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Sunday, August 12, 2012

City down ten-man Chelsea (FIFA)



(PA) Sunday 12 August 2012
English football opened the new season as Manchester City came from behind to beat ten-man Chelsea 3-2 at Villa Park in the FA Community Shield.
Second-half goals from Yaya ToureCarlos Tevez and Samir Nasri gave the Premier League champions their first Shield triumph since 1972.
But it was the succession of niggly tackles, eight yellow cards and a straight red for Branislav Ivanovic that left the biggest impression as Chelsea lost out, despite Fernando Torres and Ryan Bertrand scoring the first and last goals.
Good and bad for Chelsea
Stefan Savic was booked after ten minutes, which set the scene for an opening period in which both sides were guilty of going too far at times. Ivanovic was the worst offender. Forced to challenge for a stray John Terry pass, the Serb slid straight into countryman Aleksandar Kolarov with studs raised.
It was not two-footed, but it was dangerous. And though Chelsea protested, referee Kevin Friend was justified in dismissing Ivanovic, who must now miss next week's trip to Wigan Athletic, plus home encounters with Reading and Newcastle United.
Earlier, David Luiz had been cautioned, followed by Frank Lampard, and in the immediate aftermath of Ivanovic's exit, John Obi Mikel. It amounted to some introduction into English football for Eden Hazard, who was a bystander when Chelsea got their opener.
Ramires created it, nipping past Pablo Zabaleta before surging into the box and flicking an astute pass past Hazard to Torres on his right. The £50million man showed signs last season of starting to find his old form and, with Didier Drogba embarking on his new life in China PR, manager Roberto Di Matteo needs Torres to justify that massive price tag.
Today's contribution was clinical, beating the advancing Costel Pantilimon with the predatory instinct of old. Pantilimon had been given a rare start due to Joe Hart's back injury and, having been the least busy of the two goalkeepers, probably felt hard done by.
Toure begins comeback
Tevez, Nasri and captain Vincent Kompany had all gone close for the Premier League champions. As so often on showpiece occasions, though, Toure was the man who did the damage.
Seizing on Terry's poor clearance, the midfielder drilled a fierce shot straight back through a crowd of bodies, giving Petr Cech no chance of keeping it out. Now City had the momentum with them and made their extra man tell.
Six minutes later, neither Luiz nor Terry were able to check Tevez's darting run along the edge of the penalty area. From a central position, Tevez belted a superb shot into the top corner to put the champions ahead.
Six minutes after that, City scored again as Kolarov streaked past makeshift right-back Ramires and curled a cross to the near post which Nasri touched home. If Ramires had not managed to steer James Milner's cross over the bar, an unmarked Tevez would have had a tap-in as a rampant City poured forward.
Yet it was Chelsea who scored ten minutes from time, through substitute Bertrand, who promptly became involved in a spat with Pantilimon as he tried to wrestle the ball away to restart the game.
City came closer to grabbing a fourth than Chelsea an equaliser, though, as Sergio Aguero somehow managed to turn Milner's cross wide in the final minute when it seemed easier to score.

The early blow that shocked Brazil (FIFA.com) Saturday 11 August 2012 (FIFA)



© Getty Images
When a story has an ending that, as well as unhappy, is all too familiar, it can sometimes be difficult to find the will to seek out any positives.
The Brazilian players at the Men’s Olympic Football Tournament must be feeling the same way, with time surely required before they can fully appreciate their run to the final and the fact Mano Menezes’Seleção have come closer to finding a collective identity during London 2012.
Adding to the pain of their 2-1 defeat by Mexico on Saturday at Wembley was the fact it was Brazil’s third loss in the final of the men’s competition at the Games, having also suffered reverses in the deciders at Los Angeles 1984 and Seoul 1988. 
Throwing further salt in the wounds is the knowledge that the seeds for this latest disappointment were sown by carelessness in the early seconds, with Rafael’s slack pass starting the chain of events that led to the quick-fire opener from Oribe Peralta which changed the face of the game.
At least we can draw on the experience of playing at an Olympics and learn from this final, even in defeat.
Neymar, Brazil forward
“Everyone who plays football knows that finals are decided by small details, and that’s what happened today,” said Neymar, one of the most visibly dejected members of the Canarinho squad during the medal presentation. “Losing like that is very tough to take, but at least we can draw on the experience of playing at an Olympics and learn from this final, even in defeat.”

Following Peralta’s strike after just 29 seconds, it was clear that A Seleção went into a state of shock. Indeed, the early blow sucked the creativity out of a team that had scored three goals in each of the five games running up to the final.
Goals were gifts
“When you concede an early goal like that it’s hard to take,” said No10 Oscar. “Of course it affected us all. We went on to miss several chances to equalise but we couldn’t manage it. Then, in the second half, we began with all guns blazing but, in the midst of all our pressure, they went and scored again. We virtually gifted Mexico both their goals, but they’re a good team, they took their chances well and deserved to win.”

Despite the difficulty of focusing on the future so soon after losing a major final, the Brazilians were still able to appreciate that five wins and only one defeat at London 2012 could still be seen as an encouraging sign for the five-time FIFA World Cup™ winners ahead of Brazil 2014.
“Of course the overall verdict on this campaign is positive,” said left-back Marcelo. “It’s hard to think that way right now, but it’s true. We’ve come here and won a medal with a young squad, one which has a lot of room to grow,” added the Real Madrid star, before doing his best to prevent fellow full-back Rafael becoming a scapegoat for the reverse.
“Of course it was careless by us, but when we make a mistake, it's on all of our shoulders. Just like when someone scores a winning goal, we all share the credit.”
And, on a similar wavelength was Neymar, who had the final word: “There’s no point dwelling on what went wrong. It’s already in the past. Life goes on.”

Bayern clinch Super Cup (FIFA)


(PA) Sunday 12 August 2012
Bayern Munich beat Borussia Dortmund for the first time in six attempts to lift the German Super Cup with a 2-1 win at the Allianz Arena. Mario Mandzukic and Thomas Muller put the hosts two up within 11 minutes, but Robert Lewandowski pulled one back 15 minutes from time.
Dortmund, the current league and cup holders, were unable to find an equaliser, though, as Bayern picked up the first trophy of the 2012/13 season and became the record German Super Cup winners with this, their fourth triumph.
Bayern had lost their last five games in a row to Dortmund and made it clear straight away that they were not going to tolerate a sixth defeat. Muller went close with a header early on before Mandzukic put the hosts in front with his first goal since arriving from Wolfsburg in the summer.
Franck Ribery's cross from the left evaded two Dortmund defenders on its way through to Mandzukic, who kept his composure to place a shot into the bottom corner, out of the reach of Dortmund goalkeeper Roman Weidenfeller. Muller made it two in the 11th minute, benefiting from a rebound off the post after Arjen Robben's lifted shot over Weidenfeller just missed the target, and shooting powerfully into the roof of the net.
Bayern sat on their lead, but Dortmund lacked the invention to cause them any problems, not managing a single shot on goal in the first 45 minutes. That soon changed in the second half when Lewandowski tested Manuel Neuer with a header which the Germany goalkeeper did well to push behind.
Lewandowski missed an even better chance in the 67th minute after Marco Reus and Mario Gotze combined to set him up, but his weak effort trickled wide of the post. He made no mistake with his third effort, though, to bring Dortmund back into the game in the 75th minute with a low shot from just outside the penalty area.
Bayern resorted to defending their lead, but a tiring Dortmund side were unable to cause any further problems as the record German champions became the record Super Cup winners.

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Tiki Gelana of Ethiopia wins women's marathon (USA TODAY)



LONDON – Tiki Gelana of Ethiopia blew a kiss in the air just before she crossed the finish line Sunday to win Olympic gold in the women's marathon.
  • ORG XMIT: USPW-86932 Aug 5, 2012; London, United Kingdom; The marathon runners on the course with Big Ben in the background during the London 2012 Olympic Games at The Mall. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports ORIG FILE ID: 20120805_bsd_sd2_661.JPG
    Bob Donnan-US PRESSWIRE, Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports
    ORG XMIT: USPW-86932 Aug 5, 2012; London, United Kingdom; The marathon runners on the course with Big Ben in the background during the London 2012 Olympic Games at The Mall. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports ORIG FILE ID: 20120805_bsd_sd2_661.JPG
Bob Donnan-US PRESSWIRE, Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports
ORG XMIT: USPW-86932 Aug 5, 2012; London, United Kingdom; The marathon runners on the course with Big Ben in the background during the London 2012 Olympic Games at The Mall. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports ORIG FILE ID: 20120805_bsd_sd2_661.JPG

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Gelana, neice of 2000 Olympic men's marathon champion Gezhagne Abera of Ethiopia, was clocked an Olympic record 2 hours, 23 minutes, 7 seconds along a 26.2-mile course that took the runners past Buckingham PalaceBig Ben and theTower of London.
Priscah Jeptoo of Kenya (2:23:12) won silver, and Tatyana Petrova Arkhipova of Russia won bronze (2:23:29).
Kenya has yet to win a gold medal in the Olympic women's marathon.
For the USA, Shalane Flanagan finished 11th (2:25:51), just ahead of teammate Kara Goucher (2:26:07).
Flanagan and Goucher hung with the leaders for about 18 miles before the lead pack pulled away.
Desiree Davila of the USA dropped out during the race.
"I came in a little bit injured," she said. "I could tell early it was not going to happen today. You just don't try to tough out what you 

Serena Williams reveals 'deep secret' after gold medal win (USA TODAY)



WIMBLEDON, England – With the gold medal finally — finally — hanging around her neck,Serena Williams allowed herself to admit the truth.
  • Serena Williams celebrates a point against Maria Sharapova on her way to her first Olympic singles gold medal on Saturday at Wimbledon.
    Mark J. Rebilas, USA TODAY Sports
    Serena Williams celebrates a point against Maria Sharapova on her way to her first Olympic singles gold medal on Saturday at Wimbledon.
Mark J. Rebilas, USA TODAY Sports
Serena Williams celebrates a point against Maria Sharapova on her way to her first Olympic singles gold medal on Saturday at Wimbledon.

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She really did want to win the Olympic tennis singles championship, more than she ever said. Despite protestations that gold at Wimbleon would just be "gravy" on a legendary career, when the moment came, it blew her away, in more ways than one.
"I always wanted to win a gold medal (in singles) secretly," she said Saturday shortly after dismissing Russian Maria Sharapova 6-0, 6-1 on the same grass where she won the Wimbledon title last month, "and I've always said it doesn't matter because I already have a gold medal (in doubles), and I really believe that. But deep, deep, deep, deep down I wanted it in singles as well."
This was the one major title that had been missing on her résumé. Williams owns 14 Grand Slam singles championships, the most of any active woman. She had won the Olympic gold medal in doubles with her sister Venus in 2000 and 2008, but not the gold in singles. She and Venus will play for a third doubles gold Sunday.
"It's such an amazing feeling. I got it," she said. "I can't compare. I have it, I have them all so it's great feeling."
The stage had been set for drama. The Olympic gold medal match. Williams vs. Sharapova.
The last time Sharapova defeated Williams in a singles final came at this court at the 2004 Wimbledon Championship final. Both players Saturday were chasing career golden slams, a sweep of the four major titles and an Olympic gold.
But instead of three acts from Shakespeare, Saturday's match was as brief as a Tweet. It was the most lopsided women's final in Olympic history. It's telling when the most drama of the day comes after the match.
After the blowout was over, Williams shouted in delight and then hopped like a school kid on a playground. That soon turned into a dance.
"I didn't know what to do. I was so happy. I didn't plan it; it just happened," Williams said. "It's a big moment. It's a big moment."
True joy isn't scripted. Neither was the scene that followed. During the medal ceremony, the American flag being raised while the national anthem played took flight, adding a bit more drama to the moment.
"Obviously it wasn't intentional," Williams said. This flag flap wasn't quite as embarrassing, politically at least, as the one that occurred earlier in these Games when the South Korean flag was mistakenly displayed on the jumbotron alongside the faces of North Korean players at a women's soccer game.
Nor was it leftover gust of Cold War frigidity. The International Olympic Committee member presenting the medal just happened to be be Russian. (Former tennis player Shamil Tarpischev.)
"It was just the wind. It was so windy," Williams said. "Hey, it's life."
In other words, blame Mother Nature. "All these gusts of wind, you then see the flag flying and then oohhh," Williams said, describing the scene in which the flag flew to the ground. "It was probably flying to come hug me because the flag was so happy," she joked. "It didn't quite make it but almost. It was fluttering towards me trying to wrap its fabric around me."
Everything went Williams' way this day. She even dominated the wind, Sharapova said. "She's playing incredibly confident tennis," said Sharapova, who has lost to Williams the last eight times they've met, dating to that 2004 Wimbledon match.
"After winning Wimbledon (last month), you've seen her level progress so much here over this tournament. With every match she's played, she's getting better, hitting harder. So much power on the ball even against the wind today. Her shots were very powerful. She's done an incredible job of keeping that up."
In the six matches of her gold medal run, Williams lost 17 games. Against Sharapova, Williams finished with 10 aces, 24 winners and seven unforced errors.
"I was really focused today. I really wanted to go out and do well when you're playing a great tennis player like Maria, the only other player that's playing that has a career Grand Slam, you gotta come ready to play," Williams said. "I don't know what was going on today. I don't know if it was domination or if it was just me being really focused. I think the grass suits me. It just all came together."
Men's doubles: Americans Bob and Mike Bryan (Wesley Chapel, Fla.) won their first doubles gold medal in men's tennis, getting past France's Michael Llodra and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 6-4, 7-6 (7-2). The gold medal by the Bryan brothers is the fourth in doubles won by the United States in the event. Ken Flach and Robert Seguso were the last to claim it for the USA at the Seoul 1988 Olympic Games. The other two came at the St. Louis 1904 Olympic Games and the Paris 1924 Olympic Games.

NBC to devote hour to Michael Phelps on Sunday Olympics show (USA TODAY)



NBC plans to devote the first hour of its Sunday prime-time Olympic coverage, or at least most of it, to a single athlete: Michael Phelps.
  • NBC will get as much mileage as it can out of U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps, cooking up an hour-long feature on the record-setting Olympian to air Sunday night.
    Mark J. Terrill, AP
    NBC will get as much mileage as it can out of U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps, cooking up an hour-long feature on the record-setting Olympian to air Sunday night.
Mark J. Terrill, AP
NBC will get as much mileage as it can out of U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps, cooking up an hour-long feature on the record-setting Olympian to air Sunday night.

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Jim Bell, overseeing NBC's London Olympic coverage, says that wasn't originally planned, though Olympic prime-time coverage is usually sketched out well in advance.
The idea came after Phelps was in NBC's studio Saturday to talk to Bob Costas.
"It really dawned on us during the interview," says Bell, an NBC Olympic TV veteran who also oversees NBC's Today show. "Phelps was relaxed and reflective. And we wondered how we could get this all in. He is the greatest Olympic champion of all time. I think we can say that. The interview felt like it was crying out for expanded treatment."
So NBC will replace previously scheduled action — which would have been some track and field and diving, Bell says — for one last chance for NBC to get some ratings mileage out of Phelps.
Not that Bell would rule out Phelps returning to the network — as an analyst.
"Right now, we're so used to seeing him in the pool. But that's something we'll obviously talk to him about. But like his mom, we wouldn't mind seeing him in an Olympic pool again," Bell says.
As to what Phelps told Costas that will strike viewers as new, Bell offered one tidbit: In the interview, Phelps says after he missed out on a medal in the 400 individual medley in London, "He says he really had a freak-out. But it helped him to relax more."

Usain Bolt still heavy favorite to win 100 meters (USA TODAY)



By Reid Cherner, USA TODAY
Updated 49m ago
By Kirby Lee, USA TODAY Sports
If you don't think Usain Bolt is still the fastest human on earth, there is money to be made.
Bolt is -133 (bet $133 to win $100) to repeat as the 100-meter gold medal winner according to sportsbook.ag (via covers.com).
On Saturday, Bolt ran a 10.09 in the prelims, the ninth best time. The USA'sRyan Bailey had the best qualifying time in 9.88.
Here are the odds for the 100 meters (finals are today):
Bolt: -133
Yohan Blake: +160
Tyson Gay: +2000
Ryan Bailey: +2200
Justin Gatlin: +2200
Asafa Powell: +4500
Keston Bledman: +20000
Richard Thompson: +25000
Adam Gemili: +25000
Dwain Chambers: +30000
Churandy Martina: +30000
Daniel Bailey: +30000
See photos of: OlympicsUsain Bolt