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Super Cup kicks off season on July 31

By - Jul 27,2014 - Last updated at Jul 27,2014

AMMAN — The local football season kicks off during the upcoming Eid holiday with Wihdat facing Baqaa in the 32nd Super Cup — the first major competition on the calendar kicking off the 2014/15 season.

Wihdat have just returned from a camp in Turkey. They have lost captain Rafat Ali and four players who have transferred abroad, including Hasan Abdul Fattah, but have ex-Baqaa star Suleiman Addous in the line-up.

“Wihdat have a solid line-up and a big task this season. We intend to retain the Jordan Professional League and Jordan Cup titles and hope to win the Super Cup as well,” head coach Abdullah Abu Zameh was quoted by the local media as saying.

Last season, Wihdat won the league for the 13th time and beat Baqaa in the final of the Jordan Cup. Shabab Urdun beat That Ras 2-0 to win the 31st Super Cup. The Shield was not held.

The Super Cup has been won by Faisali a record 13 times out of 21 appearances in the final, Wihdat 11 times, Ramtha and Shabab Urdun twice each while Jazira and Hussein won once each.

The Jordan Cup will also kick off on
August 2. Only league teams will compete this year in two groups. Group A includes Faisali, Hussein Irbid, Baqaa, Sarih, Jazira and Ahli, while Group B includes Wihdat, Ramtha, Ittihad Ramtha, Shabab Urdun, Manshieh and That Ras. The top four in each group will move to the quarter-finals.

The league has been set for September 12.

 

Super Cup Record

(Runner-up in parenthesis)

1981 — Faisali (Wihdat)

1982 — Faisali (Ramtha)

1983 — Ramtha (Wihdat)

1984 — Faisali (Ramtha)

1985 — Jazira (Amman)

1986 — Faisali (Wihdat)

1987 — Faisali (Arabi)

1988 — not held

1989 — Wihdat (Faisali)

1990 — Ramtha (Faisali)

1991 — Faisali (Ramtha)

1992 — Wihdat (Ramtha)

1993 — Faisali (Wihdat)

1994 — Faisali (Ramtha) 

1995 — Faisali (Wihdat)

1996 — Faisali (Wihdat)

1997 — Wihdat (Ramtha)

1998 — Wihdat (Ramtha)

1999 — not held

2000 — Wihdat (Faisali)

2001 — Wihdat (Faisali)

2002 — Faisali (Hussein)

2003 — Hussein (Faisali)

2004 — Faisali (Hussein)

2005 — Wihdat (Faisali)

2006 — Faisali (Shabab Urdun)

2007 — Shabab Urdun (Wihdat)

2008 — Wihdat (Faisali)

2009 — Wihdat (Shabab Urdun)

2010 — Wihdat (Faisali)

2011 — Wihdat (Manshieh)

2012 — Faisali (Manshieh)

2013 — Shabab Urdun (That Ras)

Rosberg on pole, Hamilton at the back for Hungary Grand Prix

By - Jul 26,2014 - Last updated at Jul 26,2014

BUDAPEST — Formula One world championship leader Nico Rosberg took pole position for the Hungarian Grand Prix on Saturday while Mercedes teammate and title rival Lewis Hamilton saw his hopes go up in flames.

Hamilton, 14 points behind Rosberg after 10 races, has won in Hungary for the past two years and four times in total and was the favourite for pole and the race after setting the pace in practice.

Instead, the Briton was set to start last and from the pitlane after his car caught fire with the session barely started.

Red Bull’s quadruple world champion Sebastian Vettel qualified second, equalling his best grid placing of the season, on an all-German front row.

Finland’s Valtteri Bottas starts third in a Williams with Australian Daniel Ricciardo fourth for Red Bull on an overcast afternoon that saw light rain fall between the second and final phase of qualifying.

For the second race in a row, Rosberg was left with mixed emotions — happy to be in the top slot with every chance of extending his overall lead — but saying also that he felt cheated of a battle with his teammate.

“It’s a pity for the team, not a good thing... I would prefer to be out there battling Lewis,” he told reporters. “That would have been the maximum adrenalin rush.”

 

String of setbacks

 

Hamilton, winner of five races to Rosberg’s four, has had a run of bad luck with two retirements to the German’s sole blank and has also endured a string of qualifying setbacks going back six races.

At Hockenheim last Saturday, he crashed out of qualifying at the same point when a front brake disc failed and had to start in 20th place.

That triggered a thrilling charge through the field on Sunday to third place but the slow and twisty Hungaroring is a far more difficult track to overtake on.

“There’s a lot going through my mind, but I just have to try to turn it into positives until tomorrow,” Hamilton, whose car will need a change of engine and gearbox with accompanying five place penalty, told the BBC.

“I think it’s getting to the point beyond bad luck — it’s something else. We just need to do better,” added the 2008 world champion.

While Hamilton’s blaze — caused by a suspected fuel leak — was the main talking point, there were other shocks in an eventful session that ended with Mercedes’ 10th pole in 11 races.

Frenchman Jules Bianchi, a Ferrari academy driver who races for struggling Marussia, qualified 16th and ahead of Ferrari’s 2007 champion Kimi Raikkonen at one of the Finn’s strongest circuits.

Ferrari had mistakenly assumed both their drivers were safely through the first phase and did not send them out for second runs — and then saw Bianchi pip Raikkonen when there was nothing they could do about it.

Raikkonen’s double world champion teammate Fernando Alonso will start fifth and with Brazilian Felipe Massa, who was replaced by Raikkonen at the Italian team, alongside.

The final phase was halted for some eight minutes after Danish rookie Kevin Magnussen crashed his McLaren heavily into the barriers on a surface made slippery by the sudden shower.

Venezuelan Pastor Maldonado, who has not scored a point so far this season, was the first out of qualifying after parking up his Lotus.

Context means Nibali gets an easy ride on doping

By - Jul 24,2014 - Last updated at Jul 24,2014

CARCASSONNE, France — On the first rest day of the Tour de France, Team Sky boss Dave Brailsford wondered why Vincenzo Nibali was being let off the hook over cycling’s doping problem after last year’s champion Chris Froome was grilled multiple times on the matter.

Froome answered dozens of doping-related questions as media urged him to prove his credibility in 2013 but until Sunday, the day before the second rest day, Nibali had faced no more than three questions on the subject despite comfortably leading the general classification.

So why is Nibali having an easy ride on a theme that has dominated the sport for years?

After all, Nibali is riding for the Astana team, whose manager Alexandre Vinokourov was banned for two years for blood doping in the 2007 Tour de France.

In contrast, Team Sky have implemented a zero-tolerance policy meaning that any rider or staff member with a doping history had to leave the squad.

The reasons why Nibali has avoided being harangued are varied, but the fact he has slowly worked his way up to cycling’s pinnacle and his team being members of a key anti-doping initiative are perhaps the main ones.

Nibali snatched the overall lead on the Tour after the second stage and has therefore had to hold a news conference everyday since July 6, except after briefly surrendering the yellow jersey to France’s Tony Gallopin.

It took until last Thursday for the first question about drugs to confront Nibali, who eight years ago when cycling’s doping “Omerta” was still firmly in place said cheats should be locked up.

“Mistakes were made by a lot of riders,” the Italian said. “We need to leave these mistakes in the past and give their chance to the young riders.

“There are in- and out-of-competition controls in cycling, there is the biological passport [since 2008].”

Has he ever worked with banned doctor Michele Ferrari as a cycling team sports director and an Italian newspaper speculated in 2009?

“No, I’ve never met him personally,” said Nibali.

“They said that there were photographs where he was following me with a stopwatch in hand. We are talking about a few years ago.

“I sued, it went ahead for some time, but towards the end, they asked me to pull it because I was right, there was nothing to it. There were claims made, the photographs didn’t exist, nothing to give.”

 

Same coach

 

While Froome’s climb to the top of cycling was rather sudden, Nibali’s rise has been steady since he finished third in the time trial at the junior world championships aged 17.

Froome only burst into the limelight when he took second place overall in the 2011 Vuelta at the age of 26.

Before snatching the yellow jersey on the Tour, Nibali had finished in the top 20 of the 11 grand tours he took part in, winning the 2010 Vuelta and last year’s Giro.

It is therefore no surprise that he is competitive on the Tour this year, having also always worked with the same coach, Italian Paolo Slongo, whom he never forgets to mention in his post-race comments.

The duo have been working together since 2002.

While Astana have a tainted reputation because of the team’s previous doping history, the Kazakh outfit is a member of the MPCC — Movement for Credible Cycling.

Team Sky are not.

MPCC has enforced anti-doping rules that are stricter than that of the International Cycling Union (UCI) and the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), meaning, for instance, that a rider needing steroid-based drugs to heal an injury will be barred from racing for eight days.

Earlier this year, Froome competed in the Tour de Romandie after being treated for a chest infection with cortico-steroids having been granted a Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE) by the UCI.

Had Sky been a member of the MPCC, the Briton would not have been allowed to race.

 

Clean athletes

 

Under Sky’s own anti-doping policy, two staff members, Bobby Julich and Steven de Jongh, were released from their contracts in 2012.

Sky hired doctor Geert Leinders on a freelance basis in 2010 before the team ended their collaboration in 2012 after Belgian prosecutors opened a doping investigation into him.

Yet, Sky’s 2012 Tour champion Bradley Wiggins and Froome last year faced questions on whether they were clean athletes in every news conference they held as yellow jersey holders.

Wiggins duly answered before losing his temper after a stage when asked if he believed it was possible to win the Tour without doping.

Froome always kept his composure but was clearly out of words after countless doping-related queries last year, even prompting Brailsford to ask reporters to come up with a list of questions the team would answer once and for all.

If Froome’s performances, especially in the mountains, raised eyebrows last year, Nibali’s displays has been less impressive on the Tour.

Froome’s sudden acceleration in the climb up the intimidating Mont Ventoux dropped a few jaws, as well as his ability to crush the opposition on flat time trials despite his meagre appearance. He says he is clean and cycling believes him, while with Nibali it is clear how hard he is having to work.

Finally when asking why Nibali is not constantly being grilled about doping, the very different context of this year’s race has to come into play.

Froome dominated a Tour that was under immense scrutiny as it was the season when Lance Armstrong admitted to cheating his way to seven Tour de France titles — a huge blow to a sport that has been crippled with doping.

This year, some would argue Nibali is only out in front after crashes led to Froome and double Tour winner Alberto Contador leaving the race.

Hamilton looking for a high five at Hungarian Grand Prix

By - Jul 24,2014 - Last updated at Jul 24,2014

BUDAPEST — Lewis Hamilton may not be putting the Buddha into Budapest this weekend but he could be tempted to seek divine assistance if luck goes against him in Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix.

The Mercedes Formula One driver needs a win to cut into teammate Nico Rosberg’s 14-point championship lead after 10 of the 19 races and Hungary offers the perfect opportunity.

Hamilton has won there four times in the last seven seasons, including the last two, and the Briton shares the record for victories at the slow and twisty Hungaroring with Michael Schumacher.

Rosberg’s best result at the circuit, outside Budapest, remains a fourth place with Williams in 2009.

However, Hamilton’s season has also been beset by bad luck, with two race retirements and problems such as the front brake disc failure in qualifying that led to him starting last weekend’s German Grand Prix from 20th on the grid.

“I’m going there [Hungary] to try and win,” he told reporters after finishing third at Hockenheim.

“I just hope that the car sticks together so I can go out and do the job... I’m not planning on starting from the back there,” he added with a laugh.

Hamilton, like most Formula One drivers, is a believer in the old adage that you make your own luck in motor racing and he said he would never pray for it.

But it would be nice if some of the bad stuff went away in the last Grand Prix before the three-week European summer shutdown.

“A clean weekend is what I’m looking for, to come away from there with some strong points going into the break, get some rest time and then head back into the last part of the season,” he said.

“Maybe I need to go and visit some Indians, go and visit the Buddha, rub the Buddha belly or whatever,” joked the Briton, with a big grin. “Try all the different religions to see if I can get some luck.”

 

Williams danger

 

While Rosberg will be Hamilton’s main rival, with Mercedes having won nine of the 10 races so far, Hungary is more about aerodynamics and downforce than having the best engine.

That could put Red Bull more into the mix — although quadruple champion Sebastian Vettel has never won in Hungary despite finishing on the podium three times.

Williams — and particularly Finland’s Valtteri Bottas — have been the team pushing Mercedes hardest of late and the revived former champions are hoping for another good weekend.

Bottas has been second in the last two races, and third in the one before that, and Hungary has long been seen as a home race for Formula One’s Finnish drivers due to linguistic similarities and proximity.

“We know it’s not the best circuit for our car but we are working on getting more grip in the corners and we have some upgrades that should help as well,” said Bottas. “A good few practice sessions should help us get the set-up right.

“There are always a few fans from Finland, it’s almost like a Finnish GP, so I hope to pay the fans back with a good result.”

Hungary also has happy memories for McLaren’s Jenson Button and Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso, who both took the first wins of their F1 careers at the circuit.

Button has won there twice, most recently in 2011, while Alonso’s sole victory was in 2003.

“The Hungaroring is a great track. Everybody thinks of it as a slow circuit, but, out the back, it’s got some pretty decent corners... the sequence of S-bends that make up turns 8 to 11 are really satisfying to drive,” said Button.

“Nonetheless, it’s still a circuit where you require lots of downforce and grip, and I think we are making positive steps in that direction.”

 

Calm warning

 

Brazilian Felipe Massa has urged Formula One’s younger drivers to calm down after he suffered another big collision in the German Grand Prix.

The Williams driver had qualified third on the grid but failed to complete a lap after being pitched out at the first corner in a coming together with McLaren’s Danish rookie Kevin Magnussen.

Massa, whose car flipped and skidded along upside down before righting itself, blamed the Dane for the crash.

“This is not the first time he was in an accident on the first lap. Most of the time these young drivers they want to win the race at the first corner,” said the former Ferrari driver.

“If you take most of the accidents that happen, they happen always with them.”

Asked what he would say to Magnussen, Massa continued: “I would say what I’m saying to you: ‘Just take it easy’. I’m not the only one losing, he’s losing out as well. He spun, maybe his car was not the same, so for sure he lost points as well.

“I hope it’s enough for him to understand to take it easy a little bit more in the next race.”

Massa’s frustration was understandable, with the Brazilian sidelined while Finnish teammate Valtteri Bottas took second place — his third successive top-three finish and the 300th podium in Williams’ history.

Massa has yet to stand on the podium this year, despite having one of the quickest cars after the dominant Mercedes, and has scored just 30 points to his teammate’s 91 in 10 races.

He drew a blank in the British Grand Prix two weeks ago when he started slowly and was then caught up in the aftermath of Kimi Raikkonen’s first lap crash into the barriers.

James will be mentor to Cavaliers young players

Jul 24,2014 - Last updated at Jul 24,2014

LAS VEGAS (USA Today/MCT) — Cleveland Cavaliers rookie Andrew Wiggins dribbled baseline, spun through two defenders towards the basket and with Philadelphia 76ers big man Nerlens Noel closing to back a shot, Wiggins finished an electrifying two-handed dunk.

But that wasn’t it. He showed his defence skills by blocking one of Noels shot attempts. And now Wiggins, the No. 1 overall pick in the June draft, has found himself the focus of other highlights in Las Vegas.

It’s just Summer League, and it’s against other developing pros, but it’s impossible not to consider Wiggins’ athleticism alongside LeBron James and Kyrie Irving.

“For a guy a like Andrew, to have the opportunity to play with arguably one of the best players of all-time and to learn from him and be tutored by him and to play alongside him, which he will in many cases, I’ve got to think that’s a tremendous boost to his confidence, to his comfort level and probably to his motivation to be even better,” Cavaliers coach David Blatt said.

Add that second-year forward Anthony Bennett, who had a very difficult and disappointing rookie season in 2013/14, said he has lost nearly 10 kilos and has looked like he’s motivated to contribute and the Cavaliers have a reason to believe the struggles of the past few seasons could be about to get better.

Like Blatt said, who wouldn’t be motivated by James’ presence and the very real possibility that the Cavaliers can compete for a championship in 2014/15? Now it’s starting to look like the Cavs can salvage Bennett and turn him into a productive player.

“The first and the best thing I can tell you about that is that I’m coming in here and he’s coming in here with a clean slate,” Blatt said. “Anthony has done a great job working with our performance guys and our training staff and with our skills coaches to No. 1 get himself in good physical condition and No. 2 work on his game and many elements of his game and No. 3 allow him to come out and play basketball.”

Bennett admitted it was tough last season but when it ended he began working on losing weight. He said he’s at his playing weight of 110 kilos, down from 118kg. In three Summer League games, Bennett has played at least 30 minutes. Last season, he played just 30 or minutes twice in 52 games

“I was happy to see his confidence level high,” Blatt said. “I was happy to see his energy and his ability to run the floor and to stay in it for extended periods of time. I just think with his approach and his improved approach and condition, he’s just going to get better and better.”

When James begins organising team workouts before training camps begin, he’s going to be the obvious leader and elder statesmen on a young team. James has more combined NBA seasons (11) than Irving, Bennett, Tristan Thompson and Dion Waiters combined (nine).

In his Sports Illustrated essay announcing his return to the Cavs, James admitted: “It will be a long process, much longer than it was in 2010. My patience will get tested. I know that. I’m going into a situation with a young team and a new coach. I will be the old head. But I get a thrill out of bringing a group together and helping them reach a place they didn’t know they could go. I see myself as a mentor now and I’m excited to lead some of these talented young guys.”

They are young and talented, and it might be the team with the most youthful and promising potential on which James has played. Miami had plenty of talent, but that was mostly a veteran team.

His old Cleveland teams didn’t have anywhere near the same youthful potential, and those Cavs teams were constantly trying to jam pieces around James to make it work. On the Cavaliers’ 2007 NBA Finals team, James had Larry Hughes, Drew Gooden, Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Anderson Varejao, Sasha Pavlovic and Donyell Marshall as main supporters.

When the Cavaliers had the best record in the league in 2008/09, Mo Williams, Delonte West, Daniel Gibson, Varejao and Ilgauskas were key contributors.

This Cavs team is built for now and for the future, considering that James doesn’t turn 30 until December 30.

The Cavaliers have expressed interest in Minnesota Timberwolves All-Star forward Kevin Love, but the Timberwolves are bargaining hard. They are unwilling to entertain serious discussions unless Wiggins is offered, and right now, the Cavs have no intention of trading him.

“There’s no reason cause or worry on his part because Andrew is not going anywhere,” Blatt said.

Of course, until Wiggins is signed, speculation will continue. Teams cannot trade signed rookies for 30 days, and the Cavaliers have not signed Wiggins as they try to manipulate salary cap space to their advantage. That James didn’t mention Wiggins in his SI essay only fuelled talk that Wiggins might not be with Cleveland.

Wiggins is not exactly naive. Even though he’s 19 years old, he just signed a multimillion-dollar apparel deal with Adidas and soon will sign a
multimillion-dollar rookie deal. But it still must be jarring to think you’re going to spend your rookie season with James but not know for sure.

“It’s a great feeling having the best player in the game today come to your team,” Wiggins said, who added he anticipates James being a mentor, too. “He’s the best in the game. He works hard. I know he’s a hard worker, unselfish so hopefully he takes us all of us under his wing and teaches us what it takes to get to his level and build a championship team.”

Majka closes in on polka dot jersey as Nibali gains more ground

By - Jul 24,2014 - Last updated at Jul 24,2014

ST. LARY PLA D’ADET, France — Poland’s Rafal Majka took a big step towards winning the Tour de France polka dot jersey when he took a solo route to the stage victory on Wednesday as Italian Vincenzo Nibali strengthened his grip on the overall race.

Majka was the best climber on the 17th stage, a brutal 124.5km trek from St. Gaudens featuring four tough ascents, and extended his lead over Nibali and Spain’s Joaquim Rodriguez in the mountain classification.

The win was his second stage victory after prevailing on the 14th stage in the Alps, and a third in four stages for Tinkoff-Saxo after leader Alberto Contador crashed out.

Italian Giovanni Visconti was second with Nibali taking third place to extend his overall race lead to over five minutes.

France’s Jean-Christophe Peraud was fourth as he gained more than 50 seconds on compatriot Thibaut Pinot, who struggled in the final climb.

Nibali leads Spain’s Alejandro Valverde by 5:26 with Pinot in third place overall, six minutes off the pace. Peraud, who is expected to fare better in Saturday’s time trial, lies fourth, eight seconds behind Pinot.

A group of 22 riders, featuring Rodriguez, Majka, Luxemburg’s Frank Schleck and Dutchman Bauke Mollema, who started the day in 10th position overall, broke away at the foot of the Col du Portillon, the first of four brutal climbs.

A Movistar soigneur (caretaker), on the climb to hand out drinks to the riders, tangled with Australian Luke Durbridge (Orica GreenEdge), who fell off his bike, but remounted to continue the stage.

Vasil Kiryienka of Belarus powered away from the leading group and was first to crest the top of the Col de Peyresourde, but he cracked in the penultimate climb up the Col de Val Louron-Azet.

Majka burst away from the breakaway group as he looked to strengthen his lead in the mountain classification.

Bardet attacked in the descent from the Col de Val Louron-Azet and opened a 30-second gap over Pinot, Nibali, Valverde, Peraud and Tejay van Garderen.

Once Bardet was caught on the final climb, Nibali attacked 5.5 kilometres from the finish as Valverde cracked.

Peraud was in the Italian’s wheel while Pinot, Bardet and Van Garderen chased.

Nibali and Peraud opened a decent gap and Pinot and company limited the damage but could not catch the duo.

Valverde, who at one point lagged some 20 seconds behind the Pinot group, was helped on the way by a few Movistar teammates who had been dropped from the morning’s breakaway.

He fought his way back in the 10.2km ascent and gained a handful of seconds on Pinot.

Bolt, Farah headline cast at Glasgow Commonwealths

By - Jul 22,2014 - Last updated at Jul 22,2014

LONDON — Olympic champions Usain Bolt and Mo Farah lead a cast of the world’s leading athletes descending on Glasgow to compete in the Commonwealth Games starting in Scotland’s biggest city on Wednesday.

World-record holders, decorated Olympians and novice participants make up the 6,500 athletes representing 70 Commonwealth nations who share the aim of claiming prizes in 261 medal events in 17 sports.

Scotland hosts the 20th edition of the multi-sport event for the third time and instead of trying to emulate the success of the London 2012 Olympic Games, it will offer something quite different over 11 days of competition.

Although the Games may not be held in the same regard as the Olympics or a World Championship without superpowers such as the United States, China and Russia, there will be plenty of household names and fairytale stories.

Six-time Olympic gold medallist Bolt will bring a dose of showmanship to the Hampden Park running track when the towering Jamaican attempts to win his first Commonwealth medal in the 4x100 metres relay.

“I am available for relay duty if the selectors feel I can be an asset to the Jamaican team in Glasgow,” Bolt said.

“I have received lots of requests, invitations and messages of support from my fans in Scotland who are looking forward to a great event.”

England’s double Olympic and world champion Farah, who is fit to take part in the 5,000m and 10,000m after recovering from abdominal pains, will join Bolt in Glasgow and the pair will be hoping to perform their customary “lightning bolt” and “Mobot” celebrations.

“The Commonwealth Games is different from the Olympics,” the 31-year-old Farah said.

“In terms of which countries are involved, you have everyone at the Olympics so it’s not going to be the same, but at the same time it’s another title.

“I’m very excited to compete for England and go out there.”

David Rudisha, Kenya’s Olympic 800 metres champion and world record holder, will return to Glasgow after romping to victory at the Diamond League meeting last week and New Zealand’s Olympic and world shot put champion Valerie Adams remains unbeaten in her last 53 competitions.

 

Home favourite

 

Australia is expected to dominate the swimming with the likes of Cate Campbell, Christian Sprenger and James Magnussen, but home favourite Michael Jamieson will receive strong support in his bid to become the 200 metres breaststroke champion.

South African Chad Le Clos, who beat the great Michael Phelps to Olympic gold in the men’s 200 metres butterfly in London two years ago, will also try to add to the five Commonwealth medals he won in New Delhi four years ago.

“Hopefully, I can get one or two gold medals,” Le Clos said. “I’m hoping to do better than I did four years ago.

“It’s not quite like the Olympic Games or the World Championships where it’s the best in the world. It’s still going to be tough having the Aussies, the Brits, and the Canadians there.”

At cycling’s Velodrome, named after Scotland’s six-time Olympic champion Chris Hoy, England possesses a strong team and Hoy’s former sprint partner Jason Kenny is the man to beat in the individual sprint, while 2012 Tour de France champion Bradley Wiggins takes part in the time trial.

But for all the talk surrounding the likes of Bolt and Farah, the Games also provides a platform for athletes from the lesser-known sports to make their name.

Squash is not recognised as an Olympic event and was rejected in favour of retaining wrestling at the 2020 and 2024 Games, meaning medals in Glasgow are the top prize for international competitors.

England’s three-time world champion Nick Matthew, who won the men’s singles and doubles titles in New Delhi, is the top seed in Glasgow and Malaysia’s defending champion Nicol David leads the women’s draw.

The integration of disability sports into the able-bodied programme ensures that the some of the world’s best athletes, regardless of classification, will be given equal billing.

Glasgow 2014 is a far cry from the games that were held four years ago in New Dehli. The Indian hosts were dogged by preparation and security issues whereas the Scottish organisers’ main concern will be the reliability of the British weather.

Whatever the conditions, the historic Celtic Park, home of former European Cup football winners Celtic, hosts the opening ceremony on Wednesday before the competition sprawls across the city, taking in venues mirroring the diversity of the events.

It all culminates in the finale at Hampden Park on August 3 but not before some familiar faces, along with a few new ones, have made their mark.

Cook has nowhere left to hide following Dhoni schooling

By - Jul 22,2014 - Last updated at Jul 22,2014

NEW DELHI — England skipper Alastair Cook is running out of time, excuses and places to hide after Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s India became the latest side to expose his weaknesses with a thumping victory at Lord’s to open a 1-0 lead in their five-match series.

His bright start to life as England captain at the end of 2012 now appears like a dim and distant memory as Dhoni carried on a trend started by Australia’s Michael Clarke before handing the baton on to Sri Lanka’s Angelo Mathews.

Cook’s poor form and questionable leadership have come under intense scrutiny with some critics suggesting he should give up his place at the top of England’s batting order and take a break from the game following Monday’s painful 95-run defeat.

The England skipper has little time to rally his troops ahead of the third Test starting in Southampton on Sunday, needing to lift his underperforming senior players and without the services of injured wicketkeeper Matt Prior for the rest of the series.

Cook’s malaise began with the 5-0 Ashes rout in Australia, continued when a modest Sri Lanka eked out a 1-0 series win in England earlier this summer and was amplified by being forced to eat humble pie by an average Indian attack in his own backyard.

The gravity of the latest defeat gains even more perspective when it was carried out by a notoriously poor-travelling India side that had not tasted an away Test victory since beating West Indies at Kingston in 2011.

Cook’s captaincy in the Lord’s Test provided further ammunition to detractors like Shane Warne, a constant critic of the Essex player’s “negative and boring” leadership.

England baffled the fans and pundits alike when Cook asked India to bat first at Lord’s on a greenish wicket and their pacemen proceeded to dish out a barrage of ineffective bouncers in the first session of the Test.

Similarly surprising was Cook’s decision to spread the field for India’s number 10 batsman Mohammad Shami, that too when his premier bowler James Anderson had the second new ball in his hand.

However, those frailties pale in comparison to how one-by-one his batsman succumbed to India’s hook trap after lunch on the final day, bounced out with an old ball by an erratic Ishant Sharma, who needed to be goaded into bowling short by Dhoni.

“He’s not scored a hundred in 27 innings, tactically he’s been all at sea for a while now,” former England captain Michael Vaughan told BBC, summing up Cook’s situation.

The often outspoken former opener Geoffrey Boycott was even harsher in his assessment.

“Only Alastair Cook, his wife and family want him to remain as captain — nobody else,” he said.

Astute Dhoni

 

Cook’s lack of tactical nous at Lord’s stands in stark contrast to the way Dhoni marshalled his team so skilfully, with the Indian skipper also going into the match under considerable pressure.

Regularly poor away from the sub-continent, India entered the contest with a 15-match winless streak in overseas Tests leaving critics like Ian Chappell believing it was time for Dhoni to hand the reins over to a new driver.

The 33-year-old from Ranchi, however, sniffed a rare opportunity against an English side still smarting from the Ashes rout in Australia and an aftermath that prompted wholesale changes to the composition of the Test squad.

Dhoni set attacking and innovative fields, smartly rotated his bowlers and then came up with a masterstroke on the final day when he asked a reluctant Sharma to target the confidence-sapped Englishmen with a battery of bouncers.

“To start with it was a bit difficult to convince him, so the last two overs when he came in, I just told him to bowl short,” Dhoni told reporters after the victory.

“I set a field to him so that he doesn’t even think of bowling up, so that was the strategy — give him a field where he is forced to bowl the kind of length I want him to bowl.”

Sharma, whose seven second innings wickets earned him the man-of-the-match award, was naturally effusive in his praise for his astute captain who persisted with the old ball.

“With the new ball the batsman can judge the bounce with ease, while with the old one he cannot gauge the bounce as some might take off and an odd one will keep low,” Sharma told www.bcci.tv.

“I feel all the wickets I got today should go to MS bhai [brother] because he planned them and set the field for them.”

Where did all the German Formula One fans go?

By - Jul 22,2014 - Last updated at Jul 22,2014

HOCKENHEIM, Germany  — Where have all the German Formula One fans gone?

The glamour sport was asking itself that question after tens of thousands stayed away from a home Grand Prix that should have been box office gold in the land of Mercedes but instead left plenty of empty seats on Sunday.

Some pointed the finger at the country’s reigning quadruple world champion Sebastian Vettel, struggling for form at a below-par Red Bull this season and unhappy with the new rules and engine format.

Others blamed World Cup fatigue, Germany’s strict tax rules on corporate hospitality or the absence of Michael Schumacher — the most successful driver of all time who retired in 2012 and is still in hospital after a near-fatal ski accident.

Whatever the reason, the facts on Sunday were stark.

The dominant Mercedes team, with championship leader Nico Rosberg triumphant, had just won their home Grand Prix with a German driver for the first time since the 1930s.

Such a result had looked on the cards for months — Mercedes have now won nine of 10 races so far — and yet instead of queues of cars on the autobahns and crowds thronging through the turnstiles, the race at Hockenheim drew an attendance of just 52,000 on Sunday.

In total, 95,000 turned up over the three days — a small crowd in one of the world’s largest car exporting nations and home of sporting marques like Porsche, BMW and Audi.

The Sunday figure represented a 38 per cent drop on the previous race at the circuit two years ago, when seven-time champion Schumacher was in the last season of his comeback with a then-uncompetitive Mercedes team.

When Schumacher — the first German world champion and a four-time winner in Hockenheim — announced his comeback with Mercedes in 2010, the circuit sold 10,000 tickets straight away.

 

Quiet engines

 

Katja Heim, the circuit adviser who was involved in the race promotion, said the crowd was better than the 45,000 at the Nuerburgring last year but Hockenheim was always more popular.

She blamed Vettel, and the return of the Red Bull-owned Austrian circuit which hosted its first race in 11 years in June, in part for some of the empty seats.

Vettel told reporters early in the season that the new V6 turbo hybrid engines, which are much quieter than the old V8s, sounded “shit”. He was not the only one of that opinion, but his words had resonance.

“It certainly didn’t really help that Sebastian in his frustration about the new Formula One and his car gave loads of interviews about how bad Formula One is now and that it’s not worth going there,” Heim said.

“As a four-time world champion from Germany, people believe him more than they would the salespeople. So if he says there’s nothing any more for the fans, it’s not Formula One like it used to be, that was 100 per cent quite damaging.”

Mercedes motorsport head Toto Wolff was inclined to agree.

“We’ve talked the sport down at the beginning of the year and we are all to blame, or many of us,” he told reporters on Sunday as he faced yet more questions about the poor turnout.

“The last couple of races were really good to watch. Lots of overtaking everywhere, so the sport is in good shape. We have to analyse properly why there are not more spectators in Hockenheim. It’s a shame,” he added.

“Is there a general trend that people just have many more options in what they do in the digital world? I don’t have an answer because from the sporting side all of us are doing it right.”

 

High prices

 

High ticket prices, with a category one weekend pass costing 515 euros ($700), were also seen as a factor — particularly with Austria offering a cheaper alternative as well as novelty value in the same German-speaking catchment area.

Austria was a sellout attraction, with tickets limited to 225,000 over the three days. An estimated 80,000 turned out on race day. Silverstone, home of the British Grand Prix, drew around 120,000.

Heim said Austria had probably taken six- or seven-thousand spectators away from Hockenheim, while seats that might have gone to corporate guests in the past were harder to shift.

Germany’s World Cup success, with the national team winning their fourth title in Brazil only the weekend before Hockenheim was also seen as contributing.

“Germany won the World Cup, and all the sports-mad people bought a ticket to Brazil,” Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper. “They’re just worn out after so many major sports events.”

Heim agreed that was a consideration.

“For Formula One, it would may have been better if Germany had done an England and gone out in the first round. I really believe that,” she said with a smile.

But there are also deeper concerns, one to do with demographics and the need for the sport to appeal to a younger audience with other demands on their time and attention.

“Someone asked me yesterday ‘Do you think all your spectators died away?’” laughed Heim. “They were referring actually to the point that we need to find a trick to get new, young fans. That is something the whole sport has to embrace. We need to get cooler.”

McIlroy will emerge even stronger than ever

By - Jul 22,2014 - Last updated at Jul 22,2014

HOYLAKE, England — The celebration began long before Rory McIlroy had a chance to drink out of the claret jug.

McIlroy was upstairs in the clubhouse at Royal Liverpool for the traditional toast with the R&A, unable to ignore the chants below from club members waiting for a glimpse of the British Open champion.

“Rory! Rory! Rory!”

It was a raucous scene for a club that starts with “Royal”, but such is the personality of Liverpool. The members booed anyone who came down the stairs who did not have curly brown hair, freckles and a claret jug. And their cheers shook the brick clubhouse when Boy Wonder finally descended with the oldest trophy in golf.

The scene was so much different a year ago.

McIlroy stood on a podium in a makeshift tent outside Muirfield, speaking to reporters with a vacant look in those brown eyes. He had just opened with a 79, his worst start ever in a major in what was shaping up as a year to forget. He had no idea what was wrong with him or his game.

“Sometimes I feel like I’m walking around out there and I’m unconscious,” he said that day. “I just need to try to think more. I’m trying to focus and trying to concentrate but, yeah, I can’t really fathom it at the minute.

“I’m definitely under thinking on the golf course. Maybe overthinking off it.”

He looked lost.

Now he looks like the best player in golf. And odds are, the worst of times might lead to the best.

If he felt unconscious on the golf course a year ago, he looked unconscious at times at Royal Liverpool. His golf was simply explosive on Friday afternoon with two bursts of birdies, and plenty of chances in between, on his way to a 66. The defining moment of this championship was Saturday, when McIlroy went from a share of the lead to six shots clear in just over an hour. He made eagle on two of the last three holes with two mammoth drives, two pretty swings and two perfect putts.

Nothing came easily to McIlroy over the last 18 months.

He was criticised for swapping out equipment when he signed a megadeal with Nike. He showed his age when he quit in the middle of the Honda Classic and initially blamed it on a sore wisdom tooth. He changed agents for the second time, and lawsuits followed that are still to be decided in court. He got engaged to tennis player Caroline Wozniacki to start the new year, then broke it off with a telephone call in May.

And there he was on Sunday, introduced as the “champion golfer of the year”, his name etched in silver, his eyes gazing at all the names on that claret jug.

Asked for a low point during his struggles, McIlroy didn’t hesitate.

“This time last year,” he said.

Through it all, the 25-year-old from Northern Ireland never doubted he could return. He won the US Open and the PGA Championship by eight shots. That wasn’t an accident. He won the money title on both sides of the Atlantic. There was never a question of his skill.

“It was just trying to find a way to make it come out again,” McIlroy said. “But yeah, definitely, missing the cut at Muirfield last year was a very low point. I never missed a cut at the Open before. I said to myself, ‘I’ll try to never make that happen again.’ It’s been huge what a difference a year makes. But it’s turned into a great year.”

And the tough times should only lead to better times.

Tom Watson knows that as well as anyone. He flopped badly in his first couple of shots at a major until he won the Open at Carnoustie in 1975, the first of eight majors and a career that ranks among the best. He played the British Open for the 37th time. Watson has seen a lot in his career, and failure piques his interest as much as success.

“He’s gone through a struggle with his golf game over a period of time,” Watson said of McIlroy. “And now it seems like he’s got it back. And you learn a lot from your failures. And he’ll come back stronger if you fail. I know it was a burden on him. The frustration was there with him. All golfers feel the same frustration. You’ve gone through the low spells. You’ve gone through the times where you couldn’t break an egg.

“And then finally, all of a sudden, the light switch will turn on... and it gets easy. That’s what happened to me many times in my career. And it seems like it’s happened to Rory.”

Where does McIlroy go from here? He has moved to No. 2 in the world behind Adam Scott. Even though the PGA Championship is three weeks away, his eyes already are looking ahead to Augusta National in April, a shot at the Masters to become only the sixth player to complete the career Grand Slam.

“When he’s in rhythm, he’s phenomenal,” Scott said. “He doesn’t have weaknesses and he has more strengths than most anyone else. When he’s in rhythm, you’ll see him shoot low numbers all the time.”

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