Leinster rivals collide

Hockey: If Pembroke Wanderers want to realise their ambition of retaining the Irish Senior Cup, they must eliminate Glenanne - …

Hockey: If Pembroke Wanderers want to realise their ambition of retaining the Irish Senior Cup, they must eliminate Glenanne - the team they have failed to conquer in the last two seasons in Leinster competitions - in the quarter-finals on February 10th, writes Dermot Ashmore.

Having snatched the lead from Pembroke last March, All Ireland champions Glenanne have since beaten their strongest rivals three times: 2-1, 3-0 on strokes after a 2-2 draw and 3-2 in the current campaign. Pembroke (who will also meet Glenanne in the Mills Cup semi-finals) have been drawn at home.

Avoca and YMCA will also have home advantage against Trinity and Aer Lingus, respectively, in the other all-local ties, while, with Cork Harlequins travelling to Newry, there will be one non-Leinster team in the semi-finals.

Tennis: Jennifer Capriati has risen to seventh in the world rankings, her highest position since 1993, after her shock win in the Australian Open final.

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Martina Hingis, who was beaten by Capriati in the Melbourne final, leads the rankings with 6,248 points. She has stretched her lead over secondplaced Lindsay Davenport (4,468) in the 12-month rankings after the American, last year's Australian Open champion, lost to Capriati in the semi-finals.

Venus Williams is third, only 374 points behind Davenport.

Tennis: Conor Niland, the youngster in Ireland's touring tennis squad in Australia, has made quite an impact already with a hat-trick of wins en route to the main draw in the first week on the Sydney ITF circuit.

Niland beat Michael Tebbutt 7-5 6-4 after two demanding sets. The Australian was ranked 60 in the world a few years ago and made the fourth round of the US open. Earlier Niland had beaten another Australian, Anthony Guccione 6-1 6-1 and LH Moon (Korea) 6-0 6-2. The Limerickman faces Anton Klaric of Australia today.