Friday 27 September 2013

Underdogs Durham defy the doubters


DURHAM secured a third County Championship title in six seasons after skipper Paul Collingwood and his ferocious bowling attack produced a storming second half of the season. 

The campaign included a club-record five consecutive wins as Durham defied the doubters to rack up 10 top-flight victories, three more than any other team. 

But, despite opening with a win against Somerset, England's most northerly county cricket club actually suffered a rather sleepy start to the season. 

Well-beaten away against Warwickshire, captain Collingwood was stunned when Yorkshire successfully chased down a target of 336 to make it two defeats out of three. 

Yorkshire reached their mammoth total thanks in no small part to Joe Root who hit 182 - and put himself in prime position for an Ashes call-up. 

Durham responded well, with impressive consecutive away wins at Trent Bridge against Nottinghamshire and the Oval against struggling Surrey. 

But that progress was checked by successive draws in a rain-affected match against Middlesex and on a typically flat track at Taunton against Somerset. 

Safely nestled in mid-table, Durham had already defied the bookmakers and many preview writers who had put them down as favourites for relegation. No one was thinking much about the title, though. 

Then, in a remarkable game of twists and turns at the Riverside, Durham avenged their early-season defeat to Warwickshire, sneaking home by just 11 runs. 

Requiring 257 to complete the double, an eighth-wicket stand between Jeetan Patel and Ateeq Javid had brought the target within 25 runs. 

But Graham Onions and Ben Stokes combined to remove the final three wickets just in time. 

For the next match, Onions was away on England duty, of sorts, but it mattered not. 

Derbyshire had found the season tough going so the last thing they needed was to face Chris Rushworth on his 27th birthday and in the form of his life. 

Rushworth finished with match figures of 10-103 as a crushing victory set up Durham for a late-season tilt at the title.

First, though, Durham failed twice with the bat to go down to defeat inside three days at Middlesex - though this was probably their toughest match left on the fixture list. 

A home match next against Surrey was ideal, and - still without Onions - two young bowlers Jamie Harrison and Mark Wood hit their stride, each taking a five-wicket haul in the two separate innings. 

In doing that, they set up the biggest win of the season - by an innings and 144 runs - as Durham headed to the North Yorkshire coast in fine spirits. 

The match against Yorkshire at the out-ground in Scarborough was absolutely pivotal to the season as a whole. 

The two northern rivals had become the primary challengers for the Championship crown - although, with Yorkshire ahead by 25 points going into the contest, Durham were undoubtedly more desperate for the result. 

Things started badly for Durham who found themselves 5-2 inside the first three overs but a trio of centuries from Stokes (127), Mark Stoneman (120) and Michael Richardson (102) contributed to a massive total of 573. 

Yorkshire crumbled under the scoreboard pressure with nine wickets and a run out shared equally between Rushworth, Harrison, Stokes, Wood and the excellent Scott Borthwick. 

Asked to follow-on, the White Rose county made a much better job of it second time around, Phil Jacques hitting 152 to bring the draw back into the equation. 

But a second collapse on the final day saw Yorkshire slump from 283-1 to 419 all out, leaving Durham enough time to chase a target of 121. 

Borthwick starred with the bat, scoring 65 off 85 balls, as Durham delivered a huge statement of intent by collecting maximum points from a very tough match. 

Just three days later, Collingwood's men went top for the first time, beating the Championship's early pace-setters Sussex inside three days as Onions picked up seven wickets in the match on his return. 

Then, Midlands pair Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire were well and truly routed by the Durham bowlers. 

First, Derbyshire looked to be putting up some kind of fight as Durham achieved only a 27-run lead on first innings. 

But Onions then took 5-23 in the second innings, including a spell of 5-4 in 41 balls, for match figures of 9-85. Derbyshire were out for 63, and Durham were on the brink. 

The title came at home and it came in style. This time, the wickets were more shared out - three each for Onions, Rushworth and Harrison, and one for another impressive youngster Usman Arshad - but the result was the same: Nottinghamshire were all out for 78. 

With Durham 45-5 in reply, meaning 15 wickets had fallen in the first 48 overs of the match, a mandatory pitch inspection - and possible points deduction - became a real danger. 

However, Collingwood put the acceptable quality of the pitch in perspective, combining with his predecessor as captain, Phil Mustard, in a stand of 121. 

Nottinghamshire, too, batted better in their second innings but their total of 246 still left Durham only 69 runs to chase. 

There was one over left in the day - and the possibility of eight more - when Stoneman and his fellow opener Keaton Jennings took to the crease. 

But, despite a bright, sunny evening, Collingwood was aware that - with two days left in the game - there was no need to rush.

Durham declined the option of taking the extra overs, returning instead for a third day which was free to attend for spectators. 

Rain delayed the start of play but, Durham were not to be denied - and the celebrations were in full flow by 2.30pm after Stoneman had knocked off the winning runs

In their final match, the newly-crowned champions lost to Sussex in Hove by six wickets for only a second Championship defeat since the end of April.

Indeed, since Collingwood's appointment, Durham have won 14 County Championship matches out of 22, a record which has taken the club from winless and bottom of the league in July 2012 to champions in September 2013. 

Following their battle of survival last year, little was expected of Durham in this campaign - and, although many pundits are now wiping egg of their face, their low expectations were understandable. 

For a start, Durham began the season with a deduction of 2.5 points for breaking salary cap regulations in 2012 and ongoing financial problems even left them going cap in hand to the county council for help

There was no chance of being able to afford an overseas player and a budget pre-season featured a climb up Ben Dubh near Loch Lomond to build fitness

By the middle of the season, things were looking worse again. The club's all-time leading run scorer Dale Benkenstein had succumbed to a shoulder injury and, more catastrophically still, the club's long-serving director of cricket, Geoff Cook, suffered a cardiac arrest while out running on a towpath adjoining the Riverside. 

Cook spent five days in an induced coma and had to watch the rest of the season unfold from afar. But Collingwood, a three-time Ashes-winning hero, stood firm.

The 37-year-old is a local captain of a team with its roots very much wedded to the north east. Gateshead-born Onions went to my secondary school in Blaydon, while Borthwick, Stoneman, Mustard and Rushworth all hail from the north east too. 

Meanwhile, the likes of Stokes, Harrison and Arshad may be from further afield but all of them rose through the ranks of the Durham Academy.

It is all so far removed from Durham's early years in the County Championship. 

At just 21 years old, the north easterners are still its newest members - and, in the first seven seasons, never finished above 14th out of 18 teams, thrice finishing bottom. 

In 1999, the English Cricket Board decided to split the Championship into two divisions and, amazingly, Durham finished eighth to make it into the top flight of the split. 

Inevitably, though, Durham were immediately relegated and then spent five seasons milling about the second division before promotion in 2005. 

A remarkable final-day survival in 2006 saw Durham finish just half a point above the champions from the previous season, Nottinghamshire, who were promptly relegated. 

Then, in 2007, Durham won their first major trophy, thrashing Hampshire by 125 runs in the final of the 50-over Friends Provident trophy at Lord's. 

Better was to come with remarkable back-to-back successes in the County Championship in 2008 and 2009 while, off the pitch, the Riverside has been developed into a ground of international stature, culminating in it hosting the fourth Test of this summer's Ashes series. 

It is not too much to say that none of this would have been achievable without the foresight and ambition of Cook - and Collingwood was quick to acknowledge that

"I know every man in the dressing room wanted to do it for Geoff," said Collingwood. 

"For Durham to win the title three times in 21 years – many good players don't win it at all – a lot of it has to go down to Geoff."

Cook, who has said he will re-evaluate his future at the end of the season, is nevertheless on the mend - but, even if he does retire, he leaves Durham in fine shape - on and off the field.  
  
MATCH-BY-MATCH Durham's March to the Championship
WLLWWDDWWLWWWWWL

DatesFixtureVenueResultPointsTotal
10-13 AprilSomerset (H)Riversidewon by 42 runs18.5-
17-20 AprilWarwickshire (A)Edgbastonlost by 318 runs523.5
24-27 AprilYorkshire (H)Riversidelost by four wickets427.5
29 Apr-2 MayNottinghamshire (A)Trent Bridgewon by six wickets2249.5
10-13 MaySurrey (A)The Ovalwon by five wickets2170.5
22-25 MayMiddlesex (H)Riversidedrawn878.5
6-9 JuneSomerset (A)Tauntondrawn987.5
12-14 JuneWarwickshire (H)Riversidewon by 11 runs21108.5
8-11 JulyDerbyshire (H)Riversidewon by 279 runs21129.5
2-4 AugustMiddlesex (A)Lord'slost by six wickets3132.5
22-25 AugustSurrey (H)Riversidewon by an innings and 14423155.5
28-31 AugustYorkshire (A)Scarboroughwon by seven wickets24179.5
3-5 SepSussex (H)Riversidewon by 285 runs20199.5
11-14 SepDerbyshire (A)Derbywon by nine wickets22221.5
17-19 SepNottinghamshire (H)Riversidewon by eight wickets21242.5
24-27 SepSussex (A)Hovelost by six wickets3245.5
Other competitions
Clydesdale Bank Pro40 Finished fourth out of seven in group stage (W7 L4 NR0)
Friends Life T20 lost in QF to Northamptonshire by 36 runs. Finished third in group (W6 L4)

FINAL STANDINGS County Championship Division One
PosTeamWLDBatBowlPoints
1DURHAM10423646245.5*
2Yorkshire7274939221
3Sussex5384539188
4Warwickshire5293742186
5Middlesex6553239182
6Somerset3583341146
7Nottinghamshire2594740146
8 (R)Derbyshire31033134122
9 (R)Surrey1693637116
*Durham were deducted 2.5 points for breaching salary cap regulations in the 2012 season

Promoted from County Championship Division Two Lancashire, Northamptonshire
Points scoring in the County Championship (max 24 points)
Win 16 Draw 3 Loss 0
Batting
200-249 runs - 1 point
250-299 runs - 2 points
300-349 runs - 3 points
350-399 runs - 4 points
400+ runs - 5 points
Bowling
3-5 wickets - 1 point
6-8 wickets - 2 points
9-10 wickets - 3 points
Batting/Bowling points apply for first 110 overs of the first innings only

Monday 23 September 2013

Turning 30 in Prague: a perspective

Time ticks by... the Astronomical Clock in the Old Town Square, Prague
THE BEAUTIFUL surroundings in the city of Prague are where I decided to celebrate my 30th birthday, a choice inspired by two previous visits to the Czech capital.

Prague is a magical place to someone like me, someone who fancies himself as a bit of an amateur history buff and a big fan of quality beer.

Of course, a 30th birthday is seen as a bit of a landmark, usually signifying an end to sprightly youthfulness and the onset of middle age.

I have no doubt that it was all in good humour - but a September birthday has the consequence of me being one of the oldest in my school year and, among my long-term friends on the trip, there were inevitable 'old man' jokes at my expense.

Additionally, one of my cards warned that it was "all downhill from here" - and, in certain senses, that prediction looks rather grimly accurate.

A difficult morning in Prague was described brilliantly by one of my friends as "the hangover of [my] past 29 years".

But, while I have noticed my hangovers nowadays hit me worse than ever, I have found that there are actually some advantages to my advancing years.

It is an unfortunate fact that my 20s, and particularly my late 20s - while featuring so many fantastic memories that it would be impossible to list them all - have also been set in the context of my issues with panic and generalised anxiety.

Last year, ridiculously, I almost missed the trip of a lifetime to Thailand, and the most significant repeat episode this year left me dangerously dosed up and debilitated in Dublin on diazepam. It later even affected my ability to work, too.

Indeed, my head was so all over the place that I even stopped doing something which I find that I really enjoy: writing this blog.

Thankfully, I backtracked on that particularly rash decision and I am still getting help through a therapist with the underlying causes of my anxiety.

Specifically, it is a lack of self-confidence derived from the core belief that I just cannot and will not cope with the various challenges which life will always throw at me.

Now, of course, there is a whole stack of evidence in my life to the contrary of that belief - and my sessions with the practitioner aim for me to focus on this. They also challenge and rid me of certain 'safety' behaviours which I consider help me but actually ensure my problems persist.

Armed with the facts, it is amazing just how far a different perspective in life can take you.

This summer, I visited three other capital cities - Budapest in Hungary, Zagreb in Croatia, and Ljubljana in Slovenia - with barely an ounce of anxiety, and happily my visit to Prague was a similarly unspoiled experience.

I drank in various beer halls - U Medvídků, U Fleků, and U Vejvodů among my favourites, and visited the excellent Klášterní Pivovar Strahov and the unmissable Beer Museum - twice.

I went to the Museum of Communism, amusingly situated next to McDonalds, and - across the glorious Karlov Most - to the Franz Kafka Museum to learn about a writer even more tortured by his inner demons than myself.

Finally, I scaled the heights of the Powder Tower, and then Prague's most famous landmark, the medieval Astronomical Clock in the Old Town Square.

Yes, it was rather apt that the entry into my 30s was marked in a place so indelibly linked with the passing of time.

And, as I reflect on this most special of birthdays, I will confidently predict to give myself an easier ride in my 30s than my 20s.

It is time to ensure turning 30 in Prague was simply a milestone in life - and not another millstone.

Thank you to all my family and friends who have listened to me, helped me out, and just asked me how I was. The cloud is lifting and I am getting better at this crazy thing called life.

The Season 2013/14: Mackems ditch Di Canio

ROCK-BOTTOM Sunderland became the first Premier League club to sack their manager last night with the seemingly-inevitable early departure of Paulo Di Canio.

Di Canio had overseen a complete squad overhaul in the summer, with 14 incomings and 10 outgoings in total, as he sought to improve the Wearsiders following their lowly 17th-placed finish last season.

But, despite the new squad roll call, the same old problems have remained at the Stadium of Light.

Steven Fletcher's dislocated shoulder and the sale of Stephane Sessegnon to West Bromwich Albion has left the team woefully short of firepower alongside a defence, shorn of the sold Simon Mignolet, which just cannot be relied to keep a clean sheet.

It is little wonder then that Sunderland have struggled this season, taking a solitary point in the Premier League from their visit to Southampton.

The last three games have all been defeats, each of which have resulted in an increasingly-bizarre reaction from Di Canio.

Following the 3-1 loss to Crystal Palace, Di Canio fumed at the "pathetic goals" which his team had conceded, criticising club captain John O'Shea for giving away a penalty and getting sent off.

Then, in the Arsenal home defeat by the same score, the Italian admitted he had invited referee Martin Atkinson to send him off, which Atkinson promptly did.

Di Canio saved his most bizarre move of all for the full time whistle at the Hawthorns after a match in which Sunderland had been comprehensively beaten by West Brom, with Sessegnon inevitably scoring.

Striding across the pitch, Di Canio faced up to the away supporters, asking them to keep their chin up despite the team's poor form. This gesture was a world away from his knee-sliding celebration at St James Park in April.

Indeed, it is now strange to think that it had all started so well for him in his first top-flight managerial position.

A 2-1 defeat to Chelsea in his opener showed plenty of promise before Sunderland then pulled off their biggest win in the Tyne-Wear derby since 1979. This was followed up by a win in his first home game against Everton.

Since then, though, Di Canio has only tasted victory once more with Sunderland - and that was at home against Milton Keynes Dons in the League Cup.

In the Premier League, the Black Cats are now without a win in nine games stretching over the two seasons, having limped over the line in the last campaign without actually getting to 40 points.

That mark looks a long way off again right now, and their next two league fixtures are at home against Liverpool and Manchester United.

Still, having seen so much transfer activity, it was a surprise not to see Di Canio get at least until around Christmas time.

But American owner Ellis Short can be a ruthless character, as witnessed when boyhood supporter Martin O'Neill was dumped in March following a string of similarly poor results.

Clearly, Short - realising Di Canio's loose-cannon approach was never going to work long-term - has cut his losses at an early stage, petrified that the Black Cats might already be getting cut adrift.

Nevertheless, a myriad of problems remains. The fact that the club has confirmed that there is no shortlist to replace Di Canio shows that this was a move which they did not expect to have to make.

And, then, the new manager - whoever he is - will have to come in and buck up the ideas of a squad brought in largely by Di Canio.

Meanwhile, the former Swindon Town boss will now presumably head back to the lower leagues with his tail between his legs, though few should lament his failure as a top-level manager.

Woody Guthrie once wrote "All of you fascists bound to lose" - a song covered by Billy Bragg in 2000. It looks as if they were right again. Ciao, Il Duce!

THAT PAULO DI CANIO REVOLUTION IN FULL...
Three wins from 13 games in 175 days:
2012/13
7 AprChelsea (A)L1-2
14 AprNewcastle United (A)W3-0
20 AprEverton (H)W1-0
29 AprAston Villa (A)L1-6
6 MayStoke City (H)D1-1
12 MaySouthampton (H)D1-1
19 MayTottenham Hotspur (A)L0-1
2013/14
17 AugFulham (H)L0-1
24 AugSouthampton (A)D1-1
27 AugMilton Keynes Dons (H) [LC]W4-2
31 AugCrystal Palace (A)L1-3
14 SepArsenal (H)L1-3
21 SepWest Bromwich Albion (A)L0-3
[Overall record: P13 W3 D3 L7 Win% 23.08]

Sunday 15 September 2013

GNR 2013: Farah tastes defeat on the South Shields sea front

The Tyne Bridge adorned for the first time with the Great North Run sign

DOUBLE Olympic champions Mo Farah took to the mean streets of the North East for the first time today but his bid for victory in his maiden Great North Run ended in defeat.

It was a very close-run thing, though, as Farah and winner Kenenisa Bekele treated the chilly South Shields crowd to a thrilling sprint finish.

For much of the race, Farah and Bekele had been joined by the legendary Haile Gebrselassie who was still competing aged 40, ultimately setting a new world record for his age-group.

Between them, the trio can boast no fewer than seven Olympic gold medals and they set off at an impressive pace, completing mile seven in just 4:21.

That pace seemed to catch out Bekele a little but, while he dropped about 20 metres behind, he made sure not to fall completely out of contention - and he was back in touch for a climactic finish.

Indeed, Bekele was first to make a move, pulling away down a steep slope in mile 12 - something which would have been rather unfamiliar to track star Farah.

But, still, Farah would not give up - and, as Gebrselassie faded to third, the stage was set for the Briton to chase down the lead.

Closer and closer came Farah but the tape was also coming closer and closer for Bekele. It was really unclear just which one would come first.

However, after a couple of anxious looks over the shoulder and a defensive weave across the path of Farah, one final kick would prove enough for Ethiopian Bekele to complete the course in 60:09.

Farah, just a second behind, was left only with the rare and bitter taste of defeat, though undoubtedly also with a hunger to road race again.

Meanwhile, in the women's elite race, an exciting finish of a different sort developed.

Unlike in the men's competition, there was no doubt who was going to win - Kenyan Priscah Jeptoo was well ahead of all of her rivals.

Instead, it was Jeptoo against the clock as, despite the dreary conditions, she chased down Paula Radcliffe's half-marathon record of 65:40, set in the 2003 Great North Run.

Radcliffe, who was on commentary duty today for the BBC, will have breathed a sigh of relief when Jeptoo crossed the line.

It was not quite quick enough, five seconds off the record to be accurate, though still the third-fastest time in history.

In the wheelchair races, the Tyneside crowds could cheer home success - in both the men's and women's events.

Six-time Paralympic gold medallist David Weir (43:06) took the men's event for the fifth time, a feat matched by Shelly Woods, who finished in 54:28.

But, of course, the Great North Run is not just about the elite athletes. Today, another 55,000+ runners, joggers, try-hards, and never-give-uppers also crossed the line in South Shields, raising millions between them for charity.

Little did Brendan Foster know just how big the Great North Run would become when he devised the first edition in 1981.

As Foster freely admits: “To be honest we had no idea if anyone was going to turn up at all

"But they did. And it’s just grown. When we reached 40,000 entrants a few years back, someone said that’s it, we can’t get any bigger. But we have."

Now, the run is constantly over-subscribed and attracts regular praise for its level of organisation.

And next year's entrants have the added incentive of the possibility of being the millionth person in the race's history to cross the line, the very first mass-participation event set to reach landmark.

Amongst the throng this year for the second time was my sister, Helen, a keen runner as she amply demonstrated in comfortably breaking the hour-mark in the Blaydon Race.

My sister was running for a brilliant charity, the Alzheimer's Society, a cause close to all of our hearts in our family, given that dementia has blighted three of our grandparents' latter days.

Dementia, which affects approximately 800,000 people in the United Kingdom alone, does not discriminate between the victims which it chooses.

It is a harrowing, often drawn-out illness without a known cure - and much more scientific research needs to be done to solve the enigma or at least stem the tide.

This is where the Alzheimer's Society comes in - but, of course, research requires money and so it feels only right that I should annotate this blog posting with my sister's JustGiving page.

Helen was very proud to represent the Alzheimer's Society today and she did them proud, finishing in a personal best time of two hours and 12 minutes.

A brilliant effort on a day which - even when the sun does not shine - never fails to show Newcastle and Tyneside in anything but a fantastic light.

For Nanna x

Friday 13 September 2013

World Cup 2014 qualifiers: Hodgson satisfied by Ukraine stalemate

WORLD CUP 2014 QUALIFIERS
(Q) Brazil, Japan, Australia, Iran, South Korea, Netherlands, Italy, United States, Costa Rica, Argentina

ENGLAND stayed on course to qualify for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil after a 0-0 draw against Ukraine in Kiev kept the Three Lions on top of Group H.

The drab stalemate puts England on 16 points, one clear of both Ukraine and Montenegro, with two matches left.

Roy Hodgson's men host the Montenegrins and Poland in back-to-back games at Wembley in October, and so can be confident of completing the job.

But the veteran head coach was forced on the defensive after a match of few chances brought more criticism from legendary striker Gary Lineker.

Match of the Day presenter Lineker described the performance as "awful" on Twitter, adding: "What happens to some of these players when they pull on an England shirt?"

And, while Lineker has since sought to clarify his comments, Hodgson was still far from happy, noting "He has done it for a second time".

Lineker had earlier suggested England's tactics in the drawn friendly against Ireland in May were "a step back to the dark ages".

Now, in the past of course, England have sometimes qualified with ease but still underperformed on the big stage - and, having failed to beat anyone other than minnows Moldova and San Marino in the group so far, Hodgson will have to hope the opposite also holds true.

Being realistic, though, it is difficult to see either England or Ukraine going too far in the tournament with performances like the one from this week.

At least England are still likely to qualify, which is more than can be said for the other home nations at this stage.

Incredibly, Scotland were the very first team from the European qualifiers to be eliminated - before even San Marino and the Faroe Isles - though, in fairness, the appointment of Gordon Strachan has seen an upturn in their fortunes in Group A.

Wales are now bottom of that group following a 3-0 home defeat against Serbia despite which coach Chris Coleman has expressed a desire to remain in his role.

However, the most humiliating result by a British team came from Northern Ireland, beaten 3-2 by Luxembourg after conceding two late goals. It was Luxembourg's first World Cup win since 1972.

Things are not quite as bad as that south of the border but two defeats against Sweden and Austria this week leave Ireland requiring a series of extraordinary results to reach the Rio beaches.

On the back of a poor effort in Euro 2012, in which the Irish had the worst record of all 16 competitors, it was perhaps little surprise the successive losses spelt the end for Giovanni Trapattoni.

Yes, the Italian coach may have got some good results for a while but, once they dried up, his safety-first tactics were never likely to help him preserve his position... 

--

Elsewhere around the world, there are now 10 teams assured of a World Cup place next summer, including hosts Brazil of course, and the first qualifiers from Europe - World Cup 2006 winners Italy and 2010 runners-up Netherlands.

Overnight, United States, Costa Rica and Argentina also sealed their place in their respective qualifying zones, with the Americans beating Mexico 2-0 in Columbus, Ohio.

It is a result which leaves the Mexicans in danger of missing out on their first World Cup finals since 1990, when they were banned for fielding an ineligible player in a youth competitions.

Given the availability of three automatic places, and the fall-back option of a playoff against Oceania winners New Zealand, it would still be amazing if Mexico failed to make it.

But then no one would have expected them only to win one match out of eight so far, and none at home in their former fortress, the Azteca.

Definitely going to the World Cup from Asia are the final group stage winners, Iran and Japan, and their respective runners-up South Korea and Australia.

Meanwhile, Jordan will aim to join them and qualify for their first World Cup, the Middle East team having won an extraordinary fifth-place playoff against Uzbekistan this week.

Following two 1-1 draws, and extra time in the second leg, Jordan eventually prevailed 9-8 in a penalty shoot-out with no fewer than 20 spot-kicks.

Their final hurdle will be the fifth-placed South American team, likely to be 2010 semi finalists Uruguay or Ecuador after the latest round of matches officially knocked out long-time stragglers Peru, Bolivia and Paraguay.

As mentioned, Argentina have made it through easily, losing just once in the marathon format so far.

Colombia face Chile next month, with the victors also certain of making it - while Ecuador-Uruguay on the same night will go a long way to deciding who faces those extra games against Jordan in November.

Also reaching its climax is the African qualifying competition. The group stage has now been completed with the 10 winners to be drawn in playoffs on Monday to determine the five qualification places.

The seeded teams in the draw, based on September's FIFA rankings, are Ivory Coast, Ghana, Algeria, Nigeria, and Tunisia - who only got through to this stage after Cape Verde were thrown out for fielding a suspended player in one of its matches.

In the unseeded half of the draw, Egypt, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Senegal and surprise package Ethiopia await their fate.

For Egypt, a finals appearance would be their first since 1990. Burkina Faso and Ethiopia have, of course, never been to the World Cup.

The next two round of matches will be played on 11 and 15 October. The European and North American and South American group phases completed and the identity of 11 more qualifiers will be discovered.

Links to full Group Tables/Results FIFA World Cup - Wikipedia

Sunday 8 September 2013

Tokyo to stage IOC's 2020 vision

 

FirstRun-offFinal
Tokyo (JPN)42-60
Istanbul (TUR)264936
Madrid (ESP)2645-

TOKYO will stage the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2020 after beating Istanbul and Madrid in a vote at the 125th IOC session in Buenos Aires last night.

The Japanese capital, which has hosted the Summer Olympics previously in 1964, was seen as the favourite before the ballot, having successfully allayed concerns about the nuclear fallout from Fukushima.

Japan was a safe choice for the IOC, after the still potentially risky decisions in favour of Sochi and Rio de Janeiro.

The Asian powerhouse has the world's third-largest economy by GDP and has hosted big sporting events in the past, including the football World Cup in 2002, and two Winter Olympics in 1972 and 1998. Just a year before the Olympics arrive back in Japan, it will also host its first Rugby World Cup.

As a city, Tokyo will not have too much to do to be ready for 2020. Except for the planned renovation of the National Olympic Stadium, this should be a relatively stress-free seven-year build-up - and this was ultimately the decisive factor in the IOC vote.

Pity poor Madrid - defeated now in three successive bids to bring the Games to the Spanish capital, a desire so desperately borne out of Barcelona being such successful hosts in 1992.

Since then, though, the Spanish economy has boomed and busted - worse than many in Europe with as much as a quarter of the population unemployed. Youth unemployment has been particularly bad.

The Madrid bid tried to counteract that by promising a budget Games with over 80% of its planned venues having already been built. But, one of its slogans - "a realistic bid for realistic times" was not exactly awe-inspiring.

Indeed, according to Olympic historian Robert Livingstone, the no-frills approach would not exactly have been music to the committee's ears. "The IOC doesn't like cheap. It likes monuments to the Olympic movement," he said. 

Nevertheless, it was still a surprise to see the Spaniards ousted in a run-off vote following a dramatic first round tie with Istanbul.

Even the presence of a Crown Prince Felipe, a former Olympic sailor, could not swing the vote, though - with the need for a first round run-off, Istanbul must have known it was up against it.

After all, the Turkish capital had endured a difficult run-up to yesterday's vote. Political unrest this summer had put the government in a poor light following the deaths of eight people and over 8,000 injuries amid accusations of police brutality.

Some of the protests were at proposed Olympic sites, with economic concerns again among the demonstrators' grievances.

Moreover, a series of doping scandals involving Turkish athletes came at the worst possible time (though doping was an issue which also hampered the Madrid bid). 

Ultimately, then, for a fifth time, the outstanding attraction of hosting the Olympics on two separate continents at the same time had been outweighed by far more pragmatic concerns.

Not that the Tokyo bid had been entirely worry-free, of course, despite the weakest field of candidates for over 30 years.

In fact, with only three finalists, this was the fewest number of candidate cities for a Summer Olympics since Seoul beat Nagoya in 1981.

The Japanese may have lost back then but they succeeded this time after tackling their main issue - Fukushima - head on.

Bid leader Tsunekazu Takeda was at pains to stress that the high-profile nuclear leak is under control.

"The radiation level is absolutely safe. The 35 million people in Tokyo are living in normal conditions. There is no problem. Not one person in Tokyo has been affected. Tokyo and Fukushima are almost 250km apart," he said in Buenos Aires.

Takeda's comments were echoed by Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who said: "Let me assure you the situation is under control. It has never done and will never do any damage to Tokyo."

Next, the IOC session will move onto two other big selections. Today, three sports - baseball, squash and wrestling - compete for a place at the 2020 Games.

With Japan's victory in the bidding process and an Olympic history which goes back to ancient times, wrestling is the strong favourite. An announcement will be made at 5pm BST.

Finally, on Tuesday, the IOC will elect a new president to replace the outgoing Jacques Rogge.

For this, there are six men, and no women, standing. They are: Thomas Bach of Germany, Ng Ser Miang of Singapore, Richard Carrion of Puerto Rico, Wu Ching-kuo of Chinese Taipei, Denis Oswald of Switzerland, and Sergey Bubka of Ukraine.

Bubka is easily the most famous name on the list, having won the pole vault in Seoul with an Olympic record, but Bach - who also won gold as a fencer in Montreal 1972 - is favourite for the role.

Bach would largely be seen as an extension of Rogge, the quiet 71-year-old Belgian surgeon. Asked to reflect on his time at the top, Rogge was characteristically modest.

"I did my duty," he said. "I did what I had to do. If it has benefited the IOC, I'm happy." Almost as happy as the Japanese today, perhaps.


SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES HOSTS
†= Cancelled due to WW1 or WW2
1896IAthens, Greece

1960XVIIRome, Italy
1900IIParis, France

1964XVIIITokyo, Japan
1904IIISt Louis, USA

1968XIXMexico City, Mexico
1908IVLondon, UK

1972XXMunich, West Germany
1912VStockholm, Sweden

1976XXIMontreal, Canada
1916VIBerlin, Germany

1980XXIIMoscow, Soviet Union
1920VIIAntwerp, Belgium

1984XXIIILos Angeles, USA
1924VIIIParis, France

1988XXIVSeoul, South Korea
1928IXAmsterdam, Netherlands

1992XXVBarcelona, Spain
1932XLos Angeles, USA

1996XXVIAtlanta, USA
1936XIBerlin, Germany

2000XXVIISydney, Australia
1940XIITokyo, Japan then Helsinki, Finland

2004XXVIIIAthens, Greece
1944XIIILondon, UK

2008XXIXBeijing, China
1948XIVLondon, UK

2012XXXLondon, UK
1952XVHelsinki, Finland

2016XXXIRio de Janeiro, Brazil
1956XVIMelbourne, Australia

2020XXXIITokyo, Japan