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Leona Maguire battles her way into contention as Minjee Lee leads Women's PGA by four in Texas
Leona Maguire battles her way into contention as Minjee Lee leads Women's PGA by four in Texas

Irish Independent

time16 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Irish Independent

Leona Maguire battles her way into contention as Minjee Lee leads Women's PGA by four in Texas

The Co Cavan star (29) has plummeted 52 spots to 87th in the world rankings over the past year. But while she missed four cuts in a row before arriving at Fields Ranch East at PGA Frisco, she knew she was playing better than her scores suggested. "I feel like I've been actually playing really well for four or five weeks now," said Maguire, who goes into the final round tied for sixth on two-over, eight shots behind the impressive Australian Minjee Lee, who signed for a bogey-free, three-under 69 to lead by four strokes from Thailand's Jenno Thitikul on six-under. "I've been telling my team and everybody I'm playing better than I'm scoring. And I feel like this week, it has come together a bit nicer. "I like hard golf courses. I always have. I like the challenge. And this one is a challenge for sure, and it's nice to be able to execute the shots that I wanted.": It was a trademark battling performance from the Ballyconnell woman, who looked set for a long day when she double-bogeyed the second and bogeyed the fifth to slip to five-over for the championship. Rounds were taking six hours, but she birdied the seventh from five feet and never looked back as she made clutch par saves at the 11th and 14th before brushing in a four-footer for birdie at the 105-yard 17th. "Obviously, I didn't get off to the best of start, but I accepted that everybody was going to make mistakes today, and at least I got mine out of the way early," she said. "I didn't feel like I'd done a whole lot wrong to be three over through five and just stayed patient; tried to hit as many fairways and greens as I could, and made a really nice birdie on seven, and that kind of got the ball rolling." At the Tipsport Czech Masters on the Ladies European Tour, Lauren Walsh carded a bogey-free, six-under 66 to go into the final round just four shots behind leader Kim Metraux. The Castlewarden star (23) shares sixth place on nine-under at Royal Beroun Golf Club behind the Swiss talent, who carded a bogey-free 63 to lead by a shot from England's Emse Hamilton on 13-under. Douglas' Sara Byrne carded a 70 to share 50th place on four-under with Olivia Mehaffey, who made ten birdies in a seven-under 65 — her best LET round in over two years

Supreme Court decision on compensation over power lines could affect thousands of landowners
Supreme Court decision on compensation over power lines could affect thousands of landowners

BreakingNews.ie

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • BreakingNews.ie

Supreme Court decision on compensation over power lines could affect thousands of landowners

A Supreme Court decision that compensation can be awarded for depreciation of the value of lands due to having electricity power lines installed across them could potentially affect thousands of landowners. The five judge court rejected arguments by the Electricity Supply Board (ESB) that a property arbitrator was not entitled to include compensation for land depreciation – referred to in the relevant 19th century law as 'injurious affection' – in an award of €39,500 statutory compensation to a couple over power lines installed across their farm. Advertisement Arbitrator Peter Good, since deceased, had made the award to Peter and Rose O'Reilly concerning lands owned by them at Crubany, Co Cavan. Compensation for 'injurious affection' formed a substantial part of the award, and its inclusion was successfully appealed by the ESB to the High Court. The couple appealed the High Court to the Court of Appeal, which decided the matter raised issues of public importance requiring determination by the Supreme Court. On Friday, Mr Justice Brian Murray, giving the court's main judgment, upheld arguments by Peter Bland SC, with barrister Michael O'Donnell, instructed by solicitor Gabriel Toolan, that the entitlement to compensation includes for 'injurious affection'. Advertisement The case arose after the couple entered landowner agreements with the ESB in 2011. In return for unobstructed access to their lands to construct electric lines, they were entitled to compensation under the Electricity Supply Act 1927. The main issue in the Supreme Court appeal concerned the extent of the right to compensation. Mr Good decided that, as well as compensation for the loss of value of house sites on the land holding across which the lines travel, they were entitled to compensation for injurious affection, or general loss of value of their entire holding. Among his findings, Mr Justice Murray said none of the legal authorities demand a 'perfect equation' between the compensation mandated by the Constitution for interference with property interests, and the compensation enabled either by developments of the common law or by early Victorian legislation governing the compulsory acquisition of property. The ESB was correct in saying the exercise of powers conferred by section 53 of the 1927 Act did not give rise to the transfer or creation of interests 'in land', he said. There was therefore no basis on which it could be said that the 'injurious affection' provisions of the 1845 Land Clauses Consolidation Act were automatically incorporated into the procedure for deciding compensation under the 1927 Act. Advertisement No significance could be attached to the fact that the 1927 Act did not expressly include or exclude those provisions, he said. Ireland 'Author' of property fraud scheme faces prison ter... Read More He said the High Court had erred if it found the Acquisition of Land (Assessment of Compensation) Act 1919 operated in any way to preclude a claimant seeking compensation for injurious affection or depreciation of the value of their holding caused by the presence of the electric lines, poles and pylons, he said. In other findings, he held Mr Good erred when he fixed compensation for the anticipated exercise of the power of re-entry onto the lands. He upheld the High Court decision that there was no breach by Mr Good, in his handling of the matter, of the ESB's right to fair procedures. The precise amount of compensation was referred for decision, in line with the court's findings, by a new arbitrator. In a separate concurring judgment, Mr Justice Seamus Woulfe agreed with his colleague on all issues other than the constitutional issue and said he was reserving his position on that issue to an appropriate case.

Pizza maker invests €12.5m on extended Tesco deal
Pizza maker invests €12.5m on extended Tesco deal

Irish Times

time02-06-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

Pizza maker invests €12.5m on extended Tesco deal

Pizza maker Crust & Crumb is spending €12.5 million on boosting production as it extends a deal with supermarket chain Tesco . The Ballyconnell, Co Cavan-based company will hire 120 more workers and double the size of its production facility to 7,430sq m after agreeing to supply Tesco with new premium pizza varieties. Crust & Crumb already employs 282 workers and makes 30 types of pizza for the supermarket chain, including five new lines that began selling in recent weeks. The pair's relationship began five years ago when Tesco sought to move production of its own-brand pizza range to Ireland. READ MORE Ford chief Lisa Brankin on accelerating the switch to electric vehicles Listen | 41:35 The contract is worth more than €10 million a year to Crust & Crumb, which increased production 35 per cent on the previous year in 2024. Tesco commercial director Joe Manning said the deal highlighted the chain's commitment to using Irish suppliers and growing jobs locally. Crust & Crumb chief executive Mark McCaffrey noted that his company's relationship with Tesco had grown over the past five years. 'Brexit presented many challenges as we know, but also offered some great opportunities to home-grown Irish suppliers like ourselves,' he said. Mr McCaffrey confirmed that support from groups such as Tesco allowed the firm to invest and expand.

Garden centre owner and another man appear in court over €5.3m drug seizure
Garden centre owner and another man appear in court over €5.3m drug seizure

Irish Times

time29-05-2025

  • General
  • Irish Times

Garden centre owner and another man appear in court over €5.3m drug seizure

Two men aged in their 60s have appeared in court in connection with the seizure of heroin and cocaine valued at €5.3 million. Joseph Sherry (61), of Allagesh, Smithborough, Co Monaghan, and Matthew Farrell (63), of Lisagoan, Kingscourt, Co Cavan, appeared before Judge Eirinn McKiernan at a special sitting of Navan District Court on Thursday. The men are charged with unlawful possession of drugs and possession for sale or supply at a premises at Leggagh, Castletown, Navan, last May 27th. Mr Farrell, a garden centre owner, made no reply when charged, Detective Garda Paul Cullen told the court. READ MORE Detective Garda Ben McGarry gave evidence of having charged Mr Sherry, who made no reply. Judge McKiernan said she was refusing bail due to the seriousness of the charges. She remanded both in custody to appear by video link before Trim District Court on June 3rd.

New Irish albums reviewed and rated: The Would-Be's, Varo, Curtisy and Pete Holidai
New Irish albums reviewed and rated: The Would-Be's, Varo, Curtisy and Pete Holidai

Irish Times

time19-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

New Irish albums reviewed and rated: The Would-Be's, Varo, Curtisy and Pete Holidai

The Would Be's: HindZeitgeist (Roundy Records) ★★★★☆ The Would Be's were stalked by several big record labels back in the 1990s, but notions of mainstream commercial success quickly unravelled. The Co Cavan band persevered fitfully, split up and then returned with all their original members almost 15 years ago. Some bands are best left to memory, but HindZeitgeist shows that there's always room for indie-pop melodies that linger in the sunshine. Stay Tuned is a superb James Bond theme song in waiting. That's How It Gets You is a shoo-in for a song of the summer, and Stupid Little Heart is a love anthem that Johnny Marr would be happy to have written. It continues with a persistent DIY superiority: three Finnegan brothers (guitarist Matty, bassist Eamonn, drummer Paul), one sassy saxophonist/trombonist (Aidine O'Reilly) and one quality singer (Julie McDonnell). Varo: The World That I Knew (Self-released) ★★★☆☆ Varo – Lucie Azconaga and Consuelo Nerea Breschi – have been integral to Ireland's trad/folk scene for about a decade. During this time they've gathered like-minded musical friends and delved into the song archives. The aim of this resourceful collaborative album, which sees the Dublin-based duo perform with John Francis Flynn, Ruth Clinton, Niamh Bury, Junior Brother, Ian Lynch, Anna Mieke and Lemoncello, among others, is to highlight the value of authentic human experiences, good and bad, across the centuries. Between elegant versions of Green Grows the Laurel (with Flynn), Let No Man Steal Your Thyme (with Lemoncello) and Work Life Out to Keep Life In (with Bury), Azconaga and Breschi have achieved that and more. Curtisy: Beauty in the Beast (Brook Records) ★★★★☆ Hot on the heels of last year's RTÉ Choice Music Prize nomination for What Was the Question, his debut album, the Dublin rapper Curtisy releases a collaborative 12-track mixtape that sieves happiness out of hopelessness. Working with the producer Hikii (who arranged several tracks on What Was the Question), the new songs flow smoothly across a blend of sample-heavy soul/jazz-influenced hip-hop. There's a particularly smart cinematic sensibility on tracks such as Fuss, Milk & Honey, Eyes, RIP2ME and The Necessary Evil, the collection's standout track, which includes a sample of Bela Lugosi as Dracula. Curtisy's lyrics and delivery are equal to those of any contemporary rapper you care to mention. Pete Holidai: Electric Jukebox Volume One (Pilgrim Sounds) ★★★☆☆ Anyone who fancies playing a game of spot the glam-rock music act can safely listen to Electric Jukebox without fear of boredom. The latest solo album from the stellar musician and producer Pete Holidai pays homage to the music that foreshadowed punk rock. A New Revolution is such a New York Dolls tribute that you can almost taste the lipstick, Daydream Girl has David Essex channelling Roxy Music, and We Had a Vision is the cheekiest blend of two David Bowie songs you know very well. In other words, this is good, clean fun delivered by someone who knows what's what every which way and inside out. Volume Two soon, if you don't mind.

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