Showing posts with label Royal wedding live. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal wedding live. Show all posts

Mike Tindall

Michael James Tindall, MBE born 18 October 1978 is a rugby player who plays Outside centre for Gloucester Rugby and has captained the England team. His fiancée is Zara Phillips, the daughter of HRH The Princess Royal and the granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth II.
Tindall was born in Otley, Leeds, West Yorkshire, and was educated at the Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, Wakefield, while his father Phil captained Otley. He refused braces to straighten his teeth, one of his greatest regrets; and served fish and chips from a van while studying.

Bath
Tindall joined Bath straight from school, as an 18-year-old in 1997. At that point the centre pairing at Bath and England were Jeremy Guscott and Phil de Glanville. But after the 1999 Rugby World Cup, Tindall stepped up to become a regular fixture at both club and country level, making his debut against Ireland at Twickenham in 2000 alongside Mike Catt.
Despite receiving criticism over the years, in particular from Will Carling and ex-Bath fly-half Stuart Barnes, he cemented the outside centre position as his own with a partnership with inside centre Will Greenwood, playing in the 2003 Rugby World Cup. Tindall played in the number 12 jersey and played at outside centre, with Greenwood in the number 13. The shirt numbers frequently misled people into thinking they played the other way around, though in fact those who watched saw that Tindall all but invariably lined up outside Greenwood. He was dropped for the semi-final in favour of Mike Catt, whose kicking was required in the rainy weather, but reinstated in the final.
Tindall missed the 2005 Six Nations with a foot injury and subsequently failed to regain his fitness for the British and Irish Lions tour to New Zealand. Described by England's former head coach, Andy Robinson as the 'heartbeat' of the side, Tindall was gradually finding his way back to form following a lengthy absence from the game during 2005.


Personal life
Tindall has two criminal convictions for drunk driving. On 8 January 2009 he was convicted, was banned from driving for three years and fined £500 for drink-driving, with £75 costs. This was the consequence of an incident on the M4 motorway on 15 March 2008, following a day out at Cheltenham Racing Festival with Zara Phillips. This was Tindall's second drunk driving conviction. The earlier conviction, in 2000, resulted in a 16-month disqualification (which was in itself in excess of the obligatory 12-month disqualification for a first offence).
On 21 December 2010 it was announced that he was engaged to Zara Phillips, the daughter of HRH The Princess Anne, Princess Royal, and her first husband Captain Mark Phillips. Phillips is the granddaughter of HM Queen Elizabeth II and HRH The Duke of Edinburgh. The wedding is set for July 30, 2011.


Gloucester Rugby
After returning from injury in the Autumn of 2005, Tindall regained his England place but this time at number 12. However at club level he continued to play at 13 with the 12 shirt going to Henry Paul. The partnership was heavily criticised as being flat and boring and Tindall spent much of the season showing a poor run of form despite selection week in, week out. It wasn't until an incident at Tindall's girlfriend's birthday party that Henry Paul broke club rules and fell out of favour with Gloucester Rugby coach, Dean Ryan. This brought in the introduction of young centre Anthony Allen, which towards the end of the season helped forged what became the start of a very powerful centre partnership. His partnership with Jamie Noon for England was much criticised, with many people claiming that the bulky partnership lacked imagination and play-making ability.Tindall has a strong cult following however, and is often nicknamed "The Fridge" due to his sizeable bulk.
During his recuperation from another injury in 2005, Tindall entered the prestigious British Poker Open tournament, finishing in 3rd place in his heat before being eliminated by John Gale. On 18 November 2006 Tindall made his first Guinness Premiership start of the season against third-placed Wasps. Troubled by a calf injury so far into the 2006/07 season, he had made only two appearances as a replacement, against Worcester and Irish Tindall came back from his injury however with a much more highly rated run of form. His 10, 12 and 13 partnership of Ryan Lamb, Anthony Allen and himself inspired him to play more attacking and exciting rugby and since has become a Gloucester Rugby favourite. Gloucester supporters now affectionately hold him with high regard and he continued the season extremely well in helping Gloucester Rugby with his own running abilities, powerful defence and tactical kicking to top spot of the Guinness Premiership.
Tindall was again included in the England starting line up for the 2007 Six Nations opener against Scotland at Twickenham, under new head coach Brian Ashton. Selected to play outside former Rugby League star Andy Farrell, the pair combined to make what is arguably the largest centre partnership in international history.
In April 2007 playing away against Newcastle Falcons in the Guinness Premiership, Tindall broke his leg in a tackle on Toby Flood and this forced him to miss the rest of the season, including the Guinness Premiership final, where his leadership would have been critical in a young backline. This also precluded his selection for the 2007 Rugby World Cup.
In October 2007 Tindall returned to the Gloucester Rugby starting line up after recovering from injury against Worcester Warriors at home in the Guinness Premiership. Tindall had a fairytale comeback, scoring a try to the Shed's delight. He has since played most of Gloucester Rugby's games scoring a handful of tries including one against Ulster Rugby in the Heineken Cup, where he contributed to Gloucester Rugby setting a new record in the Tournament's history, the fastest time to score 4 tries and collect the try bonus point.
On 7 December 2007 against Bourgoin in the Heineken Cup, Tindall limped off the field with a severe shin injury sustained in a similar tackle from that done against Newcastle last season when Tindall broke his leg. Despite this injury, Tindall recovered fast and played the following week, and continued his form for Gloucester.
In February 2008 Tindall was named in England Head Coach Brian Ashton's squad for the upcoming 6 Nations tournament, and thus started for England at outside centre against Wales at Twickenham on 2 February 2008. Early in the second half of the game, Tindall dived on the ball in open play, landing on Welsh full-back Lee Byrne's foot which pressed up into his chest. Tindall was stretchered off showing signs of severe pain, but the immediate belief was damage to his ribcage, however 45 minutes later he was rushed to hospital, where it became clear he had punctured his lung, and also torn a 2 inch tear in his liver, in which 2 pints of blood bled before clotting. Tindall spent the following 5 days in intensive care before he was released to return to his home at Gatcombe Park.

Royal wedding live

Live coverage of the Royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton which will take place at Westminster Abbey on April 29.

11.08 Er, how odd. Apparently Kate Middleton is to do a Mumsnet live chat this afternoon at 1pm. We'll keep an eye on it, naturally. I suppose that Gordon Brown wasn't a mum either when he did his own live chat on the website, otherwise I'd start wondering whether this was a royal shotgun wedding.
11.03 A gambler is in with a chance of winning £72,000 if Kate Middleton wears the Queen's wedding tiara, a diamond-encrusted headpiece known as the Russian Fringe Tiara, for her wedding. It's 180 years old and was also a favourite of Queen Victoria, apparently. Miss Middleton will presumably avoid nodding too violently while she's wearing it.

10.54 Cutting Off Nose to Spite Face Dept: the Rail Maritime and Transport union (RMT) has said that it will refuse to take a day's holiday on Friday, because it has a policy of abolishing the monarchy.
RMT has a clear national policy supporting the abolition of the monarchy and so, on the day of the royal wedding, our head office will remain open for business as usual.
10.49 We have a name for the ultra-keen Royalist camped out outside Westminster Abbey. The Press Association says it is one John Loughrey, 56, "one of the most seasoned royal fans in Britain":
Mr Loughrey was the first to arrive last night with only a sleeping bag and two carrier bags at the start of a week-long vigil to ensure a prime position for the event.
He was dressed in a Kate and William T-shirt, emblazoned with the words "Diana Would Be Proud" with the images of Kate and William tied round his waist and a Union flag hat.
The former assistant chef, from Wandsworth, south west London, a self-confessed "super fan" of the late Diana, Princess of Wales, said he planned to stay in his position until Saturday.
"I have always been loyal to the Royal Family," he said.
"I think they are good for Britain and good for tourism. We have had them for more than 1,000 years and they make a great contribution to the life of this country."
10.18 The Telegraph's peerless Matt has captured the mood effortlessly, as ever:

10.12 Lady Antonia Fraser, who was among the crowds at Princess Elizabeth's wedding to Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten in 1947, recalls the euphoria of the crowds outside Buckingham Palace at Princess Elizabeth's post-war wedding:
"Into this severe, dutiful world came a real-life fairy story. The bride was a princess but she had dressed up as a soldier in the war, an ordinary ATS uniform being the modern equivalent of a goose girl's get-up. The bridegroom, tall, fair and handsome, was a sailor and a commoner, but he too was a prince in disguise, of royal stock.

10.04 Allison Pearson thinks that Kate Middleton will bring a "refreshing informality" to the Royal family with her "sensible, steely but warm-hearted" nature:
"Here is a modern woman, who, like Diana, Princess of Wales, is known for her kind heart and love of dancing, wears £40 polka-dot dresses from Topshop, and found herself auditioning for a role in a cantankerous institution that still runs according to rules that would make Queen Victoria feel at ease. Only Jane Austen would have guessed that the perfect person for the role would turn out to be a Miss Catherine Middleton of Bucklebury, Berkshire.

09.37 It may come as a surprise, by the way, that there is already a royal wedding movie. The made-for-TV film William and Kate - the Movie was shown yesterday on Channel 5. It will come as less of a surprise, possibly, that it's not very good - our own Neil Midgley says:
"It would have been no surprise to see Diana Dors pop out in full Hammer Horror costume. While this movie was ‘based on true events’, it certainly wasn’t based on true hairdos or soft furnishings."
09.18 And you should probably pack an umbrella for Friday. We report that heavy rain is forecast for the big day.
09.16 Peter Oborne, the Telegraph's chief political commentator, writes in praise of the "quiet wisdom" of the Windsors:
"There have been moments of difficulty, of which the abdication crisis in 1936 and the popular convulsion which followed the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997 have proved the most threatening. But the monarchy has pulled through – and it has rarely looked stronger than this week, as we approach the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton."
09.07 We're running a special royal wedding supplement today in the paper. Patrick Jephson, a former equerry and private secretary to HRH the Princess of Wales, writes that after the drama of William's parents' marriage, now is the time to show that the next generation has learned the value of calm predictability.

09.02 It might feel to you as though we're getting a bit ahead of ourselves here, but at least one ardent Royalist would disagree with you: the first spectator has bagged their spot outside Westminster Abbey already. Thanks to @WilliamsJon on Twitter for this splendid pic.

09.00 Morning, and welcome to the first day of the Telegraph's live coverage of the royal wedding between Prince William and Catherine ("Kate") Middleton.
We'll keep you up to date with all the stories as they happen. as well as showcasing the best of the Telegraph's coverage from the paper and online, until the big day itself, Friday April 29.
First, here are a few more practical pointers about what goes on on the day.