Saturday, 11 February 2012

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Sunday, 15 January 2012

Spain striker Fernando Torres could miss selection for next year's European


Fernando Torres
Spain striker Fernando Torres could miss selection for next year's European championship if he does not get more playing time with Premier League club Chelsea, Spain coach Vicente Del Bosque has said.
In an interview with the Spanish sports daily As on Friday, the former Real Madrid coach said Torres's poor club form was a worry.
"There are five months until the European championship during which everything could turn around but if the situation does not change it will be hard for him," Del Bosque said.
The 27-year-old striker, who scored the goal against Germany in 2008 that won the Spanish their second European title, has netted just five times in 23 games since his January move to London from Liverpool and seven of his 12 Chelsea appearances this season have been as a substitute.
"Fernando deserves respect for his record and he has our confidence but if he is not playing, there are certain things that are obvious," Del Bosque added.
"If he plays and he is on form he'll go to the Euros. He has contributed to the successes and he has room for manoeuvre."
Torres's form has become more of an issue for the world champions since the nation's all-time top scorer David Villa broke his leg playing for Barcelona this month.
Villa should return in time for the tournament in Ukraine and Poland but Del Bosque has other options for the forward line, including Athletic Bilbao's Fernando Llorente, who is currently out injured, and Sevilla's Alvaro Negredo.
Valencia captain Roberto Soldado, who has scored 11 goals in La Liga and five in the Champions League this season, is also pushing hard for a recall.
Del Bosque told As that if Soldado maintained his form he would be selected.
The 26-year-old has represented Spain twice, in June 2007, when he failed to score.
"If Roberto Soldado maintains his current form we'll include him in our plans," Del Bosque said.
"In the last few months Soldado has stood out, scoring goals which is the barometer of forwards, while others have been in difficult situations," he added.
"Villa and Llorente are injured, Torres has not played much. What nobody should doubt is that I will try to be fair."

Australian opener David Warner hit an unbeaten 156 but Indian paceman Umesh Yadav took three wickets in the hour before lunch to reduce the hosts to 256 for three after the second morning of the third test on Saturday.

Australian opener David Warner hit an unbeaten 156 but Indian paceman Umesh Yadav took three wickets in the hour before lunch to reduce the hosts to 256 for three after the second morning of the third test on Saturday.

It could have been even better for the tourists had Virat Kohli not dropped a straightforward catch off the bowling of Zaheer Khan when Warner, who hit the quickest century by an opening batsman in 69 balls on Friday, was on 126.

As it was, Australia held a first-innings lead of 95 with Warner, whose batting lacked the fireworks of Friday's astonishing knock, accompanied at the crease by captain Michael Clarke (three not out).

India, already 2-0 down in the four-match series, had laboured on another hot and humid morning at the WACA until Yadav finally separated the two Australian openers when he bowled Ed Cowan for 74 with 214 runs on the board.

Shaun Marsh came for a brief cameo but he managed just 11 runs on his home ground before he nicked the ball to a diving VVS Laxman at second slip with Yadav again claiming the wicket.

The Western Australian at least improved on the scores of 0, 3 and 0 that he recorded in the first two tests but he will probably rue a missed chance to take the pressure off with a big innings.

Ricky Ponting, coming off his first test century in two years in the Sydney test, had made seven runs off six balls when a rash stroke saw Yadav remove his middle stump.

Warner showed only flashes of the swashbuckling brilliance he displayed on Friday, most notably a massive six through long-on which landed in the fourth row of the stand.

The third of his four sixes had brought up his record century but it was with a more prosaic run three that he reached his first test 150, achieved in 223 minutes off 128 balls with 21 boundaries.

Cowan had proved the perfect foil for Warner and he reached a milestone of his own in the morning, bringing up the second test fifty in his short career before getting an inside edge onto the stumps.

The kind of anonymity that provides innocent experiences of when she would be excited to catch a fleeting peek of the top players of the day and when she "played on the last court on the left" in the juniors' competition at the age of 13.



Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark
She's tall. Blonde. Screeches like a banshee on the tennis court and is half of one of the most famous sporting couples in the world.

But on Saturday, Caroline Wozniacki looked back with a slight hint of regret at her lost anonymity.

The kind of anonymity that provides innocent experiences of when she would be excited to catch a fleeting peek of the top players of the day and when she "played on the last court on the left" in the juniors' competition at the age of 13.

"It's fun to think back," the world number one said after she had counted off on her fingers the number of times she had played at the year's first grand slam tournament. "I remember someone once confused me with Daniela Hantuchova.

"They thought I just finished up a mixed doubles. They were like, 'Daniela, can we have your autograph?'

"I said, 'I'm not Daniela'. They said, 'Yes, you are, we just saw you'. That was very funny.

"A lot of things have happened since then."

'A lot' includes 18 career titles, one grand slam final appearance at the U.S. Open in 2009, nearly $12 million in prize money, and no doubt countless more in commercial endorsements, and more than a year as world number one.

However, like previous world numbers ones in Russia's Dinara Safina and Serbia's Jelena Jankovic, she has had the legitimacy of the ranking questioned because she has not won a grand slam title.



TRY TO WIN

"You know, I've been number one for a long time already," came the curt and highly polished reply that dispelled those memories of innocence so evident earlier and perhaps hinted at the pressure such a mantle bestows on players.

"Now my main focus is just to win as many tournaments as possible and the ranking will get there, will be there, if you play well."

That pressure, however, could abate a little by the end of the Australian Open, which starts on Monday.

Not if she wins, which would end the discussion once and for all, but also because her grasp on the top ranking could slip through her fingers.

Wozniacki will have to reach the fourth round to ensure she heads off world number two and Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova and the Dane was in defiant mood despite suffering a wrist injury at a build-up tournament in Sydney that had threatened her Australian Open participation.

"Obviously every time you go into a tournament, you want to try to win it," Wozniacki said, while adding she expected her wrist would be "100 percent" by Monday.

"Yeah, I want to try to win here. We'll see if that will happen. You need to play the best tennis to do that.

"I feel confident in my game and hopefully I can play well here.

"I know that if I play on my high level and if I play the way I want to play, it's really tough to beat me."

Canada's David Hearn responded in the best possible way to some good-natured banter from his compatriots by charging up the second-round leaderboard at the Sony Open in Hawaii on Friday.

Canada's David Hearn responded in the best possible way to some good-natured banter from his compatriots by charging up the second-round leaderboard at the Sony Open in Hawaii on Friday.

The previous day, fellow Canadian Graham DeLaet had set the tournament pace with a sizzling seven-under-par 63, and Hearn knew all about it when he checked his mobile phone messages after opening with a tidy 66 at Waialae Country Club.

"I got a few texts from some guys saying you're not the top Canadian, I need to work harder," a smiling Hearn told reporters after posting another 66 on Friday to briefly hold the outright lead.

"It's great to see Graham back. He had a tough year last year with his injury," he added, referring to DeLaet's back surgery in early January that almost entirely wiped out his 2011 campaign.

"Canadians, like the Australians and all the other countries around the world, we kind of pull for each other, so it was good to see him do well yesterday."

Hearn, whose best finish on the PGA Tour was a tie for fifth at last year's Las Vegas Open, eagled the par-five ninth on Friday on his way to a share of second place at eight-under 132.

"There's a lot of doglegs out there and I've always been pretty good off the tee," the 32-year-old said after also recording four birdies and two bogeys on a breezy day at Waialae.

"Any golf course where you have to put the ball in play I tend to do well at. Everything feels pretty good for the most part. My short game has been really good and my putter has been really solid."

Hearn, who has triumphed once on the second-tier Nationwide Tour, grew up just five blocks from the home of ice hockey great Wayne Gretzky in Brantford, Ontario.

However, he was never tempted to take up Canada's national sport as a youngster because of his relatively slight frame.

"I didn't really fill out well enough so that decision was kind of made for me at a young age that I was going to be a golfer, not a hockey player," Hearn said. "I always knew I'd be a golfer."

Ironically enough, as a golfer, Hearn got to know Gretzky.

"I was fortunate he had a Nationwide event for three years in Canada," Hearn recalled. "He ran it in Collingwood, and the first year that he hosted it, I was his partner for the tournament.

"He's obviously the greatest at his sport of all time, so it was pretty much an honour and privilege to play with him at an event like that. Great guy ... and a lot of fun to be around."


Maria Sharapova asked herself where her game was going after a disappointing start to 2011, but winning two titles and returing to a grand slam final for the first time in more than three years has her heading in the right direction going into the Australian Open

Maria Sharapova asked herself where her game was going after a disappointing start to 2011, but winning two titles and returing to a grand slam final for the first time in more than three years has her heading in the right direction going into the Australian Open.

The 24-year-old had shoulder surgery in 2008, which kept her out of the game for nine months and she had struggled to regain the consistency that had earmarked her as a player capable of dominating the game after she won Wimbledon as a 17-year-old.

A new coach, change of racquet and some patchy form in the first half of last year raised more doubts but she felt she turned the corner by reaching the French Open semi-finals then the final at Wimbledon, where she lost to Petra Kvitova.

"I didn't really start the year off on the best note," Sharapova told reporters in Melbourne on Saturday. "I lost here in the fourth round. I got sick playing Paris. Didn't play in Fed Cup.

"It was kind of, 'where is this going?'

"Then all of a sudden things clicked because ultimately when you put in the work, it's going to pay off. Maybe not tomorrow, maybe not in one week, but maybe in many months.

"I think my level was much more consistent than where I saw it at the couple years before that ... following the shoulder surgery.

"It was a big step for me in the right direction."

Sharapova suffered an ankle injury in the year-ending WTA Chamionships, which kept her out of the Brisbane International earlier this month, but she was confident she had recovered.

"It has healed pretty well," she said. "It just didn't heal as fast as I thought it would. But, yeah, it feels good now.

"I've been in Melbourne for some time now. Came here a little bit early (and) I was thinking of maybe playing a tournament the week before (but) just thought it would be good to stay here and train and get ready.

"I wasn't really in a hurry to go and play a tournament when I didn't feel like I had enough practice and all.

"But, it's been really good. The body feels really good

Peterhansel, who had won the Dakar Rally six times on a motorcycle and three times in a car before his latest win, led Roma, who won the 2004 edition of the race on a motorcycle, by 41 minutes 56 second

Frenchman Stephane Peterhansel, in a Mini, won Sunday his 10th title in the Dakar Rally, finishing in Lima ahead of his Spanish team-mate Nani Roma.

KTM's Cyril Despres of France won the motorcycle category ahead of defending champion Marc Coma of Spain.

Sunday's 29-kilometre special between Pisco and Lima only confirmed the overall standings after the 13th stage.

Peterhansel, who had won the Dakar Rally six times on a motorcycle and three times in a car before his latest win, led Roma, who won the 2004 edition of the race on a motorcycle, by 41 minutes 56 seconds.

"When you think of how hard it is to win a Dakar, it's incredible that I've been able to win ten of them," Peterhansel admitted, in comments posted on the Dakar Rally website.

In a car, he won the 2004, 2005 and 2007 editions as well as this one. Previously, he had won on a motorbike 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1997 and 1998.

"To take the victory in South America is a huge relief, it ranks among my best triumphs. Moreover, the race was very close during the first week and there was always a lot of pressure," he said.

The 2009 cars champion Giniel de Villiers of South Africa completed the podium in central Lima's Plaza de Armas, 1:13:25 behind Peterhansel.

The 14th and final stage of the prestigious offroad race was won by US driver Robby Gordon, 21 seconds ahead of Ricardo Leal dos Santos of Portugal. Gordon was disqualified Tuesday for technical irregularities in his Hummer, but he was allowed to drive on pending appeal.

In the motorcycle section, Despres made the most of Coma's problems a day earlier. The Frenchman, who had already won the Dakar Rally in 2005, 2007 and 2010, won the race with a 53:20 lead over Coma, who led the overall standings as late as the start of Saurday's stage. Helder Rodrigues of Portugal finished third, 01:11:17 behind Despres.

"It's simply fantastic. This is without a shadow of a doubt the toughest Dakar I've ever raced in. It was difficult physically, but even more psychologically. Challenging yourself every morning and fighting on the course takes its toll on your mind," Despres said.

"All victories are beautiful, but this one is special because it came down to the wire and was decided at the last minute."

Pal Anders Ullevalseter of Norway won the final stage, 01:08 ahead of Coma.

Coma and Despres, both on KTM bikes, have between them won every edition of the Dakar Rally since 2005. However, neither one has managed to get back-to-back titles.

"I finished second in what was a difficult rally. I gave it my all every single day," Coma said.

"I'm going to work hard to try and win again next year. If we keep alternating... it should be my turn!"

Alejandro Patronelli of Argentina won the quad category, while Gerard de Rooy of the Netherlands carried victory among the trucks.

   A total of 469 vehicles - cars, motorbikes, quads and trucks - set out from the Argentine seaside city of Mar del Plata on January 1. Only 242 vehicles managed to finish in Lima.

Participants completed 14 stages - one of which was cancelled due to snow - and covered more than 8,000 kilometres, including more than 4,000 kilometres of timed specials.

The Dakar Rally was held for the fourth straight year in South America. The endurance race took place in Africa from 1979-2007. It was moved to Argentina and Chile after fears of terrorist attacks in Mauritania led to a cancellation of the annual event in 2008.

   This year, Argentina hosted five stages but was mostly a springboard for further action. In Chile, over five stages, the race went through the Andes and the challenging Atacama Desert. Peru became Thursday the 27th country to host the race in the history of the Dakar Rally, and contributed sand dunes which provided for plenty of excitement.