The Wrap: Injuries and depth to determine Super Rugby AU A Set the default text size A Set large text size
Replay A Set the default text size A Set large text size
One of the benefits of playing Test rugby in December and starting Super Rugby in mid-February is that the ‘silly season’ is kept mercifully short.
That didn’t prevent some eyebrow-raising moments surfacing over the break, including Rugby Australia chairman Hamish McLennan using his casting vote to determine that the 2021 Wallabies will strip in a version of the classic 1991 jersey.
Of itself that wasn’t a bad decision at all, but the accompanying rationale – that McLennan chose the 91 jersey because it was the clear favourite of the 13,000 fans polled – raises possibilities. For example, will those same fans get to vote on whether the Wallabies take three points in Test matches when they are on offer?
America’s Auto Auction names fleet/lease manager for Toledo location
Will Miller is the new fleet/lease manager for America’s Auto Auction s Toledo facility. Photo courtesy of America s Auto Auction. Thursday, Jan. 14, 2021, 01:56 PM By Auto Remarketing Staff DALLAS -
America’s Auto Auction has promoted Will Miller to the position of fleet/lease manager for its Toledo, Ohio, facility, noting that Miller is well suited to the new role during the current climate of increased emphasis on internet selling.
In his previous post as the auction’s online manager, Miller worked with fleet/lease and dealer accounts.
Miller said he understands the importance of digital selling to the auction’s buyers and sellers.
In Search of 100-Mile Beer
The Tyee wondered if BC had any truly local brew. What we found is the makings of the next beer revolution.
J.B. MacKinnon is an independent magazine journalist and writer, and co-author of
The 100-Mile Diet (Random House, 2007, with Alisa Smith), a bestseller that is widely credited as a catalyst of the local foods movement. SHARES Longwood Brewery’s Harley Smith (foreground) and Peter Kis-Toth harvesting hops south of Nanaimo.
Photo: Longwood Brewery.
When James R. Anderson, a colonial statistician, set out in 1891 to complete the first survey of British Columbia’s agricultural products, there were good reasons to doubt that craft beer made from local ingredients would be among them.