.


Her most successful season was 2013 when she became ladies’ class two National and British Autograss Series champion - the two biggest titles on offer.


That prompted the move from being a lady racer to a competing in the men’s class two for the 2014 season.


It didn’t take long for her to find her feet, first taking heat wins which turned into final wins by mid-season.


mixedbagphotography.co.uk Michelle Arnett recieves her Yorkshire Dales AC champion’s trophy from Don Hilton (centre) and Roger Gill


Michelle Arnett recieves her Yorkshire Dales AC champion’s trophy from Don Hilton (centre) and Roger Gill

Her 2014 highlight of the season was winning men’s class two title at the Yorkshire Open, going unbeaten throughout the heats and final against the top drivers in the North-east and Yorkshire.


But now she is going back to race with the ladies in class seven after selling her class two car.


However it will be loaned back to her for the Ladies’ Nationals in September as she bids to become a double national champion in classes seven and two on her home track.


Another Teessider to taste YDAC title victory was Chris Chilvers from Acklam who took the F600 crown.


Other trophy winners included Darlington’s Graham Blackburn who was the runner-up in classes seven and eight while his wife Pam won ladies’ class seven and was second in ladies’ class eight.


Angie Hilton from Hartlepool was third in ladies’ class two, Phil Peek from Thornaby was second in the stock hatch championship and Brian Arnett finished second in class three.