Don Quixote in Wellington

EQ and I continued our interest in the ballet.
She has recently returned to the dancing world after a couple years off; both for the activity, the enjoyment and the completion of her exam sequence as she has one  more to complete.

Anyway- St. James theatre. The New Zealand ballet put on a ballet that(as usual) we had not seen. In fact we went in knowing nothing of the story but it it was simple to follow and enjoyable to watch. The music was a simple accompaniment rather than a real treat in itself as with some ballets. The costumes were bright, the set good and a simple humour about it. The delivery was slapstick in parts and quite camp in others.

The group dancing was well done. The individual performances were good even if a little formulaic in the way they were squeezed into the story line at time.

A positive review too.

Overall a good experience and a lovely evening with one’s daughter.

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Cricket Part II

Yesterday was another trip to the Cake Tin in the beautiful Wellington weather, this time to watch England take on Sri Lanka. I went with Joe and Eleanor and Swen came along too-thanks to the free tickers supplied by Mark Wotherspoon.

 

The match did not go England’s way. Soundly beaten as their bowels did not at all limit the Sri Lankan batmen who reached the target of 310 with 1 wicket down.

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Nobody cares about their online privacy… until it’s gone | Comment is free | The Guardian

Nobody cares about their online privacy… until it’s gone | Comment is free | The Guardian.

 

I read John Naughton’s blog and column regularly and always enjoy his thoughts and his links to other writers.

Regarding the whole provicy issue and the mantra of the powerful “if you have nothing to hide you have nothing to worry about”. I like the following:

In that sense, they (Rifkind and Straw) are in the same boat as most citizens. We all do harmless or foolish things that we nevertheless regard as private matters that are none of the government’s (or anybody else’s) business. That’s what privacy is all about.

A Visit to the Cake Tin Difficult to Believe

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England suffer humiliation as New Zealand romp to World Cup win | Sport | The Guardian.

Yesterday I went off to the stadium thinking I was about to see a good day of entertainment watching England play the ‘Black Caps’ in the Cricket World Cup.

The day was a good one for watching cricket. Sunny, warm and calm. Wellington looked good in front of the world. We had good tickets and avoided the sun burn risk. However, the day did not pass as expected.

However, the duration of the game was somewhat shorter than expected. England were hammered as they collapsed to 123 all out in 33.2 overs and NZ reached the target in 12.2 overs with McCullum hitting 77 in 25 balls! He was hitting everything into the stands. That was impressive but at the time one thought that the bowlers might make it a bit more difficult for him by not giving him  quite so many short balls, reaching him waist high, to hit to the short side boundaries.

It was a awful but unbelievable thing to watch. It is difficult to believe that the England can recover from this experience.

The good aspect to all this is that Mark Wotherspoon is in town as he is the England team doctor. So I managed to meet up with him a couple of times during the week, and hopefully again next week when England return to Wellington to play Sri Lanka after what is expected to be a successful match against Scotland in Christchurch.

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Mark working somewhere in the past.

Brentford about to lose their momentum?

Mark Warburton

Brentford manager Mark Warburton to leave in summer

BBC Sport – Brentford manager Mark Warburton to leave in summer.

So for a change, as noted, Brentford are flying high for the first time in living memory.

There has been conjecture in the press regarding the future of the manager which has not been confirmed. Apparently the set up is being changed to promote the long term goals of the club. But could it all go wrong? Could the brief run of success and acknowledged good football be about to evaporate with the disruption? Or sensible planning as this article contends.

Planning for life after a manager makes sense in a cut-throat world of football

Mark Warburton has been a revelation since taking charge at Brentford but it is prudent for owners to think ahead and look for ways to be more competitive – even if that means getting rid of a successful manager
Brentford refuse to deny reports Warburton has been sacked

Nostalgia

My memory was prodded by needing to think about an overseas trip for my French homework. It made me think of the school trip to Brienz with St. John’s when we were in class seven, around 10 or 11 years old.

A trip across Europe by coach(?) boat and train from west London. Looking back it was a great thing to be doing.

If found the youth hostel on the web. I remember the place well enough to recognise the images. Amazing really.

Brienz – Hostels – Swiss Youth Hostels.


The year before I had gone to Fiesch, also in Switzerland. Again I found what I think to be the sire though I do not remember it so clearly. Though I do remember the pool and the environs.

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Hallenbad

 

 

Post holiday in the sun

The fresh start.

I have decided to re-instigate the blog since being on holiday. I thought it would be a good thing to again keep some record of life’s activities. I addition I though it best to take control and actually pay real money rather than using a site that is ‘free”. As the saying goes; “if your not paying, then you are the product”. I had already changed from Blogger and the world of Google to WordPress.com. Not the whole way with a real domain name and site hosting.

When on holiday I tried to demonstrate that I am not ancient and could still live on the edge(?!) and so had a paragliding trip. Views over Lake Hawea after jumping off a hill. The time in the ir was about 15 minutes and great fun. No fear just the exhilaration of speed, noise and views.

Maybe more in the future.

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Enjoy the publicity

I can see that I am not using this blog often, and now it would appear, only or things related to Brentford FC.

Anyway, as it happens I wrote and e-mail to PB regarding the son of one of our contemporaries at secondary school who is breaking into the Wasps RU team. In the e-mail he mentioned a trip to Griffin Park to revel in the previously inexperienced glory.

Anyway, here is more of testament to that-again from the The Guardian:

The Brentford manager Mark Warburton
Mark Warburton, pictured, and Matthew Benham are stealthily and unfashionably creating a bright future for Brentford. Photograph: Daniel Hambury/PA

Football fans, like any gamblers, are pretty well guaranteed to endure more bad days than good ones. Liverpool supporters, to take a high‑achieving example, probably feel their domination of the 1980s was several lifetimes ago. Faithful Terriers must scarcely believe there was a time when Huddersfield Town were the powerhouse of English football, becoming the first team to win the league on three successive occasions in the 1920s.

But spare a festive thought for the long-suffering followers of Brentford, a club who celebrated their 125th birthday in October. Brentford have won a couple of minor trinkets in that time but really nothing to build even a very tiny cabinet about; their heyday came with a pair of top-six finishes in the old First Division in the 1930s. And then imagine how good it must feel to be a Bee right now. After knocking around in the lower leagues for ever, Brentford have embarked on a run that – precisely halfway through the campaign – took them to third in the Championship, before Boxing Day’s slip-up at home to Ipswich. Losing 4-2 was a setback but it was against one of the two teams ahead of them; it is suddenly conceivable that next season the team will contest a west-London derby against Chelsea in the Premier League.

Brentford, new boys in the Championship this year, were not expected to be at this end of the table. This time last year, Wigan Athletic poached their dynamic manager, Uwe Rösler, who was credited with introducing the team’s attacking, high-tempo style. Rösler was replaced internally, by Mark Warburton. The sporting director was not a sexy appointment, which is another way of saying that he’s a bald, middle‑aged man from Enfield – but he’s very New Brentford. Never much of a player, Warburton became a currency dealer in the City in the 1980s, working for companies such as Bank of America and AIG, and turning out at right-back for non-league Boreham Wood on the weekends.

After two decades of waking up at 4.32am five days a week, his mortgage paid off, money in the bank, he decided to get back into football. His education began by spending a year travelling round Europe on his own buck seeing how coaches did it at Sporting Lisbon, Ajax, Barcelona and Willem II.

At the risk of oversimplifying his pan-continental quest, Warburton learned that the best clubs invest in nurturing their young players. He was also impressed that Barcelona’s academy boys asked for a broom and left the changing rooms spotless after matches. As the Brentford manager, Warburton has remained loyal to the squad he had brought through with Rösler and supplemented them with smart investments, such as the top scorer, Andre Gray, and the Spanish playmaker Jota, and canny loan signings, notably Spurs’s Alex Pritchard. (Rösler, meanwhile, was fired by Wigan last month.)

Warburton is the public face of New Brentford, but the vision and the pockets belong to the club’s owner, Matthew Benham. I first heard of Benham when I interviewed Marcus du Sautoy, a professor of mathematics at Oxford University and an Arsenal obsessive, for an Observer article on the data revolution in football. Du Sautoy and Benham studied physics together, and after university Benham went to work in the City for a hedge fund. He got bored with that and – despite having placed only a few bets in his life – he became a full-time gambler. He did well enough to set up a company, Smartodds, which sells statistics and tips to professional gamblers, and that in turn did well enough that in 2012 he bought Brentford, the team he has supported since childhood.

Benham immediately invested £15m and pledged another £10m for a new stadium. Lower those eyebrows; this is not exactly a straightforward case of a rich investor fast-tracking a club to short-term success. Benham appears to be smarter and more sensible than that. On the evidence, what’s happening at Brentford now – stealthily, unbelievably, unfashionably – could be a lesson to which the rest of football should pay attention.

The conclusion of my article on the role of computer analysts in football – I’ll save you 10 minutes, here – was that nobody knows anything. Or perhaps they do, but they are not going to tell you. The field is new and impenetrably secretive, as every club try to squeeze a competitive advantage from the statistics. Benham isn’t much help, either, as he rarely gives interviews.

From public pronouncements it is possible to work out core elements of the Brentford philosophy. Warburton clearly wants to reduce the number of talented teenagers who are lost and discarded in the youth ranks. In September 2013, the club’s academy began a partnership with Uxbridge high school, rated outstanding by Ofsted, that allows them to supervise boys all day, every day, both physically and with their education. The stated aim is to mould them as individuals as much as players – expect freshly swept, Barcelona-spotless dressing rooms – and to have four or more boys make the first-team squad in the next few years.

These individuals will be supplemented by underappreciated signings from outside the club, identified by scouting and data analysis. This is the fabled Moneyball-isation of football and will be overseen by Warburton, Benham and Brentford’s new sporting director, Frank McParland, formerly director of Liverpool’s academy, where he brought Raheem Sterling through after his signing as a 15-year-old from QPR. Benham’s quirky algorithms, honed as a gambler and at Smartodds, may already be paying dividends here, but don’t expect him to ever admit it.

Most of all, as shown with the departure of Rösler, no individual is bigger than the club. Brentford under Benham have a belief in how football should be played and a long-term plan on how that will be accomplished. Even if they could have José Mourinho as their manager, you suspect they wouldn’t want him. It’s a clever strategy and if Brentford, the perennial underachievers, do end up in the Premier League one day soon, then you suspect the only people who won’t be surprised will be the people behind it.

The Big Match

Screenshot_2014-11-22-15-24-01It’s really not that important but it is hard to miss the opportunity.

Brentford played their local rivals, Fulham, Friday evening in the Championship. The last time I saw them play each other was about 1990 when I went to Craven Cottage with Sara for a League Cup game. Jimmy Hill was the chairman of Fulham at the time and he spoke to the crowd at half-time through the PA. The Brentford fans were singing “Flats upon the Cottage…”. We lived in Hammersmith at the time-a short walk to the ground. I cannot remember the score and not really that important.

Anyway, a big match this time around and televised by Sky TV-which was good for me. Not because it was televised here but because I could watch it via an internet streaming site. Excellent! The quality of the image was average but good enough to watch the action.

Brentford dominated the first half, the second was even. Fulham scored first-no!!!

But an equaliser brought the Bees back to life and they managed to score the winner near to the end.

Riding high now-4th until tomorrow probably but it has not been this good in my lifetime I believe.