Not exact matches
April 26th: at
home to Chelsea Arsenal face a
home clash against their London rivals, Chelsea, to round
off the month of April.
Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal and substitute goalkeeper Victor Valdes were caught up in an
off - the - field drama ahead of tonight's FA Cup third round
clash away to Cambridge United, report the Mail, with a bloodied
home supporter receiving treatment in the away dugout after he reportedly fell near the dugout area.
The young Tottenham goalscoring sensation Harry Kane sounds like he is writing
off Arsenal ahead of today's
clash at White Hart Lane, and after 15
home wins in a row you can understand a little bit of confidence today, but when it comes to the North London Derby there is no room for cockiness.
PLEASE NOTE: The pick - up and drop
off point for The
Clash: Bath v Leicester on 7 April will be in Rosebine due to Harlequins
home match that day.
When you sit back at
home, five AM on a freezing Australian morning, ready to see titans
clash and your team pull
off the spectacular, you don't really grasp what the word spectacular is.
Meanwhile, Arsenal finish
off their season with a
home clash against already relegated Aston Villa.
Niasse earned his recent run in the side by coming
off the bench to thump
home an equaliser in the
clash with West Brom.
Osasuna are bottom of the table and have the worst
home record in the league this season (1W, 6D) and just a marignally better away one (2W, 3D) going into this
clash with Luis Enrique's side, who are coming
off a morale boosting Clasico win against arch rivals Real Madrid.
The Hammers, well, they came through their midweek Carling Cup
clash with Stoke City in the end, not without a number of scares mind, but arrive in north London
off the back of a dreadful performance last time out in the league when losing 2 - 1 at
home to Newcastle United a week ago.
The Championship
clash between Ipswich and Hull, Barnsley's
home game against Norwich and Cardiff's trip to Brentford were called
off on Friday, adding to the postponement of Sheffield United v Burton a day earlier.
Members of the Orgreave Truth and Justice Campaign told a news conference «we regard the gloves as
off» in response to
Home Secretary Amber Rudd's decision not to look further into violent
clashes between miners and police in 1984.
It is unclear what triggered the
clashes, but police officers had to intervene, and warned supporters of both parties to call
off their walk and return
home.
Playing like a scandal - rag version of events, writer / director Douglas McGrath (working
off George Plimpton's biography of the author) concentrates on the
clashing of Capote's gossipy, New York City atmosphere with the down
home curiosity of rural Kansas as the author tries to earn the trust of folks who can tell him about the murder of the Clutter family.