A brief glimpse into the past

POST MATCH: Cambridge City 0-1 Coventry Sphinx, with Jamal Adams
POST MATCH: Cambridge City 0-1 Coventry Sphinx, with Jamal Adams

Jamma is home! Hear his thoughts on his Sphinx return and the dramatic win at Cambridge in his first interview with the Sphinx ...



POST MATCH: Cambridge City 0-1 Coventry Sphinx, with John Woodward
POST MATCH: Cambridge City 0-1 Coventry Sphinx, with John Woodward

Joint Coventry Sphinx manager, John Woodward, shares his views on a dramatic late victory at Cambridge City #UTS.



HIGHLIGHTS: Cambridge City 0-1 Coventry Sphinx
HIGHLIGHTS: Cambridge City 0-1 Coventry Sphinx

Late drama for the Sky Blue and Whites as Coventry Sphinx picked up a much needed win at ten man Cambridge City with an ...



LIVE COMMENTARY - Cambridge City vs Coventry Sphinx
LIVE COMMENTARY - Cambridge City vs Coventry Sphinx

Join us for live audio coverage of Coventry Sphinx's Pitching In Northern Premier League Midlands trip to Cambridge City.



Team, Place & City Details

Cambridge Winter Hawks

The Cambridge Winter Hawks were a Canadian junior ice hockey team based in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. They played in the Mid-Western division of the Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League.

Cambridge Who's Who

Cambridge Who's Who, also known as Worldwide Who's Who, is a vanity publisher based in Uniondale, New York. It describes itself as highlighting people's professional careers by publishing encapsulated biographies.

Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather plc
Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather plc

Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather plc [1994] 1 All ER 53 is a case in English tort law that established the principle that claims under nuisance and Rylands v Fletcher must include a requirement that the damage be foreseeable; it also suggested that Rylands was a sub-set of nuisance rather than an independent tort, a debate eventually laid to rest in Transco plc v Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council. The Cambridge Water Company were a company responsible for providing potable water to the inhabitants of Cambridge and the surrounding areas.

Cambridge Whitefriars
Cambridge Whitefriars

The Cambridge Whitefriars, or Newnham Whitefriars, were a community of Carmelite friars who first settled in Chesterton outside Cambridge in the thirteenth century. Although granted permission by Henry III to build a house there in 1247, they instead moved into a house in Newnham donated to them by Michael Malherbe in 1249.

Cambridge Water Company

The Cambridge Water Company is a water supply utility company serving Cambridge and the surrounding area. It was established by The Cambridge University and Town Waterworks Act, 1853 and was privately owned until it became a Public Limited Company in 1996.

Cambridge War Memorial
Cambridge War Memorial

Cambridge War Memorial is a war memorial on Hills Road, Cambridge, outside Cambridge University Botanic Garden. It comprises a bronze statue of a marching soldier by Canadian sculptor Robert Tait McKenzie, known as "The Homecoming" or sometimes "Coming Home", mounted on a heavily carved limestone plinth.

The Cambridge Diet

The Cambridge Diet, also known as The 1:1 Diet, is a very-low-calorie fad diet developed in the 1960s. In its various forms, it has specified a calorie intake between 330 and 1500 kcal per day.

Cambridge, Wisconsin
Cambridge, Wisconsin

Cambridge is a village in Dane and Jefferson counties in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. The population was 1,457 at the 2010 census.

Cambridge, New Zealand
Cambridge, New Zealand

Cambridge is a town in the Waipa District of the Waikato region of the North Island of New Zealand. Situated 24 kilometres (15 mi) southeast of Hamilton, on the banks of the Waikato River, Cambridge is known as "The Town of Trees & Champions".

Town of Cambridge
Town of Cambridge

The Town of Cambridge is a local government area in the inner western suburbs of the Western Australian capital city of Perth, about 5 kilometres west of Perth's central business district and extending to the Indian Ocean at City Beach. The Town covers an area of 22.0 square kilometres (8.5 sq mi) and had a population of almost 27,000 as at the 2016 Census.