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Former Arsenal youth striker Vigar dies after injury during game

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Chichester City FC and former Arsenal striker Billy Vigar has died after sustaining a “significant brain injury”.

Vigar, 21 and from Worthing, was injured during a game at Wingate and Finchley on Saturday in the Isthmian League Premier Division.

It is thought the injury was caused when he collided with a concrete wall, but the club has not confirmed this.

Vigar’s family said on Thursday they were “devastated that this has happened while he was playing the sport he loved”.

“After sustaining a significant brain injury last Saturday, Billy Vigar was put into an induced coma,” the family said.

“On Tuesday, he needed an operation to aid any chances of recovery. Although this helped, the injury proved too much for him and he passed away on Thursday morning.

“The responses to the original update show how much Billy was loved and thought of within the sport.”

Vigar was a graduate of the Arsenal academy and also had spells at Derby County, Hastings United and Eastbourne Borough.

Derby County said in a statement: “All at Derby County are deeply saddened by the passing of Billy Vigar.

“Billy spent the second half of the 2022-23 season with the academy on loan from Arsenal, making several appearances for the Under-21s.

“The thoughts of everyone at the club are with his family and friends at this incredibly difficult time.”

A spokesperson for Hastings said: “All of us at Hastings United are devastated to learn of the passing of Billy Vigar.

“We will always remember Billy’s time at Hastings United with fondness. Our thoughts are with Billy’s family [and] friends at this time.”

Vigar made 32 appearances for Eastbourne while on loan from Arsenal during the 2023-24 season.

Eastbourne said: “[We] are devastated to learn of the passing of former player Billy Vigar.

“Both footballing and non-footballing club staff are shocked and deeply saddened of the news, and our thoughts are with Billy’s family at this terrible time.”

The FA said in a statement: “We send our heartfelt condolences to his family, friends, loved ones and everyone at Chichester City FC at this incredibly difficult time.”

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Cardiff sign Halfpenny on short-term deal

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Cardiff have signed former Wales full-back Leigh Halfpenny on a short-term contract.

Halfpenny, 36, will initially take on a kicking coach role but aims to play for the Arms Park side again when he recovers from a calf injury.

The former British and Irish Lions Test star had been training with Cardiff after leaving Harlequins at the end of the 2024-25 season.

The deal had been agreed before the departure of former head coach Matt Sherratt who left to join Steve Tandy’s Wales backroom staff.

“I’m really grateful for this opportunity – first to Jockey (Matt Sherratt) for bringing me in and to the club for formulising the arrangement,” said Halfpenny.

Combining playing and coaching

Halfpenny was given a kicking coach role by Wales during the summer tour of Japan where he worked in the backroom staff of Sherratt, who has since left Cardiff to become the permanent Wales attack coach.

“I have been fortunate to work as a kicking coach with Wales Under-20s a few years ago and more recently had the privilege of working with the senior team in Japan this summer,” said Halfpenny

“This is the next step in that journey and I’m really enjoying working with Cardiff’s kickers and their young back-three players.

“There is so much talent here and if I can help them in any way, passing on my experience then that is great.”

In an illustrious career Halfpenny won 101 Wales caps, appeared in four Lions Test matches and won the Heineken Cup during his time with Toulon.

He is not yet ready to hang up his boots.

“Being a kicking coach is where I see my future but I’m still enormously motivated to play and feel I have a lot to give on the pitch,” said Halfpenny.

Back to where it all began

Halfpenny played for Cardiff RFC and Cardiff Blues between 2007 and 2014 before moving to Toulon and later Scarlets.

During his previous seven years at Cardiff, Halfpenny made 87 appearances, scoring 568 points.

The 36-year-old won both the Amlin Challenge Cup and Anglo-Welsh Cup during that time.

“After coming through the academy and spending seven years here, I have always hoped to come back to the Arms Park one day,” said Halfpenny.

“To be able to play for this club again would mean so much to me, where it all started.

“It would be a dream to finish my playing career here.”

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‘That was maybe my Dad’s sign to make sure I am going to continue with the season’

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LOOKING BACK, Sharlene Mawdsley is convinced her father’s spirit guided her back to the track in the weeks after his passing. 

She has just settled into her off-season break on the day that we speak, but in June, she wasn’t thinking about athletics. She had withdrawn from racing. She was, understandably, prioritising family over sport with no real headspace available to contemplate the rest of her season in athletics. 

And then a call came. Her Ireland teammate Sophie Becker was unavailable to compete at the European Team Championships in Slovenia due to injury. Mawdsley had previously forfeited her lane in the women’s 400m. But now there was a way back for her. Something intervened to reopen the door. Or someone.

After a chat about the offer, her mother, Louise, nudged her to lace up the spikes.

“You’re going,” she told her daughter. “You have to do it.”

And then Mawdsley ran a season’s best time of 50.93 to finish third in the women’s 400m and put Ireland in the hunt for promotion to the first division. She carried on, and won the 400m at the Morton Games as well as the 200m gold at the National Athletics Championships.

And then the World Championships in Tokyo came into view, something which Mawdsley had already qualified for. A force was coming from somewhere to lead her back to the Irish singlet.


Irish athlete Sharlene Mawdsley.

“I don’t know how,” says Mawdsley, reflecting on that season’s best performance at the European Team Championships. “I think it was just adrenaline. 

“That was maybe my Dad’s sign to make sure that I am going to continue with the season.

“It was always going to be really hard to race in Ireland. The reason I was racing there in the first place was because both of my parents were going to get to go and my family. So that was probably the hardest one for me to do this year.”

The days are rarely the same when living through a bereavement. It’s the same for Mawdsley and her family. Some days are ok. Others are bad. Running turned out to be a distraction for her while trying to cope with all the emotions that were coming up to greet her each day.

But when someone who has become a famous athlete is trying to grieve privately, another challenge presents itself. The news was quickly being circulated after the sudden death of her father Thomas. In response, she posted a message on her Instagram account, requesting privacy while also paying tribute to her Dad. It wasn’t something she wanted to do at such a difficult time, but she felt she needed to act to protect her family.

“I did find that hard because it was out in the media before I could even tell some of my friends. And that was really hard for my family as well. You just want privacy in that time. It’s not something that you want to share with people, and especially so soon.

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“So, I did find that really difficult. But it was more, I wanted to protect my family from that. I guess, at the end of the day, you put yourself out there and people do want to follow your life. Generally, it was really positive. I had so much support. 

“I was really blessed in that way that people were so supportive.”

Transitioning from last season to this season was challenging for Mawdsley. She came down with a bout of the post Olympics Blues after a brilliant debut in Paris which almost yielded a medal for her in the women’s 4x400m relay. It’s a common ailment for athletes.

How does one return to normal living after experiencing something like an Olympics? The enormity of it can be overwhelming. 

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Sophie Becker, Phil Healy, Rhasidat Adeleke and Sharlene Mawdsley after finishing fourth in the final of the women’s 4x400m relay Olympic final. Morgan Treacy / INPHO


Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO

And for Mawdsley, the Paris Olympics came on the back of a brilliant 2024 season where she won a bronze medal at the World Relay Championships, followed by a European Championships which ended in gold [4x400m mixed relay] and silver [4x400m women’s relay] success.

“That’s nearly everything that I had ever dreamed of, to win medals and to also go to the Olympics,” Mawdsley says.

“So, I found it like quite difficult when I came back to navigate what I wanted to do.”

Mawdsley missed out on the Tokyo Olympics but she was firmly involved in Ireland’s track output at the World Championships, featuring in the individual 400m event as well as the mixed and women’s relay teams.

The relay outfits fell short of a place in the final but she did manage to reach the semi-finals of the 400m. That was the target she set for herself and she celebrated accordingly. RTÉ even captured the moment she knew her qualification was assured. 

“I did believe that I was in semi-final shape. I honestly knew I wasn’t going to be in final shape. The 400 metres has just taken [off to] a whole new level right now.

“It was more of a relief than anything.”

Mawdsley finished fourth in her heat in 51.04 and clocked 51.22 to take eighth in her semi-final to give her a 20th place finish overall. The numbers are a reflection of where she was at giving what she has been through. But there’s more in the tank.

“We knew earlier in the year that I was in really good shape. So we just kind of keep going back to that point of, ‘If I hadn’t had an interrupted season that we know I would have ran really fast.’

“We’re going into next season knowing that if I just do the work that I’ve done last year, it is going to pay off eventually. And hopefully there’s no disturbances in that period of time.

“It wasn’t that I underperformed. It was just genuinely where I was at. It’s not that we were happy, but we also weren’t disappointed.” 

Earlier this year, Mawdsley ran the 400m and 200m at the Grand Slam Track athletics series in Philadelphia. Four-time Olympic champion Michael Johnson launched the series as a direct challenge to the Diamond League but it abruptly ended due to financial difficulties.

Ireland’s Andrew Coscoran also competed in Philadelphia and featured again when the series was in Miami. He won over $50,000 in prize money, and says he’s confident that he will receive those earnings. Mawdsley enjoyed the experience but is less encouraged about the $15,000 she is due for coming sixth in the long sprints category.

“I don’t have any animosity towards Michael Johnson. He didn’t go into this thinking that it was going to go bankrupt. He tried to do better for the sport. Obviously, it would be nicer to have that money in my back pocket. But I’m glad that I got to experience it nonetheless. And I know it’s not a personal thing. I am one of many athletes who haven’t been paid.

It’s break time now for Mawdsley. She has five or six weeks of rest to look forward to before the work resumes at the end of October. Switching off is something that comes easily to her. There’ll be no itch to pound out a few kilometres or hop on the bike for a spin class.

michael-breen-celebrates-with-his-girlfriend-sharlene-mawdsley-after-the-game
Michael Breen and Sharlene Mawdsley after Tipperary’s win over Cork in the All-Ireland SHC final. Morgan Treacy / INPHO


Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO

Not even another race around Thurles could tempt her. The Olympian was videoed running on the street in the hours after her native Tipperary won the All-Ireland hurling title. Her boyfriend, and now three-time All-Ireland winner, Michael Breen tried to discourage her but she had been challenged. She had to set some people straight.

 ”I guess someone saying I bet I’m faster than you. One thing led to another.

“When you’re drinking, you think you’re invincible. I was wearing sandals and I remember Mikey being like, ‘You’re not doing it.’ And I was like, ‘Yes, I am.’”

Her dog Lola is her primary form of exercise for now. Being a parent isn’t easy and the daily walks can’t be ignored. 

“I’m more so doing that for her than for me,” she says.

It’s been a difficult year for Mawdsley. But something is telling her to keep going.

Irish Athlete Sharlene Mawdsley and Zambrero Ireland are inviting runners across the country to join the first-ever Plate4Plate Zam Run, taking place nationwide this weekend from 25 September to 28 September.

Each kilometre tracked will equal a meal donated to Rise Against Hunger.

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Lancaster’s arrival ensures Connacht head into new season with belief

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A NEW SEASON tends to summon feelings of excitement and hope, but in Connacht’s case, it’s been a long time since the feel-good factor has been so strong.

The appointment of Stuart Lancaster as head coach looks a game-changer, and comes as the province prepare to step into a significant new era in their history. The revamped Dexcom Stadium is expected to be fully open in January of next year. The squad now trains in a state of the art new high performance centre, and despite a disappointing return on the pitch last season, it remains a squad which can punch higher.

In Bundee Aki, Mack Hansen and Finlay Bealham, Connacht have three British and Irish Lions on their books, while at the other end of the scale there are exciting players kicking on – Ben Murphy, Hugh Gavin, Jack Aungier and Darragh Murray all returned from the summer as Ireland internationals.


Jack Aungier and Ben Murphy were both capped by Ireland over the summer. Ben Brady / INPHO


Ben Brady / INPHO / INPHO

Watching what Lancaster can do with this group could be the most fascinating story in Irish rugby this season. This is a different project to what is happening around the other provinces. There is no headline signing brought in to make a big impact, such as Juarno Augustus at Ulster or Reiko Ioane at Leinster, nor has there been major turnover like the loss of key senior players at Munster. Connacht’s project is fully focused on how Lancaster can improve a group who underachieved in 2024/25, and remains largely the same.

The former England, Leinster and Racing coach looks an ideal appointment given his track record of developing young players. At Connacht he’ll have a core of senior men to rely on, alongside a strong group of emerging talents eager to take the next step in their careers.

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With former Harlequins man Billy Millard also on board in the newly-created role of General Manager of Performance, Lancaster’s focus is likely to be centered around working on the training pitch as opposed to in the office – similar to how he worked alongside Leo Cullen to such good effect at Leinster.

And it’s clear where Connacht need to improve. Connacht’s defence was a glaring weakness last season and it was no surprise to see defence coach Scott Fardy move on. The province won just six from 18 in the URC and conceded 62 tries along the way. Their scrum ranked 15th and they were 14th in terms of tries per 22 entry.

Connacht lost five URC games by five points or less last season, and turning just a couple of those narrow losses into wins this time around could ease the pressure at key points of the season.

On the positive side, Connacht’s lineout ranked first with a 91.4% success rate, while they also had the best maul defence in the URC (81%), highlighting the good work being done by lineout and maul coach John Muldoon.

That leaky defence will be expected to tighten up under Lancaster’s watch and he’ll also be confident of sharpening Connacht’s accuracy in attack, an area where new assistant coach Rob Seib will also have responsibility. The word out of pre-season has been positive and already Lancaster’s presence will have boosted confidence and belief after the disappointment of last year, where morale dipped as Pete Wilkins’ time in charge came to an unfortunate end.

And for all the change that’s taken place across the management side of things, the squad retains a familiar look. Piers O’Connor, Andrew Smith, JJ Hanrahan and Santiago Cordero have all departed, but New Zealander Sam Gilbert is the only new recruit. Gilbert, 26, can play at centre, wing and fullback and is also a goalkicking option.

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Sam Gilbert joins from the Highlanders this season. Photosport / Michael Thomas/INPHO


Photosport / Michael Thomas/INPHO / Michael Thomas/INPHO

As ever with Connacht, keeping key players fit will be crucial and there is always a concern they lack the power up front to compete with the biggest teams.

Lancaster’s arrival ensures expectations have risen but at the moment the bar is relatively low. Having missed out on the URC playoffs last season, getting back in the top eight will be the aim, and it’s certainly an achievable one. 

The Challenge Cup felt like a missed opportunity last season as Connacht lost a quarter-final thriller to Racing 92 – who played more than an hour with 14 men. A pool draw against the Ospreys, Black Lion, Montpellier and Montauban offers an opportunity to go on another cup run this time around.

In the URC, opening fixtures against Benetton (home), Scarlets (home), Cardiff (away) and the Bulls (home) looks challenging but not daunting.

After the disappointment of last season, it feels as though the only way for the western province is up.

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