Thursday, September 9, 2010

FIFA to consider axing extra time at World Cups - Blatter

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FIFA President Sepp Blatter
Photo: Reuters

FIFA is to consider abolishing extra time at the World Cup and going straight to penalties if knockout matches are drawn, the federation's president Sepp Blatter said on Thursday.

Blatter also said that FIFA would look at ways of encouraging teams to play a more attacking game after a flurry of low-scoring contests in the early stages of this year's World Cup in South Africa.

"In the first few matches of the group stage in South Africa, we witnessed some teams that went out to avoid defeat, that were playing for a draw from the outset," he told FIFA's website (www.fifa.com).

"This is a topic that I would like to discuss at upcoming football and technical committee meetings.

“We have to try to find a way to encourage free-flowing football in tournaments like the World Cup, with teams playing to win.

Blatter's remarks differ from an interview he gave to the German magazine Focus last month, when he was quoted as saying FIFA were considering penalty shootouts to provide a winner when drawn matches ended goalless.

"Often we see teams set themselves up even more defensively in extra time, in an attempt to avoid conceding a goal at all costs.

"To prevent this, we could go directly to a penalty shootout at full time, or reintroduce the golden goal rule. We'll see what emerges from the Committee meetings."

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Woods eager to carry momentum into BMW stomping ground

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Tiger Woods of the US waits on the third tee during the fourth round of the Deutsche Bank Championship in Norton, Massachusetts September 6, 2010
Photo: Reuters

Tiger Woods returned to one of his happy hunting grounds on Wednesday riding the momentum from one of the best weeks of a turbulent year into his title defense at the BMW Open.

With his divorce finalized, a spot on the US Ryder Cup squad confirmed and his game pointed in the right direction, Woods's world seemed to be slipping back into a familiar orbit on a sunny day at Cog Hill Golf and Country Club where he has been a winner five times.

"It's always nice to come back to a venue that I've won but also I've won it multiple times and in different ways," Woods told reporters. "I can always kind of go back to that no matter how I'm playing.”

“I can still figure out a way to get it done."

Winless after 11 starts, Woods arrives at the third stop on the FedEx Cup playoff playing his best golf of the season.

He finished in a tie for 12th at The Barclays and tied for 11th at the Deutsche Bank Championship, that he had three straight rounds in the 60s for the first time this year.

The good vibes continued to flow on Tuesday when US Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin made the world number one a wild card pick for the squad that will take on Europe at Celtic Manor in Wales from October 1-3.

Woods was even in a bit of playful mood when he met with the media on Wednesday until asked about working relationship with swing guru Sean Foley and if he was paying him.

"That's none of your business," snapped the American.

Pressed further, Woods came as close as he has to confirming the Canadian as his new swing coach saying: "He's coaching me."

With Foley's help, Woods appears to be getting his game back on track, but three consecutive rounds in the 60s is a modest achievement for a golfer who not long ago considered winning three straight titles routine.

Still, Woods has seized on every positive as a sign of something to build on.

His next target is the Tour Championship in Atlanta and the world number one is projected to need a top-five finish at the BMW to clinch a spot in the elite 30 man field.

But Woods, who will be going up against all 11 of his Ryder Cup team mates at Cog Hill, said he is encouraged by his recent progress and feels he is headed in the right direction.

"Obviously the confidence is coming up... I've put a lot of hard work into it," said Woods.

"That's been nice to see the progress, to be able to go out there and hit the golf ball the way I know I can, know the fixes and understand the concept.”

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Barca, Real and Chelsea eye Inter's crown

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Chelsea's Nicolas Anelka (L) challenges Stoke City's Danny Collins during their English Premier League soccer match at Stamford Bridge in London August 28, 2010
Photo: Reuters

European champions Inter Milan will rewrite the record books and claim a place among the greats if they retain the Champions League trophy this season.

Huge obstacles stand in their way, of course, from Spain's Barcelona and Real Madrid, England's Chelsea, Manchester United and Arsenal, last season's runners-up Bayern Munich and their arch-rivals AC Milan.

Europe's leading bookmakers have almost all ignored Inter's claims and installed Barcelona as favorites to repeat their 2009 success with Real Madrid and Chelsea also heavily backed.

But Inter's new manager Rafa Benitez won the competition in 2005 with Liverpool and would like nothing better than to restore his reputation as one of Europe's shrewdest coaches.

If Benitez leads them to victory at Wembley Stadium on May 28, they would emulate their own back-to-back successes of 1964 and 1965 and take huge delight in becoming the first club to do so since AC Milan triumphed in 1989 and 1990.

But no side has remained European champions after changing a winning manager since Bayern Munich lifted the trophy under Udo Lattek in 1974 and Dettmar Cramer in 1975.

That is the challenge facing Benitez who replaced Jose Mourinho when the Portuguese decamped to Real Madrid after securing last season's triumph over Bayern to make Inter European champions for the first time for 45 years.

Mourinho may have got up the noses of the Italian soccer establishment but he gave Inter a winning mentality in Europe after decades of under-achievement in the world's premier club competition.

Different style

Inter have decided to stick with the same ageing squad, minus striker Mario Balotelli, leaving fans worried the lack of investment will harm their chances.

Inter face Tottenham Hotspur and Twente Enschede as well as Werder Bremen in the group stage but will need to improve their early season form which has been patchy.

Among those threatening Inter's ambitions are Barcelona, eager to make up for last season's semifinal loss to the Italians, and a rejuvenated Real Madrid under Mourinho.

The canny Mourinho's arrival at the Bernabeu has raised hopes the club can end a lengthy drought in Europe's elite club competition.

The nine-times continental champions have failed to make the quarterfinals for the past six seasons, a galling statistic for big-spending president Florentino Perez.

The construction magnate returned to the club before the 2009-10 campaign pledging to restore former glories but even an outlay of US$319 million on players including Cristiano Ronaldo and Kaka failed to yield a trophy.

Real have spent wisely, bringing in Germany midfielders Sami Khedira and Mesut Ozil, Argentina winger Angel Di Maria and teenage midfielder Sergio Canales.

But Pep Guardiola's Barca side have added prolific Spain striker David Villa, combative Argentina midfielder Javier Mascherano and versatile Brazilian defender Adriano Correia.

Effective team

Mourinho, a former assistant coach at the Nou Camp, got the better of Guardiola last season but it will be hard to mould the Real squad into an effective team in his first campaign.

If he does he will become the first man to lift the European Cup with three different clubs following his initial triumph with Porto in 2004.

Real are also in a tricky group, pitted against old rivals AC Milan, Ajax Amsterdam and Auxerre of France.

Barca, by contrast, are the finished article, boasting eight Spain internationals, including World Cup winners Villa, Xavi and Andres Iniesta, and should progress comfortably from a group with Rubin Kazan, Panathinaikos and FC Copenhagen.

Exciting arrival

Chelsea, who played outstanding football to claim the English double last season, have won their first three league games with a 14-0 goal tally and have recruited exciting midfielder Ramires from Benfica and Israel's Yossi Benayoun.

Manchester United can never be ruled out especially if Wayne Rooney puts his off-field problems out of his mind and reproduces the scoring form he showed for most of last season.

Arsenal have failed to win a trophy for five seasons but usually do well in Europe.

Manager Arsene Wenger's best piece of transfer business was keeping Cesc Fabregas at the Emirates, boosting the chances of a London side lifting the European Cup for the first time.

With three London teams competing, the first time one city has provided three sides in the competition, and the final taking place in their home city, there is even more incentive than usual for them to go all the way.

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Federer blows hot at windy US Open

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Roger Federer of Switzerland celebrates defeating Robin Soderling of Sweden during the US Open tennis tournament in New York September 8, 2010
Photo: Reuters

Roger Federer mastered the wild weather and his opponent to storm into the US Open semifinals on Wednesday and remain on course for another showdown with his great rival Rafa Nadal.

Federer was at his brilliant best as he outclassed Sweden's dual French Open finalist Robin Soderling 6-4 6-4 7-5 to reach the last four at Flushing Meadows for the seventh year in a row in conditions better suited for flying a kite than tennis.

"It's not easy, you know, it's cold, everywhere it's blowing,” Federer told reporters. “You feel like it's blowing through your ears and into your eyes.”

"I used to dislike it so much (but) I'm on the other side now.

“I was able to turn it around and kind of take enjoyment out of playing in the wind."

Yet to drop a set in the tournament, Federer next plays Serbia's Novak Djokovic in Saturday's men's semifinals with a final against Spain's Nadal looming large. The US Open is the only grand slam where the pair have not met in the final.

Djokovic also advanced in straight sets, beating Frenchman Gael Monfils 7-6 6-1 6-2, but was unable to produce his best after gale force winds turned the last slam of the season into a lottery.

"These are the worst conditions at this tournament," Djokovic grumbled. "I don't think the crowd enjoyed the tennis too much."

Caroline Wozniacki and Vera Zvonarea steamed into women's semifinals but were more relieved than excited after being tormented by the elements as much as their rivals.

"This felt like playing in a hurricane," Wozniacki said after beating unseeded Slovakian Dominika Cibulkova 6-2 7-5. "It was just about surviving."

Zvonareva was almost apologetic after her 6-3 7-5 win over Estonia's Kaia Kanepi that was littered with 11 service breaks and 88 unforced errors.

"We both were trying our best out there," the Russian seventh seed protested.

Comical moments

The wind inside Arthur Ashe Stadium was blowing so hard that hitting winners almost became a secondary consideration.

Players were repeatedly having to re-toss after gusts blew the ball out of their reach when they were about to serve. Just landing the ball on the court became an achievement.

It lent itself to some comical moments but for tennis purists, it was a day to forget. The only consolation was that Mother Nature did not claim any victims and the four favorites all won easily.

Federer alone seemed unaffected by the conditions, thumping 18 aces past a bewildered Soderling. The fifth seed ended a run of 12 straight losses to Federer when he beat him at Roland Garros in June but normal service resumed on the hard courts of New York.

"I've played in such strong winds,” Federer said. “I've practiced in such hot conditions.

“Whatever you throw at me, I can do it.”

The acrobatic Monfils provided Djokovic with some worrying moments when he grabbed an early service break but the world number three was able to break back and win the first set tiebreaker before running away with the match.

After a slow start to the tournament, Djokovic is starting to show signs that he is getting back to the form that saw him reach the US Open final in 2007, but has to face Federer next.

The Swiss beat him in the 2007 final and the semifinals each of the past two years and will be an overwhelming favorite to win again.

"I like playing under the radar sometimes," Djokovic said. "It releases the pressure on myself."

After reaching the final 12 months ago and starting this year's championship as the top seed, Wozniacki automatically forfeited any hope she had of quietly sneaking through.

The Dane, who has not dropped a set in the tournament and remains on course to pocket a US$1 million bonus if she wins the title, briefly lost her cool during an argument with the chair umpire in her latest match.

"I'm really competitive," she said. "I really don't like losing."

Wozniacki's opponent in Friday's women's semifinals is Zvonareva. The winner will play either the defending champion Kim Clijsters or Venus Williams in Saturday's final.

Zvonareva has been one of the most improved players on the women's tour this year and is Russia's highest-ranked player.

She made her first grand slam final at Wimbledon in July and is through to her first semifinal at Flushing Meadows.

"I guess I'm improving," she said. "I've been playing for a while, but I'm still out there and still working hard."

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Wrestlers grapple with national glory

HA NOI – About 200 wrestlers from 19 teams will show off their skills at the National Greco-Romans and Freestyle Championships next Wednesday.

The national squad's coaching board will choose the top wrestlers from the tournament who will represent the country at the Asian Games (ASIAD) in Guangzhou, China from November 12-27.

"We recruit the best wrestlers at the championship for the national team for ASIAD and the 2012 Olympics qualifiers," said the National Sports Administration's wrestling division head, Vu The Long.

Athletes will compete for 26 medal sets in the men's and women's weight divisions at Ha Dong Gymnasium.

Teams from Ha Noi, Ninh Binh, Bac Ninh and the Army have sent their squads to a one-year training session in China.

"Most of the teams prepared well for the championship because the athletes will compete for official berths on the national squad that will compete in the biggest Asian sporting event," said Long.

Long said he hoped favourites Nguyen Thi Lua, Pham Thi Hue and Luong Thi Quyen would pick up gold medals at the championship and at the Asian Games.

Last year Lua bagged a bronze medal in the women's 48kg weight class at the World Greco-Roman and Freestyle Wrestling Championship in Herning City, Denmark. – VNS

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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Vietnam, China fly the flag of culture

Cultural development in the market economy and global integration drew
the attention of communists from both Vietnam and China at a
workshop underway in Vietnam.


To Huy Rua,
Politburo member, Secretary, Head of the Information and Education
Commission and Chairman of the Theory Council of the Communist Party of
Vietnam Central Committee, led a Vietnamese delegation to the three-day
workshop, that opened in the central city of Da Nang on September 8.


The Chinese delegation was led by Liu Yunshan,
Politburo member, Secretary in the Central Secretariat and Head of the
Central Propaganda Department of the Communist Party of China (CPC).


In his opening speech, Rua said the topic of cultural development
drew great attention from the two parties as it bore both theoretical
and practical significance, affecting both immediate and long term
interests of the two economies which have much in common.


“Vietnam is developing a socialist-oriented market economy while
China is speeding up the construction of a socialist market economy,”
said the CPV senior official, explaining the similarity of the two
economies.


He said the two ruling communist
parties should share experiences gained during their leadership in order
to help each other solve emerging problems.


For
his part, the Chinese head delegate said culture is the spiritual
flagship of a Party and State and developing a socialist culture should
be based on Marxism.


Liu called for consistent efforts to be made to advance towards a civilised culture.


He emphasised the socialist value of cultural development and the
need to build a cultural bridge capable of uniting people for further
development.


“The fundamental purpose of cultural
development is for the people and its power should be based on the
people,” the Chinese senior communist said.


People
should be put as the root of the cultural development cause, which
should meet people’s cultural demands as much as possible, Liu added.


He expressed a desire to learn from Vietnam’s successful policies
in culture and pledged to work together with the south-eastern Asian
neighbour, which shares not only a common borderline but also cultural
similarities with China, in boosting cultural cooperation./.

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Ha Long Bay vies for honours in world wonders

Ha Long Bay vies for honours in world wonders

Ha Long Bay in Quang Ninh province, a UNESCO recognised world’s
heritage site, has jumped to second place among 28 finalists of the
online voting for the world’s new seven wonders.


The voting was launched by New Open World (NOW) and is available at http://www.vote 7.com.


The
positive result is thanks to Quang Ninh province’s efforts in boosting
information dissemination and promotion of the image of Ha Long Bay to
foreign friends.


The province has also developed
tourism linkages with other provinces nationwide, especially the
country’s five biggest tourism centres.


The Vietnam
National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) has planned a promotion
campaign and asked Quang Ninh province to publish a tourism publication
on Ha Long Bay with attached voting guidelines as well as build a game
show named “Impressive Vietnam”.


Ha Long Bay is drawing
the attention of tourists from both road and waterways, helping to
bring 5.3 million visitors to Quang Ninh in the first eight months of
the year with estimated revenue of 2.3 trillion VND./.

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