September 09, 2010 ,
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Sky Sports
Carlos Queiroz was sacked today as coach of the Portugal National Team, the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF) confirmed. The former Real Madrid and MetroStar boss' dismissal comes in the wake of... Read on
September 09, 2010 ,
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Sky Sports
FIFA president Sepp Blatter revealed that extra-time could be scrapped at the soccer World Cup and the so-called "golden goal" rule could be reintroduced, Sky Sports reported today. Blatter said he... Read on
FIFA president Sepp Blatter revealed that extra-time could be scrapped at the soccer World Cup and the so-called "golden goal" rule could be reintroduced, Sky Sports reported today.
Blatter said he was concerned by the defensive approach of many teams during this summer's tournament in South Africa, particularly in extra-time when the priority appeared to be not conceding a goal to ensure a penalty shoot-out.
Discussions were set to take place about the best ways to promote free-flowing soccer, and there were a couple of ideas on the agenda. FIFA, the world's soccer governing body, will look at whether they should go straight to penalties after the 90-minute game or bring back the "golden goal" rule where the first team to score in extra-time wins the game.
Blatter said, "We have to try to find a way to encourage free-flowing football in tournaments like the World Cup, with teams playing to win. We plan to take the opportunity to look at the concept of extra-time as well."
He added: "Often we see teams set themselves up even more defensively in extra-time, in an attempt to avoid conceding a goal at all costs. To prevent this, we could go directly to a penalty shoot-out at full-time, or reintroduce the golden goal rule. We'll see what emerges from the committee meetings."
Blatter believes some sides at the latest World Cup played for a draw from the first whistle, specifically in the early stages when nobody wanted to lose their opening game.
He told FIFA.com: "Football has become such a strategic game, with teams moving as a unit. It can be an impressive sight; gone are the days of simple tactics where you attacked then defended. But in the first few matches of the group stage in South Africa, we witnessed some teams that went out to avoid defeat, that were playing for a draw from the outset."
Read more:
http://www.skysports.com/story/0,19528,12098_6366098,00.html
September 08, 2010 ,
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NewsCore
The stop-start career of Arsenal striker Theo Walcott suffered another setback late Wednesday when the English Premier League (EPL) star was ruled out for six weeks with an ankle injury. A scan on... Read on
The stop-start career of Arsenal striker Theo Walcott suffered another setback late Wednesday when the English Premier League (EPL) star was ruled out for six weeks with an ankle injury.
A scan on the injury he suffered 10 minutes into England’s 3-1 win over Switzerland on Tuesday night revealed ligament damage to his right ankle that will keep him on the sidelines until the end of next month.
England manager Fabio Capello had originally predicted a two-week layoff after speaking to the player before leaving Basle.
Walcott’s latest injury is a huge blow to Arsenal and England, but more pertinently to the player himself, who has responded impressively to being left out of Capello’s World Cup squad to re-establish himself as first choice for club and country.
The 21-year-old began the season in magnificent form, scoring four goals in three EPL games, including a hat-trick against Blackpool, and starting all of England’s three matches.
Walcott’s brief career has been a rollercoaster ride of highs and lows, from being taken to the 2006 World Cup as a 17-year-old to being dropped on the eve the next tournament, but the recurrence of injuries has been the one constant theme.
This is the eighteenth significant injury he has suffered since signing for Arsenal four years ago, a curse that has played an important role in hindering his development.
September 08, 2010 ,
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Sky Sports
England coach Fabio Capello confirmed Wednesday that he will step down as the team's manager after his contract expires following the Euro 2012 soccer tournament, Sky News reported. The 64-year-old... Read on
England coach Fabio Capello confirmed Wednesday that he will step down as the team's manager after his contract expires following the Euro 2012 soccer tournament, Sky News reported.
The 64-year-old said he was not interested in a new contract with the national side after the tournament in Poland and Ukraine.
"We have to qualify first of course but after that I will be too old," he said. "I want to enjoy my life as a pensioner."
After a poor showing in this summer's World Cup in South Africa, many pundits believed Capello was fortunate to keep his $9.3 million-a-year job.
Read more:
http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Fabio-Capello-To-Quit-As-England-Football-Coach-After-Euro-2012/Article/201009215723584?lpos=UK_News_Carousel_Region_0&lid=ARTICLE_15723584_Fabio_Capello_To_Quit_As_England_Football_Coach_After_Euro_2012
September 08, 2010 ,
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NewsCore
The parents of the woman at the center of an alleged sex scandal involving England star Wayne Rooney issued a public apology today to the striker's wife. Jennifer Thompson, 21, went public on Sunday... Read on
The parents of the woman at the center of an alleged sex scandal involving England star Wayne Rooney issued a public apology today to the striker's wife.
Jennifer Thompson, 21, went public on Sunday with claims Rooney paid the $1855-a-night escort for sex, creating a scandal which threatens to end the soccer player's marriage.
Rooney's 24-year-old wife, Coleen, was pregnant with the couple's only child at the time.
In a statement released Wednesday, the escort's parents Hamish and Dana Thompson offered their "most sincere apologies to Coleen Rooney and her family."
"The last few days have been extremely trying for us and our family," the statement said. "Following the various newspaper articles concerning our daughter Jennifer, we would like to offer our most sincere apologies to Coleen Rooney and her family."
The statement continued: "This may sound somewhat hollow, but my wife and I would never condone what has or may have happened. Jennifer is our daughter and we love her and we will deal with this matter as a family, not via the media."
Rooney, 24, set aside his personal problems yesterday to score a goal in England's 3-1 victory over Switzerland in their second Euro 2012 qualifier match.
England coach Fabio Capello praised the Manchester United star's performance, which followed speculation that he would be left out of the squad to recover from the psychological fallout of the sex scandal.
"I think he played well. He was always at the center of the play, the center of the movement. I think the pressure was really strong on him, but he played very well," Capello said.
September 07, 2010 ,
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BRIAN LEWIS
The FIFA Inspection Group arrived in New York last night to start their tour of the United States, and produce a technical report for the executive committee. They'll file that in November and the... Read on
The FIFA Inspection Group arrived in New York last night to start their tour of the United States, and produce a technical report for the executive committee. They'll file that in November and the 24-member panel will make its decision Dec. 2.
Here is a partial transcription of a press conference today on the Upper East Side with U.S. Soccer President Sunil Guilati and Head of FIFA Inspection Group Harold Mayne-Nicholls.
Harold Mayne-Nicholls, head of FIFA Inspection Group
Opening Comments
"Thank you, Sunil. First of all I would like to really thank all the representatives of the venues and cities that are bidding for this World Cup bid process for 2018 and 2022. The reception we had last night was wonderful and we really enjoyed it. Thanks to the mayors of New York, Nashville and Atlanta who were with us in that reception…We are here on our eighth visit to different bidding countries for these two next World Cups. We are here to get as much information as possible about what this bidding process is presenting to FIFA to run the World Cup in 2018 or 2022.
We will in these four days receive as much information as possible to put in our report for the [FIFA Executive Committee] members who, on Dec. 2, will decide which countries will get the World Cup in 2018 and 2022. We are sure we will receive all the information we need and with that information we are also sure we will present to the ExCo members a very objective report so they can have a strong basis for the decisions they will make.
I really thank U.S. Soccer and the bid organization for all their help during the last days in organizing the visit and also for sending us all the information we required for the visit. It will be a pleasure to be here. It will be a pleasure to go to these five venues, and of course it was really nice yesterday to receive information from the other thirteen venues that we will be unable to visit due to the time limit. Thanks again to the U.S. Soccer Federation and thanks to Sunil for all your efforts in the well organized visit that we will have here in the next days."
U.S. Soccer President Sunil Gulati
Opening Comments
"Good morning. Welcome to the official kickoff of the FIFA Inspection Tour for the 2018/2022 World Cups. A big welcome to those of you who are here from our 18 candidate cities, as well as members of the media and guests. It's my great pleasure to introduce Harold Mayne-Nicholls, a longtime friend and the president of the Chilean federation who is head of FIFA's inspection group. He'll make some remarks and then he will be officially starting his inspection of five cities and a number of stadiums and training facilities. He will depart with his team after which I'll make a couple of opening remarks and take any questions from any of the media.
“This is very much a technical inspection tour. They will be looking at facilities, infrastructure, hotels, highways, trains, planes, those sorts of things and obviously our stadiums. They will go from here to Washington to Miami to Dallas and Houston and home on Thursday night. The last stop on the totality of the inspection tour is Qatar, which they will do early next week. It’s an important part of the process. We had a date in May where we submitted the thousands of pages of documents but this is part of the process where they will write a technical report to FIFA’s Executive Committee which will summarize their visit and evaluate the bids more generally. Then FIFA will make a decision on Dec. 2 regarding the placement of the World Cup in 2018 and 2022.
"We started last night with a reception. Some of the highlights of the trip are visits to the stadiums. There is a White House breakfast on Wednesday morning, we’re not sure of all the guests but there will certainly be a couple of cabinet members and some senior members of the President’s staff as well as the FIFA group. Bob Bradley is flying in for that as well and will be joining me with the group. [There will be] lots of things with mayors and governors and civic leaders in our cities, starting with New York and Washington today.
"FIFA’s routine in this is that they do an opening and a closing statement but they don’t take questions. It’s the same policy they have in all nine of the countries. They let the written reports speak for themselves, but we’re under no restrictions. I’m happy to answer any questions there may be.”
On how the five cities were selected for the tour:
“A lot of it had to do with distances and wanting to be on the East Coast because they are trying to get back to Zurich. It was about trying to make sure they saw three or four things; they wanted to see potential stadiums for the opening and Final. They wanted to see potential sites for the international broadcast center, and third was some training sites and hotels and so on. The first two are obviously very specific in terms of the IBC and stadiums. In a country like the United States we could have done that in different ways. We could have done a West Coast swing because we’ve got multiple stadiums that could meet the 80,000 minimum requirement for the Final. We decided on an East Coast swing because a couple of the newest stadiums we have, obviously one is here in the New York area and one is in Dallas. We wanted to make sure those were part of the process. The nation’s capital seemed like an obvious one. Once we did that, trying to get the rest into three days, there weren’t a lot of degrees of freedom. In an ideal world there would have been a longer trip. We would have loved to have taken them to a game, for example in Seattle, an MLS game, and seen some other venues on the West Coast, but that wasn’t possible.”
On the challenges in convincing FIFA to award the World Cup to the United States:
“The challenge is that it’s not a time trial. We’re not in a race against the clock; it’s a competition, an election. So the biggest challenge is the other challengers. There are some very qualified competitors that have done World Cups, have top leagues and lots of infrastructure. There are others who have proposed different solutions to issues. I think the challenges are that this is going to be a tough fight. We’ve known that since the beginning and it’s been a hard competition so far. I think we’ve done everything we can to date on the technical bid preparation, which is extraordinary, and the second part now, which is convincing 24 people that the technical bid and everything that the United States offers is what they want. We did a lot of that this summer, with President Clinton and Vice President Biden on the ground at the World Cup. They held one-on-one meetings and group meetings with those people. We are visiting all 24 of the Executive Committee members in their home cities. Luckily one of those is 150 meters from here so I think he is on board.
Other issues that we may face is that we hosted in 1994, which may not have been long enough ago, and I think some of the international community underestimates the passion for the game in the United States. When we start talking about the landscape in the U.S. they’re surprised by it. They are surprised that we have 16 teams and are growing in MLS. They are surprised that Americans were the No. 1 ticket buyers for the World Cup. They are surprised that you couldn’t get into bars in a lot of major cities at 10 a.m. to watch World Cup games. They’re surprised that the TV rights for the World Cup were the single largest in the world. When you look at all those things happening in a relatively short time since the 1994 World Cup, you can see the extraordinary success story. It’s important that we continue to get that message across, and the story we tell is that if you look at this as a 50-year time span from 1984, which I use as a benchmark because of the Olympic Games which gave FIFA the faith in American spectators for the sport in 1994, we’re at halftime. Look what we’ve done in the first half. Imagine what we can do in the second half if American television and commercial partnerships treat the World Cup the same way they might treat the Olympics, for example. And more Americans treat viewing it the way they might the NFL, for example. We saw some of that. We finally got what we’ve been going for for 25 years, which is water cooler talk. People who didn’t normally tune in were talking about the World Cup, Donovan’s goal, the save, whatever. So, convincing the world that we’re halfway there is a big challenge, and that’s what we’re working hard on.”
September 05, 2010 ,
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SkySports
Gerard Houllier is set to be offered the manager's job at Aston Villa, Sky Sports reported Sunday. Houllier, who was in England for Jamie Carragher's testimonial on Saturday, was staying coy on the... Read on
Gerard Houllier is set to be offered the manager's job at Aston Villa, Sky Sports reported Sunday.
Houllier, who was in England for Jamie Carragher's testimonial on Saturday, was staying coy on the rumors when asked about the Villa job over the weekend.
However, it is believed Villa chairman Randy Lerner has offered the Frenchman the chance to replace former boss Martin O'Neill.
O'Neill resigned at Villa Park just before the start of the season with Kevin MacDonald being placed in caretaker charge.
The likes of Alan Curbishley, Sven Goran Eriksson and MacDonald have been linked with the role, but it appears former Liverpool boss Houllier is in pole position for the post.
Houllier, who left Liverpool in 2004, is believed to have impressed Villa's board in the interview process and could be unveiled as the new manager in the next 48 hours.
Read more:
http://www.skysports.com/story/0,19528,11677_6359276,00.html
September 05, 2010 ,
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Katie Cassidy
Soccer star Wayne Rooney was expected to fly with the rest of the England squad to Switzerland, despite allegations about his private life appearing in several British newspapers Sunday. The... Read on
Soccer star Wayne Rooney was expected to fly with the rest of the England squad to Switzerland, despite allegations about his private life appearing in several British newspapers Sunday.
The Manchester United striker trained with his national teammates Sunday and the session was described as business as usual. At a media conference, England midfielder James Milner said, "We're coming off the back of a good result and we've got another big game on Tuesday, so it's about preparing for that and recovering from the last one."
Rooney was the subject of reports Sunday in several British newspapers which lead to speculation about whether he would play against Switzerland in Tuesday's Euro 2012 qualifying game. However, the Football Association (FA), England's soccer governing body, denied reports that Rooney would remain at home.
Milner described Rooney as a "top player," adding, "You want your best players out on the field and he's obviously one of those. Things are always being said in the papers -- good things, bad things -- about the England team. That’s part and parcel of football, you have highs and you have lows and it's down to us to make sure the only thing that matters is on the field."
Tuesday's game was considered to be England's toughest fixture in its bid to make the finals and fans feared the potential absence of the team's star performer could damage chances of a victory.
Read more:
http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Wayne-Rooney-Expected-To-Fly-To-Switzerland-Amid-Allegations-About-Private-Life-In-Sunday-Newspapers/Article/201009115714849
September 05, 2010 ,
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NewsCore
David Beckham and wife Victoria are set to quit Britain and make the United States their permanent base after putting their English mansion on the market, the (London) Sunday Mirror reported.... Read on
David Beckham and wife Victoria are set to quit Britain and make the United States their permanent base after putting their English mansion on the market, the (London) Sunday Mirror reported. Goldenballs and Posh Spice have officially gone Hollywood.
Estate agents have valued their southern England home at $27 million (£18million) -- they snapped it up in 1999 for £2.5 million.
A source close to the family said: “Frankly they cannot see themselves ever returning to make London their full-time base. The children are settled, speak with American accents and David and Victoria are immersed in the laid-back Los Angeles way of life. They love it there -- they’re well liked, have plenty of friends and feel it’s their spiritual home.”
As well as the 1930s Georgian mansion, the couple, both 35, have homes in Los Angeles, Dubai and France.
The Beckhams, who spent most of the summer at their chateau in Bargemon in the South of France, are also planning to buy an apartment in New York, where Victoria’s fashion business is based.
Since moving to America in 2007 the Beckhams have taken to the American way of life and their Hollywood celebrity pals include Tom Cruise and his wife Katie Holmes.
September 05, 2010 ,
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By BRIAN LEWIS
The Red Bulls lost 1-0 at defending MLS Cup Champion, Real Salt Lake last night in front of 19,115 at Rio Tinto Stadium.With the loss, the Red Bulls dropped to 11-8-4 with 37 points, losing ground on... Read on
The Red Bulls lost 1-0 at defending MLS Cup Champion, Real Salt Lake last night in front of 19,115 at Rio Tinto Stadium.
With the loss, the Red Bulls dropped to 11-8-4 with 37 points, losing ground on Eastern Conference-leading Columbus. With coach Hans Backe having said beforehand MLS Cup finalists L.A, and Real Salt Lake along with Columbus were the class of the league, and his own team wasn't yet quite up to the task of winning a title, last night was a measuring-stick game for New York; and the Red Bulls were found wanting.
The Red Bulls are 0-4 against that trio, MLS' top teams in the points standings; but they're 11-4-4 against the rest of the league. Whether they're truly a cut below, or were just due for a letdown coming off back-to-back solid wins, they came up short at Real Salt Lake, which ran its MLS-record home unbeaten streak to 22 games.
New York coughed up the game's only goal just four minutes in. Midfielder Kyle Beckerman lofted the ball over the top to an on-rushing Fabian Espindola, who shook off his defender and slotted it past goalkeeper Greg Sutton with his left foot. That proved to be all Real Salt Lake needed. The Red Bulls played a horrid first half followed by a vastly-improved second, but couldn't break through.
The Red Bulls, who were missing four starters from last Saturday’s 2-0 win over San Jose due to international duty – midfielders Rafa Marquez and Dane Richards, goalkeeper Bouna Coundoul, and defender Roy Miller – tried to get right back into the game in the 12th minute, as midfielder Seth Stammler found Juan Pablo Angel in the penalty box and the Colombian’s header forced goalkeeper Nick Rimando to parry it off the left post. Four minutes later, Real Salt Lake’s Andy Williams sliding volley was held by Sutton.
In the 33rd minute, Angel’s aerial prowess again nearly earned the visitors a goal as his header from a Joel Lindpere corner kick was cleared off the line by Williams. Soon after, Sutton made a huge save to keep the match at 1-0 when he pushed away a Robbie Findley eight-yard header.
In the second half, New York put more pressure on the hosts and Angel was denied for a third time in the 55th minute. Lindpere’s corner swung to the Designated Player, whose powerful header was saved by a diving Rimando. Angel’s ensuing attempt on the rebound was deflected by Rimando and cleared from the goal mouth by Beckerman.