Leinster’s Springbok Snyman wins URC player award

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The Players’ Player of the Year for the 2024-25 United Rugby Championship is second row Leinster RG Snyman.

After leaving Irish rivals Munster, the 30-year-old lock helped Leo Cullen’s side reach the URC semi-finals. He has made a significant impact in his first campaign at Leinster.

The 16 URC teams’ captains and vice-captains have approved of the award, which was previously won by Leinster hooker Dan Sheehan and Munster flyhalf Jack Crowley.

Massimo Brunello, who had led the Italians to five victories, including affluent victories over Ulster and Edinburgh, was named coach of the season as determined by the league’s other coaches.

The winning team was the Scarlets’ fly-half Ioan Lloyd, who also won the golden boot, and Cardiff’s Harri Millard, who also won the trophy, named Tom Farrell as Munster’s playmaker of the year.

URC awards winners 2024-25

Ioan Lloyd (Scarlets) is the Golden Boot.

Top try-scorer: Carliff’s Harri Millard

Ruben van Heerden (Stormers) is the owner of the Tackle Machine.

Ironman: Carl McCartney’s Cam Winnett

Playmaker: Münster’s Tom Farrell

Cameron Hanekom (Bulls): Next-Gen player of the season

Sharks receive innovation awards

Deon Fourie (Stormers) is the try of the season.

Sacha Feinburg-Mngomezulu (Stormers) is South Africa’s URC player of the year.

Massimo Brunello (Zebre), the season’s coach

Player of the year: RG Snyman (Leinster)

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  • Leinster
  • Irish Rugby
  • Northern Ireland is a sport
  • Rugby Union

Leinster’s Springbok Snyman wins URC player award

Images courtesy of Getty

The Players’ Player of the Year for the 2024-25 United Rugby Championship is second row Leinster RG Snyman.

After leaving Irish rivals Munster, the 30-year-old lock helped Leo Cullen’s side reach the URC semi-finals. He has made a significant impact in his first campaign at Leinster.

The 16 URC teams’ captains and vice-captains have approved of the award, which was previously won by Leinster hooker Dan Sheehan and Munster flyhalf Jack Crowley.

Massimo Brunello, who had led the Italians to five victories, including affluent victories over Ulster and Edinburgh, was named coach of the season as determined by the league’s other coaches.

The winning team was the Scarlets’ fly-half Ioan Lloyd, who also won the golden boot, and Cardiff’s Harri Millard, who also won the trophy, named Tom Farrell as Munster’s playmaker of the year.

URC awards winners 2024-25

Ioan Lloyd (Scarlets) is the Golden Boot.

Top try-scorer: Carliff’s Harri Millard

Ruben van Heerden (Stormers) is the owner of the Tackle Machine.

Ironman: Carl McCartney’s Cam Winnett

Playmaker: Münster’s Tom Farrell

Cameron Hanekom (Bulls): Next-Gen player of the season

Sharks receive innovation awards

Deon Fourie (Stormers) is the try of the season.

Sacha Feinburg-Mngomezulu (Stormers) is South Africa’s URC player of the year.

Massimo Brunello (Zebre), the season’s coach

Player of the year: RG Snyman (Leinster)

related subjects

  • Leinster
  • Irish Rugby
  • Northern Ireland is a sport
  • Rugby Union

Anik ‘hopeful’ for Aspinall-Jones fight in December

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Jon Anik, a UFC broadcaster, claims he “thinks” and is “hoping” that Jon Jones and Tom Aspinall’s upcoming heavyweight title fight will be broadcast in December.

British boxer Aspinall has been the interim champion for 18 months, but Jones, who last competed against Stipe Miocic in November, has since lost.

Aspinall, 32, has repeatedly demanded a fight between Jones and Jones, but the American has not been forthcoming, teasing his fans on social media and making hints about retirement.

More than 150, 000 people signed a petition calling for the removal of Jones’ title from him last week, which was signed by frustrated UFC fans.

At Thursday’s UFC 316 news conference, Anik was asked about the possibility of a unification bout while reversing Dana White, the organization’s president.

If Jon Jones and Tom Aspinall are both champions, “I believe a fight is more likely,” said Anik.

“I think… I’m hoping they’ll clash in Las Vegas in December.

Aspinall stated earlier this month that the “waiting to fight Jones” has been difficult mentally.

Since fighting Curtis Blaydes in Manchester 11 months ago, Aspinall hasn’t yet fought.

Jones has a record of 28 wins, one loss, and one no-contest victories, making him widely regarded as one of, if not the best, MMA fighter of all time.

Meanwhile, the rematch for the bantamweight title between Georgia’s Merab Dvalishvili and American Sean O’Malley takes place on Saturday at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey.

American Julianna Pena fights compatriot Kayla Harrison in the co-main event to defend her bantamweight title.

Former Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix makes his UFC debut against fellow American Mario Bautista elsewhere.

After venting his frustrations with other athletes about the lack of fights in the PFL, which bought Bellator in 2023, Mix left in May.

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What will Trump travel ban mean for sport?

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The United States is gearing up to host the world’s two biggest sporting events in the next three years, the 2026 Fifa World Cup and 2028 Olympic Games.

Events like these typically see a host nation draw hundreds of thousands of visitors from all over the world.

Will the tournaments be affected by a new travel ban that US President Donald Trump has instituted? And what about the ban’s effect on the wider world of sport?

As part of an immigration crackdown, he claims, is necessary because it places full restrictions on citizens of 12 nations entering the United States, as well as a small portion on seven others.

However, the order provides a provisional exemption for those who participate in the 2026 and 2028 Olympics.

Organisers of the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics say they have “great confidence” that the ban will not disrupt the summer Games or the preparations for them.

After a meeting with the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) co-ordination commission, LA28 chair and president Casey Wasserman said: “I want to thank the federal government for recognising that.

It’s obvious that the federal government will be accommodating and providing for that environment.

“And so we have great confidence that that will only continue”.

Which nations are affected by the ban?

Passport-holders from 12 nations are now outright banned from entering the United States. They are: Yemen, Ethiopia, Haiti, Ethiopia, Myanmar, Ethiopia, Ethiopia, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen.

Significant but not sluggish travel restrictions are in place in seven additional nations: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela.

Section four of the travel ban includes a clear exemption for sports stars travelling to those competitions – and other “major” sporting events.

Any athlete or member of an athletic team who is traveling to the US for the World Cup, Olympics, or other significant sporting event as determined by the secretary of state, including coaches, supporters, and immediate relatives, is permitted to do so.

Nicole Hoevertsz, an IOC vice president who chairs the LA28 coordination commission, stated that “two hundred and six countries are preparing to attend the Games.”

“The federal government has given us that guarantee … to make sure that these participants will be able to enter the country… We are very confident that this is going to be accomplished”.

What crucial aspect of the athlete’s announcement was left out?

The text means that those participating in the two major global sports events the US will host during Trump’s second term will still be able to travel. However, there are still a lot of important questions that remain unanswered because of the lack of detail surrounding other sporting events.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio will not or will not define as a “major sporting event” any further clarifications or measurement criteria.

“I think people from around the world, and Americans going to these events, would want to see actions like this”, said US state department spokesperson Tommy Pigott at a press briefing on Thursday afternoon.

“This is a component of being a host,” he said. We take security issues very seriously, and we want everyone to be able to attend the World Cup safely.

The Concacaf Gold Cup, for example, begins in the USA on 15 June and Haiti are due to participate. However, their participation is now questioned because the travel ban does not list the Gold Cup, which includes countries from North America, Central America, and the Caribbean as one of the exempted major events.

The phrase “World Cup” is unclear as well. The revamped Fifa Club World Cup, featuring 32 of the world’s best club teams, will take place in the USA from 14 June to 13 July. The competing clubs’ books contain 10 players from nations that are subject to a travel ban, but it hasn’t been decided whether the tournament will be exempted from the exemption.

Track and field athletes frequently travel to the USA to train in training camps ahead of major competitions. Though the exemptions make clear that athletes from the affected countries can travel to the Olympics in 2028, it makes no mention of their ability to attend camps in the time before then.

Getty Images

Are fans exempt from the travel ban?

Major sports events are not available to fans from the underprivileged nations.

Iran, for instance, has already qualified for the 2026 World Cup, while countries like Haiti, Sudan, and Venezuela also have a chance to qualify.

There have already been concerns over the length of time the citizens of some countries were being made to wait for US travel visas to be processed and granted. As things stand, fans of all of those teams will no longer be able to attend the tournament. Given that their rivals will be able to rely on fans from the stands, it could be said that the restriction will put those teams at a competitive disadvantage.

What about American athletes who are prohibited from competing in their own countries?

What will happen to athletes who are currently employed in the USA but are citizens of prohibited nations is not made clear in the proclamation.

The NBA, MLB and MLS all feature players who are citizens of countries now placed on the travel ban list – how those players can continue to play in the USA is uncertain.

For instance, nine Venezuelans are currently listed with Major League Soccer clubs. Ronald Hernandez of Philadelphia Union, David Martinez of Los Angeles FC, and Josef Martinez of San Jose Earthquakes are scheduled to play in international competitions over the coming week.

By the time they return to the USA, travel restrictions on Venezuelans will be in place. The three athletes, along with others employed by US sports teams, will be permitted to travel abroad to compete or visit their families after that.

Has Trump banned athletes before?

Trump enacted a severe travel ban on some nations, the majority of which had Muslim populations, during his first term in office. The MLS Players Union at the time stated that it was “extremely disappointed” and that it was “deeply concerned” about potential victims.

Trump’s anti-immigration policies have also prevented some athletes from other nations taking part in scheduled events held in the USA.

The Tibetan women’s soccer team received a 2017 US visa for travel to the Texas Dallas Cup. Cuba’s Yordan Santa Cruz, the head coach of Cuba, was denied a visa for the 2019 Gold Cup, and nine members of the Guatemalan Under-15 national soccer team were denied entry to the Under-15 Concacaf Championship in 2019.

In 2017 football’s world governing body Fifa warned Trump that travel bans could hinder the USA’s joint bid for the 2026 World Cup. Any team, including the supporters and officials of that team, must have access to the nation, according to FIFA President Gianni Infantino, because otherwise there won’t be a World Cup. The requirements must be concise.

That ban was eventually overturned by Trump’s successor Joe Biden in 2021.

Due to “travel measures” introduced by Trump, the women’s soccer team from Zambia earlier this year withdrew four Americans-based players from their squad for a upcoming tournament in China.

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What will Fifa make of the ban?

Infantino appears to have been interested in cozying up to Trump in the years since that decline.

Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Jeff Bezos were among the tech billionaires who were present at Trump’s inauguration in January.

The speech – given by Trump after he was sworn in for his second term as president – included negative comments about neighbouring Canada and Mexico, the USA’s World Cup co-hosts.

Infantino shared a glowing Instagram caption with “Donald Trump and I share a great friendship” during the week leading up to the inauguration. Infantino wrote about Trump nine times in a week total.

Infantino then accompanied Trump on the latter’s state visit to Saudi Arabia, before drawing the ire of Uefa and other continental bodies by delaying the start of the Fifa congress in Paraguay in order to hold a private meeting with Trump.

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  • Olympic Games

Knockouts to nappies – dad-to-be Wardley’s defining week

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Fabio Wardley v Justis Huni

Venue: Portman Road, Ipswich Date: Saturday, 7 June

Fabio Wardley may soon be celebrating a solid night’s sleep with the same gusto as a knockout victory in front of 20,000 home fans.

As the British heavyweight prepares for arguably the toughest test of his career on Saturday, there is another monumental challenge waiting for him outside the ropes – becoming a father.

The 30-year-old’s partner is due to give birth to their first child just a week after Wardley fulfils a long-held dream: fighting at the home of his beloved Ipswich Town Football Club against undefeated Australian contender Justis Huni.

With a midwife appointment just 30 minutes away, Wardley candidly speaks to BBC Sport about the uncertainty of impending parenthood.

“I don’t know if I’m nervous about changing nappies or not,” he jokes.

“Fighting is at least something I have control over and have done a few times, so I know what I’m doing.

“But this whole new stage after this fight – being a dad – is going to be a whole different realm.”

Should Wardley approach fatherhood with the same mindset that he has driven his boxing career – dedication, a hunger to learn and a fierce determination to embrace the journey – he should be fine.

At 19, Wardley was working in recruitment, having never laced up a pair of gloves. A decade later, a victory over Huni will move him one step closer to a world-title shot – possibly as early 2026.

The ‘gangly’ novice turned boxing headliner

Wardley acknowledges that fighting so close to his partner’s due date is not ideal, but the opportunity to be the main event at Portman Road was simply too good to pass up.

“I didn’t believe it would happen up until six, seven months ago,” says Wardley, a lifelong fan of the ‘Tractor Boys’.

“For everything to fall into place – the pitch, the season ending, the right opponent – is extremely difficult. But all the things have aligned perfectly.”

The journey to this landmark moment has been anything but straightforward, though.

Once commuting daily from Ipswich to London for work, Wardley devoted his evenings to learning the fundamentals of boxing.

It was not until he knocked out three of four opponents in the unlicensed white-collar boxing scene – where novices compete often for charity or personal challenge – that he decided to turn professional.

“Had I known how much I’d take to boxing, I’d probably have left my job a bit earlier,” he says.

Picking ‘hard opponents’ to silence the doubters

Fabio Wardley floors Frazer Clarke in RiyadhGetty Images

Wardley silenced critics who questioned his lack of amateur background with a brutal first-round knockout of Frazer Clarke last October, having fought to a draw against the Olympian seven months prior.

“The 12 rounds I had with Frazer were enough to see me through for a little while,” he says.

“It did me good not to go through that again in a rematch – not get more miles.”

Originally set to face Jarrell Miller on Saturday, Wardley faced a late opponent change when the American withdrew because of injury.

Instead of opting for an easier fight, he chose Brisbane’s Huni – a 26-year-old unbeaten heavyweight with an impressive amateur pedigree.

“Boxing fans always need convincing and I’m picking hard opponents to show them what I’ve got in my locker,” Wardley says.

“They’ve seen a lot of people come and go, some who they thought would do great things and haven’t, and others they underestimated who’ve gone on to do really big things.

Keeping a keen eye on Usyk-Dubois

Wardley will be closely watching next month’s undisputed heavyweight title fight between Daniel Dubois and Oleksandr Usyk – perhaps during a late-night nappy change.

Usyk has suggested he only has two fights left, meaning a future bout with Wardley seems improbable, but not impossible.

When Wardley first sparred with Usyk in 2018, any prospect of facing the generational great felt “a million miles away”.

More realistically, Wardley believes a showdown with Dubois could be on the horizon, with both fighters handled by Queensberry Promotions.

“I’ll be pushing my mandatory status, aiming to be at the front of the queue or next up on the list,” he adds.

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