Saturday, 28 April 2012
Get Your Kit On: Crystal Palace 2012/2013
Thank you to Football Kit News, for providing intro and photo to the Palace shirts and also the previous Leeds United post - sorry forgot (again).
These are the new Crystal Palace kits 2012/2013, Npower Championship outfit Crystal Palace’s new 2012/13 home and away shirts for the forthcoming footy season. Palace’s new 2012/13 kits are bespoke and unique to the club and were unveiled in April 2012.
The new Palace home kit for 2012/13 reminds one of Barcelona’s tops. It has stripes on the front as well as on the back, as can be seen in the pictures below.
The words “Established 1905″ and “South London proud” are seen on this Palace 12/13 home shirt.
CPFC’s new away kit 2012/13 has the same design as the home shirt, but with a different set of colours ( Yellow and blue)
GAC are the principal sponsors of both Crystal Palace home and away kits for the 2012/13 season.
AVEC Sport, a division of Just Sport Ltd, have made the new Palace kits.
Get Your Kit On: Leeds United 2012/2013
This is the new Leeds United kit 2012/2013, Championship club Leeds United’s new home shirt for the 2012/13 season. The new Leeds kit 12/13 has been made by Macron and was officially unveiled by LUFC on April 27, 2012. The new LUFC strip has been unveiled under the motto “New Shirt, New Start” for the new 2012/13 season after Leeds’ disappointing 11/12 Championship season where they failed to even make the playoffs.
The new Leeds home top is white in colour with royal blue piping and has 1919, the year the club was formed, embroidered in the back of the neck.
Enterprise Insurance are the principal sponsors of Leeds’ new 2012/2013 home shirt, which is priced at £40 to buy for adult versions. Manager Neil Warnock has also participated in a video for the new kit that can be seen below.
Captains Log: Double header from the Captains table.
A double header of match reports from our friends at Lake County Captains. The first three posts are from the series against Kane County Cougars and the second from Peoria Chiefs games. Thank you to the Captains Media teams for providing the post and Reverend Jennings for the image.
Captains Lose Pitcher's Duel 1-0
An RBI Double by the Cougars Danny Mateo provided the only offense of the game on Sunday afternoon from Fifth Third Bank Ballpark. It was scoreless in the bottom of the seventh and with one out Lane Adams drew a walk from Captains pitcher Mason Radeke (1-1, 2.45). The next hitter Mateo, lined a double down the line to right field and Adams was able to score easily from first making the score 1-0 Cougars.
The Captains now fall to 4-13 on the season. The Captains are also now 1-9 on the seaon when they score under five runs and 0-8 when the opposing team scores first. The Captains are 0-2 on Sundays in 2012. The Captains fall to 0-6 when they are out hit in a ballgame.
Captains starter Elvis Araujo (0-0, 2.25) didn't get a decision. Araujo, pitched five innings and allowed just five hits and struck out four and walked three. Mason Radeke (1-1, 2.45) took the loss after surrendering the only run of the ball game. He pitched two innings and allowed one other hit and walked one and struck out two. Kyle Blair also pitched for the Captains, he pitched a scoreless ninth and struck out one.
The Cougars starting pitcher Edwin Carl (0-3, 1.77) pitched seven innings and earned the win. Carl also gave up just five hits, walking just one and fanning three. Nick Graffeo got the save his forth after pitching the final two innings and allowing one hit and two walks.
Captains Slug Kane County 11-8
Back-to-back homeruns by Luigi Rodriguez and Francisco Lindor in the top half of the eight inning, powered the Captains to a 11-8 victory Monday afternoon at Fifth Third Bank Ballpark. The Captains scored four runs in that inning and put the game out of the Cougars reach.
Kane County scored first in the bottom of the third inning when Justin Trapp singled home two runs and giving Kane County the lead by a pair. It was two to nothing heading to the top of the fourth inning.
The Captains responded in the top of the fourth inning. Lake County sent 12 men to the plate in the inning and scored six times. The big blow in the inning for the Captains was the two out three run double by Todd Hankins. The Captains led six to two after the inning. In the bottom half of the fourth Kane County responded with three runs of their own cutting the Captains lead to one run. The score after four complete innings was six to five Captains.
A three run sixth inning by Kane County gave the Cougars a two run lead in the ballgame. In the inning Justin Trapp was at it again but this time he unloaded a homer to right field and that jolted the Cougars out in front by a score of eight to six.
In the seventh Patric Tolentino cut into the Kane County lead when he picked up his second RBI of the afternoon on a ground out to first scoring. Bryson Myles from third base. The score was eight to seven Kane County in heading to the eighth inning.
Bryson Myles stole three bases in the game. He stole second and third in the eighth inning, and had a straight steal of home in the fourth inning. In both innings the Captains put up multiple runs on the scoreboard.
Captains starter Will Roberts (1-1, 3.75) didn't get a decision. Roberts, pitched five and one third innings and allowed eight hits and eight runs, six of which were earned. Francisco Valera got the win after twirling one and two thirds innings of no hit shut out baseball. Jeff Johnson pick up the save after working two innings and fanning three.
The Cougars starting pitcher Kellen Moen (0-1.820) pitched three and two thirds innings and allowed four hits, six runs and all were earned. Moen got the no decision. The Loss went to Mike Giovenco (0-2,7.27) after he surrendered both homers in the eight inning.
Captains Comeback Falls Short
A three run bottom half of the sixth inning doomed Lake County on Tuesday afternoon at Fifth Third Bank Ballpark. The Cougars used two doubles in the inning, which contributed to the three run inning. After the inning the score was six to nothing Kane County.
Kane County scored first in the bottom of the third inning when three straight hits plated two runs. A single by Michael Antonio and a double by Jorge Bonifacio mad the score one to nothing and then a single by Lane Adams made it two to nothing Kane County.
The Cougars added to their lead in the fifth when the hero of game one of the series was at it again, Danny Mateo homered to right field making it a three to nothing ballgame. That set the stage for the sixth inning for Kane County.
The Captains did not go quietly in the ninth inning. Trailing six to nothing, the Captains batted around and scored five runs. Alex Monsalve led off with a double, then Alex Lavisky walked, and Nick Bartolone reached on a fielder's choice where everyone was safe. With the bases full Robel Garcia, and Leonardo Castillo each singled home one run and the Captains played station-to-station baseball on the bases. The score was six to two when Jerrud Sabourin came to the plate and he laced a single to right field scoring two, cutting the lead to two runs, and still no one was out. Sabourin represented the tying run and Castillo was on third. Todd Hankins hit a one out sacrifice fly to right field plating the final run for the Captains. Francisico Lindor came to the plate representing the go-ahead run, but was struck out to end the ballgame and the Captains fell six to five.
Captains starter Joe Colon (1-2) took the loss for the Captains. Colon pitched four and one third innings allowing seven hits three earned runs while walking three and striking out a trio as well. Rob Nixon entered the game in relief and his final line was one and two thirds innings pitched allowing four hits, three earned runs two walks and a strikeout. Grant Sides also pitched for Lake County and went two innings of hitless and scoreless baseball. Sides walked one and struck out three.
The Cougars starting pitcher Santiago Garrido (3-0) was credited with the win after pitching shutout ball for six and one third innings. He gave up just three hits one walk and struck out three. Brooks Ponders pitched for Kane County and went two and two thirds innings allowing six hits all five runs, thee were earned with a walk and three strikeouts. Pounders also committed a throwing error in the five run ninth inning.
The Captains will return to Classic Park on Wednesday night at 6:30PM. The Captains will take on the Peoria Chiefs and send RHP Cody Anderson (1-0, 3.00) to the mound against RHP Michael Jensen (3-1, 1.50) for the Chiefs. The Chiefs will be making their only trip to Classic Park in two years with this three game set in Eastlake.
Garcia's Homer Sparks Captains Victory
Robel Garcia circled the bases in the first capping a five run inning. The round tripper was a three run homer that extended the Captains lead to 5-0. Luigi Rodriguez, Francisco Lindor and Alex Monsalve started the attack in the first inning. Rodriguez scored on the Monsalve single and then Lindor came home on the Alex Lavisky sacrifice fly that made the score two to nothing. Jordan Casas singled Alex Monsalve to second and both of those runners score on Garcia's long ball.
Peoria cut the lead in the top of the third inning. Pin-Chieh Chen doubled and Wes Darvill singled home Chen to get the Chiefs on the board. It was a five to one ball game when the Chiefs added on. Taylor Davis singled home Darvill who was at second base and at the end of the inning it was a 5-2 baseball game.
The Captains got another run in the bottom of the seventh inning when Rodriguez got a bunt single and Lindor walked. Alex Monsalve hit a ground ball to the shortstop Marco Hernandez of the Chiefs. Hernandez threw the ball low and it got by the first baseman. Rodriguez scored from second base and that made the game 6-2.
Zeke DeVoss hit a homerun in the ninth inning. The homer was the second of the year for DeVoss. That came with two outs in the inning and capped the scoring for the night. The final from Classic Park was Captains 6 and the Chiefs 3.
Captains starter Cody Anderson (2-0) earned the win for Lake County. This was Anderson's second consecutive victory. Anderson pitched five innings allowing six hits two runs one was earned and struck out six. Cole Cook entered the ballgame in the sixth and pitched two scoreless innings. Cook allowed just three hits and one strikeout. Mason Radeke pitched two innings allowing one hit and one earned run it was a solo homer in the ninth inning. Radeke also struck out four.
The Chiefs starting pitcher Gerardo Concepcion (0-1) who was making his first professional start. He pitched five innings gave up five earned runs all in the first inning. Concepcion gave up eight hits walked one and struck out two. Concepcion did allow the one homerun. The Chiefs bullpen allowed one hit and one unearned run.
Captains Have a Walk-Off Win in Extras
The Captains won 7-6 in 11 innings. Jerrud Sabourin lifted a fly ball to right field with Jordan Casas on third base. Casas raced home to score the winning run and give the Captains the walk-off win. Casas led off the 11th with a single and then a sac bunt by Robel Garcia moved Casas to second base. On the play, the pitcher Austin Reed threw the ball past his first baseman, and both runners moved up one base. With no outs Peoria decide not to walk Sabourin to set up a force, and it worked in the Captains favor as Jerrud won the ballgame.
Peoria took the lead in the top of the third inning when Pin-Chieh Chen doubled and then trotted home on the two run homerun by Wes Darvill. The homer opened the scoring and put the Chiefs on top 2-0.
The Captains answered in their half of the third. Zach MacPhee walked to begin the inning, and went to third on a Todd Hankins double. Francisco Lindor's single scored MacPhee. Hankins came home on a single by Jordan Smith. The game was tied 2-2 through two innings.
In the fourth inning, Peoria took the lead. A bunt single and a triple by Eduardo Gonzalez gave the Chiefs the 3-2 lead. Lake County re-took the lead in the bottom half when they scored three runs. The big hit came when the score was tied at three Alex Monsalve hit a two out two run single that put the Captains up 5-2.
In the seventh inning the Peoria scored three runs to take a 6-5 lead. The big hit in the inning was a single by the DH Paul Hoilman. The single put the Chiefs on top 6-5. The Captains tied the game in the ninth with a sac- fly off the bat of Leonardo Castillo. It was a 6-6 game going to extras.
Captains starter Felix Sterling (0-0) didn't factor in the decision for Lake County. The line on Sterling was 5.0 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, 1 K, 1 HRA. Sterling gave way to Francisco Valera. Valera (1-3) took the loss after pitching 1.2 Innings allowing four hits three earned runs with one walk and one strikeout. Kyle Blair entered for Lake County and pitched three and one thirds innings not allowing a hit or a run and striking out four. Jeff Johnson (1-1) worked a perfect 11th to pick up his first win of the season.
The Chiefs starting pitcher Michael Jensen (3-1) also got the no decision. He pitched five innings surrendering six hits and he gave up five earned runs with three walks and four strikeouts. The Chiefs bullpen surrendered the lead in the ninth and in the 11th. The losing pitcher was Austin Reed (0-1) who surrendered the walk off sacrifice fly in the 11th.
Captains Drop Finale to Chiefs 3-0
The Peoria Chiefs defeated the Lake County Captains by a score of 3-0 on Friday Night at Classic Park. The Chiefs pitching was the story of the game. Starter P.J. Francescon (2-1) pitched six innings allowing just two hits. He did not walk a hitter, and did not allow a run to score. Francescon struck out nine Captains hitters and earned the win. The dominant start was a big part of the victory for the Chiefs.
In the first inning the leadoff hitter Pin- Chieh Chen bunted for a base hit and then with two outs and two batters later Paul Hoilman unloaded a homerun to the right center field lawn. The two run homer put the Chiefs in front early in the game. It was 2-0 Chiefs after one inning.
Peoria scored again when they plated a run in the top of the eighth inning. Oliver Zapata reached on a fielder's choice and then was able to move to second on a walk and score on a two base throwing error by Robel Garcia. The Captains committed four errors on the night.
Captains starter Elvis Araujo (0-4) took the loss for Lake County. The line on Araujo was 5.1 IP, 7 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 5 K, 1 HRA. Araujo gave way to Rob Nixon. Nixon went 2.1 IP allowing one unearned run with three walks and struck out four. Grant Sides also pitched for the Captains pitching 1.1 Innings and striking out four. The Captains had 13 strike outs as a staff the most since opening night in Fort Wayne.
The Chiefs used two other pitchers besides Francescon. Bryce Shafer entered the ball game and pitched two innings and struck out three. He also just surrendered two hits. Andrew McKirahan earned the save his second as he pitched a perfect ninth inning. The Chiefs staff totaled 12 strike- outs on the night.
The Captains stay at Classic Park on Saturday Afternoon at 1:00PM. The Captains will take on the Burlington Bees and send RHP Will Roberts (1-1, 3.75) to the mound against RHP Jose Macias (1-2, 5.40) for the Bees. The Bees are visiting Classic Park for the only time in two years with this three game set in Eastlake.
Thank you to Reverend Jennings for the image.
Thursday, 26 April 2012
Get Your Kit On: Glasgow Celtic 2012/2013
Thank you to our friends at Football Kit News for intro and photo's.
This is the new Celtic kit 2012/2013, Glasgow Celtic’s new home top for the 2012/13 Scottish Premier League season. Celtic are the reigning champions of Scotland, having won the 11/12 edition of the SPL. Celtic’s new 12/13 home kit has been made by Nike and was unveiled on April 26, 2012, the same day as Rangers’ new 2012/2013 home kit.
Celtic’s new home top for the 2012-13 season is based on the 1903-1905 hooped kit. Celtic then used to have thin hoops on the shirt and wore black socks before switching to thick hoops and white. As you can see in the picture of the 12/13 kit below, Nike have gone for a retro look by returning to thin hoops and black socks.
The other major change ( also in the Rangers kit), is the Tennent’s logo branding. The sponsor’s logo has gone below the crest and is smaller in comparison to the last 10/12 home jersey.
Here are some pics of Celtic’s new 2012/2013 home kit.
Get Your Kit On: Glasgow Rangers 2012/2013
Thank you to our friends Football Kit News for the intro and photo.
This is the new Rangers home top 12/13, Scottish Premier League side Glasgow Rangers’ new home strip for the 12/13 season. Rangers’ new 2012/2013 home kit has been made by Umbro and was officially unveiled by the Gers on April 26, 2012 at 11am. This new Rangers top is a tribute to the side that triumphed in Europe in 1972 by beating Dinamo Moscow at the Nou Camp, Barcelona in the European Cup Winners’ Cup.
The 2012/13 strip sees a rebranding of the Tennent’s logo, which now appears below the club crest instead of being across the shirt. The strip also has the same red and white socks worn by the Gers in that famous 1972 campaign. The jersey features a bigger badge and the five stars are running vertical at the side of the top.
Rangers’ new 2012/2013 home kit will be worn for the first time in a pre-season friendly against Linfield FC on May 7, 2012.
Here is a pic of the new Rangers top 2012/2013, which has 1972 stitched inside the collar
World in Union: Round up of week 21, the league 'hots up'
Thank you to Aviva and Premiership Rugby for providing us with the reports of Round 21.
The race for final finishing positions in the Aviva Premiership Rugby table was red hot this weekend. Harlequins, Leicester Tigers and Saracens are now confirmed as Aviva Premiership Rugby semi-finalists with one more semi-final place left to fight for on 5th May. London Wasps and Newcastle Falcons, in 11th and 12th place respectively, face a nail-biting relegation battle on 5th May when they play each other in Round 22. The top six in the table after Round 22 will quality for a coveted Heineken Cup place next season.
On Friday night, Saracens clinched a place in the Aviva Premiership Rugby semi-finals with a brutal victory over Newcastle Falcons at Kingston Park. Three penalties from the boot of Owen Farrell booked Saracens their semi-final berth while Jimmy Gopperth's solitary strike gave the Falcons a crucial losing bonus point in front of a crowd of 8,011 - Newcastle's biggest of the season. Just four points now separate Newcastle Falcons and London Wasps at the foot of the table. Final score: Newcastle Falcons 3, Saracens 9.
Should London Wasps secure Aviva Premiership Rugby survival on the 5th May then players and fans alike may well raise a glass to Tom Varndell for his late try-saving tackle on Saturday which secured a losing bonus point at the Recreation Ground. Bath's Sam Vesty was seemingly cruising to the line to score a try which would have meant that Wasps would have gone into the Aviva Premiership Rugby Round 22 clash with Newcastle just three points ahead of the Falcons. Final score: Bath Rugby 17, London Wasps 12.
Sale Sharks came closer to qualifying for next season's Heineken Cup by posting their tenth Aviva Premiership Rugby victory of the season at Kingsholm against a Gloucester Rugby side without Bryan Redpath who resigned this week. Both sides needed to win the crucial match to stand any chance of finishing sixth in the Aviva Premiership Rugby and a Heineken Cup spot. Two tries from Sale full-back Rob Miller, along with 14 points from the boot of fly-half Nick Macleod was enough for them to see off the home side. Final score: Gloucester 19, Sale Sharks 24.
Over at Sixways, London Irish ended a seven-match losing streak in Aviva Premiership Rugby against an out-of-sorts Worcester side. Exiles full-back Tom Homer was the hero of the match scoring 15 points, with impressive performances from Bryn Evans and Ofisa Treviranus. The Warriors started to fight back with late tries from Marcel Garvey and Miles Benjamin but victory deservedly went to the Exiles. Final score: Worcester Warriors 16, London Irish 25.
At the Twickenham Stoop, Leicester Tigers made a devastating statement of intent ahead of the Aviva Premiership Rugby semi-finals by coming from 13 points down to decisively beat current leaders Harlequins. The victory saw the Tigers leapfrog Saracens back into second place, with a win against Bath on 5th May guaranteeing a home semi-final. In an action-packed first half, Leicester drew first blood through Thomas Waldrom's try, only for Harlequins to race into a 23-10 advantage courtesy of two tries from Ugo Monye and Nick Easter. But Leicester ensured the game remained in the balance at half-time as Steve Mafi went over to ensure they were only three points behind. While George Lowe's try restored Quins' advantage, Leicester went through the gears in the second half as a try from Alesana Tuilagi and Waldrom's second brought up the bonus point before Toby Flood, who finished with 23 points, rounded off the win with a late penalty. Final score: Harlequins 33, Leicester Tigers 43.
On Sunday, Northampton Saints moved back into fourth place in the Aviva Premiership Rugby table thanks to two second half tries by Chris Ashton and Paul Diggin, as they ended Exeter Chiefs' run of four league wins in a row with a victory at Sandy Park. Stephen Myler added a conversion and two penalties to seal the win on the day that Exeter were led out by number eight Richard Baxter on his 350th league appearance for the Devon side. The result means the final place in the Aviva Premiership Rugby semi-final will be decided on the last day of the regular season - Saturday, May 5 - when Saints host Worcester Warriors and Exeter are away to Saracens. Final score: Exeter Chiefs 15, Northampton Saints 18.
The race for final finishing positions in the Aviva Premiership Rugby table was red hot this weekend. Harlequins, Leicester Tigers and Saracens are now confirmed as Aviva Premiership Rugby semi-finalists with one more semi-final place left to fight for on 5th May. London Wasps and Newcastle Falcons, in 11th and 12th place respectively, face a nail-biting relegation battle on 5th May when they play each other in Round 22. The top six in the table after Round 22 will quality for a coveted Heineken Cup place next season.
On Friday night, Saracens clinched a place in the Aviva Premiership Rugby semi-finals with a brutal victory over Newcastle Falcons at Kingston Park. Three penalties from the boot of Owen Farrell booked Saracens their semi-final berth while Jimmy Gopperth's solitary strike gave the Falcons a crucial losing bonus point in front of a crowd of 8,011 - Newcastle's biggest of the season. Just four points now separate Newcastle Falcons and London Wasps at the foot of the table. Final score: Newcastle Falcons 3, Saracens 9.
Should London Wasps secure Aviva Premiership Rugby survival on the 5th May then players and fans alike may well raise a glass to Tom Varndell for his late try-saving tackle on Saturday which secured a losing bonus point at the Recreation Ground. Bath's Sam Vesty was seemingly cruising to the line to score a try which would have meant that Wasps would have gone into the Aviva Premiership Rugby Round 22 clash with Newcastle just three points ahead of the Falcons. Final score: Bath Rugby 17, London Wasps 12.
Sale Sharks came closer to qualifying for next season's Heineken Cup by posting their tenth Aviva Premiership Rugby victory of the season at Kingsholm against a Gloucester Rugby side without Bryan Redpath who resigned this week. Both sides needed to win the crucial match to stand any chance of finishing sixth in the Aviva Premiership Rugby and a Heineken Cup spot. Two tries from Sale full-back Rob Miller, along with 14 points from the boot of fly-half Nick Macleod was enough for them to see off the home side. Final score: Gloucester 19, Sale Sharks 24.
Over at Sixways, London Irish ended a seven-match losing streak in Aviva Premiership Rugby against an out-of-sorts Worcester side. Exiles full-back Tom Homer was the hero of the match scoring 15 points, with impressive performances from Bryn Evans and Ofisa Treviranus. The Warriors started to fight back with late tries from Marcel Garvey and Miles Benjamin but victory deservedly went to the Exiles. Final score: Worcester Warriors 16, London Irish 25.
At the Twickenham Stoop, Leicester Tigers made a devastating statement of intent ahead of the Aviva Premiership Rugby semi-finals by coming from 13 points down to decisively beat current leaders Harlequins. The victory saw the Tigers leapfrog Saracens back into second place, with a win against Bath on 5th May guaranteeing a home semi-final. In an action-packed first half, Leicester drew first blood through Thomas Waldrom's try, only for Harlequins to race into a 23-10 advantage courtesy of two tries from Ugo Monye and Nick Easter. But Leicester ensured the game remained in the balance at half-time as Steve Mafi went over to ensure they were only three points behind. While George Lowe's try restored Quins' advantage, Leicester went through the gears in the second half as a try from Alesana Tuilagi and Waldrom's second brought up the bonus point before Toby Flood, who finished with 23 points, rounded off the win with a late penalty. Final score: Harlequins 33, Leicester Tigers 43.
On Sunday, Northampton Saints moved back into fourth place in the Aviva Premiership Rugby table thanks to two second half tries by Chris Ashton and Paul Diggin, as they ended Exeter Chiefs' run of four league wins in a row with a victory at Sandy Park. Stephen Myler added a conversion and two penalties to seal the win on the day that Exeter were led out by number eight Richard Baxter on his 350th league appearance for the Devon side. The result means the final place in the Aviva Premiership Rugby semi-final will be decided on the last day of the regular season - Saturday, May 5 - when Saints host Worcester Warriors and Exeter are away to Saracens. Final score: Exeter Chiefs 15, Northampton Saints 18.
Tuesday, 24 April 2012
Sol y Futbol: Lanzarote a point off play-off place
Ian reports as Lanzarote win 3 vital points. They are now closing in on the final play-off spot, with just three games remaining. It's getting to be an exciting end to the season. Go Rojillos!
SD TENISCA 0 LANZAROTE 1
23rd April 2012
A priceless goal midway through the first half from midfielder Javi Betancort gives the Rojillos three golden points and sends Lanzarote to within just a single point from the final playoff spot.
On a ground where the second placed La Palma side have not lost all season and Lanzarote had not won in 14 attempts the Rojillos looked doomed. The only away matches the Rojillos have won this term are against the bottom two clubs so the statistics were not good from the outset.
The home side began the more confident. Striker Memo who seems to love to score against the Rojillos in the various clubs he has played for was unlucky not to put his current team ahead. His strike hit the underside of the bar and he believed the ball had crossed the line but fortunately for Lanzarote the Referee and his assistant did not agree and allowed play to carry on.
After the initial onslaught Lanzarote began to dominate possession and in the 23rd minute a powerful strike from Javi Betancort on the edge of the area beat the goalkeeper and sent the Rojillos into a 0-1 lead.
The home side had several opportunities to level the score with Memo going close from a free kick and then narrowly heading wide whilst Rosmen almost doubled Lanzarote´s lead minutes before the break but the striker failed to hit the target.
The opening stages of the second half and Lanzarote took control of the ball. Both Ayoze and Rosmen were unlucky not to get on the score sheet. The home side did have an effort cancelled out from Dani López for offside and moments later Javi Betancort thought he had scored his second of the afternoon only for the Ref to call back play for a foul which bemused the Lanzarote players.
In the final 20 minutes Lanzarote decided to sit back and defend their lead whilst trying to catch their opponents out on the break. Ayoze had a golden opportunity to give his side a goal cushion but his strike hit the post and was cleared.
Life was made a little easier in the 75th minute when Dani López picked up his second yellow card and the home side were down to 10 men. The hosts still pressed but Lanzarote goalkeeper Ruymán was not called into action as his side picked up three magical points.
The Rojillos have two home games remaining and one away. Over the past few months Lanzarote´s home form has been devastating with seven wins on the bounce. Up next this Sunday at 12 Noon is 8th placed side CD Tenerife B.
Lanzarote are in 6th position but 4th placed side C.D. Vera and 5th placed side Estrella CF face each other on Sunday and should they draw and Lanzarote win, then the Rojillos would climb into the final playoff spot for the first time this season.
GOALS
0-1 min 23 Javi Betancort
SD TENISCA 0 LANZAROTE 1
23rd April 2012
A priceless goal midway through the first half from midfielder Javi Betancort gives the Rojillos three golden points and sends Lanzarote to within just a single point from the final playoff spot.
On a ground where the second placed La Palma side have not lost all season and Lanzarote had not won in 14 attempts the Rojillos looked doomed. The only away matches the Rojillos have won this term are against the bottom two clubs so the statistics were not good from the outset.
The home side began the more confident. Striker Memo who seems to love to score against the Rojillos in the various clubs he has played for was unlucky not to put his current team ahead. His strike hit the underside of the bar and he believed the ball had crossed the line but fortunately for Lanzarote the Referee and his assistant did not agree and allowed play to carry on.
After the initial onslaught Lanzarote began to dominate possession and in the 23rd minute a powerful strike from Javi Betancort on the edge of the area beat the goalkeeper and sent the Rojillos into a 0-1 lead.
The home side had several opportunities to level the score with Memo going close from a free kick and then narrowly heading wide whilst Rosmen almost doubled Lanzarote´s lead minutes before the break but the striker failed to hit the target.
The opening stages of the second half and Lanzarote took control of the ball. Both Ayoze and Rosmen were unlucky not to get on the score sheet. The home side did have an effort cancelled out from Dani López for offside and moments later Javi Betancort thought he had scored his second of the afternoon only for the Ref to call back play for a foul which bemused the Lanzarote players.
In the final 20 minutes Lanzarote decided to sit back and defend their lead whilst trying to catch their opponents out on the break. Ayoze had a golden opportunity to give his side a goal cushion but his strike hit the post and was cleared.
Life was made a little easier in the 75th minute when Dani López picked up his second yellow card and the home side were down to 10 men. The hosts still pressed but Lanzarote goalkeeper Ruymán was not called into action as his side picked up three magical points.
The Rojillos have two home games remaining and one away. Over the past few months Lanzarote´s home form has been devastating with seven wins on the bounce. Up next this Sunday at 12 Noon is 8th placed side CD Tenerife B.
Lanzarote are in 6th position but 4th placed side C.D. Vera and 5th placed side Estrella CF face each other on Sunday and should they draw and Lanzarote win, then the Rojillos would climb into the final playoff spot for the first time this season.
GOALS
0-1 min 23 Javi Betancort
Get Your Kit On: Brazil new for 2012/2013
GYKO would like to thank Football Kit News for providing intro and photo.
This is the new Brazil kit 2012/2013, the Brazilian football team’s new home jersey for the 2012/13 season. The new Brazil jersey has been made by Nike and uses the kit maker’s revolutionary new eco friendly technology. Santos prodigy Neymar, a target of Chelsea, Barcelona and Real Madrid amongst others, is here seen modelling the new strip.
Captains Log: Cards are stacked against the Captains in this series.
The match reports of the Captains series against the Clinton LumberKings are brought to you courtesy of the Lake County Captains media team.
Captains Drop another 2-1
The Captains fell to the Clinton LumberKings Thursday Evening at Ashford University Field in Clinton, Iowa. The final score was 2-1. The LumberKings scored single runs in the sixth and seventh innings to just sneak by Lake County who has now dropped 10 straight. The go ahead hit came from Clinton's catcher Steve Baron.
Lake County scored the first run of the game. In the second they manufactured the run. Alex Lavisky singled to lead off the inning then Bryson Myles sacrificed Lavisky to second base. A Groundout by Jerrud Sabourin moved Lavisky to third and the two out RBI single by Leonardo Castillo make the score 1-0 Captains.
Leonardo Castillo saved a run in the field with a diving stop in the bottom of the sixth inning. The fielder's choice was scored five unassisted and the tying run did come home to score but the stop saved extra bases. The pitching duel went to the seventh tied at one run apiece.
Captains starter Joe Colon (1-1, 5.19) didn't get a decision. Colon pitched six innings allowing two hits one earned run allowing three walks and fanning five. Francisco Valera (0-2) entered the ball game in the seventh and allowed the go ahead run. He was saddled with the loss. The two out single put Clinton on top for good 2-1. Valera pitched two innings allowing three hits one earned run and struck out three.
The LumberKings starting pitcher Trevor Miller (1-0, 2.25) pitched seven innings allowing just one run himself. Miller surrendered just six hits and did not strike any Captains hitter out. Brett Shankin earned the save his first for the LumberKings as he went two scoreless innings and walked two. Clinton pitching did not strike out any Captains hitter all night long.
Captains Blank LumberKings 7-0
The Lake County Captains broke their ten game losing streak by defeating the Clinton LumberKings on Friday by a score of 7-0. The big blow came in the top of the eighth inning. The Captains scored three runs on four hits highlighted by the two run double by Alex Lavisky. Lavisky's doubled made it 4-0 Captains and then Bryson Myles tripled home Lavisky capping the scoring for the inning. It was a 5-0 lead headed to the ninth.
Lake County scored the first run of the game on a single by Leonardo Castillo which made the score 1-0 Captains. The Captains tacked on another in the top of the sixth inning on a sacrifice fly by Bryson Myles making it two to nothing.
The Captains got two more insurance runs in the ninth inning when Alex Monsalve who had four hits on knocked in two and pushed the lead to seven runs. The final from Iowa was seven to nothing Lake County.
The Captains played errorless ball and improved their record when scoring five or more runs to 3-2. The Captains last win came on April 9,2012 in Midland Michigan against the Great Lakes Loons. That night the Captains shut out the Loons eight to nothing. Friday night was the second shutout of the season for Lake County.
Captains starter Cody Anderson (1-0, 3.00) got the win. Anderson pitched six shutout innings allowing just four hits and struck out four. Newcomer to the Captains Rob Nixon went two shut out innings while fanning two as well. Kyle Blair also worked a scoreless ninth to preserve the Captains win.
The LumberKings starting pitcher Cameron Hobson (0-3, 4.95) pitched seven innings allowing just five hits, and two runs only one was earned.The LumberKing bullpen combined to pitch just two innings but allow five earned runs in the eighth and ninth innings.
Clinton Squeezes Past Lake County
A suicide squeeze put the LumberKings ahead in the bottom of the seventh. Clinton used that momentum to plate two more runs a total of three for the inning. Mario Yepez laid down the bunt right to the pitcher but the flip to the plate by Captains hurler Cole Cook was not in time. The LumberKings led the game six to five. Clinton led eight to five after seven innings.
Clinton scored first. The LumberKings plated two runs in the bottom half of the first inning off of Felix Sterling. Sterling walked home a run and then saw Jean Acevedo hit a sacrifice fly to right field making the score two to nothing Clinton.
The Captains took the lead in the forth inning when they scored four times. Alex Lavisky led off with a double to center field and then came home on the Bryson Myles triple. Robel Garcia singled home Myles making it a two to two ballgame. Leonardo Castillo walked and so did Zach MacPhee to load the bases. An error on the shortstop let the Captains take a four to two lead.
The Captains added to the lead in the forth inning when Robel Garcia walked to lead off the inning. Castillo was hit by the pitch to put runners on first and second two batters later Todd Hankins had an RBI single. The score was Lake County five and Clinton two at the end of four innings.
Clinton Scored three runs in the fifth to tie the game. The big blow in the inning was a single that plated the tying run by Jean Acevedo. That momentum set up the big seventh inning for the LumberKings.
Captains starter Felix Sterling (0-0, 3.15) didn't get a decision. Sterling hurled four innings allowing two runs both were earned walked three and struck out five. Cole Cook (0-1, 8.44) took the loss after surrendering six runs only three were earned in his three innings of relief. Grant Sides also pitched one scoreless inning for the Captains tonight.
The LumberKings starting pitcher Ambioris Hidalgo (0-3, 5.89) pitched three innings and didn't get a decision. Hidalgo gave up five runs four earned, with three walks and one strikeout. Tim Griffin (1-0,1.64) pitched four innings of two hit scoreless baseball to earn the win. The save went to John Taylor his second on the season.
The Captains stay on the road to take on the Kane County Cougars. Game one of the three game series will be Sunday April 22 with the first pitch scheduled at 2:00pm. The Captains will send LHP Elvis Araujo (0-3, 3.00) to the mound. He will face off against the Cougars RHP Edwin Carl (0-1, 2.70). Last season, the Captains played Kane County in Eastlake. The Cougars will host the 2012 All-Star game at Fifth Third Bank Ballpark on June 19, 2012.
We will bring you the match report at the end of that series.
Monday, 23 April 2012
Gwrys Yn Kernow: Pirates Complete Play-Offs As They Focus On The Semis
Thank you to Cornish Pirates for the post. To Phil Western for the match report and Brian Tempest for the photo.
Leeds Carnegie 42 Cornish Pirates 25
RFU Championship Play-Offs Round 6
Headingley Stadium
Saturday 21st April
Phil Westren's Match Report
Pirates Complete Play-Offs As They Focus On The Semis
In what was described pre-match as a 'no pressure' game, the Cornish Pirates having secured their semi-final place in the RFU Championship following their narrow 21-20 points victory at home to Bedford Blues the previous weekend, provided an opportunity in this final Pool B play-offs fixture to give certain personnel both game time and the chance to stake a claim for a shirt in the 'semis'.
As for Leeds Carnegie, who at the start of the season were likely favourites to bounce straight back to the Premiership, this was an emotional last day of the season as a number of players were making their final appearances for the club, including their most experienced performers in the shape of propMike MacDonald, centre Scott Barrow, and wingmen Lee Blackett and Michael Stephenson. Their selection was a strong one.
That the Pirates lost was not a major surprise and the signs were there in the very first minute when Stephenson crossed for a converted try to give the Yorkshire side a 7-0 lead.
With Rob Cook being rested and Ceiron Thomas for the moment on the bench, full-back Grant Pointer pulled three points back with a penalty, only for Bell to strike one of his own and then add the extras to Leeds Carnegie's second try of the match scored by wing Lee Blackett.
The Pirates were 17-3 down with just thirteen minutes on the clock, but midway through the half they scored their first try when good handling by the back line ended with wing Rhodri McAtee crossing out wide. Pointer, who had played his part in creating the try-scoring opportunity with a clever pass, missed with the conversion.
Leeds replied with s second penalty from Bell, but when hooker Rob Elloway crossed for an unconverted try to make it 20-13 come the break, the Pirates were still in range to hopefully make a go of it in the second forty.
Leeds, to their credit, came out full of energy at the start of the second half and in the space of seventeen minutes put the outcome of this match well and truly beyond doubt. Tries from rangy centre Iain Thornley, 'man of the match' flanker Chris Walker, and scrum-half Craig Hampson, were all converted by Bell, who also added a penalty in between for good measure.
To provide some consolation for the Pirates it was a number of their men off the bench who would trouble the scoreboard operator as the game reached its conclusion. Replacement flanker Phil Burgess scored a consolation try after wing David Doherty had pinned back his ears top sprint away in accustomed fashion, and there was a five-pointer also at the very end for replacement Dave Ward, whose effort was converted by Thomas.
Speaking after the game head coach Ian Davies was not too despondent with the result, commenting:
"Accomplishing our aim of reaching the semi-final stage with our win against Bedford Blues, in all honesty everyone knew this was a nothing game and therefore lacked an edge which we know will be back in place when we are fresh and ready to challenge Bristol."
Leeds Carnegie:
S. McColl, L. Blackett (P. Lucock 37), I. Thornley, S. Barrow (J. Davies 65), M. Stephenson, T. Bell, C. Hampson (W. Cliff 65), J. Rowan, C. Walker, R. Beck, S. Hohneck (D. Barrow 20), J. Pendlebury (E. Williamson 56), H. Aulika (M. Mustafa 56), A. Titterell (capt, S. Freer 56), M. MacDonald (H. Aulika 70).
Cornish Pirates:
G. Pointer (S. Hill 71), R. McAtee (J. Doherty 39-40), A. Suniula, T. Cooper, D. Doherty, A. Penberthy (C. Thomas 56), T. Kessell (J. Doherty 55), B. Maidment, K. Marriott (capt, C. Morgan 71), D. Ewers (P. Burgess 56), M. Smith, L. McGlone, R. Brits (C. Rimmer 74), R. Elloway (D. Ward 74), R. Storer.
Yellow card: McGlone.
Scorers:-
Leeds Carnegie
Tries: Stephenson, Blackett, Thornley, Walker, Hampson; cons: Bell (4); pens: Bell 3)
Cornish Pirates
Tries: McAtee, Elloway, Burgess, Ward; con: Thomas; pen: Pointer
Referee: Ross Campbell (RFU)
Attendance: 1,588
Leeds Carnegie 42 Cornish Pirates 25
RFU Championship Play-Offs Round 6
Headingley Stadium
Saturday 21st April
Phil Westren's Match Report
Pirates Complete Play-Offs As They Focus On The Semis
In what was described pre-match as a 'no pressure' game, the Cornish Pirates having secured their semi-final place in the RFU Championship following their narrow 21-20 points victory at home to Bedford Blues the previous weekend, provided an opportunity in this final Pool B play-offs fixture to give certain personnel both game time and the chance to stake a claim for a shirt in the 'semis'.
As for Leeds Carnegie, who at the start of the season were likely favourites to bounce straight back to the Premiership, this was an emotional last day of the season as a number of players were making their final appearances for the club, including their most experienced performers in the shape of propMike MacDonald, centre Scott Barrow, and wingmen Lee Blackett and Michael Stephenson. Their selection was a strong one.
That the Pirates lost was not a major surprise and the signs were there in the very first minute when Stephenson crossed for a converted try to give the Yorkshire side a 7-0 lead.
With Rob Cook being rested and Ceiron Thomas for the moment on the bench, full-back Grant Pointer pulled three points back with a penalty, only for Bell to strike one of his own and then add the extras to Leeds Carnegie's second try of the match scored by wing Lee Blackett.
The Pirates were 17-3 down with just thirteen minutes on the clock, but midway through the half they scored their first try when good handling by the back line ended with wing Rhodri McAtee crossing out wide. Pointer, who had played his part in creating the try-scoring opportunity with a clever pass, missed with the conversion.
Leeds replied with s second penalty from Bell, but when hooker Rob Elloway crossed for an unconverted try to make it 20-13 come the break, the Pirates were still in range to hopefully make a go of it in the second forty.
Leeds, to their credit, came out full of energy at the start of the second half and in the space of seventeen minutes put the outcome of this match well and truly beyond doubt. Tries from rangy centre Iain Thornley, 'man of the match' flanker Chris Walker, and scrum-half Craig Hampson, were all converted by Bell, who also added a penalty in between for good measure.
To provide some consolation for the Pirates it was a number of their men off the bench who would trouble the scoreboard operator as the game reached its conclusion. Replacement flanker Phil Burgess scored a consolation try after wing David Doherty had pinned back his ears top sprint away in accustomed fashion, and there was a five-pointer also at the very end for replacement Dave Ward, whose effort was converted by Thomas.
Speaking after the game head coach Ian Davies was not too despondent with the result, commenting:
"Accomplishing our aim of reaching the semi-final stage with our win against Bedford Blues, in all honesty everyone knew this was a nothing game and therefore lacked an edge which we know will be back in place when we are fresh and ready to challenge Bristol."
Leeds Carnegie:
S. McColl, L. Blackett (P. Lucock 37), I. Thornley, S. Barrow (J. Davies 65), M. Stephenson, T. Bell, C. Hampson (W. Cliff 65), J. Rowan, C. Walker, R. Beck, S. Hohneck (D. Barrow 20), J. Pendlebury (E. Williamson 56), H. Aulika (M. Mustafa 56), A. Titterell (capt, S. Freer 56), M. MacDonald (H. Aulika 70).
Cornish Pirates:
G. Pointer (S. Hill 71), R. McAtee (J. Doherty 39-40), A. Suniula, T. Cooper, D. Doherty, A. Penberthy (C. Thomas 56), T. Kessell (J. Doherty 55), B. Maidment, K. Marriott (capt, C. Morgan 71), D. Ewers (P. Burgess 56), M. Smith, L. McGlone, R. Brits (C. Rimmer 74), R. Elloway (D. Ward 74), R. Storer.
Yellow card: McGlone.
Scorers:-
Leeds Carnegie
Tries: Stephenson, Blackett, Thornley, Walker, Hampson; cons: Bell (4); pens: Bell 3)
Cornish Pirates
Tries: McAtee, Elloway, Burgess, Ward; con: Thomas; pen: Pointer
Referee: Ross Campbell (RFU)
Attendance: 1,588
Happy St Georges Day
Tapes Up: Diamonds Romp To Early Lead And Take Win Despite Bandits' Fight Back
Thank you to George English and the Diamonds Media Team.
Newcastle Diamonds 53
Berwick Bandits 41
(League Cup)
The Berwick Bandits arrived on Tyneside, tails-up and confident of putting together a good away performance against the Newcastle Diamonds, but 12- down by the end of Heat Four signalled things were going to be far harder than expected.
Ricky Ashworth crashed out of Heat One when he was trying to pass Christian Henry on the third bend, but caught his rear wheel instead bringing himself and Diamond's skipper Mark Lemon down.
Lee Complin ended up excluded too after a heavy fall on bend one of the second lap in Heat Three and hammered hard backwards into the fence whilst attempting a pass round Claes Nedermark. The Re-run resulted in a home 5-1 putting Newcastle 13-5 up, and another hard-fought max in the fourh for Stuart Robson who blasted around Sebastian Alden with ease put Newcastle 18-6 up.
The Bandits placed Ashworth on a tactical ride for double points in Heat five, but his six-point lead was nullified by Ludvig Lindgren who passed him decisively at the end of lap one with the 4-4 heat result setting the score at 22-10.
Henry took the sixth over Alden in a 4-2 whilst Robson soared ahead in the seventh as Complin swooped round Steve Worrall to split the Newcastle maximum in another 4-2 with the scores now looking heavily in the Diamonds' favour 30-14.
Heat Eight was the race of the night with Henry out in front, Complin blasted round the boards to fly round Richie Worrall, and set up a chase on Henry, but Worrall wasn't finished and made a spectacular race of it, passing and re-passing the Berwick skipper in a surprise home 5-1 and with Berwick now 20 down Alden was nominated as a tactical in the ninth.
Alden shot away to lead by a mile, but behind Edberg dwindled, looking set for last, but a desperately woeful effort from Lindgren couldn't pass ending the race as a 2-7 to Berwick with the score now tightened to 37-22.
In the 10th Jason King fell at the back on lap two, but up front half a lap later Lemon crashed out with Complin easing his way wide to avoid the stricken Diamond and fell as well just as Henry clattered unavoidably into his fallen skipper.
With no permanent injuries, but Lemon excluded for the stoppage and King out for not being under power at the time of the stoppage a two-man re-run was required, won by Henry to push Newcastle one more ahead, 43-27.
Complin took a magnificent win in Heat 12 whilst Alden and Ashworth fended off a massive challenge from Lemon but the five points went to Berwick with their late revival with the score now at 47-35, but despite the Bandits last ditch effort the match was lost.
Newcastle team manager George English said: "Solid in the main, and that's why we took Berwick apart in the early section of the match. Yes over all a good team performance."
Newcastle Diamonds 53
Berwick Bandits 41
(League Cup)
The Berwick Bandits arrived on Tyneside, tails-up and confident of putting together a good away performance against the Newcastle Diamonds, but 12- down by the end of Heat Four signalled things were going to be far harder than expected.
Ricky Ashworth crashed out of Heat One when he was trying to pass Christian Henry on the third bend, but caught his rear wheel instead bringing himself and Diamond's skipper Mark Lemon down.
Lee Complin ended up excluded too after a heavy fall on bend one of the second lap in Heat Three and hammered hard backwards into the fence whilst attempting a pass round Claes Nedermark. The Re-run resulted in a home 5-1 putting Newcastle 13-5 up, and another hard-fought max in the fourh for Stuart Robson who blasted around Sebastian Alden with ease put Newcastle 18-6 up.
The Bandits placed Ashworth on a tactical ride for double points in Heat five, but his six-point lead was nullified by Ludvig Lindgren who passed him decisively at the end of lap one with the 4-4 heat result setting the score at 22-10.
Henry took the sixth over Alden in a 4-2 whilst Robson soared ahead in the seventh as Complin swooped round Steve Worrall to split the Newcastle maximum in another 4-2 with the scores now looking heavily in the Diamonds' favour 30-14.
Heat Eight was the race of the night with Henry out in front, Complin blasted round the boards to fly round Richie Worrall, and set up a chase on Henry, but Worrall wasn't finished and made a spectacular race of it, passing and re-passing the Berwick skipper in a surprise home 5-1 and with Berwick now 20 down Alden was nominated as a tactical in the ninth.
Alden shot away to lead by a mile, but behind Edberg dwindled, looking set for last, but a desperately woeful effort from Lindgren couldn't pass ending the race as a 2-7 to Berwick with the score now tightened to 37-22.
In the 10th Jason King fell at the back on lap two, but up front half a lap later Lemon crashed out with Complin easing his way wide to avoid the stricken Diamond and fell as well just as Henry clattered unavoidably into his fallen skipper.
With no permanent injuries, but Lemon excluded for the stoppage and King out for not being under power at the time of the stoppage a two-man re-run was required, won by Henry to push Newcastle one more ahead, 43-27.
Complin took a magnificent win in Heat 12 whilst Alden and Ashworth fended off a massive challenge from Lemon but the five points went to Berwick with their late revival with the score now at 47-35, but despite the Bandits last ditch effort the match was lost.
Newcastle team manager George English said: "Solid in the main, and that's why we took Berwick apart in the early section of the match. Yes over all a good team performance."
Rebels 2: Rebels second half come back, just falls short
Thank you to the Melbourne Rebels Media Team for providing the post.
A late surge was not enough for the RaboDirect Rebels at the Sydney Football Stadium on Saturday night, as the Waratahs held on for a 30-21 win having led comfortably for the duration of the match.
The Rebels improved significantly upon their last FxPro Super Rugby fixture against the Brumbies, but once again a slow start proved costly as the Waratahs built an early lead which they never surrendered.
Captain Gareth Delve suggested that his side were paying the price for their wavering levels of effort and focus.
“Again our performance was pretty inconsistent – it was a very slow start from us but we seemed to pick up towards the end of the first half, then maybe went to sleep a little bit at the start of the second, but finished strongly,” Delve said.
“It’s easy to make the excuse of us being a young team, but we are building and we are getting better. I think that’s a massive step up on what last week was, but we need to start putting 80 minute performances together.”
The Rebels knew all too well that a strong start would be vital to finding their rhythm, but they could do little to stop the home side getting off to a flyer.
Winning the ball back from their own kick-off, the Waratahs spread it wide with the Melbourne defence in disarray, before full-back Bernard Foley spotted a big gap in the drifting defence and ran a clever switch line to score untouched after just 26 seconds.
With a valuable headstart, the hosts looked full of confidence and kept their momentum going with quick pick-and-drives, strong running lines and offloads from the tackle. The Rebels did well only to concede two penalties to the boot of Brendan McKibben as the Waratahs forwards repeatedly tried to blast their way over the Melbourne try-line.
It was 20 minutes into the game before the Rebels were able to string some phases together, and their hard work paid off when a pinpoint penalty kick to touch from the sublime boot of Mark Gerrard allowed hooker Ged Robinson to score from the ensuing lineout drive.
McKibben stretched the Waratahs’ lead to 16-7 with another shot at goal, but the Rebels were beginning to click with the ball in hand – another strong attacking set saw the visitors open up a gap in the defence only for the attempted offload to go astray.
A golden chance then went begging just before the half-time whistle, as a 14-phase move started by Kurtley Beale and Lachie Mitchell from their own 22 ended just a metre short of the tryline when the ball was lost as the Rebels’ forwards attempted to shove their way over.
The Waratahs blitzed the Rebels again shortly after the break when hooker Tatafu Polota-Nau scored from a beautifully orchestrated lineout move, the Sydney side showing their set-piece prowess again soon after when they ruthlessly quashed the Rebels attempt to try their own training paddock lineout routine.
While the Rebels defence was much improved, they struggled to contain their opponents’ big forward runners, who made easy ground around the breakdown and eventually got the Waratahs in position for their third try - centre Rob Horne worked his way over from short distance, McKibben’s conversion making it 30-7.
Horne gave the Rebels an opening soon after when he was yellow-carded for a dangerous tackle on Beale, and Tim Davidson was the man to benefit from his side’s advantage, scoring his first Super Rugby try after patient build-up work from his team-mates.
Another perfect touch-finder from Gerrard and a strong rolling maul then gave Beale more than enough of a stage to show his talents, skipping and swerving to draw in two defenders before popping the ball to Mitchell who dived over to reduce the gap to nine points and set up an enthralling finale. But the Rebels couldn’t maintain possession to launch another attack as the clock wound down and the Waratahs guarded the ball in search of their own bonus point try.
While they will rue their early lack of focus, the 14-14 scoreline in the second half was indicative of a much-improved performance from the Rebels that bodes well for the rest of the season.
Kult & Punk: St Pauli take vital points
The boys are laughing again. St Pauli pick up full points over the weekend and the district have a nude ale festival. The lads did well in the topless darts. Sorry no pictures for the fest and thankfully none for the topless darts (believe me that's for the best!)
FC St. Pauli 3-0 FC Hansa Rostock
Pauli's promotion hopes are still alive and kicking after their confidence-boosting win against a Rostock side, who were undone by their defensive fragility as opposed to their lack of threat in front of goal.
Pauli pounce
In a physical and feisty opening dominated by niggling challenges in midfield, Rostock acquitted themselves well as they held their own against Pauli's early pressure. However having neutralised each other for the most part in the first ten minutes it was the hosts, who broke the deadlock. Fin Bartels was played into space on the left to provide a cross that Marius Ebbers at full stretch managed to stab home at the back post.
Hansa pushed forward in search of an immediate response as Marek Mintal drew a sprawling save out of Philipp Tschauner with a long range effort before Dominic Peitz's header needed a touch from the Pauli keeper to take it past the post. However it was the hosts who almost added a second on the stroke of half-time when Bartels burst past two players in the penalty area only for the strong hand of Jörg Hahnel deny the midfielder from a tight angle.
Mighty Marius
Pauli immediately put themselves on the front foot in the second-half and reaped the rewards within five minutes of the restart, when Ebbers broke in behind before toe-poking the ball through the legs of Hahnel. Sebastian Peltzer rattled the side netting in response before Tom Weilandt stung the palms of Tschauner with a rasping effort, but a goal continued to prove elusive for the visiting side.
Ebbers should have wrapped up his hat-trick with 15 minutes remaining, but having been played through on the counter-attack the striker could only hit his first time strike directly at Hahnel. However the two-goal hero made up for his complacency by setting-up Pauli's third when he broke into the box on the left before drilling the ball across the face of goal for Bartels to wrap up the win with his close range finish ten minutes before the end.
FC St. Pauli 3-0 FC Hansa Rostock
Pauli's promotion hopes are still alive and kicking after their confidence-boosting win against a Rostock side, who were undone by their defensive fragility as opposed to their lack of threat in front of goal.
Pauli pounce
In a physical and feisty opening dominated by niggling challenges in midfield, Rostock acquitted themselves well as they held their own against Pauli's early pressure. However having neutralised each other for the most part in the first ten minutes it was the hosts, who broke the deadlock. Fin Bartels was played into space on the left to provide a cross that Marius Ebbers at full stretch managed to stab home at the back post.
Hansa pushed forward in search of an immediate response as Marek Mintal drew a sprawling save out of Philipp Tschauner with a long range effort before Dominic Peitz's header needed a touch from the Pauli keeper to take it past the post. However it was the hosts who almost added a second on the stroke of half-time when Bartels burst past two players in the penalty area only for the strong hand of Jörg Hahnel deny the midfielder from a tight angle.
Mighty Marius
Pauli immediately put themselves on the front foot in the second-half and reaped the rewards within five minutes of the restart, when Ebbers broke in behind before toe-poking the ball through the legs of Hahnel. Sebastian Peltzer rattled the side netting in response before Tom Weilandt stung the palms of Tschauner with a rasping effort, but a goal continued to prove elusive for the visiting side.
Ebbers should have wrapped up his hat-trick with 15 minutes remaining, but having been played through on the counter-attack the striker could only hit his first time strike directly at Hahnel. However the two-goal hero made up for his complacency by setting-up Pauli's third when he broke into the box on the left before drilling the ball across the face of goal for Bartels to wrap up the win with his close range finish ten minutes before the end.
Saturday, 21 April 2012
The Joy of Six: sporting events that should never have been held
With chaos surrounding the Bahrain Grand Prix here are half a dozen examples of governing bodies ignoring the outside world.
The photograph, courtesy of Alamy, features the commentary box during the 1934 World Cup.
Again thank you to our friends at Guardian Sport the article, by Scott Murray, was taking in full and features in todays edition of the Guardian. See the whole picture buy the Guardian and Observer.
1) Italy's first World Cup.
Say what you like about Fifa; it's been a consistent shower. it . These days quite happy to select World Cup hosts with questionable human-rights records – try being a LGBT supporter in Qatar at the 2022 tournament – it was equally content to make morally dubious picks back in the day. The infant Fifa's first choice as a World Cup host, in 1928 for the 1930 staging, had been a progressive one: the up-and-coming port of Montevideo in briskly developing Uruguay. So it came as something of a depressing blow when, as a result of eight uneasy meetings between Fifa delegates, the second World Cup was eventually awarded to Italy.
Italy had been under Benito Mussolini's fascist yoke for more than a decade, the blackshirts running wild, the state picking off anyone whose face didn't fit. It therefore came as no surprise when Fifa was rewarded for its choice with an exceptionally grim tournament. Setting the tone, the opening match was played in the Stadio Nazionale del Partito Nazionale Fascista. Italy's 7-1 win over the US was celebrated with a series of stiff-arm salutes towards Mussolini, sitting in the stands, his bulbous head crammed into a ludicrous white sailing cap.
The hosts were permitted to pick four Argentinians and a Brazilian, previously capped by the countries of their birth, Fifa turning a blind eye to the dubious legitimacy of the selection. Italy – their shirts resplendent with the fasces, Mussolini's fascist symbol of choice – were also allowed to hoof the opposition hither and yon, thanks to some laughably lenient refereeing. Spain were reduced to seven men through injury during the quarter-final, while fellow finalists Czechoslovakia were subject to a barrage of waist-high tackles and punches to the gut.
Italy prevailed, and were rewarded with a gold championship cup "so big that it took four men to carry it and its pedestal on to the field". Mussolini handed out the prizes to his fellow countrymen – and a special cup to the German team, who prominently joined the celebrations/rally despite coming third.
2) The Berlin Olympic Games (1936)
In fairness to the International Olympic Committee, no one knew that Germany – who were awarded the 1936 Games in 1931 – would fall into the hands of fascist dictator Adolf Hitler two years later. However, that's about as much leniency as it deserves. The IOC had three years to make other plans upon Hitler seizing control, but elected to sit on its hands instead. Ostentatiously so: in 1934, the IOC president, Henri de Baillet-Latour, and the future president Avery 'Female Athletes Are Ineffective And Unpleasing' Brundage, went to Germany to sniff out alleged anti-Semitic racism. The evidence presented was deemed insufficient for this pair of clowns, who further argued that even if Jews were being discriminated against, it was a matter for Germany to address behind closed doors, and not one that should concern the IOC.
With Hitler later brazenly making it clear that no Jewish athletes would be part of the German team, the US seriously considered boycotting the event. Only disingenuous campaigning by Brundage – who having cosied up to the Führer, contended that each nation had the right to pick whoever they wanted, and that the IOC should not get involved in a piffling "Jew-Nazi altercation" – ensured the States agreed to send over a team. Even then, Brundage could not find the strength to keep out of it: during the Games, he put pressure on the US coaches to remove two Jewish runners from the 4x100m team, ensuring Hitler would not be embarrassed should they win.
Pleasingly, the Games proved to be a thundering PR disaster for Hitler, with Brundage inadvertently doing his bit to kibosh Adolf's gig. One of the men ordered to replace his Jewish team-mates in the US 4x100m team was Jesse Owens; his gold in that event would be one of four meaty slaps in Hitler's supposedly superior Aryan face.
That, though, was not how the IOC saw it. As the world skidded towards war, erstwhile president Pierre de Coubertin spoke of the "imposing success of the Berlin Games", which were, he argued, "illuminated by a Hitlerian force and discipline". The IOC then awarded the 1940 Games to a similarly belligerent Japan – whose government later withdrew, considering the whole affair a bit internationalist for their liking.
3) The Mexico Olympic Games (1968)
On the morning of Thursday 3 October 1968, the Guardian ran a front-page story concerning some worrying news ahead of the Mexico Olympics, scheduled to start 10 days later. The Mexican government had ratcheted up the charges for satellite links, forcing the European Broadcasting Union to pull out of their TV contract. It looked like there would be no pictures for the 350m viewers across the continent.
But also, at the very bottom of the column, there was a snap of late news: "Troops opened fire and moved in with fixed bayonets on 15,000 students as they staged an anti-government rally in Mexico City tonight. Although most shots were fired in the air, at least two people fell to the ground."
The following day's paper put things into proper perspective, with the order of the two stories flipped around. The Mexicans had dropped their demand for higher transmission fees, coming to an agreement with Europe's broadcasters. But that was now an afterthought, tucked away at the bottom of the page because more importantly would they have a Games to cover? Most of the shots at the anti-government rally had not been fired into the air; up to 500 students and trade unionists were feared dead, slain by troops acting on orders from the government. Surely the Olympics could not go ahead?
"None of the demonstrations or violence has at any time been directed against the Olympic Games," insisted our old pal Avery Brundage, now president of the IOC. The Olympics were, he said, "a veritable oasis in a troubled world". The massacre, he opined, plucking an old favourite from the bag, was "an internal affair".
The Guardian's legendary correspondent John Rodda, who had been caught up in the crossfire and was lucky to escape with his life, considered the reaction "extraordinary". He noted that a statement swallowed whole by the IOC from the Mexican president, Gustavo Díaz Ordaz, blaming "agitators" for events and denying any machine-gun fire had taken place, was simply untrue, and that "extremists could well look to [threaten] the Games" as a result. Not for the first time, the IOC looked the other way, declaring itself an apolitical organisation. Another barefaced lie: two weeks later, it was quick enough to encourage Tommie Smith and John Carlos to leave the Games, and the country, in the wake of their famous black power podium salute.
4) Argentina's World Cup (1978)
While there had been 10 days between the Tlatelolco massacre and the 1968 Olympics, Fifa had nearly two years to work out whether to reallocate the 1970 World Cup, which had been awarded to Mexico in 1964. Doing what comes naturally, they did bugger all, other than avert their eyes. It proved to be a trial run for events in Argentina eight years later.
Fifa had awarded Argentina the World Cup in 1966, so can hardly be expected to have foreseen the military coup that led to General Jorge Videla deposing Isabel Perón in March 1976. Even so, when Amnesty International publicised the new junta's predilection for making dissidents disappear by pushing them out of planes into the River Plate, there was still more than a year in which Fifa could act by moving the tournament to a democracy. It didn't bother.
"It is quite impossible," ran an editorial in the Buenos Aires Herald just before the World Cup began, "to pretend human rights are respected in this country … In many cases, after two years without a single clue as to the whereabouts of a missing son, daughter, husband or wife, relatives have given up hope. They are simply asking whether the person they seek is alive or dead. It is not too much to ask." In football's corridors of power, it apparently was.
5) The Springboks in New Zealand (1981)
The New Zealand prime minister, Robert Muldoon, had helped to draft the 1977 Gleneagles Agreement, when all Commonwealth countries pledged their commitment to opposing apartheid in South Africa by discouraging all sporting contact. But – as the Conservative premier went on national television in 1981 to point out, with the all-white Springboks on their way to visit the All Blacks at the invitation of the New Zealand Rugby Union – it was up to each government to work out how best to fulfil this commitment. Muldoon's position of choice was on the fence: his government weren't in the business of withholding visas and passports of sportsmen for political reasons. He'd ask the rugby administrators nicely if the tour could possibly be scrapped, but that was all.
The request was denied and the tour went ahead. "The New Zealand Rugby Union council is behaving in an irresponsible way and will cause quite unnecessary trouble," opined a leader in the Guardian, who had it pretty much spot on. The entire tour was played against the backdrop of attritional battles between anti-apartheid demonstrators and riot police. Two matches were abandoned, one after 200 protestors staged an on-pitch sit-in, having liberally scattered tacks over the turf. The three Tests between New Zealand and South Africa went ahead, though, and a tight series was only settled in time added on for stoppages at the end of the third match, New Zealand's Allan Hewson kicking a long-range penalty to settle the affair.
Despite the sporting drama, that final game, at Auckland's Eden Park, is chiefly remembered for elements of bleak farce. The match was interrupted by a lone aircraft dispatching flour bombs, leaflets and flares on to the pitch, the All Black prop Gary Knight being felled by bag of self-raising. Outside the stadium, where protests had escalated into a full-blown brouhaha, police waded into a group of peaceful demonstrators dressed as clowns and bumblebees. Law was enforced by the vicious swinging of truncheons; the clowns, in grim juxtaposition, had previously been jauntily waving baguettes.
Muldoon's government, picking through the wreckage after the Springboks had left, opted to clutch at straws. As the Guardian reported: "Within the government there have been some hopes that the abhorrence of racial discrimination that so many New Zealanders displayed during the tour … must make any country wary of having South African teams as visitors."
6) Gatting's rebel tour of South Africa (1990)
English cricket has suffered plenty of dark days over the years, but Tuesday 2 August 1989 is probably the pick of them. That was when England relinquished the Ashes on home soil for the first time since 1934, David Boon crashing the winning runs in the fourth Ashes Test to give the supposed "worst Australian side to tour England" an unassailable 3-0 lead in the series. But this was not the root cause of the nadir. That came later in the day, when the South African Cricket Union announced that a rebel 16-man English squad would tour the following year.
The mercenary squad would be led by the former captain Mike Gatting, and included two more ex-skippers in John Emburey and Chris Cowdrey. "This is the most shameful day for English cricket," said Bob Hughes MP, chairman of the Anti-Apartheid Movement, of players prepared to sacrifice their morals for juicy contracts reportedly up to £100,000. "They are taking blood money."
A bullish Gatting responded that he knew "very little about apartheid", an unconvincing and unreconstructed justification for a sorry betrayal. "I do believe there shouldn't be politics in sport. As far as I'm concerned, I should be allowed to play cricket to earn my living wherever I want."
Happily, karma intervened. The tour, held the following February, was a risible farce, and a financial disaster, dogged by controversy at every stage. Thousands of demonstrators, as well as the local trade-union movement, mobilised, getting up in the touring party's grill at every opportunity. At one hotel, Gatting was forced to get his pinny on to cook, the kitchen staff having walked out at the team's presence.
South Africa was on the cusp of seismic change, with Nelson Mandela due to be finally released from prison – although with Gatting's tour causing security concerns, the ANC leader's release was delayed. Mandela's patience was being tested to the very end: 27 long years in the jug, and yet forced to wait another week because of the English tourists.
Mandela's eventual release meant the tour was scrapped midway, Gatting and his men returning home "stunned" and, unsurprisingly, "confused".
The photograph, courtesy of Alamy, features the commentary box during the 1934 World Cup.
Again thank you to our friends at Guardian Sport the article, by Scott Murray, was taking in full and features in todays edition of the Guardian. See the whole picture buy the Guardian and Observer.
1) Italy's first World Cup.
Say what you like about Fifa; it's been a consistent shower. it . These days quite happy to select World Cup hosts with questionable human-rights records – try being a LGBT supporter in Qatar at the 2022 tournament – it was equally content to make morally dubious picks back in the day. The infant Fifa's first choice as a World Cup host, in 1928 for the 1930 staging, had been a progressive one: the up-and-coming port of Montevideo in briskly developing Uruguay. So it came as something of a depressing blow when, as a result of eight uneasy meetings between Fifa delegates, the second World Cup was eventually awarded to Italy.
Italy had been under Benito Mussolini's fascist yoke for more than a decade, the blackshirts running wild, the state picking off anyone whose face didn't fit. It therefore came as no surprise when Fifa was rewarded for its choice with an exceptionally grim tournament. Setting the tone, the opening match was played in the Stadio Nazionale del Partito Nazionale Fascista. Italy's 7-1 win over the US was celebrated with a series of stiff-arm salutes towards Mussolini, sitting in the stands, his bulbous head crammed into a ludicrous white sailing cap.
The hosts were permitted to pick four Argentinians and a Brazilian, previously capped by the countries of their birth, Fifa turning a blind eye to the dubious legitimacy of the selection. Italy – their shirts resplendent with the fasces, Mussolini's fascist symbol of choice – were also allowed to hoof the opposition hither and yon, thanks to some laughably lenient refereeing. Spain were reduced to seven men through injury during the quarter-final, while fellow finalists Czechoslovakia were subject to a barrage of waist-high tackles and punches to the gut.
Italy prevailed, and were rewarded with a gold championship cup "so big that it took four men to carry it and its pedestal on to the field". Mussolini handed out the prizes to his fellow countrymen – and a special cup to the German team, who prominently joined the celebrations/rally despite coming third.
2) The Berlin Olympic Games (1936)
In fairness to the International Olympic Committee, no one knew that Germany – who were awarded the 1936 Games in 1931 – would fall into the hands of fascist dictator Adolf Hitler two years later. However, that's about as much leniency as it deserves. The IOC had three years to make other plans upon Hitler seizing control, but elected to sit on its hands instead. Ostentatiously so: in 1934, the IOC president, Henri de Baillet-Latour, and the future president Avery 'Female Athletes Are Ineffective And Unpleasing' Brundage, went to Germany to sniff out alleged anti-Semitic racism. The evidence presented was deemed insufficient for this pair of clowns, who further argued that even if Jews were being discriminated against, it was a matter for Germany to address behind closed doors, and not one that should concern the IOC.
With Hitler later brazenly making it clear that no Jewish athletes would be part of the German team, the US seriously considered boycotting the event. Only disingenuous campaigning by Brundage – who having cosied up to the Führer, contended that each nation had the right to pick whoever they wanted, and that the IOC should not get involved in a piffling "Jew-Nazi altercation" – ensured the States agreed to send over a team. Even then, Brundage could not find the strength to keep out of it: during the Games, he put pressure on the US coaches to remove two Jewish runners from the 4x100m team, ensuring Hitler would not be embarrassed should they win.
Pleasingly, the Games proved to be a thundering PR disaster for Hitler, with Brundage inadvertently doing his bit to kibosh Adolf's gig. One of the men ordered to replace his Jewish team-mates in the US 4x100m team was Jesse Owens; his gold in that event would be one of four meaty slaps in Hitler's supposedly superior Aryan face.
That, though, was not how the IOC saw it. As the world skidded towards war, erstwhile president Pierre de Coubertin spoke of the "imposing success of the Berlin Games", which were, he argued, "illuminated by a Hitlerian force and discipline". The IOC then awarded the 1940 Games to a similarly belligerent Japan – whose government later withdrew, considering the whole affair a bit internationalist for their liking.
3) The Mexico Olympic Games (1968)
On the morning of Thursday 3 October 1968, the Guardian ran a front-page story concerning some worrying news ahead of the Mexico Olympics, scheduled to start 10 days later. The Mexican government had ratcheted up the charges for satellite links, forcing the European Broadcasting Union to pull out of their TV contract. It looked like there would be no pictures for the 350m viewers across the continent.
But also, at the very bottom of the column, there was a snap of late news: "Troops opened fire and moved in with fixed bayonets on 15,000 students as they staged an anti-government rally in Mexico City tonight. Although most shots were fired in the air, at least two people fell to the ground."
The following day's paper put things into proper perspective, with the order of the two stories flipped around. The Mexicans had dropped their demand for higher transmission fees, coming to an agreement with Europe's broadcasters. But that was now an afterthought, tucked away at the bottom of the page because more importantly would they have a Games to cover? Most of the shots at the anti-government rally had not been fired into the air; up to 500 students and trade unionists were feared dead, slain by troops acting on orders from the government. Surely the Olympics could not go ahead?
"None of the demonstrations or violence has at any time been directed against the Olympic Games," insisted our old pal Avery Brundage, now president of the IOC. The Olympics were, he said, "a veritable oasis in a troubled world". The massacre, he opined, plucking an old favourite from the bag, was "an internal affair".
The Guardian's legendary correspondent John Rodda, who had been caught up in the crossfire and was lucky to escape with his life, considered the reaction "extraordinary". He noted that a statement swallowed whole by the IOC from the Mexican president, Gustavo Díaz Ordaz, blaming "agitators" for events and denying any machine-gun fire had taken place, was simply untrue, and that "extremists could well look to [threaten] the Games" as a result. Not for the first time, the IOC looked the other way, declaring itself an apolitical organisation. Another barefaced lie: two weeks later, it was quick enough to encourage Tommie Smith and John Carlos to leave the Games, and the country, in the wake of their famous black power podium salute.
4) Argentina's World Cup (1978)
While there had been 10 days between the Tlatelolco massacre and the 1968 Olympics, Fifa had nearly two years to work out whether to reallocate the 1970 World Cup, which had been awarded to Mexico in 1964. Doing what comes naturally, they did bugger all, other than avert their eyes. It proved to be a trial run for events in Argentina eight years later.
Fifa had awarded Argentina the World Cup in 1966, so can hardly be expected to have foreseen the military coup that led to General Jorge Videla deposing Isabel Perón in March 1976. Even so, when Amnesty International publicised the new junta's predilection for making dissidents disappear by pushing them out of planes into the River Plate, there was still more than a year in which Fifa could act by moving the tournament to a democracy. It didn't bother.
"It is quite impossible," ran an editorial in the Buenos Aires Herald just before the World Cup began, "to pretend human rights are respected in this country … In many cases, after two years without a single clue as to the whereabouts of a missing son, daughter, husband or wife, relatives have given up hope. They are simply asking whether the person they seek is alive or dead. It is not too much to ask." In football's corridors of power, it apparently was.
5) The Springboks in New Zealand (1981)
The New Zealand prime minister, Robert Muldoon, had helped to draft the 1977 Gleneagles Agreement, when all Commonwealth countries pledged their commitment to opposing apartheid in South Africa by discouraging all sporting contact. But – as the Conservative premier went on national television in 1981 to point out, with the all-white Springboks on their way to visit the All Blacks at the invitation of the New Zealand Rugby Union – it was up to each government to work out how best to fulfil this commitment. Muldoon's position of choice was on the fence: his government weren't in the business of withholding visas and passports of sportsmen for political reasons. He'd ask the rugby administrators nicely if the tour could possibly be scrapped, but that was all.
The request was denied and the tour went ahead. "The New Zealand Rugby Union council is behaving in an irresponsible way and will cause quite unnecessary trouble," opined a leader in the Guardian, who had it pretty much spot on. The entire tour was played against the backdrop of attritional battles between anti-apartheid demonstrators and riot police. Two matches were abandoned, one after 200 protestors staged an on-pitch sit-in, having liberally scattered tacks over the turf. The three Tests between New Zealand and South Africa went ahead, though, and a tight series was only settled in time added on for stoppages at the end of the third match, New Zealand's Allan Hewson kicking a long-range penalty to settle the affair.
Despite the sporting drama, that final game, at Auckland's Eden Park, is chiefly remembered for elements of bleak farce. The match was interrupted by a lone aircraft dispatching flour bombs, leaflets and flares on to the pitch, the All Black prop Gary Knight being felled by bag of self-raising. Outside the stadium, where protests had escalated into a full-blown brouhaha, police waded into a group of peaceful demonstrators dressed as clowns and bumblebees. Law was enforced by the vicious swinging of truncheons; the clowns, in grim juxtaposition, had previously been jauntily waving baguettes.
Muldoon's government, picking through the wreckage after the Springboks had left, opted to clutch at straws. As the Guardian reported: "Within the government there have been some hopes that the abhorrence of racial discrimination that so many New Zealanders displayed during the tour … must make any country wary of having South African teams as visitors."
6) Gatting's rebel tour of South Africa (1990)
English cricket has suffered plenty of dark days over the years, but Tuesday 2 August 1989 is probably the pick of them. That was when England relinquished the Ashes on home soil for the first time since 1934, David Boon crashing the winning runs in the fourth Ashes Test to give the supposed "worst Australian side to tour England" an unassailable 3-0 lead in the series. But this was not the root cause of the nadir. That came later in the day, when the South African Cricket Union announced that a rebel 16-man English squad would tour the following year.
The mercenary squad would be led by the former captain Mike Gatting, and included two more ex-skippers in John Emburey and Chris Cowdrey. "This is the most shameful day for English cricket," said Bob Hughes MP, chairman of the Anti-Apartheid Movement, of players prepared to sacrifice their morals for juicy contracts reportedly up to £100,000. "They are taking blood money."
A bullish Gatting responded that he knew "very little about apartheid", an unconvincing and unreconstructed justification for a sorry betrayal. "I do believe there shouldn't be politics in sport. As far as I'm concerned, I should be allowed to play cricket to earn my living wherever I want."
Happily, karma intervened. The tour, held the following February, was a risible farce, and a financial disaster, dogged by controversy at every stage. Thousands of demonstrators, as well as the local trade-union movement, mobilised, getting up in the touring party's grill at every opportunity. At one hotel, Gatting was forced to get his pinny on to cook, the kitchen staff having walked out at the team's presence.
South Africa was on the cusp of seismic change, with Nelson Mandela due to be finally released from prison – although with Gatting's tour causing security concerns, the ANC leader's release was delayed. Mandela's patience was being tested to the very end: 27 long years in the jug, and yet forced to wait another week because of the English tourists.
Mandela's eventual release meant the tour was scrapped midway, Gatting and his men returning home "stunned" and, unsurprisingly, "confused".
Real Madrid keep on scoring but will it be enough against Barcelona?
A fantstic article from Sid Lowe, ahead of tonights latest instalment of 'el classico', copied in full from our friends at Guradian Sport as featured in today’s edition.
It was not supposed to be this way. These two unstoppable beasts were supposed to stride towards each other, floor shaking with every thumping step, swatting others out the way until they came head to head at the Camp Nou for the ultimate showdown. For Real Madrid, this was an opportunity; with a four-point lead at the top, it was a chance to defeat and destroy Barcelona, taking the title and proving themselves the most powerful force around. Instead, they both turn up defeated.
They always knew that was possible. Bayern Munich are Real's other enemy, and El Clásico is still a colossal clash, the biggest in world football, but this was the week that seemed set to enthrone them. It is only seven days since Real become the equal highest scoring team in Spanish football history; Karim Benzema's goal against Sporting Gijón was his team's third of the match, the goal that restored their lead at the top of the table to seven points. It was also Real's 107th league goal. José Mourinho's team had matched the record with five matches to spare.
Last season Real had come close, scoring 102, but there was something a little false about the stat. It owed much to a late-season flurry, scoring six, two, six, four, three and eight in their final six matches following a 1-1 draw with Barcelona, which had effectively confirmed the Catalans as league champions and after which Alfredo Di Stefáno described Madrid as a team "without personality", playing like "mice".
There is nothing false about this total. Madrid have equalled John Toshack's Real Madrid of 1989-90, the last waltz from a legendary, artistic team: the Emilio Butragueño-led Quinta del Buitre, which clinched five consecutive league championships. The Clásico will go a long way to deciding if Real can prevent Pep Guardiola's team reaching a fourth successive title.
That 89-90 season, Hugo Sánchez equalled Telmo Zarra's 1950-51 record, scoring 38 goals – every one with a single touch. Cristiano Ronaldo broke Sánchez's record last season with 39. Now he's on 41. He has 53 in 49 games in all competitions, 139 in 137 since leaving Manchester United. Forty-one is the same figure as Lionel Messi. He has 63 in 53 games; Messi gets a goal every 72 minutes, Ronaldo every 81. They have assists, too, and lots of them: Messi is on 25, Ronaldo 14.
One week, Messi leads in the Pichichi charts, the next it is Ronaldo. The Clásico is a confrontation of a thousand subplots; Messi v Ronaldo, players who define their teams, is the most compelling of them. At times, you can almost picture the two of them on the phone before the weekend's games, deciding on the number of goals they will get. They are in cahoots, having a giggle at all our expense, and to our joy. How many this week, Cris? Two, Leo? OK then.
When it comes to goals in this fixture, the balance has tipped the way of the Madrid man once accused of not being able to perform against the Catalans – he missed a penalty for Manchester United in Barcelona. He has now scored in the past three Clásicos; Messi has not scored in any of them. Yet Messi has six in six confrontations with Real at the Camp Nou and has scored more against Iker Casillas than any other goalkeeper.
It is not just about Messi's goals, though. And it is not just about Ronaldo. He is not alone in the Madrid team. Benzema has 18 in the league. Gonzalo Higuaín has 21. They are the most effective "trident" in history, ahead of Messi, Thierry Henry and Samuel Eto'o, who led Barcelona's 6-2 win at Madrid in 2008-09, even though they rarely play together. Real's goal difference is +78, Barcelona's is +72. In Europe, Madrid have scored 33, level with Barcelona. In the league, they average 3.2 per game. As the assistant coach Aitor Karanka put it: "For those who say Mourinho is defensive, those aren't bad stats."
Accusations of defensiveness linger, and in Spain, where the aesthetic is often as prized as the effective, "accusation" is the word. But the figures make a powerful case. It is easy to empathise with Mourinho: 107 goals and you're still calling us defensive?
At specific moments Mourinho has sought protection, though. Fábio Coentrão tends to replace the attacking full-back Marcelo in key games. Mourinho also opted for a trivote – a three-man defensive midfield and a word laced with negative overtones – in Valencia, Málaga and Villarreal. He has famously done the same against Barcelona, with Pepe as one of the three, a decision some met as if it was a moral aberration.
One of the big questions being posed is: will he do the same now? Will the four-point lead give him a cushion that allows him to attack Barcelona knowing that Madrid will still be top no matter what, or will it encourage him to protect what he holds? After all, a draw will almost certainly make Real champions. They have let a 10-point lead slip but few can see them dropping points twice in the final four games. If Mourinho does seek an extra body in there he may have to find another man for the role. Lassana Diarra, the normal addition to Xabi Alonso and Sami Khedira, has slipped not just from the team since the draw at Villarreal but from the squad.
The occasional caution suggests a recognition of the different levels of opposition in Spain and beyond. Yet Mourinho has tried many approaches against Barcelona. The results have been largely the same – they have won one in 10 – but the sensations have been different. The desire to protect is understandable, but Barcelona have rarely been less comfortable than when Real have attacked them, applying intense pressure and applying it high: the 2-2 Copa del Rey draw at the Camp Nou was one of those rare occasions where the sensation was that the visitors were the better side. Mourinho's critics suggested that he only did so because, trailing from the first leg, he had no choice.
Mostly, Mourinho's team has been insatiable this season. No one rains in shots like they do: Real have taken 645 this season. The second highest, Barcelona, are almost 100 behind. They do not play the same technical game as Barcelona and their possession stats are lower; 58% against 67% in the Champions League before last week's semi-final first-leg ties; 500 passes per game against 666 in La Liga. But the offensive intent is there.
There is a relentlessness about them that is partly born of last season, of the realisation that in Spain draws are the new defeats. Real failed to win the 2010-11 title because of their 5-0 loss to Barcelona, sure, but also because of 0-0 draws with Mallorca, Levante and Deportivo and 1-0 defeats against Osasuna and Sporting Gijón. Five games against clubs they should destroy, whose budget they dwarf; five games without scoring. The lesson was reinforced in weeks three and four of this season when they were beaten 1-0 by Levante and drew 0-0 in Santander.
The determination not to repeat that mistake has contributed to the manner in which they have steamrollered teams and contributed to their goals tally. Since Santander, they have failed to scored once: the 0-0 draw with Valencia, in which they took 33 shots. The previous two games they had won 5-1, in part a reaction to the timely reminder received the week before when Real scored once against Málaga and Villarreal, both times conceding late equalisers from free-kicks. It was a wake-up call for a team that had found that even when they played badly they still had sufficient pegada to win.
Pegada means punch. While Barcelona are technically precise stylists, dancing around, jabbing you into submission, Real beat you to a pulp. And when they do not, when their opponent may even be winning on points, they have an incredible capacity to land the knockout blow. It can come out of nowhere and it can come from anywhere, making them more dangerous. As one La Liga coach explains, "Barcelona make you feel worse than Madrid, more inferior. You never touch the ball, you just drop ever deeper and protect yourself. Against Madrid, you feel like you're in the game, you get the ball, you play, you attack … and that is when they score."
Less possession sometimes means more effective possession. The speed of Real's transitions is devastating. "Counterattack" is treated like a dirty phrase in Spain but Real execute it with such pace and precision that it is a thing of breathtaking beauty. Rarely does the opposition look more vulnerable than when they have a corner. Another coach admits to not sending defenders forward for them. It is not worth the risk. Real, on the other hand, do. From set plays in the air, Sergio Ramos might be the most dangerous player in Spain. Mesut Ozil, Alonso and Ángel Di María provide accurate deliveries. Only two sides have scored more from dead balls than Real. No one has had more penalties.
If that makes Real sound like a purely counterattacking side, scoring on the break and from free kicks and corners, think again. They may well opt to be so against Barcelona but, on average, they still have more than 60% of the ball and they have scored more goals from team moves than anyone else – including Barcelona. There is just so much variety to Real's game: speed and power, technique, athleticism and skill. They can go outside or inside, play long or play short. They are supremely well organised, too, fit and fast.
Stripped down to the basics, there is just so much talent. There's never been a more expensive team. Their front three last Saturday was Ozil, Higuaín and Ronaldo. Cost: €126m. The players on the bench cost €174m and they have been used well: more subs have scored for Madrid than anyone else.
Nuri Sahin was the Bundesliga's best player last season; last Saturday he started his first league game in Spain. Real hadn't needed him until now. It ended with Madrid scoring three. Three more. One hundred and seven in total. No one has ever scored more. But will it be enough?
Friday, 20 April 2012
Welcome to the New Design
Hello, nothing has changed regarding features. Our design has got slightly more grown up(ish). We also have new features coming up, as the football and Rugby seasons come to an end.
Tapes Up, our look at speedway following Newcastle Diamonds and Captains Log - following Lake County Captains in Baseball have started already.
New features coming soon.
Odd stories throughout the Olympics in 'Tales from the East'
Firkin and Stump: following 'dads' cricket team Bamville, on travels to Eastern Europe during the Euro's and their main cricket season.
Chopsticks for Goalposts: A series of 3 posts looking at the Chinese Super League.
'Who let the Dogs out' returns. Paddy Crowley will be reporting in, as the newly named Barking & Dagenham Bulldogs start their season
and much, much more
Tapes Up, our look at speedway following Newcastle Diamonds and Captains Log - following Lake County Captains in Baseball have started already.
New features coming soon.
Odd stories throughout the Olympics in 'Tales from the East'
Firkin and Stump: following 'dads' cricket team Bamville, on travels to Eastern Europe during the Euro's and their main cricket season.
Chopsticks for Goalposts: A series of 3 posts looking at the Chinese Super League.
'Who let the Dogs out' returns. Paddy Crowley will be reporting in, as the newly named Barking & Dagenham Bulldogs start their season
and much, much more
Get Your Kit On: Norwich City 2012/2013
Thank you to our friends at Football Kit News for the image and introduction for the new Norwich City home shirts. Also we forgot to credit them for the Leyton Orient post - sorry.
This is the new Norwich kit 12-13, Norwich City’s new home shirt for the 2012/13 season. Norwich City compete in the Premier League and are the only club in the league to have their kits made by Italian manufacturer Errea. Norwich are the second Premier League club to unveil their 2012/2013 kits after Chelsea.
The new Norwich City 12-13 kit was officially unveiled on April 18, 2012 ( on Global Canaries- 14.00 UK.
AVIVA are again the principal sponsors of the 2012/2013 Norwich kit, which has a collar as well as a different end of the sleeve design. It also seems to have a more vibrant colour in comparison to the last 11/12 Norwich home kit. The Canaries also showcased a new video for the kit release with the theme “pass it on”.
Get Your Kit On: Leyton Orient 2012/2013
These are the new Leyton Orient kits 2012/13, English club Leyton Orient’s home and away shirts for the 12/13 season. Leyton Orient’s new 2012/2013 kits have been made by Nike and have a new sponsor in the form of electronics major Samsung ( home kit) and gaming giant EA Sports ( away shirt). The new O’s kits were unveiled on April 18, 2012
The O’s new 12/13 home shirt is red in colour, while the new away strip is blue in colour, both with white blocks on the sleeve. The Nike logo in both kits is white in colour.
Apart from Orient, Samsung also sponsor Chelsea and Swindon Town in English football. EA Sports have the FIFA 13 logo on the front of the away shirt and their logo will also appear on the back of the home shirt. The Samsung logo will be on the front of the home kit and on the back of the away kit.
The O’s new 12/13 home shirt is red in colour, while the new away strip is blue in colour, both with white blocks on the sleeve. The Nike logo in both kits is white in colour.
Apart from Orient, Samsung also sponsor Chelsea and Swindon Town in English football. EA Sports have the FIFA 13 logo on the front of the away shirt and their logo will also appear on the back of the home shirt. The Samsung logo will be on the front of the home kit and on the back of the away kit.
Tuesday, 17 April 2012
Amid the drugs and violence, soccer lifts a city
Post from The Associated Press. Picture from ((AP Photo/El Siglo de Torreon)
TORREON, Mexico—Gunfire crackled during the game, with players and referees running for cover.
Outside Santos Laguna's soccer stadium, gunmen had opened fire on a police patrol. No one was killed this time. This was just the daily fallout from the drug cartel violence that engulfs this city in northern Mexico.
That was eight months ago.
Fast forward to next week, when the same stadium will be the main stage for a big moment in Mexican sports. Santos Laguna will try to win the CONCACAF Champions League against Mexico rival Monterrey. The winner of the two-leg finals advances to Tokyo for the Club World Cup, which was won last year by Spanish giant Barcelona.
"It'd be really nice to give these people something to be proud of, for Torreon to be put on the global scale for something other than negativity or violence," said Herculez Gomez, the American striker and the team's top scorer. "They live, they eat, they breath this team out here."
Gomez grew up in Las Vegas and played in the last World Cup for the United States. He transferred to the first-division team in December from the Mexican club Estudiantes Tecos.
"I was definitely worried coming in," he said. "You fear what you don't know. I'd heard great things about the club, that they were a top-notch club, very professional; very new-age as far as Mexican football goes. I came and that's exactly what I saw."
Santos Laguna plays the first leg Wednesday at Monterrey with the second leg on April 25 at Santos' Corona Stadium.
Santos has been close to success recently, losing three of the last four finals for the Mexican League championship. The team is near the top again this season, thanks in part to the ownership and financial might of Mexican brewer Grupo Modelo.
Much of the credit goes to Alejandro Irarragorri, the club president who took over in 2006 and is intent on keeping the team competitive. He has visited European powerhouses such as Barcelona, Real Madrid and Manchester City and has tried to learn from those models. The club also has close links with Celtic in Scotland and has showed its ambition by signing Spanish midfielder Marc Crosas, a product of Barcelona's youth system.
"Our vision is that of a business, and when one wants to learn important things you have to look to the leaders, and it is clear that European leagues are leaders in all aspects," Irarragorri said.
The team's Territorio Santos Modelo complex—opened in 2009, and housing the stadium, youth team housing, training facilities and eventually a shopping mall and hotel—is one of the most modern sports facilities in Mexico.
But the city has had myriad problems linked to the drug war. A government assault on organized crime has been accompanied by violence that has left more than 47,000 people dead nationwide since President Felipe Calderon deployed thousands of federal police and soldiers shortly after taking office in 2006.
In Torreon, nightclubs closed because of the violence and bars shut early. Get-togethers in homes are the norm with the drug-related turf war between the Sinaloa and Zeta cartels ravaging the city. The army and state police patrol the streets, and the U.S. government advises its citizens not to go to Torreon.
"The city of Torreon had a murder rate of more than 40 per 100,000 population between January and August of 2011," the U.S. government said in a statement "You should defer all nonessential travel."
Despite the fear and chaos, Santos regularly fills its 30,000-seat stadium on the outskirts of the city.
"With all this violence, the stadium has become like a meeting point for the city," taxi driver Aaron Ramirez said. "It would mean a lot here to get to the Club World Cup."
TORREON, Mexico—Gunfire crackled during the game, with players and referees running for cover.
Outside Santos Laguna's soccer stadium, gunmen had opened fire on a police patrol. No one was killed this time. This was just the daily fallout from the drug cartel violence that engulfs this city in northern Mexico.
That was eight months ago.
Fast forward to next week, when the same stadium will be the main stage for a big moment in Mexican sports. Santos Laguna will try to win the CONCACAF Champions League against Mexico rival Monterrey. The winner of the two-leg finals advances to Tokyo for the Club World Cup, which was won last year by Spanish giant Barcelona.
"It'd be really nice to give these people something to be proud of, for Torreon to be put on the global scale for something other than negativity or violence," said Herculez Gomez, the American striker and the team's top scorer. "They live, they eat, they breath this team out here."
Gomez grew up in Las Vegas and played in the last World Cup for the United States. He transferred to the first-division team in December from the Mexican club Estudiantes Tecos.
"I was definitely worried coming in," he said. "You fear what you don't know. I'd heard great things about the club, that they were a top-notch club, very professional; very new-age as far as Mexican football goes. I came and that's exactly what I saw."
Santos Laguna plays the first leg Wednesday at Monterrey with the second leg on April 25 at Santos' Corona Stadium.
Santos has been close to success recently, losing three of the last four finals for the Mexican League championship. The team is near the top again this season, thanks in part to the ownership and financial might of Mexican brewer Grupo Modelo.
Much of the credit goes to Alejandro Irarragorri, the club president who took over in 2006 and is intent on keeping the team competitive. He has visited European powerhouses such as Barcelona, Real Madrid and Manchester City and has tried to learn from those models. The club also has close links with Celtic in Scotland and has showed its ambition by signing Spanish midfielder Marc Crosas, a product of Barcelona's youth system.
"Our vision is that of a business, and when one wants to learn important things you have to look to the leaders, and it is clear that European leagues are leaders in all aspects," Irarragorri said.
The team's Territorio Santos Modelo complex—opened in 2009, and housing the stadium, youth team housing, training facilities and eventually a shopping mall and hotel—is one of the most modern sports facilities in Mexico.
But the city has had myriad problems linked to the drug war. A government assault on organized crime has been accompanied by violence that has left more than 47,000 people dead nationwide since President Felipe Calderon deployed thousands of federal police and soldiers shortly after taking office in 2006.
In Torreon, nightclubs closed because of the violence and bars shut early. Get-togethers in homes are the norm with the drug-related turf war between the Sinaloa and Zeta cartels ravaging the city. The army and state police patrol the streets, and the U.S. government advises its citizens not to go to Torreon.
"The city of Torreon had a murder rate of more than 40 per 100,000 population between January and August of 2011," the U.S. government said in a statement "You should defer all nonessential travel."
Despite the fear and chaos, Santos regularly fills its 30,000-seat stadium on the outskirts of the city.
"With all this violence, the stadium has become like a meeting point for the city," taxi driver Aaron Ramirez said. "It would mean a lot here to get to the Club World Cup."
Get Your Kit On: Some new kits for Euro 2012
Thank you to our friends at Football Kit News for providing the photograph and introduction.
Nike have unveiled new 2012/2013 national home kits that the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo, Robin Van Persie, Wesley Sneijder, Luka Modric and Karim Benzema will be wearing at this summer’s Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine.
Nike are outfitting five nations at the 2012 European Championships and it is these five nations’ Euro 2012 kits- Poland, Netherlands, Portugal, Croatia and France, that have been unveiled by Nike today ( April 16, 2012)
France’s home 2012/2013 kit is completely blue in colour, while Portugal’s sees a modification from their World Cup 2010 home jersey. The likes of Ronaldo, Sneijder and Modric are seen modelling their respective national kits.
Nike have unveiled new 2012/2013 national home kits that the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo, Robin Van Persie, Wesley Sneijder, Luka Modric and Karim Benzema will be wearing at this summer’s Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine.
Nike are outfitting five nations at the 2012 European Championships and it is these five nations’ Euro 2012 kits- Poland, Netherlands, Portugal, Croatia and France, that have been unveiled by Nike today ( April 16, 2012)
France’s home 2012/2013 kit is completely blue in colour, while Portugal’s sees a modification from their World Cup 2010 home jersey. The likes of Ronaldo, Sneijder and Modric are seen modelling their respective national kits.
Rebels 2: Melbourne struggle in Canberra
Thank you to the Rebels media team for providing us with the match report.
The RaboDirect Rebels were given a masterclass in ball protection by the Brumbies in Canberra on Saturday night, as the weight of the home side’s possession saw them break through some sloppy Melbourne defence for four first-half tries.
The Rebels tried to force their way back into the match on the rare occasions when the ball did come their way, but without the composure that comes from building sustained attacking momentum they entered a vicious cycle, turning the ball over through handling errors almost as soon as they had won it.
Captain Gareth Delve said his side’s performance was “very disappointing”.
“We just weren’t at the races. That first 30 minutes especially, we just didn’t get off the line and make our tackles”, said Delve.
“No excuses, tonight we just didn’t come out and implement what we’ve put in place”.
The Rebels looked unsettled from the very start of the match, with the Brumbies’ unyielding control of the ball frustrating the visitors. Unable to win back possession or prevent the home side’s relentless forward momentum, the Rebels repeatedly breached the offside line and were duly punished by referee Craig Joubert. Christian Lealiifano slotted two early penalty goals to give his side an early lead, before Danny Cipriani countered with a huge kick from 53m.
Unfortunately getting points on the board did nothing to calm the Rebels and bring back some structure, as the host’s first try of the night came soon after. The Brumbies flooded the midfield channel from a lineout deep in Rebels territory and centre Pat McCabe brushed off a tackle from his Wallaby team-mate James O’Connor to score under the posts for a 13-3 lead.
But while the Rebels were happy to try and rein in the deficit with an O’Connor penalty, the Brumbies were looking for greater rewards. After kicking for a lineout in the corner, the Canberra side struck again when flanker Michael Hooper broke through the disorganised Rebels’ defence from a rolling maul.
Another try followed just two minutes later, after a fantastic kick chase from the Brumbies won them back the ball with the Rebels in disarray. While the desperate scrambling defence stemmed the tide for a few moments, eventually lock Sam Fardy burrowed over from short distance.
Things got even worse for the Rebels when Delve was sin-binned 10 minutes before half-time, the captain ultimately paying the price for his side’s repeated breakdown and offside infringements. The Brumbies quickly capitalised on their numeric advantage, with their own skipper Ben Mowen benefitting from McCabe’s strong run and offload to score his team’s fourth just before the break.
The Brumbies were content to sit on their 30-6 lead for much of the second half, but while the Rebels continued to battle and did win some sustained possession, it seemed the harder they tried the less things went their way. Mistakes in the scrum and lineout were compounded by further handling errors, and although the Rebels defence seemed able to handle the more subdued Brumbies attacks, eventually another missed tackle gave Fardy his brace and his team their fifth and final score.
Sol y Futbol: Lanzarote keep up push for play-off
After the Easter break Lanzarote returned to league action. Ian Lane was in Arrecife, to watch them register their biggest win of the season and keep the push for a play-off spot alive.
LANZAROTE 4 CLUB ATLÉTICO VICTORIA 0
The Rojillos make it seven home wins on the bounce with their biggest victory of the season and have darted to within three points of the final playoff spot. Rosmen, Vladi and Ayoze (2)were the goal scorers with the latter finishing the match with a goal of the season strike.
Lanzarote fired off the blocks in typical attacking style and dominated from the off. The midfield of Vladi, Jotha and Ayoze showed their class by keeping the ball moving and closing their opponents down when losing possession.
Toñito was causing his usual mayhem bamboozling his defender with his trickery and pace. When the defender thought that he could get the better of him, Toñito then switched flank and did the same to the left back. It was good football and a goal was on the cards.
After several well worked half chances the inevitable finally occurred in the 25th minute. Ayoze raced to the by-line and with great vision picked out a beauty to Rosmen, the tall centre forward neatly placed his header into the far right hand corner leaving the keeper no chance and gave his side a 1-0 lead.
The Tenerife side were well under the cosh but in the 33rd minute Lanzarote almost learnt how frail a one goal advantage is. A cross from the left found the ball at the feet of striker Carlos. With a free crack at goal from four yards the Atlético Victoria player only managed to find the feet of the Lanzarote keeper Ruymán who remained alert kicking the ball away to safety.
The Rojillos still dominated but were unable to increase their lead as the sides went into the break with Lanzarote a goal to the good.
There wasn’t much change in the pattern of play in the early stages of the second half with Jotha and Vladi moving the ball around quickly making their opponents tire. As the game approached the hour mark the Rojillos upped the tempo one more notch. In the 61st minute Ayoze fed his ever dangerous left back Taja, he curled in a high cross to the far post and Vladi brilliantly rose tallest and thundered in a header from five yards to send the Rojillos 2-0 up.
What little resistance the Tenerife side had prior to this goal had
now evaporated. The Rojillos didn’t need to chase the game so held onto possession and just bided their time. In the 64th minute another great cross from Taja found Ayoze who simply tucked the ball away from close range to make it 3-0.
Any fans who decided to wait beyond the 90 minutes were greatly rewarded. Ayoze chased a long ball up field and battled away with the defender. Being off balance and under pressure from the defender he released a strike from 30 yards that whistled through the air and within a second the ball smashed into the net for a goal that would have graced any Primera Liga ground.
A brilliant day’s work for Lanzarote but now they must travel to La Palma to face a side that is fighting for that all important top spot S.D. Tenisca. The Rojillos must return with something.
The last playoff spot is up for grabs. Current holders of that position are C.F. Estrella and they have not won in eight games. Realistically it is between four clubs and the Rojillos have put themselves in a position where they have a great chance of claiming that prize. Lanzarote´s goal difference is the weakest but in Spanish football it is different. It goes against the two clubs. Lanzarote drew away to Estrella therefore on the last game of the season Lanzarote would just need to beat Estrella at home if the points are level and goal difference would be irrelevant.
GOALS
1-0min 25 Rosmen
2-0min 61 Vladi
3-0min 64 Ayoze
4-0min 91 Ayoze
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