Thursday, 24 February 2011
Torres to make Chelsea debut against Liverpool (AP)

Fernando Torres should make his debut for Chelsea against former club Liverpool in the Premier League on Sunday, just six days after leaving the Reds in a British-record transfer deal. The Spain striker angered Liverpool fans after sealing his reported 50 million pounds ($81 million) switch to the defending English champions by saying he jumped at the chance to move to a "top-level club"...
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Agences de presses
EU Court adviser goes against Premier League (AP)

The top adviser in the European Union's highest court says that consumers are free to use the cheapest decoder available to watch football matches even if it sidesteps exclusive national broadcasting agreements. Advocate General to the Court of Justice Juliane Kokott gave Thursday's advice in a case pitting England's Premier League against companies who import Greek decoders into...
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Agences de presses
Two-Time European Cup Winner Sandro Mazzola: Inter Will Have It Tough Against Bayern Munich In The Champions League (Goal.com)
Inter have been warned not to expect an easy game against Bayern Munich in tonight's Champions League encounter as former striker Sandro Mazzola picks out the dangermen.
Mazzola won the European Cup with La Grande Inter twice, and he expects Bayern to test Leonardo's men.
"I expect a difficult game where Inter will have to watch their opponents very carefully as they want revenge following last year," Mazzola told Tuttomercatoweb.com.
"Inter will need to watch Franck Ribery and Bastian Schweinsteiger carefully.
"It's difficult to predict what type of game we will see, but I hope Inter will be determined with the will to win.
"I think Maicon or Dejan Stankovic will be decisive."
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Labels: against, Bayern, champions, European, Goalcom, Inter, league, Mazzola, Munich, Sandro, Tough, TwoTime, winner
Monday, 21 February 2011
Emperor Bernie's now in a race against freedom - Daily Mail
Last updated at 1:17 AM on 21st February 2011
That’s the problem with freedom. First one group of little brown people want it, then a whole damn region of little brown people want it, and the next thing you know there is one less place for rich white guys to race cars.
With bodies piling up in Libya and protesters assaulted by tear gas and rubber bullets in Bahrain, the struggle for freedom in the east is no frivolous matter. As for how it affects Bernie Ecclestone and the first grand prix of the Formula One season, however, this should not prevent us laughing like drains.
The tin-pot dictators of these sporting fiefdoms take their events to countries run by regimes that mirror their own authoritarianism and may now be derailed by the local desire for self-determination. Just beautiful, isn’t it? Maybe God is setting his alarm clock after all.
Oh, please, Qatar next. Wouldn’t that be wonderful? Wouldn’t it be the happiest day if freedom rang the length and breadth of North Africa, the Middle East and the Gulf states and we found out how the people really felt about living under systems of rule that border on medievalism?
Dodgy business: Ecclestone's deal with Bahrain is looking a major mistakeNo need to rush, of course. There are 10 years for the penny to drop in Qatar’s capital, Doha. In fact, give it a while and land that freedom clusterbomb right on FIFA’s toes, if only to see Sepp Blatter’s face when it happens.
Maybe save it until he is perched on the throne-like seat he occupied at the opening ceremony of the Asian Cup. We want something we can treasure on YouTube, like when he fell down a big hole onstage while glad-handing some executive suits.
As for Ecclestone, watching him wrestle with the concept of the freedom movement in Bahrain has been a delight. First he declared it all quiet, then he hoped it would blow over, as if the encampment on the Pearl Roundabout was no more than a few concerned villagers campaigning about the by-pass near Chideock.
This was the bloke who intimated that Jenson Button was targeted by carjackers in Brazil because he was a bit dim.
‘We have never been involved in religion and politics,’ said Ecclestone, hoping to tip-toe away from this pile-up by perpetrating one of the great lies in modern sport.
Ecclestone is dissembling. Politics and religion are very much part of every deal these days, particularly if there is money and an emerging market involved. Ecclestone says he will leave the final call in Bahrain up to a bloke called the Crown Prince: there’s the clue.
Send the Olympics to China and you are involved in politics, because China is a totalitarian regime that will build venues and put on a show using its power to subjugate local dissent.
There were official protest zones at the Beijing Games but the 77 requests to use them were denied, and those who objected were sent for re-education through labour.
South Africa altered its constitution to accommodate FIFA’s demands during the 2010 World Cup. As for religion, that is increasingly in play as sport embraces wealthy regimes that have singular attitudes to alcohol, homosexuals and Jews.
Snapshot: A Bahraini anti-government protester looks at a banner at the Pearl roundabout Ecclestone knew what he was getting when he took F1 to Bahrain. He was in bed with a repressive regime that would pay ?24.6million to host the first grand prix of the 2010 season and raise the offer by 50 per cent to retain the right this year. That is in addition to the ?92m it cost to construct the circuit. Bahrain has capital and, until recently, did not have an opposition with a voice asking awkward questions about democracy.
Ecclestone finds democracy inconvenient and, when he spouts his rubbish, many smile and judge him indulgently as a maverick. Yet the new frontiers F1 has opened up suggest his aversion is genuine.
Sport conspires with rulers from a different age, despots, theologians and hereditary Crown Princes. Administrators want to make modern millions, while exploiting systems of government from the Dark Ages, because that is also how they rule.
Yet it would follow that if Egypt can get rid of Mubarak, Libya can topple Gaddafi and Bahrain can overthrow the house of Khalifa, we can also do something about sport’s self-appointed little emperors.
See you in the square, or on the roundabout.
Among those in the Parliamentary Select Committee currently sitting in judgment on football is Tom Watson, Labour MP for West Bromwich East.
Watson is a career politician who moved through student activism to safe union and party jobs, with the briefest spell in marketing and advertising.
This may be where he learned the delightful tactics that helped produce a leaflet entitled ‘Labour is on your side, the Lib Dems are on the side of failed asylum seekers’ when he was campaign organiser at the Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election in 2004.
Another leaflet argued that if the Lib Dems won, 16-year-olds would be allowed to appear in hardcore porn, guns would be easier to buy and cocaine would be sold over the counter in local shops.
All Labour literature was branded by a cross of St George, this being a constituency with a significant Asian population and a disaffected white working class community.
Just so you know the calibre of the men calling the shots here. Brian Mawhinney, Lord of Governance, is up this week.
Maybe Watson could ask him about those silent rules that were in place during his time as chairman of the Football League.
Although, according to his voting patterns, as a strong opponent of transparency in Parliament, Watson probably agrees with them.
Birmingham City and Stoke City were through to the quarter-final on Saturday, but a day later Manchester City and Notts County were still to resolve a tie from the round of 32. Everything that is wrong with the FA Cup was encapsulated in the chaos of the weekend fixture programme.
Was it a fourth round replay or a fifth round match? Who knew? There were so many ‘ors’ in the sixth round draw it should have come live from a Viking longboat.
By the time television and replays were taken into account, just two fifth round fixtures started at three o’clock on Saturday.
Meanwhile, the dullards at the FA debate further vandalism such as seeding or regionalising the draw.
Round robin: Manchester City's Patrick Vieira scores the opening goal against Notts CountyWhat is slowly killing the Cup — apart from the dead hand of Julian Eccles, group director of marketing and communications, and his unwieldy consultation process — is the erosion of tradition.
The final should always be the showpiece end to the season, yet this year it will be played on the penultimate weekend of Premier League games, to accommodate the Champions League final.
Getting to Wembley, the age-old ambition of any footballer or supporter, can now mean reaching the semi-final as the FA wrings every last penny from the national stadium.
The saving grace is that the competition is woven into our DNA. The luck of the draw is an idiom that was initially applied to the choosing of straws or the dealing of cards, yet in its modern usage conjures thoughts of the random pairing of FA Cup teams.
Yet one of the reforms under consideration is the abandonment of the free draw: as vital to FA Cup survival as the trophy at the end of it.
The FA’s sponsorship deal with E.ON is up in May and no new backer has been agreed. Is it any wonder? Who knows what the next benefactors will be getting? Replays? Evening kick-off times? Midweek matches only? Seeding? Regionalisation?
Eccles and his cohorts have elected to undergo a process that leaves the whole format of the competition up in the air with an annual income of ?9million at stake.
Of course, it could be worse. Maybe the FA are so bereft of clear thought and so desperate for cash, with ?342m still to be paid off the Wembley site according to the last published accounts, that the new sponsors will end up calling the shots instead.
The FA Cup, no longer brought to you by E.ON, but devised for you by Big Bill’s Used Tyre Warehouse, because he came up with the dough.
Some ask why this column is contemptuous of UEFA president Michel Platini, and now you have the answer: he makes it so easy.
This is a man who pontificates on financial fair play and his wish to make the Champions League final accessible for children, before setting ticket prices at ?176 to ?326 with a grasping detachment that would shame the humanity of a Bond villain.
UEFA were in court last week trying to place tournaments such as the World Cup and European Championship behind a satellite pay wall. Anyone who hasn’t seen through Platini by now really isn’t paying attention.
Sunderland have posted annual losses of ?26m, with a wage bill of ?53.9m — 82 per cent of turnover — and gate receipts down ?1.3m on 2009.
The club are deemed a going concern only because of the support of the parent company, owned by Ellis Short.
Perhaps Darren Bent’s ?24m transfer to Aston Villa was not such a bad thing after all.
Harry Redknapp, the Tottenham Hotspur manager, was hardly the most popular man in the San Siro when he announced the Premier League superior to Serie A. ‘I can see you don’t like it,’ he told the local reporter who
requested the comparison, ‘and I’m not saying Tottenham are a better side than AC Milan.’
Why not? They are.
Tottenham would win the Italian league, playing better football, too. Italian domestic football is dull, and slow. That was AC Milan’s problem last week, for all the gifted players in the team, they had no collective turn of pace, no way of upping the tempo.
Two easy: Redknapp dictates matters at the San SiroWitness how Tottenham played the second half away to Inter Milan, or the whole of the return at White Hart Lane; how they started the AC Milan tie or the energy of the counter-attack that won the game when fatigue should have been setting in.
Peter Crouch looked dead on his feet but found that last reserve of strength to keep up with Aaron Lennon and score.
That is what is missing from Italian football. Their managers put such great emphasis on fitness, but the pace of the football is so plodding, it barely matters. This is why Premier League teams win.
In the days when Real Madrid were the force in Spanish football, the king and prime minister often supported them from the royal box.
Policy revision: BrailsfordUnsurprisingly, many thought it was difficult for the away team to get a decision at the Bernabeu.
The same might be said of another Spanish obsession — cycling. When the Real Federacion Espanola de Ciclismo first mooted a one-year ban for three-time Tour de France winner Alberto Contador, who tested positive for clenbuterol, there was an angry public reaction, culminating in a statement from prime minister Jose Luis Zapatero that the cyclist had no case to answer.
Last week, surprise, surprise, the RFEC agreed, by clearing him.
Meanwhile, Dave Brailsford, the general manager of Team Sky, says he will be revising a zero tolerance policy on drug cheats because it made it too hard to find backroom staff.
‘When you’re trying to lift performance, you have to go back a long way to find people who haven’t been tainted by many of cycling’s past problems,’ Brailsford said.
Although you can’t say the RFEC, not to mention the Spanish government, aren’t doing their bit to change that.
And now the squealing starts.
‘The result is so unfair,’ said Xavi after Barcelona’s defeat at Arsenal, while cheerleaders in parts of the Spanish press blamed poor refereeing and an absence of luck.
Last year, the anti-football of Inter Milan was responsible, yet there is little mention of the extraordinary good fortune that took Barcelona past Chelsea, and to their only Champions League final of the Pep Guardiola era, in 2009.
They are a great side, though, have no doubt of that and it is their misfortune to play in a time when the demands of the tournament are such that no team have retained the trophy in its current format.
Tough luck: Barcelona skipper Xavi (right) reflects on defeat at the EmiratesWere this the European Cup of the Sixties and Seventies in which the champions were crowned after nine games — if that, some of Real Madrid’s early triumphs necessitated as few as seven appearances — then Barcelona might have dominated, particularly as the early rounds were often a glorified bye.
Real Madrid, Benfica, Inter Milan, Ajax, Bayern Munich, Liverpool and Nottingham Forest all kept the trophy.
Barcelona will not have been as good as every one of those sides, but they would be better than a few. That they have a greater hill to climb is unfortunate, but it is not unfair, because the competition is better for it.
Millwall supporters came close to forcing the abandonment of Saturday’s match against Middlesbrough, after bombarding the pitch with missiles.
Chris Sarginson, the referee, asked the managers if they wanted the game to continue. They did, and Middlesbrough won 3-2.
‘From our fans’ point of view, there was some fantastic passion and perhaps they felt aggrieved at one or two decisions which didn’t go their way,’ said Millwall manager Kenny Jackett.
‘I do like passion and enthusiasm and some of the decisions we have had recently have been tough. But I’m not condoning it.’
Oh yes he is. Fantastic passion and enthusiasm is not throwing objects on the pitch, and whingeing about the referee is never justification for hooligan behaviour. More than condoning it, in future games, Jackett has as good as guaranteed it.
Agences de presses
Labels: against, Bernieaposs, daily, Emperor, freedom
West Brom boss Roy Hodgson: We deserved more than a draw against Wolves - Goal.com
Hodgson’s first fixture in charge was spoiled by Jamie O’Hara’s goal a few minutes before half-time, but the Baggies showed commitment and created a host of opportunities to level up the game.
He told reporters: “They managed in some way with their organisation to get rid of the player who in my opinion should have been square of the ball, and O’Hara got his shooting chance.
“But there is not a goal scored that is not a mistake. Every goal is a mistake.”
The former Liverpool manager watched his new side score three times to put them in the lead against West Ham United with Michael Appleton temporarily at the helm, before Hodgson’s official appointment.
“Of course I have been encouraged by what I have found. I did a session on Monday and a session on Thursday and Friday,” he said.
“So I don't really feel at the moment that I really know all I should know about this group of players.
“But that's a no brainer, how could you? When you come into a club with only 12 games to go how can you possibly know enough. I'm learning as I go and I’m having to learn very quickly.
“I'm desperately hoping the players are too, because we don't have a lot of time. I thought today there were an awful lot of encouraging signs but I am still looking forward to the time I’m going to get with them on the training ground when we can hone what we do.
“It doesn't really feel like I’ve been away that much if I'm perfectly honest. The dugout’s been my home for so long now, I'd have to be away from it a lot longer to feel like I'd missed it.
The Baggies have struggled since the start of 2011 and sit just above the relegation zone. Having picked up a single point against Mick McCarthy’s side, they now sit in 17th spot of the Premier League.
Asked about Carlos Vela on loan from Arsenal, he said: “[He is]a good loan signing that's for sure.
“It was nice today that he could come on, look very lively and score a goal. You need to be a goalscorer to be in the right position.
“And actually the ball came back at him very quickly and he got his feet adjusted. I’ve seen those chances missed.
“So I'm very pleased with him but most importantly of all I'm pleased with the team’s performance.
“Today there aren't any players that I'd criticise and say they didn't do their very best for the team.
“I was certainly happy to see the equaliser. But if you mean am I happy because I didn't think [we] deserved any better then no.
“I thought we deserved better. I thought that the performance throughout was good. I thought that we laid siege for long periods on the Wolves goal.
“But we know they defend well and all credit to them. They are not an easy team to break down. If ever a team worked hard for an equaliser, asked plenty of questions and forced good
saves and blocks then it was us.
“In the end I suppose when you equalise that late in a game, I suppose you do have that feeling of happiness but I am pretty certain that when I think back on Tuesday or Wednesday I won't be as happy as I am at this moment in time.
“It told me there is fighting spirit among them, there is a lot of determination and character. You need that when you play against teams of Wolves calibre.
“If you don't stand up, don't win your share of challenges, you don't make certain that you are prepared to give as much effort, commitment and hard work as they do then you lose games.
“I thought we matched them very well in that area.
“They scored a great goal and had a very good chance from a missed back pass but apart from that Myhill had a quiet afternoon but I don't think we can say that about Hennessey."
Striker Marc-Antoine Fortune did not feature on the score–sheet and missed a good opportunity in the 63rd minute, but Hodgson still found praise for his player's work off the ball.
“It’s unfortunate for him because he did a very good job for the team today. His target play was excellent, his selfless running, his work off the ball,” he said.
“But what’s going to be remembered is the one or two goal chances he did well enough to get into position for but he didn't put them away.
“He is anything other than happy because he wants to score goals and he realises that the fans will only judge him on goals scored.”
Agences de presses
Saturday, 19 February 2011
Wakefield to begin rebuilding process against Dragons - Independent
Wakefield know the extent of the damage done to their season by going into administration last week – and they will be relieved that it is not worse.
The Rugby League ruled yesterday that Trinity should be docked four points for breaking the body's rules on insolvency.
The punishment is the same as that handed out to Crusaders for the same infraction this winter, although the League has the power to deduct a maximum of six points.
The Wildcats, now under the new ownership of local businessman Andrew Glover, begin the task of getting their points tally into the black at the Catalan Dragons tonight.
They must do so with a depleted side, having lost three players to rival Super League clubs this week. Their coach, John Kear, has promised new recruits to fill the gaps and that process has already begun.
None of Wakefield's new signings so far – Craig Harvey from Warrington and Kyle Amor from Leeds on loan, plus two permanent signings from Huddersfield, Josh Griffin and Greg Johnson – will be involved in Perpignan, however, but Kevin Penny is in line to make his debut. Setaimata Sa is in the Catalans' squad, despite being carried off at the Millennium Stadium, but Clint Greenshields is out.
In today's other Super League match, Martin Aspinwall could make his Castleford debut against Huddersfield, the club he left this winter. The 17-year-old hooker, Daryl Clark, is also in the squad for a possible first senior game, taking the place of Nick Fozzard.
The Giants' squad is unchanged from the one which beat Warrington at Cardiff. Both sides had impressive victories there last weekend and a second win in a row would give either of them a morale boosting start to the season.
Jordan Tansey, the utility back sacked by Hull last week after a series of disciplinary breaches, has joined the Championship club, Dewsbury. He could make his debut in the Northern Rail Cup match against Doncaster tomorrow.
St George-Illawarra warmed up for next Sunday's World Club Challenge at Wigan by beating the Canterbury Bulldogs 28-14 in Woolongong. They could have lost the utility player, Nick Emmett, from their squad to travel to England after he went off with an arm injury.
Agences de presses
Labels: against, begin, Dragons, Independent, process, rebuilding, Wakefield
Friday, 18 February 2011
Liverpool FC draw a blank Czech against Sparta Prague - Liverpool Echo
Updated 8:29am 18 February 2011:
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in association withLiverpool FC draw a blank Czech against Sparta Pragueby Luke Traynor, Liverpool EchoFeb 18 2011
Kenny Dalglish 300KENNY DALGLISH enjoyed many glory nights in Europe as a player for Liverpool. But due to the Reds being banned from Europe after the 1985 Heysel disaster, it meant he never tasted any as the club’s manager.
Last night’s clash against Sparta Prague was the first time the Scot had led Liverpool into a European fixture.
And while a scoreless draw at a freezing Generali Arena was perhaps not the most romantic European managerial baptism, it will still be hugely welcomed by the Scot as the Reds head back to Merseyside for the return fixture in seven days time.
You would hardly have guessed Sparta Prague had not played a competitive football fixture for two months.
Ensconced in their winter break, the Czech side have been in effective hibernation during these icy Eastern European months.
Not that it was at all noticeable, nor could Liverpool take advantage of any perceived lack of recent match practice on Sparta’s part.
Josef Chovanec’s men set about the Reds with a relish that Dalglish’s men struggled to subdue at times.
In truth, this was a listless display from the Reds whose excellent form since Dalglish’s appointment deserted them last night.
They desperately missed the influence of Steven Gerrard up front as Liverpool’s midfield never had any grip on the match.
You almost felt sorry for lone striker David Ngog, who lacked support and understandably failed to make an impression on the Sparta backline.
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John Thompson live blogLFC fans' reaction
Video on LFC supporters' response to the saleRelated Stories Anfield can inspire Liverpool FC to complete the job says Dirk Kuyt Feb 18 2011Judge tells former Liverpool FC owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett to state their case or accept they don’t have one
Feb 18 2011Justice Floyd refuses to accept Hicks and Gillett have not decided whether to sue over sale of Liverpool FC
Feb 18 2011Sparta Prague 0 Liverpool FC 0: Reds take clean sheet back to Anfield for Europa second leg
Feb 17 2011Royal Bank of Scotland v Hicks and Gillett: Full judgment
Feb 17 2011Liverpool FC delighted High Court ruled in their favour preventing Hicks and Gillett suing in USA
Feb 17 2011Extracts from judgment refusing ex-Liverpool FC owners Hicks and Gillett's request to sue in US
Feb 17 2011 Related Multimedia
Feb 18 2011Judge tells former Liverpool FC owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett to state their case or accept they don’t have one
Feb 18 2011Justice Floyd refuses to accept Hicks and Gillett have not decided whether to sue over sale of Liverpool FC
Feb 18 2011Sparta Prague 0 Liverpool FC 0: Reds take clean sheet back to Anfield for Europa second leg
Feb 17 2011Royal Bank of Scotland v Hicks and Gillett: Full judgment
Feb 17 2011Related Multimedia
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Agences de presses
Sunday, 6 February 2011
Germany to stick with experience against Italy (AP)
BERLIN (AP)—Germany coach Joachim Loew plans to resist the urge to experiment and will start with his most experienced players in Dortmund friendly against Italy in Dortmund.
Five Borussia Dortmund players, including debutant Sven Bender, defender Mats Hummels and midfielder Mario Goetze, were called up for the friendly.
However, with early qualification for the 2012 European Championship a stated priority, Loew has indicated they may have to bide their time before as he seeks to build a settled team.
“A team which has already played together will take to the field,” Loew said Sunday.
The head coach is likely to have a full squad to choose from. Real Madrid midfielder Sami Khedira will travel despite concerns over a knee he injured in the team’s Spanish Cup win over Sevilla in midweek.
“Khedira shouldn’t be a problem for the game on Wednesday,” Loew said.
If the former Stuttgart player misses out, Bender could receive his debut in a defensive midfield role, especially as Loew has postponed a possible comeback for Michael Ballack until possibly after the games against Kazakhstan and Australia in March.
“I was surprised to be picked,” Bender said. “First of all I’m happy to be involved. There are so many good players here that you can learn more from them.”
Initially, Loew wants to observe the 21-year-old Dortmund ball-winner in training.
“I want to see him and test him for two or three days,” the coach said.
Marcel Schmelzer and Kevin Grosskreutz complete the Bundesliga leader’s quintet, and former Germany coach and player Franz Beckenbauer says it “logical” for them to play.
“The best should play in the national team, even if they’re young,” Beckenbauer said.
Loew has ruled out moving Schweinsteiger into a more attacking position, where he currently plays for Bayern Munich.
“In attack we have (Mesut) Oezil, (Toni) Kroos, Goetze, (Lewis) Holtby,” Loew said. “And Bastian in the (defensive) six-position gives us a lot of ball contact, stability and organization.
“Starting with the Italians is a very interesting game. I’m sure we will learn a lot.”
Agences de presses
Labels: against, Experience, Germany, Italy, stick

