Ross Batty scored a try in either half as Bath swept aside European Challenge Cup rivals Cardiff Blues 38-3 at the Recreation Ground to move level on points with the Welsh side at the top of Pool Four.Hooker Batty touched down to open the scoring for Bath at the end of a flowing move midway through the first half and raced clear from halfway after intercepting a wayward pass to put the hosts out of sight with 16 minutes left.Cardiff played most of the second half with 14 men after lock George Earle was shown a straight red card for allegedly eye gouging in a maul.The Welsh side had already had hooker Kirby Myhill sin-binned for a dangerous tackle on Bath second row Dave Attwood two minutes earlier and were down to 13 men for a 10-minute spell.Bath moved level on points with leaders Cardiff, who stay top courtesy of points scored.The English side scored four more tries in the second period to clinch the crucial bonus point, with Jack Wilson and fellow winger Aled Brew racing over, before Battys second, while a fifth touchdown from second row Elliott Stooke sealed a comprehensive victory.England fly-half George Ford added four conversions and a penalty and full-back Tom Homer also converted, while Cardiffs only points came from the boot of Steven Shingler in the early stages.In Pool Five, Edinburgh remain top despite slipping to their first defeat in the tournament as they lost 26-20 at Stade Francais.Duncan Hodges side trailed 26-3 at half-time but mounted a late rally in the second half, with Sam Hidalgo-Clyne dashing over for the visitors third try two minutes from time.The Frenchmen touched down through prop Remi Bonfils, full-back Hugo Bonneval and were awarded a penalty try before centre Geoffrey Doumayrou also went over.Second row Fraser McKenzie and substitute Viliame Mata scored Edinburghs other tries, while fly-half Jason Tovey added a penalty and a conversion.Bill Walton Jersey . -- Charline Labonte couldnt have asked for a better homecoming. Jusuf Nurkic Blazers Jersey . Isner, ranked No. 14, won his eighth career singles title and took the title in New Zealand for the second time after his victory in 2010. The match was similar to Isners quarterfinal victory over fifth-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber which went to three sets, all tiebreaks and contained no breaks of serve. http://www.blazersteamofficial.com/Gary-Trent-Jr-Blazers-Jersey/ . Olli Jokinen, Mark Scheifele, and Bryan Little each had a goal and an assist as Winnipeg won 5-2, handing Calgary its record-setting seventh consecutive loss on home ice. Terry Porter Blazers Jersey . "It was nerve-wracking, but we pulled through," said Collaros, who threw four touchdown passes to lead the Toronto Argonauts (8-4) to a 33-27 win over the Calgary Stampeders (9-3) in front of 28,781 fans at McMahon Stadium. Damian Lillard Blazers Jersey .25 million option on reliever Jose Veras.Prospero is right. Our revels now are ended. Well, not quite, of course. They concluded here at Taunton on the third evening of this match with a skied catch, a retirement and much hurrahing in harvest. But, as the mowers trim the County Grounds deserted square, cricket continues at half a dozen other venues around England, and at three of them matters of great moment are to be decided.All Somersets players and supporters can do is sit in their many pavilions and wait upon the Lords judgement. Perhaps that is not an inappropriate occupation in this church-towered town, to where, in 1798, Coleridge walked 11 miles from Nether Stowey to conduct services at Mary St. Chapel. There will be prayers today, too.And this evening the season will be done with. Both Championship and relegation will be decided and writers will be left to produce reviews of it all. Before long the players will depart for golf, for holidays with their families and for deserved rest.For over five months they have delighted and intrigued us. And perhaps it is only as the season closes that we fully appreciate the level of skill on show. Consider Jack Leach, for example: he is able to bowl a cricket ball so that it lands as often as not on a particular spot some 20 yards distant; not only that but the ball will be spinning away sharply from the batsman and looping with overspin so that the batsman may be deluded into thinking that it will land nearer to him than it eventually does.Or there is a batsman, James Hildreth, shall we say, who can hit a ball travelling at 80mph precisely between two fielders with, among many other arts, a turn of the wrists and a transference of weight. What complexity of brain, nerve and sinew is needed to do that? Only when you reflect on these skills is their full stature revealed; in the high days of summer they can be taken for granted or remarked upon only when absent.Something like this was noticed by the great essayist William Hazlitt in his classic 1821 essay The Indian Jugglers:Coming forward and seating himself on the ground in his white dress and tightened turban, the chief of the Indian Jugglers begins with tossing up two brass balls, which is what any of us could do, and concludes with keeping up four at the same time, which is what none of us could do to save our lives, nor if we were to take our whole lives to do it in. Is it then a trifling power we see at work, or is it not something next to miraculous? And county players do these things for over five months of the summer in a wide variety of conditions against opponents whose skills are quite the equal of their own. Their efforts make up a pageant which bewitches their teams many supporters and causes them to follow their results even when living very far away.And to most county cricketers and supporters it is the Championship which matters most of all. As I am writing this the Stragglers Café below me is filled with Somerset supporters, all of them hoping against reason that nobody wins the game they are watching. You cannot move for wyverns on chests or anxious looks on ffaces.dddddddddddd In 2012 the former Somerset committee member, Roy Harris, died but asked his grandson to promise that he would be present if his beloved county won the Championship. Yesterday the gentleman turned up at the latter stages of the match wearing his grandfathers Somerset blazer. He had travelled from Iceland - the country, not the frozen-food joint.And this is the competition of which we must have less? This piece is being written by someone who has enjoyed T20 games and been amazed by the inventive skills on show. Yet also by someone who understood precisely what Stephen Chalke meant when he entitled his history of the County Championship Summers Crown.It is easy to be seduced by enmity or to assume that those who run the ECB are double-dyed malefactors with the games worst interests filling their evil minds. They are not like that. But they have done nothing for their case by failing to ask the current supporters of county clubs what they think of their ideas. Our masters look a little rude. For it is a curious plan which is predicated more on speculation as to who might attend cricket matches than the evidence of those who actually do. Im not sure I would trust a doctor who told me my heart was not terribly important.Advertising boards are being removed from the County Ground. An area has already been roped off for later in the afternoon when players will either be consoled by the media or begin a celebration which will last until All Souls Day. But wherever the title ends up, cricket grounds are settling quietly into autumn and winter. Business will continue, of course. There will be conferences and Christmas parties. Press boxes will be filled with discussions of sales figures and exam papers; the members suites will be given over to wedding receptions and retirement dos.Then spring will come, freezing cold as likely as not, but the players will still begin their outdoor practice in England. They will be back with their gripes and their groin strains, their-odd warm-ups and their lovable clichés, their absurd level of skill which they will offer us from April to September. Miranda was right, too. O brave new world that has such creatures int. And so we wait in this Tyrolean chalet of a press box at Taunton. Before us is perhaps the most-mentioned range of hills in county cricket. On the outfield Somersets cricketers are playing football with their children. Perhaps they cannot bear to watch the television. To our left is the full glory of St Jamess and its churchyard, and behind us are the tree-thronged humps of the Blackdowns. Throughout the town people are talking about two sessions, chuck-ups and when Middlesex might pull out. It is no good saying that it will be easy to leave all this for another season but we are tougher than we think; and complex in ways beyond our imaginings.But then, you see, Prospero was correct in another respect, too. We are such stuff as dreams are made on. ' ' '