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Meet JJ van der Mescht, the 6ft 7in, 23st Saint: ‘A fly-half trapped in a second-row’s body’

about 12 hours ago
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Cometh the hour, cometh the big man.There are certain situations when size matters on a rugby field and the 6ft 7in tall, 23st JJ van der Mescht is the larger‑than‑life proof.If spectators at the Rec on Friday feel the ground beneath them shake as Northampton run out to face Bath in their keenly awaited Champions Cup quarter-final, there will be a giant-sized reason why.Clearly Saints will also bring their razor-sharp running game but even Bath’s meatier forwards should brace themselves.There is invariably a major collision when the massive Van der Mescht thunders into contact and asks the direct questions that led South Africa to include their exiled lock in an alignment squad before their July Tests against England, Scotland and Wales.

The joint-heaviest player in the Prem is particularly eager to bump into an old friend,As a youngster, he was a teammate of Thomas du Toit at the Sharks in Durban and packed down directly behind the Bath prop,Running hard at his former colleague once the latter comes off the bench is clearly an enticing prospect,“Oh, 100%, yeah,And he’ll do the same to me.

It’s a respect thing.I’ll feel disrespected if he comes in softly against me.I love Thomas.He’s a great human being who helped me a lot when I was younger.”“Van the Man”, now 26, particularly recalls the day in his teens when he was required to test himself physically during pre-season against a bunch of older forwards including Du Toit and Tendai “Beast” Mtawarira.

“I remember we trained against each other in an octagon.We had to throw each other out of the ring.It was tough.I was 18 and going in against the Beast, Thomas and the Du Preez brothers.You had to prove yourself.

” Did anyone survive? “I lost.I think the Beast won.”There will be kids around Essex still similarly scarred by the memory of Van der Mescht running at them during his brief spell as an exchange student at New Hall school.“I was already 6ft 4in or 6ft 5in at the age of 14.I was a big kid.

It was enjoyable!” As a schoolboy, the son of a pro wrestler and a 6ft 3in netball international was timed at 11 seconds flat for 100m,These days he has size 16 feet and reckons only Australia’s Will Skelton needs bigger boots,Skelton is also the player he feels he relates to most closely in terms of playing style,Both are too heavy to be lifted regularly in the lineout but try stopping either from close range,As the personable but purposeful Van der Mescht politely puts it: “We can do things other people can’t.

”That ability to give a team vital post-contact metres is precisely why Phil Dowson, Saints’ director of rugby, and his scrum coach, Jaco Pienaar, once the Sharks forwards coach, made contact after Stade Français let Van der Mescht go.“People are getting bigger but he’s genuinely a freak,” says Dowson.“When we looked at him Jaco said he was a fly-half trapped in a second-row’s body.He also said people talk about what JJ can’t do but you’ve got to look at what he can do.”It has proved to be an extremely happy marriage and has also rekindled Van der Mescht’s love of rugby.

“Since I’ve been here something has clicked.Previously I felt like I was in a constant loop … rugby felt like a chore rather than something I loved.When I was growing up all I wanted to do was play with a rugby ball.Since coming to Saints I’ve got that passion and enjoyment back.When I get home my wife can see that I’m happy.

”Just as long, that is, as there is food in the house.Remarkably Van der Mescht fasts during the day and has neither breakfast nor lunch, preferring to eat only one meal.He has dropped seven kilos since joining Saints and currently weighs in at 146kg, depending on exactly how many barbecue steaks Pienaar has been grilling for him.“Jaco loves a braai,” says Dowson.“I think JJ does the eating.

”The Springboks could be the next beneficiaries,Van der Mescht is content to bide his time – “We’ve got amazing locks in South Africa and if I don’t fit into their gameplan I understand why” – but Dowson believes he has huge Test potential,“I’m delighted he’s back on the South African radar because that was one of his ambitions when he joined,There’s loads more in JJ and I’m sure people like Felix Jones will push him as well,”For now, though, the priority is to knock over Bath.

Northampton have England’s Fin Smith back fit at fly‑half and can also draw on the spectacular evidence of December’s 41-21 league win at the Rec.Even with a supposedly depleted lineup, their front-foot gameplan was richly rewarded with Tommy Freeman grabbing a hat-trick of tries.This latest reunion between England’s top two sides may yet be the prelude to another full-on battle in this year’s Prem final.Either way Van der Mescht is in bullish mood, always assuming he can squeeze into Bath’s famously cosy away dressing room.“It’s OK, I’ll get dressed outside if necessary.

I feel like we’re going to give our best.We have a lot to prove and people have already written us off.We want to show we can compete in this competition.” When it comes to heavy-duty missions, Saints have the perfect man for the job.
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Andy Sutch obituary

As London regional director for the Sports Council (later Sport England) from 1989 to 2003, my friend, Andy Sutch, was pivotal in raising the profile of grassroots sport and for laying the groundwork for the successful bid for the London Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2012. He had joined the strategic planning department of the Sports Council in 1976.Andy, who has died aged 75, came up with a London sports strategy in 1987 that centred on increasing general participation, especially among marginalised groups. Early to recognise that the capital, given its world city status, should become a leader in world sport, he strongly supported and helped develop the credible, albeit unsuccessful, bid for the 2000 Olympics.Throughout the 1990s, his focus on inclusion and raising the profile of sport continued

about 9 hours ago
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Elliott targets Grand National with five runners after first-day Aintree double

Gordon Elliott opened the Grand National meeting with a 15-1 Grade One double on Thursday and now plans a five-strong challenge for the Grand National on Saturday, when a fourth success in the world’s most famous steeplechase would give the trainer a share of the all-time record.The highlight of Elliott’s afternoon was Brighterdaysahead’s two-and-a-quarter-length defeat of Dan Skelton’s The New Lion in the Aintree Hurdle, a result which confirmed the form of the Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham last month, when the pair finished second and third. It was also a second course-and-distance success for Brighterdaysahead, who has yet to register a win at Cheltenham in three attempts.That record tempers enthusiasm somewhat for the ante-post prices available for the festival in March 2027, but Brighterdaysahead will still be an exciting recruit to the novice chasing ranks if, as expected, she graduates to the bigger obstacles next season.“She’s the apple of all our eyes,” Elliott said afterwards

about 9 hours ago
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Noa-Lynn van Leuven banned from women-only darts events after transgender ruling

Noa-Lynn van Leuven will be banned from competing in any of the Professional Darts Corporation’s women-only events with immediate effect after a ruling from the sport’s regulatory body stated only biological females can now compete in women’s tournaments.The Darts Regulation Authority (DRA) has ruled that transgender women will no longer be permitted to compete in women’s events. Van Leuven can therefore no longer participate in the PDC Women’s Series, where she has won six titles, and will be prevented from also competing in the Women’s World Matchplay, which she was on course to qualify for this summer.The DRA said the move came in order to “achieve fair competition in darts”. The DRA commissioned a report from Dr Emma Hilton, an academic developmental biologist who has published several papers on sex and categories in sport, which determined that darts is a “gender-affected sport”

about 9 hours ago
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England absences mount for Six Nations opener after pregnancies and injuries

England are in danger of losing a ninth World Cup winner for the Women’s Six Nations after the prop Hannah Botterman was ruled out of their opener against Ireland with an ankle injury, amid doubts over whether she will play any part in the tournament.The Red Roses head coach, John Mitchell, said they will have confirmation on Botterman’s return timeline next week; Kelsey Clifford has been selected to start at loosehead at Twickenham.England are already contending with injuries, two retirements and four pregnancies; Rosie Galligan, whose partner is her England teammate Marlie Packer, the latest to announce she is expecting earlier this week.“Hannah had her ankle mended in the pre-season, at the moment mechanically it is not quite right,” Mitchell said after announcing the XV to play Ireland. “We are getting it checked

about 11 hours ago
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Gout and Kennedy renew rivalry, Hull eyes history as Australian athletics puts its best on show

Australia’s top sprinters lock horns again while the track queen is out to complete the set of middle-distance crowns at the national championships in SydneyAn array of exotic, well-trimmed dogs will parade around Sydney Olympic Park this weekend as part of the Royal Easter Show. The zoomies, however, will be across the road.Australia’s best athletes led by sprinter Gout Gout will dash around the newly laid blue track at the Athletic Centre, while others fly over bars or into sand.The immediate goal is a national title and selection for this year’s Commonwealth Games or World Junior Championships teams. But this meet arrives at a time when the sport is building towards Los Angeles 2028 and on towards Brisbane 2032, and a new crop of athletes is out to prove their era has arrived

about 11 hours ago
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Meet JJ van der Mescht, the 6ft 7in, 23st Saint: ‘A fly-half trapped in a second-row’s body’

Cometh the hour, cometh the big man. There are certain situations when size matters on a rugby field and the 6ft 7in tall, 23st JJ van der Mescht is the larger‑than‑life proof. If spectators at the Rec on Friday feel the ground beneath them shake as Northampton run out to face Bath in their keenly awaited Champions Cup quarter-final, there will be a giant-sized reason why.Clearly Saints will also bring their razor-sharp running game but even Bath’s meatier forwards should brace themselves. There is invariably a major collision when the massive Van der Mescht thunders into contact and asks the direct questions that led South Africa to include their exiled lock in an alignment squad before their July Tests against England, Scotland and Wales

about 12 hours ago
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