Sport
Silver medals for Welsh rowers
THE WELSH SEA ROWING ASSOCIATION sent 14 rowers to the British Offshore Rowing Championships on July 29-30.
Members of Fishguard Llanion, Mumbles, Newport, Neyland, Towy and Wisemans Bridge were selected for the elite squad. The Welsh squad made its home at Towy Boat Club, Llansteffan in 2015 and has gone from strength to strength, under Alun Stedman’s leadership.
The squad members row coastal sculls; sliding seats and dual oared rowing boats. Eight crews; three lady doubles, three men’s doubles and two men’s singles, all travelled to Poole to compete at the prestigious championships.
Nine rowers were competing at their first international, whilst five others were returning to international duties. All eight crews proved to be highly competitive and were away first with blistering beach starts. The biggest challenge of the day was the typical ‘British Weather’. The driving wind and rain proved to be a minor hindrance as seven of the eight crews reached the finals at the event.
The ‘Welsh Base Camp’ became the international camp as the Irish and Swedish competitors joined them for some much needed shelter from the elements. A team of 30 supporters travelled to Poole to support the Welsh Team, 10 of which were boathandlers for the event, supporting the Welsh, Irish, Swedish and English rowers at the event.
“The support shown to the rowing crews from the Welsh Supporters was phenomenal. The boathandlers were exceptional, demonstrating the best beach starts of the competition. The sense of ‘hwyl’ and Welsh pride was certainly heightened with impressive performances by the rowers,” said Nic Thomas, Assistant Welsh Coach.
The top seeded lady doubles, Charlotte Heath(Towy) and Bryony Jones(Wisemans/Towy) won Silver with the other lady doubles Tyenne Morgan(Towy) and Alison Morris (Towy) finishing 5th and Caroline Williams(Towy) and Manon Dixon (Towy)finishing 6th. The 4th position was hotly contested with both welsh crews being pipped at the post with only split seconds separating the crews.
The men’s double partnership of Steven Clack (Llanion/Towy) and Jac Davies (Towy) battled the entire race with Jersey for the gold. Jersey edged ahead, with Jac and Steven collecting a silver with a very impressive performance. The other mens double Theo Owen (Fishguard) and Ben Curtis (Towy) battled for Bronze.
They managed to hold off the other crews, but following a couple of collisions they lost pace and narrowly missed out on the bronze medal finishing in 4th. In 5th Andrew Nelmes(Newport) and Tom Brain (Mumbles/Towy) gave a solid performance, finishing comfortably ahead of the back of the fleet.
In the single men’s category Elliot Harrison (Towy) had a blistering start, banded the best of the competition, finished 6th in his heat, which sadly saw the end to his championship hopes. Chris Harding (Llanion/ Towy) proceeded to the final and finished 8th in a close run race.
“The Welsh efforts by rowers, has been tremendous. All crews have delivered credible performances and proved to be competitive at international level. We couldn’t be prouder of them and the incredible supports that travelled to Dorset for the event,” added Nic.
The competitor’s next international will be the Welsh Sea Rowing Open, held at Llansteffan on September 2-3. Following that they have the Irish Open on September 9-10 before the World Championships in mid-October.
News
Haverfordwest County AFC faces High Court winding-up threat from HMRC
Chairman says issue has been dealt with, but winding-up notice is still listed ahead of High Court hearing
HAVERFORDWEST County AFC is facing serious questions after an HM Revenue and Customs winding-up petition against the company behind the club remained live on The London Gazette website despite the chairman insisting the matter has already been dealt with.
The petition against Haverfordwest County A.F.C. Ltd was presented on February 23 and is listed to be heard at the High Court in London on Wednesday, April 15 at 10:30am. The public notice states that HMRC is seeking to wind up the company, registered at Bridge Meadow Stadium, Bridge Meadow Lane, Haverfordwest, claiming to be a creditor.

Any person intending to support or oppose the petition must give notice by 4:00pm on April 14. At the time of publication, the notice remained publicly visible and there was nothing on the Gazette entry to show that it had been withdrawn, dismissed or otherwise disposed of.
After being contacted by The Herald, chairman Rob Edwards said the case was “a non-story” and claimed it related to “a VAT offset against PAYE that wasn’t recorded”. He said the issue had been rectified “some time ago”, that the club had no debt to HMRC, and that HMRC had already provided a petition to withdraw to the court.
However, HMRC did not confirm that when approached by The Herald. Instead, a spokesperson gave only a general statement, saying: “We take a supportive approach to dealing with customers who have tax debts and only file winding-up petitions once we’ve exhausted all other options, in order to protect taxpayers’ money.”
That leaves an obvious gap between the chairman’s account and the public record. If Edwards is right, the matter may already be in the process of being withdrawn. But until the court or Gazette record is updated, the petition remains live in public and continues to list a High Court hearing next week.
Even if the matter is ultimately withdrawn, the fact it progressed to the stage of a published HMRC winding-up petition is likely to raise concern among supporters, sponsors and creditors. A petition of this kind is a serious insolvency step, not a routine administrative query. If it were to proceed and succeed, the company could face compulsory liquidation.
The issue is especially striking because the club has recently spoken publicly about growth, investment and longer-term ambition. In January, Haverfordwest said it was in the latter stages of an exclusivity agreement relating to significant investment from a US-based fund. Earlier statements had also referred to outside backing, ambitions to move towards full-time football, and a wider business vision around the club.
Those statements painted a picture of momentum and expansion. The emergence of a live HMRC petition, whatever the eventual explanation, is therefore bound to prompt scrutiny of the club’s financial management and internal controls.
Questions are also likely to be asked about Rob Edwards’ wider business interests beyond west Wales. Recent coverage has linked him and Morley Sports Management to ventures in the United States, underlining the scale of the broader commercial ambition surrounding Haverfordwest’s rise.
For supporters, sponsors, staff and creditors, the immediate question is whether the matter will be formally withdrawn or whether the public court record will remain unchanged until the hearing date. Until that becomes clear, one of Welsh football’s most talked-about recent success stories is facing a deeply serious test off the pitch.
UPDATE: 14:16 HRS, April 7, 2026:
The club has now published an official statement saying the petition “has been withdrawn by HMRC,” but the petition still appears live on The London Gazette and still lists the April 15 hearing. The club statement says there is “no debt owed to HMRC” and attributes the matter to “an allocation issue around a PAYE/VAT offset at the end of last year.”
Sport
Haverfordwest County Under-13 girls shine at final FAW festival
HAVERFORDWEST COUNTY AFC Women and Girls have praised their under-13s after another strong showing at the third and final FAW Festival of the season.
The young Bluebirds travelled to Colliers Park in Wrexham on Saturday (Apr 4), where they once again impressed with their performances.
Club officials said the girls had performed fantastically well throughout the season, adding that everyone at Haverfordwest County was incredibly proud of their efforts.
The squad for the day was Libby O, Ela I, Ines M, Mila E, Scarlett C, Rachel B, Lydia H, Lilly M, Zara E, Leila P and Lillie EJ.
Well done girls.

Sport
South Pembrokeshire Short Mat Bowls: Friendly League week 22 results
RESULTS from week 22 of the South Pembrokeshire Short Mat Bowls Association Friendly League have been confirmed, with Badgers recording a comprehensive 10-0 win over Lamphey and St Twynnells edging past Cosheston 6-4.
An earlier fixture also saw Cosheston claim a 10-0 victory over Reynalton.
Several matches were postponed during the week, including Kilgetty v Carew, Llanteg v St Twynnells and Hundleton v East Williamston.
St Johns had the bye.
Latest results:
Cosheston 4 St Twynnells 6
Badgers 10 Lamphey 0
Cosheston 10 Reynalton 0
League table after week 22:
East Williamston — Played 19, Won 13, Drawn 0, Lost 6, Shot difference 169, Points 126
St Johns — Played 20, Won 12, Drawn 1, Lost 7, Shot difference 132, Points 118
Reynalton — Played 20, Won 8, Drawn 2, Lost 10, Shot difference 24, Points 99
St Twynnells — Played 19, Won 10, Drawn 2, Lost 7, Shot difference 9, Points 99
Carew — Played 19, Won 10, Drawn 0, Lost 9, Shot difference -12, Points 98
Hundleton — Played 19, Won 10, Drawn 1, Lost 8, Shot difference -7, Points 97
Llanteg — Played 18, Won 10, Drawn 0, Lost 8, Shot difference -16, Points 95
Badgers — Played 20, Won 7, Drawn 1, Lost 12, Shot difference -104, Points 89
Cosheston — Played 19, Won 7, Drawn 2, Lost 10, Shot difference -39, Points 88
Lamphey — Played 20, Won 9, Drawn 0, Lost 11, Shot difference -71, Points 80
Kilgetty — Played 19, Won 6, Drawn 1, Lost 12, Shot difference -85, Points 73
League officials have reminded clubs that all outstanding matches must be completed by midnight on Sunday, April 19, 2026.
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