Back to Spam

Martin Dreyer (rugby union)

deletedalmost 7 years

Martin Dreyer (rugby union) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Martin Dreyer Martin Dreyer.jpg Full name Marthinus Christoffel Dreyer Date of birth 25 August 1988 (age 29) Place of birth Rustenburg, South Africa Height 1.84 m (6 ft 1⁄2 in) Weight 118 kg (18 st 8 lb; 260 lb) School Hoërskool Wonderboom, Pretoria University NWU Pukke Rugby union career Position(s) Prop Current team Kings Youth Career 2006 Blue Bulls 2007–2009 Leopards Amateur team(s) Years Team Apps (Points) 2010–2013 NWU Pukke (Varsity Cup) 18 (10) Senior career Years Team Apps (Points) 2011–2013 Leopards 13 (5) 2013 Leopards XV 4 (0) 2014–2015 Boland Cavaliers 19 (5) 2014 Stormers 5 (0) 2015–2016 Dax 10 (0) 2016–present Blue Bulls 10 (0) 2017–present Bulls 0 (0) 2017–present Kings 0 (0) Correct as of 25 October 2016 National team(s) Years Team Apps (Points) 2013 South African Universities 1 (0) 2013 South Africa President's XV 4 (0) Correct as of 17 June 2013 Marthinus Christoffel Dreyer (born 25 August 1988) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the Kings in the Pro14 on loan from the Blue Bulls.[1] His regular position is prop.

Contents [hide] 1 Career 1.1 Youth 1.2 Leopards 1.3 Boland Cavaliers 1.4 Representative rugby 1.5 Dax 1.6 Blue Bulls 1.7 Varsity Rugby 2 References Career[edit] Youth[edit] After representing the Blue Bulls at the 2006 Under-18 Academy Week youth tournament, he then joined Potchefstroom-based side the Leopards and represented them in the Under-19 Provincial Championship tournament in 2007 and the Under-19 Provincial Championship tournament in 2008 and 2009.

Leopards[edit] He made his first class debut for the Leopards in the 2011 Vodacom Cup competition against the Boland Cavaliers[2] and also played against Western Province that season.[3] He didn't appear for them in 2012, but did play in four matches in the 2013 Vodacom Cup tournament.

Boland Cavaliers[edit] He joined Boland Cavaliers for the start of 2014.[4]

Representative rugby[edit] In 2013, he was included in a South Africa President's XV team that played in the 2013 IRB Tbilisi Cup[5] and won the tournament after winning all three matches.[6]

Dax[edit] He joined French side Dax for the 2015–16 Rugby Pro D2 season.

Blue Bulls[edit] He returned to South Africa after one season in France to join the Blue Bulls.[7]

Varsity Rugby[edit] He also represented the NWU Pukke in Varsity Cup rugby between 2010 and 2013.

References[edit] Jump up ^ "SA Rugby Player Profile – Martin Dreyer". South African Rugby Union. Retrieved 29 May 2016. Jump up ^ "SA Rugby Match Centre – Leopards 14-43 Boland Cavaliers". South African Rugby Union. 1 April 2011. Retrieved 27 July 2016. Jump up ^ "SA Rugby Match Centre – Leopards 12-26 DHL Western Province". South African Rugby Union. 16 April 2011. Retrieved 27 July 2016. Jump up ^ "Luiperds se Meel op 12" (in Afrikaans). SupaRugby. 4 September 2013. Retrieved 4 September 2013. Jump up ^ "SA President's XV selected for IRB Tblisi Cup". South African Rugby Union. 17 May 2013. Archived from the original on 6 June 2016. Retrieved 6 June 2016. Jump up ^ "SA President's XV win Tbilisi Cup". IRB. 16 June 2013. Archived from the original on 19 June 2013. Retrieved 17 June 2013. Jump up ^ "Steenkamp to lead Vodacom Blue Bulls into battle". Blue Bulls. 7 July 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2016. [show] v t e Kings – current squad [show] Squads

deletedalmost 7 years
In electronic design automation, a floorplan of an integrated circuit is a schematic representation of tentative placement of its major functional blocks.
deletedalmost 7 years
Önder Şipal (born May 1, 1987) is a Turkish amateur boxer competing in the welterweight (69 kg) division. He is member of Istanbul Fenerbahçe Boxing Club.[1]
deletedalmost 7 years
In mathematics, particularly in operator theory, Wold decomposition or Wold–von Neumann decomposition, named after Herman Wold and John von Neumann, is a classification theorem for isometric linear operators on a given Hilbert space. It states that every isometry is a direct sum of copies of the unilateral shift and a unitary operator.
deletedalmost 7 years
The Farm Workers Union of Småland (Swedish: Smålands lantarbetareförbund) was a trade union for agricultural workers in Småland, Sweden. The union was founded in 1919.[1]
deletedalmost 7 years
The Kilkenny City by-election of 1875 was fought on 28 April 1875. This arose due to the death of the incumbent Home Rule MP, John Gray.
deletedalmost 7 years
Cranes are a family, Gruidae, of large, long-legged and long-necked birds in the group Gruiformes. There are fifteen species of crane in four genera. Unlike the similar-looking but unrelated herons, cranes fly with necks outstretched, not pulled back. Cranes live on all continents except Antarctica and South America.
deletedalmost 7 years
Théophile Le Grand de la Liraye (1819–1873) was a French Roman Catholic Priest, later defrocked, in Vietnam at the time of Charles Rigault de Genouilly's invasion of Vietnam in 1858. He compiled a French-Vietnamese Dictionary.[1]
deletedalmost 7 years
Lisa Anne Bero, born 1958, is an academic who originally trained in pharmacology and went on to a career studying research integrity and how clinical and basic sciences are translated into clinical practice and health policy.[1][2] She is Chair of Medicines Use and Health Outcomes at the University of Sydney.[3] From 1991 until 2014, she was Professor in the Department of Clinical Pharmacy (School of Pharmacy) and in the Institute of Health Policy Studies (School of Medicine) at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), and is currently an adjunct professor there.[4] She is also Chair of the World Health Organization (WHO) Essential Medicines Committee,[5] Director of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Pharmaceutical Research and Science Policy,[6] and Co-Chair of the Cochrane Collaboration.[7] Bero has received multiple awards for her extensive mentoring of high school students to junior faculty.[8]
deletedalmost 7 years
Béla Szeift (1944, Gödöllő – 2012) well known as a Hungarian sculptor, graphic artist, painter.[1]
deletedalmost 7 years
Sherry vinegar (Spanish: vinagre de Jerez) is a gourmet wine vinegar made from Sherry. It is produced in the Spanish province of Cádiz and inside the triangular area between the city of Jerez de la Frontera and towns of Sanlúcar de Barrameda and El Puerto de Santa María, known as the "sherry triangle".
deletedalmost 7 years
Optical margin alignment outdents letters like A, V, W, Y, and punctuation into the margins to align the text border optically. Some users remark that it makes the text margin look crooked, but this is because text frames or margin guides are visible. If text frames are not visible, e.g. in print preview, or when printed, the edge of a block of text looks more even if optical margin alignment is enabled.
deletedalmost 7 years
Cătălin George Hîldan (3 February 1976 – 5 October 2000) was a Romanian association football midfielder who played for FC Dinamo Bucureşti and the Romanian national team. In 2006, he was included to the list of 100 Greatest Romanians of all time by a nationwide poll.
deletedalmost 7 years
The Magyar Kupa Final was the final match of the 2015–16 Magyar Kupa, played between Újpest and Ferencváros.[1][2][3]
deletedalmost 7 years
Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Camerer (17 October 1842 – 25 March 1910) was a German physician born in Stuttgart. Camerer was a pioneer in the field of pediatric medicine.[1]
deletedalmost 7 years
Cleven Wanabo (born October 7, 1976) is a Surinamese footballer playing as a Forward for Inter Moengotapoe in the Hoofdklasse. He has also played for the Suriname national team.
deletedalmost 7 years
Neolamprologus is a genus of cichlids endemic to eastern Africa with all but one species, Neolamprologus devosi from the Malagarasi River, occurring in Lake Tanganyika. It is the largest genus of cichlids in Lake Tanganyika and also the largest genus in the tribe Lamprologini, which includes Altolamprologus, Chalinochromis, Julidochromis, Lamprologus, Lepidiolamprologus, Telmatochromis and Variabilichromis. The latter is a monotypic genus doubtfully distinct from Neolamprologus.
deletedalmost 7 years
In October 1753 he was one of a group of artists who drew up a prospectus for the establishment of a national academy of art. The plan came to nothing, but in 1755 a committee of artists was formed for a similar purpose, and Newton was appointed secretary, but with no more success. A more successful meeting of artists was held at the Turk's Head tavern on 12 November. 1759,[1] and a committee of sixteen artists was set up, with Newton once again acting as secretary.[2] The following spring, an exhibition organised by the committee was held in the gallery of the Society of Arts in the Strand,[3] to which Newton contributed a portrait.[1] Following disagreements with the Society of Arts, it was decided to hire an auctioneer's rooms in Spring Gardens for the group's second exhibition in 1761.[4] By the time the exhibition came to be held, a schism had taken place among the artists.[5] One faction, exhibiting at Spring Gardens, advertised itself as the "Society of Artists of Great Britain", with Newton named as its secretary. The other faction exhibited at the Society of Arts.[6] Both groups held annual exhibitions over the next few years.[7] In 1765 the Society of Artists of Great Britain obtained a charter becoming "The Incorporated Society of Artists", with Newton still as secretary.[1]
deletedalmost 7 years
Americo-Liberians, or African Americans in Liberian English, are a Liberian ethnicity of African-American, Afro-Caribbean, and liberated African descent. The sister ethnic group of Americo-Liberians are the Sierra Leone Creole people, who shared similar ancestry and related culture.[1] Americo-Liberians trace their ancestry to free-born and formerly enslaved African Americans who immigrated in the 19th century to become the founders of the state of Liberia. They identified there as Americo Liberians. (Some African Americans, following resettlement in Canada, also participated as founding settlers in Sierra Leone and present-day Côte d'Ivoire.[1]) Although the terms Americo-Liberian and Congo had distinct definitions in the nineteenth century, the terms Americo-Liberian and Congo are currently interchangeable and refer to an ethnic group composed of the descendants of the various free and ex-slave African American, Caribbean, Recaptive, and Sierra Leone Creoles who settled in Liberia from 1822.

Later in Liberia, these African Americans integrated 5,000 liberated Africans called Congos (former slaves from the Congo Basin, who were freed by British and Americans from slave ships after the prohibition of the African slave trade) and 500 Barbadian immigrants into the hegemony.[2] Unlike the Sierra Leone Creoles, Americo-Liberians rarely intermarried with indigenous West Africans.

The colonists and their descendants led the political, social, cultural and economic sectors of the country; they ruled the new nation from 19th century until 1980 as a dominant minority. From 1878 to 1980, the Republic of Liberia was a one-party state ruled by the Americo-Liberian-dominated True Whig Party and Masonic Order of Liberia.[3]
deletedalmost 7 years
Heaven (After School song)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Heaven"
AS Heaven CD only cover.png
CD only edition cover
Single by After School
from the album Dress to Kill
B-side "Crazy Driver
First Love"
Released September 25, 2013 (Digital only)
Format Maxi single, digital download
Recorded 2013
Genre Disco, dance
Label Avex Trax
Songwriter(s) H Garza, J Garza, R Garza
Producer(s) Shinichi Osawa
After School Japanese singles chronology
"Lady Luck/Dilly Dally"
(2012) "Heaven"
(2013) "Shh"
(2014)
"Heaven" is the fifth Japanese single from South Korean girl group After School. The single was released physically on October 2, 2013, but was released digitally on September 25, 2013.[1] The track is produced by Shinichi Osawa. This is the first Japanese r elease with new member Kaeun, and the first Japanese release without former leader Park Kahi.