Email @ireland.com
Find your ancestors
Limited edition Martyn TurnerSnooker: Former world champion Ken Doherty beat Cleveland cueman Mike Dunn 5-2 in the first round of the China Open in Beijing.
Doherty pocketed a tournament high run of 140 in the opening frame against Dunn, but slipped 2-1 down after his opponent won a scrappy second frame and then knocked in a 91 run.
But breaks of 42, 40, 64 and 63 made sure Doherty made sure of his place in the last 16 phase.
However, while the Ranelagh-born snooker player won his opening match, fellow Dubliner Fergal O'Brien failed to overcome Glaswegian Stephen Maguire in their clash at the Beijing Sports Gymnasium.
Maguire beat Dubliner 5-3 in a repeat of this season's Northern Ireland Trophy final
O'Brien had breaks of 86, 70, 62 and 128, but former World Championship semi-finalist Maguire had breaks of 126 and 70 to progress.
Graeme Dott's miserable season continued as the defending champion crashed out of the Honghe Industrial China Open at the first hurdle.
The defending champion was hammered 5-1 by Englishman Barry Pinches in the first round of this year's week-long tournament at the Beijing Sports Gymnasium.
And with the defeat Dott has now failed to win his last 15 matches, the worst run of his professional career.
Pinches, who beat Chinese wildcard Zhang An'Da in his opening match yesterday, started the better of the two players.
A superb break of 116 saw him win the opening frame, before he held his concentration to win the next frame — which lasted nearly half an hour — on points 65-34.
Dott, who beat Stoke's Jamie Cope in last year's showcase final, responded with a break of 56 to reduce his arrears, but Pinches won the next with runs of 58 and 40 for a 3-1 interval.
And it got even better following the resumption as a composed break of 52 made it 4-1, before Dott faltered on a break of 44 in the sixth frame and Pinches won it on points 62-53 to progress to the last 16 phase.
Meanwhile, England's Nigel Bond impressed with a battling 5-3 victory over this season's SAGA Insurance Masters finalist Stephen Lee.
Breaks of 44, 56, 55 and 56 did the bulk of the damage, while Lee mustered two breaks of 52 as he slipped to defeat in just over three and a half hours.


A catholic approach to learningAs keeper of the Catholic flame, Bishop Leo O'Reilly is keen to ensure that matters of faith are still given robust consideration in a new educational landscape which reflects the diversity of a new Ireland
Learning to box clever for lunchBringing your own food to work - whether it is a sandwich or something more exotic - is a surefire way to trim the fat from your expenditure as these financially challenging times begin to bite
Fruit of their own endeavoursWhen children grow and pick their own fruit and veg, they will eat it - some schools have found
Tackling the poetry patriarchyIrish poetry operates in something of a male-dominated culture, but is being a female poet a raison d'etre or a clunky categorisation? Fional McCann canvasses five well-versed women
Trainee teachers face unsure futureThere was no talk of recession or education cuts when the current cohort of trainees signed up to become secondary school teachers. But things have changed and, uncertain of getting a job, some are even thinking of emigrating