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Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts

In defeat, encomiums for pregnant Olympian

pregnant Malaysian Nur Taibi
Although she has been eliminated from the air rifle event in the London Olymic Games, pregnant Malaysian Nur Taibi has earned widespread commendations. But some people are nervous that her husband has yet to say anything on her adventure.

As eight-month-old pregnant Malysian athlete, Nur Suryani Mohammed Taibi, heads back home, her spirit of adventure has been generating diverse reactions. As if to prove that what a man can do, even a pregnant woman can do better, Taibi competed in the 10-metre air rifle event, hoping to capture gold, which would obviously have been like a child before her biological child due to be born in the next few weeks.

She had declared before the games started, “A pregnant woman can do whatever they think they can do. The most important thing is how they think. I don’t feel like there’s a challenge during pregnancy. I just feel like ordinary, normal people, as if I am not pregnant. I still can do whatever a normal person can do.”
To many mature Nigerians, Malaysia often rings a bell, being a country that used to be at the same socio-economic level with Nigeria about four decades ago, before it cruised into development, while Nigeria indulged in an orgy of motion without movement.

It is usually said the palm kernel, on which Malaysia built its agricultural breakthrough, is taken from the ‘Giant of Africa’ whose agricultural profile has disappeared into near oblivion.

A Kent-based Nigerian businesswoman, Felicia Udom, notes this in her reaction to Taibi’s participation at the Olympics. She adds that since the athlete did not participate in a sport as demanding as sprinting, the risk she took was a safe one.

She says, “I think the lesson is also that women should also be psychologically prepared for challenges whenever they are pregnant. I will advise Taibi’s doctors to consider the impact of the excitement she has had in the past days on the health of the unborn baby, but she is definitely one of the heroes of the London Olympics.”

In interviews with our correspondent, Emmy Gerrard – a young British lawyer – and Ibrahim Bra – a Tunisian tourist – also salute Taibi’s courage. While Gerrard, however, doubts if she is adventurous enough to step into the shooting ring if she found herself in the athlete’s position, Bra notes that personally, he would not discourage Taibi if he were her husband or brother.

“If the doctor advised that there was no problem and she felt she was fit enough, I would support her.” he adds.

Taibi has been edged out of the competition but her spirit is far from being broken. She is already looking beyond the pregnancy season, saying, “I will still carry on because this is already my life. What I’ve heard is that a mother after delivery has fresh blood so they can perform better. That’s the luck of being a woman.”
However, Bra’s stance is germane to a fear that has greeted the woman’s outing – the fact that her husband’s voice has not been heard. Her parents have expressed support for her and commended her for making them and the unborn proud. What some online comments suggest in this regard is that the hubby might not be comfortable with the wife’s decision. Our correspondent’s attempt to confirm this from Taibi, or reach her husband through her, has not yielded fruits as a message sent to her has not been replied.

“Whatever happens, I’m satisfied already. I’m proud of her. I’ve told her: ‘If you can compete in the Olympics, that’s an achievement already – all the more when you’re pregnant.’ We are her family, so we support her. We’ll be praying for her,” her father, Mohammed Taibi, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

While gossips may still be waiting for him to speak out, a comment earlier credited to the athlete, saying the hubby helped her to keep calm and focused, suggests that he had continued to ‘shoot’ along with her in spirit.

Another issue Taibi’s participation has raised borders on the inclusion of shooting in a game like the Olympics. To some people, any event that seems to promote violence ought to be discouraged. For such people who would like to indict America for entrenching such in online comments, however, a commentator on Taibi’s participation, who simply identifies him/herself as Dr. Putor, has some words, “It is nice to see coverage of shooting sports. Most Americans don’t realise that there have been quite a few medals contributed to the total medal count by our shooting teams. As for shooting not being a ‘true sport’ then you must consider most of your track and field events as non-sports also, as they came about from the mastery of weapons on the battlefield. Take a look at the ancient games of Greece, Javelin, Hammer, Shot-put, Fencing and Archery just to name a few.”

Taibi missed the cut-off by five points to finish in 34th place. She is not the first pregnant woman to compete at the Olympic Games, though. While a pregnant skeleton racer competed in the 2006 Winter Games; and another pregnant curler was in action in 2010, a pregnant figure skater is said to have won a gold medal in Sweden in 1920.

Taibi is ranked 47th in the world and has won two gold medals at the Southeast Asian Games in 10-meter air rifle and 50-meter rifle. She finished fifth in 10-meter rifle at the Asian Championships in January.

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Senegal dent Uruguay’s 84 years Olympics record

Moussa Konate celebrating a goal

Moussa Konate scored two first-half goals as 10-man Senegal handed Uruguay their first-ever Olympic defeat in a 2-0 win on Sunday. Uruguay, which could have clinched the group with a victory, was unbeaten in winning back-to-back Olympic titles in 1924 and 1928 – the last time it played in the competition.

Konate tapped in the rebound from Cheikhou Kouyate’s saved header for an easy 10th-minute opener in front of 76,071 spectators at Wembley Stadium.

Uruguay’s defence was left flat-footed again on Konate’s second in the 37th when five defenders watched him head home a corner seven minutes after defender Abdoulaye Ba was red carded for tripping up Luis Suarez.

Konate has scored three goals at London 2012 for Olympics debutante Senegal, which lead Group A with four points from two games. Two-time Olympic champion Uruguay have three points going into their last game against hosts Britain. Senegal play their last game against the United Arab Emirates.

Uruguay looked lethargic on both goals against pacy and physical opponents, especially after the 7½-hour bus ride the players took from Manchester to London on Friday to take part in the opening ceremony of the games. Konate was perfectly placed inside the box to tap home after Uruguay goalkeeper Martin Campana’s low, reflex save to Kouyate’s clear header.

Konate nearly doubled the lead six minutes later but Campana tipped his rising volley from inside the area around the post.

Uruguay created danger in the 27th as Gaston Ramirez’s free kick bounced off the near post. The Bologna striker would later elicit a tremendous save from Ousmane Mane after Senegal was reduced to 10 men from Ba’s silly trip of Suarez, who was jeered by the near capacity crowd with every touch.

Senegal struck their second goal against the run of play as Sadio Mane — who troubled Uruguay’s defenders with his pace — set up a corner that Konate easily stepped up to score from as five blue shirts stood stationary around him.

Suarez set up Ramirez’s try from inside the area while fellow striker Edinson Cavani was largely muted apart from having a 45th-minute effort cleared after he got free past Mane.

Chelsea closing in on Moses deal

 Victor Moses 
   
Chelsea is close to completing the signing of Wigan Athletic midfielder Victor Moses and Marseille defender Cesar Azpilicueta according to a Footy Bunker source.

The Blues captured the signature of Internacional playmaker Oscar last week in a £25m deal joining fellow new recruits Eden Hazard, brother Thorgan and Marko Marin in West London.

Owner Roman Abramovich and manager Roberto Di Matteo are guiding the club through a period of transition after seeing several first team stars leave the club during the summer.

Di Matteo is keen to boost his attack after losing Didier Drogba and Salomon Kalou on free transfers and wants Nigerian international Moses to provide competition in the wide areas.

The Champions League winners have already had three bids, the latest thought to be £6.5m, rejected by Latics chairman Dave Whelan who is holding out for £10m for his star asset.

Abramovich is unwilling to pay over the odds for the highly-rated 21-year-old with reports suggesting he will seek showdown talks with boss Roberto Martinez as the club continue to hold him back from a dream move to Stamford Bridge.

A move for Azpilicueta is likely to be more straight forward after Marseille sporting director Jose Anigo admitted they could sell the right back in order to generate funds for new signings ahead of the new season.
“Everybody has to sell before buying,” he told RTL.”In effect, it could either be (Stephane) M’Bia and Azpi. But for now, nothing has changed.”

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Williams sets new record at CNS tourney

Eric Williams of Rivers State provided an exciting end to the fourth Chief of Naval Staff Open Swimming Competition in Calabar when he broke a six-year national record in the men’s 50 metres breaststroke men just as seven championship records were set at the three-day competition.

Williams, who holds the national record of 29:80 set in 2007 and the competition record of 29:89 in the event in 2011, also returned with a time of 29: 74 seconds in Calabar to hit a new mark and win gold.
Seven old competition records were also broken in this year’s championship which drew swimmers from 15 states, the security forces and the University of Ibadan competing for laurels in 32 events including 16 males, 16 females, 28 individuals and four relay races.

Faith Edorodion of team Edo set a new competition record of 1:12:51 in the women’s 100m butterfly and in 50m butterfly women when she returned with a time of 31: 41.
She set the old competition mark of 1:15:07 (100 metre butterfly) and national record of 1:07:71 in the same event in 2011.

Edorodion also holds the competition record of 31:86 seconds in the 50m butterfly and the national record of 29:97 set respectively in the events at the third edition of the championship in Ilorin, Kwara, in 2011.
Rachael Tonjor of Edo, who holds the national and competition records of 33:81 and 35:17 in 50m breaststroke, in 2011, set a new competition record of 35:13 in Calabar.

Russia names Capello coach

Former England coach Fabio Capello 

The Russian Football Union on Monday appointed Italian coach Fabio Capello as new national manager to revive the flagging fortunes of the team after its flop at Euro 2012.

“Today we decided to appoint Capello as our national team’s new manager,” the RFU deputy president Nikita Simonyan told ITAR-TASS news agency. “We expect him to come to Moscow in the nearest future to finalise the details of his contract and sign it.”

“I think this will happen on Wednesday or Thursday,” added Simonyan, who is acting chief of the RFU after the ruling body’s previous head Sergei Fursenko resigned last month.

Capello said he was happy and proud to take over Russia’s national side.

“I’m happy and proud,” Capello was quoted as saying by Italian news agency ANSA.

“And I’ll be happy if my work with the Russian team will go right way. The co-operation with this team is a great challenge for me as Russia is a great country.”

Financial details have not been disclosed but the Sport Express daily reported last week that Capello had been offered an annual salary of up to seven million euros ($8.5m).

The 66-year-old Capello will be the immediate successor to Dutchman Dick Advocaat whose side were disappointingly knocked out of the Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine at the group stages.

Haye defeats Chisora in grudge match

David Haye (right) looks down at Dereck Chisora after scoring a fifth round knockout in their fight at Upton Park in London on Saturday. 

Former world heavyweight champion David Haye knocked fellow Briton Dereck Chisora to the canvas twice in the fifth round to win their grudge match in pouring rain at Upton Park in east London on Saturday.

The pair was involved in an ugly brawl at a news conference in Munich last February following Chisora’s defeat by WBC heavyweight champion Vitali Klitschko.

Haye had flown to Germany in pursuit of a bout with Klitschko after losing to his brother Vladimir last year and subsequently announcing his retirement.

Saturday’s fight at the home of English Premier League soccer club West Ham United for the WBO and WBA international heavyweight titles had been sanctioned by the Luxembourg Boxing Federation.

The British Boxing Board of Control would not sanction the fight because neither boxer held a British license.
The pair traded blows in a lively opening four rounds with Haye shading Chisora on points after landing a ferocious uppercut in the fourth.

In the fifth round, the former world cruiserweight champion unleashed a devastating left-right combination in the space of 10 seconds to win by a knockout.

Haye told talkSPORT radio he had been surprised by Chisora’s durability.

“At the back of my mind I knew he was tough, I knew he was durable. I really trained hard,” he said.

“I knew my conditioning was great and I knew the further this fight went on the more I would relax.”

Mikel Obi Retains Chelsea No.12 Shirt, Hazard gets No. 17

 

Super Eagles midfielder and UEFA Champions League winner Mikel Obi  retained his number 12 jersey after his club-side released a revised player jersey numbering for the much awaited 2012/2013 football season.
Chelsea’s official website reveals that Jose Bosingwa and Solomon Kalou’s shirt numbers have been assigned to new players.
Didier Drogba’s jersey number 11 has not been assigned to any player yet.
“The three summer additions to the squad have been given their shirt numbers for the forthcoming season.
Kevin De Bruyne will wear 14, a number that was unused last campaign. Eden Hazard  will take the 17 previously worn by Jose Bosingwa and Marko Marin is our new number 21 following the departure of Salomon Kalou.” According to Chelsea FC official website.
Mikel, Chelsea’s new signings and the rest of the squad are scheduled to fly to the United States on Saturday to beginning their pre-season tour.



Full Chelsea Squad:
1 Petr Cech
2 Branislav Ivanovic
3 Ashley Cole
4 David Luiz
5 Michael Essien
6 Oriol Romeu
7 Ramires
8 Frank Lampard
9 Fernando Torres
10 Juan Mata
12 Mikel
14 Kevin De Bruyne
15 Florent Malouda
16 Raul Meireles
17 Eden Hazard
18 Romelu Lukaku
19 Paulo Ferreira
20 Josh McEachran
21 Marko Marin
22 Ross Turnbull
23 Daniel Sturridge
24 Gary Cahill
26 John Terry
27 Sam Hutchinson
34 Ryan Bertrand
38 Patrick van Aanholt
40 Henrique Hilario
44 Gael Kakuta
30 Yossi Benayoun

ManagerRoberto Di Matteo

Games would be most dope tested in history – WADA

The London Olympics is all set to go down in history as the most dope tested Games with more than 6,000 samples expected to be analysed, the World Anti Doping Agency has said.
“These will be the most tested Games in Olympic history and doping athletes must know that they will be under severe scrutiny of anti-doping officials from the moment they set foot in the Olympic Village,” WADA president John Fahey said.
“The IOC and LOCOG (Games organising committee) have prepared an extensive anti-doping programme that will analyse up to 6,250 samples while the anti-doping authorities are already sharing intelligence to assist with target testing of athletes under suspicion,” he added.
Fahey said that WADA’s intention is to make the upcoming Games, starting on July 27, as clean as possible.
“I should also add that UK Anti-Doping is mandated to test athletes in training camps ahead of the Games and has also compiled much intelligence with the co-operation of anti-doping organisations worldwide.
“There has been a coherent effort to make London 2012 as ‘clean’ as possible and doping athletes should know that their chances of avoiding detection are the smallest they have ever been,” said Fahey after entreating dope cheaters to stay away from the quadrennial sporting spectacle.
“I say this in the clearest way possible: ‘if you are a doping athlete and you are planning to compete in London then you must withdraw from your Olympic team’.
“Doping is cheating, plain and simple. And if you compete in London as a doped athlete then not only will you be cheating your fellow athletes, you will be cheating fans across the world, doing a disservice to your national flag and flouting the ideals of the Olympic Movement.
“A doping athlete cannot achieve success, it is a complete contradiction. Even if a doping athlete were to win a medal he or she would never be able to look at themselves in the mirror and say ‘well done, I deserved this’,” the WADA chief said.
“The Olympic Games is the absolute pinnacle for many athletes, and for them to train endlessly over a four-year period and then have their efforts belittled by a doping athlete, to me that is complete and utter betrayal of what sport stands for,” Fahey said.
The WADA president also applauded the efforts of the world’s anti-doping community in trying to identify doping athletes ahead of the Games, as well as the International Olympic Committee and Games organisers LOCOG for preparing a comprehensive anti-doping programme.
Despite the work of the world’s anti-doping community, Fahey stressed that ultimate responsibility lay with the athletes as to how free of doping London 2012 will be.

Pillars lose $50,000 on illegal foreign clearance of player


Gambo Mohammed
Kano Pillars Football Club has lost about $50,000 due to illegal foreign clearance of one of its players who dumped the team early this year.
The club management has constituted a five-man committee to investigate the purported international clearance of the player, John Huan.
Pillars General Manager, Alhaji Abba Galadima on Thursday said the committee is headed by Alhaji Abdulaziz Baba.
The committee is expected to unravel how Huan secured clearance to play for Albanian clubside without the knowledge of the Pillars management.
It is also to suggest measures to be taken against the player so as to avoid future occurrence.
A club official told our correspondent the deal with the Albanian club could have fetched Kano Pillars a whopping $50,000 dollars if due process had been followed.
Pillars are currently third in the NPL log with 52 points in 33 games, six points behind leaders, Rangers. Galadima is, however, confident they will finish the season as champions.
“I believe in the ability of the players to win the trophy. You can see for yourself from the beginning of this season that they improve in every game. So I am confident that they can do it because we have been able to motivate them and there is no reason why we cannot win the trophy this season,” Galadima said.

Phelps poised for London victory lap


Michael Phelps 
 
Michael Phelps will put the finishing touches on his glittering Olympic career in London, where the swimming superstar says he has nothing left to prove — but plenty to achieve.
“I don’t think anything he could do or not do could change his legacy,” longtime coach Bob Bowman said. “He’s the greatest Olympian of all time today. He will be after this summer.”
That’s the title Phelps seized four years ago in Beijing, where his stunning sweep of eight gold medals in eight events gave him a career tally of 14 gold medals — the most of any Olympian — and two bronze.
Phelps won’t try to replicate his Beijing feat in London, where it’s far from guaranteed that a seven-event slate will yield seven golds.
For Phelps, however, London is about putting a final gloss on a career that has seen him mature from a restless kid who found an outlet for his energy in the water to a cross-over star with all the trappings of modern celebrity.
“I just want to go out and challenge myself,” Phelps said. “There are things that I want to do, and from a competitive part of my career I don’t have a very big window to be able to accomplish them.”
Just what those goals are Phelps is keeping to himself, but a peek at the record book offers a few clues.
His four individual events in London — the 100m and 200m butterfly and 200m and 400m individual medleys — all offer him a chance at a third straight Olympic gold.
No male swimmer has won the same Olympic event at three successive Games, although two women — Dawn Fraser and Krisztina Egerszegi — have done it.
Phelps also has a chance to surpass Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina’s record 18 career Olympic medals, amassed from 1956-1964.
For a time after Beijing, it wasn’t clear if Phelps would get serious shot at those milestones.
A tabloid photo fracas in 2009, when a British paper ran a picture of him with a marijuana pipe, created an outcry that him reconsidering his plans to continue swimming through 2012.
Even after his mind was made up, Phelps found himself paying the price for his indecision and lack of motivation in training as rivals such as US team-mate Ryan Lochte surged to the top of the sport in 2010 and 2011.
“Two years after Beijing, it was pretty clear that I wasn’t doing everything that I could do,” said Phelps, who believes he and Bowman have made up for lost time well enough for him to make an impact in London.
Certainly Phelps has overcome adversity and negative publicity before.
After winning six gold medals and two bronze at the 2004 Athens Olympics he weathered controversy over an underage drink-driving charge. And he soldiered on after a broken wrist disrupted his preparations for Beijing.
In some ways, the upheaval and unexpected defeats of the past few years have removed the pressure for perfection and given Phelps time to look back at the entire arc of his Olympic career.
That started in 2000, when he made the team for Sydney at 15 and finished fifth in the 200m butterfly.
Bowman recalled that Phelps headed out to race in Sydney without properly tying his swim suit.
“I was obviously not all together, I wasn’t fully engaged in everything that I was doing,” Phelps recalled of his first Games.
Then came Athens, where talk of matching Mark Spitz’s record of seven golds at one Games had begun but Phelps was more interested in testing himself against heavyweights Pieter van den Hoogenband and Ian Thorpe in the 200m free, a race that yielded bronze.
“I wanted to get in there with the best — and we kind of learned that I could juggle a bunch of different things,” he said.
In Beijing, Phelps recalled, “everything had to be perfect,” giving him little time to appreciate his own accomplishment.

Mayweather best fighter of 2012


Floyd Mayweather
Floyd Mayweather

For the fourth time undefeated superstar WBA light middleweight champion Floyd Mayweather Jr. (43-0, 26 KO’s) has won the ESPY Best Fighter award. Mayweather topped Andre Ward who is also undefeated. The ESPY Awards is a ceremony that celebrates the performances of athletes during the year.
Floyd was selected as the recipient of the award because of his hard fought victory over Miguel Cotto in May and his win over Victor Ortiz last September. In the Cotto victory “Money May” picked up the light middleweight title belt which is his sixth title belt as a professional.
The nominees for the ESPY Awards are selected by fans, sportswriters, broadcasters, sports personalities and executives. Mayweather also won the award in 2007, 2008 and 2010. The winners are then selected exclusively by online balloting.
Mayweather picked up the WBC welterweight title with his 4th round KO over Ortiz in September. Floyd has amassed an amazing record of going 20 and 0 in title bouts.
Although Mayweather is currently serving a 90 day sentence in the Clark County Detention Center he was quoted in “Fight Hype” thanking his fans for their support:
“I am very grateful for my fans and all their continued support. Your letters and pictures are helping my time go by.
“Thank you to all the fans who voted and helped me win at tonight’s ESPY’s. Your continued support is appreciated.”
Mayweather began serving his sentence on June 1. Attempts by his attorneys to have him serve the remainder of his sentence under house arrest were unsuccessful. Attorney’s for Mayweather cited the food and his inability to maintain his physical conditioning program as a reason for serving his sentence under house arrest.
Floyd’s personal physician also cited the deterioration of his physical condition stating that his boxing career was in jeopardy. The judge ruling on the case was not moved by Mayweather’s request.
As it stands now Floyd is slated to be released in August. More than likely it will take months for him to get into shape before he enters the ring again. At this point it is premature to speculate as to who his next opponent would be. Presumably Mayweather will need a tune up fight before he faces a serious opponent.

Vertonghen eyes Spurs title bid

 Jan Vertonghen 
Jan Vertonghen

The north London club were on the coat-tails of eventual champions Manchester City at the midway point of last season, before going on a poor run and eventually finishing fourth behind both Manchester clubs and north London rivals Arsenal.
When asked by ESPN at the launch of the new Spurs kit about the prospect of a title challenge, the Belgian said: “Why not? When I see these players, there is a lot of quality and possibility to be in first position.
“They were in the title race last year, this year I want to do the same and keep it going for longer.”
Having finally secured his move, rumoured to be for a fee in the region of £9.5 million, Vertonghen spoke about the frustration of how long it took for the deal to conclude.
“I was worried, though I always was convinced the deal would go through,” he said. “I went to my manager [Ajax boss Frank de Boer] and said ‘please close the deal because I really want to go to Spurs.”’
Vertonghen praised Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy for his desire to conclude the deal. “He invited me to the club, he came to Amsterdam, he told me how he really wanted to have me at the club,” Vertonghen said. “He gave me an amazing feeling about the club, for me that is the most important because i want to feel what a club wants from me.”

Enrique keen to adopt Spanish style

Defender Jose Enrique believes Liverpool can play the Spain way under new manager Brendan Rodgers.
The Reds boss has consistently stressed his style is not to copy other teams but develop a way to win which suits the players he has while also leaning heavily on possession football.
But Spaniard Enrique, who still harbours ambitions to play for his national side, feels they can emulate the tactics of Vincente del Bosque’s two-time European champions and World Cup winners.
“For me it is the best way to play football, like Spain did, that’s why they are the best at the moment,” he said.
“With the manager we play with the ball a lot and we are really happy with him. I’m really impressed. I know how he likes to play because we played against Swansea last year and I’ve seen them many times.
“He has only had a week with us but the training has been great, it is all with the ball, what more do you want?
“It’s really hard, but it’s very good. We have good players here to play in this way, and I think this season we can impress.”