Page
BRIAN GLANVILLE
Talking Sport
DYSON BECOMES A
'SUPER COACH'
Geoff Dyson, who recently gave up his job as chief coach to the Amateur Athletic Association, after years of bitter alterca- tions, begins this week a new and far more spectacular one. He will be sponsored as a peripatetic "super-coach" by "an organisation with a £300 million turnover." Dyson will not yet divulge the organisation's name he is leaving that to its chairman-but I believe it to be the Milk Marketing Board.
41
Dyan told me #1 stand advising on finess-training and physical educution methods their arme, but in the the job could take my into every eivable kind of spert; though I shall continue to keep iny in- terest in athletics.
#
"all not pose su
cop-
nivelu
(m) -
n an albletles coach, but as general physlet educa- tlonial, with Barticular phasis on two things, generat basic fitness for sport, and, a thing coming more and mere Into the limelight now, Indus- trial fitness.
be
"The whol thing will done as a gesture: non-profh- making. I'm delighted ustuciated with it. I'd very
thunk that
f
this
much like to organisation right come slowly. round to giving scholarships to men and women whose athlete skill justifies it and who need help.'
Happy
Harmer
Orient, didn't like their terms. when he came out ef ib, Army
married by then. with daughter) and left them year ngu for Queen's Park Rangris.
YOU HO
cricketor, B... Allen, formerly the skippier of Gloucestershire.
Up-and-down career
1 de- well,
"In
J lart down
"Friter this season1, finitely provert. Yeah, fitness meanS Jaster 1 put a lot wit 117 Ibe QPR entich, Jóns Andrews, because he gives you lot of confidence, Jim,”
Clifton centenary
THE CHINA MAIL,
MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1961.
Mrs Virginia Mny, wife of the England cricket captains, spends much of her time during the suminer walchior cricket, but her own sport ku show jumping. Now, she has started to breed horses. She has seven of them at her parents' home in Surrey at the moment. "I'd rather like to have one or two "chasers if I can." she told me. "We've just got one foal now; more are coralng next year. This one I hope will be a three-day event harne, Next year the same mare expects sauther foal by Colledge Master." This picture shows Mrs May with the Boney, and its dam. Jungle Frincess.
close
future," suid Harry Kane, bearded, straight now to reach the Umes, rout nosed, grey-eyed, "I shall about 30 seconde; I think I coul be conched by and have probably get somewhere the full advantages
of to si, Derek Johnson. Wonder- ful bloke." An 880 track man coaching a 440 hur dler, who was once a time among the fastest in the world!
upon
Since then, Kane-as h the first to admit--has had his ups and downs. Though dus- appointed that he wasn't picked gains either Russia ur France, he will, I think, give it another
SEASON.
H
"Bien, 1 train at Paddington, and 's not looked after as major track should be, in the days of Bannister, that track used to be watered every day, and now, if 's watered once a week, that's a lot,"
le's in coffee machines now, but there's not a lot about at the moment. With mest jobs. I coulīn't give it my full atten- tion, and obviously if you can't give it your full attention, you're
G
going to be the chap that's dise pensed with, when the dispens At 28, he's unce more amem- ing comes. Any fool can have ber of his old club, London a job of £10 n wrek, but zuccessfully for the AAA, Athletic Club; he's competed food Joh his times are among in the country, Had the lay- off--1956 to 1959 affected hun? 1 asker.
Clifton College, a school I have always warmed to for producing that superb novelist Joyce Cary, gains further distinction tomor- row, A1 5.30 p.m., on the Close, a centenary Rugby match will be played be- tween the Rev, P. W. P. Brooks's West of England XV and an Aberavon XV; at least ten internationals Wednesday. eight
are expected to take purt. goals and the fury of
Clifton have Spurs' revenge,
been playing Tiny. Rugby since 2
1862, and their jerseyed figure came Out away match against Marlborough of the gloaming of Tot in 1864 is thought to be the hist
"A hell of a lot: it rather up- tenham High Road.
ever played between two schools. sef me. I did the third fastest time in the world when I was The college has produced at Prominent
International Iont- 21. I had terrific potential then, chapped leasi vars. checks, shy, good-humoured ballers, among them three cap- because I was inexperienced, smile; it could only be Tommy tuins of England. The captain af I'm going to have my first sea- this year's XV. Anson Allen, is * ÜRÇ,
son of weights and elreuit train- White the son of Douglas Allen, him- ing this winter; It must add a
After
Hanner, who, a year or WON kill enrapturing
15
the
asi
Best Off to Sydney
Hart Lane with his delicate self a Cambridge Blue, and the certain amount of strength. brilliance.
nephew el that distinguished don't think I've got it in The
"Marvellous, wasn't it he said, without a grain of envy, 1 asked him how it was at Wal- ford in the Third Division, "Well I like playing foot- ball." And again the shy smile. "I was well pleased tonight, well pleased."
Mark makes good
"When Orlent transferred me to Queen's Park Run- gers," said Mark Lazarus, "I was told I'd be out of work next year. That's the confidence I was given. I felt like turning the whole game in; it really hurt me, that."
There's no question of Bis giving it up now-when, at 22, he hus shot into the sky as a new star, one of the most promising right wingers in the Football League. His transfer tu Wolves takes him a major step nearer his ambition-to play for England..
Lazarus is a Cockney, from Aldgate-grox eyes, olive skin, fair, wiry hair, long, straight nose, and an engaging ten- dency to laugh.
He comes from a family of 14, and two of his brothers, Harry and Lew Lazar, were middle- weight boxing heroes. "I think Lew was great, and they tell me Harry was better--but I don't see it myself, because I don't Bee Bayone could be better.
"A lot of people thought that beint better boxer than footballer, but I only did it for n short while; Ten a bit of a coward like that." (His reputa- tion In the rugged Third Divi- Blon bon been for unusual courage and exceptional speed,)
Barking phoned him up onc afternoon when he was doing nothing, and cooxed him back to football. He signed for
Sports Diary
TODAY
Tentils
Colony Ward Court champiorakip matches at CHC, 630 pm.
LG Tournament, 8.30 pm.
#winning
Entries close for annual Erdka Harbour Race, 1 pr.
TOMORROW
Meeiing
Rongkang Amateur Boxing Auto- clation annual meeting, Misions to Stained, 0.30 pm.
ABT & Od Cound) __moating, B.M.Post Board Roan, 0.30 pm.
Racing
Matrige algal for First Nace Mante Ing of "Moyat itungkang Foskey Club,..
MADDOCKS BY Four D. Jones
WELL THEN, WHAT'S
ALL THIS DEMON
KING LARK, THEN 7
FERDINAND
• LOCKS PHONEY
TO ME, JIM
THE FLUTTERS
LANT REVERE
OF TAXN
SCATTERIN' QUIDS ALL OVER THE SHOP
→IN THERE OF Alche BLOOMIN' PLACES!
BRICK BRADFORD
I'D LIKE TO SHOCK THAT PANG PATROL CRAFT, BUT WE MUST GOT TO KRIS'S OFDITING
SHIP!
VAS! LET'S MOVE OUT THE [Tig GETTING DAY.
LIGHT
Douglas Baker, the fly-half
or three-quarter of Old Merchant Taylors and Northampton, may go on playing in Australia nexi year.
Ho's going to Cranbrook School, in Sydney, on a leacher's exchange and, he tells me "1
STACK ME I'M SEEING THINGS, LOOK AT IT?
MAN, THAT CHRISTMAS SPIRI MUST HAVE BEEN LOVER SIRENGIR
YOU CERTAINLY DO THINGS PROPER WHEN YOU DROP US IN TROVELE DON'T YOUR
(1. DON'T THINK] WE NEED TO EWGRRY, MATE - NOT WITH CHRISTMAS COMIN' UP!
BRICK? I DONT F THINK WEKE SONG ANYWHERE! LOOK!
AFTER ALL TAS
I'l
hope to play a little there. he over there a couple of years -lo caru an immigrant's pas sage.
"} restone they hope that, having had a couple of years it Australia, I like it so much that I'll go back, But it's Just a two-year stint as far as I'm con- cerned." He expects to resume his post as a master al Ondle- though by that time, he'll be thirty-five and "as you get older. the bumps
gel harder anc haider."
He has no regrets si culling
short his first-class career in England. "Actually, I think I'm very pleased to go to Australia when I'm relatively young, when I might be able to enjoy my- self a little playing Rugby there. The thing is, though, I'm going straight out into 3 cricket season."
Chess News
Solution No. 6109: B-B!!, RY B: BXP 12 PxP also totus), Realgua, for if 2 PXB, 3 RxR ch, and mates.
Gonday Zigres Service
HOW THE BLAZES DID YOU GET IN HERE:
THOUGHT HE HAD GONE BACK TO
HADES
I SPECIALISE
IN LOOKING SINFUL
AND EVIL
LOOK DAB
IS THIS HAIRY
CREEP A FRIEND
OF YOURS?
RESS SHOP
By Mik
BUT WHAT IS
THE TIME OF YEAR WHEN MERCY AN" FORGIVENESS SPREAD NEXT DAY,
THEIR WARM GLOW IN THE BOSOMS
OF ONE AN' ALL_
DEAR P
A GIFT TOKENP
By Paul Norris
WE'RE SULEDUNDED) THEY LOOK_LICE TANKS!!
Russia to get 1968 Olympics?
RUSSIA is the growing
favourite to stage the 1968 Olympic Games,
There is nothing official about it yet; the very bida are not in, nor will any de- cision be taken by the Inter- national Olympic Committee until their meeting in Nairobi In Novemebr, 1963; but the rumours are busy,
and they are growing,
Clearly the Russians have 7 tremendous moral claim to the privilege; no country has pro- duced a more impressive quan- tity of athletes, male and power- tully female. The only possible absincle would be the 1.0.C.'% rule that a affliated countries be permitted to send teams-and spectators-irrespective of poll- tical alignment. A solutio this might lie in the ingenious compromise whereby the Ameri- cans admitted the East Germans
to