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Saturday 28 February 2009

Match Report - Port Vale v Luton Town, 28/02/09





Picture (Free Kick Leading to John McCombe goal, 1-0)

Port Vale 1 - 3 Luton Town

Bad defending and concentration just before half time drew the scores level and Luton had the impetus and momentum before romping to a 3-1 victory.

The game was marred by Vale fans demonstrations to get "Glover Out", and a defeat seemed inevitable after the first half hour once Luton's technical superiority shone through.

It was a deserved victory but symbolic of a sad state of affairs over both clubs: Vale - a club in shambles, lack of on-the-field competence who will only survive this season thanks to points deductions given to Bournemouth and Luton (a whopping 30 points for Luton). Luton deserve to stay up but this requires a miracle having just +5 points and seemingly resigned to non-league football. For Vale, this reality seems all too inevitable if Glover survives the season and through Christmas, come May 2010 Vale could be staring into the abyss.

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In other results, Liverpool have seemingly lost the title race with a shocking 2-0 defeat to Middlesborough, and in local football, Crewe romper to a 4th succesive win with a 4-0 win away to Brighton.

Tomorrow, Stoke face Aston Villa, who they beat early on in the season at the Britannia. In the reverse fixture it promises to be close but with Villa's form they should scrape through. Manchester United face Tottenham Hotspur in the Carling Cup final. A win for United and a quintuple on the cards? One wonders....


-- Post From My iPhone

Northumberland - McCrory's Irish Stout





4.8% ABV

Creamy and delicious. ***/5



-- Post From My iPhone

Archbishop Vincent Nichols Pastoral Letter on Disability

In a letter to be published on the weekend of March 21/22, Archbishop Nichols has addressed on Disability.

In it, he importantly points out that only 8% of disabled people actually are required to use a wheelchair: we need to recognise that disabilities come in many forms, not the stereotypes we might typically subscribe to a disabled person.

He writes... "Remember that those with disabilities tell us that the barrier which most often makes them feel unwelcome or excluded is that of peoples’ attitude. This is something we can change."

This is especially true, think of bullying, discrimination, perhaps people's general attitude to one another: people may say things in jest about just about anyone (talking negatively for example behind someone's back), but is this the example to set I wonder? Not for the disabled, not for children, not for anyone.

There is an important quote he uses to illustrate that those disabled are anything but unequal, lesser than other humans but the same as everyone else:

‘Let us keep those with disabilities at the centre of our life. Let us treasure them and recognise with gratitude the debt we owe them. We begin by imagining that we are giving to them; we end by realising that they have enriched us.’ (Pope John Paul II)

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I would invite all those in the Archdiocese of Birmingham and beyond to read this letter when published but think about the deeper meaning, the underlying tone, the message Vincent Nichols is expressing to us, Catholics and non-Catholics alike: We are all human beings, all created equal, and we must strive to give to any and everyone, equal chances of opportunity for spiritual, moral and personal development. If we didn't afford these opportunities to those less well off, it would be us that are disabled.