Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 29
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 29

Publication:
The Guardiani
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
29
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SPORTS GUARDIAN Thursday July 16 1987 29 David Davies previews today's Open championship at the 12 players who are the most likely to succeed Seve's magnificent Muirfield and profiles obsession John Rodda on a world championship casualty Jones injury may be boon Giants aiming to turn back the clock tion, then Britain's selectors should nominate him for the Olympic team. Meanwhile, Steve Cram will run in the 800 metres for England against the USA at Birmingham tomorrow despite his disappointing run in Nice two days ago. Cram, suffering from a kidney complaint, trailed in sixth in Nice, bruised a shin falling off a raft in the sea next day, and now has a crisis of confidence which threatens his defence of the world 1500 metres title in September. ENGLAND. 100 metres: L.

Asquith. E. Obeng. M. McFarlane.

200m: J. Regis. C. callender. T.

Bennett. 400m: R. Black. D. Redmond.

P. Brown. 800m: S. Cram. T.

Morrell, D. Sharpe. Mile: P. Elliott. S.

Crabb, J. Gladwin. 3000m: S. Overt. G.

Turnbull, D. Moorcroft. 3000m Steeplechase: E. Wedderburn. C.

Walker. N. peach. 110m Hurdles: B. St Louis, D.

Nelson. S. Buckendge. 400m Hurdles: K. Akabusi.

M. Gillmgham. T. Burton. 4x100m Belay: L.

Christie. Kirton. M. Adam. M.

Waldron. D. Reid. Obeng. McFarlane.

Asquith. Callender. 3x400m M. Thomas. S.

Hurd. P. Harmsworth. G. Gadogan.

P. Crampton. S. McGilchrist. Black.

Bennett. Brown. Akabusi. Redmond. European 400 metres champion Roger Black is one of eight definite starters in next Wednesday's grand prix meeting in Rome.

Black will be accompanied by his rival Derek Redmond, while Britain's leading trio of sprint hurdlers, Colin Jackson, Jon Ridgeon, and Nigel Walker are also making the trip. RAY FLOYD. Aged 44. Is the least likely-looking major champion of recent times, when seen from afar on a course. His swing contains both a pronounced loop and a distinct sway, and while not in the Eamon Darcy class, it is individualistic, to say the least.

Since winning the US Open this former owner of a topless girls' dance band has been stopping to smell the flowers with refreshing dedication and has missed the cut in six of the 15 tournaments in which he has played this season. Missed cut at Masters 43rd in defence of US Open. conceded victory to his rival. In the end Jacklin did not even finish second while in shock he took six at the 17th and five at the 18th. Langer, then, will need some good fortune, although the impassive nature of his game will ensure that he is guarded against the other kind better than most.

He will almost certainly start favourite. Yesterday afternoon he was jointly so with Ballesteros but the bookmakers were expecting the late serious money to go on the West Ger-. man and take him down a point from his 6-1. That will make it the first time since the Spaniard won his last major championship at St Andrew's in 1984, that he has not started as favourite. Ballesteros is a complex man and one who points himself so completely at major championships that desire is in danger of being replaced by obsession.

He has two Open and Two US Masters titles to his credit, but feels deeply that the tally should be more. Perhaps it could have been if he had found it possible to live a more relaxed life over the last few years. Ballesteros seems to feel the need to run world golf, to rewrite the rules wherever he plays so that they suit him and, while he is quite often right to object, the effort represents a dissipation of his energies that he, and we, could do without. Nevertheless, he is now the Nicklaus figure in world golf. He is the man to beat wherever he plays, and no player will be better suited by the Muirfield course than him.

Talk of bad luck, and Greg Norman instantly springs to mind. He contended strongly in the five major championships before this year's US Open and, of course, won only the Open at Turnberry. His misadventures include Bob Tway's holed bunker shot at the 72nd hole in the 1986 US PGA, and Larry Mize's chip at the 74th in this year's US Masters. The latter was certainly for Norman authentically unfortunate, but the Australian compounded the PGA situation by taking 76 in the last round to Mize's 70. Norman has not played well this year and he, like Langer, needs to take some further steps along the road before he can be counted as one of the greats.

If there is a temptation to think of him as being there already, it is because of the massive amount of publicity that he generates. Langer, Ballesteros and Norman are the clear favourites for Muirfield threatened only by Tom Watson who has travelled the full length of the road and is as important a golfer, after Nicklaus and Hogan, as there has been post-war. His 12-l valuation is based purely on his second place at the US Open, for he has not won a major competition since 1983. But he may well have a championship or two left in him. BEST PRICES 6: Ballesteros (Coral.

Ladbroke. Mecca). 132: Langer (C). 8: Norman (M). 12: Watson (C M).

14: Woosnam (C.L.M). 25: Crenshaw (M C). 33: Kite (M C): Lyle (M L): Stewart (M ATHLETICS MARATHON runner Steve Jones pulled out of the Rome world championships yesterday in a move which will bring a sigh of relief from those who want to see him with the Olympic title in Seoul next year. Jones, 31, damaged knee ligaments earlier this summer and has not been able to train fully since. He dropped out of the United Kingdom 10,000 metres championship at Gateshead last month.

The injury, which has not responded to treatment, might almost be fortuitous. Many marathon runners are concerned by the nature of the course in Rome, which includes a lot of cobblestones on a petal-shaped circuit with plenty of interesting backdrops for television. The Norwegian runner Ingrid Kristiansen and Britain's Priscilla Welch are among those who have already turned down the idea of racing in Rome. Hopefully, Jones will now recover in time to race one of the big open events, the Fuku-oka race in Japan in December. If he produces a top class performance there, against some fierce Japanese competi David Lacey Speedie on SOCCER Coventry City, who had 1 million to spend after winning the FA Cup, yesterday invested 750,000 in Chelsea's David Speedie, who is set to play for his new club against Everton in the FA charity Shield match at Wembley a fortnight on Saturday.

The figure is a club record for Coventry, more than doubling the 325,000 paid to Bristol City for Gary Collier in 1979. John Sillett, the Coventry team manager, said that the arrival of Speedie at Highfield Road shows we mean business. I have long admired David's ability as a player." The transfer should end an unhappy period on the 27-year-old Speedie's career. At Stamford Bridge last season he was dropped by John Hollins, the Chelsea manager, and went on the list. Earlier this year he was left out of Scotland's World Cup squad by Alex Ferguson, and reacted angrily, refusing to be put on standby for Mexico.

His temper has brought him suspensions and reports of incidents off the field, but his quality as a creative player and his remarkable power in the air for a footballer of modest height should give Coventry's attack added impetus. Obviously he will hope to strike up a partnership wth Cyrille Regis to match the one he once enjoyed with Kerry Dixon. SEVERIANO BALLESTEROS. Aged 30. No-one will be trying harder and there is an ever-present danger with this man that he will be trying too hard.

Has compiled an astonishing record this year. Played in 14 events in the US and Europe, has won one, had nine top three finishes and 11 top tens. Second in the Masters', second in the Westchester Classic the week before the US Open, but a poor third in that event itself. Is using Vicente, his brother, as a caddie this week which in my opinion, does not work. Seve likes to kick ass, and you can't when it's your brother.

GREG NORMAN, Aged 32. Running out of time. Most of the men he is mentioned in the same breath as, like Watson, Nicklaus and Ballesteros, had multiple majors by his age. Said after this championship last year that he thought 14 or 15 more was a reasonable target, but will need more luck than he's had if he is to get remotely close. Played 12 events in America with five top tens.

The best in the world according to the Sony world rankings which, of course, take in form over a three-year period. TOM WATSON. Now 37. Should be at the peak of his career. But does his desire still flourish fiercely enough Only he knows, although he maintains publicly that he desperately wants to win.

But you probably need a higher level of general performance than he is putting up at the moment, with only three top tens in 15 starts, for such a victory. Twenty'seventh on the US money list with $186,000. THE OPENZ All long journeys, the Chinese are alleged to say, begin with one short step, and certainly the road to golfing greatness begins that way. First win a tournament, then win a major championship, then win another and another. Bernhard Langer, winner of many tournaments but just one championship, has taken his first steps.

He now needs another major championship or two in order to take his proper place among the golfing greats. He has an outstanding chance to do that this week. Langer, perhaps even more than Ian Woosnam and certainly more than Severiano Ballesteros, is the man in form for the 116th Open Championship, over the course of the Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers, at Muirfield. No-one has played better golf this year, and possibly for a much longer period than that, than Langer did at Wentworth in the PGA Championship and at Portmarnock in the Irish Open. If he were to reproduce that quality of play this week then SELECTED FIRST-ROUND TEE-OFF TIMES (GB and Ireland unless stated): 8.00: J.

M. Olazabal (Sp). D. Smyth. B.

Tway (US). 8.10: P. Azinger (US). H. Baiocchi (SA), J.

M. Canizares (Sp). 8.30: M. Lanner (Swe). T.

Nakaiima (Jap), M. O'Meara (US). 8.45: H. Clark. S.

Simpson (US). D. Frost (SA). 9.0S: C. Stadler (US).

I. Woosnam, R. Davis (Aus). 9.35: G. Brand, inr.

L. Trevino (US). M. Ozaki (Jap). 9.45: P.

Mayo. M. Calcavecchia (US). J. Hawkes (SA).

10.10: M. Pinerto (Sp), K. Brown. F. Zoeller (US).

10.20: J. Haas (US). P. Stuart (US), M. Martin (Sp).

10.40: D. Feherty. A. Bean (US). 0.

Moore (Aus). 10.50: B. Gallacher. M. McNulty (SA).

T. Kite (US). 11.15: P. Walton, L. Mize (US).

G. Marsh (Aus). 12.50: N. Faldo. N.

Price (SA). R. Floyd (US). 13.10: S. Torrance.

J. Nicklaus (US). J. Rivero (Sp). 13.20: M.

James. L. Watklns (US). G. Norman (Aus).

13.45: S. Ballesteros (Sp). C. Pavin (US). T.

C. Chen (Taiwan). K.15: S. Lyle. T.

Watson (US), F. Couples (US). 14.25: B. Lanaer (WG). D.

Graham (Aus), D. Edwards (US). 15.20: O'Connor, inr. W. Grady (Aus).

A. Palmer (US). 15.30: G. J. Brand.

B. Crenshaw (US). G. Player (SA). 15.40: E.

Darcy, H. Sutton (US). J. Bland (SA). Play begins on each of the first two days at 7.30 am with the final match at 4.25 pm.

field, distinguished though it is, would be playing for second place. But the elusiveness of form in golf is one of the things that makes the sport what it is. For four or more hours per day, for four days, you have to maintain a fearful level of concentration you have to play a stream of perfect shots you have to have a touch of luck and you have to hope that no-one is doing any or all of these things better than you. If successful you may win a major championship although not necessarily for, as Tony Jacklin once remarked, when you are in contention the most essential ingredient of all is luck. It was he, here at Muirfield, who was robbed of an Open not just by one outrageous piece of misfortune, but by several.

It was Jacklin, in 1972, who had the eventual winner, Lee Trevino, hole a bunker shot at the 16th and a chip at the 18th in the early rounds, and then that chip off the bank at the 17th in the final round after he had formally 9 All dividends subject to rescrutiny arti i in hi -T-i SANDY LYLE. Aged 29. The Tournament Players' champion of America is 17th in the US money list with $286,000, and 19th in Europe with 33,500. He won the secondary tournament at Portmarnock with his nine under par total, while Langer was doing his ridiculous 19 under. Fifteen tournaments in America so far, with four top tens.

Spotted a swing flaw at Gleneagles when sports photographer Phil Sheldon took some Polaroid snaps of him, and is now happy with his game. If he gets into position, will not back off. BEN CRENSHAW. 35. Winner of one major, the 1984 Masters', and a perennial hopeful for every one since.

Has won once in America this year, the New Orleans Classic, and has had a nice symmetrical ten top tens. He has come frustratingly close to more majors, with fourth place finishes in this year's Masters' and US Opens. Could repeat that placing at Muirfield, but not if it blows. John Samuel follows four Open champions IT IS the last day of practice for the 116th Open Championship, and out on Muirield's deceivingly placid fairways and afterwards in the muggy interview marquees the old men cast their lines and spread their nets. There are other four-balls on the course, but you would hardly think so from the crowd following Nicklaus, Watson, Norman and Trevino, gently engaged in taking a few Scottish quid off each other.

Nicklaus plays an iron to the 504-yard ninth and holes the eagle putt with a perilous loop round the lip. "I almost thought that one out," says Trevino. Talked it out, more likely. No man in the history of golf has thought more about the qualities of winning than Nicklaus. You listen when he says of Trevino He never shut up the whole way round, and he never missed a shot until he was in a bunker at the sixteenth.

Then he talked to himself. I don't see why Trevino shouldn't win everything he plays in." Nicklaus and Watson took the money on the 16th but lost it again on the last two holes. Guess they outgambled us," said the mature and conversational Nicklaus of 1987, lined, blond face so much more personable than the porky young winner of 1966. "Then it blew from the east, then the west. We were playing the small ball.

You can hardly compare," he said 21 years later of his first British Open Championship win. He was already so strong he did not require a full swing. At the top his club barely reached the horizontal. His backlift was so simple, as Pat Ward-Thomas, the Guardian's golf correspondent noted at the time, that there was no break of wrists until the widest possible arc had been achieved. Then, Ward-Thomas wrote, from a stance which makes clearance of the left side after impact as easy as possible, and an anchorage so solid that it might well be cast in concrete, so massive are his legs, Nicklaus let fly.

He was still letting fly yesterday, off a swing tailored yet further to a wider girth, and not only at a golf ball. A veteran American journalist scratched his head as suddenly the old, peppery Jack William reared, eyes blazing, to the question will you join the seniors' tour Trevino, just previously, had made no bones about it. I'll be starting real practice again in two years' time when I qualify for the seniors." Nicklaus, 47 last January, doesn't quite see it that way. Who put you up to that question he demanded The anger faded as quickly as it came. The man who has won six Masters, five PGA tournaments, four US Opens and three British Opens.

The man who called his own course at Columbus, Ohio, Muirfield, and will captain the US Ryder Cup team there in the autumn, had momentarily shown the reaction of all of us to the passage of time. He seemed a better, not a worse man for it. His sights, though, are still on majors. In 1966 Nicklaus won 15,000. On Sunday the winner will take home a cheque for 75,000.

In 1966 the rough was such that you could lose your caddie as easily as your ball. If the wind blows, each of the veterans knows he can be up there. To win again, Nicklaus for a fourth time, Trevino for a third, is a dream, but not so remote that the bookmakers are giving Nicklaus better than 33 and Trevino 40 to one. I can bump and run with the best," says Trevino. I'll play the Opens here as long as they'll have me." Which is some time yet, it seems.

and the events in his country to be described as the Pyong Yang Games and those of the South as the Seoul Games. In other words North Korea wants an entirely separate celebration of teams and officials staying in the North so that there will be no need for cross-border traffic. We will be back for talks in August," he forecast. No details about how or where the events in North Korea will take place will be discussed until Samaranch secures agreement on the new offer. Perhaps he doesn't want to waste any more money than is necessary on this charade, but he cannot have really much more to give, because the Seoul organisers are certainly not going to part with any more of the celebrations on which they have spent millions.

PAYNE STEWART. Aged 30. he of the sartorial splendour, if you like men dressed in what the Americans call knickers and we call 'plus A serious contender, nevertheless, who finished second in Sandy Lyle's Open in 1985. Has had seven top ten finishes on the US tour this year. A highly consistent moneymaker, he recently announced that he had decided to risk all the hassle and try to win a major.

In the only one he has played since then, the US Open, he missed the cut. BERNHARD LANGER. Is 30 next month. Daughter Jackie is one on Sunday. Celebrations would certainly be suitable and probably restrained, for although Bavarian, he is a quiet and contained man.

He has, in theory, the complete game for a long championship course and if the weather gets vile he will just get better and better. One of the great post-war championship rounds was his 69, in the worst of the Sandwich weather, in 1985. Has played 13 events in America with no fewer than seven top tens. Seventh in the Masters, fourth in the US open, he has $302,000 in America for 13th place, 78,000 over here for 8th. IAN WOOSNAM.

Aged 29. Has had four tournament wins this year the Hong Kong, Jersey, Madrid and Scottish Open and is leader of the Epson order of merit by 50,000. Despite being only 5ft 4in. tall he is one of the longest hitters in the world and, at the moment, one of the most confident players. Currently on a streak of good form second in the Belgian Open, third in the Carrolls Irish and winner in the Scottish.

Britain's best bet. (women), the cycling road race (men) and one group of the football tournament. Put like that, the outcome of the fourth round of talks at the Olympic headquarters in Lausanne comes close to North Korea's demands for eight sports. Yet while Samaranch's energies and efforts are necessarily directed towards averting boycotts which have plagued the Games since 1972, his final offers and extension of deadlines risks damaging the credibility of the Olympic movement. North and South Korea have until September 17 to accept the new proposal.

That is the day on which the IOC sends out invitations to the 167 national Olympic committees to take part in the Games, and 1 Sx2 WX year, has six list. Couples is 1984, the Has not looked Mize, the the meek and Currently third in the US Open things probably. Bob Fisher on the run-up to Cowes Irish eyes on the Cup top tens and is tenth in the money 27, won the Byron Nelson and, in Tournament Players championship. that good since, unfortunately. chip-in Masters' Champion, bats for modest, but very effectively.

in the money list, he was fourth and is on the verge of great LAFRETOM COUMIZKITE. Aged, on average, 34, this triple header represents the formidable second level of American golf which is always striving to take the next step towards greatness. Larry Mize, Fred Couples and Tom Kite are all capable of winning the Open Championship, yet all would probably attract the each-way punter rather than the on-the-nose gambler. Kite is 37 and must, for the sake of the nice guys, win a major. Won the Kemper Open this the move Ipswich have agreed a fee of 300,000 with Sheffield Wednesday for Steve McCall, their long-serving left-back, who moved to Hillsborough two months ago when his contract ended.

Transfers in the offing: Terry Gibson from Manchester United to Wimbledon for 300,000, Paul Wilson from Huddersfield to Norwich and. Jim Gilligan from Lincoln to Cardiff. Notts County, have agreed a sponsorship with Home Brewery worth more than 130,000 over three years, hope to sign two former Aston Villa players, Andy Gray and Tony Oxford United have agreed a 500,000 two-year extension of their sponsorship with Wang (UK). The Northern Ireland centre-half John O'Neill is joining Queen's Park Rangers from Leicester City. O'Neill, 29, trained with QPR yesterday and will go with them on tour to Norway next week.

The Watford manager, Dave Bassett has followed up his interest in the Reading striker Trevor Senior by submitting a written 300,000 request to the Second Division club, whose manager, Ian Branfoot, insisted Trevor has a current contract until June 30, 1988, and he will only leave Reading when it is right for the club." The Brazilian players Dunga and Walter Casagrande are to join the Italian First Division clubs Pisa and Ascoli. British team, Indulgence, has been particularly encouraging for Mansfield and his crew. Richard Burrows, the managing director of Irish Distillers, put the weight of his company behind the Ed Dubois design for the one-tonner Jameson's Whiskey, beginning the campaign by employing David Howlett as sailing master and putting him in charge of her construction. The boat won the Irish trials, and Howlett continues to make sophisticated improvements to enable her to peak in weeks' time. To complement her, Tom Power chartered the Dubois-designed Full Pelt after she narrowly failed to make the British team.

He has kept as many of her crew as the rules allow, including the. Olympic bronze medal-winner Jo Richards, and changed her name to Irish Independent after a complex sponsorship deal Bedford clean but not clear Take 'Em To The Cleaners the name of David Bedford's boat and that is exactly what he did at the Stone's Ginger Wine J-24 national championship at Abersoch yesterday. The Poole skipper took the lead on the long beat from the start, past St Tudwal's Island, to the Causeway Buoy and was never headed. Bedford, together with Ian Southworth in Just Enuff, went to the left-hand side of the court during the tricky time when a thundercloud came over the race. They were lifted in a better breeze to pass Ian Macdonald-Smith in Hedgehog, Eddie Warden Owen in Luder and Tony Gale in Popincoota, who favoured the middle.

From the right-hand side Stuart Mount in Ghost breezed in with the leaders. Macdonald-Smith and Warden Owen were able to pass Mount on the reach back to the finish, but Southworth's second place was just enough to put Just Enuff into the overall point lead with two races to go. Bob Fisher 8c cr. waaxins (u.l.m). raiao im Nicklaus (L); Pavin (C.L.M); Tway (L Zoeller (C.L.M); Floyd (M): McNultv (M' waKajima (M sutton (C.wyi.

FOR MATCHES PLAYED JULY 11th, 1987 Client with 23 Pts. 4 DRAWS 145-90 12 HOMES 6AWAYS 4-10 Above dividend! to units ol lOp Expenses and Commission 27th June 1987-27-5 RECORD POOLS WIN! UAMES ANDERSON FROM NORTHANTS WINS Excess baggage FOUR young British players were reprimanded yesterday for completing their preparations for the Open with Tam O'Shanters and paper bags on their heads. Robert Lee, Paul Way, Mark Roe and Neil Hansen decided to have some fun during their final practice round, but Muirfield officials were not amused. Paddy Hanmer, the club's former secretary, spoke to the group after they came off the final green. "He asked whether we thought it was the proper thing to do," said Roe.

TREBLE CHANCE-Max. 23 Pts. No TOPDIV. FOR ONLY 22'i Pts. 22V2 PTS 779,057 00 22 PTS 324.09200 21V2PTS 21 PTS 1,140 20 2OV2PTS 52035 20 PTS 13845 Treble Chinee dividends to units of B9p.

Yards Par OUT 3518 3b Chouse 'W 3445 35 TOTAL 6963 71 SAILING Ireland may not have the highest profile of the world's yachting countries, but many of the competitors in this year's Admiral's Cup which starts from Cowes on July 30 believe the Irish have an excellent chance. Irish teams have shown up well in the past, and in 1979 they were loading before the storm-tossed Fastnet eliminated two of their boats. Their strength this year comes from a combination of high technology, dedicated practice and commercial sponsorship. For the team's all-important big boat," skipper Mike Mansfield chartered Turkish Delight, now owned by Halil Bezmen but originally (as Itzanothapurla) a British triallist for 1985. This Tony Castro-designed boat was substantially altered, with a new keel and a new rig, and the change has been dramatic.

In races where she has met similar-sized boats from other countries, Turkish Delight has impressed. Her ability to stay with the star of the More people are coming round to the view that, with only 12 months remaining to organise events, security, television facilities, media requirements and a free flow of spectators to and from the North, the current dialogue is almost meaningless aside from diverting North Korea from even more destructive ideas. Samaranch now urgently needs to find a cut-off point with the North which dissipates the anxieties of those in the South to whom the Games were originally awarded. Greg Foster, who won an Olympic silver medal in the 110 metres hurdles in Los Angeles, says he will not compete in Seoul unless he receives an assurance of safety by the International Olympic Committee or the United States Committee. TREBLE CHANCE 1,000,000 LIMIT APPLIED TO ONE WINNER WHO HAD TWO FIRST DIVIDENDS SURPLUS EQUALLY DIVIDED AMONG 2nd.

3rd. 4ih. 5th and 6th DIVIDENDS SeeRule 9(c). John Rodda reports from Lausanne on the latest round of talks at the IOC headquarters More concessions, but the North Koreans are still dissatisfied JHHONbhHbbrM m.i. (24 HR.

SERVICE) PAYOUT INCLUDES SUNDERLAND MAN 146,948 Samaranch agrees that at least 12 months before the Games begin competitors ought to know where they will be competing. The North Koreans, however, are still far from happy. Chun Chang Guk, a vice-president of their NOC, was saying within a few minutes of Samaranch's offer that it was was not enough. They wanted their original request for eight of the sports, or one-third of the Games, to be met. They need the soccer tournament to held in North Korea in its entirety so that FIFA will allow them to take part as host country; they were originally disqualified at a preliminary round for not turning up.

Chun also wants separate opening and closing ceremonies OLYMPIC GAMES Juan Antonio Samaranch, president of the International Olympic Committee, edged a little further along the tightrope towards a peaceful 1988 Olympic Games when he yesterday increased the offer of sports to be staged in communist North Korea. Women's volleyball has been added to the original list, which has been spun out to five sports three in full and sections of two more by splitting the men's and women's events. So it now reads archery (men), archery (women), table tennis (men), table tennis (women), volleyball THIS WEEK'S SUPER LONDON MAN 151,821 TREBLE CHANCE POSSIBLE POINTS 23 NO CLIENT WITH 23 POINTS 22V2ptS 68,254.20 22 pts 4,387.80 21Vzpts 1,026.35 21 pts 99.20 20V2pts 34.65 Treble Chance Dividends to Units of 2Sp. 12 HOMES 120.10 (Nothing Barred) (Paid on 11 correct) 8 A WAYS 14.05 (Nothing Barred) HATTRICK 37.55 Above Dividends toUnitsof lOp. Expenses and Commission for 27th June.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Guardian
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Guardian Archive

Pages Available:
1,157,493
Years Available:
1821-2024