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Saturday, October 31, 2015

Sinai plane crash: No survivors on Russian airliner KGL9268


Relatives of passengers cry at Pulkovo airport, St Petersburg - 31 OctoberImage copyrightEPA
Image captionPeople waiting for their loved ones at Pulkovo airport were told the news of the crash
A Russian airliner has crashed in central Sinai killing all 224 people on board, Egyptian officials have said.
The Airbus A-321 had just left the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, bound for the Russian city of St Petersburg.
Wreckage was found in the Hasana area and bodies removed, along with the plane's "black box". An official described a "tragic scene" with bodies of victims still strapped to seats.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has declared Sunday a day of mourning.
He has ordered an official investigation into the crash, and for rescue teams to be sent to the crash site.
Egyptian officials said 214 of the passengers were Russian and three Ukrainian.
passenger list published by the Russian Association of Tour Operators showed that 10 of those on board were under the age of 10, with one only 10 months old.
A commission headed by Russian Transport Minister Maksim Sokolov is to leave for Egypt on Saturday afternoon.
A criminal case has also been opened against the airline, Kogalymavia, for "violation of rules of flight and preparation for them", Russia's Ria news agency reported.
Egypt map
Oksana Golovin, a spokeswoman for the airline, said the company did not see any grounds to blame human error.
She told a press conference that the pilot had 12,000 hours of flying experience. Kogalymavia did not yet know what caused the crash, she said, but the plane was fully serviced.
Police are reported to be searching the company's offices.
Russian authorities say the plane was carrying 217 passengers, 138 of them women and 17 children aged between 2 and 17. Most were tourists. There were seven crew on board.
Egyptian officials investigating the scene said there were no survivors.
A centre to help relatives of the passengers has been set up at Pulkovo airport, Tass news agency quoted St Petersburg city officials as saying.

Sudden altitude loss

Initially there were conflicting reports about the fate of the plane, some suggesting it had disappeared over Cyprus.
But the office of Egyptian Prime Minister Sharif Ismail confirmed in a statement that a "Russian civilian plane... crashed in the central Sinai".
Media captionMikael Robertsson from flight tracking service Flight Radar 24: ''This was something more than a planned diversion''
Officials say up to 50 ambulances have been sent to the scene.
Access to the area is strictly controlled by the military and the terrain is difficult, correspondents say.
One official told Reuters news agency that at least 100 bodies had been found.
"I now see a tragic scene," the official said. "A lot of dead on the ground and many died whilst strapped to their seats."
The plane split in two, with one part burning up and the other crashing into a rock, he added.
The Egyptian cabinet said in a statement that flight KGL9268 left Sharm el-Sheikh at 05:58 local time (03:58 GMT)
It added that the aircraft went off the radar 22 minutes after take-off.
The flight had been due into St Petersburg's Pulkovo airport at 09:10 GMT.

The crashed plane, pictured on 17 September in Antalya, TurkeyImage copyrightReuters

Kogalymavia airline

  • Also known as KolAvia
  • Founded in 1993
  • Carried out regular and charter flights to other parts of Russia from the western Siberian towns of Kogalym and Surgut, and helicopter flights for the oil and gas industry
  • Rebranded as Metrojet in 2012
  • After takeover by tourism company TH&C in 2013, began flights to international destinations popular with Russian holiday-makers
  • Currently has fleet of seven Airbus-321s and two Airbus-320s

Egypt's civilian aviation ministry said the plane had been at an altitude of 9,450m (31,000ft) when it disappeared.
Live flight tracking service Flight Radar 24's Mikail Robertson confirmed the altitude.
He told the BBC that the plane started to drop very fast, losing 1,500 metres in one minute before coverage was lost.
Sergei Izdolsky, an official with Russia's air transport agency, said the plane had been due to make contact with air traffic controllers in Cyprus half an hour after take-off, but did not do so.
Soon after, he said, the plane disappeared from Cypriot radar screens.
Aviation official Ayman al-Mukadem said the pilot had reported technical difficulties before the plane went missing, the Associated Press reported.
Local weather observations in the vicinity of the rescue scene suggest relatively benign conditions.
Flight path map

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New Zealand v Australia: All Blacks aim for World Cup history

Australia look on as New Zealand perform the haka before they met this summer in Auckland
30 October 2015Last updated at 18:28 GMT


Rugby World Cup final - New Zealand v Australia

Date: Saturday, 31 October Kick-off: 16:00 GMT Venue: Twickenham
Coverage: BBC Radio 5 live commentary; live text commentary and analysis on BBC Sport website and app
New Zealand are aiming to become the first team ever to retain the Rugby World Cup when they meet Australia in Saturday's sell-out Twickenham final.
More than 80,000 fans will see the All Blacks start as favourites, having lost only three games out of 53 since lifting the Webb Ellis Cup in 2011.
It will be the first time the All Blacks and Australia - the world's top-ranked sides - have met in the final.
Both are double winners but no country has won the tournament three times.
The build-up to the final has seen both nations throw their weight behind their quest for victory, with the Sydney Opera House illuminated in green and gold and the slogan "Go Wallabies".
Sydney Opera House
The Sydney Opera House's iconic white sails have turned green and gold
The two countries' national airlines have also agreed a wager that their crews will wear opposing rugby jerseys on Monday should their team lose.
Welshman Nigel Owens will referee the match, while the 16:00 GMT kick-off is in the early hours of Sunday for the audience across Australia and New Zealand.
The eighth Rugby World Cup has been dominated by the southern hemisphere over its six weeks, with Argentina and South Africa knocked out in the semi-finals, while hosts England failed to progress from the group stage.

'Old fashioned' Cheika denies 'All Blacks' ban

Australia coach Michael Cheika, who took over a struggling side 12 months ago and has turned them into World Cup finalists, laughed off media suggestions on Friday that his players are banned from saying the phrase "All Blacks" in an effort to remove some of the mystique around their opponents.
Defusing some of the tension in the build-up to the game, he reeled off the name and jokingly grabbed his throat, exclaiming: "Can I say All Blacks now for you? Right. OK. [making a strangled noise] Poltergeist!
"It's pretty funny because if you notice, I never call Australia the Wallabies either. I'm really a bit old-fashioned in that way," added Cheika, who led Australia to their first win over New Zealand in four years as they won the southern hemisphere's Rugby Championship in August.
That was their only win in the past 12 games against the All Blacks, although there have also been two draws in that time.

'Devastated' Carter fuelled by second chance

All Black fly-half Dan Carter, the leading points scorer in Test history, missed New Zealand's 2011 triumph because of injury, and he admitted the thought of the 2015 final has been driving him on.
"Straight after missing the 2011 final I was pretty devastated," he said. "The reason I signed a new four-year deal was the chance of playing in a World Cup - that's what's been driving me.
"It will be a fantastic occasion, with both teams prepared to die for cause. What's happened in the past is irrelevant. Obviously it's a huge occasion but I'm just focusing on what I can do for this team."

Record breakers

At least two records - and possibly several more - will be broken on Saturday.
cartergraphic
McCaw will extend his record for the most Test caps to 148 and team-mates Ma'a Nonu and Conrad Smith will play their 62nd Test as a centre partnership, another record.
Team-mate Carter will seek to add to his record points in Test rugby, which currently stands at 1,579.
New Zealand winger Julian Savea will hope to break the record for the most tries scored in a World Cup. He is currently level with compatriot Jonah Lomu and South Africa's Bryan Habana on eight.
Australia winger Drew Mitchell, who has scored 14 tries in World Cup history, is one short of the record held by Lomu and Habana.
New Zealand and Australia are both going for a history-making third win. South Africa have won the tournament twice, while England - champions in 2003 - are the only other side to have won the tournament since it was first held in 1987.

View from the New Zealand camp

Head coach Steve Hansen: "For us in 2011 and for most teams who have won, they've had to dig deep. It's not about doing anything magical, it's about getting the basic things right.
"We don't want to get carried away, to do things differently because it is the final. We know what works for us - the formula's pretty proven - and we need to stick to that and make good decisions."
Captain Richie McCaw: "I don't mind what type of game it is as long as we win.
"We've got a game plan about making space and scoring tries. We've just got to deal with whatever's in front of us. If that means it's a tight one, then that's what we've got to do."

View from the Australia camp

Head coach Michael Cheika: "We don't want to be proud just to make the final - that's too easy. We want to be proud of what we do on Saturday and make Australians more proud of us by giving everything we have got.
"I don't feel as though there is any pressure. People love to talk about the whole pressure thing. The only time you feel pressure is if you are not prepared as well as you possibly can."
Flanker Michael Hooper: "New Zealand are a great group of players who do the small stuff really well. To try and find weaknesses in them is tough; they're a great team."
Stats
This will be the 155th meeting between New Zealand and Australia

Experts' view

Former New Zealand fly-half Andrew Mehrtens: "Can Australia win it? Yes.
"The last couple of weeks they probably haven't performed to the level they did earlier in the tournament but they have still got it in them.
"They beat the All Blacks in Sydney in August so they will have confidence."
2003 World Cup winner Matt Dawson: "I threw a tweet out there asking who is going to win. Out of 150 replies 127 said they thought New Zealand will win it."

The teams

New Zealand: Ben Smith; Nehe Milner-Skudder, Conrad Smith, Ma'a Nonu, Julian Savea; Dan Carter, Aaron Smith; Joe Moody, Dane Coles, Owen Franks, Brodie Retallick, Sam Whitelock, Jerome Kaino, Richie McCaw, Kieran Read.
Replacements: Keven Mealamu, Ben Franks, Charlie Faumuina, Victor Vito, Sam Cane, Tawera Kerr-Barlow, Beauden Barrett, Sonny Bill Williams.
Australia: Israel Folau; Adam Ashley-Cooper, Tevita Kuridrani, Matt Giteau, Drew Mitchell; Bernard Foley, Will Genia; Scott Sio, Stephen Moore (captain), Sekope Kepu, Kane Douglas, Rob Simmons, Scott Fardy, Michael Hooper, David Pocock.
Replacements: Tatafu Polota-Nau, James Slipper, Greg Holmes, Dean Mumm, Ben McCalman, Nick Phipps, Matt Toomua, Kurtley Beale.

Friday, October 30, 2015

FIFA BALLON D'OR The Ballon d'Or in Numbers


(FIFA.com) 
Real Madrid and Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo smiles after receiving  the 2014 FIFA Ballon d'Or award
© AFP
France Football triggered the trend. The esteemed magazine established the Ballon d’Or in 1956, an award for the best European, playing in his native continent, during each calendar year. Thirty-five years on FIFA, realising the desire to reward the finest individual performer from anywhere on the planet, launched the FIFA World Player of the Year gong (non-Europeans playing in the Old Continent became eligible for the Ballon d’Or award from 1995). Two then became one in 2010, with a merger giving birth to the FIFA Ballon d’Or.
Here, we take a statistical look at the award's star-studded history.

75per cent of the FIFA World Player/FIFA Ballon d’Or’s winners and runners-up in FIFA World Cup™ years played in that competition’s Final. Only Hristo Stoichkov, who inspired Bulgaria to unexpectedly reach the USA 1994 semis and duly finished second; 2010 recipient Lionel Messi, whose Argentina side were eliminated in the quarter-finals in South Africa; and Cristiano Ronaldo, who suffered group-stage elimination with Portugal last year, broke the sequence. Only once did the recipient of any of the three awards, during a World Cup year, fail to appear in that year’s competition. That player was Englishman Kevin Keegan, who was honoured despite not playing at Argentina 1978 or winning silverware with Hamburg during those 12 months.
50per cent of the top three finishers in the Ballon d’Or voting between 1972 and ’81 came from clubs from just one country: West Germany. During that period, the podium featured Franz Beckenbauer (Bayern Munich, four times), Kevin Keegan (Hamburg, three), Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (Bayern, three), Gerd Muller (Bayern, two), Gunter Netzer (Borussia Monchengladbach, one), Allan Simonsen (Borussia Monchengladbach, one) and Paul Breitner (Bayern, one). West German teams seized a record six successive Ballon d’Ors between 1976 and ’81. Spanish clubs have currently captured six successive FIFA World Player of the Year/FIFA Ballon d’Ors thanks to Messrs Messi and Ronaldo.
41is the age that makes Stanley Matthews the oldest recipient of any of the three awards. ‘The Wizard of the Dribble’ pipped Alfredo Di Stefano to the inaugural Ballon d’Or in 1956 after helping unfashionable Blackpool finish runners-up to Manchester United in the English top tier. Lev Yashin is the next-oldest, having seized the prize as a 34-year-old in 1963.
20is the age that established Brazil’s Ronaldo the youngest recipient of any of the three awards. The year was 1996 and though O Fenômeno failed to win a domestic league or continental title during it, he did lift the Dutch Cup, Dutch Super Cup and Spanish Super Cup trophies and averaged almost a goal per game for both PSV and Barcelona.
8successive years on the FIFA World Player/FIFA Ballon d’Or podium is what Lionel Messi achieved in 2014 – four more than his nearest challengers. La Pulga has finished first and second four times apiece since 2007. Cristiano Ronaldo claimed his fourth consecutive top-three finish last year, while Raymond Kopa did so in the Ballon d’Or initial’s four years, winning it once, finishing runner-up once and taking bronze twice.
5players have finished FIFA World Player/FIFA Ballon d’Or runner-up on multiple occasions. Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo – the Argentinian came second in 2007, 2008, 2013 and 2014, while the Portuguese did in 2009, 2011 and 2012 – at least got their hands of the prize more than once, but the other three never had that satisfaction. Hristo Stoichkov lost out to Van Basten in 1992 and his Barcelona strike partner Romario two years later, David Beckham missed out against Rivaldo and Luis Figo in 1999 and 2001 respectively, and Thierry Henry was runner-up to Zinedine Zidane and Ronaldinho in back-to-back years. The only other men to have finished on the podium more than once but never won the award are Xavi, Andres Iniesta and Dennis Bergkamp, who was third in 1993 and 1997.
4years had different Ballon d’Or and FIFA World Player of the Year recipients from 1995, when France Football made non-European players eligible, until 2009. They were Matthias Sammer and Ronaldo (1996), Michael Owen and Luis Figo (2001), Pavel Neved and Zinedine Zidane (2003) and Andriy Shevchenko and Ronaldinho (2004).
3is the number of times the Ballon d’Or’s top three have hailed from the same country. Franz Beckenbauer, Gerd Muller and Guntar Netzer seized West Germany a clean sweep in 1972, Karl-Heinz Rumminigge, Paul Breitner and Bernd Schuster followed suit for the same country nine years later, and Marco van Basten, Ruud Gullit and Frank Rijkaard did it for the Netherlands in 1988. The latter occasion was the only in the history of the three awards when the top three came from the same club (AC Milan).
1vote is all that Bobby Charlton and Matthias Sammer pipped Eusebio in 1966 and Ronaldo in 1996 to the Ballon d’Or by – the closest margins in the history of the former France Football award. The next-tightest came in 1972, when Franz Beckenbauer beat two of his West Germany team-mates, Gerd Muller and Gunter Netzer, by two votes.

Mourinho: Chelsea will recover


(AFP) Friday 30 October 2015
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Mourinho: Chelsea will recover
© Getty Images
Jose Mourinho says he "cannot promise" Chelsea will be in the UEFA Champions League next season, but insists his struggling Premier League titleholders will turn around their season.
The Portuguese had previously stated he was certain they would finish in the top four, but he has changed his mind after Chelsea's poor start, losing half their league games. When directly asked about the Champions League, Mourinho responded: "I cannot promise" but did say "no" when asked whether he had any doubt they would get out of this run.
That poor spell means an awkward match against Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool comes at a particularly inopportune time. Mourinho confirmed that Branislav Ivanovic is out injured with his hamstring but that Pedro and Diego Costa will have late fitness tests.
"(Thibaut) Courtois and Ivanovic are out. And Pedro and Diego we are going to wait. The others are fine. They have to come through training again. A fitness test in the morning. I am a little (hopeful that they can play). If not I don't take them to the hotel.
"It's always difficult to find a percentage (on how fit they are). It's more about the confidence. Not desire, because that's there. But the confidence of the players."
Mourinho spoke glowingly about his opposite number Klopp, saying they have a good relationship and thinks the German is an excellent coach, but also made sure to praise his Anfield predecessor - and former Chelsea coach - Brendan Rodgers.
As a manager, his work speaks (for itself). In spite of the last season, one to forget, I consider him one of the top managers in the world.
Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho on Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp
"I'm not a close friend (of Klopp) because football doesn't allow that, but he's a guy I like a lot. We have good relations. As a manager, his work speaks (for itself). In spite of the last season, one to forget, I consider him one of the top managers in the world.
"They (Liverpool) were a good team. They are a good team. They had good players. They have good players. They had a good manager. They have a new good manager. Everything is the same. They changed some details, obviously, in their tactical approach to matches, but this is the nature of the game.
"Especially when you are speaking about two top managers. When you change a top manager for an ordinary one... or a top one to another top one, the level is high. They know what to do. It's just a bit of difference on the way they look at football."
Mourinho also refused to criticise Eden Hazard after his missed penalty on Tuesday against Stoke City, that saw Chelsea eliminated from the League Cup after a shoot-out.
"I think it's not because he missed an important penalty that I'm going to be critical. He tried everything in the last game, had a positive game, played for two hours. I'm pleased with his performance. I'm happy with his performance against Stoke. I was happy with his performance against Dynamo Kyiv.
"Before that, he was on the bench a couple of matches, obviously because I was not happy and I felt it was the best thing for him, but I'm happy with his positive reaction to that."