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451.www.knrb.nl421000
452.www.hoopshype.com419000
453.cricket.indiatimes.com414000
454.www.sehv.ch414000
455.www.cagliaricalcio.net413000
456.www.monaco.mc413000
457.www.mountainbike.be410000
458.www.basketball.nl405000
459.www.violanews.com400000
460.www.fussballtempel.net394000
461.www.nrl.com.au392000
462.www.fcdenbosch.nl392000
463.www.mytennis.ch391000
464.www.knhs.nl391000
465.www.ameropa.de389000
466.www.forumlazioultras.it387000
467.www.waterpolonline.com386000
468.www.starfish.ch385000
469.www.mapleleafs.com382000
470.www.antilopen.nl380000
471.www.kitesurfing-kiel.de377000
472.www.volleyball.it375000
473.www.albaberlin.de375000
474.sports.myway.com374000
475.www.ski-online.de373000
476.www.detroitredwings.com370000
477.www.francorossi.com367000
478.www.fc-utrecht.nl365000
479.www.acffiorentina.it363000
480.www.empolicalcio.it363000
481.www.eufo.de362000
482.www.chesscenter.com357000
483.www.eredivisie.nl354000
484.www.motograndprix.de351000
485.www.spa-francorchamps.be350000
486.www.bodybuilding-magazin.de341000
487.www.verstappen.nl340000
488.www.torfabrik.de339000
489.www.msv-duisburg.de337000
490.www.arenafootball.com327000
491.www.basketball-bundesliga.de327000
492.yankees.mlb.com326000
493.www.teamrankings.com325000
494.www.skitouren.ch321000
495.www.federgolf.it316000
496.www.kwpn.nl309000
497.www.maxboxing.com307000
498.anderlecht-online.be306000
499.www.pbportal.de303000
500.www.nuvolari3000.com298000
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451. www.knrb.nl

Rating: 421000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.knrb.nl' on the other websites

www.knrb.nl

Koninklijke Nederlandsche Roeibond

Most popular searches: wwwk.nrb.nl, cricket, lacrosse, bicycle, sports, soccer, www.knrbn.l, leagues, matchups, basketball, www.knbr.nl, volleyball, wwwknrb.nl, ice hockey, IndyCar, www.knr.bnl, basketball, tennis, www.knrb.ln, college, www.krnb.nl, motorsport, www.nkrb.nl, www.knr.nl, www.knrb.n, skating, www.krb.nl, tournaments, ww.wknrb.nl, curling, www.knrb.com, NASCAR, F1, football, wwwknrb.nl, athletics, www.knrb.nl, CART, bike, MLS, ww.knrb.nl, www.nrb.nl, championships, www.knb.nl, www.knrb.nl, ww.knrb.nl, bowls, www.knrb.l, Indy, autoracing, www.knrbnl, baseball

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UOP Stadium named top new venue of decade
Sports Illustrated has named University of Phoenix Stadium as the best new sports venue of the decade.
bizjournals.com
Burnley put Steve Davis in charge of first-team affairs
Steve Davis, the Burnley first-team coach, will take temporary charge of the side for the Barclays Premier League match against Stoke City on Saturday.
feeds.timesonline.co.uk
Sundt lands $7.8M contract for Avondale sports center
Sundt Construction of Tempe was awarded a $7.8 million contract last week to built a recreational facility in Avondale.
bizjournals.com
Bill McLaren obituary
BBC sports commentator and 'the voice of rugby union' for nearly 50 yearsIt was said that Bill McLaren, who has died aged 86, was the voice of rugby. Of course, it was never said quite like he would have said it himself, in his honeyed, Borders burr, tinged with the impishness that suggested that none of this was to be taken too seriously. He would never have said anything about himself in such a way, for he was famously modest, a son of Hawick for whom a day away from his home town was a day wasted. But in truth, he was much more than rugby's voice, more its full-blown orchestra, devoted to the works of the Romantic movement, and only the Romantic.For a year short of a full half-century, first on radio and from 1962 on BBC television, Bill's voice washed over rugby union, soothing and harmonious. He saw no evil and spoke no evil. If there was violence, it was never anything more than "brief shenanigans", and nobody ever kicked a ball badly, but merely made it look a bit like one of Bill's own "scruffy nine irons".He played golf every day, come hail or shine, with his wife, Bette, whom he met at a local hop in 1947. When his body – never his voice – began to show signs of age and the second finger of his right hand curled down permanently into his palm, he was told that a simple operation might restore it to the vertical. He decided to leave well alone, since it seemed to improve his grip on his clubs.As a rugby player, he was, to borrow one of his phrases, a "tearaway flanker", a forward with the Hawick first XV, hugely promising by all accounts and fanatical from the day his father took him to see the New Zealand All Blacks at Mansfield Park, Hawick. I remember interviewing him once about his early influences, and he mentioned being impressed by the great Jack Manchester, captain of the All Blacks, in 1935. We searched and searched for images of the player and came up with a few grainy, jerky frames that stood in stark contrast to Bill's sharp recollections.The son of a knitwear salesman, during the second world war Bill found himself in Italy, a second lieutenant in the Royal Artillery. He was a forward spotter deep in hostile territory, often on his own, identifying enemy targets and relaying the information back to his unit. One day, drawn by the smell of decay to a village cemetery, he rounded a corner and was confronted by a mound of 1,500 corpses. The image would haunt him for the rest of his days.In 1947 he was back in Hawick and playing in a Scottish trial. But in that same year he contracted tuberculosis, and so began the second fight for his life. At the East Fortune sanatorium in East Lothian, he was selected as one of five patients to take part in trials for a new antibiotic, streptomycin. Three of the five died. Bill survived.While he convalesced, he began to commentate on table tennis for hospital radio. When he was discharged, he supplemented his work as a PE teacher with rugby reports for the Hawick Express, and was recommended from there to the BBC, joining the corporation in 1953.He had some tests along the way, especially when his son-in-law, the scrum-half Alan Lawson, or later his grandson in the same position, Rory Lawson, were playing for Scotland. Or when some of his former pupils, such as Jim Renwick, Colin Deans or Tony Stanger, scored for Scotland. But his impartiality was never questioned. The Welsh golden age of the 1970s would not have been so gilded without the soundtrack of Bill to the exploits of Gareth Edwards.Bill's preparation was meticulous and involved a lot of card-play. He would shuffle a deck and flash through the cards, matching a player with a number. Having memorised the names, he then liked to watch the players in training, listening to them. It hurt him just before his retirement in 2002 that he was once denied access to an Australian training session. Professional rugby has not always been kind to the romantics.In 2000 Bill and Bette lost their daughter Janie to cancer. It troubled him that he was not by her side when she died, but Janie had ordered him to the commentary box.It was there that Bill became music. I worked with him for a decade, one of his many "second voices". He would offer us that curled hand in a two-finger shake and a bag of Hawick balls, round brown sweets boiled in peppermint oil. He would then resume his consultation of his match chart, a mass of tiny notes in many colours, before, at kick-off, turning his back on us. It was nothing personal. It was just that Bill, given the choice of two television monitors, liked to hunch over the one closer to him. "Give me a wee tug on the sleeve, son, if you want to come in." Sometimes you had to tug away for a wee while.It simply did not matter. I suppose somebody had to be alongside him, to offer the odd jarring note, but once the game and Bill were in full flow, they were best left to themselves. Rugby for orchestra and full voice, and nobody made a sound quite like Bill McLaren.Appointed CBE in 2003, he is survived by Bette and his daughter Linda.• William Pollock McLaren, teacher and rugby commentator, born 16 October 1923; died 19 January 2010Rugby unionEddie Butlerguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Urban Meyer plans to coach Florida during spring football
Florida coach Urban Meyer said he plans to coach the Gators during all of spring football, which starts March 17. But he will still take a short ...
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