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LONDON, Dec 30 (Reuters) - Former Wimbledon champion Anne Jones was among British sports personalities included in the United Kingdom's New Year's honours list on Monday.


Jones, who won the Venus Rosewater Dish in 1969 by beating American Billie-Jean King in the final, was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE).


The award to Jones came at a time when Wimbledon men's champion Andy Murray had been tipped for a knighthood but was surprisingly omitted from the list.


Murray, awarded an OBE (Order of the British Empire) last year, ended a 77-year wait for a British men's champion at the All England Club when he beat Serbia's Novak Djokovic in the final in July.


Former 10,000 metres world record holder David Bedford, a key figure in organising the London Marathon for a decade until 2012, was awarded an OBE.


'I had an exciting and eventful athletics career but I'm more proud to be part of an incredible event whose fundraising has totalled over half a billion pounds for charitable causes since its inception, and attracts the world's best distance runners to London each year. London is viewed by most people as the best marathon in the world,' Bedford was quoted as saying.


Other sports personalities on the list include former England cricketer Geoff Miller, who has just retired as a test team selector, was also awarded an OBE.


'It's marvellous to see Geoff recognised in this way for the outstanding service he has given to cricket over the past five decades - firstly as a player for Derbyshire, Essex and England, and more recently as our national selector,' said England Cricket Board chief executive officer David Collier.


Former Football Association chairman David Bernstein was made a CBE for services to football.


Women's football was honoured with an OBE for Rachel Yankey, the most capped England player, having been made an MBE (Member of the British Empire) in 2006, and Katy McLean, captain of the England women's rugby union team, was made an MBE.


A woman involved in men's football, West Ham United vice-chairman Karren Brady, was made a CBE for services to entrepreneurship and women in business.


Stuart Cummings, a former rugby league referee who retired as the sports' match officials director earlier this year, was made a MBE. (Writing by Rex Gowar, editing by Pritha Sarkar)


Murray hoping to surpass Wimbledon


Andy Murray © Gallo Images


Andy Murray can be better than when he won Wimbledon, he suggested before taking little more than half an hour to win his first match in four months on the ATP world Tour in Doha on Tuesday.


Murray, a 6-0, 6-0 winner against Mousa Zayed in the first round of the Qatar Open, is making a comeback from surgery on a back injury which has also caused pain in a leg and a foot. It even required him to complete his historic grass court success against Novak Djokovic in July with physical discomfort.


But the brief evidence of Tuesday's mismatch victory over a local wild card entry is that the surgery may have been a success and that both his freedom of movement and his potential may have improved.


For the moment though Murray's words suggest more than his actions. 'I guess with most surgeries you are trying to be better than you were before - and so far the results have been good,' he said ominously.


'I haven't lost any strength, I was training two weeks after the surgery, I was on the bike and everything has been going well.


'I don't feel like I've lost speed, or strength. But I will know better when I'm playing matches against the best players in the world. It's one thing doing all this stuff in the gym and in practice but until I start doing it in matches - that's where the confidence will come from.


Murray had never previously described exactly what the injury was which decided him to risk an operation so very soon after becoming the first British player in 77 years to win Wimbledon, but now he did.


'It's quite difficult to explain,' he ventured. 'There's a lot of things which were a problem. But what exactly the one thing that it was, you know, I may not necessarily know, but I am hoping that the procedure I had done works.


'I was getting a lot of pain in my lower back, down my leg and into my foot. They were the symptoms I had but they could have been caused by quite a few different things.'


Asked how he coped with such discomfort at Wimbledon, he said: 'I don't want to go into what shots it was hurting on, but the surface helped. The lower bounce, the quicker court - you don't have to generate and rotate as much to generate the power.'


A likely outcome of that memorable triumph is that Murray's acclaim will continue to increase as time passes. He is already more popular now than then, and far more celebrated than two years ago.


'In the last couple of years the support has been getting better and better, and it does make a big difference when you are playing Wimbledon, or Olympics, or Davis Cup. And I've played pretty much my best tennis in those situations when I have had the crowd with me,' he said.


'I think the (BBC) Sports Personality thing was nice,' Murray said of his capture of the prestigious annual television award. 'I would have liked to have been there but now everyone understands what my priorities are and it was something that I couldn't do.'


That was a reference to the overwhelming need to train, practise, rehab and recover at his training base in Miami, where he was presented with the BBC award by Martina Navratilova.


It also implied that there is a growing understanding and appreciation of a personality which in his younger days could seem shy, which in his early tour years might appear dour and guarded, and which is more often now seen as loyal, dedicated and tenacious.


'Obviously the awards and stuff would suggest that,' he said. 'But the best people to ask are the public. I don't feel like it's me that's best to answer that. You know winning those sort of awards suggests that it (the public attitude) has changed a bit and I hope it continues.'


Wimbledon 1969 champion Jones gets CBE in Queen's honors


Credit: Reuters/Toby Melville


Former British tennis players Anne Jones (L) and Tim Henman talk on Centre Court at the 2010 Wimbledon tennis championships in London, June 24, 2010.


Jones, who won the Venus Rosewater Dish in 1969 by beating American Billie-Jean King in the final, was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE).


The award to Jones came at a time when Wimbledon men's champion Andy Murray had been tipped for a knighthood but was surprisingly omitted from the list.


Murray, awarded an OBE (Order of the British Empire) last year, ended a 77-year wait for a British men's champion at the All England Club when he beat Serbia's Novak Djokovic in the final in July.


Former 10,000 meters world record holder David Bedford, a key figure in organizing the London Marathon for a decade until 2012, was awarded an OBE.


'I had an exciting and eventful athletics career but I'm more proud to be part of an incredible event whose fundraising has totaled over half a billion pounds for charitable causes since its inception, and attracts the world's best distance runners to London each year. London is viewed by most people as the best marathon in the world,' Bedford was quoted as saying.


Other sports personalities on the list include former England cricketer Geoff Miller, who has just retired as a test team selector, was also awarded an OBE.


'It's marvelous to see Geoff recognized in this way for the outstanding service he has given to cricket over the past five decades - firstly as a player for Derbyshire, Essex and England, and more recently as our national selector,' said England Cricket Board chief executive officer David Collier.


Former Football Association chairman David Bernstein was made a CBE for services to football.


Women's football was honored with an OBE for Rachel Yankey, the most capped England player, having been made an MBE (Member of the British Empire) in 2006, and Katy McLean, captain of the England women's rugby union team, was made an MBE.


A woman involved in men's football, West Ham United vice-chairman Karren Brady, was made a CBE for services to entrepreneurship and women in business.


Stuart Cummings, a former rugby league referee who retired as the sports' match officials director earlier this year, was made a MBE.


(Writing by Rex Gowar, editing by Pritha Sarkar)


Former FA chief Bernstein tops New Year Honours List as Wimbledon champion ...

By Martyn Ziegler, Press Association


PUBLISHED: 17:30 EST, 30 December 2013 | UPDATED: 17:48 EST, 30 December 2013


Former Football Association chairman David Bernstein leads the list of sporting awards in the New Year Honours List but there is nothing for Wimbledon winner Andy Murray.


Bernstein is made a CBE for services to football, but expectations have been dashed that Murray - who received an OBE a year ago after winning Olympic gold and the US Open in 2012 - would also be recognised after becoming the first Briton to win the Wimbledon men's singles since 1936.


Speculation that David Beckham was in line for a knighthood after announcing his retirement from football has also proved unfounded.


Bernstein, who stepped down in July after reaching the age limit of 70, said he believed the honour also recognised his previous roles as chairman of Manchester City and Wembley.


'I think this honour relates to all my 20 years in football and I am really delighted,' he said.


'I had 10 years at Manchester City and it was a fantastic period to be involved at a key moment in its history, getting the club back on its feet and organising the deal for the new stadium.


'It was then enormously satisfying to be involved with Wembley through its construction phase to see it become the greatest stadium in the world.


Bernstein, who becomes chairman of British Red Cross from January 1, added: 'My greatest satisfaction at the FA was being involved with development at the grassroots and in disabled football, and then in anti-discrimination culminating in the report to the Prime Minister.'


Murray may have missed out but one former Wimbledon winner is recognised - Ann Jones, who beat Billie Jean King to win the 1969 Ladies title, receives a CBE after many years of work in tennis administration.


Other notable recipients include a CBE for West Ham vice-chairman Karren Brady, for services to entrepreneurship and women in business, and an OBE to London Marathon race director Dave Bedford, a former 10,000m world record holder.


Geoff Miller, who has retired as England cricket's national selector after a seven-year period which included three Ashes triumphs and England becoming world number one, receives an OBE.


Professor Peter Sonksen, the scientist who spearheaded the test for human growth hormone, receives an OBE.


Sonksen has worked on anti-doping with the International Olympic Committee since 1992 and his team project GH-2000 developed a test for the hormone that was used for the first time at the London 2012 Olympics.


Sonksen, emeritus professor at King's College, London, said: 'I was thrilled to discover I was to receive this honour - it was completely unexpected.


'It has been a very important step in anti-doping to develop this test, but the work must go on.


'Doping is still a big problem and will not go away - the cheats are always ahead of the testers and it is a running battle.'


An MBE goes to Stuart Cummings, the much-respected rugby league referee who retired as RFL match officials director earlier this year.


RFL chief executive Nigel Wood led the tributes to Cummings.


Wood said: 'I would like to congratulate Stuart on being awarded the MBE for his services to the sport.


'Stuart did an outstanding job for the RFL in his different roles both on and off the field and this recognition is richly deserved.


'Given the intense scrutiny referees face, it is to Stuart's credit that he always fulfilled what is often the hardest job in rugby league with diligence, dignity and, above all, integrity.'


Cummings added: 'I am really pleased with the way things turned out and I am pleased my career has been marked in this way.'


Rachel Yankey, the most capped England women's footballer, receives at OBE to add to the MBE she won in 2006, and there is an MBE for Katy McLean, captain of the England women's rugby union team.


Yankey said: 'This very special award means a great deal to me, and I'm incredibly proud to have my work on and off the pitch recognised in this way.


'I have to say I owe Arsenal a great deal for kick-starting my coaching and playing career. I started out as an 'Arsenal in the Community' trainee, which is where my love of coaching and working with children began.


'As an Arsenal Ladies player, I have been lucky enough to play with some of the best players in the country and to help contribute to the club's unbelievable history.


'To be recognised for my youth work too, with the Rachel Yankey Football Programme, my community football team Gibbons Wreckers Youth FC and the Dame Kelly Holmes Legacy Trust, is totally humbling.'


McLean, who has won 65 caps, said her honour can serve as both a reward and an inspiration for women and girls in the sport.


She said: 'It's a truly amazing honour, something in my career I never thought I would receive.


'This kind of award just shows how much our sport is growing and going in the right direction.'



LATEST SPORT COLUMNS FOOTBALLERS' FOOTBALL COLUMN ARCHIVE SPORTSMAIL HALL OF FAME

Wimbledon 1969 champion Jones gets CBE in Queen's honours

Reuters, 31/12 09:41 CET



LONDON (Reuters) - Former Wimbledon champion Anne Jones was among British sports personalities included in the United Kingdom's New Year's honours list on Monday.


Jones, who won the Venus Rosewater Dish in 1969 by beating American Billie-Jean King in the final, was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE).


The award to Jones came at a time when Wimbledon men's champion Andy Murray had been tipped for a knighthood but was surprisingly omitted from the list.


Murray, awarded an OBE (Order of the British Empire) last year, ended a 77-year wait for a British men's champion at the All England Club when he beat Serbia's Novak Djokovic in the final in July.


Former 10,000 metres world record holder David Bedford, a key figure in organising the London Marathon for a decade until 2012, was awarded an OBE.


'I had an exciting and eventful athletics career but I'm more proud to be part of an incredible event whose fundraising has totalled over half a billion pounds for charitable causes since its inception, and attracts the world's best distance runners to London each year. London is viewed by most people as the best marathon in the world,' Bedford was quoted as saying.


Other sports personalities on the list include former England cricketer Geoff Miller, who has just retired as a test team selector, was also awarded an OBE.


'It's marvellous to see Geoff recognised in this way for the outstanding service he has given to cricket over the past five decades - firstly as a player for Derbyshire, Essex and England, and more recently as our national selector,' said England Cricket Board chief executive officer David Collier.


Former Football Association chairman David Bernstein was made a CBE for services to football.


Women's football was honoured with an OBE for Rachel Yankey, the most capped England player, having been made an MBE (Member of the British Empire) in 2006, and Katy McLean, captain of the England women's rugby union team, was made an MBE.


A woman involved in men's football, West Ham United vice-chairman Karren Brady, was made a CBE for services to entrepreneurship and women in business.


Stuart Cummings, a former rugby league referee who retired as the sports' match officials director earlier this year, was made a MBE.


(Writing by Rex Gowar, editing by Pritha Sarkar)


euronews provides breaking news articles from Reuters as a service to its readers, but does not edit the articles it publishes.


Copyright 2013 Reuters.


WIMBLEDON'S OCTAGONAL SCHOOL – 254 YEARS OLD AND STILL ...

WIMBLEDON'S OCTAGONAL SCHOOL - 254 YEARS OLD AND STILL COUNTING

5:00am Tuesday 31st December 2013 in News By The Wimbledon Society



The Wimbledon Free School as it was known after 1773. Pictured in 1810 as drawn by the artist Porden.


As Wimbledon schools face the prospect of growing class numbers in the near future, a unique landmark beside the Common recalls how far back the question of local education really goes. The two-storey octagonal building in Camp Road first opened for lessons exactly 254 years ago this week on 31 December 1759. Known as the Wimbledon Charity School, it was the brainchild of Rev John Cooksey (1707-1777), vicar at St Mary's, who had worked for three years to get it off the ground as a means of teaching poor children to read the Bible and learn basic writing skills.


He persuaded the Vestry, Wimbledon's local authority of the day, to establish a committee of wealthy local residents who would fund the building. They convinced the Lord of the Manor, Earl Spencer, to permit the enclosure of two acres of the Common and the octagon was duly built there. It contained both the classroom for 50 pupils and the teacher's accommodation. Some of the pupils came from the workhouse next door - now the site of the almshouses - and were to be trained for domestic service.


Unfortunately problems arose and the schoolmasters conflicted with parish officials. Mr Lewis, third candidate to be interviewed for the post in 1759, cheated on his application form and was rejected immediately. Many years passed but in 1773 the place was renamed the Wimbledon Free School, the building underwent repairs and a minute-book was introduced to keep clear records. Joseph Andrews and his wife were appointed to teach 50 boys and 50 girls and stayed for 15 years. Arithmetic was added to the curriculum in 1778.


Funded by subscription, the Free School was supported by several famous local residents, including Earl Spencer, the future Prime Minister Lord Rockingham, and Lord Nelson and Emma Hamilton. The anti-slavery campaigner William Wilberforce was treasurer of the school during the 1780s, his uncle having been one of the original trustees.


Then, 200 years ago in 1813, there was another name change when it became the Wimbledon National School, linked to the National Society for the Education of the Poor in the Principles of the Established Church. The octagonal building was extended in 1834 and again after 1870.


During the later 19th century the name changed yet again to the Old Central School. In 1889, John William Selby, the longest serving headmaster (1873-1919), was the first chairman of the Old Central football club which later became Wimbledon FC and played on the Common during its formative years.



Octagon House, Woodhayes, where Rev John Cooksey lived. This property shared a common design with the school house. Both were built by William Jennings. The watercolour by John Hassell (1767-1825) dates from 1825.


The Old Central name lasted until 1966 when the Church of England transferred its operation to the newly built Bishop Gilpin Primary School building in Lake Road and the octagonal building was taken over by the new Merton Council. Partly rebuilt, it reopened as the William Wilberforce School for children with learning difficulties but later in 1992 it was sold to The Study Preparatory School for girls and refurbished once more. Since then it has been used for the younger pupils of this private school.


Written to mark the octagonal school's 250th anniversary in 2008, the book A Firm Foundation - The Story of Old Central/Bishop Gilpin School, Wimbledon, 1758-2008, by John Harvey tells the full story. It covers lesser known characters such as Betty Syrett, a descendant of Wimbledon's first postman (see Heritage story 23 August 2013) and a pupil at Old Central 1926-32. She vividly recalls being introduced to laundry work and playing hockey coached by the fearsome headmaster, Major Bernard Ogden. Copies of the book are available from the Museum of Wimbledon at 22 Ridgway.


WIMBLEDON'S OCTAGONAL SCHOOL – 254 YEARS OLD AND STILL ...

WIMBLEDON'S OCTAGONAL SCHOOL - 254 YEARS OLD AND STILL COUNTING

5:00am Tuesday 31st December 2013 in News By The Wimbledon Society



The Wimbledon Free School as it was known after 1773. Pictured in 1810 as drawn by the artist Porden.


As Wimbledon schools face the prospect of growing class numbers in the near future, a unique landmark beside the Common recalls how far back the question of local education really goes. The two-storey octagonal building in Camp Road first opened for lessons exactly 254 years ago this week on 31 December 1759. Known as the Wimbledon Charity School, it was the brainchild of Rev John Cooksey (1707-1777), vicar at St Mary's, who had worked for three years to get it off the ground as a means of teaching poor children to read the Bible and learn basic writing skills.


He persuaded the Vestry, Wimbledon's local authority of the day, to establish a committee of wealthy local residents who would fund the building. They convinced the Lord of the Manor, Earl Spencer, to permit the enclosure of two acres of the Common and the octagon was duly built there. It contained both the classroom for 50 pupils and the teacher's accommodation. Some of the pupils came from the workhouse next door - now the site of the almshouses - and were to be trained for domestic service.


Unfortunately problems arose and the schoolmasters conflicted with parish officials. Mr Lewis, third candidate to be interviewed for the post in 1759, cheated on his application form and was rejected immediately. Many years passed but in 1773 the place was renamed the Wimbledon Free School, the building underwent repairs and a minute-book was introduced to keep clear records. Joseph Andrews and his wife were appointed to teach 50 boys and 50 girls and stayed for 15 years. Arithmetic was added to the curriculum in 1778.


Funded by subscription, the Free School was supported by several famous local residents, including Earl Spencer, the future Prime Minister Lord Rockingham, and Lord Nelson and Emma Hamilton. The anti-slavery campaigner William Wilberforce was treasurer of the school during the 1780s, his uncle having been one of the original trustees.


Then, 200 years ago in 1813, there was another name change when it became the Wimbledon National School, linked to the National Society for the Education of the Poor in the Principles of the Established Church. The octagonal building was extended in 1834 and again after 1870.


During the later 19th century the name changed yet again to the Old Central School. In 1889, John William Selby, the longest serving headmaster (1873-1919), was the first chairman of the Old Central football club which later became Wimbledon FC and played on the Common during its formative years.



Octagon House, Woodhayes, where Rev John Cooksey lived. This property shared a common design with the school house. Both were built by William Jennings. The watercolour by John Hassell (1767-1825) dates from 1825.


The Old Central name lasted until 1966 when the Church of England transferred its operation to the newly built Bishop Gilpin Primary School building in Lake Road and the octagonal building was taken over by the new Merton Council. Partly rebuilt, it reopened as the William Wilberforce School for children with learning difficulties but later in 1992 it was sold to The Study Preparatory School for girls and refurbished once more. Since then it has been used for the younger pupils of this private school.


Written to mark the octagonal school's 250th anniversary in 2008, the book A Firm Foundation - The Story of Old Central/Bishop Gilpin School, Wimbledon, 1758-2008, by John Harvey tells the full story. It covers lesser known characters such as Betty Syrett, a descendant of Wimbledon's first postman (see Heritage story 23 August 2013) and a pupil at Old Central 1926-32. She vividly recalls being introduced to laundry work and playing hockey coached by the fearsome headmaster, Major Bernard Ogden. Copies of the book are available from the Museum of Wimbledon at 22 Ridgway.


Wimbledon 1969 champion Jones gets CBE in Queen's honors


LONDON (Reuters) - Former Wimbledon champion Anne Jones was among British sports personalities included in the United Kingdom's New Year's honors list on Monday.


Jones, who won the Venus Rosewater Dish in 1969 by beating American Billie-Jean King in the final, was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE).


The award to Jones came at a time when Wimbledon men's champion Andy Murray had been tipped for a knighthood but was surprisingly omitted from the list.


Murray, awarded an OBE (Order of the British Empire) last year, ended a 77-year wait for a British men's champion at the All England Club when he beat Serbia's Novak Djokovic in the final in July.


Former 10,000 meters world record holder David Bedford, a key figure in organizing the London Marathon for a decade until 2012, was awarded an OBE.


'I had an exciting and eventful athletics career but I'm more proud to be part of an incredible event whose fundraising has totaled over half a billion pounds for charitable causes since its inception, and attracts the world's best distance runners to London each year. London is viewed by most people as the best marathon in the world,' Bedford was quoted as saying.


Other sports personalities on the list include former England cricketer Geoff Miller, who has just retired as a test team selector, was also awarded an OBE.


'It's marvelous to see Geoff recognized in this way for the outstanding service he has given to cricket over the past five decades - firstly as a player for Derbyshire, Essex and England, and more recently as our national selector,' said England Cricket Board chief executive officer David Collier.


Former Football Association chairman David Bernstein was made a CBE for services to football.


Women's football was honored with an OBE for Rachel Yankey, the most capped England player, having been made an MBE (Member of the British Empire) in 2006, and Katy McLean, captain of the England women's rugby union team, was made an MBE.


A woman involved in men's football, West Ham United vice-chairman Karren Brady, was made a CBE for services to entrepreneurship and women in business.


Stuart Cummings, a former rugby league referee who retired as the sports' match officials director earlier this year, was made a MBE.


(Writing by Rex Gowar, editing by Pritha Sarkar)


NOT DONE YET!! Mahesh Bhupathi says he will play on till Wimbledon next year


Tennis - Bhupathi was supposed to call it quits after 2013 season


Indian Tennis 24 Dec 2013 - 06:52 / by Prakash / reads 600.Source:



Tennis - While Leander Paes is still going strong and wants to play till the Rio Olympics in 2016, his former friend and partner Mahesh Bhupathi had said that he would quit the sport at the end of the 2013 season.


Now Bhupathi says he is hoping to play on till Wimbledon in 2014 and wants to play a light schedule with the hope of making the ranking cut-off for Wimbledon,


Speaking in Mumbai where he was part of an Indian Tennis Players Association event, Bhupathi commented, 'The target is to try and make the cut for Wimbledon. I don't know my schedule for the year though. If I can play six tournaments this year I will be happy. I am anyway travelling for work. I had to go to Sydney for work; I had to go to Melbourne for four days of work. So I might as well play. Plus, I love the game.


'I am hoping to play in Dubai at least since I (with Michael Llodra) won the title last year and have to defend those points. I have to make enough points to make it to Wimbledon. I am playing with Rajeev Ram in Melbourne, we'll see after that.'


Bhupathi has dropped to no. 35 in the world rankings after a lackluster season in 2013.



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Andy Murray SNUBBED in New Year's honours list despite Wimbledon success

Fault: Despite his Wimbledon success Andy Murray will not be honoured as he was 12 months ago


Andy Murray will not be honoured in the New Year's Honours list, despite his 2013 Wimbledon success.


Last year, the Scot was awarded an OBE following his Olympic gold medal and US Open win in 2012.


That had led to suggestions that the 26-year-old, recently named BBC Sports Personality of the Year, would receive further honours in the New Year.


However, no such award will be forthcoming to the World No.4, while speculation that David Beckham was in line for a knighthood after announcing his retirement from football has also proved unfounded.


Former Football Association chairman David Bernstein leads the list of sporting awards, being awarded a CBE for services to football.


Geoff Miller, who has retired as England cricket's national selector after a seven-year period which included three Ashes triumphs and England becoming world number one, receives an OBE.


Rachel Yankey, the most capped England women's footballer, receives an OBE to add to the MBE she won in 2006, and there is an MBE for Katy McLean, captain of the England women's rugby union team.


Other notable recipients include a CBE for West Ham vice-chairman Karren Brady, for services to entrepreneurship and women in business, and an OBE to London Marathon race director Dave Bedford, a former 10,000m world record holder.


An MBE also goes to Stuart Cummings, the much-respected rugby league referee who retired as RFL match officials director earlier this year.


And there will be one former Wimbledon winner celebrating after all. Ann Jones, who beat Billie Jean King to win the 1969 Ladies title, receives a CBE after many years of work in tennis administration.


CBE David Alan Bernstein, lately chair, Football Association, for services to football. Karren Brady, vice-chair, West Ham United Football Club, for services to entrepreneurship and women in business. Ann Jones (Adrianne Haydon-Jones), for services to tennis. OBE Geoffrey Miller, national selector, England cricket team, for services to cricket. (Chesterfield, Derbyshire) David Bedford, London Marathon race director, for services to athletics and charitable fundraising. Martin Coyd, for services to Rugby League. (Gillingham, Kent) Shona Malcolm, Disability Athletics development officer, for services to Athletics. Charles Oliver, chair, Cricket Scotland, for services to cricket. (Edinburgh) Robert Ropner, vice-president, British Bobsleigh, for services to bobsleigh, particularly youth training. (Bedale, North Yorkshire) Professor Peter Sonksen, for services to anti-doping in sport. (Upham, Hampshire) Professor Gregory Whyte, for services to sport, sport science and charity. (Marlow, Buckinghamshire) Rachel Yankey, Arsenal and England women's footballer, for services to football, particularly the women's and youth games. Fiona Young, chief executive, Disability Snowsport UK, for services to disability sport. (Boat of Garten, Inverness-shire) MBE Karen Atkinson, netball player and coach, for services to netball. (Loughborough, Leicestershire) John Barrie, for services to badminton. (Lanark, South Lanarkshire) Louise Brearey, head, London 2012 Games Team, Health and Safety Executive. For services to the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games and voluntary service to young people in Essex. (Saffron Walden, Essex) Robert Colhoun, honorary secretary, Alpha Badminton Club, Lisburn, for services to badminton in Northern Ireland. Stuart Cummings, lately match officials director, Rugby Football League. For services to rugby league. (Ilkley, West Yorkshire) Melvyn Evans, for services to crown green bowling. (Cannock, Staffordshire) Lynda Fairbrother, chair, women's technical committee, British Gymnastics. For services to gymnastics. (Sandhurst, Berkshire) Paul Foster, for services to bowls, (Troon, Ayrshire and Arran) Miss Lucy Hodges, for services to blind sailing, (Rochford, Essex) Susan Hough, chief executive, Dorset County Football Association, for services to women's and disability football. (Poole, Dorset) James Little, honorary librarian, The All England Club, Wimbledon. For services to tennis. (London) Dominic Mahony, for voluntary services to modern pentathlon. (Watlington, Oxfordshire) Joseph McAree, lately chairman, Dungannon Swifts Football Club. For services to sport and to the community in Northern Ireland. (Dungannon, Tyrone) Katy McLean, England women's rugby union captain, for services to women's rugby. (South Shields, Tyne and Wear) Jan Paterson, director of Olympic relations, British Olympic Association. For services to sport. (Radstock, Somerset) Gwilym Price, national director of sport, Independent Schools Association. For services to education and sport. (Rugby, Warwickshire) Josephine Randolph, for services to swimming and to the community. (Tamworth, Staffordshire) John Roberts, for services to athletics and to the community. (Oswestry, Shropshire). Mark Shearman, UK Athletics official photographer, for services to sports photography. (London) Quinton Shillingford, for services to boxing and young people. (Portsmouth, Hampshire) Avril Spriggs, for voluntary service to gymnastics. (Basildon, Essex) George Stevenson, member, Ulster branch, Tennis Ireland, for services to tennis in Northern Ireland. (Bangor, Down) Jane Whetnall, co-founder, Cheshire Academy of Integrated Sports and Arts. For services to disability sport. (Crewe, Cheshire)

Review of the Year 2013

Review of the Year 2013 - April to June

5:00am Monday 30th December 2013 in News By Nick Hitchens, Assistant Editor


Players celebrate securing survival in League 2


April


AFC Wimbledon kept fans biting their nails until the final day with the threat of relegation back into the non-league divisions looming.


A tense 2-1 victory over Fleetwood secured Neal Ardley's men a spot in the league, and a chance to continue the young club's dramatic rise through the league.



A speed camera burst into a ball of flame after being torched along with a 4x4 following a dramatic crash. The camera, on St Helier Avenue, has still not been replaced.


The inaugural Merton Civic Awards saw worthy members of the whole community celebrated at a ceremony at Wimbledon Film Studios.


Organised by The Wimbledon Guardian and Merton Council, the night saw victors in nine categories, with recording studio owner John Merriman taking the main prize of the Mayor's outstanding contribution prize.


May


Stuart Hazell is jailed for 38 years for the murder of Pollards Hill schoolgirl Tia Sharp.


The five-day trial sensationally saw Hazell change his plea to guilty, but only after the court had heard horrific details of how Hazell helped a weeklong search for the girl, knowing he had stored the 12-year-old's body in the attic of her grandma's house.


A meeting to swear in the new mayor was thrown into turmoil as a row over the leadership of the Tory party saw four councillors defected to UKIP.


Councillors Richard Hilton, Suzanne Evans, Linda Scott and Rod Scott all became UKIP members after an argument over the election of Oonaugh Moulton as new leader Krystal Miller as Mayor. Councillors Chris Edge and Richard Chellew also left the Conservative party in the fallout.



A popular bookie was killed in broad daylight working in Ladbrokes in Morden.


Andrew Iacovou, who lived with his disabled wife and two children in North Cheam was found dead after an attack inside the shop on a Saturday morning.


His killer was jailed later in the year


June


The Ahmadiyya Muslim community celebrated 100 years in the UK with a huge celebration at their Southfields and Morden Mosques.


Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, the founder of the movement, set up the Fazl Mosque in Southfields in 1913. The Baitul Futuh in Morden is the largest mosque in Western Europe.


A gang who sold heroin from out of a children's playground were jailed for a combined 33 years. Covert work from Merton Police over 15 months culminated in a swoop on the 17-strong gang, that ultimately saw 16 convictions for offences including possessing firearms and dealing in class-A drugs.



Transvestite former rock star sees his life turned upside down after his home is destroyed in a fire.Nick Watkinson, lead singer of the Jags, was left homeless living out of his car after his apartment on Dorset Road was destroyed. However help was a hand both from neighbours but also celebrities such as Orlando Weeke, lead singer of the Maccabees, who pitched in to help.


VIDEO: AFC Wimbledon 1 Plymouth Argyle 1: Match Report


STRIKER Reuben Reid continued his fine goalscoring form with a late equaliser for Argyle as they drew against AFC Wimbledon at Kingsmeadow.


The Pilgrims seemed set for defeat in south-west London until Reid fired a low shot past 'keeper Ross Worner in the 88th minute.


It was his 12th goal of the season in all competitions, and fourth in the last three games.


After a goal-less first half which was dominated by Wimbledon, the home team deservedly took the lead in the 47th minute.


That was striker Michael Smith headed home from close range after a cross from the left.


Wimbledon did not build on that, however, and a change of tactics from Argyle gave them fresh attacking impetus.


Reid had one shot superbly saved by Worner before he put the visitors on level terms.


It was a far from fluent performance from the Pilgrims but they kept battling away and eventually got their reward.


Argyle's starting line-up was the same as for the 3-2 win away to Oxford United on Boxing Day.


That meant 17-year-old Ben Purrington retained his place at left-back after a successful debut for the Pilgrims at the Kassam Stadium.


There was one change on the substitutes' bench, with Durrell Berry included instead of Guy Branston.


Berry was available after serving a one-match suspension against Oxford but manager John Sheridan stuck with Purrington at left-back.


Argyle put themselves under early pressure by conceding some needless fouls inside their own territory.


The resulting free-kicks did not lead to any clearcut chances for Wimbledon but they allowed them to dictate the play early on.


Argyle had their first chance in the 10th minute, and it was very good one.


Striker Caolan Lavery got on the end of a corner from Andres Gurrieri but he headed the ball into the ground and it bounced over the crossbar.


Moments later, Argyle midfielder Lewis Alessandra forced a good save out of Worner.


Alessandra's 20-yard shot had plenty of power behind it and Worner had to be alert to push it away.


Argyle 'keeper Luke McCormick had to come to the rescue for the visitors soon afterwards.


Gurrieri gave away possession and then centre-back Curtis Nelson failed to cut out a pass which Smith raced onto.


The on-loan Charlton Athletic striker got away a shot but it was blocked by McCormick.


Smith went close with a looping header which bounced narrowly wide as Wimbledon put a series of crosses into the Pilgrims' penalty area.


Argyle could not retain possession for any length of time and continued to come under pressure.


McCormick made a diving save from striker Charlie Sheringham's header after an excellent cross from Callum Kennedy in the 28th minute.


Kennedy played at left wing-back and was a constant attacking threat on that flank, causing a lot of problems for Maxime Blanchard.


Gurrieri also spent more time tracking back to try to deal with Kennedy than getting forward..


Argyle had a rare attack in the 35th minute when Lavery sped into the box but he was cleanly tackled by Wimbledon defender Barry Fuller.


It remained goal-less until half-time, although Alessandra had another opportunity just before the break.


Lavery rolled the ball back to Alessandra and his shot was pushed away by Worner as he dived to his left.


It had been a lacklustre performance from the Pilgrims up until that point.


They had come under heavy pressure at times but centre-backs Curtis Nelson and Neal Trotman were very strong in the air.


Wimbledon's dominance earned its reward at the start of the second half, though


Smith was not picked up properly when the ball was crossed into the Argyle penalty area in the 47th minute and he powered a header into the net.


The Pilgrims had failed to heed the numerous warnings from the first half that Smith was an aerial threat.


Argyle had a chance to equalise almost immediately but Alessandra miscontrolled the ball when in a good shooting position.


Gurrieri had a goalbound shot blocked by Wimbledon defender Alan Bennett in the 58th minute.


Argyle made their first substitution soon afterwards, with Berry replacing Gurrieri as part of a change of tactics.


Berry and Purrington played as wing-backs, with Blanchard moving into central defence with Trotman and Nelson.


Alessandra also moved into a central role behind Reid and Lavery as Sheridan tried a new approach to the contest.


Reid went close to putting Argyle level in the 66th minute when a close range header from Alessandra's corner was scrambled away for a corner.


That chance apart, Wimbledon defended solidly and continued to frustrate the visitors' attacking intentions.


Sheridan made a double substitution in the 81st minute in an attempt to force an equaliser.


Lavery and Alessandra were replaced by Tope Obadeyi and Nathan Thomas respectively for the closing stages of the game.


It was a debut for Thomas, who signed for the Pilgrims as a free agent on Christmas Eve.


Argyle almost drew level moments later when a fierce 25-yard shot from Reid was superbly saved by Worner.


Reid was now partnered in attack by Obadeyi, with Thomas playing behind them.


Argyle had most of the possession and their adventure paid off when Reid equalised in the 88th minute.


A superb cross-pitch pass from Purrington picked out the Argyle striker and he drilled the ball across Worner and into the bottom corner of the net.


It was an emphatic finish for Reid's 12th goal of the season in all competitions.


The change of tactics had certainly benefited Argyle as it gave them more of a platform to build their attacks from.


They pushed forward for a late winning goal but it remained 1-1 until full-time, even after four minutes of added time.


.


Murray overlooked for British knighthood despite 'historic' Wimbledon win


Wimbledon champion Andy Murray has reportedly been overlooked for a British knighthood in next week's New Year Honours list, despite becoming the first British man to win the Grand Slam tournament in 77 years.


Murray was handed an Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the New Year's Honours a year ago after winning the Olympic gold medal at London 2012.


According to The Independent, although the British PM's office said that it would recommend Murray for the honour in recognition of his historic victory at the All England Club this July, the Scot has fallen foul of Honours list protocol, which states that a decent interval of time must pass between awards.


However, government officials criticised the decision - made by the sports honours committee that is chaired by the former London 2012 chairman Lord Coe, as 'stuffy', while another said that the strict rules encouraged well known people to 'game' the system by turning down lesser honours in the hope of getting 'upgraded' the next year.


Officials say that, as a general rule, MBEs are for people who have made a major contribution to their local community, OBEs are for those whose achievements are recognised nationally, while CBEs and knighthoods are for those whose performance is internationally renowned.


The New Year Honours list, which will be published next Tuesday, has been described by government officials as 'rather boring', the report added. ( ANI)


Review of the Year 2013

Review of the Year 2013 - January to March

5:00am Sunday 29th December 2013 in News By Nick Hitchens, Assistant Editor


The time lord was seen in Wimbledon


January


There was early excitement in the year for sci-fi fans after it was revealed Dr Who was being filmed at Wimbledon Studios.


The BBC chose the Jubilee Way venue to record its 50th anniversary one-off show.



Home grown tennis star Ross Hutchins announced he had been diagnosed cancer.


The doubles specialist who had represented Great Britain in the Davis Cup has Hodgkin's Lymphoma It was announced in the summer that cancer had gone into remission.


There was shock for six voluntary groups dedicated to supporting the elderly in the borough after they were told they would lose their council funding.


In a reshuffle of how the council handed out grants, The Wimbledon Guild were the winners receiving almost double their previous allocation of funds.


February


Multi-billion pound plans to build Crossrail 2, a new overground and underground train route linking south west London and north east London are unveiled.


The plans include making Wimbledon Station a hub providing huge investment opportunities. Construction of the route would be unlikely to being until after 2018.



Glamour model and gossip magnet Katie Price's not-too-inconspicuous car is spotted in Wimbledon Village sparking rumours the keen horse-rider could be set to move into the neigh-bourhood.


There was excitement in Mitcham when BBC film crew mysteriously appeared for a succession of weekends. It was later revealed the cameras were in Merton to shoot the new Alan Partridge Film staring Steve Coogan. Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa was released this summer.


March


Business magnate Paschal Taggart announced he wanted to transform Wimbledon Greyhound track in the Royal Ascot of dog racing.


The Irishman said his company would invest £60m if given planning permission to take over the site.


The move ramped up pressure on AFC Wimbledon who also have plans to take over the site.



Pog the donkey became a star of the stage as he was signed up to appear in the opera Carmen at New Wimbledon Theatre.


The five-year-old grey brown donkey from Tring, Hertfordshire, appeared in Ellen Kent's production of the classic.


A teenager became an overnight millionaire after selling his mobile phone app to internet giant Yahoo for a reporter £20m.


Kings pupil 17-year-old Nick D'Aloisio, from Wimbledon, created Summly, an app that summarises news stories from popular media outlets. He was also offered a position at Yahoo.


Review of the year: births, deaths, horsemeat and Wimbledon - Telegraph.co.uk

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Pope Francis I (Getty Images)


He could not have been more open about his disdain for unfettered, Wild West capitalism, or more public about his paramount commitment to the needs of the poor. Swapping the papal Mercedes in favour of a Ford Focus, the gaudy red shoes for plain black ones, and the grandeur of the Apostolic Palace for a modest two-bedroom apartment, he was even rumoured to be slipping unnoticed out of the Vatican at night to tend to the homeless of Rome.


Around the globe, those of all faiths and of none were smitten with His Holiness, the former Irish president Mary McAleese telling a journalist that 'even the 'kick the Pope' Orangemen of Northern Island love Pope Francis'.


Lady Thatcher (Rex Features)


Whether that implacable cold warrior and resolute free marketeer Lady Thatcher would have shared the besottedness for the first pontiff to deny being a Marxist, we can only speculate. She too revered the teachings of St Francis of Assisi, which might have provided some common ground had they met. But a month after the papal election, the Baroness passed away after years of poor health. In death, she inevitably remained a polarising force. Regardless of the Franciscan line about replacing discord with harmony that she recited on entering Downing Street in 1979, this is how one imagines she would have liked it.


The denunciations were far scarcer than the eulogies. Glenda Jackson was the solitary Labour MP to attack her memory during the House of Commons tribute, while protesters outside her St Paul's funeral remained mostly respectful.


The time-honoured doctrinal row about whether Thatcher's lasting influence on Britain was fully benign revived, but on one thing everybody from the post-Thatcherite right to the neo-Bennite left could and did agree. No peacetime leader in centuries, if ever, altered the direction of this country, and even perhaps the national DNA, like the force of nature who was born above a corner shop in Grantham, blew away British industrial decline like a tornado, and died in a suite at the Ritz. Whatever our political sensibilities, as the recovered stroke victim Andrew Marr observed in his Modern History of Britain, we are all of us Thatcher's Children now.


Less perhaps in honour of her memory than yielding to the demands of expediency, David Cameron rediscovered some latent Thatcherite instincts of his own. With Ukip still attracting an alarming percentage of natural Tory voters, and spooked by the rage of traditional Conservatives at his championing of the same sex marriage legislation, the Prime Minister tacked noticeably to the right as 2013 drew on.


The pressure to defang Nigel Farage, whose appeal seemed impervious to the more outre´ statements from Godfrey Bloom and other blunt-speaking irregulars, led to tougher talk on Europe and immigration. Deciding whether shoring up the core vote is more or less crucial to his chances in 2015 than alienating floating voters by vacating the centre ground remained a troublesome calculation.


Partly perhaps because the PM was wobbling now and then on that fraying tightrope, and despite the gratifying pace of the economic recovery, it was the Leader of the Opposition who seemed more in control of the political agenda than the PM - and never more so than with the theatrical pledge to freeze energy bills in an assured party conference speech.


He had his troubles with Unite, Ed Balls and Damian McBride's beautifully written book, while the majority understandably continue to find it a challenge to conjure the mental image of Ed Miliband waving from the steps of No 10 without an involuntary snort of derision.


He still resembles an auditioner for the title role in the stage play about Adrian Mole struggling to adapt to middle age, and always will. But for all his presentational problems, it was Miliband who led the Commons to flex the muscle that had atrophied under New Labour, but has happily revived since, by voting to stop Mr Cameron launching hastily conceived air strikes against President Assad's forces in Syria after the alleged use of chemical weapons against his own people.


Ed Miliband (Reuters)


Whether by luck or design, Miliband captured the extreme national fatigue with blundering military adventurism in Muslim lands, and in the process rewrote British foreign policy (and effectively that of the United States, where the President hurriedly abandoned his own plans for a Syrian intervention) for the short term at least.


Meanwhile, his brother David followed the Louise Mensch from Parliament to New York, where Milibandroid the Elder makes his own contribution to preserving Syrian lives as head of the charity International Rescue (no more Thunderbirds gags, thank you).


The tone for another monstrous year of civil war in Syria was set on January 1, when the airport at Aleppo was closed by bombing. The horror raged unabated as 2013 drew on, though compassion fatigue dictates that we read less and less about the conflict the longer it endures. 'In this globalized world, we have fallen into globalized indifference,' as Pope Francis put it. 'We have become used to the suffering of others.'


He clearly has not, and in July made his first official foreign trip to the Mediterranean island of Lampedusa, off the coast of which scores of economic migrants from Africa had drowned when their makeshift boats capsized. Holding a mass in their memory, he used the upturned wreck of a fishing vessel for the altar. 'These brothers and sisters of ours were trying to leave difficult situations to find a little serenity and peace,' he told a congregation of some 10,000 gathered on a sports field. 'They sought a better place for themselves and their families, but instead they found death.'


Anti-Morsi protesters celebrate in Cairo's Tahrir Square after he was toppled (Getty Images)


As ever, violence, turmoil and Acts of God plagued the developing world. The Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi was overthrown in July, and replaced by a military regime, though whether this was a coup d'etat or an expression of the popular will was oddly difficult to define.


The menace of Islamic extremism - no stranger to Britain, with Drummer Lee Rigby viciously hacked to death outside his barracks in Woolwich by the two converts convicted of his murder last week - saw the slaughter of 61 civilians and five Kenyan soldiers during a lengthy siege in a Nairobi shopping mall in September. A month later, Pope Francis led silent prayers in Rome for the more than 6,000 who died when Typhoon Haiyan ravaged the Philippines.


Here at home, where in that disaster's aftermath it felt insensitive to moan about the stormy autumn, there were moments of pure pleasure to leaven the gloom, though the first of two joyous domestic events in July fortnight was tinged with reflective grief. Interviewed by Sue Barker shortly before Wimbledon, Andy Murray wept and fell silent when asked about the massacre of 17 schoolmates and a teacher at his primary school in Dumblane - a unique atrocity here, but a tragically regular occurrence again in 2013 in the US, where the gun laws remained resolutely unreformed - where he escaped by hiding beneath the headmaster's desk.


Andy Murray kisses the winners trophy at Wimbledon (Reuters)


After Murray had nervily progressed to the final, his home town led the rejoicing when Novak Djokovic netted a backhand to end a closing game of staggering tension. It was never going to be entirely plain sailing, of course, and after Murray blew three consecutive championship points, Djokovic had three break points of his own to level the third set at 5-5.


Had the ferociously resilient Serb taken one of them, he might well have surfed the wave of Centre Court angst, and inflicted a national sporting trauma to put the current Ashes calamity to shame. Watched by one of his rivals for the title of Greatest Living Scot, Sir Sean Connery - but not another, Sir Alex Ferguson, who was marking his retirement as Manchester United manager with a rejujevating cruise - Murray came through the crisis with what looked like ungodly calm, though he later confessed to shaking uncontrollably.


It had famously been 77 years since a British man had won the Wimbledon singles title, and 119 years since a new born baby enabled a sovereign (Queen Victoria on the birth of Edward VIII) to look down from the throne upon three generations of heirs. Prince George of Cambridge ended that wait when he arrived, weighing an impressive 8lbs, 6oz, on July 22. The national goo-ing and international gaa-ing may have been a little intense for some tastes, but the monarchy ends the year more firmly cemented in the country's affections than ever.


Daniel Day-Lewis as President Abraham Lincoln (AP)


The same cannot be said in America of Barack Obama. His hero Abraham Lincoln had a fine year, with Daniel Day Lewis becoming the first man to win three Best Actor Oscars for playing Honest Abe in the film. But the incumbent's popularity declined sharply, despite a stronger economic recovery than our own and the Republicans' 11th hour retreat from the edge of the fiscal cliff, due to the technical catastrophes that affected the online introduction of the Affordable Care Act ('Obamacare').


With typically neat timing, Hillary Clinton jumped ship as Secretary of State when Obama's second term began to spend more time with her presidential ambitions, and while the outcome of the 2015 British general election remains impossible to call, she looks as close to a shoo-in for the White House in 2017 as could be imagined almost three years ahead of the vote.


She left it to her replacement John Kerry to cut the nuclear deal with Iran's new and more moderate Preisdent Hassan Rouhani that lengthens the odds against another dangerous and unpredictable middle eastern war. With Syria decommissioning its chemical weapons, thanks primarily to the almost sarcastic offer blurted by Mr Kerry, and Teheran softening its rhetoric, the world in which Prince George spent his first Christmas appears a shade less dangerous than the one in which he was conceived. Students of an increasingly deranged North Korean leadership, which engaged in more missile testing brinksmanship in 2013, might wish to argue the point. Kim Jung-Un's recent execution of his 'worse than a dog' uncle Jang Song-thaek, hints growing instabilty within the regime, and that 2014 may mark the time to stop finding North Korean lunacy quite so amusing for fear of laughing to death.


Chris Huhne (AFP)


A marginally less summary form of justice than that visited on Jang Song-thaek saw Chris Huhne and Vicky Pryce become house guests of Her Majesty for their speeding ticket conspiracy (although sadly for fans of the light comedy of manners, who had high hopes for a reworked prison version of Noel Coward's Private Lives, not in the same cell). Stuart Hall went down for a host of repellent crimes as the post-Jimmy Savile investigation into 'historical' celebrity sex offences rumbled on. A busy year for the courts ends with Rebekah Brooks, Andy Coulson and their fellow defendants barely halfway through the marathon phone-hacking trial.


Ronnie Biggs, who interrupted his time in jug for his part in the Great Train Robbery with that refreshing extended break in Rio was among those to whom we said farewell, as we did to Michael Winner, David Frost, Seamus Heaney, James Gandolfini, the Richards Briers and Griffiths, Peter O'Toole, Joan Fontaine, Iain Banks, Hugo Chavez and Lou Reed.


Yet it was the deaths of two titans of the turbulent second half of the 20th century which brand 2013 most indelibly on the memory. The personal styles of Margaret Thatcher and Nelson Mandela could have been no more starkly contrasted than their world views and respective routes to power. What they achieved when they took power, however, had this in common.


Nelson Mandela (Getty Images)


By sheer force of will and personality as much as political talent, each had more impact on the countries they led - Thatcher by smashing the post-war concensus to smithereens, and reversing the post-imperial defeatism; Mandela by steering South Africa clear of the universally anticipated post-apartheid bloodbath - than could be expected of any one human being. To some degree - the one for the part she played in ending the Cold War in the western democracies' favour; the other for offering a shining example that wicked injustice can be corrected without being murderously avenged - they also changed the world.


Their names will echo down the centuries. And if their passing underscores the depressing sense that the age of titans has passed, and that we are condemned to live through an era of pygmies, the emergence of Pope Francis as an shining light of humility and humanity offered some hope, fragile and nebulous, of better days to come.


And so, in the faith that those better days will not be long delayed, to a few bullish predictions of what we may expect from 2014.


The year begins with another outpouring of royalist joy when Zara Phillips has her baby. Concerns about the father's aptitude recede when Mike Tindall, claiming to have matured since that incident outside a New Zealand bar, tells reporters that he passed his NCT 'How to Distinguish an Infant from a Dwarf' course at the third attempt.


On Valentine's Day, an embarrased Nick Clegg admits that the selfie he posted on his Facebook page was photoshopped. Sources close to Mr Clegg say he has no regrets about imposing his head between President Obama and David Cameron, since he was at the Mandela memorial, but that with hindsight placing Socrates, Miley Cyrus and David Lloyd-George in the background was an error of judgment.


Chancellor George Osborne (Bloomberg)


In his Budget of March 19, George Osborne unveils a new windfall tax. 'From next April,' announces the Chancellor, 'any blond Daily Telegraph columnist who has served as mayor of a capital city will, if he returns to this House, have his parliamentary salary subjected to a surcharge of 4,500 per cent. This is a cental plank of our debt-reduction stategy, Mr Speaker, and in no way connected with any future election for the leadership of my party.'


The first serious retail scandal of the year rocks the supermarkets in April, when tests on frozen beef lasagnes find a 100 per cent concentration of beef.


David Cameron's worst fears are realised in May, when Ukip takes 31 per cent of the popular vote, and the Tories limp in third behind Labour. 'Yes, this is a wake up call,' he tells BBC political editor Nick Robinson. And yes, I hear what the voters are saying. But I am no Corporal Jones, and there will be no panic.' After asking Robinson for directions to Walmington-on-Sea, he is seen driving away in a n antiquated butcher's van brandishing a Crimean War bayonet.


In June, scandal rocks the World Cup after England fluke a 1-0 win over Costa Rica in the final group game. Although Roy Hodgson's lads were already eliminated, after heavy defeats to Italy and Uruguay, FIFA calls in Interpol. 'We have not detected any unusual betting patterns, but this result makes no sense at all,' says Sepp Blatter. 'We have strong suspicions of match-fixing.'


The energy companies fuel doubts about cartel tactics in July by jointly raising their charges by 27 per cent. 'This month, with the average ambient temperature at 78 degrees Fahrenheit,' a statement signed by all Big Six bosses explains, 'demand is outstripping supply by such a margin that we have no choice.'


The August Silly Season finds Adam Afriyie accused by Cameron loyalists of mounting yet another leadership campaign. The 'Tory Obama' admits that holding a get-together for all his political supporters in a photo-me booth outside a Tesco's near Windsor, but insists the only subject under discussion was how to promote party unity.


Nothing whatsoever happens in September, but a surprise Cabinet reshuffle in early October sees Theresa May made Chief Whip to quell residual rebelliousness from the Euro elections. Replacing her as Home Secretary, Andrew Mitchell declares: 'there will be no reprisals against the police. To prove there are no hard feelings, I am having the Met uniform redesigned as a mark of my respect for the brave men and women who protect us. In future, all constables will wear electric crimson posing pouches emblazoned across the crotch with the new Met motto, 'Pants On Fire!'.


In a startling diplomatic development, the Ecuadorian ambassador storms into the Foreign Office in November to claim asylum. 'I can't take another minute of Julian Assange, he's doing my head in,' Ana Alban tells William Hague. 'Do you have an opening for an office cleaner? I'll sleep in a broom cupboard between shifts.'


In December, after another eccentric Autumn Statement display from the shadow Chancellor, a forward-looking Robert Mugabe books Ed Balls to do the signing for the deaf at his funeral. 'His bewildering range of hand gestures are not always easy to follow,' admits a spokesman, 'but he's better than the guy who did Mandela's memorial, and that's good enough for us.'







AFC Wimbledon v Plymouth preview

Friday 27th December 2013 15:08



£5 free every week


Team news for Sunday's League Two clash between AFC Wimbledon and Plymouth Argyle at Kingsmeadow Stadium.


AFC Wimbledon are set to be without George Francomb when they host Plymouth.


The winger was sent off during the Boxing Day defeat by Southend and faces a three-match ban unless the Dons successfully appeal against the decision.


Skipper Alan Bennett needs a fitness test on the ankle injury which kept him out on Thursday while midfielder Harry Pell remains sidelined with a knee problem.


But George Porter returns from a ban and fellow wideman Chris Arthur (ankle) should be involved again after his first appearance in two months as a sub against the Shrimpers.


Plymouth manager John Sheridan must decide whether to recall full-back Durrell Berry for the clash with AFC Wimbledon.


Berry missed Plymouth's 3-2 victory at promotion-chasing Oxford on Boxing Day through suspension and may be kept out of the side by 17-year-old stand-in Ben Purrington, who made a real impression on his debut.


Fellow left-back Jamie Reckord was ruled out of the trip to the Kassam Stadium with an ankle injury and he is unlikely to add to his 16 appearances for the Pilgrims, with his loan from Wolves set to end on January 1.


Sheridan will look to in-form strike pair Caolan Lavery and Reuben Reid for inspiration as his side aim for a third straight win.


Woking, Richmond and Wimbledon pantos make wishes come true

The Ambassadors Theatre Group will donate part of their panto proceeds to the When You Wish Upon A Star charity


Jeremy Legat and Henry Winkler in Peter Pan at the Richmond Theatre


The New Victoria Theatre, Woking, and its parent company Ambassadors Theatre Group (ATG), along with panto producers First Family Entertainment (FFE) have joined forces with the charity When You Wish Upon A Star this panto season to make dreams come true this Christmas.


When You Wish Upon A Star is aiming to raise a whopping £65,000 to charter the Orient Express and take children suffering from life threatening illnesses on a magical train ride to visit the Warner Bros. Studio Tour - The Making of Harry Potter.


FFE and ATG have pledged to donate 50p from every pantomime programme sold to this cause. ATG's theatres will also be fundraising during the panto season to help When You Wish Upon A Star reach their target.


Kevin Wood, FFE's Chief Executive, said: 'We are thrilled to be supporting this wonderful charity. Pantomime and Christmas are both closely associated with children and can be very magical indeed when combined.


'We hope that by pledging to support When You Wish Upon A Star, we may be able to wave our own magic wand to help make some dreams come true for these poorly children.


'We ask everyone who comes to our pantomimes this year to please help us spread some panto magic by giving generously to make this trip a reality.'


Margaret Rowarth, National Events Manager for When You Wish Upon A Star, said: 'The amazing people of Family First Entertainment and the Ambassador Theatre Group are working together to spread lots of fairy dust, for many of our very special children. We are thrilled to have their support and in July 2014, they will turn the dreams of some very sick children, into a reality.'


FFE are producing 10 fun- filled family pantomimes for the Christmas 2013/2014 season with a star-studded line up including Jo Brand in her pantomime debut and Matthew Kelly in Aladdin at the New Wimbledon Theatre; Justin Fletcher in Cinderella at New Victoria Theatre Woking and Henry Winkler as Captain Hook in Peter Pan at the Richmond Theatre.


New Wimbledon Theatre Tickets £11.90-£47.40. Box office 020 8545 7900 or www.atgtickets.com/venues/new-wimbledon-theatre . Tickets £13.90 - £32.40 (plus a £2.85 transaction fee), on 0844 871 7645 (fees apply). Groups booking line 0844 871 7601 or online at www.atgtickets.com/woking (fees apply). Visit www.atgtickets.com/woking to catch all the latest exciting news for all things Panto and to book your tickets for this wonderful spectacle.


Richmond Theatre Box Office 0844 871 7651 (fees apply) or www.atgtickets.com/richmond (fees apply). Tickets: £10 - £32.50 (premium seats £37.50). Family tickets from as little as £40.


Click here to view more theatre events


Injuries and Other Wimbledon Weirdness


The tennis year was full of riveting story lines: the dominance of Serena Williams, the triumphant comeback of Rafael Nadal, the long-awaited Wimbledon title for Andy Murray and Britain, a record-setting year for the Bryan brothers, the steep decline of Roger Federer.


But no single day was more memorable to this harried reporter than June 26, the third day of my first Wimbledon.


Nadal's first-round loss two days earlier, one of only seven losses he would have all year, should have been an omen.


But I had barely settled into my desk at the All England Club before the next harbinger came. John Isner injured his knee three points into his second-round match and retired after 15 minutes. About an hour later, Victoria Azarenka's knee, twisted in a gruesome fall in the first round, forced her to withdraw.


Player after player paraded into interview rooms not to talk about wins and losses but shoulders and knees and the unusually slippery grass. By the end of the day, seven players withdrew or retired because of injuries.


But soon top players were coming in to talk about losses, too. By the end of the day, 12 seeded players, including seven former No. 1s, lost.


Before the seven-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer and 116th-ranked Sergiy Stakhovsky began the final match on Centre Court, the nervous jokes had started about how a Federer loss would be the most appropriate ending to the day. When Federer fell behind, two sets to one, reporters from all over the world were grumbling at their TV screens, 'We don't need any more news today!'


(It was not a slow news day for sportswriters anywhere. Across the Atlantic, New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez was arrested and charged with murder.)


Of course, Federer lost, his earliest exit in a Grand Slam tournament in 10 years. That was how the day had to end.


Thus, hashtags were born: #wimbledone, #wimblegeddon, #wimbleweird. By the time Williams lost in the fourth round a few days later, who could be surprised anymore.


It might have been an utterly strange, once-in-a-lifetime day, but it told a bigger story, one that did not end on that wild Wednesday.


Isner's early exit was perhaps the most painful symbol in a historically bad year for American men in singles.


Marin Cilic called it a 'very black day' when he withdrew that afternoon with a knee injury. But a few months later, it was revealed that Cilic had withdrawn after learning he had failed a doping test at a tournament a few months before.


After her loss to a qualifier that day, Maria Sharapova played only one more match on tour this year, hampered by injuries.


Even Federer's shocking loss was merely the biggest blip in a year full of them.


Former Crystal Palace and Wimbledon FC chairman Ron Noades dies

Former Crystal Palace and Wimbledon FC chairman Ron Noades dies

12:13pm Tuesday 24th December 2013 in News By Andrew Bloss, Reporter



Ron Noades had been battling lung cancer


Former Crystal Palace chairman Ron Noades has died.


The Purley resident passed away last night. He had been battling against lung cancer for the past year.


Mr Noades oversaw one of the most successful periods in Crystal Palace's history, which saw the Eagles reach the FA Cup Final and finish third in the old First Division. His stewardship ran from 1981 to 1998.


He was also chairman of Wimbledon FC in the late 1970s.


Fans and former players have taken to internet forums and twitter to express their condolences.


Geoff Thomas, who captained Palace when Noades was in charge, tweeted: 'Just heard the sad news that my Chairman when I was at Crystal Palace Ron Noades past away last night.


'Our thoughts and love go to his family.'


On the BBS, a Palace fans forum, one poster said: ' RIP Ron, the Chairman who presided over arguably our greatest period as a club.


Although not a favourite among many he done a lot of good for the club, and he seemed like a nice enough guy the couple of times I met him.


'Such a shame on the timing. Condolences to the Noades family, thanks for the memories Uncle Ron.'


Earlier on this year Mr Noades talked about his battle against lung cancer.


He was diagnosed in November 2012 and had recently been reliant on oxygen cylinders as he only had 19 per cent use of his lungs.


The 76-year-old went through courses of chemotherapy, radiotherapy and brain radiotherapy to fight the disease.


He said despite his ill health, he would carry on working with his businesses and doing charity work with his wife Novello.


Leave your tributes to Ron Noades below or email abloss@london.newsquest.co.uk.


Major transport disruption as storm damage shuts rail network

Major transport disruption as storm damage shuts rail network on First Capital Connect, Southern and South West Trains

7:03am Tuesday 24th December 2013 in News By Matt Watts, Assistant Editor


A fallen tree blocked Church Road in Croydon overnight


Fallen trees and flooding from the storm overnight have caused major problems on the transport network this morning.


Southern trains said it had cancelled all services until further notice because it is unable to properly assess the damage from the storm until daylight. It does not expect trains to run again until much later this morning.


First Capital Connect is advising people to only travel if necessary. It has suspended Thameslink services on the Wimbledon/Sutton Loop until further notice due to Network Rail testing the route to make sure it is safe to run trains.


South West Trains has said it will not be running trains on any routes until at least 10am.


Trams have also been affected with the Croydon tramlink service suspended between Lloyd Park and New Addington due to damage caused by flooding at Addington Village.


The road network has also been affected by flooding and fallen trees.


In Croydon, the A232 Shirley Road has been closed both ways due to flooding between A232 Addiscombe Road and A232 Wickham Road.


The A212 Wellesley Road was closed in both directions due to an accident between Station Road and A222 St James's Road at about midnight, but it reopened shortly after 7am.


Marlpit Lane, Coulsdon has been closed due to flooding between Chaldon Way and B2030 Coulsdon Road.


In Cheam a fallen tree closed A232 High Street in both ways overnight at A217 St Dunstan's Hill but this has now been reported as cleared.


Rail companies are advising people to check their websites and the national rail website before attempting to travel.


A statement from Southern trains on their website this morning said: 'The stormy weather overnight into this morning has caused considerable difficulties for our rail network and the surrounding road network.


'As a result, several lines of route are suffering from a combination of flooding, blockages from fallen trees, power supply failure or potential landslips.


'We will not be able to gauge the full extent of this damage or the prospect for operating services safely until daylight. Currently we are working closely with our colleagues in Network Rail to prioritise the clearing and proving of routes to be safe before trains can operate.


'This means that train services are suspended until this work is complete and we do not expect this to happen until much later this morning.'



Flooding at Marlpit Lane, Coulsdon (Pic: Daniel Hutchings)


First Capital Connect said: 'Severe weather is impacting our network. We advise you to travel today only if your journey is necessary.


'There will be no trains on the Wimbledon/Sutton Loop until further notice due to Network Rail testing the route to make sure it is safe to run trains.'


'Services are likely to remain disrupted for the rest of the day so anyone travelling is advised to do so as early as possible to ensure they reach their destination on Christmas Eve.'


Services are already expected to shut down from 8pm for engineering works over the Christmas period.


Keep checking this website for travel updates.


Has the storm caused you problems in the run up to Christmas? Has there been storm damage near you? Send your pictures and stories to mwatts@london.newsquest.co.uk or leave a comment in the space below.


Major transport disruption as storm damage shuts rail network on First Capital ...

Major transport disruption as storm damage shuts rail network on First Capital Connect, Southern and South West Trains

7:03am Tuesday 24th December 2013 in News By Matt Watts, Assistant Editor


A fallen tree blocked Church Road in Croydon overnight


Fallen trees and flooding from the storm overnight have caused major problems on the transport network this morning.


Southern trains said it had cancelled all services until further notice because it is unable to properly assess the damage from the storm until daylight. It does not expect trains to run again until much later this morning.


First Capital Connect is advising people to only travel if necessary. It has suspended Thameslink services on the Wimbledon/Sutton Loop until further notice due to Network Rail testing the route to make sure it is safe to run trains.


South West Trains has said it will not be running trains on any routes until at least 10am.


Trams have also been affected with the Croydon tramlink service suspended between Lloyd Park and New Addington due to damage caused by flooding at Addington Village.


The road network has also been affected by flooding and fallen trees.


In Croydon, the A232 Shirley Road has been closed both ways due to flooding between A232 Addiscombe Road and A232 Wickham Road.


The A212 Wellesley Road was closed in both directions due to an accident between Station Road and A222 St James's Road at about midnight, but it reopened shortly after 7am.


Marlpit Lane, Coulsdon has been closed due to flooding between Chaldon Way and B2030 Coulsdon Road.


In Cheam a fallen tree closed A232 High Street in both ways overnight at A217 St Dunstan's Hill but this has now been reported as cleared.


Rail companies are advising people to check their websites and the national rail website before attempting to travel.


A statement from Southern trains on their website this morning said: 'The stormy weather overnight into this morning has caused considerable difficulties for our rail network and the surrounding road network.


'As a result, several lines of route are suffering from a combination of flooding, blockages from fallen trees, power supply failure or potential landslips.


'We will not be able to gauge the full extent of this damage or the prospect for operating services safely until daylight. Currently we are working closely with our colleagues in Network Rail to prioritise the clearing and proving of routes to be safe before trains can operate.


'This means that train services are suspended until this work is complete and we do not expect this to happen until much later this morning.'



Flooding at Marlpit Lane, Coulsdon (Pic: Daniel Hutchings)


First Capital Connect said: 'Severe weather is impacting our network. We advise you to travel today only if your journey is necessary.


'There will be no trains on the Wimbledon/Sutton Loop until further notice due to Network Rail testing the route to make sure it is safe to run trains.'


'Services are likely to remain disrupted for the rest of the day so anyone travelling is advised to do so as early as possible to ensure they reach their destination on Christmas Eve.'


Services are already expected to shut down from 8pm for engineering works over the Christmas period.


Keep checking this website for travel updates.


Has the storm caused you problems in the run up to Christmas? Has there been storm damage near you? Send your pictures and stories to mwatts@london.newsquest.co.uk or leave a comment in the space below.


NOT DONE YET!! Mahesh Bhupathi says he will play on till Wimbledon next year


Tennis - Bhupathi was supposed to call it quits after 2013 season


Tennis Stories 24 Dec 2013 - 06:52 / by Prakash / reads 10.Source:



Tennis - While Leander Paes is still going strong and wants to play till the Rio Olympics in 2016, his former friend and partner Mahesh Bhupathi had said that he would quit the sport at the end of the 2013 season.


Now Bhupathi says he is hoping to play on till Wimbledon in 2014 and wants to play a light schedule with the hope of making the ranking cut-off for Wimbledon,


Speaking in Mumbai where he was part of an Indian Tennis Players Association event, Bhupathi commented, 'The target is to try and make the cut for Wimbledon. I don't know my schedule for the year though. If I can play six tournaments this year I will be happy. I am anyway travelling for work. I had to go to Sydney for work; I had to go to Melbourne for four days of work. So I might as well play. Plus, I love the game.


'I am hoping to play in Dubai at least since I (with Michael Llodra) won the title last year and have to defend those points. I have to make enough points to make it to Wimbledon. I am playing with Rajeev Ram in Melbourne, we'll see after that.'


Bhupathi has dropped to no. 35 in the world rankings after a lackluster season in 2013.



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