WRAPUP 3-China’s new yuan regime to look a lot like old one

BEIJING, June 20 (Reuters) – China will keep the yuan’s exchange rate at a basically stable level, the central bank said on Sunday, suggesting that the country’s new currency regime will look a lot like the old one.

China announced on Saturday that it would resume making the yuan more flexible, signalling that it was ready to break a 23-month-old peg to the dollar that had come under intense international criticism.

But in a lengthy statement about how reform would proceed, the central bank explicitly ruled out a one-off revaluation, repeatedly said there was no basis for any big appreciation and added that the currency’s value was not far off its fair level.

Lack of a real rise in the exchange rate would provide ammunition for critics, especially hawks in the U.S. Congress, who say Beijing’s actions will speak louder than its words and that penalties should be imposed if it keeps the yuan artificially cheap.

Leaders of the United States, the European Union, Japan and the International Monetary Fund, among others, welcomed its vow to deepen yuan reform as a hopeful contribution to the balancing of the world economy.

All eyes on Monday will be on the daily reference rate set by the Chinese central bank to manage the yuan’s value. Many economists believe that Beijing will nudge the exchange rate higher in increments, not leaps.

Global equity markets may rally as the news, coming a week before a Group of 20 meeting in Canada, eases fears of a trade row between the United States and China at a delicate time for the world economy.

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The central bank on Sunday promised to implement “dynamic management and adjustment”, which could lead to the yuan falling, not just rising, against the dollar depending on how other currencies perform.

But the crux of the exchange rate system would be the same as it had been previously, meaning that the yuan is likely at most to return to the path of gradual gains against the dollar seen for three years until mid-2008.

“Keeping the yuan basically stable at a reasonable and balanced level is an important part of further promoting reform of yuan exchange rate formation mechanism,” the People’s Bank of China said, adding that gradual adjustment was needed in order to give firms time to adjust.

Chinese economists said the move was justified economically and, above all, had a political aim.

“This important declaration by the Chinese government coming before the G20 summit is a big concession to prevent the yuan’s exchange rate from being politicised by Western countries,” said Gao Shanwen, chief economist at Essence Securities in Beijing.

China said that freezing the yuan to the dollar since July 2008 had helped mitigate the impact of the global financial crisis and spur the world’s recovery.

With the economy on a more solid footing, it was time to enhance the exchange rate’s flexibility, though there were no grounds for “large-scale appreciation”, it said.

SURPRISE AND CONTROVERSY

The European Central Bank (ECB) and Jean-Claude Juncker, who heads the Eurogroup of euro zone finance ministers, welcomed in a joint statement China’s decision on the yuan, which is also known as the renminbi (RMB). [ID:nLDE65J03Z]

“Given China’s important role in the global economy, we encourage the authorities to allow for greater flexibility of the RMB effective exchange rate as a means of promoting balanced growth in China and in the world economy,” they said on Sunday.

European leaders have generally been less strident than those in the United States as the euro has fallen sharply against the Chinese currency, buying only 8.45 yuan EURCNY=R now compared with almost 11 in July 2008.

This helped euro zone exporters through the financial crisis. Last year exports from the bloc to China grew 4 percent while those to the U.S. fell close to 20 percent.

Markets have long been waiting for China to break the yuan’s peg to the dollar, but the timing still came as something of a surprise. One day earlier, senior officials had stressed that China would not be bullied into resuming yuan appreciation.

The country’s major newspapers carried no real reports of the policy about-face, just reprinting the central bank’s statement verbatim.

The lack of articles and commentaries for the time being likely reflected a push by the government to get everyone on message about what could be a controversial policy change.

On a few websites, readers still made their views heard.

“This is such worrying news! China, you have surrendered!” wrote one online reader of the Global Times, a popular tabloid.

“We’re so well-behaved, doing whatever the United States asks of us,” wondered another, sarcastically.

Whether U.S. critics of China’s currency regime will agree remains to be seen.

INTENSE CRITICISM

Beijing has faced a barrage of complaints from abroad for keeping the yuan artificially cheap even as the country’s export juggernaut roared back to life.

Much of the rest of the global economy remains sluggish and beset by unemployment in the wake of the financial crisis, and China’s policy is seen as stealing jobs from foreign markets.

U.S. patience with Beijing over the yuan has worn thin and lawmakers threaten to penalise it for a strategy they say is unfair and breaks rules of global trade.

Democratic U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, a leading critic, said China’s statement was too vague and pledged to press ahead with legal action to raise trade barriers.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who has delayed publication of a potentially embarrassing report that could cite China as a currency manipulator, stressed that China’s actions would speak louder than words.

“This is an important step but the test is how far and how fast they let the currency appreciate,” he said. (Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Benjamin Kang Lim, David Stamp and Jon Loades-Carter)

Magic hand Hawks historic thumping

Showing no rust after an eight-day rest, the Orlando Magic routed Atlanta 114-71 on Tuesday in the opening game of their NBA Eastern Conference second-round best-of-seven series while Kobe Bryant steered Los Angeles to a 2-0 series lead against Utah in the Western Conference.

Dwight Howard scored 21 points and grabbed 12 rebounds and Vince Carter had 20 points for the Magic, who benefited from an extended break while the Hawks had barely had two days’ rest since eliminating Milwaukee in round one.

“The challenge is not to get carried away with the score,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said.

“It was one of those nights where everything just snowballed.”

It was the most lopsided playoff defeats in Atlanta Hawks’ history and the second-biggest playoff rout for the Magic, eclipsed only by a 47-point victory over Boston from the first round in 1995.

“It’s embarrassing,” Hawks guard Mike Bibby said. “They embarrassed us.”

The Magic outscored Atlanta 60-21 in the middle two quarters.

“We kind of stopped playing and we can’t do that,” Atlanta’s Al Horford said. “It kind of got away from us.”

“It was an ugly game for us,” Hawks coach Mike Woodson said. “I wish I knew what happened.”

Josh Smith scored 14 points and Zaza Pachulia had 12 to pace Atlanta, which avoided matching the fewest points ever scored in a game against Orlando by a 3-pointer in the final seconds.

“They made a run and they never looked back,” Pachulia said.

The Magic will try to seize a 2-0 edge over the Hawks at home on Thursday.

“We’re hungry,” Carter said. “Every game is important to us. This is great but we have to get ready for their adjustments and get ready for game two.”

Van Gundy was ready to do some research to make sure the Magic do not enter game two lightly.

“I will have for them virtually every time in NBA playoff history that a team had a blowout win, came back and lost the next game,” Van Gundy said. “You’ve got to forget what happened.”

In Los Angeles, Bryant’s 30-point haul was the key to the Lakers’ 111-103 victory over the Jazz which put them 2-0 up in the best-of seven series.

Bryant scored 13 points in the fourth quarter and found his shooting touch late in the fourth to deny a Jazz rally as the Lakers took command of the series, which continues Saturday and Monday in Salt Lake City.

“It’s my responsibility when things get a little tight,” Bryant said. “I just have to make the right call.”

Paul Millsap led Utah with 26 points while C.J. Miles and Carlos Boozer each scored 20 points for the Jazz.

Injured English football star David Beckham was seated at courtside for the game and during a stoppage in play, Bryant came near him and bounced the ball off his head in a nod of respect to the Los Angeles Galaxy midfielder.

Lakers coach Phil Jackson, whose contract expires after this season, said before the game there was a 90 per cent chance that he would be coaching the Lakers if he remains in coaching and he had no interest in the vacant coaching job at Chicago, which he coached to six NBA titles in the 1990s.

It all comes down to attitude, says Hodge

Luke Hodge has addressed Hawthorn’s poor AFL form the same way he plays – bluntly and straight down the line.

While Hawks president Jeff Kennett was prepared to discuss their personnel problems on Tuesday, Hodge brushed that aside as an excuse, saying “that’s football”.

Hodge said Kennett and Hawks legends Jason Dunstall and Dermott Brereton were well within their rights to savage the team.

Hawthorn, tipped as a top-four contender this year, slumped to 1-5 after Saturday night’s woeful performance against fellow struggler Essendon.

Kennett went as far as questioning the players’ “ticker” ahead of the must-win game on Saturday at Subiaco against West Coast, which also has just one win.

“You can’t complain … what we produced on Saturday night, we had no ticker, it was disappointing,” Hodge said.

“It’s something we’ve gone through, we’re going to focus on what we can do to beat West Coast and the hunger will be there this week.”

Hodge repeatedly said that Hawthorn’s on-field crisis came down to attitude and he has promised that will return against the Eagles.

Asked how well they could perform this year, Hodge replied: “You’ll see this Saturday – we’ll come out fighting this week and we’ll see how good we can be.

“Personnel comes into it a little bit but it’s mainly the attitude of the blokes who are playing.”

Hodge added that his team could still have a successful season, pointing out that Collingwood and Adelaide made the finals last year despite being 3-5.

But Hodge strongly disagreed with Brereton, who said he was “sickened” that Hawks players shook hands with opponents and were laughing after Saturday night’s finally siren.

“As far as blokes smiling, I probably don’t agree with that, but as far as shaking the hand and saying, ‘well done, mate, (you were) too good on the night’, I’ve got no problems,” Hodge said.

Predictably, Kennett used his regular note to club members on Monday to blast the team.

A day later, he said as president he had a responsibility to be transparent.

The Hawks are set to drop several prominent players for the Perth trip, but captain Sam Mitchell is no guarantee yet to return.

Mitchell trained apart from the main group on Tuesday morning as he recovers from hamstring tendinitis.

Meanwhile, Kennett said it was only a coincidence that the Hawks launched their round-10 Kokoda Game on Tuesday at the same time as they try to resurrect their floundering season.

The Hawks, including Kennett, have walked the rugged Kokoda Track in Papua New Guinea as a team-building exercise and to honour the crucial 1942 battle, where outnumbered Australian forces repelled Japan.

Hawthorn will wear a special guernsey for the game against Sydney and raise funds for locals who live along the track.

Tribunal bans Welsh for four weeks

Essendon vice-captain Andrew Welsh has put his character on trial at the AFL tribunal and lost.

His bid to halve a four-match ban for kneeing Hawthorn midfielder Xavier Ellis in the groin backfired, with the tribunal ruling that Welsh must serve the full penalty.

The Bombers midfielder testified that he would never intentionally knee an opponent in the groin and said the match-day report had caused him great embarrassment.

“It was simply a reaction to the player coming in to block,” Welsh said.

“I’m vice-captain of the football club, in the last two days I haven’t been able to look my team-mates in the eye.

“It’s one of the worst things you can do.”

Welsh pleaded guilty to the charge, but tried to have it downgraded from intentional conduct to reckless.

Had he succeeded, it would have reduced the penalty to two matches.

Welsh could also have taken the early plea and accepted a three-man suspension.

Essendon football manager Paul Hamilton said the club backed Welsh’s character, but would not appeal the tribunal decision.

“We’re disappointed, we understand the character of Andrew Welsh, a player who has never been suspended, so we’re disappointed in the finding,” Hamilton said.

“But it is the finding and we must accept it and we must unfortunately move on from there.

“Certainly the reason we’re here tonight is because he believes strongly he had no intent in making contact to the groin.

“Andrew will have no problem facing his team-mates, his team-mates will have no doubt in their minds (about) the character of the man.”

Tribunal advocate Jeff Gleeson successfully argued that Welsh had made two distinct movements, first kneeing Ellis as the Hawk tried to block him and then trying to chase opponent Brad Sewell.

The Hawks medical report on Ellis was also damning – it said Ellis was in “significant” pain post-match and was in some doubt for Saturday’s must-win game against West Coast at Subiaco.

In other tribunal news, minor facial surgery meant a one-day delay to Brisbane defender Matt Maguire facing the tribunal on a rough conduct charge.

Maguire was injured in a clash with Sydney’s Jude Bolton – the same incident that prompted the report.

Maguire is not expected to miss any matches because of the injury and will face the tribunal on Wednesday via video link.

The Lions backman is risking a two-game ban by contesting the charge.

Also on Tuesday, Melbourne captain James McDonald accepted a reprimand for striking North Melbourne’s Andrew Swallow.

Bolton took a reprimand for front-on contact against Brisbane’s Joel Patfull, while West Coast veteran Andrew Embley accepted his two-match ban for the same charge after an incident involving Fremantle onballer Rhys Palmer.

West Coast’s Matt Priddis was fined for negligent umpire contact and Fremantle newcomer Hayden Ballantyne and Eagle Adam Selwood accepted fines for wrestling each other.

Hawks finally oust Bogut’s Bucks

Jamal Crawford scored 22 points and Al Horford added 16 points and 15 rebounds as the Atlanta Hawks defeated Milwaukee 95-74 on Sunday and advanced to the second round of the NBA playoffs.

The Hawks won the best-of-seven Eastern Conference series four games to three and will play Orlando in a second-round Eastern Conference best-of-seven series.

The Magic, who have had the past week off, host game one on Tuesday. Orlando defeated Atlanta in three of four regular-season meetings.

Atlanta jumped ahead by 20 points in the second quarter, aided by an 11-0 runover the end of the first quarter and start of the second, before settling for a 53-40 half-time lead.

“We had to come out and be aggressive,” Crawford said.

“This was a huge game. I can’t describe it. It’s like a dream. Exciting. Now we have to get ready for the next round.”

Australian centre Andrew Bogut was placed on the Bucks’ roster in a largely symbolic move to replace guard Charlie Bell, banished from the active line-up for game seven for disciplinary reasons.

Bogut is out for the season after suffering several injuries in a severe late-season fall.

Milwaukee, which connected on only 32 per cent of shots, charged early in the third quarter but Atlanta never let the Bucks threaten, keeping a 73-60 edge entering the fourth quarter and dominating the final minutes.

Brandon Jennings led Milwaukee with 15 points while Ersan Ilyasova and Luc Mbah a Moute each had 13 points for the Bucks.

The Hawks reached the limit in the first round for the third year in a row.

Atlanta beat Miami in seven games in last year’s opening playoff round and lost to eventual champion Boston in seven games in the 2008 first round.

In the Western Conference, Kobe Bryant scored 13 of his 31 points in the fourth quarter and the Los Angeles Lakers defeated Utah 104-99 in Sunday’s opener of their second round series.

Spanish star Pau Gasol added 25 points and 12 rebounds and together with Bryant sparked a 15-6 run by the Lakers over the final 3:16 to bring the Lakers a victory in the best-of-seven matchup, which continues on Tuesday at Los Angeles.

Gasol’s 3-point play midway into the fourth quarter evened the game at 85-85 and snapped an 0-for-10 shooting start to the period for the Lakers.

Utah’s Deron Williams scored 17 points in the first half but Gasol and Bryant each had 12 to give the Lakers a 53-45 half-time edge.

NBA – Bucks shoot down Hawks to take series lead

The Milwaukee Bucks produced a stunning late comeback to snatch a 91-87 victory over the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday and close in on a major series upset.

Trailing by nine points with four minutes remaining, the Bucks constructed a 14-0 run and surged into a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven first-round series.

Rookie point guard Brandon Jennings led the way with 25 points and John Salmons scored eight of his 19 in the pivotal fourth quarter run for the Bucks.

“This would have to be the best game of the whole year because it’s the playoffs,” Jennings told reporters. “I had got a little motivation before the game so that made me want to come out and really play. I knew I had to come out aggressive.”

Milwaukee had not reached the playoffs since 2006 but after winning three games in a row following two losses at the start of the series, the sixth seeds can eliminate Atlanta with a home win on Friday.

The Hawks have struggled on the road and did not seriously threaten during back-to-back losses in Milwaukee but were expected to return to winning form at home.

Al Horford had 25 points and a game-high 11 rebounds for Atlanta while Marvin Williams had 22 points, but their team mates struggled to contribute and top scorer Joe Johnson fouled out in the fourth with 13 points.

Jamal Crawford, who earlier this week was named the National Basketball Association’s best player in a reserve role, managed just 4-for-18 shooting to finish with 11 points.

After a tight first half, Atlanta built a 13-point lead in the third quarter and looked on course for victory before Milwaukee’s late charge put the visitors in control of the series.

In Denver, the Nuggets kept their season alive with a 116-102 victory over the Utah Jazz.

Carmelo Anthony recorded 26 points and 11 rebounds as the Nuggets cut their best-of-seven series deficit to 3-2.

Utah point guard Deron Williams had 34 points and 10 assists in the loss, but the Jazz will have another chance to close out the series Friday at home.

(Writing by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; Editing by Alastair Himmer; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Brown gets behind struggling Buddy

Senior Hawthorn player Campbell Brown has defended his star team-mate Lance Franklin as he struggles to find goalkicking form.

The 2008 Coleman Medal winner has managed only two goals from two AFL matches so far this season, after missing the Hawks’ opener through suspension.

During Sunday’s 16-point loss to the Western Bulldogs, Franklin was kept goalless for only the third time since mid-2006 and took just one mark.

Even the Hawks faithful appeared to be getting restless, with some sections jeering Franklin late in the game because of a perceived lack of input.

Brown said the match-winning forward was working as hard as he could to fulfil lofty expectations.

“I think the media and the fans put so much emphasis on stats and things like that, whereas he laid five tackles, which from a big man was a pretty good effort,” Brown said.

“And the contribution he made in the ruck, which is not something that’s very familiar to him, as a team we thought he was pretty solid.

“Without kicking those goals and the things that we like to see, I thought his performance was still pretty solid.

“He’s working really hard and while he’s working hard I’m sure that his hands and his goals will end up coming.”

Franklin is however facing a game on the sidelines for rough conduct against the Western Bulldogs’ Jason Akermanis.

In some good news for the injury-struck Hawks, big-name recruit Shaun Burgoyne is set to play this week, possibly in their AFL clash with Collingwood at the MCG on Saturday night.

Since his switch from Port Adelaide, Burgoyne has battled knee and hamstring injuries but Brown said he was ready to line up either in the senior side or for VFL team Box Hill.

“It’s exciting, he’ll definitely be in the mix,” he said, adding that the Hawks had dubbed Burgoyne “Silk” because of his silky skills.

“It’s been hard for him having to sit out, I’m sure he wants to prove himself. It will be good to have him running around.”

Brown said Clinton Young would also be in senior contention, while fellow midfielder Brad Sewell was a week away from returning from a collarbone injury.

Former North Melbourne defender Josh Gibson, awaiting results of a scan on his injured hamstring, is expected to be sidelined for some weeks.

But midfielder Jordan Lewis should face the Magpies despite being stretchered off after suffering a heavy head knock in a collision with Bulldog Jarrod Harbrow on Sunday.

Brown described the hit as the hardest he had ever seen.

“I was right there for the contact and it was huge, a very courageous act,” he said.

“It was great to see him eventually come back on and I spoke to him today and he’s feeling pretty good.”

He said Lewis’s courage inspired team-mates.

“When players are going to be that committed to the cause of playing for Hawthorn and winning games, we know we’re going to win more than we lose,” he said.

Black touch-and-go for Bulldogs clash

Brisbane Lions coach Michael Voss says champion midfielder Simon Black is only a “50-50″ chance of playing in Saturday night’s match against the Western Bulldogs at the Gabba.

Black injured his hamstring in Brisbane’s weekend win over Port Adelaide and was forced to sit out the second half.

The Lions may be one of only three teams unbeaten after three rounds, but Voss believes he will not get a true read on their progress until they again meet the Bulldogs.

The Bulldogs ended Brisbane’s 2009 finals campaign to the tune of a 51-point hiding at the MCG.

“To get where we want to go we have to beat these teams – that’s the harsh reality of it,” Voss said.

“It (the semi-final loss) gave us a lot of great lessons about where we needed to go next.

“You can get into the second week of the finals and feel like you have made some massive ground.

“You feel like it is only a few steps away but in reality it’s not.

“We have gone away, we have hopefully learnt from those [lessons], hopefully put some of those things in practice that holds us in good stead against teams like this.”

Voss led the Lions to their first finals campaign since 2004 in his rookie year but he did not rest on his laurels.

An impressive recruitment drive, snaring the likes of Brendan Fevola, Matt Maguire and Brent Staker, resulted in the Lions emerging as early flag fancies.

“It was not just that [51-point loss] alone [that sparked the recruitment drive], but it was a lesson on what gets you to the next level,” Voss said.

“That’s what finals do. Finals have a magnificent way of exposing where you are deficient.”

Their bid to down the Bulldogs for only the second time in their past nine games was also aided by watching Hawthorn’s gutsy last-round effort.

The Bulldogs kicked away in the final quarter to pluck the Hawks by 16 points.

“We take good positives out of what Hawthorn did,” Voss said.

“The intensity that they had was exceptional but they weren’t able to maintain it.

“That’s what the Bulldogs demand from you – they play a real disciplined style of football.

“We have certainly spent a lot of time over the off-season training with that [in mind] – we are ready for the contest.”

Voss will welcome back X-factor Jared Brennan from suspension for the match.

Hawks still an unknown quantity: Clarkson

Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson admits the Hawks are yet to show their true colours this season, as injuries again contributed to a final quarter fade-out against one of the AFL’s best sides.

The Hawks led early in the last term before being over-run by the Western Bulldogs, who kicked six of the last eight goals to win 14.16 (100) to 12.12 (84) at Docklands on Sunday afternoon.

Both sides were hit hard by injury.

The Bulldogs lost defender Ryan Hargrave (neck) in the opening minutes when he was flattened by Hawks ruckman Brent Renouf.

Hawks defender Josh Gibson went off with a hamstring injury minutes later.

Hawks midfielder Jordan Lewis (head) was stretchered off after a sickening collision with the Bulldogs’ Jarrod Harbrow just before half-time, while the Bulldogs lost Jason Akermanis (hamstring) and Liam Picken (ankle) in the second half.

The match mirrored the Hawks’ equally bruising encounter with Geelong at the MCG on Easter Monday, which they also led early in the last quarter before being overwhelmed.

In that match they were also hampered by injuries, losing Rhan Hooper (hamstring) and Jordan Lewis (ankle), while their ability to field only one recognised ruckman, Renouf, has hurt them in the first three rounds, losing the last quarter every time.

Despite their 1-2 record, Clarkson says he has faith his side can match any opposition, with the help of a better run with injuries.

“I reckon that every tipster in the competition, in terms of where the Hawks were going to finish this year, those (questions) are still unanswered more or less and might be for some time,” he said.

“But we’ve got faith and confidence in our group, if we get our group up and going and have a little bit of luck with injuries.

“…When you lose (players) two weeks in a row in the first five minutes of the game, that really stretches your capacity to rotate and keep blokes fresh and fit.

“We’ll back ourselves against any side in the comp when we just have a little bit of fortune with our boys.”

Clarkson also backed star forward Lance Franklin, kept goalless by Brian Lake, to strike form soon.

The Hawks face another huge test against Collingwood at the MCG this Saturday night.

Bulldogs coach Rodney Eade says his team were fortunate to lead at half-time, after being “smashed” in winning the contested ball early and using the ball poorly throughout the match.

“We’re not playing that well, we’ve certainly got a lot of improvement to do, there’s no doubt, but that’s OK, that’s fine,” he said.

The Bulldogs face the undefeated Brisbane at the Gabba on Saturday night.

Harbrow backed over high-speed hit

Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson has called for more latitude to be given to players at the AFL tribunal when they are involved in high-speed collisions.

Clarkson was commenting after Western Bulldogs defender Jarrod Harbrow laid out Hawks midfielder Jordan Lewis with a sickening bump late in the second term of Sunday’s game at Docklands stadium.

Lewis was running with the flight of the ball when the two collided at high speed.

Hawks ruck coach Damian Monkhorst, sitting on the interchange bench, told Clarkson the impact looked like a train wreck.

Lewis was concussed and stretchered off the field, but returned to the game in the final term.

Clarkson said he had not seen a replay of the incident, but it appeared Harbrow was making a legitimate attack on the ball.

“I haven’t seen the incident, but if Harbrow’s elbow is up even just slightly and he (Lewis) has been hit in the head, he’s probably got a six-week holiday coming,” Clarkson said.

“In the tone of the game, for me, sometimes those things are going to happen in footy, it’s a tough, brutal game and it’s getting quicker and harder to adjudicate what is fair and what’s unfair.

“It’s a tough, brutal game sometimes… ‘Kanga’s’ (Hawthorn coach John Kennedy) old philosophy – you cop one, you just pass it on.

“By the end of your career, you’ve usually copped just as many as you’ve given.”

Bulldogs coach Rodney Eade strongly defended Harbrow’s conduct.

“It showed a great deal of courage from Lewis, who was fantastic in the contest, and I thought Jarrod committed himself as well – there was no other option, really,” Eade said.

“We’ve watched the tape and Jarrod got his hand to the ball first… it’s just unfortunate for Lewis.”

Head-high contact has again been a controversial topic this season, with the match review panel making conflicting judgments.

Along with the Harbrow-Lewis clash, the panel is also likely to look at a second-term incident where Hawks key forward Lance Franklin made contact with Jason Akermanis.

The Bulldogs veteran was floored but was soon back in the game.

Brisbane’s Ashley McGrath is already on report for rough conduct following an incident where he made contact with the face of Port Adelaide ruckman Cameron Cloke.

There are unconfirmed reports that an incident seconds before led to the contact.

Lions ruckman Mitch Clark was reported for striking Jackson Trengove, while Hayden Ballantyne of Fremantle was booked for the unusual charge of pinching.

West Coast forward Ashley Hansen is on report for striking North Melbourne midfielder Daniel Wells.

Tigers snap up Tragardh

The Melbourne Tigers have recruited Wollongong Hawks forward Cameron Tragardh.

The 26-year-old has signed a three-year deal with the Tigers after helping to lead the Hawks to the NBL grand final series.

Tragardh averaged 14.7 points and 5.4 rebounds per game in 28 appearances in the 2009/10 season.

Melbourne has also re-signed Tommy Greer and Bennie Lewis.

Guilty Mooney misses trip west

Not for the first time in his chequered career, Geelong forward Cameron Mooney left the AFL tribunal downcast and facing a weekend without football.

Serial offender Mooney was suspended for the 10th time on Wednesday night after being found guilty of rough conduct for a high hit on Hawthorn’s Rick Ladson during the Cats’ fiery Easter Monday win.

He will serve a one-match ban – ruling him out of the Cats’ clash with Fremantle at Subiaco Oval on Sunday – with the Cats saying they are unlikely to appeal the verdict.

Mooney had attempted to beat the ban, claiming he had not made forceful contact with Ladson’s head or neck and had no reasonable alternative but to bump him.

But the tribunal found otherwise, believing he did make high contact and could have attempted to smother the ball or avoid the Hawks player, who was moving lower to the ground to kick the ball as Mooney approached.

“We find it a bit hard to know what realistic alternative Cameron had,” Geelong football manager Neil Balme said after the hearing.

“We are disappointed.”

Mooney told the tribunal the umpires signalled to him his contact with Ladson constituted a fair bump.

And he argued he had not made forceful contact to the Hawk’s head or neck, saying the AFL’s preseason warnings about duty of care to other players in that situation was in his mind as he approached Ladson.

“Every player’s seen a lot of video. We know that’s there – the duty of care,” Mooney told the hearing.

“I tried not to go near the head.”

Should the Cats not appeal, Mooney will have missed his 15th career match through suspension – having the unenviable record of being suspended four times in the one season during 2006.

It leaves Geelong without two of its most experienced players going into the clash with the in-form Dockers, with defender Matthew Scarlett also banned for one week.

Scarlett made an early guilty plea to a misconduct conduct for kneeing Hawthorn’s Michael Osborne in the groin.

Earlier Hawthorn defender Liam Shiels was suspended for two matches after the tribunal found him guilty of striking Geelong’s Cameron Ling.

Shiels could have accepted a one-match ban had he pleaded guilty for a high shot on Ling.

Instead he attempted to have the contact downgraded from intentional to reckless and failed.

He will miss the Hawks’ matches against the Western Bulldogs on Sunday and Collingwood the following week.

Johnson set to miss Hawks clash

Western Bulldogs coach Rodney Eade says captain Brad Johnson is likely to miss Sunday’s AFL clash with Hawthorn as he continues to recover from a virus.

Johnson missed last Sunday’s win over Richmond and Eade said he was vomiting and had a high fever that night.

The coach said Johnson’s health was improving but given the amount of time he had spent out of action the club was unlikely to risk him.

Johnson was not part of the club’s training session on Wednesday.

“He looks he’s on the mend now, he probably should be right by Friday to train,” Eade said.

“What we’ve got to decide now is because he hasn’t trained for a week or 10 days, with his lack of game preparation does he need continuity as far as training?

“Indications are we will probably err on the side of being conservative with his condition as far as energy levels and have a week’s training next week.”

Fellow veteran Nathan Eagleton is set to spend another week in the VFL after working his way back from a preseason injury.

While the Hawks have been hit with several suspensions and injuries arising from Monday’s bruising clash with Geelong, Eade said he did not feel it was a good time to be playing them.

He said the physical nature of their clash with the Cats showed the Hawks were at their competitive best.

“I’m probably more worried about that than if they played a lacklustre game,” he said.

“… The fact that it was full intensity, that’s what you’d expect from them this week, so that’s what we’re thinking.

“It probably needs to heighten our awareness of what it’s going to be like this week.”

The Bulldogs hope to gain an edge in the ruck, where Hawthorn injuries mean youngster Brent Renouf is again set to take on two opponents – Ben Hudson and Will Minson – singlehandedly.

Despite solid efforts, Renouf has been worn down late in each of the first two rounds, contributing to the Hawks being heavily outscored in the final minutes of both.

“Obviously he was fatigued in the end, but that was certainly no fault of his,” Eade said.

“I think they’ll probably give him some more help this week, whether (Jarryd) Roughead does a bit more or whether (Luke) Hodge and these sort of players, but I thought the kid battled on pretty manfully.

“Hopefully we can get an advantage, but that’s like every week we go in, we know we’ve got two very good ruckmen and we hope we can get an advantage there every week.”

Hawks not focused on revenge yet

Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson does not expect the Hawks to be concentrating on avenging their poor 2009 season when they play Melbourne in Saturday’s round one clash at the MCG.

The Hawks endured a disappointing season last year by missing the finals despite winning the 2008 premiership.

But Clarkson says those memories are likely to be a major motivating factor later in the year, rather than Saturday.

“For 16 sides (it’s) just the excitement of finally being able to play a serious game of footy at this point of time,” Clarkson said.

“I’d reckon trying to have some time of revenge for last year’s performance might come later in the season if we participate in the finals and that sort of thing.

“But in the early part of the season it’s just the excitement of playing games again.”

The Hawks will blood two new players, but half-forward Cyril Rioli and new recruit Shaun Burgoyne will both be missing.

Clarkson says Rioli was underdone after a groin problem, and that the Hawks are being cautious with former Port Adelaide star Burgoyne given his past knee and hamstring troubles.

- AAP

Stynes keeps the faith

Melbourne president Jim Stynes has compared his cancer battle to the AFL club, saying he has great faith about the future.

Stynes spoke at a club promotion on Monday ahead of Saturday’s season opener against Hawthorn, where the Demons will have a theme of “dare to dream”.

The 1991 Brownlow medallist continues to undergo treatment for cancer, but his hair has started growing back and Stynes was typically upbeat.

“Really, it is a privilege to get what I’ve got and then to deal with it and get on with it and be positive and believe that you can heal,” he said.

“It’s the same thing with footy – do you really believe as a football club, we’ve been over 40 years without a premiership.

“Do our supporters really believe that we can win one? Well, I certainly do and it’s the same with my healing.

“I certainly believe I’m going to get through this and I will be healed when the time is right.”

Melbourne has had an appalling run with injuries over the last few weeks, but the Demons give themselves a strong chance against the Hawks.

Hawthorn has its own injury troubles and the Demons will debut their top draft picks Tom Scully and Jack Trengove, as well as possibly James Strauss.

“It’s going to be a big week, a big day,” Stynes said.

“The focus and theme of round one for Melbourne is ‘dare to dream’.

“It’s been a huge preseason, we have all these young kids debuting and young kids who have only started playing.

“We really are the youth club, we have the youngest list in the competition.”

Stynes played down Melbourne’s injury problems and is confident his team would perform well this weekend.

“Every team suffers injuries, Hawthorn have a few injuries as well,” he said.

“You just never know what’s going to happen in round one – who would have thought North Melbourne would have won their first game of the pre-season (against Geelong).

“Once you’re out there, you’re always a chance of a win.”

- AAP

Cats eager to re-sign finals hero Lisch

Perth’s hierarchy will move quickly to re-sign Kevin Lisch after the US import starred in the Wildcats’ 96-72 title-winning NBL triumph over Wollongong Hawks on Friday night.

But whether or not the Cats ink a new deal with Lisch, they will lose 36-year-old journeyman Martin Cattalini who retired after snaring his fourth Championship ring.

Lisch drained 29 points and nailed five of nine three-pointers, including one from three metres behind the arc on the three-quarter time buzzer, to lead Perth to the crushing victory in the deciding game three.

The 23-year-old, who scored 15 points in game one and 11 in game two, was named the grand final MVP and coach Rob Beveridge confirmed Lisch was a wanted man at Perth.

“He was everything I was looking for in terms of the work ethic, the attitude, the character,” he said.

“He’s still young and only going to improve.

“Kevin’s earned his right to continue for sure.”

But while Beveridge is confident of locking in his uncontracted players as he attempts to create a dynasty, Hawks coach Gordie McLeod is unsure whether he will be able to do the same.

“I would say it would be pretty hard for us to do that [keep this squad together] because with another team coming in I think a lot of players on the team this year have proven they can play at this level,” McLeod said.

“We only spent just over $700,000 on the cap this year so the guys aren’t playing for big bucks, they play from the heart.

“I think a lot of clubs will want to come and get some players but we’ll sit down with all our guys in the coming week and we’ll talk about the future.”

McLeod said he was confident the club, which was on the verge of folding less than 12 months ago, would continue into next season.

“We’ve done all we can do and now it’s a matter of waiting to see what decisions are made,” he said.

The Hawks led by 11 points early in the second quarter but Lisch and Damian Martin (17 points) turned the tide Perth’s way.

The home side erased the deficit in just four minutes before sealing the win with a dominant 31-15 third quarter.

Cattalini told his team-mates of his decision to retire on Thursday and Beveridge used the announcement as extra motivation.

“We spoke as a group that we wanted to do it for ourselves but said let’s do it for Martin as well,” Beveridge said.

“He’s an icon in the NBL … he was a huge part of our group and we’re going to miss him immensely.”

Beveridge, who almost left Australia after a horror run at the now-defunct Sydney Spirit last season when he was not even being paid at times, admitted his Wildcats unit had exceeded all expectations.

“When we put the team together it was about two or three years down the track,” he said.

“The way everything is run [at Perth] has put me in a position to be able to excel and I’m extremely thankful because I was at the bottom of the basketball doldrums, it was really bad.

“I was out of here and to be thrown a lifeline in Perth and to achieve this … it’s unbelievable.”

- AAP

Lisch leads Wildcats to fifth title

Perth became the most successful franchise in NBL history on Friday night as Kevin Lisch shot the Wildcats to a 96-72 game three victory over Wollongong at “The Jungle”.

Lisch, the plucky American-born guard, led all scorers with 29 points to carry Perth to its fifth championship at a sold-out Challenge Stadium packed to the rafters with red-garbed supporters.

He was awarded the Larry Sengstock Medal for the Most Valuable Player of the series, having averaged 18.3 points on 51.5 per cent shooting and 2.6 three-pointers per game across the three finals.

The Hawks levelled the three-game series 1-1 on Tuesday night with a thrilling 75-63 win on their home court, an arena which proved to be a fortress through the 2009/10 season.

But their disappointing form on the road was eventually fatal and despite holding a one-point lead after the first 20 minutes of high-pressure finals basketball, the visitors watched the Wildcats take control in the fourth.

Lisch was unstoppable from long range, draining 5-of-9 three-point attempts including an unbelievable bank shot from deep at the three-quarter-time buzzer in a play that Perth only had 1.7 seconds to execute.

Damian Martin (17 points, four steals) and Stephen Weigh (13 points, seven rebounds) chipped in for the Wildcats in veteran Martin Cattalini’s final NBL appearance.

The 17-year journeyman started and finished his career in Perth with a fourth championship, and contributed six points and four boards in 18 minutes.

Wollongong played gutsy basketball and for much of the first half it looked like the Hawks would complete a title sweep after having shocked the New Zealand Breakers to take out the preseason tournament.

But the Wildcats’ perimeter shooting was second to none in the third period and their momentum carried into the final 10 minutes.

From there, the Hawks struggled with turnovers (10 after half-time) and failed to re-discover the hot hand that they displayed in the first half (6-of-10 from downtown).

There was no doubt about the level of emotion coursing through every player on the court, especially when a particularly physical play erupted in a scuffle in the first half that required the referees to break up.

Regardless of the result there is no denying that Wollongong’s season was one of fairytale calibre – the Hawks had finished well out of play-offs contention in the 2008/09 season after almost bowing out of the league for financial reasons.

Their brilliant campaign at home saw the Hawks win 16 of their last 17 appearances in Wollongong, rocketing them into fourth spot at the end of the regular season.

Beveridge tells Wildcats to simply believe

Perth Wildcats coach Rob Beveridge says his side is still well placed to win a record fifth NBL championship despite losing game two of the grand final series to Wollongong.

The Wildcats went down 75-63 to the Hawks in Wollongong on Tuesday night to force a grand final decider in Perth on Friday night.

Beveridge says his team just needs to believe in itself and work hard on its perimeter shooting.

“We shot the ball very poor from the three-point line, it’s one of the worst performances we’ve had,” he said.

“A lot of them were open looks as well. I think we were second guessing ourselves and you can’t do that.

“You just have to believe in the work you’ve done and Friday night, if we get the same opportunity, we’ll definitely be taking it with a lot more authority and belief.”

Beveridge says the Wildcats’ home court advantage on Friday night could prove decisive and the Hawks should expect a hostile reception.

“We finished first, they finished second and right now most teams hold serve on their home court,” he said.

“We’ll be going back and we’ll be a lot more confident.

“I understand that it’s a passionate sport and they’re not feral here [in Wollongong], we’re not feral in Perth, it’s just the passion of the game.

“It’s going to happen on Friday night, they’re going to get exactly the same.”

Wildcats braced for sledging barrage

Perth coach Rob Beveridge has dared Wollongong’s home crowd to come up with some new sledges, as the Wildcats attempt to clinch the NBL title in enemy territory on Tuesday night.

The Hawks have lost just once at home this season and are hot favourites to level the series at 1-1 in game two of the grand final series in front of a sell-out crowd at the Sandpit.

Beveridge says he is treating the game as a “free hit” after last Friday’s 75-64 win in Perth, but is bracing himself and the team for a verbal barrage in Wollongong.

“What has happened in the past is that normally they have a small group of people that they put behind the bench and heckle us,” he said.

“In our crowd we had 4,500 going at their whole team and I expect that is what they are going to do against us.

“It definitely (gets personal) against me. No question.

“But with red hair and freckles I have heard it all before.

“There is no doubt they will get after me for sure … but bring on some new dirt.”

Wollongong trio Larry Davidson, Cameron Tragardh and Glen Saville failed to fire in game one but the Hawks still had their chances to beat Perth, hitting the lead midway through the third term.

Beveridge was relieved to take a 1-0 series lead, but acknowledges his team will have to produce something special in game two to break Wollongong’s dominant run at home.

“Right now we know what we are up against and we have got a free hit as I see it,” he said.

“We will play a lot better than we did the other night and we are going to have to if we want to beat them.

“We feel pretty good about ourselves.”

Wildcats guard Brad Robbins and 36-year-old veteran Martin Cattalini pulled up sore from the game one win but Beveridge says the pair will definitely play on Tuesday night.

Razzaq to join Afridi, Mendis for Hampshire Hawks

London, Mar 8(ANI): England’s reigning Twenty20 champions Hampshire Hawks have signed Pakistan all-rounder Abdul Razzaq, who will be joining his national team-mate Shahid Afridi at the Rose Bowl.

Razzaq is an integral part of Pakistan”s one-day and Twenty20 squads and is considered especially vital in the Twenty20 team, where his all-round skills make him an important asset to the squad.

Hampshire will be hoping that the 30-year-old and Afridi can provide the big hitting firepower they will need to retain their title, as the Friends Provident Trophy kicks off in June, Cricistan reports.

With the arrival of Razzaq to partner Afridi and Sri Lankan spinner Ajantha Mendis, the Hawks have raised the bar to unprecedented heights.

Afridi and Mendis were two of the top wicket takers in the 2009 Twenty20 World Cup and Hampshire will be hoping that the spin twins will choke the life out of the Hawk”s opposition.

Razzaq had earlier played at the English county level for Middlesex, Worcestershire and Surrey. He joined Surrey in June 2008 on a short-term contract to play in the Twenty20 tournament. (ANI)