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Madrid make bid for Valencia

19.5.09

The Latics are resigned to losing the Ecuador international and should recoup a fee of around £21m for the midfielder, with Manchester United also believed to be battling it out for his services.

Wigan boss Steve Bruce has openly admitted the 23-year-old will move on in the summer and Madrid have been long-term admirers after attempting to lure him to the Bernabeu last January.

Valencia's agent, Diego Herrera, revealed Real have now tabled an offer for the midfielder and that the Latics are awaiting other offers before allowing the player to leave.

"I believe Wigan will sell Antonio for the right offer and they will decide that once they receive that," Herrera told Skysports. "Real Madrid made an offer last week, but nobody from Wigan has told me of an offer from Manchester United.

"There are a number of interested clubs and I will speak with Wigan about it this week.

"Once the season is over I expect offers to be made and I will sit down with Antonio and decide what offer is in his best interests. We've not yet talked about which club he would prefer.

''Honestly I think it's really difficult that he remains at Wigan. I would anticipate that he leaves this summer.

''We have to see what will happen in the next few weeks. We're not in any rush.

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An Ode to French Flair

Whatever your opinion of the French Open—the most compelling major or most boring slog—there’s no argument about French players. They are almost without exception, and seemingly always have been, the most stylish and, as such, the most entertaining around. There must be something in the Evian.

Francoise Durr

Let’s start with the patron saint of Gallic flair, Francoise Durr. (Like Suzanne Lenglen and the Four Musketeers of Borotra, Brugnon, Cochet and Lacoste, “Frankie” was before my time, but I’ve seen the pictures.) Durr probably won too much to be considered prototypically French: a 1967 French Open victory among her 26 singles titles, along with 60 doubles titles, including five straight at Roland Garros. Underachievement brought on by maddeningly inconsistent play and fragile psyches are part of the deal with French tennis players. Durr’s fashion sense, in conjunction with Ted Tinling, heavily influenced Austin Powers. She wore knee-high tube socks before Serena Williams was a glimmer in her parents’ eyes.

But, mon dieu, her game had even more flair. Her index finger, as always, riding up the grip of her limp-wristed one-handed backhand like some demented weekend hacker, Durr, at age 34, beat Martina Navratilova 1 and 1 in the semifinals of the 1974 Colgate Inaugural! (Then she lost in the final to Chris Evert, whom she never defeated…seems appropriate somehow.)

In the ensuing years, the French have produced dozens of players with remarkable shot-making ability, free-flowing grace, effervescent personalities and skittish temperaments. My all-time favorite: Henri Leconte, the man with the golden left arm. Most people think of him as the inconsistent genius whom Mats Wilander drubbed in Leconte’s only major final, the 1988 French Open—you remember, Wilander missed one first serve in the entire match (so Swedish), while Leconte missed everything.

I prefer to remember the 1991 Davis Cup final in Lyon, where Leconte’s magnificent singles victory over Pete Sampras spurred the French to a huge upset. One shot is seared into my memory: an on-the-dead-run-ball’s-behind-him-buggy-whip-backhand-did-I-just-see-that?!?-no-freakin’-way-passing-shot. The man could hit any shot, no matter the degree of difficulty, just not three simple groundies in a row.

If the Buggy-Whip Backhand Pass was the greatest shot I’ve ever seen on television, it’s little surprise that another Frenchman hit the greatest shot I’ve ever seen live. Nor should that Frenchman’s name come as a shock: Fabrice “The Magician” Santoro, the petit double-handed pro who has thrilled crowds seemingly forever with his jester-meets-wizard game. That the shot took place on a U.S. Open practice court should only underscore its utter sublime ridiculousness.

Henri Leconte

Santoro looped a kick a serve out wide to the ad court. His practice partner—all I recall is that he was shirtless, which even in New York seemed a bit déclassé—had cheated over and ran around his backhand to unleash the mother of all monster forehands. It came back at Santoro’s shoelaces so fast that he was still in his service follow-through position: body facing 10 o’clock, right foot ahead of left foot, both pointing at 2 o’clock. The Magician had time only to spin his body 90 degrees counterclockwise and swing his wand, er, racquet as fast as he could, in what appeared to be self-defense. Needless to say, the ball went rocketing back crosscourt for a winner twice as fast as the return. The only things missing were a comely assistant and a puff of smoke.

No doubt you have your own French fave. Maybe it’s the impish Sebastian Grosjean, the little man with the big man’s game and the only player who looks right in a ball cap worn backwards. Maybe you were partial to the athletic Noah’s flying dreadlocks, or the balding-yet-dashing Forget’s indented Lacoste racquet. Even the less exciting personalities, like Mauresmo and Pioline, have always played with style. Indeed, for the French, style is substance.

Last year, the “New Musketeers” of Gasquet, Monfils, Simon and Tsonga simultaneously put four Frenchmen in the Top 20 for the first time since the computer rankings began in 1973. That’s nice, I suppose, but when it comes to Gallic tennis, I’ll take joie de vivre over victoire any day. So I care less about whether any of the four will win a major than that they continue to play with such estimable flash, from Gasquet’s gorgeous backhand (which, alas, we won’t see for some time) to Monfils’ elbows-and-knees-akimbo vibrancy.

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INIESTA LATE SHOW STUNS CHELSEA

7.5.09

Barca celebrate Iniesta's late equaliser.

Barcelona will play Manchester United in the Champions League final after Anders Iniesta's injury-time goal stunned Chelsea in a 1-1 draw.

The Blues looked to be cruising after Michael Essien's stunning early volley put them 1-0 ahead in their semi-final second leg, and when Eric Abidal saw red after 66 minutes, Guus Hiddink's side looked home and hosed and in line for a repeat of last season's final.

But with time ticking away, Iniesta struck a devastating shot - their first effort on target in the entire match - that beat Petr Cech and sent Barcelona through on the away goals rule to the Rome showpiece against holders United on Wednesday 27 May.

The Blues made a nervous start, with Jose Bosingwa having to hack the ball off the ball after a cross was deflected goalwards. But their nerves were soon settled in spectacular fashion as Essien fired in a first-time left-footed volley that crashed in off the underside of Victor Valdes' crossbar after just nine minutes.

Barca finally had an effort at goal when Dani Alves' 35-yard free-kick sailed wide of Petr Cech's goal. But the Blues were soon on the attack again with Didier Drogba's fierce free-kick touched away by Valdes' leg, while John Terry was just a yard off target with a towering header.

Drogba then saw penalty claims waved away by referee Tom Ovrebo after he went down under Abidal's clumsy challenge.

The Spaniards finished the half the stronger, but Chelsea defended resolutely as the interval arrived with no further incident.

But the Blues were soon on the attack after the break, with Nicolas Anelka slipping Drogba in on goal, but Valdes' outstretched boot saved his left-footed effort.

The Ivorian then saw penalty claims waved away once again, but Yaya Toure's challenge in the box appeared good. A rare Barca thrust saw Lionel Messi cut in from the right and unleash a powerful drive that flew high and wide.

But Barca's task was made far harder after 66 minutes when Abidal was harshly shown a straight red card after he clipped Anelka's heels as he burst towards goal.

Chelsea saw another penalty claim waved away when Gerard Pique appeared to handle in the area.

But with time ticking away, Iniesta's first-time shot - after Essien had fluffed a clearance - flew into the top corner to spark scenes of jubilation for Barca.

There was still time for Chelsea to see further penalty claims waved away and furious scenes at the final whistle could have further rammifications for the Blues.

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RR aim for revenge against Royal Challengers

Riding high after their crushing victory over Kings XI Punjab, defending champions Rajasthan Royals will be gunning for revenge against Bangalore Royal Challengers in what promises to be a cracker of an Indian Premier League (IPL) contest on Thursday.

In their first meeting, Royal Challengers defeated Rajasthan Royals by a huge 75-run margin.

Since then, both teams have followed the same course - losing matches at the start before bouncing back in the tournament.

Rajasthan Royals have nine points, one more than Bangalore Royal Challengers who have eight.

With a depleted side, Rajasthan Royals lost matches at the start and looked like a pale shadow of the formidable team that won the opening IPL championship last year.

Royals captain Shane Warne's inspirational leadership helped them bounce back as his clever fine-tunning with the team has paid rich dividends.

Warne brought Naman Ojha to open the batting with Graeme Smith in the last match and it resulted in Royals' top-order firing for the first time in the tournament.

Smith and Ojha dominated Kings XI bowlers right from the start and scored the tournament's highest total of 211.

It augurs well for Royals who so far have been relying heavily on Yusuf Pathan in batting.

After losing Kamran Khan to a suspect action, Royals discovered a new pacer in Amit Singh, who took three Kings XI wickets in his debut match.

Royal Challengers are on a roll with three wins on a trot. A new skipper in Anil Kumble has moulded the team into a winning bunch.

Their last victory against Mumbai Indians saw Jacques Kallis and Robin Uthappa return to form.

Kallis and Uthappa hit blazing half-centuries as Bangalore registered a resounding nine-wicket victory against Mumbai Indians.

They unearthed a useful South African swing bowler in Dillon du Preez who took three Mumbai wickets to restrict the strong batting line-up to 149.

Royal Challengers have the advantage of many South Africans in their ranks. In the last match, all their overseas players -- Kallis, Mark Boucher, Preez and Roelof van der Merwe - were South Africans which helped them to assess the local conditions better than any other team.

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Bopara ton holds England together




Ravi Bopara square-drives during the first session of the summer at Lord's, England v West Indies, 1st Test, Lord's, May 6, 2009
Ravi Bopara was an immediate success after being promoted to No. 3 as he held England's batting together at Lord's

Every time England have started a series in recent memory it has been preceded by talk of new eras before failing, often spectacularly, to deliver but Ravi Bopara's assured century, in his first innings at No. 3, suggests that this time might be different. It was a vital innings as the home side wobbled against the pace of Fidel Edwards, who claimed three quick wickets to rattle the middle order, but Bopara found crucial support from Matt Prior and Stuart Broad as honours ended even on 289 for 7, although West Indies rued a batch of dropped catches.

Bopara's display stood out for its maturity and calmness. He scored a hundred in his previous Test innings before being dropped and has now been thrust back in such a key position. He was also one of the clutch of players to have recently returned from the IPL and, while it wasn't the best of days for all of them, Bopara and Edwards showed that the adjustments can be made.

The No. 3 position has become the most vexing position in England's batting order since Michael Vaughan vacated it towards the end of last summer. The last hundred from the position was Vaughan's 106 against New Zealand in the corresponding fixture last summer. Ian Bell and Owais Shah were unable to take their opportunity and so the mantle has been passed to Bopara, the most exciting of England's new-look selections, and he has responded in full to the confidence shown by Andy Flower and Andrew Strauss. This will be his position for the Ashes.

He had two lives, on 76 and 100, as West Indies' fielding fell apart in the final session and survived a perilously close lbw on 40 against Sulieman Benn that was heading towards middle. However, his strokeplay, especially his driving, was classy from the beginning and he showed the best footwork of England's top five.

His hundred arrived off 207 balls after a fairly length wait in the 90s, but even then his nerves didn't show. After tucking the ball into the leg side he calmly saluted the ground before making a rectangle symbol, imitating writing to his team-mates - he wanted his name on the honours board straight away. That's confidence for you.

West Indies missed a real chance to take a grip on this match. Edwards' post-lunch spell of 6-2-15-3 reduced them to 109 for 4 and when Prior fell shortly after tea a total of 193 for 5 could have gone either way. But the visitors were then struck by a spate of dropped chances - still a problem in this improving West Indies side - as six were put down in the final session. Broad was dropped four times in making 38, with Chris Gayle guilty for one at first slip, alongside the two lives given to Bopara.

Three of those chances came off Edwards, who deserved better support after producing the spell that put West Indies on top during the middle session. For the first two hours the bowling had been too short on a pitch offering little, despite Gayle's decision to bowl, and Andrew Strauss had been their only success when cutting at Jerome Taylor. There had clearly been a team talk during the interval about bowling fuller and it worked with great effect.

Alastair Cook dragged on via an inside edge, but it was the next ball that brought the session alive. Kevin Pietersen can often be a dodgy starter, but Edwards produced a delivery that would have dismissed most batsmen, shaping away late and took the outside edge. Just as good as the ball was Denesh Ramdin's catch because the wicketkeeper had almost been wrong-footed before sticking out his right glove and grabbing the chance.

England's shortened batting was now being severely tested as Paul Collingwood came in without having had any cricket since April 3 after spending three weeks on the bench at the IPL. He middled one pull shot, but was soon undone by another full, swinging delivery from Edwards that he jabbed at without any footwork. Devon Smith hung on a second slip, but it would be a different story later on.

Prior has been picked at No. 6 because he is good enough to be a specialist batsman and his counter-attacking style helped wrestle the momentum away from the tourists. He and Bopara brought up a swift fifty partnership while Prior went past 1000 runs in 17 Tests, although he gave his innings away when he picked out cover off Edwards. Broad, though, unfurled the shots of a top-order batsman as he drove effortlessly through the off side and lofted Benn over mid-on. Two of Broad's lives came off Benn, the first when Ramdin failed to gather an edge and the second when the bowler seemed to caught by surprise as a return catch lobbed in his direction.

Benn eventually broke through when Broad sliced to backward point where Taylor showed how to catch then he removed Tim Bresnan with a dubious leg before that was heading over the stumps. Seven wickets on the opening day of a Test, especially at Lord's, is a good return but West Indies will feel it could have been even better.

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Cricket-Yuvraj hat-trick for Punjab fails to stop Bangalore

2.5.09

* Bangalore beat Kings by eight runs

* Yuvraj hat-trick and quick-fire 50 not enough

* Mumbai claim nine-run win over Kolkata

By Jason Humphries

DURBAN, May 1 (Reuters) - A fine all-round performance by Yuvraj Singh was not enough to prevent Kings XI Punjab slumping to an eight-run loss against the Bangalore Royal Challengers in the Indian Premier League (IPL) on Friday.

Punjab captain Yuvraj took a hat-trick to help restrict Bangalore to 145 for nine at Kingsmead before blasting a superb half-century only to see his side lose two wickets in the last over of their innings to finish on 137 for seven.

Punjab began the last over of their innings needing 13 runs to win but medium pacer Praveen Kumar held his nerve to allow a single boundary and capture two wickets.

Yuvraj earlier removed Robin Uthappa (19) and Jacques Kallis (27) with the fifth and sixth balls of the 11th over before trapping Mark Boucher lbw with the first ball of the 13th for the first hat-trick of this season's IPL and the fourth overall.

India's Yuvraj claimed figures of 3-22, while left-arm seamer Yusuf Abdulla captured 4-36 making him the leading wicket-taker in this year's IPL with 13 wickets in six matches.

Right-handed South African Roelof van der Merwe rescued Bangalore's innings with a blazing cameo of 35 off 19 balls with three fours and three sixes after Bangalore had been reduced to 84 for six after Yuvraj's three-wicket burst.

QUICK-FIRE FIFTY

Yuvraj, who had opened the batting for Punjab, struck a quick-fire 50 off 34 balls with three fours and four sixes in a first-wicket stand with Karan Goel (20) of 70 runs off 60 balls.

However, Bangalore's bowlers fought back with Kumar, leg spinner Anil Kumble and left-arm spinner van der Merwe ending with two wickets apiece as Punjab lost five for 67 runs.

The result lifts Bangalore to fifth place with six points from seven games, two off the pace set by Deccan Chargers, while Punjab stay fourth on six points having played six matches.

Earlier, an unbeaten half-century from JP Duminy helped the Mumbai Indians to a nine-run win over the Kolkata Knight Riders. The result moved Mumbai up to third place on seven points while Kolkata remained rooted to the bottom with just three points.

Duminy scored 52 not out off 37 balls with four sixes and a boundary as Mumbai posted 148 for six before restricting Kolkata to 139 for six in East London.

Opening batsman Sachin Tendulkar got Mumbai off to a decent start with a score of 34 off 30 balls before the elegant Duminy provided Mumbai's innings with some much needed momentum.

His team had struggled to 96 for five after 15.5 overs at a run-rate of slightly over six runs to the over.

Kolkata came in and looked in control of the match thanks to an 89-run third-wicket partnership off 77 balls from Australian Brad Hodge and South African Morne van Wyk (32).

But when the right-handed Van Wyk was caught at long-on in the 15th over and Hodge was run out for 73 off 60 balls with five fours and three sixes after 19 overs Kolkata's fate was sealed.

Mumbai seamer Zaheer Khan finished with 3-31.

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Alan Shearer Gets Tough and Drops Michael Owen

1.5.09


EPL: Alan Shearer, Newcastle United - Chelsea (PA)
EPL: Alan Shearer, Newcastle United - Chelsea (PA)

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Newcastle United manager Alan Shearer has taken the tough decision to drop Michael Owen - his close friend and former team-mate - from the vital Premier League match away to Liverpool on Sunday.

The Magpies are deeply embroiled in a desperate relegation battle, and Shearer is running out of time and options to save his beloved but beleaguered club from the dreaded drop.

Shearer is trying to find the elusive combination of personnel and tactics to keep the Toon afloat against the odds - and the name of Owen is not on the teamsheet pinned up at the club’s training ground, The Times has revealed.

It's a bold decision that may surprise many as Shearer has often been Owen’s staunchest supporter. The pair played together for Newcastle and England.

But notwithstanding any late withdrawals because of injury, Shearer will field a five-man midfield at Anfield, and have Australian Mark Viduka playing as a lone striker, rather than ex-Liverpool star Owen, who will probably be on the bench as Newcastle search for precious points.

One of Shearer's first decisions on taking over from Chris Hughton last month was to bring back Owen, 29, who had been dropped. Shearer said then, “If Michael is fit, he will start.”

But in the four weeks since then, the Magpies, eighteenth in the table and three points adrift of safety, have not won a match. Nor has Owen scored. In fact he hasn't scored since January.

Fabio Capello, England's manager, is expected to be on Merseyside on Sunday to watch the game against Liverpool, and given that Owen's last game in a Three Lions shirt was as a second-half substitute against France more than a year ago, the striker will be doubly disappointed at missing out on a chance to impress the Italian tactician.

Owen’s contract runs out at the end of this season and his boyhood heroes, Everton, are reportedly keen - although Owen has been enthusiastic about Shearer’s management.

Asked about Owen, Shearer told journalists on Friday, "If I believe he can [lead Newcastle to an Anfield win], then that will be reflected in the team on Sunday.,” he said. “If I believe that he can’t, then that’s a decision I have to make.

“But I will go in on Sunday with the team I believe will be best suited for a particular game to get us a result.”

Shearer added, “I have been mad in my time and I do not want to give away any formations or selections, but I tend to agree that, yeah, it might be mad to go there with three up front.

"Workrate-wise with Michael, there is definitely no complaint whatsoever — he’s always in the top three or four players on the pitch. If I do decide to drop one of the three strikers it will be a tough choice. Michael is still banging them in during training, but I want him scoring in games.”

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