Friday, 31 January 2014

Brendan Rodgers says Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard has silenced his critics

Gerrard scored and played a pivotal role as the Reds thrashed Everton 4-0 on Tuesday night at Anfield.
The Liverpool skipper has been deployed in a holding midfield role by Rodgers recently rather than the box-to-box part he has spent his career performing in.
The Reds boss recently likened Gerrard to Andrea Pirlo and the England international showed the passing class of the Juventus legend on Tuesday.
He is set to resume that role against West Brom tomorrow and Rodgers expects him to further silence those who did not believe he had the ability to match the world’s best at 33.
Rodgers said: “If anyone ever questioned whether Steven Gerrard can play as a controlling midfielder then he put on one of the best performances I’ve seen for a long, long time.
“I thought he was sensational in that role - opening up the game from behind, his exhibition in blocking, when he marked space, when he marked a man.
“He controlled the game and it was wonderful.”
Jordan Henderson has taken over Gerrard’s role higher up the pitch and the ever-improving midfielder continues to impress.But Rodgers wants to see more goals from the former Sunderland man to ensure there is a significant contribution from midfield with Gerrard further back.
He added: “I still think Jordan has bits to improve, he needs to get more goals.
“He understands that, we speak about that, there is no pressure on him, as he makes contributions in other areas.
“The areas that we want to improve his game is to get more goals, we need more from that area of the field.
“Steven Gerrard has done it consistently in his career but he’s in a different part of his career now and one that will see him in that role further back so that means that others have to contribute.
“I think it is a great credit to Jordan in how he has taken on the role.
“His composure and his quality is great to see and I think there is a lot of individual improvement to come.”
Rodgers was also given a boost by the news that Joe Allen has recovered from a hamstring injury.
The midfielder is expected to be on the bench for the trip to the Hawthorns.

What...no fried bread? Huge cooked breakfast defeats every foodie in its calorific path

The Juggernaut Breakfast Challenge has defeated everybody at the Undergraduate Bar in Leamington Spa, Warks.
Chefs pack the monster fry-up with eight rashers of bacon, two sausages, each a foot long, four black puddings, four fried eggs, a four-egg omelette, four hash browns, eight rounds of toast, mushrooms, tomatoes – and chips.
It weighs over 5lbs and costs £11.95. Anyone who can clear their plate gets the meal free, a T-shirt and a place on a wall of fame.
Ex-Ritz chef Adam Smith is marking British Yorkshire Pudding Day tomorrow by creating the world’s most expensive pud at the Devonshire Arms Hotel near Bolton Abbey, North Yorks.
The £500 pud is made with gold leaf, whole black Perigord truffle and fillet of beer-fed Dexter beef, the highest priced cut available.

Action McMan! Explorer conquers the world on diet of burgers and chips

The 31-year-old biked 18,000 miles, rowed 3,000 miles and climbed 29,000ft – but admitted he didn’t always eat as healthily as he could.
“My diet was atrocious!” said James. “I cycled the world on a diet of Subway, Taco Bell and McDonald’s”.
And he admitted the burger chain became a second home because “it’s cheap, easy to get to and has WiFi”.
James’s feat is more remarkable because he had recently recovered from breaking his legs and arms in a motorbike crash.
The chartered accountant said: “I always wanted to row the Atlantic and after the crash I thought to myself that I had two choices.
“I could either give up and feel sorry for myself or I could use the row as a motivational goal, something to aim for.”
After scaling Everest and rowing the Atlantic, James, known as Captain Ketch, crossed 20 different countries on his seven-month cycle ride.
After returning home to Basingstoke, Hants, he said: “I’m already planning another trip – to row across the Indian Ocean.
“I just want to inspire kids that with the right mindset you can do absolutely anything.”

Coroner's fury as soldier kills himself after being abandoned by Army

Lee Bonsall, 24, was found hanged at his home in March 2012.
He was believed to have suffered from undiagnosed post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) caused by the death of his best pal in Helmand Province.
His friend Private Andrew Cutts was killed in 2006 on duty. But Lee had to wait seven months for a psychiatric assessment after saying he felt low.
It took 11 months for his October 2006 request to be discharged to be granted.
Coroner Mark Layton said the Army waited “too long” to discharge him after their assessment that he was not suffering from PTSD.
He said: “I am writing to Defence Personnel Minister Anna Soubry to suggest the procedure for arranging psychiatric appointments is reviewed. I will also be asking the armed forces to review their practice for passing medical records to civilian surgeries and will ask UK Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt to highlight the waiting times for psychotherapy.”He recorded a narrative verdict into Lee’s death after ruling it was unclear whether he meant to kill himself.
Lee, from Tenby, south Wales, served with the 13 Air Assault Support Regiment, Royal Logistic Corps in Afghanistan. His section commander said he was “a good honest soldier, hard working and professional”.
After the hearing in Milford Haven, his widow Serena urged the Army and NHS to keep a closer eye on soldiers after they have left duty.
She said: “If this had been the case when Lee was in the Army then maybe he would still be here now.”

Call in the Navy! Weather to dramatically worsen as storm Brigid batters coast



Forecasters warned of 80mph gusts, hours of downpours and snow across much of Britain.

And the extreme weather from the Atlantic is expected to bring huge tidal and river swells in parts of Britain that have already suffered widespread floods.



Weather Channel forecaster Leon Brown said: “There will be severe gales in Wales and western England in the afternoon and all evening, with gusts of more than 80mph. Large waves could also pound the south-west and Welsh coasts.

“Even inland we may see gusts of more than 60mph as a band of heavy showers moves eastwards.

“Huge seas off the west coast of Ireland will batter the coast at high tide, with waves perhaps over 50ft high.”Looking further ahead, he warned: “There will be more stormy and wet weather next week from Wednesday onwards.”

The thousands of people flooded out for four weeks in Somerset were last night told they face 20 more years of misery after environment bosses came under attack for ending the dredging of rivers.

Environment Secretary Owen Paterson has said dredging will start again as soon as it is safe.

But he warned: “We have established we do need a proper 20-year plan to satisfactorily cover this very specialist part of our country.”

He added: “There is further bad weather coming in, there will be heavy rain. That, combined with significant high spring tides mean that I’m afraid there is real risk of flooding to properties.”

On top of the world! Olympian Mo Farah trains in the Kenyan mountains for race of his life



MO FARAH is standing 8,000ft above sea level overlooking Kenya’s Rift Valley and the scenery could hardly be more beautiful.


But this is no sight-seeing holiday for the double Olympic champion. He’s preparing for the toughest race of his life.

Mo, 30, is spending three months in a gruelling training camp to prepare for his debut in the Virgin Money London Marathon.

That’s 12 weeks without seeing his wife Tania, 28, daughter Rhianna, eight, and 17-month-old twin girls Aisha and Amani, who are at home in America.

Thanks to the poor internet connection at the camp, it’s hard for Mo even to Skype them and talk face-to-face.

Every week he runs 130 miles to prepare him for the 26.2-mile course and pretty much his only relaxation is watching his beloved Arsenal. But – as ever – Mo is smiling.

“My dream has always been to run the London Marathon,” he says. “This has come at the right time.

“I Skype the kids because I want to see them, but the internet’s not too good. I need to come out here. If you want to do something, you have to give it 110%.”

Heading to the high-altitude camp in Iten, Kenya, means Mo is free from distractions and can concentrate on his punishing schedule.

And after being constantly in the spotlight since winning gold in the 5,000m and 10,000m at London 2012, it’s certainly a quieter life.

“They don’t make life complicated. You can find people to run with every day. You don’t have to go home and open your mail, deal with those kind of things.

“It’s eat, train, sleep here. Training comes first.

“I might go for a coffee or something. I’ll watch the football all the time. There’s not much else to do.”

Luckily for Mo, his isolation in Kenya means he can watch the Gunners more often than at home in Portland, Oregon.“I watch Arsenal all the time,” he laughs. “I haven’t been this excited about them for a long time. With Ozil in the team, we’re stronger.

“Hopefully we can get a striker in. It’s about having faith. This year we’re a lot closer to a trophy.”

He’s also learning how to speak Swahili – he already speaks Somali – and chatters away on the phone in the language. Mo also greets people with a cheerful “Hakuna Matata” – the famous phrase from The Lion King which means “no worries” in Swahili.

“People are nice to me,” he says. “Even on the plane when I was coming from Nairobi to Eldoret, the pilot wanted a picture of me.

“Before we took off he told me to come into the cockpit and showed me the buttons. The kids here call me Mofarah.

They think it’s one word. I run through a village and they shout: ‘Mofarah!’”

The Somali-born athlete admits April’s Virgin Money London Marathon will be the hardest race of his life. And his body’s taking a hiding as he prepares to push himself further than ever before.

Friday is his rest day where he runs a mere 10 miles. Sunday is his long run which could amount to 20-plus miles. “Your body is just taking a beating all the time,” says Mo.”“It will be the hardest race of my life. There’s no secret – it’s about training, listening to your body and doing the key sessions.
“If I had thought the marathon would have been easier, then maybe I would have stayed at home, chilled out a little bit and come out for a month. But I wanted to do the work so I have to be here.”
Mo knows the pressure on him to win on April 13 will be immense. He says the British public automatically assume he’ll win everything he enters.
“The public expect me to win,” he admits. “And if I don’t, it will be like: ‘What’s happened to Mo?’ And I’d say you don’t know how I was feeling.
“But I’m getting more into social media to keep people informed about what I’m up to. Hopefully they will have a better understanding.”
He’s grown a beard which is staying in place until April.
“I don’t like to shave when I’m in serious training,” he says. “But it will be trimmed before the race.”
But while there’s no guarantee of a first-place finish, he’s counting on the roar of the crowd to spur him on.
“It’s going to help me a huge amount,” explains Mo.
“I’m hoping if my rivals are going to intimidate me, the crowd can do their bit and intimidate them. Maybe I can just give them some signals?
“Having the crowd behind me is amazing and that’s what carries me.
“You saw that from what happened in London. There were a lot of people out there and they just kept cheering.
“That’s another reason I want to run London.

CBB's Luisa hits the jackpot as naughty antics lead to new sex toy business venture!

The bisexual Apprentice contestant, 26, got the nation hot under the collar with her sexy antics on the Channel 5 series.
Now the businesswoman, who runs a baking firm, is set for a megabucks move into the sex industry.
A source said: “Luisa made herself a household name for all the wrong reasons on CBB.
“What makes her so special is there’s real brains behind her amazing beauty. There will soon be deals on the table.”
While in the house, Luisa turned an electric toothbrush into a sex toy and dressed up in bondage gear.
Now she is ready to cash in on her notoriety by bringing out her own range of branded equipment.
She also revealed she would love to become one of the gobby panelists on hit ITV show Loose Women.Luisa, of St Albans, Herts, stunned Britain by cavorting with housemates Dappy, 26, and Hollywood actress Jasmine Waltz, 31.
After leaving the show, she purred: “I was wild but have no regrets.
Luisa, who lost a stone using Forza Raspberry K2 diet pills, spoke as fellow housemates prepared for a massive career boost in the wake of CBB.
The show’s winner Jim Davidson, 60, last night performed a sell-out stage show in Southend, Essex, and is plotting a TV comeback.
Model Casey Batchelor, 29, has been approached to become a TV presenter.
And Dappy, 26, is rumoured to be working with NDubz cousin Tulisa.

Ukraine star Yevhen Konoplyanka 'signs' Liverpool deal

Konoplyanka, 24, has been the Reds' one and only target on deadline day.
Anfield chiefs have been busy trying to thrash out a deal before 11pm and TV station Russia-24claim the move has been completed.
The reports suggest he will earn £58,000 a week at Liverpool. However, Starsport sources are still to confirm the news.
The deal hinges on Dnipro's billionaire owner agreeing the switch - and the way in which the cash is paid.That has been the main sticking point of a possible transfer.
Konoplyanka impressed for Ukraine against England last year and is highly rated in Europe.
The winger will set Liverpool back around £15m.
Managing director Ian Ayre flew out for talks with Konoplyanka earlier this week over a four-and-half-year deal which is set to go to the wire.

Davis Cup preview: Australia vs France

After six years in the wilderness, Australia returns to the elite of tennis as it faces France in the first round of the Davis Cup World Group in La Roche-sur-Yon.
Amazingly, this is their first meeting since the 2001 Davis Cup final in Melbourne, where France defeated Australia 3-2 in a memorable (for some) tie.
Fast forward 13 years and the tie, on paper, doesn’t look as close.
For starters, the French have chosen clay as the surface for the tie.
Considering our lack of success on the surface and the fact the French are brought up on clay, it is fair to say Australia is at a disadvantage.
In addition, France has the luxury of having nine players out of the world top 50 to pick from, while Australia has just four in the top 100.
French captain Arnaud Clement has gone with the big guns, selecting top ten players Richard Gasquet and Jo-Wilfred Tsonga, excitement machine Gael Monfils and doubles specialist Julien Benneteau.
Australia, conversely, is stuck relying on veterans Lleyton Hewitt and Chris Guccione once again, with Bernard Tomic nursing a sore groin.
In a bold move, Aussie captain Pat Rafter passed over Marinko Mastosevic and Matthew Eden for the ‘special K’ duo of Nick Kyrgios and Thanasi Kokkinakis.
It is a big call from Rafter in this tie to blood two young debutants who spend more on Proactiv than Deep Heat over the course of a season.
France deservedly goes into the tie as the short-price favourite.
They have a strong team that mixes powerful ground strokes with finesse and tennis intelligence.
The only thing that can stop a French victory is their attitude.
Despite the wealth of talent at their disposal, the French since 2001 have made just two finals in 13 years, with the team failing to progress past the quarter-finals in the previous two years.
For all the electronic rankings that decide the order, three ordinary performances from the team could spell disaster.
Australia’s faint hopes of victory will once again rely on Lleyton Hewitt’s fighting spirit.
Likely to play two singles rubbers and the doubles rubber, Hewitt has to win at least two of his three ties to give Australia a fighting chance.
Clay is not his strongest surface, with the former world number one only winning two of his 45 career titles on the red dust.
As for the ‘special Ks’, a win would be nice but the important thing for the duo to concentrate on during the tie is their development.
Taking on two top ten players in one weekend is a daunting task for even the world’s best, so I expect Kyrgios and Kokkinakis to feel a tad nervous.
They need to play with strength and confidence in the same way both did at the Australian Open.
If they make a contest of their rubbers and keep the pressure on, they’ll cause headaches in the French camp.
Prediction
Despite Pat Rafter’s confidence, France will easily win the tie 4-1.
Australia’s best chance will be in the doubles as I can’t see them being victorious in any of the singles.
Jo-Will and Gasquet are big names with big tennis games, while Kyrgios and Kokkinakis are starting out on their journey.
Hewitt will give his all as usual but it just won’t be enough to topple a strong French side.

Will Oklahoma City Thunder take out the NBA title?

Oklahoma City and Kevin Durant are looking the goods at the halfway point of the NBA season. Can they keep it up?
Last year when Russell Westbrook went down after sustaining a knee injury against Houston in the first round of the NBA Playoffs, Kevin Durant wasn’t prepared to play without his All Star teammate by his side.
He simply hadn’t needed to do it; Westbrook amazingly hadn’t missed a single game in his five-year career up until that point.
This time around, KD is playing like he a man on a mission, a player that won’t stop until he has reached the summit by getting that ring!
When the Thunder need a basket, it’s Durant who delivers more so than any other player – often fighting through double teams to do so.
Durant is in the midst of the best shooting streak of his career, having scored 30+ points in his last 12 outings. For me though, it’s his all-round game that is the reason the Thunder have improved so much since last season.
He has always been able to score, but seeing him dish out assists is a new feather to his cap. He started to improve on that last season, but he has taken another step further again this season.
Durant is averaging a career high 5.2 assists per game, and his turnover rate is the lowest it’s been in the last three seasons.
If you don’t enjoy watching Kevin Durant go to work, I’m not sure why you would bother watching basketball!
Although Kevin Durant is the main reason the Thunder are currently boasting the best record in the very crowded Western Conference, the lesser known, role players deserve a lot of credit too.
Reggie Jackson and Jeremy Lamb are far from household names but these two have stepped up this season, and even more so since Westbrook has been out.
Jackson has been Westbrook’s back-up since coming into the league in 2011, and has done a serviceable job in that role.
Jackson has exploded this season in his new role as starter with Westbrook sitting out. Jackson’s minutes have been close to doubled compared to last season, and his numbers don’t disappoint.
The jump from last seasons stats are pretty impressive; in 2012-13 he averaged 14.2 minutes, 5.3 points, 1.7 assists and 0.4 steals per game.
So far this season he is averaging 27.5 minutes, 13.4 points, 4 assists and 1.1 steals per game. I don’t know about you, but that’s what I call taking advantage of your opportunities.
Over the course of the season, it’s been great to see his confidence in handling the ball and setting up his team grow.
Don’t be surprised if Jackson is moved to the starting two-guard position when Westbrook returns.
Jeremy Lamb was drafted by the Houston Rockets in the 2012 draft, but was traded to OKC in the James Harden deal.
Coming out of college, Lamb was seen as a kid with huge potential, and it is exciting for Thunder fans to see that he is showing signs of reaching that potential.
He is certainly a long way off being a consistent night in, night out performer but his last few games have provided OKC with a big boost off the bench.
In his last four games, Lamb has scored 19, 5, 14 and 18 points respectively. In all those games Durant has stolen the show, but Lamb’s shooting efficiency has been just as good as Durant’s (bar one outing of 22% from the field).
Lamb has shown growth this season, as has just about every Thunder player; KD, Jackson, Serge Ibaka and Perry Jones, just to name a few.
It’s scary to think that this team still has Westbrook to welcome back.
If OKC can continue to play as a team and with the focused mindset they are currently displaying, I have no doubt that they will be the toughest team to pass to get out of the West and face the Pacers or the Heat in the 2014 NBA Finals.

Does anyone still care about the Commonwealth Games?

Last month the BBC reported that the organisers of the Commonwealth Games were concerned about the future of the event after no member country had expressed serious interest in hosting the 2022 edition.
The announcement came with only two months to go before the March deadline for applicant cities.
Cardiff, who is pursuing a bid for the 2026 games, said it would be ‘unlikely’ for them to bring their bid forward to 2022.
Does this mean the Commonwealth Games are dead? What relevance do the Commonwealth Games still have?
Already this year’s Games in Glasgow are reported to have cost £1 billion.
The 2010 Delhi Games were huge. They featured 6,081 athletics, 21 sports and 272 events. India spent $8.5 billion putting the games together and incurred a whole lot of debt, disused stadiums and several lawsuits.
According to a list compiled by foreign governments, of the 32 international contractors employed to help run the games, only two have been paid in full!
Currently the Commonwealth features 53 members. In 2010, 71 counties attended the games, including some of the poorest and most volatile places on the planet like Zambia, Vanautu, Uganda and Pakistan.
How on earth can Games organisers continue to justify an event of such size? The first games only had six sports.
Delhi had nearly double the number of athletes that attended the Manchester Games in 2002.
What sports can be cut? How can the games make a profit, or at least not lose an absolute fortune?
Does the Commonwealth Games still fire you up? Or are they heading the same way as the Goodwill Games?

Super Bowl XLVIII: who the bloody hell should you go for?

Sport’s greatest show on Earth is only days away but what’s that, you don’t know who to cheer for?
Maybe your favourite team was too rubbish to make the big day, maybe you haven’t watched an NFL match since Dick Butkus retired or maybe you just don’t know your laterals from your Lombardis.
Whatever the case, if you’ve got your jockstrap caught on the fence and can’t bear to watch a sporting event without cheering for one team to be murderously crushed into a bloody pulp then you’ve come to the right place.
Using a set of carefully designed KPIs, here’s who you should back this Monday!
Quarterbacks
While I may have been accused of some slight bias in the past, it’s pretty hard for any football fan to not have some sort of Peyton Man(ning) crush.
The Broncos quarterback is just so damn likable, and possesses a talent that makes even the most fevered seppo helmet-head hater stop and stare in slack-jawed awe.
This is not to say the Seahawks’ Russell Wilson is some sort of NFL Blake Ferguson in comparison. Far from it, as the young Seahawk quarterback is an extremely intelligent and well-spoken young man off the field, and an equally cool customer on the gridiron.
It’s a tough choice, but with plenty of time on Wilson’s side and Manning’s inspiring comeback from injury, number 18 gets the nod here.
Team to support: Broncos.
Coaches
Both Super Bowl coaches look like the cool uncle at your family BBQ who despite the grey hair always seems to dominate your touch footy games. It’s a tough choice.
Broncos coach John Fox wins the feel good vote for his ability to take his team to the big one so soon after serious heart surgery.
On the other hand Pete ‘Big Balls’ Carroll (not my nickname), despite some serious scuttlebutt during his college coaching years, has recently been voted the ‘most popular coach in the NFL’.
Feel good always trumps popularity though.
Team to support: Broncos.
Jerk bags
If you don’t love either side, you can always just pick the one you hate least, right?
Seattle cornerback Richard Sherman made sure he’d be the bloke twisting his moustache deviously on Monday with his huge post-match spray in the NFC Championship match.
While Denver’s players may have tried to play the nice guy card, wide receiver Wes Welker’s loudmouth former Miss Hooters International wife is sure to be flapping her gums in the stands again for the papers.
Loudmouth player or loudmouth self-entitled WAG? Give us the trash-talking player any day!
Team to support: Seattle.
Australia!
When in doubt, find a dubious Australian connection.
But in this case it isn’t so dubious, with Queensland man mountain Jesse Williams leading Seattle through a fantastic season.
Okay, so he’s been injured all year and hasn’t played a game, but he’s still officially a Seahawk and hardly Brian Bosworth in the bust stakes.
The Broncos? Well they did play a game in Australia at ANZ Stadium, provided the business model for the Brisbane Broncos and let St Kilda hang out with them last year.
ANZ Stadium? Brisbane? St Kilda? Uggghhhr.
Team to support: Clearly the winner is Seattle.
Fans
Lunatics, the lot of them.
To make a call between two such monumental, rabid fan-bases is likely to leave me at risk of being either denied entry to Starbucks for life or having my John Denver collection confiscated going through US Customs
Alas, as a caffeine-addicted country boy, I can’t do without either.
Team to support: Draw!
So there you go sports fans it’s a tie, which means you’re just going to have to decide whether your bandwagoning butt looks better in fluoro green or orange.
But just remember it doesn’t really matter who wins or loses, but how many buffalo wings you can eat.

Chairman’s Stakes and Manfred Stakes: Preview and tips

When we think of summer and autumn racing in Australia, we’re often thinking of the younger horses taking centre stage.
This is only natural with the Golden Slipper and Blue Diamond, two of the richest two year old races in the world, at the forefront in Sydney and Melbourne respectively during this time.
Weight-for-age events are often dominated by the maturing three year olds over this period, taking full toll of their weight advantage. The 2012-13 racing season was a clear example of this, and off the back of Shamus Award winning this seasons Cox Plate, we could be in for more of the same.
Heck, as Justin alluded to earlier this week, we may even see a two year old, Boomwa, take out the Lightning Stakes on his way to the Blue Diamond. I can’t recall a two year old lining up in such an event in my fifteen or so years following the sport, so what a thrill it would be to see.
As January becomes February, and we get ever closer to Group 1 racing returning, it is the two and three year old races which hold feature status this week, with the Chairman’s Stakes and Manfred Stakes held at Caulfield.
The visiting Nayeli, from the Gai Waterhouse stable, is the favourite in the two-year-old Chairman’s Stakes, and maintains a place on the fourth line of betting in the Diamond itself.
An impressive debut winner at her only start, her form is franked by the horse she defeated that day, Peggy Jean, which had accounted for the afore-mentioned Boomwa on her debut.
Anything from the Hawkes yard must be respected, and while Bugatty doesn’t have the wraps of debut winning stablemate Nostradamus, he looks an honest type in his early days, and will be hard to beat from a good draw, even carrying a penalty.
Illustrious Lad is one from one after a successful hit and run mission to Adelaide for Peter Gelagotis, but may need to have found a couple of lengths in his six weeks between runs to be troubling the winner.
Jarklin keeps running into good horses and can fill a hole, while Zululand barely did a thing right in his debut second back in November, and might be capable of springing a surprise.
Of the unraced brigade, Mick Price’s Eqdaam creates the most interest. Racetrack whispers have him as a very promising colt, and Damian Oliver could ride a rockinghorse to victory at the moment. He’s being kept very safe as the second-elect, and any serious money for him in the early markets should be followed.
Selections
1.Eqdaam 2.Nayeli 3.Bugatty 4.Zululand
The Manfred Stakes has attracted a small but somewhat select field, with half the runners showing potential Group 1 ability. The race will be a kicking off point for the three year olds seeking higher honours, either on a Melbourne and Sydney Guineas campaign, or plotting a course through sprinting events.
Fast ‘N’ Rocking will be taking the latter course of action, attempting to follow in the footsteps of his sire by taking on the older horses in Group 1 sprints, the Oakleigh Plate and Newmarket on his radar.
He disappointed in the second half of his spring campaign once he was sent over anything longer than six furlongs, but he’s a good-looking, talented colt that has hopefully matured into something exciting.
Prince Harada entered the spring with a boom attached but couldn’t live up to the hype, unable to claim a victory during his three run campaign. He never saw daylight in the Golden Rose and should have been fighting out the finish, while he didn’t have any luck in the Caulfield Guineas.
Some horses attract bad luck like the plague, and avoiding traffic is a skill some horses innately possess. Prince Harada needs to get clear running and register a black type win to prove his admirers right.
Bull Point produced one of the most talked about and eye-catching runs of the entire spring with his third in the Golden Rose to Zoustar. He stood the field half a lap at one point in the race before storming home, albeit off a hot speed.
He hasn’t been seen since, but is targeting the Australian Guineas, and will have a certain D. Oliver as a pilot throughout his campaign. Many eyes will be studying his return.
The Quarterback gained fans off the back of two country victories last October, showing an impressive turn of foot against some decent horses. Connections could have pressed on for a race like the Sandown Guineas, but elected to take the patient route in the hope of greater returns this time around.
Monkstone is another who caught the eye last winter, in weaker grade, as one to follow.
Both are running into some testing material here, and we’ll have a good gauge of exactly what their level might be after the race.

Could Gerrans become our best yet?

Simon Gerrans is fast becoming a contender for the title of Australia’s greatest ever road cyclist.
The boy from Mansfield who took up cycling at the urging of then neighbour Phil Anderson after being injured in a motorcycling accident may not be at the top of the tree yet, but he is not far from it.
To my mind only three other Aussies sit above him; Tour de France winner and world champion Cadel Evans, multiple Grand Tour stage winner Robbie McEwen and Anderson who, as well as being our first yellow jersey wearer, was a true pioneer of the modern day Aussie assault on professional road cycling.
Those three represent the best of the best, a triumvirate that are hailed as heroes, not just in Australia, but the world over.
Gerrans now sits only one rung behind them, having surpassed the achievements of Stuart O’Grady and Michael Rogers even before their careers were brought to grinding halts due to drug confessions and failed tests.
Of course others may challenge and eventually surpass Gerrans and the ‘Big Three’, with Sky’s Richie Porte already knocking on the door of greatness and up and comers such as Rohan Dennis and Caleb Ewan touted for future success, but for the time being Gerrans deserves his position near the top of the talent tree.
Even the most cursory of glances at Gerrans’ palmares tells the tale.
His big wins are just that – big! To use a Mark Cavendish-ism, there are no ‘sh*t small’ races here!
Stage wins in all three of the Grand Tours including three at the Tour de France (2 x individual, 1 x TTT) and victory at Milan-Sanremo head the list.
Add to it three Tours Down Under, two national road race championships, numerous top ten finishes in the spring classics including two podiums at Amstel Gold and a couple of days spent wearing yellow in France last July and you have a list of race wins and achievements that most pros can only dream of.
His performances are all the more remarkable when you consider the type of rider he is – a solid all rounder who at first glance appears to lack a killer punch. He can’t climb like Evans or sprint like McEwen or pump out a time trial like Luke Durbridge.
But he is smart and picks his moments perfectly.
His best chances come with a small group finish, whether from a breakaway or a whittled down peloton, and when he is in that situation the odds fall heavily in his favour. Just look at some of the riders he has beaten over the past couple of years.
Cadel Evans and Richie Porte at this year’s nationals. Peter Sagan in stage three of last year’s Tour de France. Fabian Cancellara and Vincenzo Nibali at Sanremo in 2012.
They are some of the biggest and most talented names in the sport who, on their own terms, would easily account for Gerrans under most circumstances.
But few have the finishing kick that Gerrans seems to be able to produce at the end of a long, gruelling day in the saddle, making him a formidable foe should he still be with the lead group at the finish.
Kapow!
But he is more than just an opportunist. He works hard and makes the most of the chances that come his way.
His preparation and professionalism allow him to adapt on the fly and strike when others are barely managing to hold on.
He is not a pure climber, yet he went head to head with Alejandro Valverde on the short but significant climbs of 2012′s Tour Down Under (Willunga Hill) and Paris-Nice (stage 3). He is not a sprinter and yet he has gone head to head with Peter Sagan and won (stage 3, 2013 Tour de France).
He is not renown against the clock, and yet he was a contributing member of Orica-GreenEDGE’s historic Tour de France team time trial victory last year.
Simon Gerrans is not a lot of things. He is however a very, very good rider and his achievements should not be undervalued.
Another victory in the northern spring, or another couple of Grand Tour stages are well within the grasp of the 33-year-old Gerrans.
Should that happen, Evans, McEwen and Anderson will need to think about making room for Gerrans on the top branch of the tree, as he will certainly be pushing for a place alongside them.

Perth Glory vs Melbourne Victory: A-League live scores

Friday Night’s second fixture takes us to the west wherePerth Glory host Kevin Muscat’s Melbourne Victory at NIB Stadium. Join us from kick-off at 9.45pm AEDT.
This fixture is an intriguing one because it has the potential to completely derail either side’s seasons.
Muscat’s men face a mammoth task. It is never easy to come out of Perth with all three points, andit makes the task even harder when you’ve conceded 13 goals in the last three fixtures.
The Victory has slumped to demoralising consecutive 5-0 defeats against weaker opposition.
Muscat is under major pressure, with talks doing the round this week about a potential sacking if fortunes don’t change for the former A-League hardman.
Changes are expected with Tom Rogic and Gui Finkler set to be promoted into the starting XI in place of Kosta Barbarouses, who injured himself during training this week, and James Troisi who may lose his place due to poor form.
Adrian Leijer finds himself suspended once again, so Chilean marquee Pablo Contreras will regain his place in the starting XI, while exciting youngster Adame Traore will return after serving his suspension. Dylan Murnane makes way for his return.
The issue with Victory since Muscat took charge hasn’t been their lack of talent, because they have a great roster.
Inconsistency, dire efforts, bad team choices, and their lack of game-plan execution have all been the killers for the navy blue and white.
Their off-field troubles with the board and supporters haven’t helped their cause either, and everything seems to being going against the supposed ‘biggest club in the country’ at the moment.
The Glory welcome back Brandon O’Neill, Ryan Edwards and the enigmatic Adrian Zahra to the starting squad but while they will be without the likes of Jack Clisby, Matthew Davies, and Isevka Cernak.
Perth have had such an inconsistent season – in the last three fixtures they have experienced all three options of results, so you really don’t know which Perth side will be showing up.
Prediction
While Perth have been inconsistent, I think they will be too strong at home, especially against this demoralized Victory side.
Perth in a tight late 2-1 win – though if Victory are to come away with anything from the west Rogic and Finkler will need to up the ante, along with some great leadership and effort by the defensive line.

Australia vs England: Second Twenty20 International – T20I live scores

With the Test and the ODI series lost, England would be looking to take the T20Is into the final game but to do that they will need to beat Australia in the second T20I in Melbourne on Friday. Follow the action live from 7.35 pm AEDT.
It wasn’t a particularly bright start from England with the ball on what was an easy pitch to bat on in Hobart.
And once Cameron White and Aaron Finch had gotten their side off to a sizzler, it was only going to be a matter of how much more than 200 they would be scoring rather than whether they would achieve that landmark.
Don’t let the narrow, 13-run margin fool you into believing the game was close either.
Never during their chase did England look to be in control and the wickets of Luke Wright and Alex Hales, and Jos Buttler and Joe Root in the same over, hammered one nail after another into their coffin.
It was no surprise that England had decided to rest Ben Stokes and Chris Jordan, with both players having shouldered their fair share of workload during the one-day internationals.
And it wouldn’t be too surprising if at least one of them made a comeback into the playing 11 for this one, in a bid to control the escalating run-rate at the start of the innings.
What the English bowlers would also hope for is the MCG to push the boundaries back, in order to allow them to maintain more pressure on the big-hitting likes of Finch and Glenn Maxwell. Both love to hit the ball in the air and shorter boundaries will only allow them to mount on the six-count.
Much like what Australia did in the opener, England need at least one of their top three to bat the distance. Alex Hales has shown in the past he can do that but his style during the Big Bash League before this series was more on the lines of trying to smack a quick-fire 20 or 30 runs before getting out.
It’s a tactic that may need a bit of tweaking.
And if that cannot happen, Michael Lumb could need to look to carry his bat through the innings with the likes of Hales, Luke Wright and even Joe Root going hammer and tongs – especially if the track allows that.
Australia will need to make a change or two of their own.
Moises Henriques has been ruled out of the rest of the series because of his call-up to the Test team and his replacement in the squad is Brad Hodge – making a comeback into the team for the first time since 2008.
Whether or not Hodge makes it to the playing 11 remains to be seen with another all-rounder Ben Cutting seemingly a more like-for-like replacement for Henriques.
The other issue that Australia faced was with the number of runs that Josh Hazlewood gave away in that first game, especially being a frontline pace bowler.
With Mitchell Starc fit and waiting in the wings, it may not be such a bad idea to test him out for a couple of games in place of Henriques – thereby achieving the twin objective of strengthening the bowling attack and reducing the pressure on Hazlewood.
Expecting England to fight back in this one.
Join me for this second T20I of the three-match series on Friday and you can follow the live score of this game from 7.35 pm AEDT and post your comments below.

SPIRO: Has Cricket Australia sold out Test cricket to Indian money?

Old Spiro has been around sports long enough to be able to enunciate the somewhat ribald Zavos Sports Axiom No. 1: “If you jump into bed with your enemies, sooner or later you are going to be screwed.”
If there is a profound truth in this axiom, and I believe there is, then the onus is on Cricket Australia (in keeping with the ribald tone of the axiom) to ensure the experience is an enjoyable one for those cricket nations and their supporters who love the variety and ebb-and-flow of Test cricket.
The determination of India’s Board of Cricket Control (the BCCI) to scuttle the ICC format had three main targets.
First, to increase by a significant margin the BCCI’s revenues coming from the game of international cricket.
Second, to lock in India’s economic and political control of world cricket.
Third, to protect the IPL tournament against any challenges in terms of other countries or the availability of star players from around the world.
It is reasonably clear (I say ‘reasonably’ because many details are still murky) the BCCI has hit all of these targets in the bullseye.
I am taking most of the next lot of information/analysis from Mike Atherton’s article that was published on Thursday in The Australian.
Atherton is a former captain of England. He is now a cricket commentators and pundit for The Times. He is extremely well-informed and has access through his connections to a range of cricket administrators around the world.
He was critical of the draft proposals when they were put forward. He is still critical of the sligthtly amended principles that have been agreed to (or will be agreed to next month) that have emerged from the negotiations.
These principles appear to be:
1. There will be an opportunity for all members to play all formats of cricket on merit, with participation based on meritocracy: no immunity to any country, and no change to membership status.
Atherton’s gloss on this is that the countries with most to gain from this principle – the current associates like Afghanistan and Ireland – will not be barred from playing Test cricket ‘but it will not come for a long time.’
2. The Test cricket fund will be available to South Africa now, as well as Bangladesh, Zimbabwe, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and the West Indies.
Atherton suggests that those countries playing ‘unviable Tests’, Tests that have no interest outside of the two countries playing them and no financial dividends to these countries, will ‘one by one be bought off with a promise here and a promise there.’
In other words, there will be a fall in the number of Tests played and countries like, say, the West Indies – which once had the most formidable Test team in the world – will slowly give away playing Tests and try and evolve into a cricket power in the shorter forms of the game.
The boss of the Federation of International Cricketers’ Association, Paul Marsh, believes that local T20 leagues like the IPL will take over from international cricket.
My gloss on this is that T20 is a game that lends itself to gambling where it is estimated in India alone that up to $400 million can be wagered on an individual game, even if India is not competing.
3. The establishment of ExCo, an executive that effectively replaces the ICC, with five members that must include representatives of the BCCI, Cricket Australia and the England Cricket Board.
Atherton makes the point the Big Three will dominate ExCo. The biggest job of ExCo, he points out, will be to conclude and distribute the television rights for the next eight-year cycle.
India will chair the main ExCo committee handling these negotiations; Australia will chair ExCo; and England will chair the Finance and Commercial Affairs Committee.
4. All this means, according to Atherton, ‘extra money’ for India, Australia and England.
Chloe Saltau, in the SMH, reports that India will receive up to eight times more than the weakest full member. Cricket Australia will receive twice as much as the weakest full member, and England three times as much.
Saltau also reports that India is understood to have offered “better protection and compensation to countries that give up players to the IPL if the changes are adopted”.
And this gets to the heart of the matter, in my opinion.
The BCCI wanted more money and it also wanted to protect its money-machine (and gambling machine), the IPL. Both these requirements have been met when the plan is finally agreed to.
As an aside, it may be that leaving South Africa out of a Big Four may well have had something to do with the fact that a successful IPL was held in the Republic when India was out of bounds because of a terrorist attack in Mumbai.
Atherton’s article was given the headline: ‘It’s the end of the world as we know it.’
And here we come to Cricket Australia. I don’t think CA had much choice but to go along with the BCCI power play. Solidarity is a great thing. But looking after your own interests when they could be gravely threatened trumps solidarity, I would argue.
I can excuse the tough tactics, too, to force through what India wanted.
But now that the new order has been established, we have to expect some leadership from CA to ensure that the cricket countries outside the Big Three get their fair amount of Test cricket and tours to and from the Big Three countries.
This means, essentially, reining in the BCCI’s clear determination to turn world cricket, now that the great Sachin Tendulkar no longer dominates the Test arena, into an endless series of short form cricket tournaments.
We want and we expect leadership from CA on this. After all, CA and ECB can out-vote the BCCI under the new arrangements if this needs to be done in the best interests of the game throughout the world.
So the answer to the question at the top of this article can be answered in the negative (and I feel sure this will happen) if CA keeps the traditions of the cricket game in mind when the big decisions are being made by ExCo.