Saturday, October 31, 2009

Don’t blame drug user Andre Agassi for failing to handle the fame game .Andre Agassi ‘would have been pariah over drugs’


Star pair: Andre Agassi with tennis wife Steffi Graf





Up for a laugh: Agassi and Henman during an exhibition mixed doubles match at Wimbledon this year




Glamour couple: Boris Becker with wife Sharlely Kerssenberg - 10 years after his infamous romp in the cupboard with a Russian waitress





The early days: Agassi in the 1990s

Andre Agassi would have been a pariah in his own sport if his drug-taking exploits had been made public while he was playing, it was claimed last night.

Leading sponsorship experts said that Agassi’s new status as a revered philanthropist would protect him from rejection by the sponsors who now support his charitable causes.

But they were shocked by the revelation that Agassi took crystal methamphetamine, a highly addictive drug, and then lied to the tennis authorities. If that had become public knowledge at the time, they believe he would have been thrown out of tennis so fast there would have been scorch marks on the lawns of Wimbledon.

“There is no question he would have been banned and rejected by every sponsor he had,” Dominic Curran, director at Synergy, the sport sponsorship consultancy, said. “It was not just a question of taking performance-enhancing drugs or a recreational drug but a substance that has horrific consequences.

“Any sponsor would have dropped Agassi like a hot potato and could not countenance being associated with an offence and a lie on that scale.”

Agassi became one of the most sought-after sportsmen in the world, racking up more than £100 million in endorsements during his career — putting him in the same league as figures such as Tiger Woods, Michael Schumacher and Roger Federer.

His journey from scruffy bad boy to clean-cut American idol is the stuff of sporting dreams and was latched on to quickly by sponsors wanting to make the most of a man whose image transcended his sport. Nike, the world’s most powerful sportswear company, started its association with Agassi in 1986, his first year as a professional, handing him $25,000 (about £15,000). But as Agassi moved up the rankings to become an eight-times grand-slam singles tournament winner, the relationship strengthened into a ten-year contract worth $120 million.

Drugs were never on the agenda, though, and perhaps the most telling deal of Agassi’s career was with Canon, the camera manufacturer, as he intoned their slogan in a series of television commercials. The slogan was: “Image is everything.”

Agassi’s detailed confession in his autobiography of how he took the drug and then lied about it is a dent in an image that had seemed so squeaky clean until The Times’ serialisation of his book started yesterday.

“The question is whether a confession like this has an impact on the Agassi brand, built up over years,” Pippa Collett, managing director of Sponsorship Consulting, said. “I think probably not and that people will see this as a confession and that he has come back from a bad place.

“It is always difficult for a sponsor to invest in an individual because you never know when they will fall off the wagon, as it were, such as taking drugs, drinking, driving offences or bad behaviour. Fortunately, Agassi’s career is over so that is not an issue.”

Michael Phelps, the eight-times gold medal-winner at the Beijing Olympics last year, discovered just how fast sponsors can react when Kellogg, the food company, refused to renew its $1 million endorsement deal with him after he was pictured appearing to smoke cannabis through a glass pipe, known as a bong, in January.

Martina Hingis, the former tennis No 1, retired after testing positive for cocaine during Wimbledon in 2007. She was reduced to taking part in this year’s version of the BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing programme, while Phelps is slowly rebuilding his image.

But Agassi, with Steffi Graf, his wife and winner of 22 grand-slam singles titles, have devoted themselves to their charitable foundation, which has raised more than £40 million to educate underprivileged children. His deal with Longines, the Swiss luxury watchmaker, has also been used to raise money for charity.

Deals like that will go on if and when Agassi’s image is rehabilitated, in spite of his drug-taking confessions from a difficult past.
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Rio Ferdinand will never be the player he once was, claims ex-England boss Graham Taylor


Off the mark: Craig Bellamy celebrates after taking advantage of Ferdinand's howler to score in the Manchester derby





Off the pace: Liverpool's Fernando Torres holds off Rio Ferdinand to score against United


Rio Ferdinand's ability to continue playing at the highest level was thrown into doubt by former England manager Graham Taylor.

The central defender - a key man in Fabio Capello's plans for next summer's World Cup finals in South Africa - was left out of the Manchester United side that beat Blackburn Rovers 2-0 at Old Trafford on Saturday.

His omission came just hours after Taylor had claimed that Ferdinand has 'lost his legs' and would never play to his previous standard again.

Speaking on BBC Radio Five Live, Taylor said: 'What I am going to say will probably surprise a lot of people, but I think Rio Ferdinand has lost his legs. He struggled to keep up with Fernando Torres in Manchester United's game against Liverpool last week and I just don't think he is - or will be - the wonderful player he once was.'

The England defender, who turns 31 on Saturday, has endured a nightmare October, being beaten for pace in embarrassing circumstances against Ukraine and seeing his reputation as a highly mobile defender plummet.

United manager Sir Alex Ferguson will be furious over Taylor's remarks, having already hit back at the barrage of recent criticism aimed at Ferdinand.

The United boss had said: 'I don't know where it is coming from. I just have to put it down to the modern culture of humiliating people.'

Even Ferdinand's exclusion against Rovers became a talking point yesterday. The United manager claimed on Friday that the defender had a calf niggle, but there was widespread speculation earlier in the week that Ferguson planned to leave him out anyway after his run of poor form.

Ferdinand also cancelled attending a film premiere on Thursday because it was 48 hours before a match - not the actions of a man who was injured.

On Friday, Ferguson said: 'I keep reading that I am going to drop Rio but the media don't know my mind and won't pick my teams.'

However, Ferdinand can take comfort from the fact that current England boss, Fabio Capello, does not agree with Taylor's withering assessment.

Sources close to Capello explained last night that the England management still have faith in Ferdinand.

They believe his problems stem from the fact that he was unable to do full pre-season training because of injury problems. Capello is confident that Ferdinand can return to his best in time for World Cup action in South Africa.

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Saturday, October 10, 2009

Argentina 2 Peru 1: Palermo's injury-time winner rescues Maradona


Argentina's Martin Palermo celebrates his late winner against Peru.


Argentina's Gabriel Heinze, right, controls the ball as Peru's Christian Ramos, center, and Amilton Prado look on during a 2010 World Cup qualifying soccer match in Buenos Aires, Saturday, Oct. 10, 2009.



Time's up: Argentina's head coach Diego Maradona on his way out if continue to lost in the qualifying rounds in World Cup.

Palermo gets Argentina's second after Peru looked to have grabbed a draw



Belly full: Argentina's head coach Diego Maradona dives onto the ground as he celebrates his team's late winner

Super sub: Argentina's Martin Palermo celebrates after scoring the winner
Argentina kept their World Cup qualification hopes in their own hands with a dramatic 2-1 win over Peru.

Debutant Gonzalo Higuain, starting ahead of Carlos Tevez, nodded them in front in the second half before Hernan Rengifo headed a last-minute equaliser.

But deep in injury time, substitute Martin Palermo, recalled after a 10-year absence, tapped in the winner.

The win puts Diego Maradona's team up to fourth, the final automatic qualifying place, with one match left.

That key game is on Wednesday against Uruguay, who are only a point behind in the fifth-place play-off berth after beating Ecuador, who are now in sixth another point back.

"I told him at half-time 'go and resolve this'," Maradona said of his decision to bring on Palermo.

"It was a miracle from Saint Palermo that gives us another life."


Substitute Martin Palermo's close-range finish deep into injury time earned Argentina a thrilling last-gasp win over Peru in Buenos Aires just minutes after Diego Maradona's men looked to have suffered yet another World Cup qualifying setback.

Palermo, whom Maradona has recalled to the national team after a 10-year absence, tapped home at the far post in driving rain to send his coach diving across the sodden turf on his stomach in celebration.

Hernan Rengifo had headed an equaliser for Peru in the 90th minute to cancel out debutant Gonzalo Higuain's opener early in the second half.

The win moved Argentina up to fourth place in the South American qualifying table, a point ahead of Uruguay, whom they play on Wednesday, and two clear of Ecuador.

Maradona sprung a surprise with his team selection, leaving big-name strikers Carlos Tevez and Sergio Aguero on the bench and instead handing Higuain his first cap.

Argentina went into the match having lost their last three qualifiers to Paraguay, Brazil and Ecuador, but if ever there was a chance to restore some confidence in the side this was it - a home match against the team bottom of the group.

And they did everything but score in a first half they dominated from start to finish.

Gabriel Heinze stole in at the back post in the sixth minute to head a deep cross from the right low across goal and wide when he should have hit the target, but the assistant's raised flag got him off the hook.

A minute later Angel Di Maria was sent clear down the left but, despite being in acres of space and under no pressure, he could only stab his weak cross far too close to the keeper.

Higuain missed the best chance of the half when he was picked out by Di Maria's low ball in and contrived to shoot over from six yards with the goal gaping.

The Real Madrid man saw another far more difficult chance saved by the legs of Peru keeper Leao Butron as the home side continued to see opportunities come and go.

Lionel Messi was starting to pull the strings in the final third, one glorious drop of the shoulder and drag back leaving Rainer Torres on the seat of his shorts. On the half-hour mark the Barcelona man sent in a dinked left-footed cross from the right from which Pablo Aimar looked to score with an audacious backheel, but he did not get a strong enough contact and the ball went wide.

Benfica's Aimar then sent a low cross along the six-yard line which evaded everyone before moments later Messi picked up the ball just inside the area on the right and blasted a left-footed shot which swerved wide of the far post.

Di Maria's cross from the left was then spilled by Butron but Peru survived and went into the break all square as their goal continued to live a charmed life.

Maradona turned to imposing striker Martin Palermo rather than Tevez or Aguero at half-time, but his side almost found themselves behind scarcely a minute into the second period.

Nolberto Solano's corner picked out Juan Vargas who crashed a first-time left-foot volley off the top of the crossbar from well outside the area.

It was Argentina, though, who took the lead in the 48th minute, Aimar stabbing a pass through into the right of the area, which Higuain ran on to and slotted into the far corner.

Peru had a penalty shout waved away in the 58th minute when Solano's shot appeared to be blocked by the arm of Emiliano Insua.

And Argentina looked to grow more nervous as the second half wore on, their chances drying up as torrential rain started to pour down.

The home side seemed prepared to hold out for the final whistle and were made to pay for not going for the jugular when they conceded in the final minute.

Moments after keeper Sergio Romero had made a superb point-blank save, Rengifo nodded home a cross from the left from barely two yards bring Peru level.

But just as Argentina's World Cup dreams looked to be slipping away, Palermo came up trumps for his under-fire boss.

With no fewer than eight Argentinian players in a packed Peru penalty area, the Boca Juniors striker found himself in the right place at the right time to convert the easiest of chances after a low ball across the box came all the way through to him.

There was more drama to come as Rainer Torres tried his luck straight from the kick-off, but his effort struck the bar and Argentina and Maradona claimed a vital win.

Lineups:

Argentina - Sergio Romero, Jonas Gutierrez, Rolando Schiavi, Gabriel Heinze, Emiliano Insua, Enzo Perez (Martin Palermo, 48th), Javier Mascherano, Angel Di Maria, Pablo Aimar (Federico Insua, 76th), Gonzalo Higuain (Martin Demichelis, 68th), Lionel Messi.

Peru - Leao Butron, Amilton Prado, Carlos Zambrano, Walter Vilchez, Alberto Rodriguez, Rainer Torres, Nolberto Solano (Roberto Palacios, 56th), Josepmir Ballon, Juan Vargas, Luis RamDirez, y Johan Fano (Hernan Rengifo, 72nd).





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ProZone analysis proves Manchester United Sir Alex Ferguson got it so wrong over 'unfit' referee Alan Wiley


Job well done: Sportsmail columnist Graham Poll believes Wiley got all the big decisions right

Running the show: Alan Wiley takes a firm line with Wayne Rooney on Saturday

Previous: Not for the first time, Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson clashes with Alan Wiley



Sir Alex Ferguson branded him 'unfit' and berated his inability to keep pace with Manchester United and Sunderland players.

So scathing was Ferguson's personal attack that it left referee Alan Wiley questioning whether he ought to walk away from football.

Yet, Sportsmail can reveal that Wiley has nothing to be ashamed of over his performance at Old Trafford during the 2-2 draw and that he actually covered more ground than all but seven of the players on show.

A review of the ProZone match data - the tool top players and officials use to analyse their displays - shows that Wiley, 48, ran a total of 6.86 miles during Saturday's match, more than all but four of United's players and three of Sunderland's.

The revelation leaves Ferguson's withering attack on Wiley's fitness looking inaccurate and unfair.

Ferguson had ranted on Saturday evening: 'I was disappointed with the referee. He just wasn't fit enough for a game of that stature.

'The fitness of both sets of players, the pace of the game, demanded a referee who was fit. He's not fit. It's an indictment of our game that we see referees from abroad who are fit as butchers' dogs. We've got some good referees in our country who are fit. But he wasn't fit.'

But the ProZone figures exclusively obtained by Sportsmail tell a different story. Not only did Wiley cover more ground than a majority of the players, he also scored well on what referees consider the most important statistical measure of their fitness - how close to the action they were when judging fouls.

Wiley was on average 15.6 metres from the ball when awarding a foul, which is considered an impressive proximity by refereeing chiefs.

Physical conditioning has become a holy grail for Premier League referees since the elite group took salaried status. This has raised the bar on fitness demands that are rigorously enforced. It means Wiley had to show he could continue to stay the course when he was granted an extension last summer beyond the previous automatic retirement age of 48.

Wiley was understood to have been particularly aggrieved by Ferguson's claim that referees in continental Europe are fitter.

Sportsmail's figures show Ferguson was again well wide of the mark. For instance, the esteemed German referee Herbert Fandel ran 10,917 metres - a little less than Wiley - during a Champions League game between Arsenal and FC Porto last season. Around the same time, Poland's Grzegorz Gilewski clocked up 10,090 metres at Everton v Standard Liege.

Sportsmail's refereeing expert Graham Poll said: 'This evidence puts away Fergie's claim about super-fit Champions League referees and shows Wiley can sprint and was close enough to make credible judgments.

'I'd stress that the key evaluation of a referee's performance is in his decision making and Wiley got all big decisions correct. Older, more experienced referees may not always cover as much ground as the average because they don't need to, they read the game better and are proactive in movement terms.

'Referees take being fit very seriously - they have weight, body fat and actual fitness assessments throughout the season. Some referees have had appointments taken away on the grounds that they simply looked unfit.'

Wiley's overall performance at Old Trafford was rated more than satisfactory by assessors. But the fact that his physical display, however impressive, was nothing out of the ordinary highlights the indignation felt in refereeing ranks over comments by Ferguson that were not only insulting but wildly inaccurate.

For athleticism alone, Wiley's Old Trafford analysis is on a par with levels expected across Europe and the world. But no two games are the same. Typically, referees run as far as they need to.

Paul Allaerts, of Belgium, covered 11,947 metres in presiding over England's World Cup qualifier in Kazakhstan four months ago. And one representative figure from a recent game in Spain shows Elturralde Gonzalez running 11,200 metres while handling Real Madrid and Malaga.

Respect is all the rage in English football right now. Yet referees are the first to accept they are fair game for brickbats if they foul up on big decisions. That is why the FA will not charge Blackburn boss Sam Allardyce, who slammed Peter Walton for failing to award a legitimate penalty in Sunday's 6-2 defeat at Arsenal. It also explains why the referees' umbrella organisation will not rush to defend Walton, who could be dropped down the order in the next round of appointments.

Ferguson's rant is another matter entirely. Yet there is no great optimism among refereeing insiders that the United manager will suffer anything more than a rap across the knuckles and perhaps a fine at most.

What referees will hope, after Wiley's professionalism is seen in proper perspective, is that Sir Alex will feel sufficiently shamed to make an apology that is clearly due to one of England's most accomplished referees.

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Lucrative tour while training may give extra 10millions pounds to club.


Arsene decide to do world tour to earn extra money rather that rest training in Austria.

Arsene Wenger looks like changing the habit of a lifetime by abandoning Arsenal's tranquil pre-season training camps in Austria and joining the inter-continental globetrotters of Real Madrid, Manchester United and Chelsea on a lucrative tour in Asia or the USA.

Arsenal chief executive Ivan Gatzidis is determined to maximise the commercial revenue at the club and is expected to make a compelling case to Wenger, who, as an economics graduate, will fully appreciate the importance of adding another £10m to the bottom line of the club's profits.

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Chelsea's John Terry goes in hard on England team-mate Shaun Wright-Phillips.Later said Sorry.Terry may go in management.


Confrontation: Shaun Wright-Phillips and John Terry

There was no love lost between John Terry and former Chelsea team-mate Shaun Wright-Phillips in the build-up to England's clash with Ukraine last night.

During a two-touch game in training on Friday, Terry lunged at Wright-Phillips, catching him on the ankle.

The England captain seemed initially unconcerned but went to proffer his apologies when it was clear the Manchester City winger was hurt.

Wright-Phillips did not seem best pleased but accepted Terry's hand.

Nevertheless, given that no players were wearing shin-pads, it was clearly a non-contact session and Terry's diving tackle seemed out of place.

Terry may go into coaching or management.

John Terry in the rain at Stamford Bridge

Terry admits he that he is already looking into doing his coaching badges, and even states that he would love to take charge of his beloved Chelsea.

"I want to go into management after I finish playing, even though it's a lot of pressure," said Terry in the Daily Express. "I would love to be Chelsea manager, and that's the natural progression. I would want to go straight in at the deep end.

"I want to do it for the love of football, even though I know that as manager the pressure falls on your head and I know players are a nightmare. Your playing career goes so quickly and older players have always advised me, 'Take your badges, take your badges', which me, Frank Lampard and Ashley Cole are looking into.

"Depending on what we have to do, I think we go straight to the B licence. We could coach the kids after training and get our badges that way.

"I have played under some great managers and have kept notes of training sessions. Even when managers do things I don't agree with I note it down, so I remember not to do that. It sounds silly now but, hopefully, it will be helpful.

"When Jose Mourinho was at Chelsea, I used to get coaching sessions off him, Guus Hiddink as well. And Chelsea keep records, so I could go back and see what we did in every training session. But it's good for me to have that folder and those ideas ready to use.

"You have to bounce ideas and feelings off the players because they are the ones on the training pitch. That is so important.

"It's vital you get feedback and I get feedback off players. When we do a good training session and the lads are saying, 'That was good today' and talking, I'm straight in, writing it down and keeping a record." Zola influence

Terry admits he speaks on a regular basis to fellow Chelsea legend Gianfranco Zola - now in charge at West Ham.

"I also look at Gianfranco Zola and Steve Clarke, who were at Chelsea and have stepped in at a good level over at West Ham and have brought new ideas with them," he continued. "I speak to Zola on a weekly basis and find out what he's doing. They played under some great managers and used that.

"It's so important I keep absorbing stuff over the next five years. But I don't know exactly when it will be that I make the transition. I would love to keep playing until I am 35 or 36, depending on how things go."

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Fergie still in the dock: Sir Alex says sorry to ref Wiley, but it won't save him .FA may still ban Fergie


Not fit to referee: Sir Alex Ferguson angered referee after he questioned Alan Wiley's fitness last weekend

I'm sorry: Fergie has apologised over his outburst

Sir Alex Ferguson has made an unprecedented apology to referee Alan Wiley for claiming he was 'unfit' - but the Manchester United manager's apparent bid to escape an FA ban for his controversial comments may yet end in failure.

Ferguson yesterday interrupted a holiday in New York to apologise to Wiley, whom he branded as not fit enough to referee a Premier League game, following last Saturday's 2-2 draw against Sunderland.

However, Alan Leighton, the head of the union which represents referees, insisted that Ferguson's surprise move had only made things worse and the Football Association should still punish him severely.

Sir Alex said in a statement on United's website: 'I apologise for any personal embarrassment my remarks may have caused and to the FA for going public with my views.'

Ferguson, who promised to speak to Wiley personally when he returns from the United States next week, added: 'I would wish it to be noted that I have always respected Mr Wiley's integrity and that I did not state or imply that he is a bad referee or was in any way biased or that decision-making generally during the game was poor or that he missed any key incident during the game.'

Crucially, however, Ferguson has not withdrawn his allegation that Wiley was not fit enough to referee at the highest level. And the concern for Sir Alex now must be that his apology is seen as half-hearted and a tactic to avoid a potential charge.

Ferguson has until Friday to meet an FA request to explain his comments but he is expected to do so in the next 48 hours. After that, the FA Disciplinary Committee will have to decide whether to charge the United manager, with many inside the game still shocked by Ferguson's attack, broadcast on United's in-house television channel, MUTV.

'We have been put in a difficult position over this,' said an FA source. 'We might be forced to take the matter further.'

The Mail on Sunday understands that while Ferguson's apology will be welcomed by the FA because it removes an alleged stain on Wiley's reputation, it will not alter the disciplinary process.

Leighton, national secretary of Prospect, the professionals' union which represents referees, said: 'If anything, what Sir Alex Ferguson has said makes things worse. The FA should charge him and take serious action against him.

'He's apologised for causing embarrassment to Alan Wiley, but not for calling him an unfit referee. In addition he has extrapolated it to being an issue about referees in general in England being unfit.

'I think he's bringing the game into disrepute. The FA's own disciplinary rules talk about four types of offence in public comments. 'The implication of bias does not apply, but by questioning Alan Wiley's fitness he has questioned the integrity of another participant. The rules also say personally offensive comments should be avoided.

'And to suggest that we've got unfit referees in general is to the detriment of the game as a whole because it damages the confidence of fans, players and everyone else involved in the game.' Earlier in the week, Leighton said a fine or a touchline ban would be 'water off a duck's back' for Ferguson and suggested a full-blown suspension from his job might be appropriate.

Ferguson has a history littered with attacks on referees but the strength of his comments towards Wiley still suprised many pundits.

The champions' manager said at the time: 'It's an indictment on our game that this referee was not fit enough. It took him at least 30 seconds every time he booked a player and I think that is because he wanted to take a rest.

'You see referees abroad who are as fit as a butcher's dog. The pace of the game demanded a referee who was fit. He was not fit. It was ridiculous.'

Statistics have since shown that Wiley covered more ground than most of the United players, and there have been calls for Ferguson to be hit with a ban that would exclude him from the dressing-room as well as the dug-out.

That was the punishment given by UEFA to Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho after he accused referee Anders Fisk of talking privately with Barcelona manager Frank Rijkaard at half-time of a Champions League game.

Ferguson continued to claim yesterday that his comments were based on a real concern over referees' fitness.

He said: 'My only intention in speaking publicly, was to highlight what I believe to be a serious and important issue in the game, namely that the fitness levels of referees must match the ever-increasing demands of the modern game, which I hope will now be properly addressed through the appropriate formal channels.'

The refereeing world is unlikely to accept Ferguson's apology. Former referee Jeff Winter - the target of verbal abuse from Ferguson in 2003, for which the United manager was banned for two games and fined �10,000 - claimed Sir Alex had been guilty of bullying Wiley.

Winter said: 'Ferguson has stooped to a new low.'
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Sir Alex Ferguson accuses referee Alan Wiley of not being fit enough to referee at the highest level in his post match
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England's perfect record goes up in smoke but Capello says: We played very well


Early bath: Robert Green walks up the tunnel after being sent off


Raine man: Serhiy Nazarenko scores via a deflection


Fall guy: Robert Green brings down Artem Milevskiy to earn a red card


Meanwhile, already-qualified England's winning streak was ended at eight games after a 1-0 loss at Ukraine, and 2006 runner-up France was left to seek a place in the playoffs.

It was the Manchester United centre-half's terrible mistake that allowed in Artem Milevskiy in the 14th minute but there was no doubt that it was West Ham goalkeeper Green who brought down the Ukrainian.

Former Chelsea striker Andriy Shevchenko hit the post with the resulting penalty.

But more poor defending led to Serhiy Nazarenko striking a fierce shot which Ashley Cole deflected past substitute goalkeeper David James with his head. The 29th-minute goal was enough to halt England's run of eight consecutive victories and to make Ukraine firm favourites to take the runners-up spot in Group Six behind Capello's team and ahead of Croatia. But Capello seemed more concerned about the referee's howler than his team's defeat, and protested vehemently to the fourth official.

The England manager said: 'The referee has to explain what he saw. It's a big difference between Rio and the goalkeeper - one is running, one is diving.

That's what I was speaking to the fourth official about. He told me he spoke with the referee and they said it was not Rio who made the foul. But it really was a big mistake.'

Green had already endured a difficult night before his dismissal. The FA will make a formal complaint to FIFA about the Ukraine fans who forced the referee to stop play twice as they threw flares from behind the goal England were defending.

In the opening moments, Green had to flee his penalty area to escape the danger and fans were later warned that the referee would abandon the game if they continued to hurl the missiles.

Green's sending-off gave James the chance to make his case to reclaim the position of Capello's first-choice goalkeeper. There was nothing the 39-year-old Portsmouth player could do about the Ukraine goal or a shot by Milevskiy later in the first half which came back off a post.

But in the second period James made two fine saves to prevent England falling further behind, and in the 90th minute Wayne Rooney was inches away from an equaliser. Despite the loss of his perfect record in competitive matches, Capello said he was pleased with the performance of his 10 men, especially after the break.

'I was proud of my team in the second half,' he said. 'We played really well and had the chance to draw. We had chances until the very last minute of the game. We only made one defensive mistake and it was for the penalty. Then there was a deflected shot for the goal.'

But Ashley Cole's loss of the ball on the edge of his own penalty area in the build-up to the goal was just the sort of glaring error which Capello has stressed his team must eradicate if they are to make an impressive showing at next year's World Cup.

Ferdinand and Cole may be grateful that live coverage of the match was available only on the internet, although the BBC secured a lastminute deal to show highlights of the first England game to be streamed live as a pay-per-view event.

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Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Arsenal star Cesc Fabregas lined up as president Laporta's parting gift to Barcelona


Tunnel vision: Fabregas insists he is only thinking of glory with Arsenal

Badge-kisser: Cesc Fabregas celebrates scoring against Blackburn


Centre of attention: Cesc Fabregas starred against Blackburn Rovers on SundayBarcelona are increasingly confident of signing Cesc Fabregas next summer - despite the midfielder's insistence that he is 100 per cent committed to Arsenal.

The European champions outgoing president Joan Laporta has reportedly got the approval to complete a deal for the Spain star from every serious candidate for his job.

Laporta is said to want a deal a place before he leaves so that the Fabregas signing does not become an election issue.

Former Barca director Sandro Rossell, seen as an enemy of Laporta, has strengthened his campaign to be the next president and is expected to stand on a pledge to re-sign Fabregas, whose transfer to Arsenal as a 16-year-old was opposed by the businessman,declares the 22-year-old Emirates star will be the star signing of 2010 and reports that Arsene Wenger has already accepted the fact.

Laporta was prepared to pay in excess of £20million for the Gunners star in the summer but the Spanish paper claims Wenger felt he could not do a deal so soon after selling Emmanuel Adebayor and Kolo Toure to Manchester City.

A goal and four assists in the 6-2 defeat of Blackburn included a very public display of badge-kissing, but Sport explains away the act and subsequent comments as being because he wants to leave honourably rather as part of a drawn out transfer saga.

In a weekend interview in Spain, Fabregas insisted he was not thinking about Barcelona and Real Madrid, but merely about 'lifting trophies with Arsenal'.

If a drought dating to the 2005 FA Cup continues at Arsenal, he may reconsider his position.

He further excited the local press with comments about Barca head coach Pep Guardiola. Asked who his idol was, Fabregas said: 'My reference has always been Guardiola. As a child I saw all his games.'

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Emmanuel Adebayor admits he is haunted by his stamp on former Arsenal team-mate Robin van Persie -Don like Arsenal-But still thank mentor Wenger


--Crunch: Adebayor drew blood from Van Persie with his studs


--Controversy: Adebayor's sliding celebration landed him in more hot water

--Former Mentor: Gunners manager Wenger


Emmanuel Adebayor has finally held up his hands and admitted his regret at stamping on former Arsenal team-mate Robin van Persie.

Adebayor was handed a three-match ban for connecting with Van Persie's face during Manchester City's 4-2 win over the Gunners at Eastlands last month.

The City striker, who made his comeback in Monday night's 1-1 draw at Aston Villa, said: 'It's one of the things that you can't do in football. That's for sure. It's true that if someone did that to me it would annoy and hurt me. I regret it, for sure.'


Adebayor left Arsenal in the summer and the Togo international claims Gunners boss Arsene Wenger told him to go as they could not increase his contract.

He added: 'I talked with the coach and he told me I was one of Arsenal's best-paid players, that the club was in the red, so maybe they wouldn't be able to pay me any more - it would be better for me to go. I asked him: "Is it your choice or the club's?"

'He answered: "It's everybody's choice, from the whole club". I was pushed out.'

Arsenal fans branded the player greedy for leaving the Emirates Stadium but he added in an interview with French television: 'Everybody says Adebayor went for the money. I think a lot of people are wrong because Arsenal bought me for five or six million and they sold me three-and-a-half years later for £25million. So people should know that it's not me who wanted to leave for money, it's Arsenal that forced me to go.'

The striker claims the animosity from Arsenal supporters is misplaced. Adebayor was fined £25,000 and handed a suspended two-match ban for running the length of the pitch and celebrating in front of the away fans after scoring at Eastlands.

'I think we are all human beings and there are things we can stand and others we can't. We all have limits. I'm lucky that my mother is still alive. I think I would never accept things being said and done regarding my mother,' he added.


When I heard the fans singing and insulting my parents . . . I couldn't stand it. When I scored, I wanted to show them, "You kicked me out of the club, now I've scored against you".

'It was a response to what happened, but I did not in any way want to provoke them.

Relationship with Arsenal and Wenger

'My relationship with Arsenal has broken in two. I wanted to stay. It's true that I didn't score a lot of goals last season, but I was often injured.'

Despite claiming that he was forced out of Arsenal, Adebayor still feels that Wenger is a mentor and a friend.

He added: 'He's a gentleman. Wenger gave me the opportunity to be where I am today. He's a coach that helped me a lot, who gave me a chance, who's always been there for me in the bad moments.

'He called me, consoled me, gave me good advice, told me what I had to do to become a great player. I can only thank him.'






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Adebayor purposely stamps on Arsenal Persie's head.
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ManCity beat 4-2 Arsenal

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Referee Alan Wiley in quit threat over Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson's rant


Trouble ahead: The FA are investigating Fergie's rant




Quit threat: Alan Wiley was left so distressed by Sir Alex Ferguson's attack that he contemplated blowing the whistle on his career as a Premier League referee


Alan Wiley was so distressed after Sir Alex Ferguson branded him 'unfit' that he considered quitting.

Friends of the referee revealed that he was tempted to walk away from football over the Manchester United manager's astonishing attack.

Ferguson criticised Wiley following United's fortunate 2-2 home draw against Sunderland on Saturday and the FA, after debating whether to charge the manager, have asked him to explain his comments.



Ferguson said about Wiley: 'It took him at least 30 seconds every time he booked a player and I think that was because he wanted to take a rest.'

In fact, the analysis shows Wiley covered more ground than most players, and his performance has been praised by the Professional Game Match Officials.


Sir Alex has run into trouble with his comments before, including a two-match touchline ban in August 2003 following an attack on fourth official Jeff Winter, a similar ban in November 2007 for criticising referee Mark Clattenburg and two more games and £10,000 fine for an outburst against Mike Dean a year later.

Alan Leighton, national secretary of professionals' union Prospect, who represent referees, said: 'Sir Alex made comments about other referees and said about European referees being as fit as butchers' dogs.


'But all of our referees pass stringent fitness tests at the start of the season. If Alan Wiley or any other referee were not fit they would not be refereeing.'

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Sir Alex Ferguson accuses referee Alan Wiley of not being fit enough to referee at the highest level in his post match comments.
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Ali Al Faraj promises Paul Hart a January spending spree to keep Portsmouth in the Premier League tbal


Cash boost: Hart has been promised funds to buy new players to maintain in the Premier League. Portmouths lost the last 7 games. At bottom of the Premier League


Just gone: But Al-Fahim still holds 10 per cent.Out after just 42 days of chaos at Fratton Park


Portsmouth manager Paul Hart has been assured he will have money to spend in the January transfer window following Ali Al Faraj's takeover of the club.

The Saudi oil tycoon last night (Monday) agreed to buy 90 per cent of the financially-stricken Fratton Park outfit in a deal which saved Portsmouth from administration.

Hart was forced to cash in on the club's biggest names during the summer with England duo Glen Johnson and Peter Crouch sold in order to raise vital funds.

Portsmouth are now rooted to the bottom of the Barclays Premier League with just one victory from eight matches. But chief executive Peter Storrie and Al Faraj's lawyer Mark Jacob have both assured Pompey fans that every effort will be taken to ensure the club remains in the top flight.

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