Daily Mirror

ROCKY STORY NO WIND-UP FROM CANELO

- BY DAVID ANDERSON BY ALEX SPINK Rugby Correspond­ent @alexspinkm­irror GO LOW

ROCKY FIELDING admits he thought it was a wind-up when he heard Canelo Alvarez wanted to fight him.

WBA super-middleweig­ht champ Fielding says he and his girlfriend thought his trainer Jamie Moore was pulling his leg when he said the world’s pound-for-pound king had chosen him for his next fight at New York’s Madison Square Garden on December 15.

The Scouser, 31, (left) said: “Jamie called and my girlfriend asked what was up. I told her Jamie had told me Canelo wants to fight me and she said I must be having a laugh. I got to the gym at 9am the next day and said, ‘Is this a wind-up?’. It wasn’t.

“I accepted it straight away.” Alvarez, 28, said: “It has always been my desire of mine to fight in New York at Madison Square Garden.” EUROPEAN CUP boss Simon Halliday has warned of a ‘red’ October after declaring war on high tackles.

The rugby world’s top club tournament kicks off this month with opinion divided between those responsibl­e for player welfare and those who argue that the game is going soft. Former England star Halliday stepped in to end that debate last night by ruling that either players go low or they will go off.

“‘If you go in high you risk a red card,” warned Halliday (left). “Simple as that.

“We are not trying to re-invent anything, we’re just saying that we should have zero tolerance when it comes to head contact. Because if we don’t get this right, we’re in a mess.”

The issue blew up last month when Leicester lock Will Spencer was sent off and banned for a high shot on Wasps hooker Tommy Taylor. There was no intent and Taylor was unhurt.

The decision was greeted with anger by many in rugby, but the chorus of disapprova­l failed to move Halliday.

“Ex-players have been talking about it a lot, asking is rugby going soft?” he said. “Come on!

“When I talk to players I get a very different take. They don’t think that. They are really worried – and so they should be.

“If you are getting recurring headaches and that sort of thing, it’s not a good place to be.”

Halliday, whose 23-cap career included a World Cup Final, knows consistenc­y is key, accepting that there is a “notable variation” in how incidents have been judged in recent times.

To that end he got referees’ chief Joel Jutge to call a summit of Europe’s top whistlers in Paris to nail down exactly “what is an absolute red card, what is a yellow and what’s in the middle”.

Halliday, 58, added: “It is our job to take responsibi­lity for this and to make certain that we get it right, not just for clarity but to protect players – sometimes from themselves.

“We can’t afford to take it lightly. Whether you like it or not, the legal world is coming. It’s happened in the US.

“There are certain things that people tell me are no longer allowed in the NFL which we do over here.”

England wing Marland Yarde has been ruled out for the season with a ruptured and dislocated knee. Wales No.8 Taulupe Faletau is almost certain to miss the autumn internatio­nals after breaking

his arm.

 ??  ?? Leicester’s Will Spencer is sent off for high tackle on Tommy Taylor Exeter’s Thomas Waldrom is tackled by Leicester’s Ellis Genge
Leicester’s Will Spencer is sent off for high tackle on Tommy Taylor Exeter’s Thomas Waldrom is tackled by Leicester’s Ellis Genge
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