Injured Ghana goal hero faces race against time

(Reuters) – Ghana goal hero Kevin-Prince Boateng faces a week of intensive therapy in a bid to get fit for the World Cup quarter-final after suffering a hamstring injury.

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Boateng scored a fifth minute goal on Saturday to set his side on the way to a 2-1 win over the United States in their second round match in Rustenburg but later limped off in the second half.

Coach Milovan Rajevac said the Germany-born midfielder would face intensive treatment in a bid to be ready for the match against Uruguay at Soccer City in Johannesburg on Friday.

Boateng was among several Ghana players limping after the exertions of the extra time triumph over the Americans at the Royal Bafokeng Stadium.

“Boateng was injured against Germany already. It is going to be a huge problem to get him ready for the next game,” said Rajevac following the record-equaling performance by Ghana, only the third African country to reach the last eight of the World Cup.

NIGGLING INJURIES

Rajevac said there were also other players with niggling injuries. Dede Ayew will also miss the match through suspension after picking a second caution of the tournament.

“We are going to see how the players react in the next days. For me the priority now will be to try and get them all ready for Friday. There is a lot of work ahead for the medical staff.”

The Serbian-born coach praised the efforts of his players who he said had learnt how to compete.

“We played in the African Nations Cup this year without eight important players and managed to reach the final. The team learnt how to compete. The most important thing at this level is to know how to compete,” he said.

“Each victory counts and this is very dear. Ghana is now among the best eight teams in the world. This is fantastic,” he added, keeping a stoical face at the post-match news conference but then breaking into a broad smile once it was over.

Ghana are the only African side left at the World Cup and for a second successive tournament the only team from the continent to get past the first round.

“I think we can claim to be the best team in Africa now if you consider that, plus the fact we reached the Nations Cup final,” added captain John Mensah.

(Editing by Michael Holden)

Joyous Japan fans take dawn dips after Denmark win

(Reuters) – Japanese soccer fans celebrated wildly as dawn broke on Friday and police were called on to fish revelers out of rivers after the national side stunned Denmark 3-1 to reach the second round of the World Cup in South Africa.

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Newspaper headlines boasted of “history in the making” after the Blue Samurai reached the last 16 for the second time, while television viewing figures nudged past 41 percent despite the game finishing just before 5:30 a.m. local time.

The famous “scramble crossing” intersection in Tokyo’s Shibuya district erupted in a crescendo of chanting and drumming as more than 1,000 fans clad in Japan’s blue team shirts hugged as the final whistle blew.

“I’m still shaking, I just can’t believe it,” tearful 21-year-old clothes shop assistant Yuka Higashi told Reuters, shouting to be heard over the noise around her. “Honda’s amazing!”

Midfielder Keisuke Honda scored Japan’s first goal against Denmark in Rustenburg after firing the winner against Cameroon in their opening game.

Screaming fans doused each other with water from plastic bottles at the end of Thursday’s match, gleefully ignoring police loudspeaker warnings to “stop being a nuisance!”

Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, on official business in Canada, sent a message of congratulations to Japan, who arrived at the tournament mired in a miserable run of form but now face Paraguay on Tuesday for a place in the quarter-finals.

“I wish to congratulate the team on their excellent achievement,” Kan said. “The side has given the whole country energy and pride.”

ENERGY DRINKS

Energy drinks were being guzzled by many fans as euphoria gave way to exhaustion and thoughts of a train straight to work.

“I won’t get any sleep now,” 33-year-old banker Tsuyoshi Hamada said, wincing. “Shower and straight to the office. It’s worth it though.”

In Osaka, more than 50 fans plunged into the murky waters of the city’s Dotonbori river in a repeat of the jubilant scenes of 2002 when Japan reached the last 16 as World Cup co-hosts.

“Don’t take the Mickey!” Japan’s Brazilian-born defender Tulio told the Nikkan Sports, warning Paraguay they will not get things all their way in the last 16.

“Every last drop!” blared the Sankei Sports, praising the team’s endeavor after Japan capitalized on their first World Cup win on foreign soil against Cameroon in their opening game.

Former Japan captain Hidetoshi Nakata, who retired from the game in tears after the country’s meek exit from the 2006 finals, added his support.

“That’s the sort of game we’ve wanted to see,” he said. “They’ve grown up at this World Cup. Now let’s hope they can go further than we did in 2002.”

(Editing by John O’Brien)

Aussie Kewell gets one match ban for sending off

(Reuters) – Australian forward Harry Kewell was suspended for one match by FIFA’s disciplinary panel on Sunday following his red card against Ghana on Saturday, FIFA said in a statement.

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He will miss Australia’s next Group D match against Serbia on June 23.

Kewell handled the ball on the line to deny Ghana a certain goal in the 24th minute of Saturday’s game at Rustenburg which ended in a 1-1 draw. Ghana scored from the resulting penalty.

(Editing by Jon Bramley)

Pitch, ball under scrutiny as Slovenia win

South Africa (Reuters) – Slovenia chalked up their first ever World Cup win when a dreadful mistake by Algeria goalkeeper Faouzi Chaouchi handed them a 1-0 victory in their opening Group C match on Sunday.

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Both coaches said afterwards that their sides had struggled to adapt to the new high bouncing World Cup ball and the semi-synthetic pitch in Polokwane, and that that might have been a factor in Chaouchi’s blunder.

Time and again throughout the game, players overhit their passes or failed to tame the ball as it sprang off the surface.

A largely lackluster encounter took a twist in the 73rd minute when Abdelkader Ghezzal was sent off for handball having already been booked within seconds of coming on. The attacking midfielder was only on the pitch for 15 minutes.

Six minutes later Chaouchi fumbled Robert Koren’s harmless looking shot, allowing the ball to squirt through his arms into the bottom left hand corner of his net.

Asked about the playing surface, Koren said: “The turf itself is very fast and it resulted in some mistakes.”

Slovenia’s only previous appearance at a World Cup finals, in 2002, ended in three defeats but Sunday’s win has put them top of the group with three points, two ahead of England and the United States, who drew 1-1 in Rustenburg on Saturday.

“It’s going to be more difficult for us now,” said Algeria coach Rabah Saadane. “Our great opportunity was today against Slovenia and we missed that opportunity.”

Until the goal, the Algerians had been marginally the better side with the bleach-blonde Hassan Yebda bossing their midfield.

But they created few chances with their best opening coming as early as the third minute through a Nadir Belhadj free kick which Samir Handanovic tipped over the bar.

BOUNCING BALL

At the other end, Slovenia created little of note until just before the break when a rasping left foot strike from midfielder Valter Birsa forced an acrobatic save from Chaouchi.

Saadane defended Chaouchi and Ghezzal when asked about the mistakes that had cost his team a share of the points.

“Football is full of mistakes and I don’t want to blame the two players. I think it was perhaps the state of the turf. Both the ball and the turf were difficult for both goalies.”

“The speed and the impact, especially on crosses, was very difficult. The players had to place the balls very carefully.”

Asked if he would drop Chaouchi for the next match against the United States on Friday, Saadane replied: “He is the best goalkeeper we have at the moment. It’s out of the question.”

“He said sorry. He said sorry to the team. But that’s only normal and I don’t want to go back over the incident.”

Slovenia coach Matjaz Kek was also critical of the pitch, which is a mixture of grass and synthetic fibre. This was the first World Cup match ever to be played on it.

“I don’t agree with this turf,” Kek said. “We only got adjusted to it yesterday with 60 minutes of training. I’m not saying this as an excuse because it was the same for us and Algeria. But there are lots of artificial bits and that means it’s a different game.”

England’s draw with the U.S. in the group’s opening match also contained a goalkeeping error, with England’s Robert Green producing a howler to gift the Americans their equalizer.

That match was played on grass.

(Writing by Gideon Long; Additional reporting by Opheera McDoom, Editing by Nigel Hunt)

Bradley expects Howard to be fit for Slovenia

(Reuters) – United States goalkeeper Tim Howard will have a rib injury evaluated later on Saturday but coach Bob Bradley expects him to play against Slovenia in their second Group C match.

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Howard suffered the injury when England striker Emile Heskey slid into him during the first half of the 1-1 draw in Rustenburg on Saturday but carried on after receiving treatment.

“At this point, there is no answer,” Bradley told reporters on Sunday when asked if Howard was doubtful for Friday’s match in Johannesburg.

“When you see the way Timmy handled himself after the collision, you’d certainly expect he will be on the field again.”

“He’ll be evaluated later today and then a decision will be made whether he will need further tests. Obviously he was sore, he did a great job of taking a tough hit, staying in it and playing it really well. We will assess it and figure out how to go on from there.”

The States have Marcus Hahnemann and Brad Guzan available as back-up.

Bradley said that after a tough encounter with England, he expected Friday’s opponent’s Slovenia to offer another style.

“I think it will be a different kind of game, obviously we will watch them but they are a hard working team, well organized and they have an ability to sometimes sit back a little and still catch you on the counter.

“Overall, the pure speed and physicality of Saturday’s game is on the very high end and the Slovenia game, in some ways, might be a little more of a chess match,” he said.

(Writing by Simon Evans; Editing by Jon Bramley)

England players not comfortable with World Cup ball: Capello

London, May 24 (ANI): Coach Fabio Capello has said that the England team is experiencing difficulty in dealing with the World Cup ball.

Capello confirmed that the Adidas “Jalabani” ball is behaving oddly even in the relatively low heights of the squad”s Austrian base-camp.

Capello expects the ball to be even harder to control in the High Veldt, where England kick off their campaign against the USA in Rustenburg, 1200 metres above sea level, on June 12.

“We selected Austria so that the players would understand more the way the ball behaves. It”s completely different. Irdning is not as high as Johannesburg or Rustenburg but still the ball movement is completely new. That is why the players have to use the ball every day in training. That will be really important,” the Mirror quoted Capello, as saying.

“I”ve seen that the ball arrives really fast and the players are having problems controlling it. For the goalkeepers it is terrible because it is always moving. For this reason every training session ends with shooting practice at the keepers, to prepare the players for the movement of the ball,” he added. (ANI)

England players watching TV wearing oxygen masks to prepare for World Cup altitude

London, May 21 (ANI): England players are reportedly watching television wearing oxygen masks in preparation for the high altitude that will greet them at World Cup venues in South Africa.

Capello has flown the players to Irdning, a tiny resort 2,400 feet above sea level high in the Austrian Alps to get his squad ready for South Africa.

According to The Mirror, Capello’s altitude training includes the players wearing the masks for an hour every day, rotating them five minutes on and five minutes off.

The masks pump air with lower concentrations of oxygen to simulate the effects of altitude while the players can watch TV, read or run on treadmills.

It is part of Capello’s painstaking attention to detail in his World Cup preparations and Milner says the training base – nearly 200 miles from the nearest Austrian city of Graz – is ideal to get the players focused.

Meanwhile, the players involved in Saturday’s FA Cup final have now joined the squad in Austria.

Seven out of the ten stadiums in South Africa range from 2,165 feet to a mile above sea level while England’s base in Rustenburg is 4,920 feet.

It will take some getting used to for the players but the training pitch – a 15 minute drive from their luxury mountain golf hotel – is in perfect condition. (ANI)

Capello wants Beckham for England’s World Cup camp in South Africa

London, Mar 16(ANI): England manager Fabio Capello has told injured midfielder David Beckham that he can still be with the team for this summer’s World Cup in South Africa.

Capello has told Beckham that he is welcome to be a guest during the England camp in Rustenburg, as he believes the midfielder can have a positive influence on his World Cup squad by being around.

Beckham is out of the tournament after rupturing his left Achilles tendon during AC Milan’s Serie A game against Chievo at the San Siro on Sunday.

The 34-year-old had a successful two-hour operation in Finland on Monday, but he is not expected to play before September.

Capello also suggested that Beckham could recover in time to participate fully in the European Championship qualifying campaign, which will begin in September.

Beckham will be 37 by the time the tournament in Poland and Ukraine comes around in the summer of 2012, but the incentive of playing for England again has been spelt out to him as he begins his rehabilitation.

Doctors are optimistic that he can make a full recovery, and certain media reports have suggested that the setback will not force Beckham into retirement.

“David will play football again. There is no doubt in his mind about that. He is devastated he”ll miss the World Cup, but this isn”t the end of his career,” The Sun quoted a close friend, as saying.

Beckham will spend a couple of days in Finland before flying to London, where he will stay for around a week before his departure for Los Angeles. (ANI)

FIFA: Waiting for list of WCup training camps

SUN CITY, South Africa — FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke said Tuesday he still doesn’t know where all 32 World Cup teams will be based during the tournament in South Africa.

FIFA wanted the list of training camps completed on Tuesday, but those plans have been derailed by teams still changing their plans ahead of the event, which starts June 11.

With more than three months to go, organizers still face problems with Soccer City _ the incomplete Johannesburg venue for the opening match and final. Organizers also need to fill stadiums and handle the scrutiny on England’s proposed training camp.

“If the question is ‘Could we host the World Cup tomorrow morning?’ the answer is no,” Valcke said after a meeting in Sun City.

“At this stage, we couldn’t play the World Cup because Soccer City isn’t ready. At this stage, we couldn’t play the opening game. That’s a fact. At this stage we have 700,000 tickets still to sell, at this stage I can make a list of things that aren’t ready for the World Cup.

“We have 108 days _ it seems short, it is short, but even if we have to stay awake all night, every day we will be ready by the time of the World Cup.”

Valcke’s comments came after a feisty exchange with reporters about the state of several training camps. FIFA still hasn’t had confirmation from England that it will be based at the Royal Bafokeng Sports Campus near Rustenburg. There was concern about the state of its training field and accommodations.

Valcke on Monday was part of a high-level delegation featuring top African soccer officials who inspected it along with England coach Fabio Capello.

Capello said he is ready to sign the contracts and expects the training fields to be ready in time for the finals.

“We checked everything and it improved a lot from the last time we stayed here,” Capello said. “The pitches are good and will be better for June. The hotel is really, really nice and the medical center will be ready in two months. I’m really, really happy because it’s the third time I’ve stayed here and the facilities are fantastic.

“We visited four different places and this was the best.”

Valcke also spoke about the accommodations.

“The rooms are there _ there is a welcome desk where you can pay, a breakfast area where you can eat. There was a Sony television and internet in the room,” Valcke said. “At the time of the World Cup, the FA (Football Association) need the 68 rooms, the medical center and pitches. There are two which are being worked on by an Irish company who are experts in grass. We have been told the medical center will be built on time.”

Valcke was also frustrated that England’s Group C rival Algeria has yet to decide where it will be based. South Africa announced Sunday it had been forced to move from a base that was badly run down.

Meanwhile, South Africa’s tourism ministry has ordered an investigation into allegations that hotel prices are unreasonably high during the tournament.

The probe into hotel prices follows an investigation announced last month into whether South African airlines are colluding to inflate prices during the World Cup.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Capello warns WAGs World Cup in South Africa is no holiday

London, Sep 11 (ANI): England coach Fabio Capello has laid down strict laws for WAGs, and is determined that team takes the World Cup in South Africa seriously.

England’s last trip to the World Cup finals turned into a circus when the WAGs took over the picturesque town of Baden Baden in Germany. There were parties every night and the players were in almost daily contact with their loved ones.

Capello insisted that his stars will not go to the tournament for a holiday, and warned their wives and girlfriends: “If you don’t like it, don’t come.”

Capello has ruled that his current squad can have just one day with their partners and families after each game next summer. And that will be the only socialising allowed.

The 63-year-old Italian, whose team qualified for the finals, said: “I hope this period that we are at the World Cup will be very long. The players will have one day with their family, with the girls and friends. It will be one day a week, after each game and that is enough. That’s it.”

Asked if there was any danger it could be like Baden Baden, Capello replied: “No, absolutely not. Please. If they do not want to come for the day, then they should stay home. I like what we’ve had at training where the players stay together. We are going there to play, not for a holiday.”

Stars like Rio Ferdinand and Frank Lampard have admitted the WAGs’ presence affected the team under Sven Goran Eriksson in the 2006 World Cup, where Portugal won their quarterfinal on penalties, The Sun reports.

Some of the WAGs have started planning for South Africa, checking accommodation in Rustenburg, England’s most likely training base. (ANI)