Sunday, February 9, 2014

Russia win first gold in team skating

9 February 2014 Last updated at 17:05

Sochi 2014: Russia win first gold in team figure skating

Hosts Russia won their first gold of the Sochi Games with victory in the team figure skating.

There were still nearly 90 minutes remaining in the inaugural Winter Olympic team competition when the Russians were guaranteed the title owing to the points system being used.

Yevgeny Plushenko led Russia to their unassailable lead, his score of 168.20 earning them 10 points.

Canada and the United States will take silver and bronze respectively.

More to follow.


Concern over missing 12-year-old boy

Concern over missing Tommy Healy, 12, in Inverness

Tommy Healy Tommy Healy was last seen in the Merkinch area of Inverness on Saturday

Police are concerned about a 12-year-old boy who has gone missing in Inverness.

Tommy Healy was last seen on Saturday in the vicinity of Greig Street in the Merkinch area.

He is described as being 5ft tall, well built, with brown, straight, short hair and brown eyes.

He was wearing pale faded jeans, a grey hooded top with white markings and a light-coloured baseball cap. He may also be carrying a skateboard.

Anyone with information should contact police.


Man arrested over Rio protest clash

Brazil: Man arrested over Rio protest bomb injury

Cameraman hit by explosive in Rio de Janeiro A photographer captured the moment the Santiago Andrade was hit by an explosive device

Police in Rio de Janeiro have arrested a man in connection with an explosion during a protest on Friday, which seriously injured a journalist.

The man reportedly told investigators he found an explosive device on the floor but another person set it off.

Hundreds of people in Brazil clashed with police during a protest against increased fares for public transport.

Riot police fired tear gas and tried to disperse the crowd, while activists hurled stones and bombs.

The BBC's Wyre Davies was at the scene and was one of the first to try to save cameraman Santiago Andrade who suffered serious head injuries and is still fighting for his life in a Rio hospital.

The BBC's Wyre Davies was reporting from Rio's Central Station as the violence unfolded

Investigators are trying to get the detained man - named as Fabio Raposo - to identify the protester who allegedly set off the explosive device, police said.

But the man told the Brazilian media he did not know the man.

Last year, similar protests grew into a nationwide movement against corruption and excessive spending ahead of the football World Cup, which Brazil will host in June and July.

Are you in Rio de Janeiro? Did you witness the protest? Send us your experiences using the form below.


France 30-10 Italy

9 February 2014 Last updated at 17:09

Six Nations 2014: France 30-10 Italy

FRANCE (9) 30

  • Tries: Picamoles, Fofana, Bonneval
  • Cons: Doussain 3
  • Pens: Doussain 3

ITALY (3) 10

  • Try: Iannone
  • Con: Orquera
  • Pen: Allan

France followed their dramatic late win over England with a scratchy victory over Italy to maintain their 100% start to this year's Six Nations.

Second-half tries from Louis Picamoles, Wesley Fofana and Hugo Bonneval took the hosts clear from 9-3 at half-time.

Italy had competed well in the first half but could only muster one penalty, via Tommaso Allan, from four attempts.

A late try from Tommaso Iannone brought belated reward after a scrum flare-up that brought a red card for each side.

France finished the match with 13 men, after first replacement lock Sébastien Vahaamahina was sin-binned and then Italy replacement prop Michele Rizzo head-butted his French counterpart Rabah Slimani, who responded in kind.

Both men were sent off on the advice of touch judge Craig Joubert, the first time two players had seen red in a Five/Six Nations match since French duo Gregoire Lescube and Vincent Moscato in an infamous France-England clash in 1992.

But the late outbreak of violence did little to alter the course of a match that had long swung France's way.

They will head to Cardiff a week on Friday, 21 February, to face defending champions Wales with a possible Grand Slam still in their sights, while Italy face Scotland in Rome in a likely Wooden Spoon decider.

A scoreless first 26 minutes in Paris brought a comedy of errors and missed kicks from both sides.

France scrum-half Jean-Marc Doussain inexplicably pushed an early penalty attempt wide from inside the Italian 22, and was equally unconvincing with his second effort from further out.

Fly-half Jules Plisson, playing only his second Test, then pulled a dismal drop-goal attempt wide as the hosts failed to punish Italy's early indiscretions.

The Azzurri were equally profligate, although Gonzalo Garcia's first two penalty attempts were from nearly halfway.

The second resulted from Italy's first-half dominance at the scrum, where Martin Castrogovianni, who along with Sergio Parisse joined Andrea Lo Cicero as Italy's most capped player on 103, and his fellow forwards drew two penalties in quick succession.

France finally generated enough momentum for Doussain to belatedly open the scoring in the 27th minute with a simple penalty in front of the posts, a minor victory for Italy after wing Leonardo Sarto hauled down French full-back Brice Dulin metres short.

But with loose-head prop Alberto De Marchi to the fore with several barnstorming charges, Italy levelled through an Allan penalty, only for the young fly-half to waste a golden opportunity to put his side ahead by pushing his next effort wide.

Instead Doussain landed two more penalties before the interval after France were sparked into life by a weaving run from Dulin from his own 22.

After a closely contested opening period, France knocked the stuffing out of the Italians with two quick-fire tries in the space of three minutes on the resumption.

First the hosts worked a catch-and-drive move from a line-out in the 43rd minute, number eight Picamoles twisting out of the back of the maul and stretching over for his sixth try for his country.

Barely two minutes later, the dangerous Fofana picked up from the base of a ruck and burst down an unguarded right touchline - and out of Luke McLean's attempted tackle - to grab the second.

Doussain converted both and suddenly Italy were staring at a 20-point deficit, their average margin of defeat in their seven previous Paris contests in the Six Nations.

Alas for the Azzurri, it didn't end there. A loose pass on the French 22 was intercepted by Fofana, who broke away to halfway before releasing the supporting Yoann Huget. The wing was tackled just short by Sarto in the left corner, but his inside pass handed debutant Bonneval a debut try.

France, 30-3 ahead after Doussain's third conversion, appeared happy to see the game out and Italy enjoyed all the territory and possession in the final quarter.

Lock Joshua Furno lost the ball in the left corner as he attempted to ride Huget's last-ditch tackle, while replacement scrum-half Tobias Botes sniped over, but television match official Gareth Simmonds could not find an angle that confirmed he had grounded the ball.

Italy finally earned some reward for their persistence with a try from wing Iannone with three minutes left, but their 17th consecutive away defeat in the Six Nations was already sealed.

France : 15-Brice Dulin; 14-Yoann Huget, 13-Mathieu Bastareaud, 12-Wesley Fofana, 11-Hugo Bonneval; 10-Jules Plisson, 9-Jean-Marc Doussain; 1-Thomas Domingo, 2-Dimitri Szarzewski, 3-Nicholas Mas, 4-Yoann Maestri, 5-Pascal Pape, 6-Yannick Nyanga, 7-Bernard Le Roux, 8-Louis Picamoles

Replacements: 16-Benjamin Kayser (for Szarzewski, 58), 17-Yannick Forestier (for Domingo, 49), 18-Rabah Slimani (for Mas, 49, Mas for Nyanga, 75, Nyanga for Le Roux, 76), 19-Sébastien Vahaamahina (for Pape, 67), 20-Damien Chouly (for Picamoles, 58), 21-Maxime Machenaud (for Doussain, 61), 22-Francois Trinh-Duc (for Plisson, 67), 23-Gael Fickou (for Bastareaud, 73)

Yellow card: Vahaamahina (70)

Red card: Slimani (71)

Italy : 15-Luke McLean; 14-Tomasso Ianonne, 13-Michele Campagnaro, 12-Gonzalo Garcia, 11-Leonardo Sarto; 10-Tommaso Allan, 9-Edoardo Gori; 1-Alberto Di Marchi, 2-Leonardo Ghiraldini, 3-Martin Castrogiovanni, 4-Quintin Geldenhuys, 5-Joshua Furno, 6-Francesco Minto, 7-Mauro Bergamasco, 8-Sergio Parisse

Replacements: 16-Davide Giazzon, 17-Michele Rizzo (for Di Marchi, 59, Di Marchi for Bergamasco, 75), 18-Lorenzo Cittadini (for Castrogiovanni, 59), 19-Marco Bortolami (for Geldenhuys, 71), 20-Alessandro Zanni (for Minto, 51), 21-Tobias Botes (for Gori, 64), 22-Luciano Orquera (for Allan, 64), 23-Angelo Esposito

Red card: Rizzo (71)

MATCH OFFICIALS

Referee : Jaco Peyper (South Africa)

Touch judges : Craig Joubert (South Africa) and Francisco Pastrana (Argentina)

TV : Gareth Simmonds (Wales)


Johnson-Thompson secures double gold

9 February 2014 Last updated at 16:51

Katarina Johnson-Thompson wins double gold at British Indoors

Katarina Johnson-Thompson impressed at the British Indoor Championships by adding the long jump title to the high jump gold she had won on Saturday.

The 21-year-old, who set a British record in the high jump, won the long jump with a personal best of 6.75m.

Scotland's Laura Muir comfortably won the women's 800m to secure her place at the World Indoor Championships.

Olympic bronze medallist Robbie Grabarz made it back-to-back titles in the high jump thanks to a 2.24m effort.

There was controversy in Sheffield, however, as Nigel Levine (46.82 seconds) won a fourth successive 400m title after Luke Lennon-Ford was disqualified.

Lennon-Ford crossed the line ahead of Levine and draped himself in the Union flag in celebration only to later learn he had strayed outside his lane.

Andrew Osagie suffered the same fate in the men's 800m, leaving Sheffield's Mukhtar Mohammed to take the crown in a time of one minute 51.61 seconds.

It was another dominant display by Sheffield's Luke Cutts, who won the men's pole vault by 25cm.

The 25-year-old's 5.60m vault was way below the British indoor record of 5.83m which he set in France last month.

However, it was Johnson-Thompson who caught the eye once again. The Liverpool Harrier is expected to compete in the pentathlon in Poland and will take part in the Dutch Championships next week in a bid to qualify for the event.

Elsewhere, it was a disappointing day for Jenny Meadows (2:06.80) who was overtaken on the final lap and finished fourth in the women's 800m. Meadows was competing for the first time in 12 months after injury ruined her 2013 season.

IPC Athletics high jump silver medallist Jonathan Broom-Edwards failed to set a new personal best as he finished behind training partner Grabarz.

The 25-year-old, who is working towards the 2016 Rio Paralympics and is one of the BBC Sport's Paralympic Athletes to Watch in 2014, cleared 2.07m at the third attempt but had three failures at 2.12, which would have been a new personal best.


VIDEO: Bosnia police 'used violence'

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Bosnia police 'used violence' say parents

9 February 2014 Last updated at 16:54 GMT

Protesters in Bosnia's capital Sarajevo have accused police of assaulting people arrested following Friday's violent demonstrations.

Parents gathered outside the city's main police station, waiting for news of their children.

The police insist they have followed the correct procedures.

Balkans Correspondent Guy Delauney reports.


Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 Everton

Tottenham v Everton

Team badge of Tottenham Hotspur
Tottenham 1

Adebayor 65′

  • FT 90 +4
  • HT 0-0

9 February 2014 Last updated at 16:27

Emmanuel Adebayor struck to sink Everton and give Tottenham an important three points in the race for a place in next season's Champions League.

The ex-Arsenal striker profited from a quickly taken free-kick to drill past Tim Howard and send Spurs up to fifth.

His second-half finish settled a tight contest after Leon Osman had headed over and seen a shot saved, as Everton had the better of the opening period.

The loss leaves the Blues sixth, five points behind fourth-placed Liverpool.

Roberto Martinez's side will feel hard done by after Seamus Coleman saw a strong penalty appeal turned down when he went down under Etienne Capoue's lunging challenge in injury time.

While a draw would have perhaps have been a fairer result, Tottenham's resurgence under Tim Sherwood continues.

Andre Villas Boas's successor, who has now won six of his nine Premier League games in charge, owes much to Adebayor, who was selected only once by the Portuguese this season.

Everton - without their main striker Romelu Lukaku through injury - travelled to White Hart Lane with only one clean sheet from their last 10 league games.

Despite largely restricting their hosts, a momentary lapse of concentration from Kyle Walker's free-kick enabled Adebayor to score his sixth league goal since Villas Boas's departure.

Martinez will, however, take positives from Everton's energetic start as Spurs - without a single goal inside the first 15 minutes of any league fixture this season - started typically slowly.

Leon Osman went close on four occasions inside 10 minutes, his best effort a volley which required a smart save from Hugo Lloris, and the midfielder headed over from the resulting corner.

Neat link-up play between Osman, Steven Naismith and Kevin Mirallas threatened to hurt Spurs and Sherwood swiftly stepped off his bench in an attempt to influence his lacklustre side.

Captain Michael Dawson responded by glancing a free-header over the bar, but all too often Spurs' attacks became overly intricate and broke down in the final third.

Adebayor came to the fore early in the second period and headed one of his side's nine corners over the bar, before breaking the deadlock in clinical style.

The 29-year-old expertly chested down Walker's set-piece delivery in the 65th minute and fired left-footed past Howard at his near post.

It was Spurs' first shot on target and with the hosts yet to lose a league game from a winning position this season, Martinez summoned Gerard Deulofeu.

His fellow substitute Aiden McGeady saw his deflected cross well fielded by a scrambling Lloris, but Everton's first-half zest had disappeared.

Adebayor fired over from range late on, before Coleman appeared to be tripped by Capoue in the area.

But referee Mark Clattenburg waved away the penalty appeal and Everton suffered only their fourth league defeat of the season.

Lineup, Bookings (1) & Substitutions (6)

Tottenham Hotspur

  • 25 Lloris
  • 02 Walker
  • 03 Rose
  • 19 Dembélé Booked
  • 20 Dawson
  • 05 Vertonghen
  • 42 Bentaleb
  • 08 Paulinho (Capoue - 68' )
  • 10 Adebayor
  • 07 Lennon (Defoe - 86' )
  • 23 Eriksen (Townsend - 59' )

Substitutes

  • 04 Kaboul
  • 09 Soldado
  • 15 Capoue
  • 16 Naughton
  • 17 Townsend
  • 18 Defoe
  • 24 Friedel

Everton

  • 24 Howard
  • 23 Coleman
  • 03 Baines
  • 18 Barry
  • 06 Jagielka
  • 15 Distin
  • 11 Mirallas
  • 16 McCarthy
  • 14 Naismith (Deulofeu - 73' )
  • 21 Osman (McGeady - 73' )
  • 22 Pienaar (Barkley - 64' )

Substitutes

  • 01 Robles
  • 02 Hibbert
  • 07 McGeady
  • 10 Deulofeu
  • 20 Barkley
  • 26 Stones
  • 28 Traore
Ref: Mark Clattenburg
Att: 35,944

Match Stats

Shots

8 11

On target

2 3

Corners

9 7

Fouls

9 13

Live Text Commentary

Full time

Full Time Match ends, Tottenham Hotspur 1, Everton 0.

90:00 +3:23 Full time

Full Time Second Half ends, Tottenham Hotspur 1, Everton 0.

90:00 +2:46

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by Tim Howard.

90:00 +2:44

Attempt saved. Jermain Defoe (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Emmanuel Adebayor.

88:30

Foul by Gerard Deulofeu (Everton).

88:30

Danny Rose (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

86:48 Booking

Booking Mousa Dembélé (Tottenham Hotspur) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.

86:46

Gareth Barry (Everton) wins a free kick in the attacking half.

86:46

Foul by Mousa Dembélé (Tottenham Hotspur).

85:02 Substitution

Substitution Substitution, Tottenham Hotspur. Jermain Defoe replaces Aaron Lennon.

84:15

Foul by Sylvain Distin (Everton).

84:15

Emmanuel Adebayor (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the attacking half.

82:42

Foul by James McCarthy (Everton).

82:42

Aaron Lennon (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

82:08

Corner, Everton. Conceded by Kyle Walker.

79:53

Seamus Coleman (Everton) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

79:53

Foul by Emmanuel Adebayor (Tottenham Hotspur).

78:37

Gerard Deulofeu (Everton) wins a free kick on the right wing.

78:37

Foul by Danny Rose (Tottenham Hotspur).

77:44

Attempt missed. Ross Barkley (Everton) right footed shot from more than 35 yards misses to the right. Assisted by Sylvain Distin.

76:14

Attempt missed. Emmanuel Adebayor (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses the top left corner. Assisted by Mousa Dembélé.

75:51

Attempt blocked. Andros Townsend (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Aaron Lennon.

73:27

Hand ball by James McCarthy (Everton).

72:58 Substitution

Substitution Substitution, Everton. Aiden McGeady replaces Leon Osman.

72:40 Substitution

Substitution Substitution, Everton. Gerard Deulofeu replaces Steven Naismith.

72:06

Offside, Everton. Gareth Barry tries a through ball, but Kevin Mirallas is caught offside.

69:01

Foul by Steven Naismith (Everton).

69:01

Kyle Walker (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

67:24 Substitution

Substitution Substitution, Tottenham Hotspur. Etienne Capoue replaces Paulinho.

64:26 Goal scored

Goal! Goal! Tottenham Hotspur 1, Everton 0. Emmanuel Adebayor (Tottenham Hotspur) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Kyle Walker following a set piece situation.

64:18

Foul by Steven Naismith (Everton).

64:18

Mousa Dembélé (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the attacking half.

63:20 Substitution

Substitution Substitution, Everton. Ross Barkley replaces Steven Pienaar.

62:05

Corner, Everton. Conceded by Jan Vertonghen.

60:00

Leon Osman (Everton) wins a free kick in the attacking half.

60:00

Foul by Paulinho (Tottenham Hotspur).

58:33 Substitution

Substitution Substitution, Tottenham Hotspur. Andros Townsend replaces Christian Eriksen.

56:05

Attempt blocked. Leon Osman (Everton) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked.

53:15

Attempt missed. Emmanuel Adebayor (Tottenham Hotspur) header from the centre of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Christian Eriksen with a cross following a corner.

52:54

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by Phil Jagielka.

52:16

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by Phil Jagielka.

51:26

Attempt missed. Kevin Mirallas (Everton) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Steven Pienaar.

48:27

Foul by Mousa Dembélé (Tottenham Hotspur).

48:27

Kevin Mirallas (Everton) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

47:51

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by Leighton Baines.

45:44

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by Steven Pienaar.

45:00

Second Half begins Tottenham Hotspur 0, Everton 0.

45:00 +1:03 Half time

Half Time First Half ends, Tottenham Hotspur 0, Everton 0.

39:33

Corner, Everton. Conceded by Michael Dawson.

38:51

Corner, Everton. Conceded by Kyle Walker.

36:14

Foul by Michael Dawson (Tottenham Hotspur).

36:14

Steven Naismith (Everton) wins a free kick in the attacking half.

35:33

Attempt missed. Kevin Mirallas (Everton) right footed shot from the right side of the box is too high. Assisted by James McCarthy.

33:46

Hand ball by Steven Pienaar (Everton).

33:14

Corner, Everton. Conceded by Michael Dawson.

33:10

Attempt missed. Sylvain Distin (Everton) header from very close range misses to the right. Assisted by Leighton Baines with a cross following a set piece situation.

32:20

Foul by Michael Dawson (Tottenham Hotspur).

32:20

Kevin Mirallas (Everton) wins a free kick on the left wing.

30:53

Attempt missed. Michael Dawson (Tottenham Hotspur) header from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Christian Eriksen with a cross following a corner.

30:27

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by Leighton Baines.

28:00

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by Seamus Coleman.

24:22

Attempt saved. Seamus Coleman (Everton) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by James McCarthy.

23:43

Foul by Kyle Walker (Tottenham Hotspur).

23:43

Steven Pienaar (Everton) wins a free kick in the attacking half.

23:33

Attempt blocked. Kevin Mirallas (Everton) left footed shot from the right side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Leighton Baines.

22:15

Danny Rose (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

22:15

Foul by Seamus Coleman (Everton).

20:46

Attempt missed. Kyle Walker (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the left. Assisted by Nabil Bentaleb.

19:11

Offside, Everton. Leighton Baines tries a through ball, but Steven Pienaar is caught offside.

18:06

Offside, Everton. Leon Osman tries a through ball, but Leighton Baines is caught offside.

16:07

Jan Vertonghen (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

16:07

Foul by Steven Naismith (Everton).

14:41

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by James McCarthy.

12:12

Attempt missed. Christian Eriksen (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high from a direct free kick.

11:25

Paulinho (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the attacking half.

11:25

Foul by Steven Pienaar (Everton).

9:55

Foul by James McCarthy (Everton).

9:55

Danny Rose (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

9:29

Offside, Everton. Leon Osman tries a through ball, but Kevin Mirallas is caught offside.

7:47

Attempt saved. Leon Osman (Everton) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Steven Naismith.

6:58

Attempt missed. Leon Osman (Everton) header from the centre of the box is close, but misses the top left corner. Assisted by Kevin Mirallas with a cross following a corner.

6:35

Corner, Everton. Conceded by Hugo Lloris.

6:34

Attempt saved. Leon Osman (Everton) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Steven Naismith.

5:51

Corner, Everton. Conceded by Jan Vertonghen.

4:51

Corner, Tottenham Hotspur. Conceded by Tim Howard.

4:08

Aaron Lennon (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the defensive half.

4:08

Foul by Steven Naismith (Everton).

2:27

Attempt missed. Leon Osman (Everton) left footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left. Assisted by Seamus Coleman.

1:52

Foul by Michael Dawson (Tottenham Hotspur).

1:52

Steven Naismith (Everton) wins a free kick on the left wing.

0:56

Mousa Dembélé (Tottenham Hotspur) wins a free kick in the attacking half.

0:56

Foul by Steven Pienaar (Everton).

0:00

First Half begins.

0:00

Lineups are announced and players are warming up.

Live data and text provided by our data suppliers


Voices from storm-hit South West

Voices from storm-hit South West

Fierce winds and heavy rain have battered the South West of England for weeks and more dire weather is forecast in the coming days. The BBC's Michael Hirst is travelling around Cornwall following the story from some of the worst-affected areas.

On his journey, he is meeting those caught in the eye of the storm and recording their experiences on video and camera.

line break
Sunday 9 February

Joe McKnight, 20, is a barman at the Sloop Inn in St Ives.

Joe McKnight Many businesses in St Ives have been badly hit with people staying away as a result of the rainy weather, but not the Sloop Inn. "It's been really busy during the worst storms as people come down here to take photos of the waves," says Mr McKnight.
line break

Ian Luke is owner of Hayle Golf

Ian Luke Extreme sports fans have been treated to nautical acrobatics off the coast of Hayle this weekend at the Red Bull storm chaser windsurfing event. But other sports are suffering. Mr Luke says business is down 15% on last year. "Even the driving range is struggling because players don't want to hit balls into a swirling wind," he says.
line break

Barry Chapel, 70, is the sign photographer at Land's End.

Barry Chapel "We take the sign down at night, but these storms have been the first time in 14 years we've had to take it down during the day," says Mr Chapel.
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James Roberts, 21, is a fisherman in Newlyn and an RNLI lifeboat volunteer.

James Roberts "Apart from one day in January, last time I was out was the first week in December," says Mr Roberts. "If we hadn't had a good summer, it would be a massive blow for me. With taxes being paid in January, mooring fees and boat maintenance, fishermen have lots of outlay and nothing coming in. I dread to think what some of the smaller boats are dealing with when they haven't been making any money for two months."
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Patrick Harvey is the coxswain at RNLI Penlee lifeboat station and works closely with the fishing community.

Mr Harvey: "This is an ideal boat - we've had it 11 years and the crew love it to bits"

Lifeboats A fisherman for more than 20 years, Mr Harvey says there has only been one day's fishing since December, and the lack of business was hitting local industry hard.
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Josephine Wall is a retired mother of three from Porthleven.

Josephine Wall Josephine Wall says the 2.5 tonne baulks that stop swell from entering the harbour had snapped "like matchsticks" in recent storms. "The force of the sea has been unbelievable. They've had to take all the boats out of the harbour. And they haven't done that for more than 100 years."
line break

Jeremy Richards, 47, has been sailing around the Cornish coast for 40 years.

Boat owner Jeremy Richards, who feels lucky to still have a boat, says: "There were a number of things that conspired against us"


Film renews interest in fishing song

Inside Llewyn Davis revives interest in fishing song

It's hard to imagine two more different places than New York and Great Yarmouth, but a film set in one is helping to revive interest in a song about the other.

Inside Llewyn Davis, the latest movie by Joel and Ethan Coen, is a moody portrait of the US city's folk scene in 1961.

In one scene, young singer Llewyn Davis, played by Oscar Isaac, picks up his guitar and plays to his father, a former seaman now suffering from dementia, a song that had once been a favourite of his.

Oscar Isaac in Inside Llewyn Davis In the latest Coen Brothers movie, folk singer Llewyn Davis, played by Oscar Isaac, plays The Shoals of Herring to his father

"Oh, it was a fine and pleasant day/ Out of Yarmouth harbour I was faring/ As a cabin boy on a sailing lugger/ For to go and hunt the shoals of herring," he sings.

Some artistic licence is at work here, however. The song could not have been an old favourite of Llewyn's father, since it was only heard for the first time a couple of years before that film scene was set.

'Largest herring port'

Called The Shoals of Herring, it was written in 1959 by English folk singer and songwriter Ewan MacColl to illustrate the life of Sam Larner, a Norfolk herring fisherman who was a singer himself.

Larner was born in 1878 and went to sea for the first time in 1892. He first sang in public at the age of nine but was not recorded until he was in his 80s.

MacColl wrote the song for "Singing the Fishing", the third of eight BBC "Radio Ballads" first broadcast in 1960. It was a musical documentary in which Larner talked of his life at sea.

Herring fishing was once a major industry in Yarmouth and along the east coast of England and Scotland.

Johanna O'Donoghue, curator of Great Yarmouth Museums, said: "Great Yarmouth wouldn't exist as a town without herring and the fishing industry."

The town began life as a sandbank, later growing to become the world's largest herring port.

Singing and joking

Records from 1334 show that it raised more money from tax than most other towns in England, apart from York, Bristol and Newcastle. Its wealth was based entirely on herring fishing.

Sam Larner The song was written to illustrate the life of Norfolk fisherman and folk singer Sam Larner

The trade grew, peaking in 1913 when 1,000 boats landed 906 million herring at Yarmouth,

Scottish fisherman followed the migrating herring down the coast to Yarmouth, arriving each October or November.

Women known as fisher-girls came with them to gut the herring, getting through as many as 30 per minute.

Despite working long hours in cold, wet conditions on the quayside, the "girls" had a reputation for cheerfulness, singing and joking as they worked, and were popular with the locals.

Drifters unloading their catch Great Yarmouth's port was a hive of activity as drifters unloaded their catch

"People remember them as fondly as their own family," said Miss O'Donoghue.

"They stayed in people's homes and for the two weeks or so they were there, they provided income for the people of the town. The cultures blended very well."

After World War Two, the industry declined as herring stocks dwindled, largely through over-fishing.

'It's wonderful'

Its demise gives the song from the movie an added poignancy.

Women preparing the herring "Fisher-girls" could gut up to 30 herring a minute and were popular with locals

"It's wonderful to have the fishing industry in Yarmouth mentioned in such an iconic film," said Miss O'Donoghue.

But what of the man who inspired the song, and was known to sing a few himself?

Sam Larner died in 1965, aged 87.

One of nine children, Larner picked up his songs from other fishermen and performed them in pubs and parish concerts.

He was 80 when he met MacColl and BBC producer Charles Parker, who recorded him for Singing the Fishing.

Blue plaque on Sam Larner's home A blue plaque was unveiled at Sam Larner's home in Winterton in 2008

"He had lived through the industry's golden age when Great Yarmouth had reckoned up the annual catch by the million barrels," wrote MacColl in 1981.

"Furthermore, Sam could sing. He knew dozens of country songs, traditional ballads, mnemonic rhymes for navigation and local legends."

John Howson, of the East Anglian Traditional Music Trust, was present when a blue plaque was mounted on Larner's former home in Winterton, near Yarmouth, in 2008.

"He was important because he was one of the singers discovered as the '60s folk revival was coming together," he said.

'Who's quibbling?'

And The Shoals of Herring itself?

"It's become an incredibly well-known song. You see it in books now, accredited as 'traditional', and of course, it's not," he said.

"It's a very typical Ewan MacColl song. He did write some great songs - The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face, for example.

"The fact that it's been used out of context in this film makes it a little flawed, I suppose. It would have been more sensible to use a traditional song."

Others are less concerned. "Who's quibbling?" wrote American TV writer and producer Phoef Sutton on his blog.

The song is his favourite.

"Now, you might wonder why a boy growing up in the suburbs of Northern Virginia would find himself so touched by a song about the life of a fisherman of Great Yarmouth on the North Sea coast of the UK," he wrote.

"It's confused me too. But the song has always moved me.

"Maybe it's because it describes so well the work and toil of life in general."