Category: Sports

  • FA’s verdict due after claims ref Clattenburg racially abused Mikel

    FA’s verdict due after claims ref Clattenburg racially abused Mikel

    The Football Association expect to complete their investigation into Chelsea’s claims that Mark Clattenburg racially insulted Super Eagles Chelsea midfielder, John Mikel Obi before the weekend.

    Chelsea players, including Mikel and Ramires, gave witness statements to Jenni Kennedy, head of governance at the FA, on Monday. Now her attention has turned to referee Clattenburg.

    FA chiefs, who are under pressure to make a swift decision, could even make an announcement on potential charges before the weekend.

  • INTERNATIONAL FRIENDLY: England turns to Sammy Ameobi

    INTERNATIONAL FRIENDLY: England turns to Sammy Ameobi

    Meaningless distraction or match of great significance? While many will regard England’s trip to Sweden next week as more clutter in an already crowded calendar, for Roy Hodgson this is not just ‘another’ friendly.

    Hodgson’s reign as England manager has been very much a slow-burner, a mixed bag of draws against organised teams and workmanlike victories over the nations that England have been expected to beat, but he is now entering a crucial phase.

    Sweden, whom England beat at Euro 2012 thanks to a late rally, are always obdurate opponents and can be relied upon to provide England with a good examination; they showed when salvaging a remarkable 4-4 draw against Germany that they should not be underestimated.

    Hodgson might turn to the Nigerian-born attacking midfielder to exploit in the midfield against the Scandavian team next week. Sammy Ameobi was once called up by John Obuh during the 2010 World Cup warm-up but later dropped. And this will be a great loss for Nigeria football, As Ameobi could be a great asset for Super Eagles as he seen as one of the greatest youngster to wear Newcastle jersy.

  • BIG BOSS CRIES OUT: I don’t know Ethiopia

    BIG BOSS CRIES OUT: I don’t know Ethiopia

    Super Eagles handler, Stephen Keshi, has confessed that among the teams in Nigeria’s Group C which included Zambia, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Nigeria, it’s only Ethiopia that he does not really know their strength at all.

    “Like I have said severally all the teams that qualified for the Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa really worth their onions. I know a little bit of Zambia and Burkina Faso because when I was handling Mali national team I had two or three games with them but now they have changed their coaches.

    “But Ethiopia I don’t know them. But they must be a very good team to found their way into the finals of the Nations Cup holding next year in South Africa. So we have to handle the Ethiopians as well as other teams in the group with care.

    “There is no minnow team for us, there is no looking down on any team in our group or any other group. We have to be on top of our game and be professional about it,” Keshi disclosed.

  • Malbranque deserves France call-up

    Olympique Lyon goalkeeper Remy Vercoutre has called on France coach Didier Deschamps to select veteran midfielder Steed Malbranque for the friendly against Italy later this month.

    Malbranque is enjoying a wonderful spell of form after a troubled 18 months which saw him leave Sunderland for St Etienne only to cancel his contract with Les Verts due to a lack of enjoyment.

    He re-emerged at Lyon – the club for whom he made his professional debut in 1998 – at the start of the season and has been a revelation.

    The 32-year-old was again instrumental in Les Gones’ 5-2 win over Bastia on Sunday, scoring from the penalty spot for his first Ligue 1 goal in almost 12 years.

    Afterwards, Vercoutre told reporters: “If you have a coach who does not care about age then he must call up Malbranque.

    “Honestly, I would like him to be called up. It will happen soon and he deserves it so much. He is our main man, our ‘Mister Plus’.”

    Malbranque has been included in a France squad just once, in 2004 for a friendly against The Netherlands, but did not get on the pitch.

    Vercoutre believes the former Fulham Athletic man has the necessary skills to slot straight into Les Bleus set-up and inspire those around him.

    He added: “He wins the ball, he gives it and he scores goals. Everyone is in tune with Steed.

    “He does not score many goals but what he does is so impressive. If I was a selector I would take him.

    “I have not seen anyone as good as him for a long time.”

  • Bruce hopes Aluko does not get Eagles call

    Bruce hopes Aluko does not get Eagles call

    Hull City boss Steve Bruce is hoping Super Eagles forward Sone Aluko will not be called up by Stephen Keshi for the forthcoming Africa Cup of Nations.

    The 23-year-old has scored six goals in 15 league appearances for the Tigers this season after joining from Rangers in the summer. There’s no way I can stop him from going if he gets called up.

    “The way he’s playing at the moment, it certainly is a possibility,” Bruce told BBC Radio Humberside. “I just have to hope that (news of) how well he is playing hasn’t reached Nigeria. We’ll have to wait and see.”

    Aluko, who made his debut for the Super Eagles in a friendly against Republic of Ireland in 2009, did not feature in any of the qualifiers for the tournament in South Africa that will run from 19 January to 10 February 2013.

    The former Birmingham City and Aberdeen player opened the scoring for Bruce’s side in Tuesday’s 2-1 win over Wolves.

    After a run of three successive defeats, the Tigers have now won five of their last six matches to sit fourth in the Championship.

  • McGoldrick sets his sights on Rio Olympics

    McGoldrick sets his sights on Rio Olympics

    Newport boxer Sean McGoldrick has already shrugged off the frustration of failing to be a part of London 2012 and taken a giant stride towards realising his Olympic dream in Rio in four years’ time.

    The 20-year-old McGoldrick missed out on a berth in London to eventual gold medallist Luke Campbell, but responded in style by winning the bantamweight category in the prestigious post-Olympics Tammer tournament in Finland.

    The rewards for McGoldrick have been immediate, with elevation to the fully funded GB podium squad last week and a probable place in the newly inaugurated World Series of Boxing franchise, the GB Lionhearts.

    For McGoldrick, who was retrospectively awarded Commonwealth Games gold in Delhi in 2010 after the man who beat him in the final, Manju Wanniarachchi, failed a drugs test, the promise of Rio is already very real.

    McGoldrick said: “It was inspiring to see my team-mates do so well in London but it was also frustrating because I was not there myself. It has just made me more determined to be a part of it in 2016.

    “We have a great set-up now in Sheffield and we have a lot of big tournaments coming up, with the European and World Championships, the 2014 Commonwealth Games, and also the extra competition of the WSB.

    “The amateur code is a great thing these days. It has reached the stage where there is no need for a young fighter like me to think about turning professional. All the challenges are there ahead of me.”

    McGoldrick was an 18-year-old school pupil when he impressed so much in Delhi and became part of a golden generation in Welsh amateur boxing, with Andrew Selby and Fred Evans both winning European titles and Evans following it up with Olympic silver.

    McGoldrick says he has been inspired by the achievements of the pair – both of whom have rejected the overtures of professional promoters and committed themselves to the amateurs for the foreseeable future.

    McGoldrick added: “Fred and Andrew are both fantastic fighters and great ambassadors for Welsh boxing. What they have done is basically prove it is possible for a young Welsh fighter to go out and win major titles.

    “I have my Commonwealth Games gold but I still feel like there is a little bit of unfinished business because I was denied the opportunity to win the title in the ring and hear my national anthem being played.

    “I will go to Glasgow as the reigning champion and with that will come a lot of extra pressure because people will be expecting me to win it again. But that is the kind of situation that really inspires me to do even better.

    “I’m training hard at the moment and I’m inspired by what I’ve seen and by what I achieved at the Tammer. Hopefully in four years’ time I will have continued improving and be ready to go to the Olympics myself.”

  • Eagles sweat over US visa

    Eagles sweat over US visa

    There was palpable tension on Wednesday over travel plans for the national team; Super Eagles, as the American Embassy in Abuja seems to be foot-dragging over the issuance of visas.

    The Ministry of External Affairs had tried to make the issuance of the visas easy for the Eagles by issuing a ‘Note Verba’ for the team to the USA Embassy, but that was rejected, as officials of the embassy reportedly said the team was not entitled to such diplomatic treatment.

    The Embassy thereafter fixed Friday, November 9 for the team to appear at its consulate for visa interviews while the team is scheduled to travel out on Sunday, November 11.

    The fear in the camp of the team is that the visas may not be issued same day to the team and that may upset travel plans already perfected by the NFF for the first international friendly after the team’s qualification for the SA 2013 Nations Cup.

    A top official of the team, however, assured that going by the smooth relationship between the Nigerian government on one hand and its American counterpart, he was sure that the visas will be ready on time for the team’s departure on Sunday.

    “We have a smooth relationship with the USA Embassy and we are sure they will make the issuance of visas easy, but we also have to let government at the highest level know what we are going through,” the top official said.

    Already, Senate President David Mark and Sports Minister, Bolaji Abdulahi, have intervened in the matter to ensure that Super Eagles players and officials get the needed travel documents for the trip on Sunday. The two top government officials are said to be pulling the strings at the highest diplomatic level to ensure that the November 14 game sees the light of day.

    Meanwhile, all the 24 home-based players invited for the Venezuelan friendly are now in camp, even as Head Coach, Stephen Okechukwu Keshi ruled out the likes of Gabriel Reuben, Papa Idris, Joseph Yobo and Osaze Odemwingie from the trip due to injuries and club commitment.

    “We don’t want to rush them back into the national team because we already know what they can do, let them heal well and then we hope they will be in good shape for the Nations Cup championship proper,” he said.

    The last two players to arrive camp Tuesday night were Ejike Uzoenyi of Rangers International, who took special permission to arrive late and Kano Pillars’ Gambo Mohammed, whose late arrival was due to the four-club tourney in Niamey, Niger Republic last week. The duo have since jelled into the squad’s training regime.

  • Ronaldo: Every player dreams of recognition

    Ronaldo: Every player dreams of recognition

    When you were a player, was it this time of year, when the voting for the FIFA Ballon d’Or is taking place, that you gave most thought to these kinds of individual awards?

    Every player dreams of being recognised internationally as the best player in the world. Of course only one player can win each year, but players don’t only think about it at this time of year. You think about it all the time. This is the fruit of a whole year of playing well on a regular basis, scoring goals, being important to your team and winning titles. There’s a complete set of criteria for deciding who wins the Ballon d’Or.

    How big an impact did winning your first FIFA World Player award have on your life? Did opponents show you more respect afterwards?

    Wow, that first one was so special. It was lovely. And because I wasn’t expecting it, it was wonderful. You do get more respect from opponents but, at the time, the responsibility on your shoulders and the pressure to keep up that level of performance also increases. It’s good in several ways and I always say that, for me at least, the more pressure the better. I’d turn that into energy and motivation and was able to perform even better.

    Do you think 1996 was the year in which your life changed the most? You started it playing for PSV Eindhoven, won a starting berth for Brazil at the Atlanta Olympics, earned a move to Barcelona and were finally chosen as the world’s best player…

    It was a fantastic year: I started out of favour with A Seleção Brasileira, as a back-up player, though I was getting games and being decisive for PSV. And later came that transfer to Barcelona. It was a year packed full of emotions. A year of important decisions too, because it’s not easy changing clubs and taking a step like that in your career. But I was given a very good welcome at Barcelona and I managed to stay focused on just playing football.

    And how about when you won the award for the third time in 2002. Was that the ideal way to cap a year that featured a remarkable return from injury on the way to winning the FIFA World Cup™?

    I think that it was magnificent to cap the comeback with the World Player award, because it was a more personal achievement. It was about overcoming obstacles and was an example to everyone. I spent a year and a half battling to recover and I was rewarded by being able to play at the 2002 World Cup. I played well, was the tournament top scorer and won the World Player award. It was perhaps an even more significant win than the first because of the difficulties I’d had to overcome along the way.

    Was there any player you had a particular rivalry with when it came to these individual awards? Zinedine Zidane, for example, who also won the top prize three times?

    I’d say that in my day the competition was much fiercer than it is today, without taking anything at all away from [Lionel] Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, who are the two players that’ll be up there fighting it out to be the world’s best over the next few years. But in my day there was Zidane, Rivaldo won it one year, [Luis] Figo, me, later came Ronaldinho Gaucho… The battle to be the best was very fierce among that generation of players. Back then, whoever won certainly deserved it. Zidane and I were quite dominant during those years, with him winning three times and me too. We experienced some spectacular years which were enjoyed by all those who love football.

    You have played alongside a host of star names, many of whom also won the coveted award. Could you pick out any player who, in your mind, deserved to win but didn’t?

    These individual prizes are, in a way, a form of rewarding the consistency of a given player but football isn’t an individual sport, by any means. It’s a team sport, in which the collective is very important. I always made a point of sharing the credit for those awards with all my team-mates in the sides I was playing for. There’s no doubt that, in that sense, there’s a lot of injustice, because in any given year there’ll be several players who’ve performed consistently and deserve the title. For example, I always found it very difficult when I came up against Paolo Maldini. He was the best defender I faced over the course of my career. He definitely deserved to win the award several times over, but sometimes the criteria don’t work out perfectly. That’s because he’s a defender and the public like to see goals and great pieces of skill, while defenders are there to put a stop to those moves. But Maldini was always far too talented to be playing at the back anyway.

    Is it harder for non-European based players to gain votes?

    Football has been, in general terms, very well-balanced but the fact that European football is the most competitive and the best to watch isn’t going to change. It’s the benchmark for the whole world. So, it’s only natural that the continent where the best players are based is also the one that picks the winner of the award for the world’s best player.

    In your opinion, has Neymar done enough yet to be ranked alongside the biggest names currently in the game?

    Neymar is a great Brazilian talent. He’s a rare gem that we have. Some time ago I said he needed to come and play in Europe to prove how much talent he has and show the whole world. Sooner or later that’ll happen: he’ll come and play in Europe and then he’ll be in the mix for the Ballon d’Or.

    He’s going through something similar to your early days in A Seleção: he’s still very young but there’s huge expectation on his shoulders. How would you advise him to handle that?

    There’s no mystery to it, I always say the key is being focused on football. And he’s a very focused, very disciplined lad. He’s always aiming to play, score goals and win titles. So, there’s nothing special I can tell him that he isn’t already doing. I’m sure that sooner or later he’ll come to Europe and, once there, he’ll prove to the world that we Brazilians are still producing great talents.

    If you could vote in this year’s awards, who would you choose as the FIFA Ballon d’Or winner and why?

    It’s still a battle between those two – Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo – even though [Andres] Iniesta and Xavi will be in there too and are also incredible players. However, because they play in midfield, the public might not feel quite as passionately about them. So, Messi would get my vote because, in addition to being decisive – scoring loads of goals and winning trophies – he’s able to bring a special and different kind of magic to football. Cristiano Ronaldo is a very technical, very skilful and very pragmatic player, but Messi continues to produce the unexpected on a regular basis.

    And who’d be your choice for FIFA World Coach of the Year for Men’s Football and why?

    Ah, I’d give the best coach award to [Jose] Mourinho. I know the world of football well, so he’d get it for his tactical organisation, his planning, his training methods… He’s the coach I’d vote for because it’s not easy to handle 25 players so well on a daily basis.

    How about your prediction for the FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year?

    My prediction is… well, I’d vote for Marta. (laughs) Being Brazilian, I’d vote for her to win again. How many does she have already? Five, isn’t it? Well I’d vote for her so she can win for a sixth time too (laughs).

    Turning to the FIFA/FIFPro World XI, who would be your 11 picks?

    Let’s see. I’d go for [Iker] Casillas, Daniel Alves, Sergio Ramos, John Terry and at left-back… Who shall I put at left-back? Roberto Carlos maybe? (laughs) And Marcelo, from Real Madrid. In midfield I’d have Xavi, Iniesta and [Frank] Lampard. Then, up front, would be Cristiano Ronaldo, Messi and Neymar.

    If the award had existed during your playing days, do you think you’d ever have won the FIFA Puskás Award? Which of your goals would get the nod?

    Ah, I think it’d be that famous goal for Barcelona against Compostela [on 12 October 1996]. I think that would be the winner.

    And your best in a FIFA competition?

    Maybe that one from the Final of the 2002 [FIFA World Cup] against Germany, my second goal.

     

  • Nolan: Allardyce deserves CL chance

    Nolan: Allardyce deserves CL chance

    West Ham captain Kevin Nolan feels that Sam Allardyce is deserving of the chance to one day manage a club in the Champions League.

    The 58-year-old led the Hammers to promotion via the Championship play-offs last term and the east London club currently sit ninth in the Premier League, having enjoyed a steady return to the top flight.

    That, on top of his achievements at Bolton, convinced the midfielder that Allardyce should be at the top table.

    “I think the boss deserves to be mingling with the top managers week in, week out,” he told reporters.

    “I have lots of admiration for him and what he has done for me as a player.

    “After working with him for a long time I firmly believe he belongs in the Premier League and I’m a bit gutted he hasn’t been given that chance with a really top club.

    “He has worked at top clubs but I mean a club that is always in the top four or five so he can have a go at the Champions League.”

  • Labbadia casts doubt on new deal

    Labbadia casts doubt on new deal

    Stuttgart coach Bruno Labbadia has admitted that he may not extend his contract with the club, unless the conditions are right.

    Labbadia’s contract expires next summer and, after overcoming a difficult start to the season to lift the club back up towards the top six, negotiations over a new deal have commenced.

    However, after losing his rag with reporters just a few weeks ago, he admits that he has had to think long and hard about whether he really wants to stay in Stuttgart.

    “A contract is a responsibility and a duty and I am a person who only works 100% when I am really motivated,” he said.

    “I am now in a situation where I have to think seriously because I have seen how hard the way is.

    “I need to be 100% convinced. I need security and conviction.”

    Labbadia’s recent outburst was aimed at defending his team from what he claimed was unfair and unjustified coverage of his side by the German media.

    Indeed, working together with the Stuttgart players is one of the reasons why he did not throw in the towel a few weeks ago and why he could carry on as the club’s coach.

    “I have a team of players with whom I have so much fun working together,” he added on Sky television.

    “They have so much determination and that’s why I am so attached to them.

    “The relegation battle (two seasons ago) also brought us closer together. I am just seeing how things go.”

    Labbadia took charge of Stuttgart in 2010 when it was struggling at the wrong end of the table and lifted it to safety.

    Last season, after a similarly slow start to that witnessed in the current campaign, he led the Swabians to sixth in the table and a place in the Europa League, and it is now just one point behind the top six and a return to European action for next season.