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Video: Bride arrives at wedding in bright orange removal van in touching nod to how she met groom

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Video: Bride arrives at wedding in bright orange removal van in touching nod to how she met groom
News

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Video: Bride arrives at wedding in bright orange removal van in touching nod to how she met groom

2019-06-17 23:04 Last Updated At:23:04

Stacey Clark and her bridal party certainly turned heads with their quirky choice of wedding car.

Forget a horse-drawn carriage or a vintage Rolls-Royce, one Lancashire bride chose a convoy of bright orange removal vans to get her and her bridesmaids to the church on time.

The HGVs were at the centre of Stacey and Michael Clark’s romance, after they met and fell in love at first sight at HJ Clark and Sons – the removal firm his family have run for five generations, where her dad, Johnny Morris, 60, also worked.

Primary school teacher Stacey, 32, of Kirkham, who has two children, Charles, six, and Harriet, two, with Michael, 35, recalled: “I think it was love at first sight.”

She continued: “I was 18 and working part time in the office and Michael, who was 21, left me a packet of cherry drops on the desk. He knew I liked them.

“Then I found his number in the work address book and sent him a text to say thank you.

“We weren’t together instantly. We went out a few times then Michael moved away for six months then when he came back we got together properly.”

For Stacey, being driven to the church for her big day on May 31 in one van along with her mum, Lesley, 60, by her dad, while her sister Kerry Morris, 37, who has a HGV licence, drove her other sister Toni Morris, 35, and friend Sara McDonald, 32, and Michael’s sister Jenny Goodson-Clark, 37, drove Chloe Fletcher, 32, and Stacey Dutton, 34, – all of them bridesmaids – as part of a three vehicle convoy, was just perfect.

Seeing it as a great way to honour the role the family firm, started in Lancashire in 1909, had played in their relationship, she laughed: “I thought it would be a good gimmick and a bit of a novelty.

“It was a really lovely way to do it. I don’t think anyone else will see someone coming to their wedding in a removals van. It was 10 out of 10 and I wouldn’t have wanted it any other way.”

She continued: “It was really special. It just sums up how our relationship started and the history in our families.

“Anyone who knows Michael knows how much he loves removals, too. He even washes the vans three times a week!”

The night before the wedding the three removal vans were driven to Marsh Farm Hall in Great Eccleston, Lancs, an impressive local venue where the reception was held and where Stacey was staying, and decorated with white ribbons, ready for the bridal procession.

And, after their traditional white wedding ceremony, her dad Johnny drove the happy couple back to the reception, as they glugged on champagne in the cabin.

Stacey said: “My dad was getting quite stressed. He’d taken Michael’s sister Jenny for driving lessons before to help her with the manoeuvres and he was worried she wouldn’t be able to keep up. She was driving so slowly that he kept checking the mirrors. It was really funny.

“Jenny was so scared because she’s not used to driving removal lorries. She said she had to put tissues down her dress because she was sweating so much from the stress! But everyone got there in one piece.”

“Lots of people came outside their houses as we drove past and waved as we tooted the horn,” Stacey said.

“There were eight ushers waiting outside the church as well as nine nieces and nephews. Some of the guests came out to have a look, as did the vicar, who was laughing.

“I can’t actually remember how I got out of the cab, but I think my dad helped me.”

Despite his devotion to the removals business, Stacey insists that Michael, whose mum Geraldine Clark died of breast cancer 15 years ago, does have a romantic side – even though he keeps it well hidden.

She said: “He proposed to me in June 2017 on my 30th birthday. I’d just given birth to Harriet and we had a big family party, so he got down on one knee in front of everyone.

“It was totally out of the blue. Nobody was expecting it. Their jaws hit the floor. He’s not the most romantic person.”

Stacey explained: “He’d had the engagement ring for a year and was just waiting for the right time.

“I said yes straight away – well as soon as I got over the shock.”

And while Michael, who has been working for his dad since leaving school, takes his work very seriously, he would never take his new wife for granted.

He said: “The business is very important to me, as it has been in my family for five generations.

“I’ve worked for my dad since leaving school. It’s a tradition. I was basically born into it.

“And I guarantee I’ll never go to another wedding where the bride turns up in a removal van.”

Michael continued: “I thought it would be a quirky thing to do because removals are a big part of our lives, although when I suggested it to Stacey I think at first she thought it was a joke, but then she said it was a great idea.

“The vans are bright orange so when you run them in convoy they get a lot of attention – even more so with a bride in the cabin. When I took them back to the yard afterwards I was really sad cutting all the ribbons off them. I thought, ‘This is as good as they’re ever going to look’.

“It was a lovely day. Stacey is fantastic. Nobody else would put up with me. I lost my mum when I was in my twenties and lost my way a bit but Stacey stuck by me and has always been by my side. She’s never given up on me.”

Now the couple are planning to book a two-week honeymoon at the end of July.

But the ceremonial duties are not over for the removal vans quite yet.

Michael laughed: “My dad said when he dies he wants to be taken to the his funeral in the back of a removal van. It’s his dying request.”

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Hailey Van Lith trying to make US Olympic 3x3 team; next college choice to come soon

2024-04-21 23:21 Last Updated At:23:30

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) — Hailey Van Lith is focused on making the USA Basketball 3x3 Olympic team this summer and not worried about where she'll end up at college next year.

Van Lith is currently taking part in a training camp in Springfield, Massachusetts, and will play in a 3x3 tournament early next week at The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.

The 22-year-old guard, who played at Louisville and LSU, has experienced success in 3x3 for the U.S. She won a gold medal on the U18 team in 2019 and helped win gold at the FIBA 3x3 World Cup last year. The Paris Games is the second Olympics offering 3x3, after the event debuted in Tokyo in the 2021 Games.

“What I remember most is that every game is so unique,” she said of 3x3 play. “The strategy from game to game is so different. You can't specialize in one thing and make it as a player in 3 on 3. You have to be able to guard every position for at least a couple of seconds.”

Van Lith has a chance to make the Paris Games because two of the four members of the U.S. team must be in America’s top 10 for total points accumulated in FIBA rankings. Van Lith currently qualifies at fifth.

Playing in the training camp with so many WNBA players — Dearica Hamby, Allisha Gray and Rhyne Howard — has helped Van Lith improve her game.

“Playing against them and seeing how I'm able to score and not score shows me what I need to get better at,” Van Lith said. “It's a little taste of the league early.”

As far as where she will play college basketball next year, she says she still hasn't signed anywhere yet. Van Lith decided to play in college one more season instead of entering the WNBA draft.

“I did take a visit to TCU and am very interested in them, but I took visits to other schools and was very interested in them, too,” she told The Associated Press. “I haven't made an official commitment, but I'm very close. The ink has not touched the paper for any school.”

Van Lith said she's really stayed off social media for the most part since LSU lost to Iowa in the Elite Eight this month. She didn't even know that Haley Cavinder had decided to not play at TCU and go back to Miami until Saturday afternoon.

She said Cavinder's choice wouldn't play a role in her decision.

“It's a non-factor for me,” Van Lith said. “If she had stayed and I did go to TCU, I'd have loved to play with her.”

Van Lith averaged 11.6 points and 3.6 assists in her only season at LSU, joining the NCAA defending champions for the 2023-24 season. She has the option for another season because of the extra year granted by the NCAA to athletes whose freshmen season was affected by the pandemic.

She starred at Louisville her first three years, leading the Cardinals to the Final Four in 2022. Louisville lost in the Elite Eight last year before she decided to transfer to LSU. She was one of the biggest names in the portal last season and is again now.

AP women’s college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25

FILE - LSU guard Hailey Van Lith passes the ball during the first half of a Elite Eight college basketball game against Iowa in the NCAA Tournament, April 1, 2024, in Albany, N.Y. Van Lith is focused on trying to make the USA Basketball 3x3 Olympic team this summer and not worried about where she’ll end up at college next year. Van Lith is taking part in a training camp in Springfield, Mass. this weekend and will play in a tournament early next week at the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. (AP Photo/Hans Pennink, file)

FILE - LSU guard Hailey Van Lith passes the ball during the first half of a Elite Eight college basketball game against Iowa in the NCAA Tournament, April 1, 2024, in Albany, N.Y. Van Lith is focused on trying to make the USA Basketball 3x3 Olympic team this summer and not worried about where she’ll end up at college next year. Van Lith is taking part in a training camp in Springfield, Mass. this weekend and will play in a tournament early next week at the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. (AP Photo/Hans Pennink, file)

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