Wednesday, 27 April 2011

  • Brazilian teams thrive amid World Cup concerns

    On the pitch, last week was a splendid one for Brazilian football.

    Fluminense's dramatic qualification for the knockout stages of the Copa Libertadores meant that Brazil did not have a single team eliminated in the group phase - while Argentina lost three.

    The Brazilian sides also managed to avoid each other in the second round, creating the possibility of the competition's last eight featuring five teams from the same country.

    Off the field, though, the picture is not so impressive, with planning for the 2014 World Cup giving cause for concern.

    Rafael Moura (right) scores for Fluminense in their 4-2 win over Argentinos Juniors - photo: Reuters

    The state of the country's airports has always been seen as the main impediment to the smooth running of the tournament. Recently a survey by a specialist organisation concluded that work on the airports will not be completed in time - and even if it is, the airports will still be operating beyond their capacity.

    Stadium work is also dragging with construction of the new stadium in Sao Paulo, the likely venue of the opening game, yet to start - and doubt has also been cast on the financial viability of four of the 12 stadiums.

    Earlier this month, Senator Alvaro Dias, a long running critic of football administration in Brazil, even called on the country to give up the right to stage the tournament.

    Dias is an opposition politician seeking to embarrass the government and he was more likely making mischief rather than presenting a serious suggestion.

    There seems no reason to doubt that the tournament will go ahead in Brazil, but those in charge of the process have little cause for self-congratulation.

    "There is still (just about) time for us to put on a reasonable World Cup," Jose Luiz Portella last week. But a very good one is out of the question. We have wasted the opportunity."

    Portella, who in addition to being an engineer and a transport executive is one of the country's most intelligent football columnists, continued: "I have always been in favour of having the World Cup and the Olympics in Brazil, but not with this group who run our sport."

    This gets to the heart of the matter.

    Brazil's players are so good as a consequence of football's intrinsic meritocracy. By far the principal sport in a giant country, football attracts millions, the best of whom are groomed for a career in the game. The sons of Pele and Zico have tried and failed - a famous name could only get them so far.

    Off the field it is a radically different matter. Ricardo Teixeira, former son-in-law of ex-FIFA President Joao Havelange, has been in charge of the Brazilian FA since 1989. The uncharismatic Teixeira also presides over the World Cup Local Organising Committee, in which his daughter as a key administrator.

    They both might be part of the rapidly developing world, but there is a key difference between Brazil and 2010 hosts South Africa. Staging last year's World Cup was part of a lengthy process which has seen political power change hands in the rainbow nation.

    Brazil has taken huge strides to consolidate its democracy, but old semi-feudal clans have not had their power shaken - as football demonstrates. Teixeira's power base is formed by the presidents of the country's 27 state football federations, some of whom have been in power even longer than he has.

    Ricardo Teixeira (left) is the man charged with delivering the 2014 World Cup - photo: Getty Images

    The World Cup started to go wrong from the very start because of Teixeira's unwillingness to alienate that power base.

    The key date was March 2003 when Fifa president Sepp Blatter announced that, following the rotation principle, the World Cup would return to South America in 2014. Within days Conmebol (the South American Confederation) declared that Brazil was its only candidate.

    True, Colombia later broke ranks and briefly ran a rival bid, but this was never serious.

    Venezuela was investing heavily in stadiums at the time, and Colombia was looking to raise its profile in response to this challenge from its neighbour and rival. The Colombian move achieved its objective when the country was awarded this year's World Youth Cup.

    Fifa officially announced Brazil as 2014 hosts in October 2007. There was no surprise or controversy - it merely made official what everyone already knew. At this point Brazil should have had its plans in place, it should have chosen its host cities, presented its stadium projects and identified its infra-structure necessities, but had not. Four and a half years had been wasted.

    No host cities had been chosen because, for Teixeira, it was not convenient to do so.
    Eighteen cities wanted to stage games but excluding some of them would have had negative political consequences for him, so the decision was handed to Fifa, thus eating up more time.

    The list of host cities was finally read out from Switzerland at the end of May 2009, more than six years after it was apparent to all and sundry that Brazil would be staging the tournament.

    Anyone with any knowledge of Brazil was aware that such a delay was asking for problems. Throw in time spent on bureaucratic enclaves and political in-fighting and it was clear work would be running behind schedule.

    "There are countries which suffer natural disasters and need to reconstruct everything on an emergency basis," commented Brazilian architectural and engineering specialist Jose Roberto Bernasconi last week. "We create our own emergencies without any necessity."

    Emergencies have to be paid for. The 2014 show will go ahead on time, but to ensure that it does, public money will have to be thrown at it, and some urban transport projects may well have to be cut or scaled back.

    The 2014 World Cup, then, comes with two strong probabilities - one, that the hard-pressed Brazilian tax payer will shell out more than he/she should and two, the return to that tax payer is likely to fall short of what might be expected.

    Perhaps we can add a third - that some of the most dazzling football played will come from the Brazil team. The products of football's fierce meritocracy, drawn from diverse backgrounds, Brazil's players will surely combine to produce some moments that make them, in the words of American sociologist Janet Lever "a living register of society's potential".

    Comments on the piece in the space provided. Questions on South American football to vickerycolumn@hotmail.com, and I'll pick out a couple for next week.

    From last week's postbag:

    Q) I'd be interested to know if you've ever put any thought to the idea that Brazilian clubs might in the future begin to dominate the Libertadores due to greater financial muscle than other South American clubs. Obviously in recent years with the expanding Brazilian economy, the clubs have benefited and many Brazilian stars have returned in recent years. I was wondering if you thought that if this trend were to continue say over the next 10-15 years, Brazilian clubs might pull away and monopolise the competition.
    Andrew Keys

    A) I've written stuff along these lines a few times, always to a furious response from Argentine readers! In the last couple of years we've seen four Brazilian clubs in the last eight, with only Estudiantes reaching the same stage from Argentina. As the article states, there is the possibility of five Brazilians in the last eight this time. Never write off the Argentines, though. They have a tendency to grow at the vital moment - they have won out the last five times they've met Brazilian opposition in the final.

    Looking ahead, it's far from clear that the current strength of the Brazilian currency is sustainable - the country is finding it hard to export anything manufactured - and this might level out the playing field a little. Football is always dynamic, also, and it will be fascinating to see how Argentine clubs react. One thing for a start - they have to improve the standard of their goalkeeping.

    Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/timvickery/2011/04/vickery_21.html

    Gymnastics Hand gliding Hockey Horse racing

  • Dzeko justifies Mancini's faith

    Ewood Park

    Edin Dzeko was a grateful beneficiary of the turmoil that swirled around Fernando Torres as the Chelsea striker struggled to adapt to life at Stamford Bridge.

    As a harsh spotlight was trained on the Spaniard and his quest for a goal following his £50m move from Liverpool, Dzeko was able to lurk beneath the radar as he toiled away fruitlessly following his £27m move to Manchester City from Wolfsburg in January.

    Torres, who had gone 732 minutes without a goal in Chelsea colours, emerged from the darkness and into the light with a strike against West Ham United on Saturday, turning attention towards Dzeko and his own efforts to hit the target in the Premier League.

    And the Bosnian finally delivered when City needed him most against Blackburn Rovers.

    If he was billed on arrival as the man whose goals would push City towards the Champions League, then he may just have lived up his label at Ewood Park.

    Dzeko calmly slots home his first Premier League goal - photo: Reuters

    It took Dzeko, who walked into Eastlands accompanied by a reputation as one of Europe's most feared marksmen, four months and 10 games to break his duck.

    Like good comedy, however, the secret is in the timing - and City's fans filed out of Ewood Park smiling after his crucial intervention.

    As for Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini, who has repeatedly stated his support for Dzeko, he will have taken extra satisfaction from the manner in which his faith was rewarded.

    After Rovers were forced to dance to the tune of David Silva in the opening 20 minutes, the Spaniard rattling the woodwork and controlling everything like a master puppeteer, City began to struggle to impose themselves against Steve Kean's gallant Blackburn .

    Sensing the growing prospect of an opportunity lost, Mancini called on Dzeko to replace Adam Johnson after 72 minutes.

    And as with Torres on Saturday, Dzeko made a spectacular entrance, showing a sure touch and composure to take control of an attempted Phil Jones clearance and beat Blackburn keeper Paul Robinson within three minutes of coming on.

    The Premier League table reflected the significance of the moment. City now have a four-point advantage over closest rivals Tottenham, who have yet to visit Eastlands.

    This was not a sparkling City show but a demonstration of, as Mancini put it, "how to win the other way".

    The Italian explained: "In the first half, we played a fantastic game. We should have scored two goals minimum. In the second half, the game changed, Blackburn played very strong and hard."

    As for Dzeko, Mancini added: "I'm very happy for Edin because he deserves to score. He is a good player and a good man."

    City won ugly, with Nigel de Jong outstanding, after their early flamboyance fizzled out but they have responded positively to that woeful 3-0 defeat by Liverpool a fortnight ago and are now favourites to reach the Champions League as reward for the vast Abu Dhabi investment in the club.

    The promised land of the Champions League is in sight for Mancini: photo Getty

    The smiling Dzeko looked like a large weight had been lifted from his shoulders as he strolled around the corridors of Ewood Park - and spoke like a man who believes his City career can now take flight.

    "Today was very good," said the forward, who was watched by former England coach Steve McClaren, the man who rubber-stamped his move to City during his brief spell in the Bundesliga with Wolfsburg.

    "I think it is a new beginning for me. I have confidence in myself but sometimes it is difficult. I am not the first one that didn't make the best of a move but I am happy now because I scored and helped my team.

    "It's funny. I think Torres scored a lot of goals for Liverpool and changed his club and found it hard. I am happy for him because I know what the pressure is. But today I scored as well and I know that, in the future, there will be much better games for me."

    Blackburn manager Kean is another man who knows what pressure is - and it grows with every game. He could take only small consolation from a display that showed plenty of character but lacked quality.

    He was right to insist Blackburn were unlucky to be denied a penalty when City captain Vincent Kompany tangled with Jason Roberts in the first half and also complained that Mario Balotelli was standing in an offside position in front of goalkeeper Robinson when Dzeko scored the winner.

    The worry, which also applied to fellow strugglers West Ham at Chelsea, is that, after playing badly and losing, Rovers have acquired the habit of playing well and losing - not a good one to form at this late stage and with survival at stake.

    Kean was defiant but there is no escaping the growing sense around Ewood Park that Blackburn's Indian owners Venky's may have made a major misjudgement by thrusting the Scot into his first high-profile role after removing Sam Allardyce in December.

    Allardyce's methods make him a divisive figure but he was working effectively and had restored stability at Ewood Park. Venky's may yet find they pay a heavy price for attempting to fix something that was not actually faulty.

    A fight against relegation is tough enough for a manager with experience, doubly so for someone learning on the job - and these are tough times for Kean, with Blackburn currently in their worst run without a victory in 25 years, a sequence that stretched to 11 games following the defeat by City.

    As for Mancini, he promised that City would reach the FA Cup final and the Champions League after the dismal showing at Anfield. Phase one is complete and Dzeko's release from his own personal torment took City closer to completing the second part of his manager's bold pledge.

    One blot on a satisfying night for City were the chants from some of their followers about Manchester United and the Munich air disaster. They did great discredit to a fan base that is in large part exemplary, as they proved when honouring a minute's silence at Liverpool a fortnight ago.

    Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/philmcnulty/2011/04/dzeko.html

    Dennis Bergkamp Karl-Heinz Rummenigge Gary Lineker Giuseppe Meazza

  • On the March

    Exciting things are happening for Aussie WAGs in March as competition season heats up.


    March 5: Lauren Mitchell at American Cup (Jacksonville, USA)
    March 5-6: Monckton, Lorenzin, McGrath, Wheeler, Chung at Australia vs Great Britain Challenge (Manchester, UK)
    March 11-13: Monckton, Lorenzin, McGrath, Wheeler, Chung at Gymnix (Montreal, Canada)
    March 19-20: Mitchell at Paris World Cup (Paris, France)

    With more international assignments still to be announced!

    "Autographs? ... Better get used to this!"

    Source: http://ozgymnastics.blogspot.com/2011/02/on-march.html

    Skiing Skin diving Snow-boarding Snow Boarding

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

  • "Thank You for Relief Donations"


    (Photo courtesy of Detlef Ekert www.rumgammelen.de)
    During the races in Holmenkollen Itsuka Owada and Fuyuko Suzuki cheered on teammates and took advantage of international media coverage by taping, "Thank you for relief donations" in both English and Japanese to their team uniform.

    The earthquake and tsunami in Japan definitely had an effect on me while racing in Oslo the following week. I could not help thinking about the Japanese team and the loss and devastation that they soon would fly home to. I do not personally know the Japanese team that competes with us on the World Cup circuit, but my heart still goes out to them: Natsuko Abe, Naoko Azegami, Itsuka Owada, Fuyuko Suzuki, Saturo Abe, Kazuya inomta, Junji Nagai, Hidenori Isa and their staff. 

    Once home, I had the opportunity to ski with the Lake Placid Elementary School's gym classes, and in particular the 4th and 5th grade classes I had been visiting all year. I of course enjoy skiing with them and talking to them about the sport's benefits and where it has taken me. But, I also really enjoy using it as a vehicle to look at the world in a different way, a perspective which can most easily be shared with a group of attentive kids fresh in from a ski themselves. I snagged that opportunity when their ears were open for new ideas after our our ski to talk to them about the current events in Japan and about my involvement with Skiers Helping Japan. 

    (Photo Courtesy of Matt Young, LPES Gym Teacher)

    I decided to contribute to Skiers Helping Japan by donating some of my World Cup point earnings from this season - in particular what I earned during the World Cup competitions in Norway just after the March 12th earthquake and tsunami. It felt right to share this information with the classes because they too are contributing to the relief efforts. One of the Elementary teachers set up a box in the office for the school kids to collect coins that will be donated to the Red Cross for Japan.


    Another thing I enjoy are the international paper selection on the final flight home out of Munich, Germany at the end of the season.  A 9 hour flight offers luxurious amounts of time to catch up on the world's news from cover to cover in English. I came across an interesting Opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal written by the chairman, CEO and President of Sony Corp, Howard Stringer. Mr. stringer talked about Japan's shared sense of community and the spirit that arises from it, especially in times of disaster. The phrase fukutsu no seishin, which means never give up, describes this spirit and the character of Japan at this time. Stringer believes it is the country's instinctive ability to never give up that will help them endure and to rise above the absolute devastation the earthquake and tsunami created with "grace, generosity and common cause."[Stringer, Wall Street Journal, March 21, 2011] I hope so too and in my note that accompanies my donation I chose to write: stay strong Japan.


    I'm one of many skiers who have joined in the effort. You can read about the Men's Norwegian relay team who donated their World Championship Relay earnings to Japan here: Norway Donates.

    If you are interested in learning more and would like to help go to: www.skiershelpingjapan.com

    The latest update from the newly formed organization is that they continue to seek out local charities to donate to instead of the larger organizations involved in large scale relief effort.

    fukutsu no seishin
    (Photo courtesy of Detlef Ekert www.rumgammelen.de)

    Source: http://comeskiwithme.blogspot.com/2011/04/thank-you-for-relief-donations.html

    Peter Schmeichel Paolo Rossi George Weah Michael Owen

  • Send me your questions about F1 2011

    Hello everyone,

    What a start to the new Formula 1 season it has been! I am filming my first video blogs of the year on Monday. There's a lot to talk about and I'd love to hear your questions.

    So if you have anything you'd like to ask me about the Formula 1 season so far, then please post your questions below.

    All the best

    Murray

    Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/murraywalker/2011/04/welcome_to_2011.html

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