Rangers have launched legal proceedings against their former chief executive
Charles Green and Newcastle United owner Mike Ashley.
Maillot Payet Pas Cher . The Ibrox outfit
have also notified the Court of Session in Edinburgh they plan to take action
against former club directors Imran Ahmad, Brian Stockbridge and Derek Llambias,
as well as Ashleys SportsDirect.com Retail Ltd business.It is not yet clear what
the action relates to, or when it will call in court. The details of the six
defendants are revealed in an advertisement placed in Mondays edition of The
Times.Green and former commercial director Ahmad are among several men facing
charges over the alleged fraudulent acquisition of Rangers.Ashley owns a 8.92
per cent stake in the club, while his SportsDirect firm also holds a 49 per cent
shareholding in Rangers Retail, the company set up with the club to sell Rangers
kits and merchandise. Newcastle owner Mike Ashley and his Sports Direct firm
have also been targeted The Rangers board announced last week they had served
notice on RRL to terminate intellectual property agreements held with the
company - meaning the joint venture would no longer have the right to sell goods
bearing the clubs world-famous badge.Ahmad - currently believed to be overseas -
and Stockbridge were appointed to Greens board when the Yorkshire businessman
took charge of the Ibrox club by purchasing Rangers assets and business after
they went into administration and liquidation in the summer of 2012.Green
stepped down as chief executive in 2013, while Ahmad served between June 2012
and April of the following year.Finance director Stockbridge resigned from his
post in January 2014. Rangers former financial director Brian Stockbridge left
Ibrox in January 2014 Llambias, a close ally of Ashley, was appointed to the
Rangers board in November of that year, but was removed from his position five
months later when Dave Kings new regime took over the club.The advertisement in
The Times adds: If Imran Ahmad wishes to challenge the jurisdiction of the court
or to defend the action, he should contact the Deputy Principal Clerk of
Session, Edinburgh, EH1 1RQ immediately and in any event by not later than 21
days from the date of publication of this advertisement. Also See: Hibs yet to
respond to Rangers Rangers fury at Hibs and SFA Rangers bid to end shirts deal
Football League plan Ashley talks
Maillot Raphael Varane . -- Adam Snyder
returned to the San Francisco 49ers this season because the offensive lineman
thought it was his best opportunity to win a championship.
Maillot De
Foot France . Ancelotti says Ronaldo has recovered from a hamstring
injury but "but he doesnt feel comfortable yet so we wont risk him." Madrid is
third in the Spanish league, six points behind leader Barcelona, going into
Saturdays game against Valladolid.
http:///...costil-pas-cher.html
. 8 Kansas to a 64-63 win over Texas Tech on Tuesday night. The freshman from
Vaughan, Ont. Elena Delle Donne makes her body into a C-shape -- no bigger, an
end parenthesis -- as she hunches over a workbench whose tabletop hits her
midthigh at best. Shes in her garage on her parents rolling-hills estate in
Delaware, and shes been tasked with holding a clamp steady while her fiancée,
Amanda Clifton, uses wood glue and a nail gun to affix a small plank of wood to
a greater wooden canvas. Theyre making a piece of wall art, one of the 30 orders
theyve received from fans or woodworking connoisseurs since they Instagrammed
their first project, a coffee table. Amanda does most of the design and cutting
work. Elenas duties are more in line with this clamp work. Its because shes so
strong, Amanda says. Elena moves her legs into a sturdy stance and screws the
clamp in steady.This is how she uses her monolith, her Statue of Liberty of a
body, in the offseason. There are no months for the remarkably versatile
forward-guard, just a season and an offseason. During her time off, which this
year began after her Chicago Sky lost in the semifinals of the WNBA playoffs
(she sat out because of a thumb injury and subsequent surgery), Delle Donne and
Amanda hightail it out of Chicago and back to the estate. They live there in a
rustic-decorated apartment beneath what is known as the barn, a vast and
high-ceilinged structure that hosts family get-togethers. In their apartment is
the first dining room table they ever made, about a year ago. When Elena posted
it to Instagram, the comments section went nuts with compliments and people
asking if they could order one. Thats when Elena and Amanda knew. Elena has
always wanted to have a plan for a business post-basketball that wasnt about
basketball, that wasnt about being 6-foot-5. This seemed like it could be it.Its
not that she doesnt like being tall. Her height is part of her success, which
includes an MVP title in 2015. Because of the extreme nature of her height, she
had to sort through her feelings about it a long time ago. But the weird thing
about personal growth is that nobody cares how examined and at peace you are. A
while back, Delle Donne was at a grocery store in Chicago and a guy said, Youre
tall. She never understands that -- the people who just tell her what is
obvious, as if she doesnt know, as if thats not what everyone says. He asked if
she played basketball. A little, she answered. And he started telling her about
Elena Delle Donne, the greatest of all the women basketball players, the WNBA
MVP, that she should try to meet her because maybe together they could do some
great things. Delle Donne wondered whether he was messing with her, then decided
he wasnt, and so she just nodded and let him speak.She is accustomed to this.
Shes been 6-5 for a long time -- by eighth grade she was already 6 feet -- and
one of the things she learned from standing out so egregiously is that people
are watching and the best bet is just to behave. People sometimes think shes
bland -- I was warned she was a boring interview -- but its not true. Whats true
is that she has learned to stay quiet. Shes learned that people arent really
interested in the truth of your experience if it doesnt confirm their theories
about you. They dont understand what its like when you present with something
special, like height or ability -- or both, in her case -- how your future is
decided for you long before youve had a moment to consider it. They dont
understand how you could spend the rest of your life wondering if the choices
that were made on your behalf were ones you would have come around to on your
own.In her first memory, Elena is 3, and she is sucking on her pacifier on a
trip to the market with her mother, and people are saying to her mother that an
8-year-old shouldnt be sucking on a pacifier. When she was in fourth or fifth
grade, a doctor told her mother that Elena was getting too tall, that he wanted
to start her on injections to stunt her growth. Her mother wasnt having it, but
it was too late: Elena left that appointment feeling there was something wrong
with her. Her mother had a hard time finding clothes for her. She had to
special-order her size 12 shoes.It was hard to find people in the culture who
were as tall as she was to give her a sense of the impressions she made. Theres
the tall that models are. Thats acceptable. But then theres the other tall,
Delle Donne explains while sitting in a large, tapestried company chair in her
living room. Like youre a monster. Her worst day at school happened in third
grade when students had to measure themselves on a length of paper for a science
project. Her paper, when hung up, went down the wall and across the floor. She
was humiliated.Her self-consciousness doubled as she came of age and realized
she didnt just have a body -- she had a body that could do a great many things
that the body of her older sister, Lizzie, couldnt. Lizzie was born blind and
deaf, with cerebral palsy and autism and no ability to speak, and from an early
age Elena understood that not everything was OK with her sister. She remembers
lying with her body pressed up against Lizzies, communicating with her in a way
that was wordless and soothing. She remembers going to physical therapy with her
sister and jumping around on the equipment. She remembers looking over at her
mother and the therapist stretching out Lizzies legs. Then she remembers a
friend who was visiting on a playdate and who had to leave because she was so
frightened of Lizzie. Elena wasnt ashamed, though. She was mad. She also felt
guilty. She wasnt just able-bodied and strong. No, she was on her way, even at
that age, to becoming Elena Delle Donne, top recruit, WNBA MVP, superstar. Why
was it fair that Lizzie had no control over her body, and she couldnt speak or
hear or see, and Elena was Elena?She doesnt remember why she started playing
basketball. It was either because she came from an athletic family -- her
father, a real estate developer who stands 6-6, played college golf, and her
brother played college football -- or because of the tide of inertia and that
she didnt yet know to question her trajectory. People would say to her, Youre
not going to waste that height and talent, are you? And shed think to herself,
Its not a waste. I can do other things, you know. But she wouldnt say it
aloud.Its such a gender thing, Delle Donne says. Like being put right into a box
and thats what you have to do. Men might be heralded into basketball when theyre
tall, but with a woman, theres a general sense that she has to play basketball
because what the hell else is she going to do? You have to be either a
basketball player or a volleyball player, Delle Donne says. Fighting the tide
will do you no good, because at that point youre not just tall, youre female,
and there is something about the audacious act of being female that makes people
who encounter you on the street, the same ones who say Hows the weather up
there? -- like youve never heard that one before -- think you are looking for
their opinion.At her high school, Ursuline Academy in Wilmington, Delaware, she
led her team to three straight state championships and was named an
All-American. She was also the state Gatorade Player of the Year in 2005, 2006
and 2008. She was the top-rated recruit in 2008, her senior year. She chose
UConn, of course. UConn is where you go when youre a star. But something felt
rotten from the minute she signed. She thought maybe it was nerves, but it didnt
dissipate.She began school in June, and on the first night, the basketball team
had a pickup game. Delle Donne played, but all she was thinking was, God, I dont
want to do this. Were inside her apartment now, and her Great Dane, Wrigley, who
is nearly her height, is on his hind legs, pushing up against her. Like, this is
pickup. Pickups fun. This is supposed to be when the teams just having a blast,
getting along, playing basketball. And every time I stepped on the court it was
nauseating.The next day, she calmly went through her classes. Her English
teacher talked about a paper theyd have to write and she realized there was no
reason to take notes; she wouldnt be writing that paper. She wouldnt even be
around for the next class.Delle Donne left in the middle of the night, quietly.
She waited until her roommate, who was also a basketball player, fell asleep.
She had a friend from home pick her up. By the time she arrived at her parents
house in Delaware, it was 7 a.m. and pouring. Her mother opened the door and
said, What are you doing here? And Elena was crying too hard to explain.I always
felt like I was kind of following the path everybody told me to go on and that I
needed to do, Delle Donne says now, as it starts to rain outside her apartment.
And I think thats why I went through burnout and went through what I did,
because finally I was like, well, what do I want to do? Let me step back. Do I
really want to do this, or do I want to be something elsee?Her coach, Geno
Auriemma, called immediately.
Maillot Blaise Matuidi. He told her mother to
bring Elena back to school. Hed seen this before -- homesickness, nerves. But
Elenas mother knew something about this was different. I can see it in her face,
she told him.They were in for one awkward summer. The Auriemmas and the Delle
Donnes had vacation homes in Avalon, on the Jersey shore. One afternoon, Elena
rode her bike the few blocks to the coachs house. They sat and talked for hours.
He suggested she come back to school, no basketball. She stuck with her no.
Auriemma seemed sad. He thought my dreams were to be the greatest basketball
player to ever walk the planet and to win championships, she says. But that just
wasnt my dream at that time. Auriemmas wife, Kathy, who had overheard the whole
conversation, finally came in. She said, Geno, shes not going to play for you.
Let her go home.Auriemma had been so eager to coach her. Its very rare to find
someone who is that tall and can handle the ball, pass the ball, shoot it like
she does, he tells me. Can you blame him for being upset about losing a player
with those abilities? The way shed linger in the air while taking a 3-point
shot, the way shed cut and glide around the floor. Those are all things that
when she was in high school you didnt see much of, he says. This feeling that
someone like her comes along once in a great while. People had not seen this in
the past.Delle Donne spent the rest of her summer ignoring the rumors about what
was wrong -- that she was pregnant, that she was sick, that she was on drugs.
She spent her time with Lizzie, who doesnt know that Elena plays basketball and
who had no questions about her motivations.That summer of 2008, one more thing
happened that would change the course of Elenas life. She began getting terrible
migraines, and her muscles ached so much she couldnt get out of bed. One doctor
suggested it was mono; others thought it was depression that was either the
impetus for or the culmination of her dropping out of UConn. Her mother took her
for some blood work. She had Lyme disease. A tick, a bug that tops out at 10
millimeters, felled 6-5 Delle Donne, which is as stark a lesson on size as we
have here.She went on antibiotics for 20 days, then said she felt fine, unaware
that she was suffering from a chronic illness.A few days after her talk with
Auriemma, she enrolled at Delaware, less than 30 minutes from home and less than
30 minutes from Lizzie. Safely matriculated in a not-very-basketball school, she
joined the volleyball team, which might have been her first clue that, yes, she
did choose sports, that, yes, it was in her. She began to relax into this new
life, to understand that she was a mind and a soul, not just a body that found
its way onto a basketball court out of a sense of might-as-well.But she kept
remembering one moment over the summer. She had gone to visit Lizzie at her
school, and a woman named Dawn came to greet her. Dawn was a basketball fan with
cerebral palsy who used a wheelchair. She said, Elena, do everything you can
with your abilities, just like we do.Delle Donne soon found herself in the back
corner of the arena at Delaware, asking her friend Meghan McLean if she had the
keys to the gym. She wanted to test out a theory she was developing, that maybe
she could return to basketball as her choice, that maybe she would have loved
the game had she not been delivered to it as an inevitability. Volleyball was
great, but basketball. She loved how fast it was, how you had to think in the
moment and calculate risk against the possibilities that lay ahead of you. She
loved the way the defense could interrupt plans. She liked what she calls the
constant reacting. As she took shot after shot in the gym that night, she
realized that in the back of her mind, she was already rehearsing the talk she
was going to have to have with her volleyball coach.Elena met Amanda in 2013,
during Elenas rookie season. Amanda, whos 5-7, played some college ball, but
when they met, she was working for Lids. Theyd been set up through a friend, and
it didnt work out, but then after a couple of run-ins at the dog park -- Amanda
has a smaller mutt named Rasta -- they began to send flirtatious emojis to each
other. This summer they got engaged. First Amanda asked Elena on the beach,
tying the ring around Wrigleys collar. Then Elena asked Amanda on the rooftop of
their condo in Chicago over an elaborately prepared menu featuring foods from
all the places theyd been, and having wedged Rasta into a doggie wedding gown.
Their dogs mirror their owners personalities in a bizarrely on-the-nose way:
Wrigley is affectionate, quiet and warm; Rasta is having none of it. Elena says
its not that Amanda is standoffish; its that she has resting bitch face. Over
lunch in town, Amanda looks down at her soup and shrugs in agreement.Amanda runs
Elenas camps, which are usually one day and inclusive -- special-needs kids,
able-bodied kids who are generally not headed toward a sports career. That is
maybe the ur-Elena Delle Donne lesson, even if its not acknowledged, that a love
of sports doesnt have to be a career choice. It could be, but it could also not
be, and who is to say which is better?Her Lyme disease has flared up a few times
since her initial diagnosis. It struck her as a sophomore at Delaware in 2010,
and she couldnt even hold her arms up. She rode the bench, embarrassed that she
couldnt play and yet didnt know why. Then someone who knew an uncle of hers read
about her in the paper and told her uncle it sounded like Lyme. Elena found a
Lyme specialist and is now on a strict regimen, taking dozens of supplements a
day and trying to bat off recurrences, like the one two years ago that caused
her to miss 18 of the 34 games that season.This summer she reunited with
Auriemma when she played for the national team at the Olympics in Rio, winning a
gold. There was no grudge. Auriemma saw how much shed learned in the time since
theyd last been in touch. She was a very difficult matchup for any player on any
other team, he says. If you put in someone who is 6-5, theyre probably not quick
enough. If you put in someone quick or a guard, shes too big and shoots right
over you. Once we got her to be a better defender and work just as hard there as
on offense, she became invaluable to the Olympic team. For her, Rio was amazing.
She was used to being the star, but now, surrounded by equals, basketball became
about basketball again. She says it was the most beautiful basketball Ive ever
played in my life.When Delle Donne is discussed in the media, she is often
compared with LeBron James and Kevin Durant, and she has mixed feelings about
that. How could you quibble with being compared to those guys, and yet, shes a
woman, she has more finesse than LeBron, and there are women to compare her with
that would get the point across -- Candace Parker, Sheryl Swoopes. But in this
world and in this body, there is no greater height than LeBron, so shell take
it, she guesses, but she also hopes she can be part of a tide in which the woman
is the superlative example for the other woman, that one day the world will find
it acceptable to host a body like hers that isnt a mans.Theres maybe some
movement in that regard. Nike will soon release her first signature shoe. She
was recently featured in Vogue, where she was put in a dress and made to stand
on her basketball court, lest the reader not understand the context for
including a woman like her in its pages. Shes no longer ambivalent about her
height. She loves it, though the conspicuousness now that shes famous has added
a new layer. There are times Im like, if I could just turn it down to like
6-foot right now and go to this concert and just have fun and have no one know
who I am, put a hat on, that would be really nice. She smiles with sad eyes as
the TV plays on mute in the background. But it doesnt happen that way. You cant
change it.The rain stops, and we return to the garage. Even the table in her own
garage isnt built to accommodate her height. But she likes the woodwork -- it
quiets her mind the way Lizzie does, the way basketball does. Once she and
Amanda start a table, they go for it, working til 2 in the morning, blasting
Florence and the Machine. It gives Delle Donne a focus and it gives her a
product. More than that, it gives her a way to one day leave pro sports without
being someone who is always just a former athlete. Its a job that anyone could
do, no matter how short or how tall. So Elena Delle Donne stands over that
workbench and she deploys the gifts she didnt choose in order to have the life
she ultimately did. Taffy Brodesser-AknerBrodesser-Akner is a contributing
writer for ESPN The Magazine, The New York Times Magazine and GQ.
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