Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Barneveld back after ‘hell’ week

- BY MIKE WALTERS

RELIEVED Raymond van Barneveld regained his PDC Tour card in the last-chance saloon and said: “It feels great – like the end of hell.”

The five-time world darts champion had to endure a week of torture at Q-school before reclaiming his place among the elite.

Van Barneveld, 53, who prematurel­y retired 14 months ago, said: “I can’t wait to compete against the likes of Gerwyn Price, Michael van Gerwen and Peter Wright again. Of all my achievemen­ts, this was the hardest one.”

The former Dutch postman qualified in third out of eight places available at the European Q-school in Niedernhau­sen, Germany.

He added: “I was up practising at 5.30am because I wanted it so badly. It’s such a relief. Now my aim is to qualify for the world championsh­ip.”

There was to be no fairytale though for Fallon Sherrock, the first lady of darts, who needed to win the final UK Q-school tournament in Milton Keynes but lost in the first round to Andy Jenkins.

SIR BILL BEAUMONT has been warned rugby union faces “extinction within a couple of generation­s” if urgent action is not taken to tackle brain injuries.

An open letter, sent today to the chairman of World Rugby by powerful voices from across the game, claims that in its present form it is “broken”.

Progressiv­e Rugby says more must be done to protect the health and wellbeing of players from excessive workloads, brain trauma and “potentiall­y serious and life-threatenin­g consequenc­es that come from repeated concussive and sub-concussive injuries”.

Among demands are limited contact in training and substituti­ons allowed only for injury, to avoid tired players coming up against those fresh from the bench.

The group was formed by former players James Haskell (above) and Jamie Cudmore in alliance with Professors John Fairclough and Bill Ribbans.

Signatorie­s to the letter include World Cup winner Steve Thompson, recently diagnosed with early onset dementia and one of nine retired players to have launched legal proceeding­s against World Rugby.

Ex-england internatio­nals Kyran Bracken and Tim Stimpson, former England women’s captain Catherine Spencer and past and present

Wales duo Jonathan Davies and Josh Navidi have lent support.

The proposed plan of action includes recommenda­tions for a concussion database and a concussion fund, health passports, health MOTS and the involvemen­t of independen­t brain experts alongside sports scientists.

“We all love the game of rugby, and want to see it continue in the long-term,” said Dr Barry O’driscoll, World Rugby’s former medical adviser. “However, the game as it is, is broken, with many more players likely to end up with neurologic­al impairment­s in the future.”

The lobbyists wish to see themselves as “teammates not opponents” of the governing body. But their letter is a direct response to a claim by Beaumont (inset) that World Rugby is doing everything it can on the issue of brain trauma.

Progressiv­e Rugby argues the authoritie­s have a “moral and legal duty to minimise risk and to inform players and parents of the risk of brain damage from repeated knocks”.

They believe “this issue is the greatest threat to the worldwide game” and want rugby to follow the example of the NFL which has “metamorpho­sed from a sport in denial to a proactive organisati­on”.

They also want talks with World Rugby over “how we can work together to get control of this issue that threatens the very future of our game”.

 ??  ?? CARD SHARP Happy Van Barneveld is back on Tour
CARD SHARP Happy Van Barneveld is back on Tour
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 ??  ?? CONCUSSION
CONCUSSION

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