NEWS UPDATE
High court challenge means Spurs could spend season away from home
Premier League football club Tottenham Hotspur may be forced to play a season away from home thanks to a legal wrangle over the club’s new stadium development. Plans for the £400m (US$644m, E498m) 58,000-seat stadium, being built next to Tottenham’s current home of White Hart Lane, have been challenged at the High Court by the owners of the Archway Sheet Metal Works company – located adjacent to the existing stadium – because of a compulsory purchase order of land being approved in July.
In a statement. the club said: “We have
revised its construction programme in order to take the shortest possible time to construct. This now therefore involves the club moving away from the Lane during construction for a period of one season, to
start at the beginning of a season in order to comply with Premier League rules.” The club went on to say it was
“undertaking due diligence on alternative stadium options,” with Milton Keynes
Cycling in UK “more popular than ever”
Cycling in the UK is more popular than ever, with a 14 per cent increase in bike sales over the last five years causing the market to grow from £639m in 2008 to £754m in 2014, according to market research firm Mintel. In the year that saw Yorkshire host the
start of the Tour de France, participation has grown across the country with 35 per cent of adults describing themselves as cyclists and a further 31 per cent say they would consider cycling in the future. Read more:
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thought to be a likely temporary venue Other options include rotating between Wembley, the Olympic Stadium and Stadium mk, depending on the fixture. Read more:
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The high court challenge, relating to a business property adjacent to the stadium, will cause delays
Murray is one of the members behind plans for the mixed-use development
Blow for Judy Murray’s tennis and golf hub plans
45 per cent of Londoners are frequent cyclists Wearable tech to detect illegal bowling actions
The International Cricket Council (ICC) is looking to continue research in part- nership with an Australian developer to produce a reliable wearable sensor that can detect illegal bowling actions. Working with developers in Australia, the ICC is hoping that its wearable device will be able to detect an illegal action dur- ing match situations. International cricket has seen a num- ber of cases where bowlers have been deemed to ‘chuck’ the ball
The device would alert umpires of illegal actions 28 Read more:
http://lei.sr?a=c9C8G sportsmanagement.co.uk issue 3 2014 ©Cybertrek 2014
A development group led by ten- nis coach Judy Murray, mother of star Andy Murray, has been dealt a blow after a prominent member of Stirling Council’s planning office said that it could not support plans for the creation of the Park of Keir sporting hub in Scotland. Led by Murray and the King
Group, the project is also backed by her son Andy and former Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie, as well as members of the sporting community, including the Lawn Tennis Association, the Professional Golfers Association (PGA) and Tennis Scotland.
Read more:
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