Harwich and Parke 1-5 Res Wednesday, 29th Jan 2003 23:03
A young Town reserve side comfortably beat Harwich and Parkeston in occasionally atrocious conditions in a friendly at the Shrimpers Royal Oak ground.
Town took the lead in the seventh minute when Ian Westlake was quickest to react after Dean Bowditch s shot had been saved by the Harwich keeper.
On 23 the Blues scored again when Sam Morrow ran on to a long ball, took the ball past the keeper before slipping the ball past a host of defenders on the line from an acute angle.
Four minutes later Bowditch added the third, turning well inside the box and shooting across the keeper after a ball into feet from Stuart Boardley.
Matt Robinson checks out the pitch for the big match at Strathconan Park, Fairlie.
After 130 years of being out of existence, the Burkes Pass Sloggers are making a comeback. A special match to commemorate 150 years of organised cricket in the Mackenzie District will be held at Stathconan Park in Fairlie on January 31 between Albury and Burke’s Pass for the former Mackenzie Cricket Sub-Association s Fielden Cup. Cricket enthusiast Matt Robinson came up with the idea when chatting with Chris Galway, a cricket identity in the district, after returning from London for a short stay. “I m involved with cricket in London and I grew up playing the game in Fairlie.
Edgemont Partners Advises The Adaptive Group in its Sale to Help at Home (Edgemont), a premier healthcare investment bank and a leading M&A and capital raising advisor, acted as exclusive financial advisor to The Adaptive Group (Adaptive or the Company) in its sale to Help at Home (Help at Home), a portfolio company of Centerbridge Partners, L.P. (Centerbridge) and The Vistria Group (Vistria). Winston & Strawn LLP provided legal counsel to Adaptive. Terms of the transaction, which closed on December 24, 2020, were not disclosed. The Edgemont deal team was led by Eugene Goldenberg
, Managing Director, with execution support from Vice Presidents Brandon Breslow and David Murphy, and Analysts Matt Robinson and John OMalley. Since Mr. Goldenberg joined Edgemont last year to lead its investment banking franchise in post-acute services, distribution and staffing, the firm has closed seven post-acute care transactions.
Matt Robinson claims neo-Nazis cannot afford the calibre of items he sells
Some Nazi items can sell for anywhere up to $10,000 for a single piece
Swastika flags, portraits of Adolf Hitler and Nazi weapons are all up for grabs
Mr Robinson s own family was bombed by the Germans during England s Blitz
The shop owner has condemned the Nazis, but refuses to stop selling the items
Jewish leaders have condemned the sale of Nazi items and called for a ban