Thursday 30 June 2011

Man Utd chief Gill accuses FA of 'harsh' treatment

There were some  decisions that wouldn't have necessarily hit others - the actual punishments were harsh," said FA board member Gill.
"That's not to say I'm condoning  comments, because I don't think they were correct, or what Sir Alex said, because it wasn't helpful.
"We're possibly being caught up in being one of the biggest clubs and the  Respect agenda being there.
"What better way to demonstrate the authorities are being tough than by hitting one of the biggest clubs the hardest?"
Rooney admitted to losing control in the league match against West Ham in April, while his manager Ferguson received his touchline ban for
Ferguson received a three-game ban for the remarks and saw a two-game suspended ban he had previously earned for saying referee Alan Wiley was not "fit enough" to keep up with play activated.
Gill, who was quoted in a new book about United called Champ19ns, questioned whether other players who commit a similar act to Rooney will receive the same punishment.
"The club doesn't condone it but Wayne it was wrong and  almost immediately," said Gill.
"We have various issues with the ban - one being consistency. What's going to happen now? Is the referee under pressure to send everyone off?
"It's a dangerous course the FA has gone down, because consistent application is what's required and I'm not sure that will necessarily happen.
"There are certain things you should wait until the start of the season to change."
in March.

Abdoulaye Meite joins French newcomers Dijon

French top-flight newcomers Dijon have announced the signing of Ivory Coast centre-back Abdoulaye Meite.
The defender has put pen to paper on a three-year contract.
He joins the French club on a free transfer after his contract with English Premier League side West Bromwich Albion expired.
Prior to joining West Brom in 2008, he represented Red Star Belgrade (1998-2000), Marseille (2000-2006) and Bolton Wanderers (2006-2008).

Sunderland sign South Korean striker Ji Dong-won

Sunderland have completed the signing of South Korea striker Ji Dong-won from Chunnam Dragons for an undisclosed fee.
The 20-year-old has signed a three-year deal at the Stadium of Light following a wait for the administrative side of the move to be tied up.
Dong-won has scored six goals in 11 international appearances,
He had a brief spell with Reading during the 2007/08 season.
"I am so satisfied to be able to come to a good club, a nice club in the world's number one league," he told S. "I am happy because I have a chance to challenge the biggest players, and that gives me motivation.
"As a striker, I like to overwhelm defenders. My aim is to help the team get as many points as possible. That is what will give me satisfaction."
Dong-won admits that getting used to life in England and his new club will take time, but hopes the Black Cats will soon see the best of him.
"It will not be easy," he added. "I am enjoying the life and studying English. I hope I could be a member of this team within six months."
Sunderland manager Steve Bruce said: "The boy has been in fantastic form for both club and country and he was one of South Korea's stand-out performers at the Asian Cup, so we are delighted to bring him to
"The Premier League is very different to the K-League, so there is hard work ahead, but you just have to look at players like [Manchester United midfielder] Park Sung and [Bolton winger] Lee Chung-Yong to see how well Korean players are adapting to its pace and physicalityding four at the 2011 Asian Cup.
He is the second striker to join Sunderland in as many days following

The Black Cats have also brought  for an undisclosed fee believed to be about £6m having signed winger  last week
Dong-won scored 16 goals in 44 appearances for the Dragons, having joined them from Gwangyang Jecheol High School.

F1 aims to make efficiency 'cool' with new engine rules

Formula 1 is aiming to make increased fuel efficiency in cars "cool" through its new engine rules, Ross Brawn says.
Plans to replace the current 2.4-litre V8s with 1.6-litre V6 turbos with extensive hybrid systems on Wednesday.
Mercedes boss Brawn said: "It's not about the fact that the new engine is going to be more efficient in itself.
"It's the message it gives that it's cool to have a really efficient engine and race on a lot less fuel."
Cars will use about 35% less fuel in 2014 than they currently do, with plans to introduce further efficiencies in the future. This target will partly be achieved by increasing the aerodynamic efficiency of the cars at the same time.
Brawn added: "The important thing about racing
"We're setting dramatic targets for reducing the amount of fuel we race with - 30, 40, 50% less than what we're racing on now but still with the same power and the same excitement."
The idea behind the new engines was to  this type of power-train, which is the route many road-car manufacturers are taking in a bid to respond to a world of rising fuel prices, diminishing oil supplies and climate change.
There is also the hope that using these technologies in F1 will increase their speed of development in road cars, further reducing carbon emissions.
Brawn gave the example of the advances in the battery systems that have been developed for Mercedes'  hybrid system in F1 already making their way on to the company's road cars.
The decision to introduce V6 turbos in 2014 came after months of negotiations following the decision last December to switch to  four-cylinder engines in 2013.
A number of stakeholders objected to the move on various grounds, including commercial boss Bernie  who remains opposed to the new engines.
 has argued that the new turbos will sound less dramatic than the current engines, which rev to 18,000rpm, and that noise is an important part of the sport's spectacle.
The compromise was to change the four-cylinder layout to a V6 and increase the rev limit from 12,000rpm to 15,000rpm. The sport will continue with a greatly increased focus on the use of energy recovery systems - called  in F1 at the moment, but better known as hybrid systems in road cars.
Brawn was speaking at a fans' forum  by the teams' umbrella group base in, Surrey.
Brawn  that the new rules were a way of making F1 more appealing to car manufacturers who were not currently in the sport, where Mercedes, Fiat (Ferrari) and Renault currently compete along with independent company.
"You're not going to get manufacturers coming in with the normally aspirated V8 we have now," Brawn said. "The new engine creates opportunity for manufacturers to come in and that's a vital reason why we need a new engine with a more relevant specification for the manufacturers."
The fans' forum was an opportunity for about 200 fans to ask questions of key members of F1 teams, among them drivers Lewis Hamilton
cars is the message they can give.

Wimbledon 2011: Maria Sharapova returns to Wimbledon final

  • Venue: All England Club, London
  • Date: 20 June - 3 July
  • Coverage: Live on BBC One, Two, 3D, HD, Red Button, online (UK only), Radio 5 live, 5 live sports extra; live text commentary from 0900 BST on BBC Sport website (#bbctennis); iPlayer
Maria Sharapova
Sharapova amazed to back in final
Maria Sharapova recovered from a dreadful start to beat Sabine Lisicki and reach her first Wimbledon final since she won the title in 2004.
The fifth-seeded Russian will play Petra Kvitova on Saturday after winning 6-4 6-3 in an hour and 26 minutes.
A rash of errors left Sharapova 0-3 down but she took nine of the next 10 games against the German wildcard.
Both players struggled on serve, with Sharapova hitting 13 double-faults, but some big groundstrokes saw her through.
Sharapova, who has fought back from a serious shoulder injury that threatened to end her career, is into her first Grand Slam final since the 2008 Australian Open and will be favourite to triumph against Kvitova.
But she was fortunate that 21-year-old Lisicki crumbled and was unable to produce the kind of tennis that had made her the surprise package of this year's tournament.

England maintain bid for fifth spot at Champions Trophy

England beat Germany 1-0 to maintain their bid for fifth place in the Champions Trophy in the Netherlands.
The only goal came in the 50th minute when Alex Danson collected Hannah McLeod's pass and slid the ball under Germany goalkeeper Yvonne Frank.
Janine Beermann struck the base of the post for Germany and England goalkeeper Beth Storry made some vital saves.
England's next opponents will be Australia on Friday when a win will guarantee them a fifth-place play-off.
It was England's sixth successive victory against Germany, who now contest a play-off to decide seventh and eighth places on Sunday.
"We weren't great. We didn't play that well, particularly in the first half, although we were better in the second half," admitted head coach Danny Kerry.
Germany were arguably the better side in the opening 20 minutes, and aside from Beermann's strike against the woodwork they also had two penalty corners blocked.
Anna Bennett had a bright moment for England when she dribbled past Frank, only for the well-organised German defence to clear.
After Danson's well-taken goal England pushed forward in search of a second, but Frank made a series of fine saves from three penalty corner attempts in quick succession.
Germany finished strongly and won several penalty corners of their own but Storry held firm to record her second clean sheet of the tournament.

Glamorgan stripped of England v West Indies Test match

The England and Wales Cricket Board made the decision after Glamorgan said they would be late paying the fee they owe for hosting May's Sri Lanka Test.
Next year's Test will be put back out to tender for other venues to bid for.
Glamorgan will still host a one-day international against India this summer and remain eligible to hold more international matches in the future.
The Swalec Stadium is scheduled to host a minimum of one Test, five one-day internationals and one Twenty20 before 2016, with the next Test set to take place in 2014.
No decision is expected on which ground will host next summer's West Indies Test until  the international match schedule for 2012.
Meanwhile, following further discussions between the, it has also been agreed that the club will be given an extended period to pay the money it owes for hosting  Test.
 chief executive David Collier said the governing body  that  had made "considerable investment into developing and upgrading the  stadium" and that it wanted to help them develop "a sustainable long-term business plan for staging international cricket".
"While it will not be permitted to stage the West Indies Test match next year, the club will continue to host a one-day international against India later this summer and South Africa next year," added Collier.
 chief executive Alan  admitted the Welsh club had encountered financial difficulties staging the Test against .
"Due to the commercial challenges the club faced in staging the recent  Test match, the have agreed to extend the deadline for Cricket to meet the financial terms of the match agreement," confirmed Hamer

Australia to host ranking World Snooker Tour event

Australia is to stage a ranking tournament for the first time as World Snooker chairman Barry Hearn attempts to expand the game's reach.
The Australian Goldfields Open will take place in Bendigo between 18-24 July 2011, with a three-year deal signed to stage the event.
"Snooker is going global like never before," said Hearn.
"We also have new events in Thailand and Brazil within the next few months, plus many more in the pipeline."
Australia produced its first world champion when .
"This is a long-standing dream come true for me, as I am sure it is for many snooker players and fans in Australia," said Robertson.
"To have a world ranking event in my home state will be just unbelievable and I hope to get a lot of support

Wimbledon 2011: Maria Sharapova returns to Wimbledon final

  • Venue: All England Club, London
  • Date: 20 June - 3 July
  • Coverage: Live on BBC One, Two, 3D, HD, Red Button, online (UK only), Radio 5 live, 5 live sports extra; live text commentary from 0900 BST on BBC Sport website (#bbctennis); iPlayer
Maria Sharapova
Sharapova amazed to back in final
Maria Sharapova recovered from a dreadful start to beat Sabine Lisicki and reach her first Wimbledon final since she won the title in 2004.
The fifth-seeded Russian will play Petra Kvitova on Saturday after winning 6-4 6-3 in an hour and 26 minutes.
A rash of errors left Sharapova 0-3 down but she took nine of the next 10 games against the German wildcard.
Both players struggled on serve, with Sharapova hitting 13 double-faults, but some big groundstrokes saw her through.
Sharapova, who has fought back from a serious shoulder injury that threatened to end her career, is into her first Grand Slam final since the 2008 Australian Open and will be favourite to triumph against Kvitova.
But she was fortunate that 21-year-old Lisicki crumbled and was unable to produce the kind of tennis that had made her the surprise package of this year's tournament.

David Haye Versus ....

WBA Heavyweight Champion Of The World David Haye is stepping into the ring with some of the world's biggest celebrities in two 1 hour documentary specials commencing this evening 9pm (Tue 28 Jul 11) on Sky 1.
Guest appearances include "A List" Celebs; Justin Bieber, Ricky Gervais and Mickey Rourke.  The programme is called "David Haye versus", It is sure to be a massive hit amongst the public whether they are boxing fans or not.  The programmes are a prelude to a truly massive week for The Hayemaker which finishes off with his fight against Wladimir Klitschko, a fight which is surely the biggest sporting event of 2011.   
Fans can look forward to a ringside view as David and his celebrity sparring partners take part in some one-on-one boxing training; pulling no punches either conversationally or in the ring.
The programmes give viewers a fantastic insight as these intimate training sessions will coincide with interviews with David himself, reflecting on his career so far, and with those who work with him and know him best providing an exclusive insightful look into what drives him to succeed and how he has reached the world class standard he is now.
In addition by exclusive invitation only, David has requested the company of five celebrity friends to train with him as they discuss their own career defining moments and share amusing, personal anecdotes across the ring. From the familiarity of his training gyms in London, Miami and New York, David will be sparring with Ricky Gervias, Justin Bieber, Dizzee Rascal, Michael McIntyre and Mickey Rourke as he gives them tips on boxing and asks them about their career experiences, highlights and ambitions.
With the final press conference now out of the way The Hayemaker is in a surprisingly relaxed mood and very much looking forward to unifying the Heavyweight Division on Saturday evening. Sadly it may be the last time we see him in the ring before he jets off to Hollywood determined to succeed in his second career of becoming an actor on the big screen and just like his fights appearing in exciting not to be missed blockbuster films.
Viewers should tune into Sky 1 this evening at 9pm (UK Time) and the sametime on Wed 28 Jul 11.

Haye 'an embarrassment to boxing'

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Haye denies overstepping the mark with his comments about the Klitschkos
Wladimir Klitschko has labelled David Haye an "embarrassment to boxing" ahead of their world heavyweight title fight in Germany on 20 June.
Haye wore a T-shirt portraying him holding the severed heads of Wladimir and his older brother Vitali at a news conference in London on Monday.
Wladimir said: "What's next? My mum's and my dad's head cut off? Will he attack my race or religion?
"It is upsetting to see my relations portrayed like that. It is not sport."
Londoner Haye, who will challenge for Wladimir's IBF and WBO belts at Schalke 04's Veltins Arena, in Gelsenkirchen, fired back: "Your style's embarrassing, everything you do in the ring is embarrassing.
"His jab, jab, grab tactics aren't impressive and will not work against me. I'll make him fight and he doesn't like fighting.
"He holds, paws and grabs and doesn't stand in the ring and go to war like a true heavyweight sh
"He sucks, I don't like his style. I don't like what he represents. Yes, he's charming, but this is boxing and he doesn't entertain in the ring."
Former undisputed  champion  28, added that his trash-talking tactics had had the desired effect and he did not regret his actions.
"I got the reaction I wanted," said  who has 22 wins from 23 fights. "All the screaming and shouting has come to fruition.
"I got under his skin and hopefully he'll come out throwing bombs. All the screaming and shouting is necessary because people have to hear about the fight.
"Boxing is not about what you do in the ring, you have to make people want to pay to see the fight. I want a boxing extravaganza, so I want people to have passion for the fight

David Haye's speed can hurt Wladimir Klitschko - Lewis

  • Venue: Imtech Arena, Hamburg, Germany
  • Date: Saturday, 2 July
  • Start: From 2200 BST
  • Coverage: Live text commentary on BBC Sport website; Live on Sky Box Office (subscription required)
David Haye Haye expects the Kiltschko fight to be a "career-defining" contest
Lennox Lewis has said David Haye's speed and movement could be the deciding factors in his heavyweight clash with Wladimir Klitschko.
Lewis told Sportsweek on BBC Radio 5 live that Klitschko will start the 2 July bout with several advantages.
But the former world champion added that Haye could triumph if he repeats the tactics he used

"He fought a perfect fight, he kept moving, he stayed elusive," said Lewis.
"He has the speed and the weight in his arms and any shot he hits Klitschko with will be a shocking blow.
"Klitschko has the bigger advantages but if David is able to stay with his game plan and move and throw combinations he should do very well."
Lewis added that it is crucial for Haye to prevent Klitschko, 35, from using his weight advantage in the bout at Hamburg's Imtech Arena.
"His [Klitschko's] strength is his size, his reach and his weight," stated Lewis. "He has all those advantages and on paper he is the one they will pick to win because he is a natural heavyweight.
"Haye is light but he can use it to his advantage if he can stay away from him.
"But if they get into a clinch and Klitschko puts his weight on David it may sap some of David's energy."
Haye enjoyed success as a cruiserweight in the earlier part of his career and is still relatively light for a top-ranked heavyweight

Dave Haye trainer repeats call for world title ref switch

  • Venue: Imtech Arena, Hamburg, Germany
  • Date: Saturday, 2 July
  • Start: From 2200 BST
  • Coverage: Live text commentary on BBC Sport website; live on Sky Box Office (subscription required)
David Haye Haye fights Wladimir Klitschko at Hamburg's Imtech Arena on Saturday
David Haye's trainer has repeated his call for referee Genaro Rodriguez to be replaced for Saturday's heavyweight showdown with Wladimir Klitschko.
Adam Booth is concerned at the way Rodriguez officiated a previous fight of IBF and WBO champion Klitschko.
"In the first five rounds Wladimir was allowed to get away with 32 offences without being spoken to once, and that concerns me," said Booth.
He wants WBA referee Luis Pabon to officiate. Haye holds the WBA belt.
Klitschko's American adviser Shelly Finkel says he has it in writing from the WBA that it is happy for Rodriguez to officiate.
"All we are asking is for the rules of boxing to be applied by the referee," said Booth.
Rodriguez has refereed four of IBF and WBO champion Klitschko's fights, three of them wins and one of them a defeat at the hands of Corrie Sanders in 2003.
However, Haye said he did not want to get involved in any controversy that may deflect his attention from the fight itself.
"I'm not letting that bother me whatsoever," said the 30-year-old Englishman. "I just do what I do in the ring.

boxing

 Trainer Emanuel Steward concedes his charge has not met anyone with David Haye's confidence and belief for six years.

David Haye has winner's mindset, says Klitschko trainer

  • Venue: Imtech Arena, Hamburg, Germany
  • Date: Saturday, 2 July
  • Start: From 2200 BST
  • Coverage: Live text commentary on BBC Sport website; live on Sky Box Office (subscription required)
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Haye 'in best shape of career'
Wladimir Klitschko's trainer Emanuel Steward has conceded his charge has not met anyone with David Haye's confidence and belief for almost six years.
Briton Haye, the WBA champion, and the Ukrainian IBF and WBO title-holder meet in Saturday's heavyweight fight.
"Haye brings to the ring, speed, power and the mindset of a winner," Steward told BBC Sport in Hamburg.
"He's confident and that's something Wladimir hasn't experienced since his first fight with Sam Peter [in 2005]."
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Trainers ready for battle
Steward added: "There's a whole new energy that Haye brings that Wladimir has not had to deal with since then."
Klitschko was knocked down three times by Peter, before going on to outpoint the Nigerian, but the 35-year-old three-time world champion has won nine of his 10 fights since inside the distance.
The two protagonists engaged in media workouts on Wednesday, where the psychological warfare continued.
Klitschko's camp arrived earlier than planned and attempted to block Haye's path to the venue, which led Haye's camp to seek out an alternative entrance.
There followed the bizarre sight of Klitschko's entourage watching ringside as Haye went through a light workout, during which the Englishman, a right-hander, was throwing punches from a southpaw stance.
Earlier, Haye continued his campaign to wind up Klitschko by to a film featuring Adolf Hitler, with mock subtitles added which refer to preparations for their bout.
Haye, 30, has continually sought to goad his rival in the build-up with various tasteless comments and stunts - and Haye claims the gamesmanship has got to Klitschko

Ben Spies delighted by first MotoGP win at Assen

Yamaha's Ben Spies is a happy man after leading from start to finish at Assen, for the American's first ever win in MotoGP.
Casey Stoner admits that his Honda did not have the pace to cope with Spies, but is satisfied with the second place that extends his lead at the top of the driver's championship.

Highlights - Ben Spies claims first MotoGP win at Assen

Yamaha's Ben Spies wins his first MotoGP, as he leads from the first lap to the finish in Assen.
The American took advantage of an early crash between pole sitter Marco Simoncelli and defending champion Jorge Lorenzo to cruise to his first maximum, ahead of Casey Stoner and Andrea Dovizioso.

Loris Capirossi misses his home MotoGP race at Mugello

  • enue: Mugello
  • Date: 1-3 July
  • Saturday 2 July: MotoGP qualifying 1150-1500 BST, BBC Red Button/online
  • Sunday 3 July: 125cc & Moto2 races: 0950 -1205, BBC Red Button/online; MotoGP live: 1230-1400, BBC Two/online; MotoGP Extra: 1400-1430, BBC Red Button/online
Loris Capirossi Capirossi is a three-time world champion in 125cc and 250cc racing
MotoGP rider Loris Capirossi will miss his home race in Mugello, Italy this weekend through injury.
The 38-year-old crashed out of qualifying for last week's race at Assen and broke two ribs.
He also injured his shoulder and will miss a race at Mugello for the first time in his 22-year grand prix career.
The Pramac Ducati rider said: "Now I will have to rest, sit still for at least two weeks and try to get back on track as soon as possible".
Italian Capirossi was keen to race in his homeland but could return in Germany in a fortnight's time.
"I'm obviously very disappointed and angry," he added.
"I was hoping I could do to get on track for this race, but the double fracture of the ninth and 10th ribs and distorting the shoulder joint injury forced me to raise the white flag for the first time in my career for Mugello

Is Mark Cavendish already a legend?

Pushed for time to tell a story on television, succinct soundbites are a gift. Brian Holm, sports director for the  cycling team, delivers one with the final words of his interview.
We are discussing road cycling's supremely talented Manx sprinter, who begins his fifth campaign next week. Earlier this year, we spent two days with him and his HTC team in Belgium.
Holm, a Danish former pro, clears his throat a final time. With the air of a doting grandfather, he looks me in the eye and says: "He is already a legend."
Holm and his HTC colleagues do not see the enigma in 26-year-old Cavendish that others do. Despite 15 Tour de France stage wins in the last three years - almost unparalleled in the sport - Cavendish sometimes seems known in Britain only as  Irritable, outspoken, even selfish.
When he received an MBE earlier this month, somebody on Twitter said they didn't know why: "The stories I've heard don't make him sound like a team player." Cavendish, a sigh audible in his typing, "And I drown kittens."
Reporters have spent years sitting down with Cavendish, and define a man whose success has yet to make him a household name in the UK.
Cavendish is doing a better job of it  possibly surprising a few with links to Huffington Post articles, a Father's Day message to his dad signed with a kiss, friendly jibes at his Team Sky rivals and praise for the good-natured people of Newcastle.

He isn't inclined to open up like that with cameras rolling. Why should he? As he often tries to make clear, being famous is about the last thing he wants.
"The reason I do this sport is because I want to win," he says. "I love the sport. I'm not in it to be recognised on the street or to earn a bit of money and then retire."
What he wants to do is become a legend. That's where the single-minded, driven Cavendish comes in. But he sees that and fame as very different concepts.
"Imagine there's a book and it just lists the greats of cycling. The greats I grew up watching and reading about," he says, reeling off names like a Belgian considered by many the greatest cyclist in history, and who won the Tour de France a record seven times in a row from 1999 to 2005.
"I'd like my name written with them. I'd like to leave a legacy in the sport, that's what's important to me. But I'm not going to put myself in the same sentence as any of them."
Holm, however, doesn't blink at doing so. "He can be at the top level for 15 years and I believe he'll be the world champion one day," he says.
"I would love him to beat Eddy Merckx's record, 34 stage wins in the Tour de France. He has just started and already has 15, so that will be a close one."
The next year may put Cavendish firmly on that path. He and his team believe they do more homework than most professional cycling outfits, spending days studying each Tour stage. He has for this year's event, which begins on 2 July.
If he were to win five - ambitious, but feasible - he would share sixth place in the  with 20 to Merckx's 34, six years before reaching the age of 32 at which Merckx retired.
Beyond the Tour, in Copenhagen provide Cavendish, in his words, with his "best chance of winning it since I've been professional".
The flat course suits him. Owning the rainbow jersey which comes with a world title is among cycling's most prestigious honours.
And then there is the Olympics. Cavendish is routinely mentioned as  in the men's road race, the day after the opening ceremony, on a similarly favourable course.
Uncommonly among Olympic sports, in road cycling the Games are considered a poor cousin to the World Championships, the Tour and the series of one-day  races. But Cavendish realises its importance for Britain, if not cyclists.
"In terms of being a pro cyclist, the World Championships is an honour that is greatly, greatly admired in the sport," he says.
"The Olympics, being British, is more of a patriotic thing. As a Brit the Olympics are very important, as a cyclist the Worlds are very important."
Holm, more pointedly and dismissively, says: "You can't compare anything to the World Championships. If you can ride for a year in the rainbow jersey, it means everything.
"It's probably nice to be Olympic champion. Like or something."
Perhaps. But, having acrimoniously returned from Beijing 2008 as the only GB track cyclist without a medal -  in his subsequent autobiography - Cavendish knows that, rightly or wrongly, Olympic gold medals carry more weight in Britain than cycling's green jerseys.
It may be his reaction to losing out in Beijing that first inspired the view of him as "not a team player". Scraps in races since, accompanied by have not helped. But it's not a Cavendish his current colleagues recognise.
"Mark fights for his team. He appreciates them, he looks after them," says HTC technical director an Australian former pro who works alongside Holm managing Cavendish and the others.

Tour de France 2011: Day-by-day guide

  • Dates: Saturday 2 July - Sunday 24 July
  • Coverage: Listen live to every stage finish on the BBC Sport website (UK only); live text commentary on key stages; updates on BBC Radio 5 live and 5 live sports extra
  • Get involved: Tweet with the hashtag #bbccycling to join the discussion
The peloton rides through the French countryside in the Tour de France The Tour includes a celebration of the 100th year since the first ascent of the Galibier
Over three gruelling weeks, the 98th Tour de France will cover 3,430.5km (2132 miles). The race is divided up into 21 stages - 10 flat, six mountain with four summit finishes, three "medium mountain", just one individual time trial and one team time trial.
After trips to Britain and the Netherlands in recent years, the 2011 edition will cross France's borders only once, with a visit to the Italian Alpine stop of Pinerolo on Stage 17.
Route organisers love a good anniversary and to mark the 100th year since Tour founder Henri Desgrange first sent the peloton over the Galibier in the French Alps, the riders will twice climb the most-visited mountain pass in the race's history.
Stage 18 will finish on top of the mountain which, at an altitude of 2,645m, will be the highest in Tour history.
There are a few changes this year which alters the way points are distributed:
  • In an effort to involve sprinters in more than just the daily finish, 20 green jersey points - up from six last year - will be on offer in a single intermediate sprint each day and points will also be awarded to the next 14 finishers.
  • The polka dot jersey, worn by the best climber, will see double points being awarded only for crossing finishing lines at the summit of category two and harder climbs.
The other two main jerseys are yellow for the leader of the general classification, having taken the least time to complete the course, and white, for the best rider under 25 years old.
Defending champion Alberto Contador of Spain will aim to do the double and become the first rider to win both the Giro d'Italia and the Tour de France since the late Marco Pantani achieved the feat in 1998.
Andy Schleck, who has finished second in the last two tours, will be Contador's main challenger, but few will bet against the Spaniard coming out on top, considering he has won three out of the last four Tours, and six Grand Tours in a row.
Contador's presence will prove controversial, however, given that he is awaiting the outcome of an appeal against a provisional ban for a clenbuterol positive test. The appeal won't be heard until August at the earliest.

our de France 2011: Alberto Contador angry at drugs appeal

  • Dates: Saturday 2 July - Sunday 24 July
  • Coverage: Listen live to every stage finish on the BBC Sport website (UK only); live text commentary on key stages; updates on BBC Radio 5 live and 5 live sports extra
  • Get involved: Tweet with the hashtag #bbccycling to join the discussion
Alberto Contador Contador in preparation for this year's Tour de France
Alberto Contador says it will be "ridiculous" if he is stripped of the Tour de France title should he again win the event which starts on Saturday.
The Spaniard tested positive during his victory last year and though cleared he is awaiting results of an
"From the beginning of the season I've been the rider who's had the most doping tests, and I've been tested in all the races I've been in," he said.
"The idea victory could be taken away if I win, I just find ridiculous."
Contador is seeking to become the first man for 13 years to complete the Giro d'Italia and Tour de France double as he defends his title, starting in Passage du Gois in the Vendee region of western France.
The late was the last rider to achieve the feat.
Contador tested positive for banned substance clenbuterol on the second rest day of last year's Tour.

Diamond League: Ones to watch in Lausanne

The high-class field has the look of a dress rehearsal for the World Championships in two months time. World record holder David Rudisha of Kenya makes his first Diamond League appearance of the year, having pulled out of the season opener in Doha with an ankle injury. He only returned to competitive action last weekend in Nancy in France, but responded with the fastest time in the world this year.
The 2010 Athlete of the Year claimed a thrilling victory in this race last year when he edged away from South Africa's Mbulaeni Mulaudzi and fellow Kenyan Alfred Yego in the closing stages. Both men are again likely to provide him with a stern test on Thursday, along with Olympic 1500m champion Asbel Kiprop and past and present European champions Bram Som and Marcin Lewandowski.

Steve Parrish's MotoGP column

  • enue: Mugello
  • Date: 1-3 July
  • Saturday 2 July: MotoGP qualifying 1150-1500 BST, BBC Red Button/online
  • Sunday 3 July: 125cc & Moto2 races: 0950 -1205, BBC Red Button/online; MotoGP live: 1230-1400, BBC Two/online; MotoGP Extra: 1400-1430, BBC Red Button/online
Valentino Rossi holds his injured leg
Valentino Rossi breaks leg in horror crash last year
The MotoGP circus rolls into Mugello this weekend and it is a massive few days for Valentino Rossi.
The nine-time world champion has had a tough start to his life on the Ducati and the return to his native Italy marks the anniversary of his

There should not be any psychological hangover for him at the circuit but he may be a bit cautious in practice on Friday.
At the time I was asked whether that was a career-threatening injury and I said no but he has you wonder how many more he will get.
It has certainly slowed his career down, there is no doubt about that.
Rossi has an unprecedented record at Mugello, he loves the track and he has been testing there so maybe he will be back up at the front. I do not think he can win but he could end up on the podium, which would be a huge boost for all his fans.
Valentino Rossi Rossi has won seven MotoGP races at Mugello The bike is made just up the road from the Mugello circuit as well so it could be a bit of an embarrassment if they do not manage a respectable result.
but at the top of the standings Casey Stoner is doing what Jorge Lorenzo did last year. He realises that sometimes he cannot win but he is picking up finishes and growing his points lead.
We are all pleased to see  It has been a long time coming but if he can come back 100% fit and challenge from the off this weekend then maybe his decision to stay on the sidelines will be vindicated.
He needs a bit of a miracle to challenge for the title but stranger things have happened. All he can do is concentrate on winning races.
I just hope Marco Simoncelli has still got the fight in him after his latest crash.

Paranoid in Hamburg

 Broadcaster  has gone for the  'The Talk Ends Now'; has gone for 'The War'. Personally, I would have plumped for 'Paranoia': the air was thick with it at the final fight news call on Wednesday.
There is a great scene in the  which kicks off with the line: "In Vegas, everybody's gotta watch everybody else." And that is what it was like in the rather more sanitised surroundings of the Mercedez-Benz showroom in Hamburg members of  camp were watching members of camp, men were posted on balconies, men in plain clothes were spying from behind ring posts. No all-seeing "eye-in-the-sky" but this journalist was watching it all.
One  insider told me he locked eyes with  older brother, and was unable to break the stare. In a sport of psychological inches, it would have represented a defeat, at least in this insider's mind. "How did you leave it?" I asked. "I raised an eyebrow and he eventually looked away." Victory! At last...
Wladimir Klitschko watches David Haye's training session.
It is fair to say  was not impressed as he watched  training. Photo: Getty images
Earlier crew had attempted to intercept  entourage on its way into the venue, only for  and co to burrow their way in via another entrance. We were then treated to the surreal sight  camp watching from ringside as  performed a perfunctory workout. At one point,  was shadow-boxing southpaw, before  for a reason that was lost on most - started brandishing a glove on a stick. And so the fun and games continued.
"David  is a bad actor," the told BBC Sport. "But all he's doing is showing he's low in confidence. All these games are burning him up - he's only playing games with himself."
Not surprisingly, Haye disagreed. "Wladimir looks rather wound up," said the Englishman, who will be putting his WBA belt on the line at the Imtech Arena on Saturday. "Everything I've done has worked perfectly, their whole team seems rattled." build-up to Saturday's fight has been stage-managed to the minutest detail, in and out of the ring. T-shirts depicting a headless dark claims about trainer Emanuel Steward and something categorically denied by Steward against .
And as if that was not enough, goes and digs up Hitler.
On Wednesday morning,  tweeted a link to the about the last days of Hitler, with mock subtitles referring to the build-up to the fight. An English guest in Germany making references to  enough to make you wince and there is a real sense that Haye is alienating a lot of would-be British fans with his boorish
Even Steward had to admit that, if it were not for motor mouth, the fight might not have happened. But the ink is dry on the contract, the fight is days away and fans are tired of the trash talk. "I hope shuts up this little upstart," wrote one on a previous blog, "A disgrace to professional sport." And there are plenty more where that came from. That said, and Booth seem so calculating, I'm not sure they care.

Wimbledon 2011: Andy Murray column

It's another chance for me to take him on in a Wimbledon semi-final and I go into it knowing that I've learned something from all 15 matches we've played - last year's defeat as well as the times I've won.
What is for certain in any match against Rafa is that both tactically and mentally you have to be ready for some long rallies, lots of punishment, and you mustn't panic.
Some people think you have to blast through him and go for everything, but you have to be patient.
If you watch how world number two Novak Djokovic played when he beat Rafa on the clay in the Madrid Masters and Rome Masters last month he was very solid, didn't take huge risks, but hit the ball with a lot of authority.
You can't just leave the ball in the middle of the court against Rafa, but at the same time trying to hit winners off the first shot of the rally just doesn't work.
On clay, once you're behind in the rally it's very difficult to get yourself back into it. On grass, if I can get a good, deep hit in when I'm out of position then I can get myself back into the rally pretty quickly.
Lewis Hamilton and his brother Nicholas watched Murray play Lopez Nicholas Hamilton, Lewis Hamilton and Judy Murray It's all about understanding what he's going to do, and what I'm going to do to  his strengths.
I've got Sven from the Adidas coaching team around when I practice if I want to get his thoughts, I'll watch some videos of our previous matches, and along with player Dani from my regular team we'll get as much information on Rafa as we can before I step out on court.
My practice sessions are like events in themselves with so many people around the courts but it's been like that for quite a while, so I'm used to it.
The only thing I do notice is that every time I make any sort of reaction, whether I laugh or shout or close my eyes, I hear the cameras going off.
I'm always conscious that I don't want it to look like I'm messing about or maybe in pain, because by one reaction that can become a whole story, so I try to be as neutral as possible and that's not easy!
Andy Murray
Murray's hat-trick of aces blow Lopez away
I think that's one thing people don't that even when I'm coming off the practice court or walking to the car there are questions flying around, so I just need to be careful and not do or say anything silly.
I've had plenty of experience of that now so I can handle it, and nothing will distract me from the job I've got to do.
The chance to make a Wimbledon final is an opportunity to make history and I think every player's interested in that side of the game.
Before the match on Thursday I heard Rafa, his coach Toni and my opponent  Lopez talking in Spanish about players from the past.
When I'm on the court I'm not thinking about my place in history but when I look back on my career, I'll want to see where I was in the grand scheme of things.
It's alright being good in your little two or three-year window, but how that compares to previous eras will be fascinating.
It's also a big part of why Wimbledon is such a huge event and has people queuing for two or three nights to get a ticket on Court.
That's something incredible that you don't get anywhere else and I can see the attraction, I wouldn't mind doing it if I was with a few friends.
I actually never get that flustered off the court so it wouldn't be a problem - I'd need plenty of food and drink though!
Hopefully I can give the people queuing to see me the result they want and reach my first Wimbledon final.
Any time you can get to a Grand Slam final it shows that you're close to the top of the game, and if I can get past Rafa it will give me more than enough belief that I can go on and win the tournament. I've beaten him before but I'll need to play great tennis to do it again.
It promises to be a great match and atmosphere, I can't wait to get playing.

Wednesday 29 June 2011

2011 fantasy football sleepers, busts

We polled a number of ESPN.com fantasy analysts and editors  Bell, Matthew Berry, Tristan H. Shawn  Christopher Harris, Dave Hunter, Eric  Keith Lipscomb,  Mass, James Nate  and Brendan Roberts  for their choices for their top sleeper, bust and rookie breakout candidate at quarterback, running back, wide receiver and tight end. Plus, there are plenty of explanations for why certain players were chosen because different people have varied definitions of what constitutes a "sleeper" or "bust."

Greatest Football Player in SF History "Victim of the Hood"

In the end, David Henderson was what he was: the best football player San Francisco has produced since OJ Simpson -- and, statistically, the 2008 Lincoln High graduate, winner of three city championship Turkey Boys and holder of numerous city rushing records was even better than OJ Simpson, at least in high school. And Henderson was also a product of the Hunters Point "hood," which eventually claimed his life as a victim.
Henderson, 21, had been paralyzed from the neck down since last week, when he was shot several times in the neck and head in an apparent robbery in the 1400 block of He was removed from life support on Monday,.
As a star running back for Lincoln High's Mustangs, Henderson  He ran for 5,596 yards and 67 touchdowns while a prep football star, both records, and ran for 242 yards and three scores in his final Thanksgiving Day game, a 49-0 win over Washington.
Henderson had played football for City College of San Francisco but had left the program after off-field troubles led to him being benched. In May,  after playing for the semipro  Islanders, and was scheduled to try out for the University of Nebraska, according to his mother.
A cousin of Henderson's, Robert  19, was shot and killed in the  in January.
Henderson's mother,  Henderson, said his son was a victim of life in the hood, according to the Examiner.
"That's just life in the hood," she said. "And I didn't get him out of this hood

Sepp Blatter and Fifa: It's time to boot out football's grasping toadies

What an excruciating week for football fans. After the giddy delights of Saturday's Champions League Final, the best showcase for the beautiful game since Pelé's Brazil were in their pomp, there is not just the usual end-of-season hangover to suffer, but something far more painful: a farce of tragic dimensions at the heart of football.
The prospect that Sepp Blatter will tomorrow be returned unopposed as president of Fifa, the game's governing body, is enough to make any true football fan, of whatever nationality, cringe with embarrassment.
Unopposed? Does that mean people think he is doing a good job? Couldn't some tramp be brought in from the streets of Zurich to contest the election? Are ballot papers being printed to give this fiasco a veneer of legitimacy? And who is paying for the prerequisite slap-up lunch for the stooges flying thousands of miles to rubber-stamp Blatter's election?
The sheer absurdity of the process makes Premier League footballers look like paragons of virtue. Unless 75-year-old Blatter does the decent thing and agrees to the deferment of tomorrow's election – and nothing in his record of ruthless, self-important nest-feathering suggests that he is capable of doing the decent thing – a coronation of look-away-now awfulness, with toadies in blazers applauding the Supreme Leader, is in prospect.
An unopposed election is unsatisfactory at the best of times. Nobody stood against Gordon Brown when he replaced Tony Blair as Labour leader, and look what happened to him. But in the case of Blatter, whose staunchest supporters would acknowledge that he has been a controversial figure, it is particularly pernicious.

Football: Russia, Qatar triumph at World Cup vote

Russia and the tiny Gulf state of Qatar were awarded the 2018 and 2022 World Cups Thursday after an acrimonious bidding war marred by allegations of corruption and illegal deal-making.
In a historic conclusion to two years of frenzied lobbying, world football supremo Sepp Blatter revealed the winners following a secret ballot of 22 FIFA executive committee members in Zurich.
The announcement means the World Cup will be staged in two countries which have never hosted the event before following the 2014 tournament in Brazil.
Russia prevailed in the 2018 race, upsetting England - who were knocked out in the first round of voting after mustering a mere two votes - and joint bids from Spain/Portugal and Belgium/Netherlands.
The outcome represented a stunning comeback for Russia, whose campaign had believed to be in trouble after Prime Minister Vladimir Putin declined to join the lobbying effort in Zurich.
Putin, who was to travel to Switzerland later Thursday to congratulate FIFA, had also launched a stinging attack on England's bid on the eve of the vote, accusing the country's media of "smearing" officials.
Russian deputy prime minister Igor Shuvalov said FIFA would not regret handing the sporting showpiece to his country after being presented with the World Cup by Blatter.
"You have entrusted us with the FIFA World Cup for 2018 and I can promise, we all can promise, you will never regret it," Shuvalov said.
"Let us make history together."
But the shock of the day came in the 2022 race, where Qatar beat off stiff competition from the United States, Australia and Asian rivals South Korea and Japan in a remarkable result.
Qatar 2022 bid president Mohammed bin Hamad Al-Thani said his country's victory had defied the odds.
"We started off being written off, being the unconventional bid. And no-one thought we had a chance to win," he said.
"On behalf of millions living in the Middle East, thank you FIFA for having such bold vision. We have a date with history which is summer 2022."
Qatar's win came despite serious reservations being raised about the logistical problems of staging the football tournament in the Gulf during the searing heat of the summer months.
Although the Qataris have promised to build an array of state of the art stadia which are climate-controlled, the technology has never been tested on a large-scale before.
Al-Thani dismissed concerns about the climate as "misconceptions" however.
"One of the most important misconceptions was that Qatar cannot do it because it is too hot," he said.
The results brought the curtain down on one of the most controversial World Cup votes in years, with FIFA facing myriad allegations of corruption which led to two executive committee members being suspended.
FIFA president Blatter has acknowledged that the decision to stage votes for two tournaments at the same time was a mistake, making illegal horse-trading between bids inevitable.
An increasingly acrimonious climax to the campaign saw Spanish and Russian officials issue veiled attacks on England earlier Thursday as the respective bids made their final presentations to FIFA voters.
Spanish FIFA member Angel Villar Llona attacked British media reports which exposed corruption within the organisation, describing them as "slander."
Meanwhile in Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also hit out at perceived "intrigue and blackmail" surrounding the vote.
England 2018 officials declined to respond to the criticism, but were left dejected after launching a heavyweight, increasingly optimistic lobbying offensive led by Prime Minister David Cameron, heir to the throne Prince William and football icon David Beckham.
"According to FIFA we had the best technical team, no one could identify any risks of coming to England. I think we had the strongest commercial bid and the country is passionate about football," Cameron told reporters.
"But it turns out that's not enough."
Beckham later expressed his disappointment Thursday after the defeat, as it emerged that England had been eliminated in the first round, a humiliating setback.
"I think the bid team have done everything possible, we couldn't have got a better bid," Beckham told BBC radio.
"It's obviously hard to not come away with the World Cup in 2018 but a lot of congratulations have to go to the team, a lot of hard work has been done."
Former England captain Alan Shearer struck a gloomy note, wondering if the World Cup would ever return to England having last been held there in 1966.

McCoist: Henry cheat row highlights need for TV evidence in football

Ally McCOIST last night condemned the football authorities - and not Thierry Henry - over the goal that shook the world.
McCoist has every sympathy for the Republic of Ireland and the way they have been denied a place in South Africa next year.
But he defends Henry's actions while football exists in the Dark Ages, able to use TV evidence but unwilling to switch on.
The Gers assistant boss said: "I don't know Henry personally but he will get no stick from me.
"If there was no TV coverage of the game on the scale we've witnessed since Wednesday night we would not even be discussing the incident.
"If football followed the example set by rugby, cricket or tennis and used TV evidence to establish mistakes we wouldn't be having the argument that's going on now.
"Henry clearly handled the ball twice but he's hardly going to run up to the referee and admit his guilt when there's a place at the World Cup Finals at stake, is he?"
McCoist will be accused of betraying the ethics of his sport but claims football leaders punished Ireland in Paris, not Henry.
He said: "All we do is moan about referees and then we take the decision not to offer them the help TV replays would bring to clear up mistakes.
"If you have a tool that corrects miscarriages of justice and don't use it then that's the biggest crime of all.
"Maybe it will take the cruellest of blows to the Irish to make people see sense.
"Do you think there's an Irishman who wouldn't vote for the implementation of technology to bring the game into the 21st century? It's ridiculous not to use it in this day and age."
Henry has plenty of "previous" where bending the rules is concerned, including another handball offence to give Barcelona a goal against Rangers in a Champions League tie two years ago.
But that's not enough for McCoist to find the Frenchman guilty of being a persistent offender.
He said: "Football is full of fine lines between right and wrong.
"Is it cheating if Henry commits a foul any more than if he handles the ball before crossing for a goal? "And what kind of can of worms does he open up if he goes to the ref and confesses to handball ? "The referee is then left in some position because he has already awarded a goal and his word is supposed to be final.
"I wouldn't say football is all about win at any cost.
"I wouldn't think for one moment Henry would have been getting pats on the back from his team-mates after the game .
"I believe the French would have felt for the team they'd just beaten and wouldn't have been gloating."
McCoist admitted his opinion would leave him with no comeback if Rangers were ever on the receiving end of such an error.
And it was Rangers who occupied his mind after he dumped any possibility of taking the Scotland job. The man who was part of Walter Smith's backroom team with Tommy Burns when the trio joined forces to help Scotland in 2004 knows two things about the job.
The first is the national side is in the same state of distress they were in five years ago before Smith transformed them.
The second is that McCoist's previous experience with Scotland as No.2 doesn't qualify him to become the main man.
He said: "I want to be Scotland manager one day but I'm not ready for the job yet. There are people out there a lot more experienced than me.
"Craig Levein, Jim Jefferies and Jimmy Calderwood are all in front of me. The Scotland players need to be given a sense of direction and a renewed sense of self belief. But it's not all doom and gloom."
McCoist's optimism for the future is based on his experience of the past and what can be done with broken minds.
He said:"Walter, Tommyand I met a group of players who had been battered from pillar to post but they were decent pros and we are in the same position today.

Football Associations ask Fifa to delay election

The Football Association and the Scottish Football Association have called for Fifa to postpone its presidential election.
Current president Sepp Blatter is the only candidate for the 1 June election after Mohamed Bin Hammam's withdrawal.
The FA now wants the vote delayed and an independent body to recommend "improved governance" of Fifa.
An SFA statement added: "The election should be rescheduled to facilitate a period of consultation."
The United Kingdom Home Nations are due to have discussions on Tuesday to discuss a joint stance.'Discussions are going to happen in the next 24 hours and that [calling for the election to be postponed] will be a topic of conversation,'' Jonathan Ford, the FA of Wales chief executive, told BBC Wales.

Jack Warner 'out of football' after Fifa's bribery probe

CONTROVERSIAL former football leader Jack Warner has effectively been banned from the game for life, a member of Fifa's ethics committee has said.
A leaked committee report said there was overwhelming evidence that Warner, who quit all football activities on Monday, was "an accessory to corruption".

There was anger after Fifa then dropped the bribery investigation against its former vice president and said the 68-year-old was "presumed innocent".

Sondre Kaafjord, however, said the outcome was the same as a ban.

Mr Kaafjord, one of the five-man panel who provisionally suspended Warner and fellow Fifa member Mohamed Bin Hammam on bribery charges last month, said: "The result is the same as if he had been banned by us - he's out of football. If we had sentenced him or banned him the result would have been just the same.

"If Warner were to take part in football again, the case will be re-opened immediately."

He added: "We concluded on 29 May that there was enough reason to suspend him for 30 days. It means that there was a probability that he was guilty

American Football: Hearst's record run seals 49ers' triumph

GARRISON HEARST opened the new American football season with a bang, breaking free for a spectacular 96-yard run in overtime to give the San Francisco 49ers a season-opening 36-30 inter-conference victory over the New York Jets.
New York sent the game into overtime thanks to John Hall's 31-yard field goal as time expired, then pinned the 49ers at their own four-metre line when safety Chris Hayes blocked a punt.
But Hearst took a hand-off, shed two tacklers and took off for the right sideline. He broke the tackles of the Jets' defensive backs, Kevin Williams and Otis Smith, and made it into the end zone just as linebacker Mo Lewis caught him from behind.
"That's going to go down in history now as one of the great, great runs of all-time," the San Francisco coach, Steve Mariucci, said. "I didn't even know he scored because of everybody going crazy down there."
The 96-yard run broke the previous team best of 89 yards, set in 1952 by Hugh McElhenny. It also helped Hearst finish with 187 yards - the fourth-highest total in team history.
In Philadelphia, Ricky Watters ignored the boos to rush for 67 yards on 16 carries, and Warren Moon threw three touchdown passes as the Seattle Seahawks kept their first clean sheet for 12 years with a 38-0 victory over the Eagles.
Watters played three seasons in Philadelphia, but during the off-season, he signed a four-year, $13m (pounds 7.8m) deal with the Seahawks. By the end of the game, the fans were booing the Eagles, who without Watters had no serious scoring threats. The only touchdown pass thrown by the quarterback Bobby Hoying was to the wrong team - to the Seahawks' cornerback, Shawn Springs, who returned it 42 yards for the game's first score.
The top two quarterback picks in the NFL draft this season, Peyton Manning and Ryan Leaf, made their debuts on Sunday with mixed results.
Manning passed for more than 300 yards but threw his first touchdown pass to the wrong team, finishing with three interceptions as the Indianapolis Colts fell to the Miami Dolphins 24-15. "I think the entire team and I will learn a lot from this game," Manning said. "If you turn the ball over you're not going to win."
The much-ballyhooed quarterback showdown between Manning, the first pick in the 1998 draft, and Miami's Dan Marino, the NFL's most prolific passer, never quite materialised, as Marino completed 13 of 24 passes for just 135 yards.
In San Diego, Doug Flutie's first NFL game in almost a decade upstaged Leaf's debut and nearly resulted in a storybook comeback, but Buffalo's Steve Christie missed a 39-yard field goal with seven seconds left and the Chargers held on to defeat the Bills 16-14. The second selection in the 1998 draft, Leaf completed 16 of 31 passes for 192 yards and a touchdown. He also threw two interceptions. "He made some plays, he missed some things and he'll just get better and better," the Chargers' coach, Kevin Gilbride, said.
Chicago managed a 24-23 home win over Jacksonville Jaguars in a game that featured five lead changes. In Kansas City, the Chiefs routed Oakland Raiders 28-8, meaning Kansas have now beaten Oakland in 16 of their last 18 games. Elsewhere, Cincinnati Bengals crashed to a 23-14 home defeat by the Tennessee Oilers while Pittsburgh won 20-13 at Baltimore.

American Football: Smith rushes into history



The story goes that when Emmitt Smith arrived at his first Dallas Cowboys training camp in the summer of 1990, he scrawled a set of goals on to a piece of paper. High on the list was his desire to become the NFL's all-time leading rushing leader. On Sunday, after a 13-year career which has brought three Super Bowls and four rushing titles, the Dallas Cowboys running back was finally able to tick off the last box on his wish list.
The story goes that when Emmitt Smith arrived at his first Dallas Cowboys training camp in the summer of 1990, he scrawled a set of goals on to a piece of paper. High on the list was his desire to become the NFL's all-time leading rushing leader. On Sunday, after a 13-year career which has brought three Super Bowls and four rushing titles, the Dallas Cowboys running back was finally able to tick off the last box on his wish list.
In the fourth quarter of a tight game against the Seattle Seahawks, Smith took the ball, stumbled, steadied himself with one hand on the ground, then continued on for the 11 yards which earned him immortality. The 16,726 rushing yards achieved by the legendary Walter Payton, of the Chicago Bears, had been consigned to history. The game was held up for a full five minutes as a capacity crowd at Texas Stadiumacclaimed one of American football's defining moments.
Fittingly, Smith capped the drive with his 150th career rushing touchdown, and ended the game with a season-high 109 yards to take his all-time total to 16,743. Payton died in November 1999 of liver cancer at just 45 and members of his family were in attendance in Dallas to see his record broken.
A close bond had grown between the two prior to Payton's death, and in a post-game ceremony, the new record-holder was quick to acknowledge the accomplishments of his predecessor. "Today is a special day for me, my family and the Payton family," he said. "Without Payton doing what he did, he wouldn't have given a young man like myself a dream, something to shoot after, and a person to try to emulate in every way possible."
The big difference between the two was that Payton laboured in vain on a succession of dreadful Chicago Bears teams, before finally being part of a Super Bowl winning group in 1986, the twilight of his career.
Smith, in contrast, was surrounded by talent such as the quarterback Troy Aikman, the receiver Michael Irvin, and a powerful, dominant offensive line. The Cowboys were the team of the 1990s, with Smith at the heart. Today, he alone remains from the glory years, seemingly driven in his quest for the record, and to fulfil the prediction made by his mentor shortly before he died. Their career paths are remarkably similar. Payton retired after his 13th season; Smith is in his 13th campaign. Payton set the record in his 190th game, while Sunday's contest was Smith's 193rd.
The question now is how long will he continue. Smith is no longer the self-styled "hammer and hard hat" of the mid-1990s and the Cowboys have fallen far from grace. It sums up their current state that on Sunday they were beaten by the feeble Seahawks. Nevertheless, his hunger continues to drive him. Smith has never even hinted at retirement, and breaking the record has not changed that. This Cowboy looks set to keep on running