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South Lanarkshire Disability Sport

South Lanarkshire Disability Sport: Chairperson

Recruiting body: South Lanarkshire Disability Sport
Closing date: Friday 24 February 2017

South Lanarkshire Disability Sport (SLDS) is a voluntary sport group where the main aim is to lead in the development of sport for people with physical, sensory or learning disabilities in partnership with key local agencies in the four local authority areas of Camglen, Hamilton, Clydedale, East Kilbride. SLDS is a member branch of Scottish Disability Sport (SDS) who are the governing body of sport for athletes and players with a physical, sensory or learning disability. SLDS achieved SDS Minimum Operating Requirements (MOR) which ensures all governance is up to date and appropriate. The committee of SLDS now wishes to appoint a new chair to lead the branch.

Role Title – Chairperson (voluntary)
Organisation – South Lanarkshire Disability Sport (SLDS)
Responsible to – South Lanarkshire Disability Sport committee
Location – South Lanarkshire

Contract – This is a voluntary position but all reasonable expenses will be paid. The chairperson is expected to attend branch meetings, held 4 times per year, club development steering group meetings and other branch events (as available). The Level of time commitment is flexible and will be tailored to suit the applicant’s current commitments and the needs of the branch.

Term – Minimum 2 year (can be re-elected at annual AGM)

Skills Required

  • Enthusiastic
  • Well organised
  • Prepared to make a regular time commitment
  • To become a PVG Scheme Member through SLDS
  • Prepared to make instant decisions when necessary
  • Confident at keeping order during meetings

Main Duties:

To lead the trustee body in ensuring that it fulfils its responsibilities for the governance of the organisation by ensuring that the charity acts in accordance with its constitution and by managing its activities.

  1. SLDS to maintain SDS Minimum Operating Requirements, supported by SDS.
  2. To optimise the relationship between the trustee body and its staff/volunteers.
  3. Take responsibility for managing the committee and the affairs of the branch.
  4. Oversee and guide all decisions taken by the committee and sub committees
  5. In conjunction with the secretary, prepare and present the annual report
  6. Liaise with the secretary on the agenda for each meeting and approve the minutes before they are circulated
  7. Be completely familiar with the constitution, branch rules, committee procedures and SDS MOR
  8. Liaise with the Treasurer to ensure that funds are spent properly and in the best interests of the branch
  9. Help to prepare and submit any statutory documents that are required (e.g. VAT, grant aid reports)
  10. If unable to attend any committee meetings, a written report should be sent to the meeting and the Vice Chairman briefed on the agenda

Interviews
Monday 6 March 2017 (This date can be flexible if required)

Applications
All applicants should send a note of interest to jennifer.livingstone@scottishdisabilitysport.com detailing why you are interested in the role and any relevant skills and experience.

If you have any questions or would like more information please contact Jennifer Livingstone on the above email or phone the SDS office on 0131 317 1170.

L to R: David Purdie & Colin Leslie (Silver Medals), Bobby Laing & Alan Oliver (Gold Medals)

2017 National Badminton Championships

The inaugural Scottish Disability Sport/Lothian Disability Badminton Club (LDBC) Championships were held at Engage Centre, at Edinburgh’s Napier University on Saturday 28th January. Given the inclusion of para-badminton in the programme for Tokyo 2020 Paralympics it is imperative that the pathways from local to national involvement in this fine sport are strengthened. Part of this process is ensuring players are exposed to relevant competitive opportunities against their peers from around Scotland and this event served to fulfil that role with both Scotland’s top players and those slightly newer to the sport competing across 21 sections to determine who would become the first ever champions of this event.

The competition saw sections in the categories of standing, wheelchair and players with a learning disability – with players banded into sub-sections appropriately. In the SL3 section the pre-tournament favourite Alan Oliver was victorious as expected, but not before being tested by his stablemate Colin Leslie in both the group stages and the final. They were to meet again in the final of the doubles event where in one of the most exciting matches of the tournament Alan and Bobby Laing prevented Colin from exacting revenge for his singles defeat. Colin and David Purdie eventually lost 16-21, 22-20, 21-19 however, the match was as close as it gets and it seemed an injustice that one side had to lose. Colin, however, was not to be denied a gold medal and was rewarded for his endeavour by victory in the mixed doubles with the experienced Mary Wilson – a familiar face across many sports on the SDS programme. They defeated Bobby Laing and Dierdrie Nagle in the final. Bobby and Dierdrie did manage to win the SS6 Mixed doubles title beating the Davidson siblings Finlay and Sky. Bobby added a further two gold medals to his collection in the SS6 Singles and the SL4 Singles events defeating Andrew Davidson and David Purdie respectively.

Lothian Disability Badminton Club – so integral to this event’s inauguration – saw further success through player and coach Fiona Christie comfortably won the WH section with further LDBC success in the form of Ross Foley’s doubles win.

The sections for players with a learning disability were very hotly contested with Grant Hunter defeating Michael McGraw in the final of the Class 1 section, reversing the result from the earlier group stage. Michael McGraw was able to taste victory in the Men’s Doubles event though, before Grant Hunter added the Mixed title to his Singles success, partnering Linzi Finnigan to defeat the ever-present Michael McGraw and Jenny Gray. Fife’s Lloyd Simpson and Lothian’s Matthew Power claimed the Class 2 & 3 titles respectively with Diane Gillian doing the Class 1 ‘double’ with title wins in the Singles & Doubles events, partnering Aimee-Leigh Allan.

SDS is grateful to the efforts of all the players who competed, and the officials and volunteers of Badminton Scotland who marshalled the event so expertly on the day. Thanks should also go to Lyndon Williams, who saw this event through from inception to implementation but was regrettably unable to join in the fun on the day as a prior engagement in Wales precluded his involvement. All in all a fantastic first event and one that should become a fixture on the national calendars of both SDS and Badminton Scotland. Thanks to all involved for their efforts in ensuring its undoubted success.

Full results can be found at SDS/ LDBC Tournament Results

Photo Credit: Roselind Hall

Photo (L to R): Men’s Doubles Finalists: David Purdie & Colin Leslie (Runners-up), Bobby Laing & Alan Oliver (Winners)

Mark Gaffney
SDS Events Manager

Robyn Love competing in the 2016 Paralympic Games

Love Selected for Osaka Cup

Rio 2016 Paralympian Robyn Love has been selected for the GB Women’s Wheelchair Basketball team to compete in the Osaka Cup taking place in Japan.

The women’s programme had great success on the world stage in 2016 with the senior team securing their highest ever Paralympic finish and the former SDS Academy Athlete was a key part of that success.

The Osaka Cup provides a great standard of competition that comes at the start of the Tokyo 2020 cycle.  Undoubtedly this event will provide an invaluable opportunity to refine travel strategies and work on team dynamics early in the cycle.

For more information please visit the GB British Wheelchair Basketball website:
http://www.britishwheelchairbasketball.co.uk/gbwba/index.cfm/news/osaka-cup-team-announcement/

Nik enthralling the delgates as he provides a fascinating opening address

SDS Coaching Conference – 29 January 2017

89 delegates attended the SDS Coaching Conference in Stirling on Sunday 29 January 2017 and fantastic learning opportunities were on offer throughout the day.  Richard Brickley MBE provides his thoughts on the day.

“Nik Diaper, Head of Sport Science and Sports Medicine  at the English Institute of Sport, and Matt Hammond, Performance Manager at GB Boccia, provided stimulating keynote addresses on Rio 2016 and planning for Tokyo 2017.

Morning and afternoon workshops in transition tolerance and toughness, leadership and mentoring, nutrition and hydration, developing an adapted programme, communication and planning and preparation for a major event offered delegates lots of food for thought.

A panel session of coaches and athletes involved in Rio and a “looking forward” session  from Mike Whittingham, sportscotland’s Director of High Performance, rounded off the very full day programme perfectly.”

Many thanks to all the coaches and support staff who supported the event.

Gordon Reid and Joachim Gerard with trophy

Reid Australian Open Title Complete Doubles Grand Slam

Gordon Reid completed a career Grand Slam of men’s doubles wheelchair tennis titles on Friday after partnering Joachim Gerard of Belgium to win the Australian Open crown 6-3, 3-6, (10-3) against Alfie Hewett and Argentina’s Gustavo Fernandez.

With two Australian Open titles secured so far for players on the Tennis Foundation’s Wheelchair Tennis World Class Programme, Andy Lapthorne will bid for another on Saturday. Lapthorne takes on Dylan Alcott of Australia in the quad singles final, when he will bid to add to the quad doubles title he won on Thursday. The match will take place on Rod Laver Arena.

With Brits on either side of the net in the men’s doubles final, second seeds Reid and Gerard made a confident start and took a 4-0 lead before Hewett and Fernandez managed to recover one of the breaks against them.

After beating Paralympic champions and top seeds Stephane Houdet and Nicolas Peifer in their semi-final, Hewett and Fernandez made the early breakthrough in the second set, turning a 2-0 lead into a 5-2 advantage and forcing the match tie-break. However, Reid and Gerard went through the last seven points of the match tie-break without reply to win their first Grand Slam title together.

“I’m very happy to finish this Australian trip on a high after some disappointing results and performances at times. It was a last minute decision to play with Jo but one that has paid off,” said Reid after the fifth Grand Slam doubles title of his career. “I don’t think any one of us played our best tennis in the final today, but we upped our level when it mattered in the match tie-break. It’s also a great feeling to complete the career doubles Grand Slam.”

Reid had previously won the Roland Garros and US Open doubles titles in 2015 and added the Wimbledon doubles crown to a second title in Paris in 2016.

“It was a tough final. The momentum kept switching as the match went on,” said Hewett. “We started a bit slow again and they pressured us into making errors. But once again it was a real positive that we fought back. We just didn’t have the composure or consistency to keep it up in the match tie-break. It was a really great atmosphere to play in and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my first Australian Open experience. I’m looking forward to going back home and working on everything I have learnt this week.”

Lapthorne was awarded a walkover in his scheduled third and last quad singles round-robin match against Heath Davidson after the Australian withdrew due to injury.

World No.3 Lapthorne will now bid to go one better than in 2013 when he reached his first Australian Open quad singles final.

Photo courtesy of the Tennis Foundation

Two swimmers preparing to dive at the championships

National Performance Swim Championships 2017

Sunday 22nd January 2017

The Mercat Gait Centre in East Lothian played host to the Scottish Disability Sport / Scottish Swimming National Short Course Performance Swim Championships on Sunday 22nd January 2017, attracting 42 swimmers with a physical, sensory or learning impairment from all regions of the country.

The Performance Championships are a strong partnership event between Scottish Disability Sport and Scottish Swimming and were introduced to support regional development and create an appropriate competition for regional and national squad swimmers, inviting individuals from the Highlands, Grampian, Central, Fife the West and East of Scotland.  The event implements the IPC Multi-Classification system and for a number of swimmers, this was the first time they had experienced the British Swimming Points Scoring System allowing them valuable an introduction to these conditions and therefore preparing them for future competitions.

Records Tumble

The calibre of swimmers was evident for all to see, highlighted by the attendance of three Paralympians – Scott Quin & Stephen Clegg (East of Scotland) and Abby Kane (West of Scotland).  Paralympic medallists Quin (25) and Kane (13) demonstrated the form that secured silver medals in the SB14 and S13 classifications respectively, with youngster Kane building on that success by breaking three Scottish Records in the 50m Free (30.50), 100m Fly (1:18.69) and 100m Breast (1:26.29).  On top of this, the REN 96 swimmer wowed the crowd with an astonishing performance, swimming inside the world record time for the S13 100m Back – completing the distance in 1:09.42.

There were also notable performances from Borders Elite Swim Team (BEST) swimmer Beth Johnston who lowered the Scottish record in the S10 100m Back (1:16.77), Kayleigh Haggo (West of Scotland) and Rosie Sheridan (Central) who also claimed new Scottish records.

In total there were 66% of swims where personal bests were achieved, highlighting the importance of this gala in terms of encouraging the development of swimmers.

Scottish Disability Sport would like to express thanks to all the dedicated volunteers from the SASA East District for their Swimmers lined up at the championshipsinvaluable support on the day, as well as the expertise provided from multi Paralympic medallist Jim Anderson OBE who kindly handed all medals to the successful swimmers.  Paul Wilson, the Disability Performance Development Manager, was also present to ensure the smooth running of the event lending his experience to the points system for the event.

For further information on the event or swimming for people with disabilities in Scotland, contact Scottish Disability Sport on 0131 317 1130 or email admin@scottishdisabilitysport.com.

Logo of Disability Snowsport UK

Scottish Guide wins Downhill Gold and Double Silver

Britain’s Millie Knight won downhill gold on the opening day of the IPC World Para Alpine Skiing Championships in Italy and was led to victory by her Scottish guide Brett Wild.

The visually impaired 18-year-old, who was GB’s youngest athlete at the Sochi 2014 Paralympics, completed the course in one minute 13.42 seconds and was 1.2 seconds faster than Five-time Paralympic champion Henrieta Farkasova of Slovakia.

GB officials are claiming that Knights success is Britain’s first-ever World Para skiing title and are excited by the 18 year olds prospects at next year’s Winter Paralympics in Pyeongchang.

Wild, from Bearsden in Glasgow, has been supporting Knight for the past year and following some early success, Parasnowsports GB requested he join them full time. A top skier himself, he raced for the Scottish junior development squad as well as for the royal Navy, where he is a Submariner.

Boor further honours in the Super G event on Thursday.

The pair also added a further two silver medals in the super combined and giant slalom to complete an excellent showing at the World Para Alpine Skiing Championships.

Tennis Scotland

Marketing and Communications Officer (Maternity Cover)

Salary: £24 – £28k

Tennis Scotland is seeking to recruit an enthusiastic and motivated Marketing and Communications Officer to lead on the marketing and communication needs of the organisation and achieve the mission and targets within the Tennis Scotland strategy.

View the detailed job description and person specification

The ideal candidate will demonstrate a track record of managing social media channels, website editing, ensuring consistent and high quality communication support for the office, tournaments and events promotion, supporting the organisation’s relationship with the press and delivering graphic design support to all staff as well as having a real passion for achieving the mission of ‘More People Playing Tennis More Often’.

For more information please see the Tennis Scotland website here.

 

Gordon Reid

Brits Set for Australian Open Challenge

World No.1 Gordon Reid begins his Australian Open men’s singles title defence against Joachim Gerard of Belgium in a rematch of last year’s final when the first wheelchair tennis Grand Slam of 2017 gets underway at Melbourne Park on Wednesday.

With four Brits on the Tennis Foundation’s Wheelchair Tennis World Class Programme lining up for the men’s, women’s and quad singles and doubles events this year in Melbourne, Alfie Hewett will make his Australian Open debut against world No.2 Stephane Houdet of France, while Lucy Shuker faces her doubles partner Marjolein Buis of the Netherlands.

The four-way quad singles round-robin begins with world No.3 Andy Lapthorne playing his doubles partner, the USA’s world No.2 David Wagner.

Reid has reached the semi-finals and final, respectively, in his first two men’s singles events of the year at the Sydney Open Super Series and the ITF 2 Melbourne Open. Most recently he finished runner-up to Gustavo Fernandez of Argentina on Saturday at the Melbourne Open. Reid bowed out against British No. 2 Hewett in the semi-finals in Sydney but then beat Hewett in the semi -finals last week.

“I had a disappointing start to this Australian trip, but managed to up my level in Melbourne in difficult conditions. So I arrive at Melbourne Park in a good place ready to defend my title ,” said Reid, who wo his first Grand Slam singles title in Melbourne 12 months ago before going on to win the inaugural men’s singles title at Wimbledon.

“It is obviously a different situation than I’ve ever been in before, coming to a Grand Slam as defending champion. But seeing the courts here brings back great memories and gets me excited to start competing here again.”

After reaching his first Super Series singles final in Sydney, having beaten Reid for the very first time, Hewett is relishing his debut at Melbourne Park against Houdet.

“It’s been a pretty positive start to 2017 for me after beating Gordon to reach my first Super Series final in Sydney and then going to three sets with him at the Melbourne Open. So after doing that against the world No.1 I’m really excited to be at the Australian Open for the first time and I’m looking for another big performance against the world No.2 on Wednesday,” said Hewett.

World No.8 Shuker is set to begin her eighth Australian Open against Buis after reaching successive women’s singles quarter-finals so far this year in which she has had close results against world No. 6 Diede de Groot and world No.2 Yui Kamiji.

“I feel like I’ve been playing some pretty good tennis out here in Australia in the first two tournaments of the year. I pushed Diede in Sydney, going to a final set tie-break, and had chances in the match against Yui in Melbourne, so I’m looking forward to my eighth Australian Open,” said Shuker.

“The last time I played here with Marjolein in doubles we made the final, so I’m looking forward to playing together again after facing each other on Wednesday.”

Lapthorne began 2017 by defeating Wagner in his very first match of the year in Sydney two weeks ago, before finishing runner-up in a four-way round robin featuring the same three players he will face this week. While Lapthorne will hope to repeat that result on Wednesday he then goes on to face Australians Dylan Alcott and Heath Davidson. The top two players at the end of the round-robin will meet again in the final.

Former US Open quad singles champion Lapthorne also pairs up with Wagner in a bid to win their third Australian Open quad singles title together.  He is also a former two-time quad doubles champion in Melbourne with fellow Brit Peter Norfolk.

“I’m excited to be going after title number five in doubles, which would be very special, and looking to try and go one better than my past attempts in singles here,” said Lapthorne.

There is the possibility of two Brits being in the men’s doubles final, with Reid and Gerard set to play the Australian-Dutch combination of Ben Weekes and Maikel Scheffers in their semi-final. Hewett and Fernandez will play French top seeds Houdet and Nicolas Peifer in the other semi-final.

Shuker and Buis will take on Dutch top seeds Jiske Griffioen and Aniek van Koot in their quest to reach a second Australian Open women’s doubles final after finishing runners-up to the same partnership in 2013.

Photo courtesy of the Tennis Foundation

Scottish Rowing

Scottish Rowing Director of Corporate Governance – Voluntary Position

Scottish Rowing is the Governing Body for rowing in Scotland.  It promotes participation in rowing by both men and women, at every age and level of ability from novice to elite.  Scottish Rowing is now seeking to appoint a Director with responsibility for Corporate Governance to join its voluntary Board of Directors.  This is an exciting opportunity for the right person to get involved in shaping the future of rowing in Scotland.

The Board meets up to eight times each year including the AGM and planning days.  The successful candidate should also expect to commit up to 2-3 hours per month for communication with the Chief Operating Officer and other staff as required.

The post is accountable to the membership of Scottish Rowing through the Board of Directors, with a direct report to the President of Scottish Rowing as required.

The term of office for this post is three years.

For more information please see the following attachments:

Director of Corporate Governance Job Description

Director Application Form

Equal Opportunities Monitoring Form