Terry tells French they were wrong to expel Anelka

(Reuters) – France made a mistake in expelling striker Nicolas Anelka from their World Cup squad, his Chelsea captain and former England skipper John Terry said on Sunday.

Sports

Terry told reporters at England’s World Cup base at the Royal Bafokeng Sports Campus that he admired Anelka as a player and as a man and felt it was wrong to send him home on Saturday.

He said: “I see they sent him home for voicing his opinion and maybe a few of us (England players) will be sent home after this evening!”

Anelka was sent home after allegedly insulting France coach Raymond Domenech last Thursday during their 2-0 defeat by Mexico in a Group A game at Polokwane.

Terry was referring to a planned crisis meeting of the England squad with manager Fabio Capello scheduled to take place later on Sunday evening.

He added: “But I can speak honestly about Nico. He is a really good guy.

“Before he came to Chelsea, a lot negative stuff was written about him but as a person you won’t find a better man in football.

“He is very quiet but he has been in the game a long time and he knows his football so, if Nico had something to say to me, I would stand up and listen — because he is a great player as well

“It is obviously the wrong decision.”

(Editing by Jon Bramley)

Kuznetsova’s luck runs out against Kirilenko

Svetlana Kuznetsova’s luck finally ran out at Roland Garros on Friday.

This time, as darkness descended on Court One, the defending French Open champion could find no miraculous escape from the jaws of defeat as she was beaten 6-3 2-6 6-4 by fellow Russian Maria Kirilenko.

It was not through lack of effort though. The sixth seed saved two match points to go with the four she staved off two days ago against Germany’s Andrea Petkovic.

When Kirilenko was offered a third opportunity to finish off her struggling opponent, however, she made no mistake as Kuznetsova prodded a backhand into the tramlines.

“I mean, it was very hard to defend my title with the tennis I have been playing this season,” a glum 24-year-old, who also has a U.S. Open title to her name, told reporters.

“I didn’t come here with my best game, but I gave my all. I fought to the end, it happens.

“I’ll be back. I have the game. It’s just matters of time.”

Kuznetsova appeared to have turned the match on its head when she had a point for a 3-0 lead in the deciding set but Kirilenko reeled off the next four games.

Again Kuznetsova had two points to level at 5-5 but her brittle confidence undermined her again and Kirilenko held her nerve to reach the fourth round here for the first time.

“I’m happy the way I played at the end of the match, I was so aggressive,” Kirilenko, who also beat Kuznetsova in Rome recently, told reporters. “I took a risk. That last game was a tough, tough game. This is one of the best wins of my career.”

Kirilenko will face Italy’s Francesca Schiavone in the fourth round.

“I’m expecting a tough match. She has too much spin, she plays kind of like a guy,” the 23-year-old said of her next challenge.

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

Cricket umpire ‘headbutts’ player in England over ‘disputed’ decision!

London, May 26(ANI): A cricket match between Oswestry CC and Whitchurch CC in England descended into chaos when an umpire allegedly headbutted a player during an argument.

According to reports, the umpire gave a batsman “not out” and had a heated row with a fielder, who was convinced that the official had made a mistake.

Later, things turned ugly as players from both the sides piled into each other.

“I couldn’t believe what was going on. I have never seen anything like that on a cricket pitch in my life,” The Mirror quoted one of the players, as saying.

The club game reportedly had no neutral umpires so was being officiated by players from the batting side.

The situation only got under control only when local police intervened to part the warring teams.

The game was abandoned. (ANI)

Prince Andrew forgives Fergie over ”cash for access” scam

London, May 26 (ANI): Prince Andrew has forgiven ex-wife Sarah Ferguson for her “cash for access” scam, it has emerged.

A sting operation by British tabloid the News of the World had recently caught the Duchess of York setting a price tag of 500,000 pounds on an introduction to Prince Andrew, promising to open the door to lucrative international deals for the ”client”.

But now Andrew has forgiven Fergie after she called him up and apologised.

She even offered to quit the room she has at his Windsor mansion.

But Andrew told her she could stay as long as wanted to.

“Andrew told her to calm down and get a grip. He is a very caring person, a loving father and he told Sarah not to be so silly,” the Mirror quoted a friend, as saying.

The insider went on: “He told her she had been set up and although she had clearly made a massive mistake, he wasn”t going to kick her out on to the streets. He knows she can”t afford anywhere – that”s why he let her stay at Royal Lodge in the first place.

“The other major reason was because Bea and Eugenie like being close to their mum. Whatever else she is, Sarah has always been an excellent parent and Andrew admires her for that. His attitude is that he isn”t going to tear his family apart because of one week”s bad headlines.”

The source added: “The fact is that when say they are the world”s happiest divorced couple, they really mean it. Sometimes you cannot understand why they split up in the first place. They will always be best friends and although the set-up seems weird to many people, it works for them.” (ANI)

Brit teacher fighting for career after accidentally showing porn to pupils

London, May 21 (ANI): A British teacher has been left fighting for his career after he accidentally showed a porn movie to pupils during a lesson.

The incident took place after James Cooney, 35, decided to use his own laptop when the DVD player in the classroom failed to work.

A disciplinary hearing was told that instead of educational material the class of 11 and 12-year-olds saw “graphic sexual images”.

But Cooney was quick to realise his mistake and hurriedly pulled the plug on the computer.

He was then sent home as an investigation was launched at Sandfields Comprehensive in Port Talbot, South Wales.

The hearing was told he subsequently resigned after talks with schools officials from Neath Port Talbot council.

He was later charged with unacceptable professional conduct and ordered before the General Teaching Council For Wales.

The Council”s Professional Conduct Committee will decide whether he can keep his licence to teach.

“Whilst using a personal laptop computer to project a DVD film to show pupils, instead of the film being played adult pornographic images appeared on the screen and were seen by pupils,” the Sun quoted presenting officer Louise Price as telling the hearing.

Cooney, a teacher with more than ten years experience, denies unacceptable professional conduct.

He successfully applied for the hearing to be held in private because of “matters of his personal circumstances”.

Police investigated the complaints but Cooney did not face prosecution after a decision was taken that he did not break the law.

The case was adjourned to a date to be fixed. (ANI)

One more mistake will wreck McLaren’s title bid, warns Button

London, May 20 (ANI): Formula One champion Jenson Button, who is trailing this year in drivers competition, has warned that his team’s one more mistake will wreck their title bid.

The Formula One champ has followed teammate Lewis Hamilton in urging McLaren to sort things out.

Button slumped from first to fourth in the standings when a mechanic left a cooling bung in his side pod as he went to the grid in Monaco, causing his engine to blow early in the race.

“Lewis and I have failed to finish in one race. The whole team has got to make sure that’s the only time this year we fail to score points,” The Sun quoted Button, as saying.

“I think we’ve seen all the top teams make small mistakes so far this year. But those small errors can sometimes have bigger consequences,” he added. (ANI)

FIFA to probe Triesman”s comments

London, May 18 (ANI): FIFA bosses will investigate the FA”s handling of Lord Triesman over his reported comments on the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 FIFA World Cups.

“FIFA officials are demanding a report on Triesman”s comments and want to know whether FA could have acted quicker,” reports The Sun.

Triesman quit as FA chairman and leader of England”s 2018 World Cup bid on Sunday after he was recorded accusing rival bidders Spain and Russia of planning to bribe references at next month”s tournament in South Africa.

“We have not received any apologies,” said Alexei Sorokin, the head of Russia”s 2018 bid

English officials, however, claim to have faxed a full apology to Moscow and Spain.

“We can only suppose two things – either the English had some technical mistake or they were in too much of a hurry when they informed the media they had already apologised,” said Russian FA Director General Sorokin.

FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke has asked the governing body”s ethics committee to cross check the claims put forward by Triesman.

Meanwhile, Spanish FA boss Jorge Perez Arias has tagged the idea of his country bribing references as absurd.

Geoff Thompson, will now chair England”s 2018 World Cup bid team.
(ANI)

Qaeda’s ability to launch complex attacks diminished: US

Al-Qaeda’s ability to carry out large-scale complex strikes has “diminished” due to recent aggressive campaigns against it, but the terror network is trying to launch smaller attacks which are much more difficult to detect and thwart, the US Defence Department has said.

“…their (al-Qaeda and its extremist allies) ability to launch large-scale, complex attacks has clearly been diminished by the fact that we have taken the war as aggressively as we have to them,” Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said.

“Now, has al-Qaeda and other associated terrorist groups, have they been able to disperse and crop up elsewhere? Yes. Are there problems that we need to deal with around the world? Yes,” he told MSNBC.

It is the belief of Pentagon and the Obama Administration that “we have been able to protect the homeland because we have been taking the fight to the terrorists where they operate, where they plan, where they try to hatch these attacks,” he said.

“By keeping them on their toes, unable to really launch large-scale, sophisticated, complex attacks which result in mass casualties, like we saw on 9/11, they are far diminished,” Morrell said in response to a question.

At the same time, the Pentagon spokesman conceded that these terrorist groups have been trying to carry out small-scale attacks.

“Well, listen, this is a very difficult situation that we are arriving at. Whereas we are having tremendous effect going after large-scale operations; so as a result, the terrorists are adapting, and they’re using more individuals to launch smaller attacks,” he said.

Such attacks, he observed, are much more difficult to detect and thwart, “because it’s not a number of people collaborating, increasing the chances that communications can be intercepted, individuals can make a mistake, the group’s activities can be uncovered by our detectives, by our intelligence apparatus”.

But a single person wishing to do harm is far more likely to get through the layers of protection, he argued, two weeks after Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad allegedly tried to blow up a Nissan Pathfinder packed with explosives in the crowded Times Square.

“That is a reality we are confronted with; and yet, we are doing all we can to even prevent those. Individuals, as you saw with that vendor (in Times Square who alerted police about the parked vehicle with explosives inside) and others, can make a difference. That’s why we all have to be vigilant to protect the homeland against terrorists,” Morrell said.

World’s most expensive stamp has a price tag of £5m!

London, May 13 (ANI): The tiny Treskilling Yellow, weighing just 0.03 grams is worth a whopping 5 million pounds.

The stamp, which will be auctioned off in Geneva next week, exists only because a 14-year-old Swedish schoolboy rescued it from his grandmother”s rubbish bin in 1885 and sold it onto a dealer for the lowly price of seven Kroner.

The three-shilling stamp was first issued in Sweden in 1855 and used in 1857 to mail a letter.

Its rarity is augmented by the fact that it was the only one in the batch to printed in yellow by mistake, when it should have been printed in green.

The last sale was in 1996 when it sold for 2,875,000 Swiss Francs, to collectors who remain anonymous.

“There was hot competition when it was sold last time. People collecting stamps like to have rare things, like to have special things. I think maybe it”s because it”s been known for so many years, it”s special,” The Telegraph quoted Thomas Høiland, a Danish auctioneer, as saying. (ANI)

Button claims Schumacher’s move at Spanish Grand Prix was complete bull

London, May 10 (ANI): Formula One champion Jenson Button has criticized ex-champion Michael Schumacher for allegedly using unfair means while taking him on in Sunday’s Spanish Grand Prix.

“I didn’t really know where Michael was on the outside of me. He turned in and, if I hadn’t backed out of it, we would have crashed. He didn’t really give me a lot of room. There you go. You’d think with his experience he would know. It wasn’t really the right move,” the Daily Express quoted Button, as saying.

Button was less than impressed by that initial move, although it showed that Schumacher is returning to his old style and should not be underestimated now that he has a Mercedes built to his liking.

“It’s tough to overtake here and Michael’s not silly. He knows where to put his car on a track like this and you’re not going to overtake him. He was putting it on the inside, and I couldn’t pass on the outside because he just pushed me wide every time. He didn’t make a mistake, so it was very frustrating,” Button said.

Veteran German racer Mark Webber emerged the winner. (ANI)

‘Lonely’ Lara Bingle wants to earn back her respect

Melbourne, May 10 (ANI): Australian model Lara Bingle has owned up to her mistakes and even promised never to do a story for money in a bid to win back respect and to get her life on track.

In an unpaid interview with Grazia magazine, Bingle, 22, admits that selling the Brendan Fevola nude picture story for a reported 200,000 dollars fee, a deal that her agent Max Markson brokered, cost her numerous sponsorship deals and a fall from grace in the public eye.

“I made a mistake, I can’t blame anyone else for it. It was my decision and I thought it would settle things but it just got worse,” News.com.au quoted her as saying.

“I’ll never do that again.

“I know I need to build up people’s respect and I’m going to have to start at the bottom and work up, but that’s what I’ll do,” she added. (ANI)

Croatian footballer booked for diving by referee, as he was dying

Melbourne, May 7 (ANI): A referee imposed a yellow-card diving penalty on the dying Croatian footballer as he collapsed to the ground after suffering a heart attack.

Goran Tunjic, a 32-year-old defender playing for Croatian side Mladost, collapsed and fell to the ground after being tackled in the 35th minute of a game against rivals Hrvatski Sokola.

The referee, who had warned the teams in their dressing rooms before kick-off that he would deal firmly with any play-acting, promptly strode across the pitch to the prone player and waved a yellow card at him, The Australian reports.

The Sokola supporters cheered, but the players who gathered around saw Tunjic was in serious trouble.

The referee realised his mistake and called for medical aid. Tunjic was taken off the field on a stretcher and to hospital.

He was declared dead on arrival, with doctors saying he had died on the pitch from a massive heart attack, the paper reports.

“Doctors tried to help him but there was nothing they could do. He just fell dead on the spot,” a club spokesman said.

The game was abandoned, with the score at 0-0. (ANI)

No high school for illiterate students: expert

The director of a national not-for-profit tutorial centre says there should be an iron-clad law that students cannot progress to high school until it is proven they can read.

Thousands of primary school students around Australia cannot adequately read and write yet still make the transition to high school.

Reverend Bill Crews, who runs remedial learning centres in Sydney, Darwin and Gladstone, says that is a massive mistake.

He says the Federal Government’s national literacy and numeracy tests, known as NAPLAN, are critical to keeping a check and balance on students, especially those who might slip through the system.

“It is such a good thing to do. Our experience here, which is now being shown up in the tables, is if kids don’t leave primary school being able to read they fall behind at high school,” he said.

“It should be an iron-clad law that kids cannot leave primary school until they can read.”

State and territory education unions are stepping up their push for teachers to boycott next week’s NAPLAN tests, saying data will be used for the My School website and lead to the creation of league tables.

Reverend Crews says students like Joel West prove how important testing is.

At age 11 Joel has the reading skills of a child four years his junior.

“I couldn’t read and spell, write, and whenever I couldn’t do it it was making me angry,” he said.

He has been at the Exodus tutorial centre for two months.

His mother, Monie West, says the change in her son has been unbelievable.

“He went from reading nothing… struggling with every word… to being able to sound out the biggest words. So I’m very proud of him,” she said.

“It’s only been a term and he can read. It helps now because he can read the back [of microwave packets] now to cook his own pasta and stuff like that. So it’s helped in a lot of ways, big and small.”

Life skills

Mary Storch, a senior teacher from the Exodus centre in Ashfield, says the inability to read can lead to a host of problems later in life.

“We have to catch these kids before they go to high school because what happens, if you look at the statistics, I think something like 70 per cent of people in prison have literacy problems,” she said.

“So if you can’t read it’s very difficult to get a job. You can’t a job. You can’t fill in forms. What happens? How do you earn an income? It’s very hard.

“So what Bill is trying to do is get them into good jobs and keep them out of trouble.”

Reverend Crews says education unions are fighting the wrong cause.

“I think their compassion is misguided. The whole thing is to do what’s in the best interest of every child, and in 2010 the best interests of every child are being served by them being able to read,” he said.

He also believes the NAPLAN test results should be made public.

“Yes, because we need to know. Everybody needs to know. What then happens is anecdotal evidence can be supported.”

On Tuesday afternoon Fair Work Australia ruled that teachers in Victoria could not boycott next week’s national tests.

Education unions in other states and territories have already been ordered to supervise the NAPLAN tests.

The Australian Education Union (AEU) is attempting to defy the order because it says the tests can be used to compile league tables ranking schools.

Education Minister Julia Gillard says that is not what the NAPLAN tests are about.

“It’s not like we’re standing by just going ‘bad school’. We’re there with $2.5 billion of new resources and reforms including things like getting the best graduates to go into teaching, paying our best teachers more to go to the classrooms that need them the most to make a difference,” Ms Gillard said.

“And it just amazes me that people would stand in the way of that journey.”

Speaking to business leaders in Adelaide, Ms Gillard said illiteracy is a sensitive area but it must be addressed.

“Forty per cent of Australian workers don’t have basic literacy and numeracy skills; the skills we need in the modern workforce. That equates to around 4.5 million Australians.”

She says boosting the language, literacy and numeracy capacity of the workforce is perhaps the single most constructive step in improving Australia’s productivity.

Schumacher’s comeback a massive mistake: Moss

London, Apr 28(ANI): British Formula One legend Stirling Moss reckons seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher has made a massive mistake by choosing to make a comeback.

“People are going to say he’s past it now, which he probably is,” The Sun quoted Moss, as saying.

Schumacher has had a nightmare start to his comeback, where he finished sixth and 10th in his first two races in Bahrain and Australia after three years out of the sport.

In the Malaysian Grand Prix, Schumacher retired early in the race, with a faulty wheel nut, while in China he finished 10th after being passed by several other drivers in the wet conditions towards the end of the race.

He has also been outraced by team-mate Nico Rosberg in all four races so far.

The 41-year-old has just 10 points, and is 50 behind reigning world championship leader Jenson Button. (ANI)

Brit Mayor apologizes for comparing illegal immigrants to sperm on Facebook

London, Apr 16(ANI): Great Torrington Mayor, Sue Mills, has made a public apology for posting a joke on her Facebook page comparing illegal immigrants to sperm.

lls wrote: “Illegal immigrants are like sperm – millions of them come in, but only one works.”

While apologizing for the comment, the 50-year-old said: “I accept the comments on my page were out of character and never intended to cause offence.”It was intended as a bit of fun and not designed to upset anyone. I wish to publicly apologize for this mistake and deeply regret any upset I may have caused,” The Telegraph quoted Mills, as saying.

Supporting the Mayor, town clerk Michael Tyghe said: “I have known Sue for sometime now and one thing she is not is racist. This is just a regrettable mistake in my opinion.”

Mills has been on Great Torrington Town Council for seven years and became Mayor in May 2009. (ANI)

Brit Mayor apologizes for comparing illegal immigrants to sperm on Facebook

London, Apr 16(ANI): Great Torrington Mayor, Sue Mills, has made a public apology for posting a joke on her Facebook page comparing illegal immigrants to sperm.

Mills wrote: “Illegal immigrants are like sperm – millions of them come in, but only one works.”

While apologizing for the comment, the 50-year-old said: “I accept the comments on my page were out of character and never intended to cause offence.”

“It was intended as a bit of fun and not designed to upset anyone. I wish to publicly apologize for this mistake and deeply regret any upset I may have caused,” The Telegraph quoted Mills, as saying.

Supporting the Mayor, town clerk Michael Tyghe said: “I have known Sue for sometime now and one thing she is not is racist. This is just a regrettable mistake in my opinion.”

Mills has been on Great Torrington Town Council for seven years and became Mayor in May 2009. (ANI)

Hoon driver hopes others get the message

A 26-year-old Perth man who was caught speeding while taking a car for a test drive says he hopes others will learn from his mistake.

Steven James Atkinson drove a Mini Cooper at more than 70 kilometres over the limit at Beckenham in January.

The car, which belonged to a dealership, was impounded for 28 days under WA’s hoon laws.

Atkinson was originally fined $1,500 and disqualified from driving for ten months.

However, a Perth Magistrate today reduced his fine to $1,300 with a six month licence suspension.

Outside court, Atkinson said he had lost his job as a result of the incident.

“They just basically didn’t say much at all. They said look, given the circumstances you can’t have employment with no licence.”

Atkinson said he hopes his case serves as a warning to others.

Qatari diplomat released after shoe bomb scare

A Qatari diplomat has been released from custody in the US after an incident on a flight from Washington to Denver yesterday.

Two F-16 jets were scrambled to intercept the United Airlines plane and escort it to land safely at Denver airport.

Investigators were told Mohammed al-Madadi had been found smoking in the plane’s toilet and made a joke that he had been trying to light his shoes – an apparent reference to “shoe bomber” Richard Reid.

Qatar’s ambassador says the incident was a “mistake”.

Ratten keeping emotions in check

Carlton coach Brett Ratten admits he has made the mistake of being swept up in the emotion of AFL blockbusters, as he seeks to reverse a winless record against Essendon.

The Blues boss said candidly on Wednesday he had focused too strongly in the past on the history and passion of playing the club’s biggest rivals and led his players down the same path.

The result against the Bombers has been losses in all five matches since Ratten took the job late in 2007.

His aim now is to ignore the hype and treat the big-drawing matches as simply another chance for four points – starting against Essendon at the MCG on Saturday night.

“Is it a bigger build-up (at Carlton) because it’s Essendon or Collingwood? No,” Ratten said.

“We’re going to keep it pretty simple and the way we go about it we won’t try and change too much.

“That’s something that maybe as a coach I got caught up in a little bit myself.

“So we’ll keep it on the straight and narrow or on the medium line, not just escalate your emotions, keep it in check and just make sure we focus on getting the job done.”

He said previously he had erred by mixing tactical instruction with history lessons before big games.

“Sometimes you look back on history and try and educate the players on what’s gone on in the past and maybe that’s been a bigger focus in the Essendon and Collingwood games compared to some of the other games,” he said.

“I think that’s something that this year I made a focus that I don’t want to do that – like, we’ve won the last two or we’ve lost the last two.

“This is at present, this team, the 22 that we can put out versus their 22.

“I know it sounds very simple but maybe then the emotion gets taken out and actually you’re thinking your way through, to make sure the players get the information that they do instead of worrying about is this a bigger build-up.

“The four points at round one versus the four points at round 22 are exactly the same.

“They are simple messages but I think maybe in the past I’ve looked and built these games up a little bit more myself.”

He also dismissed the notion that Carlton had a particularly difficult draw with games against Essendon, Adelaide away and Geelong to come in the next three weeks.

“It doesn’t change for us. It’s amazing – everyone says you’ve got a difficult draw but I’m just looking for the easy part of the draw, where does that come in this?” he said

“I think all the clubs – and how even the competition is – the draw’s very hard for everyone.”

Ratten said that the shape of both Essendon and Carlton had changed this year.

“This is 2010 and their personnel is extremely different from this year to last year – similar to ours, so I think we won’t worry about the past.”

Ratten pointed to Essendon’s loss of Matthew Lloyd, Scott Lucas and Andrew Lovett and Carlton’s departing players Brendan Fevola, Nick Stevens and Cameron Cloke.

Young Socceroos lose to Paraguay

The Young Socceroos have suffered a 2-0 loss to Paraguay’s under 20s in the opening match of their South American tour.

In front of a small crowd at the Libertad Stadium, Australia went down a goal in the third minute after Diego Benitez pounced on a defensive mistake.

Paraguay then went up 2-0 just before half-time when striker Ivan Torres chested down the ball and neatly finished past goalkeeper Alex Pearson.

The second half was more evenly contested, though it was delayed for 20 minutes after the floodlights went off due to a power failure.

Young Socceroos coach Jan Versleijen was optimistic about his team’s performance.

“We came to South America to play quality opposition and that is what we got tonight, our players learnt a lot by the experience,” said Versleijen.

The Young Socceroos, captained by Newcastle Jets star Ben Kantarovski, will face Paraguay again on Thursday before two matches against the Argentina U20s next week.

The tour forms part of the side’s preparations for October’s Asian Under 19s Championship in China, where the top four teams will qualify for next year’s FIFA Under 20s World Cup.