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National team finishes 5th in FIBA Asia Cup

By - Jul 20,2014 - Last updated at Jul 20,2014

AMMAN — Jordan’s national basketball team finished fifth at the 5th FIBA Asia Cup that ended in Wuhan, China.

Jordan beat Japan 79-72 after trailing 40-35 at halftime. Jordan lost to Taiwan 85-63, beat Singapore 70-53, lost to the Philippines 71-70. In Round 2, the them lost to Iran 75-60 and eventually settled to play from 5-8th spots. They beat India 69-65 and played Japan for fifth place. India finished in 7th spot.

The Philippines took third place after beating China 80-79 while Iran retained its title after beating Taiwan
89-79 in the final match. 

The winner of this tournament automatically qualifies for the FIBA Asia Championship in 2015 that qualifies three teams to the World Championship. 

Jordan moved to the 5th FIBA Asia Cup after it won the title of the West Asian Basketball Association (WABA) Championship in Amman for the second time in the absence of both the Lebanese and senior Iranian teams, that dominated the event in the past few years. 

Coach Murad Barakat acknowledged the absence of two top teams helped the squad’s results, while also noting that technical director Serbian Rajko Truman was new to the squad and many players did not have ample time to prepare with the line-up.

The team later played at the Alexandria Championship before heading to the Asia Cup that had 10 teams playing. Hosts  China, as well defending FIBA Asia Championship titleholders Iran automatically qualified to the event held every two years and previously known as the Stankovich Cup. Qatar was champs in 2004, Jordan in 2008, Lebanon in 2010 and Iran in 2012.

Jordan reached the World Championship once in 2010, after it beat Lebanon in the third place match at the 25th FIBA Asia Championship.

Jordan had previously won the West Asia title in 2002 and qualified to the FIBA Asia Championship. In the 2011 qualifiers, Jordan finished second behind Iran and qualified to the 26th FIBA Asia Championship where, for the first time in the country’s history, it reached the finals but lost the chance to qualify to the 2012 Olympic Games. Jordan then played at the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) for Men but lost to Puerto Rico and Greece and was eliminated. The OQT gave Asia’s second and third teams a chance to qualify to the London Games basketball event. In the past two seasons, Jordan had finished third at WABA Championship.

Olympic team plays Iran in friendly

By - Jul 20,2014 - Last updated at Jul 20,2014

AMMAN — The men’s Olympic team will host Iran in two matches this week as part of a rigorous agenda aimed at getting the squad ready for the 2015 Asian Games qualifiers as well as the 2016 Olympic qualifiers.

Jordan will play Iran on Monday in the first of two matches before it plays Bahrain on August 9 and hosts the Uzbek team on August 30.

Coach Jamal Abu Abed again expressed his dissatisfaction with the preliminary phase of preparations as his efforts to regroup the line-up have so far been hampered with players not released either by their teams in the league as well as being on national team duty. Even now, the line-up has five players missing as they are with Wihdat’s camp in Turkey.

Jordan lately tied Kuwait 1-1 in two matches before holding Qatar 0-0. The coach said he was satisfied with the team’s performance in latest matches despite the agenda. “We are exerting all efforts and will aim to amend any gaps in upcoming friendlies. We hope to be able to have a final camp in east Asia before heading to South Korea for the Asian Games,” Abu Abed was quoted as saying by the local media.

Jordan lately settled for second place after losing 1-0 to Palestine in the final of the Palestine International Championship. Earlier this year, the team hosted the England C squad in a historic match, losing 1-0.

F1 championship leader Rosberg wins German GP

By - Jul 20,2014 - Last updated at Jul 20,2014

HOCKENHEIM, Germany — Nico Rosberg won the German Grand Prix on Sunday to stretch his lead in the Formula One drivers’ championship over Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton, who finished third after starting 20th.

“It’s an amazing feeling to win at home. It’s a very special day,” said Rosberg, who led throughout to become the first German to triumph at Hockenheim since Michael Schumacher won in 2006.

Hamilton, who crashed in qualifying and survived a number of scrapes throughout the race, could not pass Valtteri Bottas in the closing laps and the Finn took second to give Williams its 300th F1 podium finish.

“It was not easy and required input from all the engineers. Thanks to all the fans. I saw many Finnish flags so thank you,” Bottas said.

Hamilton was pushed back to the penultimate row of the grid due to his qualifying crash and a penalty for changing his gearbox, but threaded his way through the field despite a broken front wing caused by a collision with former teammate Jenson Button of McLaren.

His super-soft tyres wore quickly in his final stint and he did not have the grip to get past Bottas. Rosberg leads Hamilton by 14 points going into next weekend’s race in Hungary.

Four-time defending champ Sebastian Vettel was fourth, ahead of Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso, who won his exciting battle with Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo for fifth.

Alonso and Force India’s Nico Hulkenberg, who finished seventh, are the only drivers to have scored points in each of the 10 races so far this season, and the Spaniard’s points finish means Ferrari has finished in the points for 77 consecutive races.

There was a collision at the first corner between Kevin Magnussen’s McLaren and Felipe Massa’s Williams, which flipped over and slid across the run-off area in a shower of sparks.

The McLaren also left the track and Ricciardo had to steer wide around them to avoid the damage, dropping him down to 15th and compromising his race.

Magnussen had to pit to repair damage to his left front tyre but Massa’s race was over. The Brazilian emerged unhurt from the car to cheers from the crowd.

“I’m okay. The accident was a little bit more scary watching than being inside. I just saw everything the other way around, but I am fine,” Massa said. “I am so disappointed at what happened. It’s another race and another car that has pushed me out and finished my race. With a car that is very competitive and fast that’s so disappointing.”

Massa said the Danish driver was at fault although a stewards’ review found no wrongdoing.

“I was in front and doing the corner in front. If someone needs to watch, it’s the car behind,” Massa said.

It was looking like it could be another a 1-2 for Mercedes as Hamilton quickly worked his way through the field. The Briton hit Kimi Raikkonen’s Ferrari to overtake both the Finn and Ricciardo in a brave move at the hairpin on lap 13. A piece of Raikkonen’s front plate flew into the air.

On lap 30, Hamilton tried to overtake Button on the hairpin but damaged his left-front wing and that proved critical in finishing third rather than second.

“I did as good as I could. It was hard to get through the pack safely and I had a little bit of a collision with Jenson,” Hamilton said.

“I thought he was going to open the door which he has done a couple of times lately but that was my bad judgement.”

Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat retired on lap 46 when his car burst into flames. The Russian was visibly annoyed, hitting a barrier in frustration.

Adrian Sutil of Sauber spun on lap 50 of 67 and stalled in the middle of the start-finish straight. The race director had to make a big decision on whether to bring out the safety car, which would have pulled Rosberg back to the field, or let the race continue, and he chose the latter even though it took a couple of laps before they moved the car.

“That would have made it more difficult,” a relieved Rosberg acknowledged.

It has been a remarkable couple of weeks since the German’s first non-finish of the season at the British Grand Prix. The 29-year-old married his girlfriend, watched Germany win the World Cup, signed a contract extension with Mercedes, and he has now won his home GP for his fourth victory of the season.

Rosberg had previously not finished higher than eighth place at Hockenheim, in 2010. The best he managed at a German GP was fourth at the Nurburgring the year before that.

Mercedes’ Rosberg on pole as Hamilton crashes out

By - Jul 20,2014 - Last updated at Jul 20,2014

HOCKENHEIM, Germany — Formula One leader Nico Rosberg put Mercedes on pole position for his home German Grand Prix on Saturday after a brake failure dumped title rival and teammate Lewis Hamilton out of qualifying.

Hamilton, who is four points behind Rosberg in the standings after nine of 19 races, ended up sore and 16th after a heavy crash but should start 15th when a penalty is applied to Sauber’s Esteban Gutierrez ahead of him.

Finland’s Valtteri Bottas joined Rosberg on the front row for Mercedes-powered Williams, with Brazilian teammate Felipe Massa qualifying third on a searingly hot afternoon at Hockenheim with temperatures in the 50OC.

The pole was Rosberg’s fifth of the season, fourth in the last five races and ninth of his career, but less satisfying than some.

“It’s great, a home race and to be on pole is fantastic,” the 29-year-old, who got married last week and signed a new multi-year contract with Mercedes while also celebrating Germany’s football World Cup win, told reporters.

“Of course I would have preferred it if it was an open fight with Lewis, so a little less happy as a result because Lewis didn’t have a shot at it again,” said Rosberg.

McLaren’s Danish rookie Kevin Magnussen qualified a strong fourth, with 2009 world champion teammate Jenson Button only 11th, to ensure Mercedes-powered cars filled the two front rows of the grid.

Red Bull’s quadruple world champion Sebastian Vettel, a home winner last year when the race was held at the Nuerburgring, will line up sixth and behind Australian teammate Daniel Ricciardo in fifth place.

Victory on Sunday would make Rosberg the first German to win his home Grand Prix in a German car since Rudolf Caracciola in 1939, as well as the first driver in 60 years to win in Germany for a works Mercedes team.

With five of the eight races to date at the redesigned circuit won from pole, Rosberg also knows he has a great chance to extend his lead considerably although the weather could play a hand.

“It is supposed to be a bit colder [on Sunday], so it should make it easier on the tyres. The weather could play a role, so I just need to take it as it comes,” said Rosberg.

Hamilton crash

 

The German had been fastest in final practice, after Hamilton had been top of the timesheets on Friday, with Saturday expected to be another duel between the top two for pole but it did not turn out that way.

The Briton provided the early drama when he crashed heavily at the Sachs Kurve section of the stadium complex, where Mercedes have a grandstand, bringing out red flags to stop the session in the first phase of qualifying.

The team blamed a right front brake disc failure for the accident, with a puff of smoke visible before the car spun and was pitched into the tyre wall.

Hamilton — who uses a different brand of brakes to Rosberg as a matter of personal choice — stepped out of the car and was taken to the medical centre before returning to the paddock, declared OK but sore.

The crash continued a run of bad luck for 2008 champion Hamilton, who has retired from two races this season through no fault of his own while Rosberg suffered his first blank in Britain two weeks ago.

Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso, winner of the last two races held at Hockenheim, qualified seventh while struggling Finnish teammate Kimi Raikkonen starts 12th.

Russian rookie Daniil Kvyat qualified eighth for Toro Rosso, with the Force India duo of Nico Hulkenberg and Sergio Perez 9th and 10th.

Jordan up 6 spots in FIFA rankings

By - Jul 19,2014 - Last updated at Jul 19,2014

AMMAN  — Jordan climbed up six spots to 57th place in the latest FIFA rankings issued over the weekend.

Following the recently concluded World Cup, there were big changes on FIFA top 10 rankings as newly crowned champs Germany took top spot followed by runners-up Argentina, the Netherlands, Columbia, Belgium, Uruguay, Brazil, Spain, Switzerland and France. 

The Kingdom, which qualified to the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Asian Cup 2015 in Australia, went up to fifth among Asian Football Confederation teams, and is now the top ranked Arab team in Asia and fourth ranked Arab team after Algeria, Egypt and Tunisia.

Asian rankings are led by Japan at 45th spot, followed by Iran (49), Uzbekistan (52), South Korea (56), Jordan (57), the UAE (65), Oman (69), Australia (76), Saudi Arabia (78) and Palestine (98) — after they qualified to the Asian Cup for the first time and shot up 71 spots last month.

Jordan advanced to the Asian Cup finals after finishing second in Group A qualifiers behind leaders Oman. They will play in Group D with 2011 titleholders Japan, Iraq and Palestine.

The qualifiers included 25 teams playing in five groups of four teams each. The top two teams from each group and the best third-placed team qualified to the tournament set for January 9, 2015. Teams qualifying automatically to the finals include 2011 Asian Cup champions Japan, third-placed South Korea, hosts and runners-up Australia, AFC Challenge Cup 2012 winners North Korea and 2014 AFC Challenge Cup champs Palestine. 

Jordan last played Columbia in June, losing 3-0 in an important friendly as the squad kicked off a series of high level friendlies in preparation for Asian Cup 2015. The Jordan Football Association (JFA) has now scheduled six other matches aimed at giving the line-up optimum competitive experience against leading teams as they prepare for their third participation in the Asian Cup. 

Jordan is set to host Uzbekistan on September 3, China on September 9, Malaysia on October 11, South Korea on November 14, the UAE on December 31 and Bahrain on January 4, 2015.

In its past eight times since first taking part in Asian Cup qualifiers in 1972, Jordan reached the finals twice. In the 13th Asian Cup, it lost to Japan in the quarter-finals and jumped to the best ever FIFA ranking of 37th place in August 2004. In 2011, Jordan again reached the quarter-finals where it lost 2-1 to Uzbekistan.

During 2013, Jordan climbed 30 spots and ended the year in 65th place overall and 5th among AFC teams.

Attention to detail, milkshakes fire German glory

By - Jul 18,2014 - Last updated at Jul 18,2014

BERLIN — The omens were not good.

In late May, as the Germany football team gathered at their World Cup training camp in Italy, news broke that manager Joachim Loew had been stripped of his driver’s license for six months after a series of speeding tickets.

Days earlier, Kevin Grosskreutz, a versatile defender, had been caught urinating in the lobby of a luxury hotel in Berlin.

Two other players, attending a public relations event, had been involved in a high-speed car crash that seriously hurt two pedestrians.

The troubled start fuelled public panic about Loew’s coaching strategies.

The training camp, designed to get the players ready for the tropical heat of Brazil, was beset by cold temperatures and heavy rain. Then, in a friendly against Armenia before their departure for Brazil, Germany lost Marco Reus, one of the team’s best players, to an ankle injury.

With a “golden generation” of some of the best football players Germany has ever produced, there is little doubt the pressure on the 54-year-old Loew was building as he set off for Brazil.

Eighty one million Germans — desperate for a fourth world title after wins in 1954, 1974 and 1990 — felt it was time for the sharply dressed, mop-haired manager to deliver or quit.

The “Bundestrainer” — as Germans call the head coach — had taken his talent-laden team to the semifinals of their last four major international tournaments, but failed to win a trophy.

That was just not good enough in a country where the World Cup has been an integral part of post-World War II identity ever since the 1954 “Miracle of Berne”.

That improbable triumph, historians say, gave the broken, bombed-out nation such a boost it helped spark West Germany’s economic miracle.

So how did Germany overcome all their problems and go on to beat hosts Brazil in a sensational 7-1 semifinal thrashing before edging Argentina 1-0 in extra-time in the final?

The answer: Attention to detail, ignoring distractions and milkshakes.

Talking to reporters after arriving at Germany’s Brazilian base in Santo Andre, an isolated town on the Atlantic shore, Loew outlined his thoughts.

“I’ve been around long enough to realise that some of these same kinds of debates repeat themselves from tournament to tournament,” he said.

“Obviously people are going to have different opinions on the line-up and on the tactics. But I’m going to try to stay away from of all that.”

 

Six warm-ups

 

More than any other squad at the World Cup, Loew and his players treated each of their six matches as warm-ups along the way to the final they always seemed confident of reaching — and winning.

Victories in the group stage and the early knock-out phase brought not celebrations but a quiet round of banana milk shakes at the German compound.

Loew repeated a simple sporting mantra after each win — victory was meaningless unless they won the cup.

With customary German thoroughness, Loew and his coaches were as well prepared as possible. They spent two years focusing on every detail from tactics to vegetation.

A team of 50 students at the University of Cologne compiled an enormous database of information about every team, their strategies and their players.

German staff took care to make sure the grass on their training pitch near their compound was “South American” and identical to that used in Brazilian pitches.

Loew picked the base because it was two hours flying time from the bright lights of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, where many of the other 31 teams set up.

He also wanted his players to be in a tropical part of Brazil to get ready for the scorching afternoon conditions they would experience.

To blot out distractions further Germany struck a deal with a German developer in Brazil to build them a spanking new 14-villa luxury compound they dubbed “Campo Bahia”.

The fortress, erected in the middle of a poor town of 800 residents, was protected by high walls and armed guards.

Some 30 kilometres and a 15-minute ferry-crossing from the nearest city of Porto Seguro, the camp’s isolation meant no distractions, no sponsors, no well-wishers and no journalists to stir dissent.

“We’re glad that none of you tried to climb over the walls and sneak into the camp,” team manager Oliver Bierhoff told reporters on the eve of the final. “The conditions for the team to focus and concentrate were ideal.”

Loew and his players kept their distance from the 100 or so German reporters who followed the team. Unlike his predecessors Rudi Voeller and Juergen Klinsmann, Loew did not speak to journalists on the plane journey to the World Cup.

Once in Brazil, reporters were fed information in tightly controlled daily news conferences.

Only the odd player and occasionally an assistant coach were sent up to answer questions. Loew attended just two in five weeks and even bluntly told the reporters that he was not reading German newspapers — and neither were his players.

The manager was spotted almost every day jogging or walking along the beach.

“That’s where he lets off steam,” said captain Philipp Lahm.

 

New phones

 

The players also got new cell phone numbers before the tournament, effectively cutting off their media contacts.

“Sorry, I don’t have my cell phone anymore so I can’t get your text messages,” Loew told one exasperated tabloid reporter.

Klinsmann’s assistant coach from 2004 to 2006, Loew was part of a revolution in the German team.

Klinsmann, a former Germany striker, added physical fitness specialists, a psychologist and urged the team to play more open, attacking football. That was credited with helping Germany to the European Championship final in 2008 and the semifinals of the World Cup in 2006 and 2010.

But after Loew’s entertaining squad lost yet another semifinal at the 2012 European Championship to outsiders Italy, the mood began to turn.

Loew had made wholesale changes before the Italy match. When Germany lost, critics said Loew was guilty of over-coaching and was a control freak.

In Brazil he decided he would not get burned like that again and re-jigged his high-scoring team to give it more defensive strength by including four towering centre-backs, sacrificing speed and crossing proficiency for a tighter defence.

The move was poorly understood and widely criticised. The German public wanted attractive, high-scoring play and assured victories.

In the eyes of many, Loew also committed a cardinal sin by putting his captain Lahm, considered by many to be the world’s best right back, into midfield for the first four matches.

Germany struggled at times and the criticism escalated. When a reporter accused Loew of appearing to be content with the shaky 2-1 extra-time win over Algeria in the last 16, Loew snapped.

“Should I really be disappointed that we made it to the quarter-finals?,” he said.

An opinion poll showed 93 per cent of Germans wanted Lahm to return to full back and Loew moved him there for the final three matches.

“No, I don’t have a closed mind when it comes to advice,” Loew said. “A team needs to improve their performance through the course of the tournament. That’s the art that a team needs to master.”

After the victory over Argentina, Loew smiled for the first time in weeks and said he was keen to fulfil his contract, which has another two years to run.

“This is something for eternity,” he said. “We’re the first European team to win the World Cup in South America. It took 10 years of hard work to get here.”

Brazil rethinks future after World Cup failure

By - Jul 18,2014 - Last updated at Jul 18,2014

SAO PAULO — The World Cup held potential disaster for Brazil — the country, not the team.

Yet the country pulled off a magnificent tournament, albeit with a few bumps. It’s the team that has left many Brazilians wondering what went horribly wrong.

The Cup was widely seen as theirs for the taking, especially on home turf. They finished in fourth place with their star badly injured and the brutal memory of a 7-1 rout by the Germans in front of a global audience.

The most successful nation in World Cup history has been eliminated in three straight tournaments, enough to raise questions about whether it’s doing the right things to keep up with countries that have dominated the sport in recent years.

It’s already clear Brazil won’t be the same after the home tournament.

Luiz Felipe Scolari will not be returning, and new players will be joining Neymar and Oscar for the 2018 World Cup in Russia. Critics say bigger changers are needed, including in the local football confederation.

Scolari’s replacement was not immediately announced. Assistant Carlos Alberto Parreira, the coach who led Brazil to the 1994 World Cup title, was also leaving.

The resounding 7-1 loss to Germany, which embarrassed the nation, could become a turning point for the national team. The semifinal defeat has everyone thinking about the need to rebuild.

“We failed. We didn’t play up to expectations, we know it wasn’t a good tournament,” said striker Neymar, who missed the last two matches because of a back injury. “We didn’t play the kind of football that the Brazilian national team plays. It was just regular, and that’s why we still reached the semifinals, but it wasn’t Brazilian football, not the kind of football that enchants everybody.”

Brazil never displayed its traditional “Jogo Bonito”, or “Beautiful Game”, and ended the tournament with three wins, two draws and two losses, including 3-0 to the Netherlands in the third-place match on Saturday.

“Brazilian football has to evolve in general,” right back Dani Alves said. “We can’t discredit the work that has been done by this team, but we have to find a way to start restructuring our football from the youth levels up.”

Sports Minister Aldo Rebelo blamed some of Brazil’s failings on young players moving early to European clubs. He said parents were given jobs with clubs, and brought their children along.

“I have already denounced this,” Rebelo said Monday. “This is a type of football colonialism exercised by rich teams in Europe.”

The president of the Brazilian confederation, Jose Maria Marin, had said that losing the World Cup at home would be like “going to hell”.

“We need to think football differently,” said Brazilian coach Paulo Autuori, who led Sao Paulo to the Club World Cup title in 2005. “We need the Brazilian confederation in the hands of people from football. We need people in charge who can think football.”

Marin, a former politician, is leaving the confederation next year and will be replaced by Sao Paulo state federation president Marco Paulo Del Nero. Both were politically linked to Ricardo Teixeira, who ruled the confederation for more than 20 years before resigning in 2012 citing medical reasons and amid a cloud of allegations of corruption and irregularities in his administration.

Scolari was picked to lead the 2014 team mostly because of his popularity and experience from the 2002 title, but many critics said he was outdated as a coach. Before rejoining the national team, the coach was relegated in the Brazilian league with Palmeiras.

“We should thank him, but we need to choose new people with new thoughts about how to play the Brazilian way,” said former Brazil star Zico, who also blamed Brazil’s problems “on poor administration, a lack of structure and a vacuum of leadership.”

Scolari said Brazil is going through a period in which there are “fewer young promising players” in the country, and said that the confederation needs to “keep working” to make sure more appear in the future.

There are a few names already rumoured to be the next coach, including Tite and Muricy Ramalho, who have been successful with local clubs in recent years. Ramalho is a four-time Brazilian champion, while Tite led Corinthians to the Club World Cup title in 2012. There is also talk in local media about international coaches, including Pep Guardiola, Jose Mourinho and Chile’s Argentine coach Jorge Sampaoli.

Regardless of the new coach, many of the players will be changing.

Of the 23 players picked by Scolari for the home tournament, only seven will be younger than 30 in Russia — Neymar, Oscar, Marcelo, Luiz Gustavo, Paulinho, Willian and Bernard.

“It was disappointing in the end, but we have to remember that this generation has started a rebuilding process for 2018 with a fourth-place finish at the World Cup,” Scolari noted.

Neymar, who will be 26 in Russia, will still be carrying the hopes of the national team for a sixth world title.

“This will hurt for a long time, but we know that better days will come,” the 22-year-old striker said. “We have to do whatever possible to make sure we can make the Brazilian people happy again.”

We have nothing to hide, says Qatar World Cup chief

By - Jul 16,2014 - Last updated at Jul 16,2014

LONDON — The 2022 World Cup will take place as planned in Qatar and the country has nothing to hide over allegations of corruption during the bid process, the tournament communications director, Nasser Al Khater, said on Wednesday.

“We’ve held ourselves to the highest ethical standards. We are confident of how we’ve behaved,” Khater said on Al Jazeera television. “We are not worried. The World Cup will take place in Qatar.”

Khater said his country would comply with the FIFA investigation into possible bid corruption but stressed Qatar had nothing to hide.

“Qatar is part of the investigation and so is Russia [2018]. The whole process is part of that. It’s unfortunate that people single out Qatar every time they discuss it,” he said.

He also distanced himself from disgraced former FIFA executive Mohamed Ben Hammam, saying he was not representing the Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee in the bid process.

FIFA President Sepp Blatter said before the Brazil World Cup that it may have been a mistake to award the tournament to Qatar due to the intense heat in the summer, when temperatures can reach up to 50oC, and winter may be a better option.

Khater said either way his country can host the World Cup in the summer or winter.

“We are waiting on a task force to come back and make recommendations. Our plans won’t change, we are going to be ready whether it is the winter or summer,” he said.

He added that his committee was also doing everything it could to make working conditions safe in Qatar following criticism from Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch on the alleged mistreatment of migrant workers, mostly from Nepal and India.

Khater said the 2022 World Cup would be a celebration and truly a Middle Eastern affair.

“These two billion people are going to be from various cultures, various ethnicities, various people from different parts of west Asia, the Middle East, north Africa and I think it is going to be rich and vibrant,” he said.

Sun shines on game but not everything in garden is rosy

By - Jul 16,2014 - Last updated at Jul 16,2014

RIO DE JANEIRO — After putting on what was widely considered the best-ever World Cup in terms of entertainment FIFA is unlikely to make wholesale changes to the way the game is played but at the professional level some issues need addressing.

Football’s authorities are proud of the fact that football’s 17 laws have remained fundamentally unchanged for over 100 years but, in reality, there have been regular adjustments and shifts of emphasis that have altered many aspects of the game.

The definition of foul play is the same now as it was in 1950 yet tackles that were considered part and parcel of the game then would be immediately penalised now and perhaps draw a yellow or red card — innovations introduced in 1970.

The offside law was once black and white, routinely explained to the uninitiated with salt and pepper pots.

Now there is a whole “active” element to benefit the attacking side that means even experts and pundits can disagree over whether a player is on or off.

The latest innovation to make its World Cup debut in Brazil was goalline technology.

In use without any problems in England’s Premier League last season, this advance has few opponents despite FIFA dragging its heels for so long before England midfielder Frank Lampard’s laughably disallowed goal against Germany four years ago finally forced their hand.

 

Next level

 

Some observers are now talking about the next level of technological interference — the use of TV replays to aid the match officials, particularly in the case of offside.

In general, replays do a great job of highlighting just how superbly efficient linesmen are when it comes to offside decisions, despite the routine howls of protest from players and fans when they go against them.

Opponents claim the wait for a replay decision would “slow the game down” but for a tournament like the World Cup, with cameras and replays available in an instant, it would make little time difference if decisions were routinely reviewed, as in rugby.

FIFA President Sepp Blatter opened this World Cup by floating the idea of each team having two or three “challenges”, as in cricket, where the tension of awaiting the outcome on the big screens has become part and parcel of the fan experience.

That is unlikely to come about soon, but one area the game’s overseers do need to address is how and why referees have decided to allow a virtual wrestling free-for-all at every corner and free kick.

When Brazil’s Fred tumbled to the ground after feeling the slight presence of the hand of Croatia’s Dejan Lovren in the tournament’s opening game, supporters of the striker claimed he was fully entitled to fall over because “there was contact”.

Yet at corners defenders have no compunction about wrapping both arms around an attacker, gripping his arm or virtually tearing the shirt off his back, safe in the knowledge that nothing will be done.

Referees routinely delay the taking of a kick to hand out a stern lecture and then do absolutely nothing when the players ignore him seconds later. Not one penalty was awarded for such an offence that, if carried out on the halfway line, would earn a certain booking.

 

Unenviable task

 

The referees have no excuse for ignoring this behaviour, even if there seems to be a tacit agreement not to penalise it, but when it comes to diving and “simulation” they have an unenviable task.

Arjen Robben was roundly abused for diving to gain the last-gasp penalty that gave the Netherlands a 2-1 win over Mexico in the second round yet his supporters said he had every right to fall over the outstretched leg of Rafa Marquez.

During the third-place play-off Brazil midfielder Oscar suffered the ignominy of becoming the only player in all 64 matches to be booked for diving.

He was outraged as his leg was eventually clearly taken from under him but that happened only because he had dragged it beneath him in an unnatural gait, which is adopted by some players inside the area in an attempt to “win” a penalty.

It was an important action by Algerian referee Djamel Haimoudi, showing that officials are not always going to be hoodwinked by what is now a widespread “technique” and one that brings outrage to the vast majority of watching fans.

FIFA and national federations need to support their match officials in the continuing fight against underhand methods, which is the latest evolution in the game that never changes.

Ecstatic Berlin crowds welcome victorious German team home

By - Jul 15,2014 - Last updated at Jul 15,2014

BERLIN — About a million jubilant Germans welcomed their triumphant national football team home to Berlin on Tuesday, many waving flags and banners saying “We are all World Champions!” as they basked in the nation’s fourth World Cup victory.

Hundreds of thousands of revellers packed Berlin’s “fan mile”, a 1.3km stretch of road running from the west of the capital up to the Brandenburg Gate, for a huge party. Many more lined the streets in the city centre along the team’s route.

The players danced and sang their way onto a stage at the Gate, a potent symbol of the Cold War, dressed in black
T-shirts with the
number 1 emblazoned on them and threw footballs into the crowd.

“We’re all world champions!” coach Joachim Loew told the crowd.

“Of course, it was a long way to the title, and an incredibly tough one in the end. But we’re incredibly happy to be here with the fans now.”

“Without you we wouldn’t be here. We are all world champions,” low-key Loew, affectionately known as Jogi, told the fans, many of them holding red posters with the words “Thanks Boys”.

Young and old fans alike were decked out in Germany shirts, many with their faces painted black, red and gold and with wigs and bandanas in the national colours. Many had started drinking beer hours before the team’s arrival from Brazil.

“This is a once-in-a-lifetime experience, it’s something to remember,” said Sabine Kopf, 42, who travelled by train from the western city of Cologne with her husband and 11-year-old son who wore a shirt with “Jogi’s Joker” on the back.

A black open-roofed bus drove the players, who jumped, screamed, waved and held up the golden World Cup trophy, through the streets of Berlin at a snail’s pace for about 2-1/2 hours.

“I am really excited to welcome the World Cup winners during my lifetime. I am from East Germany and this is important,” said Guenther Richter, 51, from East Berlin.

Sunday’s 1-0 victory over Argentina in Rio de Janeiro marked the first time a reunified Germany has been world champion, with West Germany having won the trophy in 1954, 1974 and 1990.

Pride

The success of the national team since 2006, when Germany hosted the World Cup, is widely seen as having helped Germans take greater pride in their nationality. History had previously made them uncomfortable about displaying such feelings.

Television channels blanketed the airwaves with coverage of the party and newspapers dedicated whole editions to the win.

“This is what four feels like!” splashed top-selling Bild on its front cover, with a picture of the team with hands raised.

“Welcome, World Champions!” Berliner Zeitung wrote on its front page.

Football enthusiast Chancellor Angela Merkel watched the match in Rio and had pictures taken in the dressing room with the exhausted but jubilant players afterwards.

However, she did not receive them on Tuesday as she was in Croatia. Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit welcomed the team in Berlin and the players signed the city’s roll of honour.

A roar went up from the crowd in the “fan mile” when the team’s plane circled overhead. “Football’s coming home!” bellowed fans when it touched down at the airport.

Captain Philipp Lahm led the team down the plane’s stairs holding above his head the golden trophy secured in Sunday’s final, with midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger close behind him wrapped in a German flag.

“We all saw each other here in 2006. But now we’ve got the damned thing,” Schweinsteiger, who got a battering during the final match and ended up with a bloody cut under his eye, told the fans in the city centre.

Germany snatched the win in extra time with a stunning goal from fresh-faced Mario Goetze, a 22-year-old boy wonder who got a hero’s welcome when he danced onto the Berlin stage.

“This is an unbelievable feeling. It’s a dream,” he beamed.

It’s indescribable,” fan Till Uhlig from Hannover said of the crowds.

People travelled to the celebration from all over the country: “They’ve all taken their holidays to come here. It’s absolutely crazy,” he said. “We were behind the stage where the bus pulled up. Just incredible.

Berlin resident Katrin Fels, who brought her daughter, said: “We knew it would happen. It was clear from the start of the year that we had the best team. It’s perfect, perfect for all generations.”

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