awec wrote: » Yes, 24-5 is terrible. Ireland need their weak batmsen to run up a score now.
Deleted User wrote: » 5 wickets already seems like a bad thing...?
errlloyd wrote: » No third innings. We need 182 from this innings to win. The game ends when we finish batting. We can take as long as we want, we have two days.
Deleted User wrote: » I'm trying to get my around it.... Is this a continuation from during the week? Ireland have to beat 303 total in this second innings? Is there a third innings?
Bridge93 wrote: » Potential for something pretty extraordinary to happen at Lords today in the cricket. Barely believable
mfceiling wrote: » I know I know I know!! The wife's brother lives in Rome and he wants to show us "waaaay better" sh*te than the usual tourist stuff!! To be fair I've drank in some deadly bars and eaten in restaurants where the place is full of locals, there's no menu to talk of and not a single word of English was uttered!! It's a magnificent city to be fair and I'll be back.
Podge_irl wrote: » :eek: Even ignoring the Sistine Chapel (which you shouldn't!) the Vatican museum itself is absolutely stunning.
mfceiling wrote: » Shamefully I've been in Rome 5 or 6 times and I've never went into the Sistine Chapel. Had a mooch outside the Vatican and bent the ear of herself about the display of wealth of the CC!! *Remember to give generously the next time you're in mass*
sydthebeat wrote: » Brexit will lead to the break up of the UK and the reunification of Ireland... you heard it here first
Neil3030 wrote: » "They did it all wrong" - mfceiling
Deleted User wrote: » Not sure if this breaks the charter, isn't so much talking about 'politics' and more the operation of political parties. Had an interesting chat with someone I know who is heavily involved in Fianna Fail. Some interesting stuff, the main parties are fully communicating on Brexit and have basically committed to a unified approach behind the government. It's quite sensible but you would have to consider it fairly patriotic by all involved also.
thomond2006 wrote: » As far as amazing sights go, the Sistine Chapel's ceiling was mesmerising. I've never seen anything like it.
Squidgy Black wrote: » Address him by his proper title you little bollox
thomond2006 wrote: » https://twitter.com/CatholicHerald/status/1153606280663228418?s=19 Amazing.
mfceiling wrote: » It's a learned habit. I sit at mass every Christmas and wonder how they got the vaulted ceilings so symmetrical. Show me a historical site and I'm thinking of how they built it, the logistics in getting the materials there and the manpower needed to do the job. I don't know if anyone else does this or is it a Nordie thing (awec?). When I go into a new pub or restaurant I make a note of the available exits and the quickest way out!! Fair sure it's a throwback to the troubles for me.