Connacht ground Edinburgh into submission to win 28-15 at the Sportsground to pick up their first points in this seasons Guinness PRO12.Tries from Niyi Adeolokun and Quinn Roux helped the hosts lead 18-10 at half-time in soggy conditions, with captain Grant Gilchrist touching down for Edinburgh.The Scots, whose head coach Alan Solomons stepped down after three years on Wednesday, failed to take anything from the game despite Mike Allens 70th-minute try. Connacht ended up as bonus point winners with Peter Robb crossing to add to Cian Kellehers 45th-minute score.Connacht lost Matt Healy early on to an arm injury and Jason Tovey knocked over a central penalty in the fifth minute.But a fine break by Adeolokun from the 10-metre line saw him cross for his third try of campaign, converted by Jack Carty, and further surges from Kieran Marmion and powerful centre Robb kept the hosts on the front foot.Cartys opening penalty put Connacht in double figures before Sean Kennedy sent second row Gilchrist over for a levelling seven-pointer.Connachts scrum, including impressive new tighthead Conor Carey, got on top, winning one against the head, and Edinburghs resistance eventually broke in the 36th minute.Tiernan OHalloran and Kelleher punched holes with a series of direct runs, and Jake Heenans excellent flick pass put Roux over in the right corner for his first ever score for the westerners.Carty unlocked the Edinburgh defence just five minutes after the restart, outfoxing the covering Glenn Bryce with a superb offload out the tackle that put replacement Kelleher cantering clear for try number three.Acting head coach Duncan Hodge would have been pleased with Edinburghs response, however they failed to turn initial breaks from Damien Hoyland and Tovey into points with handling proving increasingly difficult.Connacht dealt with the forward pressure too, man-of-the-match Heenan and Tom McCartney leading a resilient home defence. That was until winger Allen was freed up to score in the left corner, profiting from full-back Bryces instinctive between-the-legs pass.Toveys conversion attempt came back off the post, however, and Connacht sealed this much-needed bonus point success just two minutes later. Robb used his strength to slip out of Hoylands attempted tackle and raid in from the Scots 22-metre line.Vapormax Homme 2020 . -- The plastic that was taped across the lockers in Oaklands clubhouse came down and the champagne that was on ice went back into the cooler. Vapormax Femme 2020 . Neymar curled home a free kick from just outside the area to put the 2014 World Cup host ahead in the 44th minute. Three minutes after the break, a simple through pass from Paulinho freed Oscar and the Chelsea star rounded goalkeeper Jung Sung-ryong to extend Brazils lead. http://www.vapormaxsolde.fr/basket-vapormax-homme-grossiste.html . Scott won the Australian PGA last week in his first event in Australia since winning the U.S. Masters in April. American Matt Kuchar, ahead by two strokes with four to play and even with Scott with one to go, double-bogeyed the 18th after taking two shots to get out of a bunker. Vapormax Blanche Femme . "I dont know that were close," said general manager Alex Anthopoulos. "I just think, right now, the acquisition cost just doesnt work for us right now. I dont know if I can quantify how far off or things like that that they might be but I would say we continue to have dialogue. Vapormax Femme Solde . Varlamov made 33 saves and Ryan OReilly had a goal and scored in the shootout as the Avalanche beat the New Jersey Devils 2-1 on Thursday night.(STATS) -- To say sports has taught Tyler Swafford teamwork, sportsmanship and drive is an understatement. Especially when his lifes work may be to stand up for the most vulnerable and foster freedom and democracy in places where they are fragile.The Eastern Kentucky University quarterback, who aspires to be a human rights attorney, was announced Tuesday as the 2016 recipient of the STATS FCS Doris Robinson Scholar-Athlete Award. Named after the wife of legendary Grambling State coach Eddie Robinson, the award is presented to an FCS student-athlete who excels not only in the classroom, but in the community and beyond.Swafford will be honored at the STATS FCS Awards Banquet and Presentation Jan. 6 in Frisco, Texas -- on the eve of the national championship game.The 21-year-old rose through a crowded depth chart at Eastern Kentucky to become the Colonels starter during this past season. A redshirt sophomore athletically, the 4.0 honors scholar is on pace to graduate after the spring semester in only three years at the Ohio Valley Conference university.Although Swafford could return as the starting quarterback next fall, he will forsake the opportunity, and likely his playing career at EKU, for his calling in life. He will attend University College Dublin as one of 12 winners in the United States of the prestigious George J. Mitchell Scholarship sponsored by the U.S.-Ireland Alliance.Your education is what you make of it, your football career is what you make of it, Swafford said. But certainly you benefit from people who invest in you and who care about you, and I certainly have at Eastern -- crediting coaches, instructors and administrators.Swafford is majoring in globalization and international affairs with a minor in business. The interdisciplinary studies have combined political science, economics, history and religion and helped shape his desire for humanitarian service. His masters study in Ireland will be geopolitics and global economy.Since I started at EKU, Ive developed a passion for human rights and international security issues, said the resident of Franklin, Tennessee. His parents, Tony and Tara, are attorneys.I think the United States has an indispensable role in the world to lead, to fight for human rights, civil liberties and freedom. Obviously, we shouldnt get in every quagmire around the world that is out there and look for conflict; I know were still war-weary in this country. But I think being the United States, we have a moral high-ground and a special ressponsibility in the world to provide freedom and widespread opportunity and human rights protection, when they are so under assault today.ddddddddddddSwafford was part of his football teams mission trip to Haiti in May 2015, where they worked at an orphanage to build a fish and plant farm system that would become self-sustainable. He also was part of EKUs honors delegation to the Salzburg Global Citizenship Seminar in Austria last May, an experience that included a profound trip to the Dachau concentration camp. He completed an independent research project on the evolution of human rights law, from the Nuremberg Trials through the present-day International Criminal Court.At the seminar, professors challenged the students to become more involved in their local communities. After returning from the trip, Swafford worked with Kentucky Refugee Ministries to help resettle a Syrian family of six to Lexington.During semester break in January, Swafford will study American diplomacy overseas and be part of a select group of students visiting U.S. embassies in Paris and Rabat, Morocco, and the European Commission in Brussels, Belgium.I knew from the moment I met Tyler as a freshman that he was a young man marked for great things, EKU president Michael Benson said, given his intellect, his work ethic, and his ability to relate to others. I also saw in Tyler someone who would thrive in an international studies environment, given his own perspective and world-view.Swafford was chosen as the Doris Robinson Award recipient from a list of finalists comprising all 13 FCS conferences. The other finalists: Dayton linebacker Christopher Beaschler (Pioneer Football League), New Hampshire cornerback Casey DeAndrade (CAA Football), Saint Francis place-kicker Lance Geesey (Northeast Conference), Liberty offensive lineman Lucas Holder (Big South Conference), Alcorn State linebacker Michael Hurns (Southwestern Athletic Conference), North Dakota linebacker Brian Labat (Big Sky Conference), Wofford place-kicker David Marvin (Southern Conference), Delaware State offensive lineman Ernest Mengoni (Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference), Northern Iowa defensive end Karter Schult (Missouri Valley Football Conference), Stephen F. Austin safety Marlon Walls (Southland Conference), Penn wide receiver Justin Watson (Ivy League) and Holy Cross wide receiver Jake Wieczorek (Patriot League). ' ' '