Category: Sports

  • Mourinho: I don’t have a team yet

    Mourinho: I don’t have a team yet

    Mose Mourinho has slammed his Real Madrid side after losing 1-0 to Sevilla on Saturday night, alluding to an absence on the part of the players who offered a lacklustre performance.

    Los Blancos have made a disastrous start to the season, picking up just four points from as many games, which places them 10th in the table and eight points behind leaders and long-standing rivals Barcelona.

    Mourinho is unhappy with the attitude shown by the players, and feels that they have not corrected the mistakes they made in previous showings this season.

    “At the moment, I have no team,” Mourinho said to reporters after the game.

    “The first period and the second period, we got it badly wrong. It was a totally deserved victory for Sevilla and totally deserved loss for Real Madrid.

    “Congratulations to Sevilla because they did everything to get the win and they deserved it without a doubt. And we deserved the loss in an awful game for us.

    “Today’s match was no different from Getafe. It was not very different from Granada either, apart from the fact we won. I do not think it has anything to do with the rumour of the past two weeks.

    “For me it’s about the state of our collective spirit.”

    Real Madrid take on Manchester City in the Champions League opening game on Tuesday night.

     

  • Wright: I’d love to see Drogba at Arsenal

    Wright: I’d love to see Drogba at Arsenal

    Former Arsenal forward Ian Wright has stated that he would relish the opportunity for Shanghai Shenhua striker Didier Drogba to sign for the north London club.

    The Ivory Coast international has been linked with a move away from his current side amid issues revolving around the club’s boardroom.

    Wright, who scored 128 league goals for the Gunners, has spoken highly of the striker who scored the winning penalty in last season’s Champions League final.

    “I’d love to see Didier Drogba at Arsenal, I’d like to see him come back to England,” he told Absolute Radio. “And not play against Arsenal because he’s always demolishing them and the back four!”

    “Of course you’ve got to play that kind of thing down. I think if Drogba’s coming back to the Premier League I’m sure there’ll be a queue and I think if Arsenal are in and around it, I don’t think that’s a bad thing. That’s not a bad signing.

    “Hopefully Arsene can make that happen, if it can happen, because I think he will be a definite positive move in respect of Arsenal and I think he’s still got something to offer in the Premier League. So fingers crossed that something can come of that.”

     

  • Worlds team time trial win whets Boonen’s appetite

    Worlds team time trial win whets Boonen’s appetite

    Just like in 2005, Boonen has now won the Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix and a world title in the same season, but there were no rainbow jerseys on offer for the team time trial winners on Sunday. Perhaps with that in mind, the 31-year-old gently dismissed the notion that his startling 2012 haul – which also includes Gent-Wevelgem, E3 Harelbeke, the Belgian championship and Paris-Brussels – already constitutes the best season of his career.

    “It’s a good season, maybe in the top three in my career but every season is different,” said Boonen matter-of-factly. “I had a few good wins in the spring, I was national champion and now I have a good last part of the season but next Sunday is a different race but it doesn’t matter what you’ve won before. You take the start like everyone else and try to win the race.”

    The tactical minutiae of how Boonen and his national team co-leader Philippe Gilbert decide to dovetail their efforts will doubtless dominate the column inches in Belgium in the coming week, but on Sunday evening in Valkenburg, he was happy to focus on paying tribute to the efforts of his Omega Pharma-QuickStep teammates in what was a demanding team time trial.

    On a rolling 53.2km course that included the climbs of Lange Raarberg, Bergseweg and the Cauberg, Omega Pharma-QuickStep dosed their effort to perfection to hold off the spirited BMC challenge by just three seconds. At the end of a season that has seen the squad positively transfigured after a lacklustre 2011 campaign, Boonen described a change of mentality that had permeated the set-up in relation to time trialling.

    “Time trialling is not a Belgian thing you know,” Boonen said wryly. “We wanted to put some efforts in it. It’s always nice when you win Classics and it puts you a little bit at ease for the rest of the season but it’s not bad to have some different goals too, beyond always trying to go well in the classics.”

    Such was the strength of Omega Pharma-Quick Step’s sextet – Boonen, Tony Martin, Sylvain Chavanel, Peter Velits, Niki Terpstra and Kristof Vandewalle – that all six riders survived the final haul up the Cauberg and reached the finish line together. Boonen labelled Martin as a “machine”, but noted that Niki Terpstra’s demands for specific time trialling equipment had also played an important part.

    “This was one of those victories I never expected to have – first of all, because the race didn’t exist,” Boonen said, grinning. “In any case, we didn’t have the team for it [team time trialling] in the last few years. But last year, we started thinking about it and we started working on it and look at us now. There’s been a change of mentality going on and I’m happy to be part of this team. It was a real team effort, not only from the riders but from everyone.

     

    Before leaving the press centre with his teammates, Boonen was asked to place the emotions of this collective victory in context amid the garland of individual wins he has stitched together during his career, and his response was succinct.

    “It’s the same feeling, eh? It’s happy,” Boonen said. “Happy is happy.”

  • Murray arrives in Dunblane to celebrate title

    Murray arrives in Dunblane to celebrate title

    The win in the Arthur Ashe Stadium at Flushing Meadows emulated Fred Perry’s 1936 achievement and capped a special year for the 25-year-old Scot, who won gold at the Olympic Games after he beat Roger Federer in the final – a rematch of this year’s Wimbledon final where the Swiss triumphed.

    Murray also won Olympic silver in the mixed doubles competition with Laura Robson.

    ‘It’s overwhelming and I’ve never had anything like that before,’ Murray told Sky Sports News, after around 15,000 people came to celebrate his return.

    The other day I woke up after sleeping on the sofa and I was questioning whether it [the US Open win] actually happened.

    ‘It was when I woke up and realised I had actually won the US Open that it all started to sink in.’

    Murray’s walkabout in the town overran by an hour after he decided against travelling on the bus with his family and friends and instead spent time signing autographs and meeting his fans.

    Murray’s mother Judy, who travelled on the bus decorated by children from Dunblane Primary school, said: ‘I’m absolutely amazed. I thought it was going to be mobbed but I didn’t realise it was going to be as mobbed as this.

    ‘It’s wonderful for Andy to come back and share the success of the summer with people of the town.

    ‘Coming back to your roots and the town you grew up, he always gets such amazing support whenever he plays but particularly when he’s in a final. It’s amazing.’

  • Bolt ‘can’t turn into Kim Kardashian,’ says agent

    Bolt ‘can’t turn into Kim Kardashian,’ says agent

    After a well-documented build-up to London 2012 that didn’t quite go to plan, Usain Bolt answered the doubters in stunning fashion by winning Sunday’s 100 metre final in an Olympic record time of 9.63 seconds, leading many to speculate exactly what the win could mean for his endorsement portfolio.

    The general consensus is that the fastest man on the planet will double his off-track earnings after becoming the first sprinter since American Carl Lewis to retain the 100 metre Olympic title.

    But the sprinter’s agent has indicated that the impact of a successful London 2012 on Bolt’s marketability may not be as dramatic as many people think.

    “The strategy very much was to try and keep to a small number of quite high value contracts between Beijing and London,” said Irishman Ricky Simms, speaking exclusively to SportsPro as Bolt began the defence of his 200 metre crown in Tuesday’s heats.

    “We’ll sit down at the end of the season and work out his goals for the next four years and this will be part of that discussion. Of course, he’s going to be competing for the next four years so he can’t turn into Kim Kardashian where he can go to an appearance every week. He still has to be an athlete. It won’t change that much but it will a little bit.”

    Fully aware that endorsement dollars will soon dry up if Bolt fails to preserve his status as the king of track and field, Simms and Bolt’s coach, Glen Mills, are keen to ensure the Jamaican’s training is not compromised by the demands of his off-track affairs.

    “He can’t turn into Kim Kardashian where he can go to an appearance every week”

    “Usain was already one of the most marketable athletes in the world, as you guys decided, so he’s probably gone higher up on that list right now,” Simms said, referring to SportsPro’s 2012 list of the world’s most marketable athlete, in which Bolt ranked fourth.

     

     

     

    “The good thing with Usain is that he’s still young so he still has another four years. He’ll only be thirty at the next Olympics. He’s still towards the middle of his career. So he’s in a very strong position now but to be honest we’re focused on the 200 metres now and getting him through that and then the relay. There are a few more races so not until the end of the year will we begin working with him on those kinds of contracts.”

    For Bolt’s existing sponsors, the most prominent being Puma, Sunday’s performance was just what the doctor ordered. Simms has met with the sponsors “almost everyday” during the Games and is pleased to report that they are all “delighted from a brand level, for being part of that journey, but also for him as a person.”

     

     

     

    “Usain worked extremely hard, the last few weeks especially, to try and get to where he needed to be and it all came off, which is great.”

    “I was just looking at the amount of famous people that are tweeting both during the race and after the race. So I think he’s the centre of attention right now”

    And Simms is certain of which markets he will target in order to capitalise on Bolt’s popularity after the Games. “I think everyone,” he laughed. “I was just looking at the amount of famous people that are tweeting both during the race and after the race. So I think he’s the centre of attention right now.”

    “I think his target market depends on the product. For sports clothing and things like that, obviously the teenage market is very important. But there are other products in the pipeline that will appeal to an older market as well.”

    Simms is equally excited at the prospect of capitalising on the growing profile of his client and good friend Mo Farah after the Briton produced a remarkable display to win gold in the 10km race in front of a sell-out home crowd on Saturday night.

    “[The win] puts him on a much higher level,” Simms said. “He was world champion last year and now he’s Olympic champion – more people are watching the Olympics for sure – and Mo is such a likeable character. And you know he’s a great ambassador for the brands that he works with. He represents a lot of things so I think he will be someone that we’ll see a lot more of over the next four years.”

     

  • Hatton vows to lighten the load

    Hatton vows to lighten the load

    RICKY HATTON has KO’d Ricky Fatton and insisted there will be no more binge booze-ups after his fights.

    The former world champ hits the comeback trail in Manchester on November 24, with many critics doubting if he can turn his back on his old ways.

    Alcohol and junk food saw the Hitman balloon from his fighting weight of 10st to around 15st between bouts, before he ‘retired’ 2½ years ago.

    Then there were the infamous ‘S*** shirt days’, when Hatton and his pals would celebrate his fights with a mammoth drink-up while wearing the most outrageous shirt they could find.

    But he looked in terrific shape as he officially confirmed he fights again at the MEN Arena in two months’ time.

    Hatton said: “I am going to change my spots but you can’t completely change me. I’m a Jack the lad and all that.

    “But I cringe now at the weight I had to lose all those years ago. If I’m going to make a comeback, the three stone I used to shed when I was 25-years-old can’t be shed when I’m 34.

    “Things have got to change. I’m also a promoter so I can’t say to my fighters ‘Keep coming to the gym and don’t balloon in weight’ if I’m not going to do it. You have to lead by example.

    “I’m a father again and I’m nearly 34. Sooner or later things start to slow down. It’s not going to slow down to a standstill, I am what I am.

    “But if this comeback is going to go how I want it to then I have to change. And I have done, I’m older and wiser.”

    Some pundits believe Hatton is on an ego trip but he responded: “I think the fans have always liked me because I’ve never had an ego.

    “I’m a man of the people, I’m a Jack the lad, there’s nothing about ego doing this.

    “If people have to ask if this comeback is about ego and money, then they’ve got to sit down and think again.”

    Hatton was punched into retirement by Manny Pacquiao in two rounds in Las Vegas and there are pictures of his partner Jennifer screaming in horror at ringside at the brutality of the stoppage.

    He added: “When I said to Jennifer I was thinking about making a comeback, it was about 14 weeks ago and she said ‘Oh, don’t do it Rick’.

    “But she has seen me develop as a person, as a fighter. She has seen me drop the weight and change my attitude.

    “She said to me ‘I wasn’t sure at first because I love you but this has been the best decision you have ever made’.

    “All my team, too, reckon I’m going to come back stronger. I don’t expect anyone to believe it yet — just buy a ticket.”

     

  • Giroud: France has to show ambition

    Giroud: France has to show ambition

    After just two years in the French top flight, Olivier Giroud packed his bags for London to sign for Arsenal from Montpellier over the summer. Although the top scorer in Ligue 1 last season has not yet found the net for his new employers, he intends to establish himself in the English Premier League and in the French national side.

    FIFA.com met up with the left-footed striker to discuss the numerous challenges that await him during this coming campaign.

     

    FIFA.com: Olivier, was it a dream come true for you to pull on an Arsenal top, and if so, why?

    Olivier Giroud: Even as a young boy, I dreamed of playing in the Premier League. Remember, there were several big-name French players doing well at Arsenal at the time, guys like Patrick Vieira, Sylvain Wiltord, Robert Pires, Thierry Henry, among others, and that made an impression on me. I’m very proud to follow in the footsteps of all those ‘Frenchies’, and I hope to make my mark at the club as well. I really am pleased with my decision to come here.

    Was Arsene Wenger a key factor in your decision?

    Yes, because he knows me and has confidence in me. Generally speaking, the French guys here help you to settle in pretty quickly – there are actually quite a lot of French-speaking players overall. There are lots of people you can count on if you need help with something. But you can’t let that hold you back in terms of mixing with the others, and that suits me fine as I really want to improve my English and speak fluently, without having to think about what I’m about to say. Being at Arsenal will help me with my development, and with a manager like Arsene Wenger in charge, I’m definitely in good hands.

    The reputation and style of the Premier League are widely recognised, but have you been surprised by your initial experiences on English pitches?

    The atmosphere in the stadiums is pretty much what I was expecting; the support from the fans is amazing! They chant non-stop, and I felt very honoured that they even sang a little song about me when I arrived. On top of that, the fans are very knowledgeable. They applaud when you block a clearance, when you drop back to help in defence, or when you put in a strong tackle. It’s actually a tremendous way of looking at the game. In terms of the quality of play, the Premier League is, in my eyes, the best league in the world. It’s very intense and demanding, and requires much more focus. I’ve not been too surprised by that, to be fair, as I used to watch English matches on TV quite often, but you just have to put all that out of your mind and go out and play.

    Being at Arsenal will help me with my development, and with a manager like Arsene Wenger in charge, I’m definitely in good hands.

    Olivier Giroud

    And now all you need is a goal to break your duck.

    Yes, that’s true. I’ve been freezing up a little bit just when I’ve been about to pull the trigger, and that’s exactly what happened in my first few matches for France. I’m not too worried about it, because I’ve been scoring in training and I feel pretty comfortable being a part of this team. I just need to not think about things too much, so that I feel as relaxed as possible when the time comes to stick the ball in the net.

    Have you known any periods in your career where you ever doubted yourself? A goal drought, for example?

    I’ve always scored goals – it’s simply a question of confidence, of ‘tenacity and dedication,’ as Marc Libbra, the ex-Marseille striker, used to say. Those two words have always stuck in my mind, as for me they sum up quite well the qualities that a forward needs to have. You can’t ever give up, and even if I sometimes show my disappointment when I miss a chance, I try to keep my head up and get on with it. You can never let doubt, which I think is a very strong word, get the better of you. When I arrived at Tours, it took me seven or eight matches to score my first goal, while at Montpellier it was four matches. I’ve only started two games for Arsenal so far. It’s definitely a step up, but I just have to remain patient and confident.

    Does the early-season success enjoyed by Robin van Persie – your predecessor at Arsenal – at Manchester United, or by Eden Hazard, who came directly from Ligue 1 like you, prey on your mind at all?

    I’m not at all surprised at how well Eden Hazard has settled in this league, because he’s very comfortable everywhere he goes. He’s a very good player who’s going to give Chelsea quite a boost. As for Van Persie, people seem to think it’s something that weighs on me, but I know that the manager has confidence in me. He could easily have brought in another forward when Robin left, but he didn’t. The fact that people have put their trust in me creates the best possible conditions for me to develop and score goals. I’ve even set myself a little target in terms of the number of goals I’m going to get, but I’ll keep that to myself. I’m coming in after someone who scored 30 goals last season, but who took eight years to reach that level, albeit while dealing with various injuries along the way. I feel that I have less time to establish myself and that there are more immediate expectations of me. I imagine it’ll be the same thing for Emmanuel Herrera at Montpellier. That’s how it works, that’s what the demands of top-level football are all about – you have to accept it and remain strong.

    What are your thoughts on the way in which Abou Diaby, your team-mate at Arsenal and in the French national team, has started the season?

    Abou is absolutely essential to how we approach games tactically at Arsenal. He’s an athletic, complete player, extremely effective at winning the ball back, but also at distributing it and driving into opposition territory. He’s a very important player for the club, but also for France, and he’s doing everything he can to leave his injury problems behind him. He’s a great professional, and it’s reassuring to play alongside him.

    Speaking of Les Bleus, how have things changed for you since the arrival of Didier Deschamps at the helm?

    I was brought into the French set-up a few months before EURO 2012, and Laurent Blanc never really had the time to try Karim Benzema and me together in a 4-4-2, as he’d talked about doing. Didier Deschamps tested out that option right from the outset, against Uruguay, but they play in a very compact style with five at the back, and I’d only seen 45 minutes of play with Arsenal the previous weekend. That’s why I want to quickly regain my form with France so that we can give that formation another shot.

    You can’t ever give up, and even if I sometimes show my disappointment when I miss a chance, I try to keep my head up and get on with it.

    Olivier Giroud on a striker’s mentality

    Given that Karim Benzema is one of the first names on the team sheet, the 4-4-2 that you refer to would seem like a good solution for you personally, although it would require more defensive work.

    The modern attacker has to know how to defend, to get into a position where he can try to block or delay balls being fired back down the pitch. That’s not a problem for me at all; I’m used to playing like that. My goal is to earn a regular place in the side, so if Karim is playing, the 4-4-2 obviously suits me better.

    How did you find your experience at UEFA EURO 2012, where you mostly watched from the bench?

    ‘Frustrating’ is the word I would use. I didn’t play very much – I was a virtual spectator. Even though I pretty much expected that’s how things would be before the tournament began, it was still difficult, because I was accustomed to playing all the time at Montpellier. It’s tricky to go from that to getting just ten to 15 minutes and touching the ball a handful of times. But you need experiences like that to learn and mature as a person.

     

     

    Aside from Spain, the strong favourites to win France’s qualifying section (Group I) for Brazil 2014, which team do you fear the most?

    Belarus, because they beat us at home a couple of years ago in a qualifying match for EURO 2012, and they’re a team that’s constantly improving. These days, the gap between countries is not as wide as in the past. Lots of players from so-called smaller teams play in major leagues, and if you don’t take the match seriously and aren’t completely mentally prepared, you can quite easily leave yourself exposed. The Belarusians are well aware that they’ve already got the better of us quite recently, which definitely makes them the biggest threat.

    You came up against Spain in the quarter-final of Poland/Ukraine 2012. How would you describe the gap that separates France and the current world and European champions?

    Spain are benefitting from an incredible generation of players who’ve been performing together for a very long time. I don’t know if any team will ever be able to do better than they have. That said, from what I could see from the sidelines, I don’t think we were that far away from them during that quarter-final. They were able to exploit our rare mistakes amazingly quickly, but we could have beaten them. That’s what we all felt, and we certainly have some regrets about that game. But they remain a very tough side to play against, one that holds on to the ball and forces you to come and get it, only to then catch you out on the counter-attack.

    Do you think France are capable of finishing top of Group I?

    Spain are the best team in the world, so it’s going to be difficult, but not impossible. We have to show some ambition. If we can win every one of our other matches, anything can happen in the two games we play against them. We’re going to try our utmost to qualify automatically and avoid the play-offs, because those are always dangerous to be involved in. The fact that Brazil are hosting the next World Cup obviously gives everyone a little bit of extra motivation. It’s an event that nobody wants to miss.

     

  • Yak fires Guangzhou to victory again

    Yak fires Guangzhou to victory again

    Super Eagles striker and Guangzhou forward Yakubu Aiyegbeni rose to the occassion once more Sunday grabbing the homers’ first goal as they defeated visiting Shanghai Shenxin 3-2.

    The former Portsmouth and Blackburn ace found the net in the 32nd minute of the match only for the visitors to equalise in a jiffy, grabbing two goals within two minutes in the 45th and 47th minutes respectively through Wang Yun and Anselmo Resumption of play in the secon half however saw Guangzhou level up in the 66th minute thanks to a penalty before grabbing the winner at extra time through home boy Li Zhe.

    Aiyegbeni has scored virtually against all the teams he played against since arriving China in a 1.4million Euros move from Blackburn Rovers.

  • Eko 2012: MOC okays preparation as zonal qualifiers kick off

    AFTER inspecting facilities designated for the 18th National Sports Festival tagged Eko 2012, the Main Organising Committee (MOC) has expressed satisfaction with the level of preparation by Lagos State.

    The MOC led by its Secretary-General, Abba Yola told journalists after inspecting venues such as Onikan Stadium, Rowe Park Sports Centre and Teslim Balogun Stadium that he was satisfied with the level of work being carried out at the venues.

    He, however, urged the Local Organising Committee (LOC) to ensure that work is speeded up in all the venues in order to ensure that the facilities are fully ready for the festival in November. The MOC scribe said: The Onikan stadium renovations are going on well, the only problem is the pitch and I think they need more hands to remove the weeds that are growing there so that they can plant the grass and beautify the place.

    Also, removing the weeds is not something that a machine can do, so they would need more manpower in removing the weeds. Aside from that, I think work there is going on well and the manager has promised that we would get results by the end of the month. We would be getting in touch with the contractor to ensure that more people are employed to do this so that they can meet up with the timeline.

    He added: “The work at Rowe Park is moving on well because I can see that they have done about 70 per cent of the job and I am particularly impressed with the facilities put in place for the physically-challenged athletes that would be taking part in the games. Teslim Balogun Stadium is going on very well and I am quite impressed with the facilities on ground, all they need to do now is make some minor adjustments and the stadium is ready for the games.”

    He however, said: The renovations are going on well, just that things have to move fasters because of the lack of time. We have been assured by the people in charge that by the end of the month renovations would be almost done. The renovation of the secretariat, I can say is 99 per cent complete; all the offices are set and all the equipments needed are in place and I have to commend the LOC Secretary-General for his efforts in seeing that things are up and running.”

    For the LOC scribe, Kweku Tandoh, the renovation work would be completed as at when due.

  • Omeruo out of South Africa tie

    Omeruo out of South Africa tie

    Club commitments will again rule Kenneth Josiah Omeruo out of the African Youth Championship (AYC) qualifier between the Flying Eagles and Amajita of South Africa slated for Nelspruit on Friday, a source close to the player has revealed.

    Omeruo, who was also called up by Nigeria’s U-20 chief coach, John Obuh in the last round against the Ngorongoro Heroes of Tanzania, couldn’t honour the two legs for the same reason.

    The source, who does not want his name in print, told SportingLife that Omeruo, who has developed into an integral member of his club in the Dutch League, ADO Den Haag, would be needed for their blockbuster league match at home to Ajax Amsterdam next Sunday hence the decision of the club to hold on to the lanky defender.
    The source further revealed that Omeruo did not only play the entire duration of the game against Heerenveen on Saturday very impressively but also had an assist in their 3-1 away win.

    “It is official that Kenneth will not be playing against South Africa despite all John Obuh has done to ensure he makes the game. Den Haag need Kenneth for a league match against Ajax Amsterdam. He will not be released for Nigeria.

    “Kenneth has been very fantastic for Den Haag and he has played in the club’s five matches played in the league this season. He was even awesome against the Marco Van Basten-coached Heerenveen in a match they won away 3-1. He also had an assist,” the source disclosed.

    Omeruo went to the last U-20 World Cup in Colombia and was signed from Standard Liege of Belgium by Chelsea FC before he was farmed out to Den Haag on loan for two seasons so as to have more playing time.

    Den Haag currently lie in 6th position after five games in the Dutch Eredivisie and could move higher than their present position if they beat second-placed Ajax on Sunday in a Week 6 duel.