Portsmouth end nightmare tour with drubbing in Washington

(Reuters) – With scarcely any sleep, in sweltering heat and after losing their kit, Portsmouth ended a farcical North American pre-season tour on Saturday with a 4-0 drubbing at the hands of Major League Soccer’s DC United.

Relegated from the Premiership, in administration and placed under a transfer embargo by England’s soccer authorities, Portsmouth could scarcely field a team during their week-long tour of the United States and Canada, relying heavily on youngsters with little or no first-team experience.

But if anyone thought things could not get any worse for the embattled club, they were wrong.

Stranded in Chicago by a lightning storm en route from their last game in Edmonton, the players had just four hours sleep the night before Saturday’s game with DC United and with no time to train for three days.

As if that wasn’t bad enough, 14 bags went missing en route, including the one containing their kit, meaning they had to play Saturday’s game in a strip borrowed from their hosts.

They probably wished they had never arrived at all, after a thrashing at the hands of the MLS strugglers, which included a hat-trick by Australian striker Danny Allsopp.

“Probably that result summed up the tour for us really — it has been extremely tough,” Portsmouth manager Steve Cotterill told reporters.

The journey from Edmonton had taken 27 hours. The flight from England to their first game in San Diego took 42.

“The time it took us to get here, we could have flown to Australia,” a furious Cotterill told Reuters after the game.

The newly installed Pompey boss has made no secret of his frustration with the grueling tour, organized before he took over, and that he would have preferred to have remained in England to try and assemble a squad for the approaching season.

Two players went home injured after the Edmonton game, one with a broken leg.

Then goalkeeper Jamie Ashdown, trying to earn a new contract after the departure of David James, went off injured after colliding with a team mate during Saturday’s game, to add to Cotterill’s woes.

Pompey’s weary players soon ran out of steam on the hottest day of the year in Washington, with the temperature reaching 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius) in the RFK Stadium.

As that wasn’t bad enough, three players were sent off, including Portsmouth’s Hayden Mullins, whose only offence was to get into an argument with DC United’s Santino Quaranta, which Mullins admitted included “some swearing.”

Quaranta then seemed to spit at Mullins and both men were shown straight red cards.

Cotterill called the refereeing “ridiculous” and “appalling.”

“I can’t believe he’s been allowed to officiate a game,” he said. “I’ve never seen anything like it in my life.”

It has been an incredible fall from grace since Portsmouth won the FA Cup in 2008. On Saturday, the players were just relieved to be going home.

JGBs fall as Nikkei surge curbs appetite for debt

TOKYO, July 14 (Reuters) – Japanese government bonds fell on Wednesday with futures touching a two-week low as investors’ appetite for debt was curbed after Tokyo stocks surged in response to a bull run on Wall Street and a pull back by the yen.

The rise in JGB yields was limited by a hunt for bargains in longer-dated debt by investors ranging from regional banks, pension funds and publicly affiliated financial institutions, underscoring persistent demand for bonds.

September 10-year futures 2JGBv1 fell 0.18 point to 141.22 after hitting a two-week low of 141.12.

“The rises in JGB yields are limited considering how bullish U.S. stocks have been for the last few days,” said Makoto Noji, a senior market analyst at Mizuho Securities.

“In addition to the large gap between bank lending and deposits at home, another key factor supporting JGB yields is the view among investors that overseas yields will stay anchored.”

Noji said the level of U.S. one-year overnight index swaps USD1YOIS= showed that investors saw little chance of the Federal Reserve hiking rates for the next year despite the recent surge in stocks.

The Bank of Japan began a two-day policy board meeting on Wednesday. The central bank is widely expected to keep monetary policy unchanged and the focus is on its monetary policy stance following the ruling party’s heavy defeat in an upper house election on Sunday.

Some analysts say the election drubbing may result in the government putting pressure on the Bank of Japan to ease more, while others reckon the recent pullback by the yen from its peaks and the significant equity market rebound from a seven-month trough could lift the pressure on the central bank.

Japan’s government is looking to make broad cuts in spending to meet a self-imposed cap in next fiscal year’s budget, the Nikkei said, even as the ruling party’s election loss puts efforts to fix the country’s tattered finances at risk. [ID:nTOE66D011]

The yield curve was little changed in shape, with the previous day’s flattening having stalled.

“The rise in yields of longer-dated maturities was kept in check relative to those of shorter-dated debt. The curve could resume flattening again,” said a trader at a domestic bank.

The five-year/20-year yield was unchanged on the day at 146.5 basis points, staying within reach of a nine-month low of 143.5 basis points touched early this month.

The five-year yield JP5YTN=JBTC rose 1 basis point to 0.375 percent, following a 2.4 trillion yen ($27 billion) auction of the maturity on Tuesday.

The benchmark 10-year yield rose 1.5 basis points to 1.140 percent JP10YTN=JBTC and the 20-year yield climbed 1.5 basis points to 1.840 percent JP20YTN=JBTC.

The 30-year yield JP30YTN=JBTC gained 1.5 basis points to 1.915 percent.

Japan’s Nikkei average surged 2.7 percent on Wednesday as tech firms gained after Intel (INTC.O) results beat expectations, buoying overall sentiment. [.T] ($1=88.66 Yen) (Editing by Michael Watson)

Japan’s Your Party wants BOJ to help create jobs

July 12 (Reuters) – A small opposition party that made a strong showing in Japan’s upper house election, the Your Party, is urging a change in the law to make the Bank of Japan responsible for achieving maximum employment.

Former banking minister Yoshimi Watanabe, who helped form the party last year, said on Monday the change would be part of a bill the party hopes to submit to end deflation in Japan.

Your Party won 10 seats in the upper house in Sunday’s election and could cooperate with the ruling Democratic Party, which suffered a drubbing and lost the majority it held with a small coalition partner. [ID:nTOE66A02V]

The Democrats still control the more powerful lower house. But they will need help from other parties to push bills through the upper house which Prime Minister Naoto Kan seeks to revive the world’s second-biggest economy and reduce massive public debt.

Watanabe told Reuters the proposed change in the BOJ law would be similar to a law governing the U.S. Federal Reserve, which requires it to be mindful of how tight monetary policy can adversely affect the labour market.

Watanabe, who left the then-ruling Liberal Democratic Party last year, said he has no contact with a group of 130 Democrat lawmakers who in April called for the BOJ to weaken the yen to 120 yen to the dollar JPY= and also said his anti-deflation bill would not mention currency levels. [ID:nTOE63C066]

“Targeting a foreign exchange level is not monetary policy,” Watanabe said. “If you increase money supply the yen would weaken, so this is like a back-door strategy.”

The dollar rose 0.5 percent to 89.07 yen on Monday as the upper house election result points to policy gridlock.

Your Party, in its growth strategy, proposes to end deflation by setting an inflation target, extending government loan guarantees to small businesses and then asking the BOJ to buy the debt from commercial banks. (Reporting by Yoshifumi Takemoto. Writing by Stanley White; Editing by Michael Watson)

Australia need goals, luck and no more red cards

(Reuters) – Australia need a calculator and goals, goals, goals to make it to the next round of the World Cup in South Africa after a battling, 10-man draw against Ghana Saturday gave them a flicker of hope.

Sports

With their two best players sent off in their first two matches in the tournament, the Socceroos may also be hoping for a bit of luck.

A 1-1 scoreline against the World Cup’s top African side so far left Australia with one point from two games, with Ghana top on four and Germany and Serbia each with three.

The easiest route into the last 16 would be a thumping victory over Serbia or an, unlikely, second successive loss for Germany.

However, Australia are confident of getting a big win against Serbia in Nelspruit Wednesday, particularly with the chance of playing the whole match with 11 men.

Coach Pim Verbeek said the way the team had rallied after going a player down showed their belief was not misguided.

“We have to go for it, we have to win this game, there is no alternative,” Verbeek said.

“Germany is history, Ghana is history. All we have to do is beat Serbia with at least a four goal difference, so let’s focus on that.”

Australia showed good spirit to hold off a skilful Ghana after forward Harry Kewell was red carded after just 24 minutes. This was the second time the team had to play a man down with Tim Cahill dismissed during the 4-0 drubbing by Germany.

Cahill, Australia’s top goalscorer, will be back for the Serbia match, giving the team a target up front. In two games so far, the team has managed just one goal.

“We played 70 minutes with 10 players and still we created 2 or 3 open chances. You could never prove it but if you play 11 v 11 you can get even more chances,” Verbeek told Reuters following Saturday’s tie.

“We have no choice, we have to score (against Serbia) or Ghana should beat Germany that is also an option. Or if Germany beat Ghana with a lot of goals then one goal is enough so it is a very interesting Wednesday,” Verbeek said.

Captain Lucas Neill had no doubt the world’s 20th ranked side will repeat its achievement of Germany 2006 and make it through to the knockout rounds.

“When there is hope, we will stay positive and positive things happen to positive people.”

(Additional reporting by Sonia Oxley; Editing by Michael Holden)

(Reuters) – A shrewd combination of youthful talent, experience and sound tactics propelled Germany to a 4-0 drubbing of Australia in their opening World Cup game, surprising many who had written off the three-times champions. Sports Captain Michael Ballack was one of five players forced out of the squad through injury and the team’s two chief strikers netted only a handful of goals between them in the German league last season. While Spain and Brazil have yet to play, Germany’s performance was the most impressive so far at the World Cup and it will focus minds in Group C as the team that comes second will face the winners of Germany’s Group D in the second round. British bookmakers cut the odds on Germany winning their fourth World Cup to 9-1 from 12-1 immediately after the match. The Australian defense had been expected to mount stiff resistance to the out-of-form strikers Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski. But unlike France against Uruguay, the German side unlocked the Australian defense with neat passing down the flanks and penetration through the middle from the 21-year-old pivot of the team, Mesut Ozil. Captain Philipp Lahm linked deftly with Ozil and the 20-year-old right winger Thomas Mueller to leave the Australians floundering, carving out a string of openings in the first 20 minutes that should have produced more goals. Coach Joachim Loew said afterwards that Mueller had been chosen over the more experienced Piotr Trochowski precisely for his ability to carry the ball to the edge of the penalty box and really penetrate dogged defenses. Loew will also be pleased that in-form striker Cacau came off the bench and buried his first chance to round off the German win, despite being left out for Klose. “It was a difficult decision not to field Cacau straightaway,” said Loew after the game. “I just knew I had a strong substitute there on the bench.” Loew said it had been important for the team to get a sound win under their belts to build confidence and that the defense had been excellent. He warned it was just the start, but his youthful side has already proved many doubters wrong. England will now be all the more anxious to avoid coming second in Group C and running the risk of facing Germany in the second round. (Editing by Ossian Shine)

DURBAN (Reuters) – Germany began their quest for a fourth World Cup in devastating style Sunday with a thumping 4-0 victory over Australia in their opening Group D match.

Sports

With a fluent performance fitting for the first match of the tournament at the magnificent Moses Mabhida stadium, the youngest German World Cup squad for three quarters of a century put down their marker as serious title contenders.

Forwards Lukas Podolski and Miroslav Klose gave their side a 2-0 halftime lead to vindicate coach Joachim Loew’s faith in them despite a recent lack of goals, with winger Thomas Mueller and substitute Cacau finding the net after the break.

Australia, who started both halves brightly and battled gamely throughout, played the last 34 minutes with 10 men after Tim Cahill was dismissed for clattering into Bastian Schweinsteiger.

Germany lead Group D from Ghana, who beat Serbia 1-0 in Sunday’s earlier match in Pretoria.

“It was very important that we won because we gained a lot of self confidence,” said Loew, whose team face the Serbians next on June 18.

“We can now hope to make the last 16 with just one more win. All players were very, very focused. We did many things right but this is just the start.”

GERMAN TRIUMVIRATE

It was the triumvirate of captain Philipp Lahm, Mesut Ozil and Mueller who laid the foundation for victory as the Germans took to the wings and fired in low, hard passes to outflank and unpick the much-vaunted Socceroo defense.

“I think the way we set up our attacks, the way we passed balls to and fro is something we have been working on very intensively over the past few years,” Loew said.

“We were very good on the ball and we created beautiful goals.”

In the eighth minute, Ozil found Mueller in what looked to be an offside position and his cutback allowed Podolski to smash the ball into the net via Mark Schwarzer’s flailing arm.

Klose should have doubled the lead in the 24th minute but he blasted wide when Podolski’s cross left him free in front of goal. He made amends just two minutes later, however.

Lahm lofted a high cross in from the right, Schwarzer came charging out to claim the ball but Klose beat him to it and headed into an empty net for his 49th international goal.

“Everything worked today,” said the 32-year-old, top scorer at the last World Cup on home soil.

“We have three points in the bag but we have not won anything yet. But we did gain a lot of respect with this success tonight.”

With the Australian spirit sapped in the second half by Cahill’s sending off, Mueller got his reward for a fine performance on the right flank when he found space in the box and screwed the ball into the net off the post in the 68th minute.

Cacau, who had just replaced Klose, completed the scoring two minutes later after Ozil had beaten the offside trap to play in the striker to drill the ball into the net.

“It was not the day for us,” said Australia coach Pim Verbeek. “They were better and the reality is the next two games we have to win. There is no discussion about that. Drawing is not enough.

“We have six days to recover physically and mentally and then we have to show the right spirit.”

Verbeek said Germany had shown they were a “fantastic side” and had not been weakened by playing youngsters.

“Every player they brought in made the team not weaker but stronger,” the Dutchman added.

(Editing by Ossian Shine)

Analysis: Germans prove their strength in depth

(Reuters) – A shrewd combination of youthful talent, experience and sound tactics propelled Germany to a 4-0 drubbing of Australia in their opening World Cup game, surprising many who had written off the three-times champions.

Sports

Captain Michael Ballack was one of five players forced out of the squad through injury and the team’s two chief strikers netted only a handful of goals between them in the German league last season.

While Spain and Brazil have yet to play, Germany’s performance was the most impressive so far at the World Cup and it will focus minds in Group C as the team that comes second will face the winners of Germany’s Group D in the second round.

British bookmakers cut the odds on Germany winning their fourth World Cup to 9-1 from 12-1 immediately after the match.

The Australian defense had been expected to mount stiff resistance to the out-of-form strikers Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski.

But unlike France against Uruguay, the German side unlocked the Australian defense with neat passing down the flanks and penetration through the middle from the 21-year-old pivot of the team, Mesut Ozil.

Captain Philipp Lahm linked deftly with Ozil and the 20-year-old right winger Thomas Mueller to leave the Australians floundering, carving out a string of openings in the first 20 minutes that should have produced more goals.

Coach Joachim Loew said afterwards that Mueller had been chosen over the more experienced Piotr Trochowski precisely for his ability to carry the ball to the edge of the penalty box and really penetrate dogged defenses.

Loew will also be pleased that in-form striker Cacau came off the bench and buried his first chance to round off the German win, despite being left out for Klose.

“It was a difficult decision not to field Cacau straightaway,” said Loew after the game. “I just knew I had a strong substitute there on the bench.”

Loew said it had been important for the team to get a sound win under their belts to build confidence and that the defense had been excellent. He warned it was just the start, but his youthful side has already proved many doubters wrong.

England will now be all the more anxious to avoid coming second in Group C and running the risk of facing Germany in the second round.

(Editing by Ossian Shine)

Hobbling Date Krumm, 39, stuns Safina in Paris

Japan’s Kimiko Date Krumm made a mockery of a 15-year age gap by stunning former world number one and last year’s runner-up Dinara Safina 3-6 6-4 7-5 in the French Open first round on Tuesday.

Date Krumm, 39, made her Roland Garros debut in 1989, when Safina was just three, and with the victory became the second oldest player behind Britain’s Virginia Wade to win a main draw women’s singles match in Paris since the game went professional.

The Japanese player repeatedly called on the trainer to treat a calf problem during the match and lost the first set in 36 minutes, but Safina lost focus and Date Krumm prevailed after two hours and 34 minutes.

“I am very sad for her, very happy for me. I just tried,” Date Krumm said in a courtside interview.

“I was more thinking about her than about myself, what I had to do. I lost the momentum,” Safina, who could barely put the ball in court by the end, told reporters.

“In the first set I think I was doing pretty good, but then I got tight and I lost the motion.”

The Kyoto-born Date Krumm, who had called it quits in 1996 before returning to the tour two years ago, looked set for a quick drubbing at the hands of last year’s finalist when she went 5-0 down in the opening set.

Date Krumm, now 72 in the WTA standings and making her first Roland Garros appearance since 1996, did not panic, however. She managed three games in a row before letting the first set slip.

She went 4-2 down in the second set before reeling off four games as Safina lost her composure, smashing her racket into the ground but sparing the courtside geranium displays.

Safina broke again in the third set to open a 4-1 lead as Date Krumm, her face a mask of pain, stretched at the change of ends and had the tape on her right calf tightened by the trainer.

With her Russian opponent making a string of unforced errors, Date Krumm, who has reached the last four in all grand slams apart from the U.S. Open, simply hung on, waiting for Safina to crack.

The unthinkable eventually happened as Safina fired a forehand long on her first match point.

(Editing by Miles Evans; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Manchester United will be back, says Ferguson

Manchester United will bounce back from the disappointment of missing out on an unprecedented fourth successive league title, manager Akex Ferguson said on Sunday.

United eased to a comfortable 4-0 victory over Stoke City on the final day of the Premier League campaign but missed out on the title by a point following Chelsea’s 8-0 drubbing of Wigan AtHletic.

“Of course we’ll come back next year,” Ferguson told reporters. “It is what Manchester United do.

“We’re going to try and bring the title back to the best place in the world.”

Ferguson was full of praise for Chelsea’s efforts under coach Carlo Ancelotti.

“The title winners deserve it,” added Ferguson, who has won the Premier League 11 times in 18 seasons.

“It’s the hardest league in the world. To Carlo, I congratulate him.”

Ferguson said he was not concerned by the situation at Old Trafford.

“It is a good structure we have in place here,” he said. “We have worked very hard over the course of the season and we will assess everything over the summer.”

Ferguson thanked the United fans for their magnificent support.

“It has been something of a roller coaster but then it usually is and while we can look back with regret at the outcome of certain games — losing twice to Chelsea certainly ranks as a huge disappointment — there have also been some outstanding achievements and thrilling matches,” he said.

(Editing by Ed Osmond; to query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

‘Nicolas Sarkozy blames Rachida Dati for spreading affair rumors’

London, Apr 1 (ANI): Nicolas Sarkozy believes his former justice minister Rachida Dati started talk that his wife Carla Bruni was having an affair with Benjamin Biolay, a pop singer, while he was seeing his ecology minister, Chantal Jouanno, it has emerged.

Following the blame game, Dati has been deprived her of her chauffeur-driven limousine and three bodyguards, reports The Telegraph.

The rumors of extra-martial affairs were rubbished by the French premiere.

According to reports, Nicolas took “retaliatory action” against the 44-year-old Dati, the night his ruling Right-wing UMP party suffered a drubbing in the first round of regional elections on March 14.

Dati created history in 2007 when Nicolas made her the first Muslim woman to hold a top ministerial position. (ANI)

England can avoid 7-0 drubbing in NatWest Series: Anderson

London, Sep 19(ANI): England paceman James Anderson has said that the England team would be looking forward to avoid a humiliating 7-0 whitewash against Australia in the NatWest Series.

England team has been out of sorts after the historic Ashes series win, and in the absence of experienced players like Andrew Flintoff and Kevin Pietersen they have not been able to prevent Australians from taking a 6-0 lead.

“Obviously, we don’t want to lose 7-0. There’ll be a lot of pride to play for on Sunday. We’re very disappointed with the way we’ve played in this series, we’ve never really clicked. But, we’re leaving for the Champions Trophy in South Africa on Monday and we can look forward to that as a fresh start,” The Sun quoted Anderson, as saying.

“The vast majority of us in the dressing room still believe we can beat Australia and think that 6-0 flatters them a bit,” he added.

The 27-year-old further said that Australians have taken note of England’s weaknesses and have been able to take advantage of it.

“Throughout the series, it seems as though we’ve tried to make it look as complicated as possible. I suppose when confidence is low as a batting team, it affects everything, not just shot selection,” Anderson said.

England will now be playing for pride in the final contest at Chester-le-Street on Sunday. (ANI)

England must start winning again, says Prior

London, Sep.14 (ANI): Wicketkeeper Matt Prior believes England can start winning again after suffering a four-nil series loss to Australia.

After Saturday’s seven-wicket drubbing against Australia at Lord’s, England are sliding towards a humiliating 7-0 whitewash.

The Aussies will take on the Poms in the fifth match at Trent Bridge tomorrow.

“There’s no getting away from it – we’ve been very disappointing and the batters have to hold our hands up. It’s not through lack of effort, I just think one-day cricket is about getting on a roll,” The Sun quoted Prior, as saying.

“If you don’t, you can put a lot of pressure on yourself immediately. We have a lot of talent in the dressing room. I genuinely believe that, if we stick with these guys and build a team, it will come good. Right now, it should potentially be 2-2. We should have won the first two games but weren’t ruthless enough,” he added.

Skipper Strauss insists everyone must remain positive.

He said: “The cancer, the thing that you really want to avoid, is becoming more and more negative because that won’t get you anywhere. A few guys are low on confidence and one-day cricket is not a game in which you can scratch around for long. You have to play in a positive fashion.” (ANI)

Swayamsewaks vs Outsiders syndrome killed BJP

New Delhi, Aug.30 (ANI): The bickering in the BJP sparked off by the drubbing in the 14th Lok Sabha polls has let open the can of worms in the saffron party.

BJP which claims to be “structured” and always talked about taking the high moral ground of being democratic, appears to be shattered like no one could expected, not even its principal rival party the Congress.

Apparently, trouble began brewing in the saffron camp when the suave, English spouting, tech savvy leaders, often termed as the outsiders by the swayamsewaks, took centre stage and became the key decision makers about the party’s politics.

BJP’s Prime Ministerial candidate and Loh Purush Lal Krishan Advani, whooiled hard to adorn Vajpayee’s inclusive image, miserably failed to strike a balance between the swayamsewaks and the outsiders.

Rajnath Singh did manage to win the hearts and minds of the core ideological workers but his hard-line approach and demagogic characteristics let him down among the league of the so called “outsiders”.

But, undoubtedly, Singh failed to demonstrate coherence and vision as the President of main opposition party of the Lok Sabha on key issues like Indo-US nuclear deal and response post 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks besides not being able to bring radical organizational reforms within the BJP.

Vacuum at the top-level offered room for the second-rung leaders to exercise and flaunt their authority in the decision-making.

All this gave confused or wrong signals to the cadres of the organization, for whom discipline has remained a binding force for decades.

It’s no secret that Arun Jaitley , Sushma Swaraj, Vekaiah Naidu and even

Ananth Kumar, considered close to Advani and draw their basic strength from him, showed reluctance and disregard in taking orders from party President Rajnath Singh ,which ultimately fuelled factionalism in the party.

Rajnath looked and sought Sangh Parivar’s shadow to counter his detractors in the party and soon become the blue-eyed boy of RSS.

Though RSS poster boy Rajnath publicly never displayed his annoyance or disagreement with Advani or his brigade but the prevailing discomfort was apparently visible on many occasions.

Discord came to the fore when Advani camp started taking different line and defying Rajnath Singh openly on key issues. In one such instance, ahead of the Lok Sabha polls, when Sudhanshu mittal was inducted by Singh as a Prabhari of North East , Jaitley defied Singh and made no bones in opposing the move . Off late Vasundhra who is considered close to Advani and his family, has shown reluctance to step down as the Leader of Opposition in Rajasthan State Assembly on Rajnath’s call.

There were several instances on which Advani and his followers held divergent views from Rajnath’s thinking and the authority of party President on party affairs and leadership waned dramatically in last three years.

Singh might have failed to impress or befriend hawks at centre like Jaitley ,Swaraj ,Naidu or Ananth Kumar but did get solace from the state leadership, he found a sense of loyalty in RSS’ icons Shivraj Singh Chauhan and Narendar Modi, he also shared good relationship with Chawal Baba Shivraj Singh Chauhan.

Advani’s love and penchant towards the intellectuals and journalists brought him extremely close to Arun Shourie, Jaswant Singh , Sudheendra Kulkarni. But this fascination distanced him from the core ideologues of the party.

In a bid to build up his inclusive and visionary image, Advani, who is seen as the architect of Babri mosque demolition by many quarters of the country, had somewhere lost the plot.

Jinnah fiasco did not move him and he tirelessly made efforts to rid himself from the image of “communal untouchable” to Mr. Secularist. The intelligentsia injected and indoctrinated into the BJP’s Prime Minister-in- waiting that until he bridged the gap with the Muslim community, he could not get to the 7 RCR .

The ideas like Akhand Bharat (united India), cultural nationalism, Ram temple in Ayodhya, which rode the party to the power thrice, took the backseat for Advani but carried on and taken forward by the BJP ‘s President Bal Apte report did held responsible the “prevalent inconsonance” among the top leadership for the defeat in the recent elections.

Today, BJP is in shambles. Once again, the RSS and the top leadership are trying to fix the discontent. But, by merely changing the leaders will these deep-rooted divergences and differences will be ironed out?

A mere reshuffle will not sort out the mess and RSS should think of new alternatives and draw new central leadership from the States, people like Shivraj Singh Chauhan, Narendra Modi, B.S Yediyurappa and Modi have proved their mettle in the states and will be more than willing to perform at the national stage.

Reshuffle can stave off the pressure and trouble temporarily but it is notnough to have a long term solution.

Arun Shourie’s suggestion to bomb the headquarters like the communists did, sounds dogmatic and radical, but sometimes last option is the only option.

And If BJP has to rebuild and resurrect itself before the 15th Lok Sabha elections, it has to pass many litmus tests and the landscape of the central leadership has to be changed. By Naveen Kapoor (ANI)

People consider RJD-LJP alliance opportunistic: Raghuvansh

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): Having faced an embarrassing drubbing in the recently held Lok Sabha polls, Rashtriya Janata Dal on Wednesday admitted that the pre-poll tie up with Ram Vilas Paswan’s Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) proved a wrong move during elections.

“People of Bihar rejected the RJD-LJP alliance because they considered it as an opportunist alliance. The break up of the Congress-RJD alliance did not help our poll fortunes,” said Raghuvansh Prasad, while reacting to a question over the RJD-LJP alliance.

While reacting to the question of his joining the Cabinet, Raghuvansh said, “It is up to my people to decide whether I would be joining the Cabinet or not.

RJD and Lok Janshakti who formed the Fourth Front, distancing themselves from the UPA alliance to go all alone in the LS elections failed to put up a good show against the National Democratic alliance.

BJP-led NDA captured 32 of the 40 seats in Bihar, a success widely being credited to the good development work done by chief minister Nitish Kumar in the State.

Lalu Prasad Yadav lost to friend-turned-foe Ranjan Yadav of Janata Dal – United in the prestigious Pataliputra seat by a margin of over 30,000 votes.

But he survived by a thing margin defeating BJP’s Rajiv Pratap Rudy in Saran constituency.

Whereas LJP’s supreme Ram Vilas Paswan lost to JD (U)’s Ram Sundar Das by a margin of over 37,000 votes in Hajipur constituency. (ANI)

Flower believes Poms will spin the Aussies out during Ashes

London, May 11 (ANI): England ‘s new coach Andy Flower has wasted little time publicly backing his troops in their bid to reclaim the Ashes following the three-day demolition of the West Indies at Lord’s, and off-spinner Graeme Swann is seen as the man most likely to trouble Australia’s top order.

While Cricket Australia is forced to hold a spin summit and has no clear-cut favourite for the tweaking role, Swann has bolstered his reputation by terrorising the Windies’ left-handers.

With Australia set to play five lefties in their batting line-up, Swann is being billed as a potential saviour for England.

The Sydney Morning Herald quoted England captain Andrew Strauss as saying: “Swann is an excellent bowler at left-handers in particular. I haven’t seen a left-hander play him with real confidence yet. He troubles everyone, has a good variety – and I think he’s a smart bowler. Possibly the fact he’s come in a little bit late in his career means he’s had a little bit more time to think about his variations, how to out-think people and get them out. We’re excited about what he can offer us.”

Flower’s first match in charge yielded a 10-wicket win, capping a remarkable turnaround from the humiliation of the 51-run dismissal in Kingston three months ago, and he believes England can perform a similar about-face from the 5-0 drubbing of the previous Ashes series in Australia.

“We have not talked about the Ashes series in detail but we have had a few thoughts and discussions. We aim high. We want to win the Twenty20 World Cup and, yes, I do believe we can win the Ashes,” Flower said.

England has also been buoyed by the emergence of young guns Ravi Bopara at first drop and Graham Onions in the pace attack.

Closer to home, Australian players are locked in a tense standoff with CA over payments for next season, with their contracts having expired two weeks ago.

The Australian Cricketers’ Association is fighting for higher wages for players but CA says the global economic crisis has forced it to tighten the belt. (ANI)

Younis, Misbah lead two bitterly divided camps inside Pak cricket team

Lahore, May 9 (ANI): There seems to be an unending list of controversies and internal scuffles in the Pakistan cricket team, as reports spilling out of the team’s dressing room suggest that there are two factions of players in the national squad.

Sources privy to the team’s dressing room have revealed that national side is bitterly divided into two camps of captain Younis Khan and vice-captain Misbah-ul-Haq.

There is a complete lack of trust and unity between these two camps, The Nation reports.

It is also believed that it was this divide of players which resulted in the team’s 3-2 drubbing by a depleted Australian squad in the recently concluded Dubai one-day international series.

The divide among the players was quite visible during the UAE tour, where the two groups allegedly stayed distant from each other.

It was also evident that while Younis Khan supported Shoaib Akhtar, Umar Gul, Shahid Afridi, and a few younger players like Fawad Alam, Misbah -ul-Haq lobbied with former captain Shoaib Malik, Kamran Akmal, Salman Butt and Rao Iftikhar Anjum.

Questions are also being raised over coach Intikhab Alam’s inability to build a cohesive unit ahead of an important event such as the Twenty20 World Cup.

Alam is also being criticized for his laid back attitude, as he is more interested in pleasing the Pakistan Cricket Board’s (PCB) top brass, rather than sorting out the problems within his team and bridging gaps between the players. (ANI)

Cape Town match will determine outcome of Proteas-Oz series: Arthur

Cape Town (South Africa), Apr.8 (ANI): Proteas coach Mickey Arthur believes outcome of the third one-day match with Australia could determine the outcome of the five-match series.

The match will take place in Cape Town on Thursday.

“It’s hugely important to us and we are really looking forward to it. The two teams are evenly matched and it’s all there for one team to reach out and grab. It’s all there for one team to really take the initiative on Thursday make a claim for the series,” the South African Press Association (SAPA) quoted Arthur, as saying.

“The side that wins on Thursday will take a lot from it. Bearing in mind the situation now, at one-all, it’s probably the most important ODI. The two sides are so close, that if you just open the door, the other side will walk through,” he added.

Arthur said South Africa had done some serious soul-searching after their 141 drubbing in Durban last Friday, and he expected the Australians had done the same after South Africa dismissed them for 131 at Supersport Park on Sunday.

“It’s going to be up to us. We put into practice (on Sunday) a lot of what we spoke about on Friday night. We reinforced what we’d spoken about before the first ODI and I think our execution on Sunday was fantastic. I’m pretty sure Australia are doing the same thing right now,” he said

Arthur said he did not expect changes to the team that demolished Australia on Sunday.

“We have an unbelievable balance in the team that we’ve put out now. I think people have seen the balance that Jacques Kallis brings to our side – we were unbalanced in Durban. Jacques is two players, really. We couldn’t afford that extra batter in Durban because we didn’t have enough fire power in the bowling,” he added.

Arthur added, “With this current combination, we bat to 10 -I certainly include (Wayne) Parnell in that – and we have seven bowling options at our disposal, which is a very nice position to be in. We’ve found a combination that will work.”

“We also have the ability to change that combination according to conditions,” he added. “We’re in a very good position, and it’s not a position that happened by chance – it took a lot of thinking and a lot of planning. The squad is as good a squad as we’ve ever had.” (ANI)

Sri Lankan cricket captain Jayawardene quits

Colombo, Feb.11 (ANI): Sri Lanka’s cricket captain Mahela Jayawardene resigned from the post on Wednesday.

The Sri Lanka Cricket Board sources said Jayawardene decided to quit the captaincy from both forms of cricket after the Test series against Pakistan.

Sri Lanka was handed a 4-1 drubbing by India in the recently concluded One-day series during which Jayawardene’s lacklusture performance was criticised by top cricket officials, The Colombo Times reports.

Sri Lanka Cricket CEO Duleep Mendis said Jayawardene’s decision had been accepted and a new captain would be appointed for the one-day home series against Zimbabwe, which follows the Pakistan tour.

Jayawardene, who sat out Sri Lanka’s Twenty20 international against India on Tuesday, called for a meeting with the selectors on Wednesday morning and proposed that the time was right to hand over the captaincy, ensuring his successor had sufficient time to build the team for the 2011 World Cup. He was asked to reconsider but reiterated the time was right, given the heavy season ahead.

He then met Mendis and informed his teammates.

“This is something I have been considering for some time as it has been my long-held belief that my successor should have at least 18 months in the job to imprint his vision on the team for the 2011 World Cup,” Jayawardene said in a statement.

“I have concluded that the time has come for fresh leadership to takeover. It was not an easy decision to make because being the Sri Lanka captain has been the source of enormous pride. I hope to play a major part in the team’s success as a batsman,” he said.

Wicket-keeper batsman Kumar Sangakkara, who is vice-captain of the squad, is likely to replace Jayawardene.

Jayawardene was appointed ODI captain in 2004 and took over the Test captaincy from Marvan Atapattu in 2006.

One of his major achievements was taking Sri Lanka to the 2007 World Cup where it was defeated by Australia. In 2008, Sri Lanka won the Asia Cup defeating India in the final.

Jayawardene led the side in 94 one-day internationals, winning 54 and losing 35.

He led the Lankan squad in 26 Tests, winning 15 and losing seven.

Despite his recent poor form in, he remains a prolific run-getter in the longer version of the game averaging 64.70 as captain. (ANI)

Sri Lanka cricket team to tour Pakistan from February 14

Lahore, Feb.10 (ANI): The Sri Lankan cricket team will return to Pakistan on February 14 to participate in the two match Test series starting February 21.

The islanders would be playing a two-day practice game from February 17 before taking on the home side in Karachi.

The second Test match scheduled to start on March 1 will be played in Lahore, the Nation reported.

Sri Lanka, after the 4-1 drubbing by India in the recently concluded One-day series, would be looking forward to putting up an improved show in the longer version of the game.

Pakistan, on the other hand would be donning the white clothes on a cricket field after more than a year, and is looking forward to the Test series to salvage some national pride. (ANI)

Intikhab warns team against complacency in Sri Lanka Test series

Karachi, Feb.7 (ANI): Pakistan’s cricket coach Intikhab Alam has warned his players against any complacency during the forthcoming Test series with Sri Lanka, that might creep- up due to the islander team’s drubbing by India in the on-going ODI series.

Alam said that Test matches are different from one day games, and Sri Lanka was capable of turning it around with several world-class players in their squad.

“Test cricket is a different ball game altogether. You can’t predict the performance of a side in Test matches on the basis of its one-day showing, at least not Sri Lanka,” The News quoted Alam, as saying.

He added that though India has defeated Sri Lanka in all the four games quite comprehensively, the Lankan’s would be a different side altogether in the longer version of the game with the return of veteran left-arm fast bowler Chaminda Vaas.

“Sri Lanka has two of the best spinners in the world, Muttiah Muralitharan and Ajantha Mendis, and with Vaas returning, their bowling attack will be very strong,” Alam said.

Referring to Pakistan’s lack of playing Test cricket, he asked the players to shift their game plan from the fifty over match to the five day game.

“Our first target would be to switch off the one-day mode and get into the Test mode,” Alam said.

Commenting on new skipperYounis Khan, Alam hoped that the team will perform cohesively under the new leader.

“Younis is a new captain and it would be good that he spends time with his players before the Tests. We would need a team effort to win the series and I’m confident that boys will gel behind Younis,” he added. (ANI)