Paul Cullen
Paul Cullen
Paul Cullenwas Roman Catholic Archbishop of Dublin and previously of Armagh, and the first Irish cardinal. His Ultramontanism spearheaded the Romanisation of the Catholic Church in Ireland and ushered in the devotional revolution experienced in Ireland through the second half of the 19th century and much of the 20th century. A trained biblical theologian and scholar of ancient languages, Cullen crafted of the formula for papal infallibility at the First Vatican Council...
NationalityIrish
ProfessionClergyman
Date of Birth29 April 1803
CountryIreland
That's got to be our target. The big challenge is top six. There are a number of big names who weren't in it last year who have spent an awful lot of money and recruited very well to get themselves back to the standard that we set last year. I know it's an old cliche but it will be far tougher in 2006 than it was in 2005.
There is a common trait in teams at this point in the season that they seem to sit back and wait for somebody to win the game for them. And we had too many of our players waiting for someone to win the game.
Paul made a massive contribution and gives us an extra dimension.
That desire to win the game was not there,
Nathan's guts and fighting qualities were our saving grace.
He made a massive contribution. But so did his team-mates. He gives us an extra dimension and that's why we brought him across here.
We're now up there punching with the big boys and will enjoy the rarefied atmosphere. We didn't crack after Leeds' early try and took the game off them.
To extend the deals of these two influential squad members is a huge boost for the club.
This was our best performance when you also consider it came after the Bradford win. It's a fantastic win in its own right - but doubled up with Bradford makes it even more special. It was a good effort here and I'm convinced there is more to come from us.
He gives us an extra dimension and that's why we brought him over. He's now four or five games in and with every game he gets better - and we think there's more to come.
It's a matter of reducing the work to its very simplest possible state, eliminating all of the things that lead away from the guts of the work, the thing the work is really about. Anything that's there must build towards its over-all organization and meaning.
In a very simple sense I want everything that's in a work to be there for the reason that it's needed. It's not an ornamentation. It's not there because I thought it looked nice but because it has to be there.
I've put in a complaint to the match commissioner, but it's not going to change the result.
Contractually he is secure and he won't lose out financially in this situation,