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Experienced Kent all-rounder Azhar Mahmood has praised youngster Sam Billings for his match-winning knock against Warwickshire Bears at the St Lawrence Ground on Friday night.
Billings hit an unbeaten 58 to lead Kent Spitfires to a crushing 10-wicket win under the lights and Mahmood, who was playing in his first game of the season since returning from the Indian Premier League, was impressed with the 20-year-old’s display.
He said: "It was a very good win against Warwickshire and while any win is a win, it’s good to have got it in the manner that we did.
"It’s been great coming back and playing for Kent, it’s always been a great place to play and we have done well with Sam Billings showing the tremendous talent he has with that knock. He played particularly well, along with Rob Key, and all the bowlers put in a good performance apart from me, which is a good sign for us for the rest of the season."
Mahmood struggled with the ball, going for 26 runs off his two overs, while team-mate Mark Davies conceded just 10 runs in his eight overs on the way to figures of 3-10 as the Spitfires restricted Warwickshire to 94-7.
Mahmood said: "Mark Davies has been brilliant and the way he bowled, taking 3-10 and conceding just 10 runs from eight overs was exactly what you want.
"We seem to be gelling very well and are playing some good cricket as a team."
Kent, fourth in Clydesdale Bank Pro40 Group C, have a chance to climb the table when they take on Unicorns at Garon’s Park, Southend today.
Skipper Rob Key has selected a 12-man squad with Ben Harmison and Mike Powell, both yet to feature in the CB40 this season, included, while Mahmood has been rested ahead of the Tunbridge Wells Festival, which begins on Wednesday.
Kent from: Billings, Key, Powell, Nash, Stevens, Northeast, Jones, Coles, Tredwell, Ball, Davies, Harmison.
Tuesday, June 05 2012
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Source: www.kentonline.co.uk
Kent artist Joseph Ryan makes a big impression in New York - thisiskent.co.uk
FROM a small Kent village to the Big Apple, up-and-coming artist Joseph Ryan is certainly making an impression in the States.
Now the former St Anselm's pupil is staging his second exhibition in New York and commanding up to £12,000 a painting.
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TALENT: Former Canterbury schoolboy Joseph Ryan lives and works in New York GILS201200524A-001_X
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WORK OF ART: Work by Joseph Ryan, inspired by his wife and model, Alison GILS201020524-002_X
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MAKING AN IMPRESSION: Joseph Ryan's work consists of sketches and paintings GILS20120524A-003_X
The 29-year-old, who grew up in Wye, moved to the city to chase his ambition of becoming a professional artist.
His dream was realised when, while studying in Italy, he was offered a scholarship by dean of the New York Studio School Graham Nickson.
The talented painter has now settled in Brooklyn with his Californian wife Alison, who provides the inspiration for most of his works.
Joseph said: "My wife is great. She sits for me for hours as my long-suffering model. Things are going well.
"I'm still very fond of England and try to get back to Kent as often as possible to see my family.
"But I fell in love with New York. It' is a very exciting city which has a certain buzz about it."
Joseph went to Stelling Minnis Primary School and then St Anselm's Catholic School in Old Dover Road.
But he honed his skills at Canterbury College and the Kent Institute of Art and Design (now the University of Creative Arts).
He gained his degree in painting from Wimbledon College of Art before travelling the world.
His late grandfather Andrew Forge was a well-known painter and writer who moved to America in the 1970s and served as dean of the Yale School of Art in New Haven.
Joseph is now exhibiting his work for the second time at a small gallery in 79th Street and has already sold a third of his paintings.
He said: "I've had a good reaction to my work since the exhibition opened on May 10. It doesn't finish until July 6. The art market is all over the place at the moment and people are hesitant to take risks.
"But it is very encouraging they have taken to my art so well."
Source: www.thisiskent.co.uk
Divorce settlement causes pain - WA today
PROMOTERS of the billion-dollar divorce and property settlement proposal for Brickworks and Washington H. Soul Pattinson seem to have missed how finicky Tax Office chief Michael D'Ascenzo is about giving investors relief from capital gains tax.
Fund manager Perpetual's push to have the two investment groups, and their coalmining associate New Hope Corporation, undo their cross-shareholdings seems to have been running longer than the Survivor television series - with none of the players managing to find immunity from the ATO.
With a few billion dollars worth of assets potentially in play, the two sides have been trading shots over the past week on the back of a break-up plan devised by Charlie Green's Brisbane-based broking house Hunter Green.
Where Green thinks the tax effect on Brickworks would be minimal if it first raises some cash by flogging some of its 42.85 per cent holding in WHSP, and then distributing the rest to Brickworks shareholders on a pro rata basis - Brickworks' advisers beg to differ.
Brickworks actually sent a letter to shareholders last week saying that work done by PricewaterhouseCoopers calculated that instead of the $46 million in tax that Green theorised would be payable, the accounting group had come up with a $277 million cost.
That figure is roughly the 30 per cent of capital gains tax payable by Brickworks on the difference (some would call it profit) between the current $13.18 market price of its WHSP shares and the $3 a share that they cost way back when.
A cautious and sensitive PwC (do not mention the costly Centro settlement) spent some time vetting the Brickworks taking of its name before allowing it to go public last week. Insider understands the whole of PwC's advice is unlikely to be made public.
Perpetual investment chief Matt Williams may, though, get a look at it as early as today because Insider hears that he is meeting with Brickworks and its advisers to see if they cannot find a way of unravelling the group cross-shareholdings to mutual benefit.
Already this week those in the Perpetual camp have been arguing that for Brickworks to distribute its WHSP shares would be like Amcom Telecommunications' pro rata distribution to its shareholders last year of its 20 per cent stake in internet provider iiNet, where it did not trigger a capital gains tax (CGT) event.
Insider understands, though, that the problem with the argument is that the ATO only grants relief from CGT when the entity distributing the shares is deemed to control them.
In this case the feeling is that WHSP's cross-holding of 44.48 per cent in Brickworks would have the ATO shaking its head and treating the handing over of the stock as a ''sale''.
If that is right, Brickworks would be up for a tax bill that far exceeds the cash it has, quite probably triggering the sale of more assets and discomforting its bankers.
Buying back one another's shareholdings would seem to create worse problems, in Insider's view, with Brickworks needing $680 million to do that and WHSP $1.3 billion. While Brickworks' cost is wiped out by virtue of the cash it would get from WHSP, assuming the deals were done simultaneously, the latter would be $680 million out of pocket. And even though WHSP's balance sheet suggests that it has $1.6 billion in cash on deposit, that is really New Hope's money that it has been saving for a rainy day - or developing its coal assets.
Robert Millner, who chairs all three companies, almost had a solution when he put New Hope on the market last year - but had to kill off the sale in February without a bid on the table.
Had someone bought out New Hope at the mooted $6 billion asking price, then 60 per cent of that money - or $3.6 billion - would have flowed to WHSP (of which Brickworks' share would have been about $1.5 billion) and everybody would have been happier, most likely including the Tax Office.
That, though, is history and the simple fact is that Perpetual is seemingly way overweight with $806 million tied up in the three companies (almost 5 per cent of its total Australian equities under management by Insider's calculation) at a time of increasingly shaky financial markets - and no easy way to quickly cash it in without depressing the share prices.
GR finally reveals hit
GR ENGINEERING Services finally revealed yesterday afternoon that it has been hit with a $25 million legal claim hanging over its head from work it did on Allied Gold Mining's Solomon Islands mine - and the result will not be known until November.
Its shares fell more than 10 per cent to 93¢ on the news, dropping the company's market worth below $140 million, compared with the $345 million peak last July.
As Insider pointed out yesterday, GR Engineering had given no previous indication of any sizeable claim against it. The claim over its work on Allied's Gold Ridge mine seems to be claiming that the GR-designed and built plant and gold recovery circuit were inefficient.
It did, though, only land on May 18 (just two days after GR Engineering issued a profit warning), but was only admitted by the arbitrator of the case yesterday - hence the announcement.
It was a counterclaim to GR Engineering's own suit against the mine over $4.5 million of unpaid work. GR Engineering tried to argue yesterday that the reason it had said nothing specific before was because the legal action was a ''confidential'' matter, and that it had made ''general references'' to claims, and that a $1.5 million doubtful debt provision in last year's results related to this.
Insider thinks the claims do not wash, and that in the context of GR Engineering's size, even the initial $4.5 million claim was a material matter. The market clearly agrees.
Source: www.watoday.com.au
Kent State baseball has a tradition of excellence - Cleveland Plain Dealer
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- To those outside Northeast Ohio, the Kent State baseball team's berth in the NCAA super regional at Oregon this weekend might bring the term "Cinderella" to mind.
But the Flashes won't be turning into a pumpkin at midnight. They have stood the test of time.
Like a train rolling down the tracks, the super regional appearance has been coming for a while. The Golden Flashes have won the past four Mid-American Conference titles and have made 12 NCAA Tournament appearances, but had never reached a super regional.
And they were within a game of pulling this off last year. In Texas in 2011, KSU topped the powerhouse host team before the Longhorns came back through the losers' bracket to beat the Flashes in the championship game.
Last weekend at the Gary (Ind.) Regional, the Flashes played top-seeded Purdue, the Big Ten champion, and No. 2-seeded Kentucky, arguably the team to beat in the tournament. Yet Kent beat the Wildcats twice, first in a 21-inning classic Friday, then in a nine-inning nail-biter for the championship Sunday.
KSU, which enters the super regional riding a 20-game winning streak, used the weekend to show off its trademark -- quality pitching and sterling defense -- and made its own breaks along the way.
Pitching and defense
Kent used five pitchers in the 21-inning marathon, but they issued only seven walks and struck out 21.
Needing to rest the bullpen in the second game Saturday against Purdue, the Flashes got their first complete game of the season out of Strongsville's Ryan Bores, who went nine innings with one walk and two strikeouts. He scattered nine hits.
Then in the title game against Kentucky, Tyler Skulina, another Strongsville native, pitched a strong game, oblivious to the fact Kentucky's Chandler Shepherd was holding the Flashes hitless over six innings.
"Ty was unreal," KSU coach Scott Stricklin said. "He threw a lot of strikes, mixed in his slider and his change-up. He did everything he needed to do. They hit some balls hard, but they hit them at us."
Making the breaks
In the 21-inning marathon, what appeared to be a double off the wall in left to start the 12th inning became an out when Kent noticed that Kentucky's Michael Williams had missed first base.
The relay back to the infield beat a retreating Williams to the bag for the out.
And in the third inning of the title game, KSU catcher David Lyon made a nifty pick-off throw to first baseman George Roberts to erase a runner after a leadoff single. The play drew Kentucky coach Gary Henderson out of the dugout to protest the call, but photos later proved the call correct.
"We played great defense all weekend long," Stricklin said. "Clean baseball, only one error all weekend long, and got it done."
Kent landed six players on the all-regional team, including Roberts, who was voted Most Outstanding Player. He finished the series 7-for-18 at the plate with five RBI and several slick fielding gems.
He was joined by Bores and Skulina, second baseman Derek Toadvine, shortstop Jimmy Rider and outfielder Evan Campbell, whose three-run homer accounted the Flashes' runs Sunday.
"The only home run hit in this regional was hit by Evan Campbell," Stricklin said. "It was the biggest hit in Kent State baseball history."
Source: www.cleveland.com