Portsmouth end nightmare tour with drubbing in Washington

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Inside Line: Mayor Visits Apprentices as Council Creates Jobs

Young people from Middlesbrough striving for a career in the motor industry have
received a major boost with the creation of a number of paid training roles.
LONDON–(Business Wire)–
Redcar & Cleveland Borough Council has teamed up with leading skills provider
System Training to invest money into the employment of young people aged 16-19
in the area. Mayor Ray Goddard and the Lady Mayoress took time to meet
apprentices and their training team at System Training`s facility at Queensway,
Middlesborough.

Eighteen apprentices have been placed on funded Fast Fit Apprenticeships with
System Training, which sees the youngsters undertake the first phase of a
potential three-year apprenticeship that gives them upfront practical training
in various aspects of the industry as well as providing classroom-based learning
that leads to nationally-recognised qualifications and an opportunity to move
into full-time employment upon completion of the course.

The innovative apprenticeship model and allows candidates to make a genuine
contribution to potential employers from the moment they start work.

In addition to the apprenticeship roles, System Training has expanded its
presence in Middlesbrough and taken on four new members of staff at its local
office – an administrator, an apprentice co-ordinator and two vocational
trainers – meaning additional quality jobs have been created in the area.

With 200 candidates now placed with a variety of different training providers
borough-wide, Redcar & Cleveland Borough Council is pleased its partnerships are
delivering employment and contributing to the overall regeneration of the
region.

Ray Goddard, The Mayor of Redcar & Cleveland, said:
“We`ve been delighted with the enthusiasm and commitment of the apprentices and
it clearly shows the desire of young people in the region to work. Our Routes to
Employment team and System Training have worked closely together to deliver this
exciting new initiative to offer training and employment opportunities to our
young residents in the motor vehicle repair trade.”

Tony Higgins of System Training said:

“It`s a great achievement for us to help create some many jobs for young people
in the region. The model is new and our approach has ensured that apprentices
are fully trained when they go into their work placements, reducing the risk for
employers and actually allowing the apprentices to make a real difference at
work.”

This information was brought to you by Cision http://www.cisionwire.com

Further information on System Training and its training and workforce
development solutions is available from:
Stephanie Norman
t: 01228 574024
e: Stephanie.norman@system-training.com

Follow System Training on Twitter at www.twitter.com/systemtraining

Media contact:
Glenn Patterson
The Inside Line
m: 07872 470115
e: glenn@the-inside-line.co.uk

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Indian ruggers confident after NZ, Fiji tours: Davey

New Delhi, Jun 5 (PTI) Rugby India”s Development Manager Greg Davey feels the recent training-cum-competition trips to New Zealand and Fiji have helped iron out flaws in the team”s preparation for this year”s Commonwealth Games. “New Zealand and Fiji tours have given boys the confidence required at the international level.

They trust themselves more, they believe in their strengths. They have learned to take decisions quickly on the field and have rectified their mistakes,” Davey told PTI. “They were exposed to some great teams during the tour.

Now I would like to see the boys applying these skills in tournaments like Shanghai Sevens, Buenos Aires Sevens and the big Delhi Commonwealth Games,” he added. During their three-week trip, the 23-member Indian contingent met former champions and legends of the game, visited state-of-the-art gymnasiums, world class pitches and fitness professionals and competed in a few practice matches.

“The trip was very important keeping the Commonwealth Games in mind. Boys need to step up their performance and produce good results in front of home crowd.

What matters is attitude and aggression. They have the killer instinct in them and need to show that on the field against opponents,” said Davey.

On the Indians” performance in the just-concluded Asian5 Nations Rugby tournament where they finished runners-up after losing to lowly ranked Philippines 12-34 in the summit clash, Davey said it was disheartening to see the team lose after coming so close to the title triumph. “We had prepared hard for the tournament and that showed in our performance.

But we faltered at the last hurdle. Anyway the tournament has given us many positives and we hope to continue our good form” he said.

The New Zealander said inclusion of youngsters in the team was a positive step taken by the national federation and “it will pay rich dividends in the future.” “It”s a good step taken in right direction.

It”s good for the overall development of the team. But the young guns need to prove their talent to retain their place in the side,” he said.

In Davey”s native New Zealand, rugby is the most popular sport and he foresees the sport to become as popular in cricket-mad India as well. “I think in two-three years, we can have 50,000 players, a good scenario for India.

There is a need to build the strong foundation at the school and college level. I believe Rugby has what it takes to appeal to sport loving Indians,” he said.

Davey is aiming to put in place a proper coaching and administrative infrastructure to ensure all-round growth of the sport.

FEATURE-Syria grapples with surging population

DAMASCUS, June 3 (Reuters) – Ibrahim Issa, a jovial Syrian taxi-driver who wears a blue robe over an ample belly, has nine children from two wives. He plans to marry a third wife soon.

He says it is up to Allah whether more children arrive, and not for him to interfere, say, by using contraception. Like all Damascus taxi-drivers, he complains about the cost of living and how hard it is to make ends meet on the $300 a month he earns.

Issa, 43, shrugs when asked if all those mouths to feed don’t make life harder for him. “No, I’m delighted,” he grins.

Syria now has a population of 20 million people, with a growth rate that remains one of the world’s highest at about 2.4 percent. But it has declined since averaging 3.2 percent from 1947-94, according to the Syrian Commission for Family Affairs.

“We have a population problem, no question,” said Nabil Sukkar, a Syrian economist formerly with the World Bank. “Unless we cope with it, it could be a burden on our development.”

He said labour supply was growing about 4.5 percent a year, due to rapid population expansion in earlier decades, outpacing the capacity of Syria’s economy to create jobs for the quarter of a million youngsters arriving on the job market every year.

“Too big a population means a high burden on government services, such as education, electricity and health care,” he said. “Perhaps in 20 years the growth rate will go down to 1.5 percent as in Egypt, but in the meantime we do have a problem.”

The official unemployment rate is around 10 percent, but independent estimates put it at anywhere up to 25 percent.

DISPARATE FERTILITY RATES

Syrian women have an average of 3.6 children each, but this masks big disparities between cities and the countryside.

Despite the efforts of men like Issa the taxi-driver, fertility rates in Damascus and three other governorates are set to fall from 2 to 2.5 children per woman now to 1.4 to 2 by 2025, below the replacement rate of 2.1 children per woman.

In the seven least-developed of Syria’s 14 governorates, women have between 3.8 and 6.2 children. Their fertility rates are not expected to decline much in the next 15 years.

Demographers say urbanisation and the spread of education, especially among girls and women, are among the most potent forces that eventually curb population growth across the world.

Syria’s minority Christians, who tend to be well-educated citydwellers with high aspirations, provide a good example.

“My grandfather had eight children, my father had four and I have only two,” said Samer Lahham, who runs ecumenical affairs at the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate in the Syrian capital.

“Now maybe after five years each family will have only one because of economic problems, education costs, living costs.”

Religion as such is irrelevant, said Lebanese demographer Riad Tabbarah. “Development brings education, which is a crucial factor because it increases the cost of raising children. Once education and modernisation set in, fertility falls.”

Syria, only now emerging from a socialist-style command economy, has modernised more slowly than nearby Lebanon, where fertility is already below the replacement rate and where the Lebanese have long yearned for lifestyles beyond their means.

“What affects fertility is also the difference between your income and your conventional standard,” Tabbarah said.

Contact with the outside world often gives people a taste for cars or other goods they can only afford by having fewer children, he said. “In Syria, that exposure came slowly and they still have a high fertility level, but it’s coming down.”

COMMUNICATION REVOLUTION

The aspirations of Syrians, like Arabs elsewhere, are now rising because of satellite TV, mobile phones and the Internet. “Young citizens are likely to have greater expectations than their parents, with readier access to regional and international media,” a Western diplomat said. “Even remote villages have satellite dishes. Many Syrians work abroad and return.”

Youngsters may be delaying marriage in places like Damascus, partly because they spend years in higher education and partly because they then cannot meet the traditional marriage costs.

A 32-year-old philosophy graduate said he was still single and lived with his parents because he could not afford the apartment that any bride would demand, even though he drives a taxi to supplement what he makes working at a government clinic.

“There are so many like me,” said the frustrated young man, refusing to be named. “It’s enough to drive people to crime.”

In rural areas, families are often large because it is relatively cheap to raise children until they are nine or 10 and can start working in the fields or earning money elsewhere.

Until modernisation prompts people who lack knowledge or access to contraceptives to desire fewer children, family planning advice is likely to fall on deaf ears. “Before that, nobody wants it. After that, nobody needs it,” Tabbarah said.

Giving girls a chance to go to school is a vital element in tackling Syria’s population challenges, said Etab Altaqee at the U.N. Population Fund, which works with the Syrian government.

Altaqee said some community-level efforts in the northeast had yielded small but encouraging results.

“In one of the poorest villages, the girls were saying we want to continue our education, but we need a bus because our fathers won’t allow us to go to school by ourselves,” she said. “It was as easy as that, just to provide them with transport.” (Editing by Samia Nakhoul)

40pc US teens sexually active, prefer rhythm method of birth control: Study

New York, June 4 (ANI): Forty percent teen girls aged 15 to 19 say they”ve had sex at least once and prefer the rhythm method of birth control, according to new statistics.

The report also found that youngsters are casual about pregnancy, which researchers say may help explain why the teen pregnancy rate is no longer dropping, as it was earlier.

Overall, teenage use birth control methods and teen attitudes toward pregnancy have remained about the same since a similar survey was done in 2002.

There are some bright results too – more girls prefer the rhythm method— timing sex to avoid fertile days to prevent getting pregnant— probably along with another form of birth control. That”s up from 11 percent in 2002.

However, the rhythm method is only 75 per cent effective.

The survey results were based on face-to-face interviews with nearly 2,800 teens ages 15 through 19 at their homes in the years 2006 through 2008.

“We”ve known the decline in childbearing stalled out. This report kind of fills in the why,” The New York Daily News quoted Bill Albert, a spokesman for the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy. (ANI)

Qadir welcomes Akhtar’s inclusion

Karachi, May 26 (IANS) Pakistan’s legendary leg-spinner Abdul Qadir has welcomed the inclusion of Shoaib Akhtar in the national team for Asia Cup and England tour.

The former Test cricketer said the selectors took the right decision by including the pacer in the preliminary squad.

‘It’s a good decision, Shoaib Akhtar is a kind of bowler who can alone win matches for his team,’ said the former spinner.

Qadir, also a former chief selector said Salman Butt should be named the deputy of captain Shahid Afridi for team’s upcoming assignments.

‘Salman Butt is in good form and is a permanent member of the team, he should be named vice captain,’ he said.

On reviewing the ban on players, the former star said there should be no double standards and all the players should be forgiven if PCB wants to remove the ban against the players.

‘PCB should deal with all the players equally if it wants to lift the ban against the players, removing bans from one or two players would not be fair for other players,’ he said.

Qadir also called for a back-up team of youngsters which he said would pressurise the senior players to perform.

‘A back-up team is a must as it would add pressure on senior players to perform,’ he said.

Where talent is groomed, foundations are laid

When S Chikkarangappa broke the news of having begun playing golf to his parents, the biggest grouse his father had was that it wasn’t ‘their kind of sport’. “Our relatives used to tell him that it was a rich man’s game,” says the Bangalore player whose family lives on a farm in the village of Rangagodaddi.

Luckily for Indian golf, Chikkarangappa had enough persuasive powers to convince his father and the Golf Foundation had already been established.

Amit Luthra realised the need of supporting golfers who had the talent but not the means to stick to the sport when Ashok Kumar, who caddied for the 1982 Asian Games gold winner once in a while, wanted to play full-time. The Foundation, currently funded by HSBC, tries to do that and a little more.

“We keep around 10 players on our rolls at any time, with the two main criteria being talent and financial need,” Luthra says. “Then we give each of them a fixed monthly emolument, arrange for their travel for tournaments throughout India and sometimes abroad, pick up the tab for their training with any coach of their choice in India, help them with equipment and apparel and find them a sponsor.”

But apart from finances, as board member and Delhi Golf Club coach Nonita Lall Qureshi explains, the organisation also helps the youngsters get a “kickstart in life through golf”. English lessons and classes on formal table manners are also a regular feature. “The lack of education or knowledge of English can often turn out to be a big setback when you travel abroad. It can come as quite a shock, sometimes bringing out all their insecurities,” Qureshi says. “We just try to prepare them best for all situations.”

The list of players is reassessed each year, and non-performers can even be dropped. There is no age limit for the player to be picked up, but Qureshi says once a player turns professional, they don’t keep him on the list for more than two years. “That’s when you’re expected to support yourself,” she adds.

On the current list, Rudresh Sharma is the only professional; most others are juniors. Chikka and Rashid Khan were on the roster for long, but have been graduated recently. “I was gifted a ladies club set by a member at Eagleton when I started. The only set that I’ve used after that is the one that the Foundation helped me get,” says Chikka.

Asian tennis championship to test Indian juniors

New Delhi, May 23 (IANS) Indian youngsters will test themselves against promising players from the region as the Asian Junior Tennis Championships begin at the DLTA complex here Monday.

The competition is a test event for the October 3-14 Commonwealth Games.

The top billing in the boys event has gone to Chinese Chuhan Wang, who last week here lost the high-quality ITF boys’ final against compatriot Bowen Ouyang, who is seeded second in the 64-player draw.

In the girls section, Chinese Zi Yang, seeded fourth, will be bolstered by her last week’s straight-set triumph over Indian Kyra Shroff in the girls’ ITF event.

Shroff, who made a last minute entry in this tournament, has been handed a wild card and she is seeded 10th.

National champion Ankita Raina would like to live up to her potential while Natasha Palha would like to stretch her last week’s good form after her quarter-final appearance.

Among India boys, fifth-seeded Ronit Bisht, who lost to Chuhan in the semi-finals last week, would get another chance to prove his mettle.

Sai Nakireddi, who is the highest seeded Indian in the draw at fourth place, is also in good touch.

The last-minute pullouts and lack of entries led to the cancellation of the qualifying rounds. All the players who had lined up for the qualifiers were drafted into the main draw. The top four seeds in both the events have got a bye in the first round.

Agricultural Sciences taught in Bihar school

Bakhtiyarpur (Bihar), May 21 (ANI): Students at a government-run school in Bihar”s Bakhtiyarpur town are being taught Agricultural Sciences as a subject, to revive the interest of youngsters towards farming.

Apart from conventional education, the students in the age group of 10-15 years are getting exposed to various facets of agriculture at a young age, which they are enthusiastically putting into practice in their own backyards as well.

“Earlier, we didn”t know anything about how the green vegetables and rice are grown. But in this school, our teachers taught us how to do farming and grow green vegetables. We gained immense knowledge about agriculture,” said Chandani Kumari, a student.

“We use this knowledge at home as well and we grow vegetables on the roof of our school building as well,” she added.

Shivram Sharma, Principal of the Sabnima Middle School, said the initiative would prepare youngsters to take up farming as a profession.

“Increasing population and decrease in agricultural knowledge will result in the problem of crop deficit in future. So, to prevent this situation we are teaching students about scientific farming,” said Sharma. (ANI)

Cheryl Cole ‘refusing to sign new £1mn X Factor contract’

London, May 20 (ANI): Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole is said to have refused to sign her new 1million pounds X Factor contract until she knows who will replace co-judge Dannii Minogue.

Cole, 26, also wants a promise that her pregnant pal Minogue will not be permanently replaced.

Minogue, 38, will miss out on the auditions stage when it starts next month, and producers plan to have guest judges to fill in for her alongside 50-year-old Simon Cowell and Louis Walsh, 57.

“It’s getting very close to the start of The X Factor auditions and Cheryl has not yet signed on the dotted line,” the Daily Star quoted a show source as saying.

“It would ruin her X Factor experience not to have another ‘girly girl’ like Dannii to laugh and joke with and gang up with against the lads.

“There’s been talk about Mel B whom Cheryl is quite frightened of.

“She is also mindful of the fact any youngsters may try to upstage her in the fashion stakes,” the source added.

All the judges are set for a showdown meeting at Cowell’s London mansion next week, and Minogue, who is back in Australia and due to give birth in July, will join them via a conference call.

The new series of The X Factor is scheduled for August. (ANI)

Hampshire police unveil new ‘Noddy car’ for patrols

London, May 20 (ANI): Hampshire Police have unveiled a 1,000-pound, pedal-powered patrol car complete with siren and flashing lights.

PC Keith Waller believes that engaging youngsters to construct the trendy Noddy-car vehicle for the British Pedal Car Grand Prix will help the community.

“Getting youngsters involved gives them something to focus on so they are not committing antisocial behaviour,” The Times quoted him as saying.

He spent 40 hours building it with teenagers at Ringwood Comprehensive School to try to make the image of the police “cooler”, but he admitted that it drew comparisons with Mr Plod from Noddy. (ANI)

Narender Modi says only talks can resolve Maoist issue

Aligarh (Uttar Pradesh), May 20 (ANI): Gujarat Chief Minister Narender Modi on Thursday said only talks can resolve the Maoist issue.

In a seemingly contradicting statement Modi said: “The Maoist issue can be solved through talks. The BJP is forcing the government to take harsh steps on them.”

“It is very sad to see that the youngsters are getting themselves involved in the Maoist group,” he added.

The BJP had on Tuesday demanded that Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh should bring the debate on Maoists problem to an end by clarifying his stand on the issue.

“Looking at the seriousness of the issue, the time has come when the Prime Minister should bring this debate to an end. He has to now stand up and clarify his stand,” said senior BJP leader Arun Jaitley.

“The stand will have to clarify why the security agencies, the Home Minister, Home Ministry is finding themselves to be weak and crippled against this fight with the Maoists,” he added.

In the latest incident, about 35 people were killed when Maoists blew up a private bus near Dantewada in Chhattisgarh.

The bus was on its way from Dantewada to Sukma. The incident took place near Chingawaram, about nine kilometers from Sukma.

The bus was carrying 20 special police officers (SPO) and over 30 civilians. (ANI)

‘Binge listening’ in clubs causes hearing loss

Sydney, May 19 (ANI): Forget about binge drinking, it is ‘binge listening’ that’s harming the youngsters who go clubbing.

Youngsters in Australians are apparently showing early signs of hearing loss due to night outs at pubs and clubs, where they get exposed to three weeks” worth of noise in one night.

In a new survey, Harvey Dillon, the director of research at the National Acoustic Laboratories, found that out of the 1000 people quizzed, more than two-thirds of young people reported hearing loud music at venues such as nightclubs and pubs. He also measured the sound exposure of eight people.

“Most people were getting almost no noise until they went out on the weekend, and then they were getting up to three weeks” worth of noise in one night,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Dillon, as saying.

He insisted that most people were unaware of the risks of being exposed to loud music.

He said: “Of those with the highest exposure to dangerous noise about 6 per cent thought they had no risk of hearing damage and 20 per cent thought they had a very small risk.

“You never notice the small losses but even occasional damage causes permanent hearing loss and eventually it accumulates and you do notice,” he said. (ANI)

Radio rules the roost as most trusted source of news in UK

London, May 19 (ANI): Video has not, after all, killed the radio star if a UK Office of Communications survey is to be gone by, as according to it, radio has emerged as the most trusted source of news in the UK ahead of TV and the Internet.

Ofcom, the independent telecom regulator for the UK, found that 66% of people considered radio to be reliable and accurate, compared with 58% for online, 54% for TV and just 34% for newspapers.

This year has been a lean one for the once infallible Television, with the Internet pipping it to bag the position of the second most trusted source for the first time.

However there was significant difference of opinion between adults and youngsters regarding the subject of reliability of news websites, with just 3 out of 10 adults rating them as “reliable and accurate”

According to the BBC, the survey, of 1,824 people over the age of 16, was conducted in 2009.

The survey also found the use of digital TV, Internet and mobile phones had increased since 2007.

About three quarters (73%) of adults used the Internet in 2009, up from two thirds (63%) in 2007, while 91% of the population used a mobile phone.

Half of all Internet users said that using the Internet had increased their contact with friends or family who lived further away, and about a quarter said it had increased their contact with friends who live nearby.

Social networking sites such as Facebook were among the most popular sites, with 35% of respondents regularly using the Internet to keep in touch with family and friends.

Reiterating the soaring popularity of online social networking, the survey found that twice as many Internet users had a social networking site profile (44%) compared with 2007, the BBC reports. (ANI)

Experience gives Aussies advantage says Clarke

Australia captain Michael Clarke believes his team’s superior big match experience will give them a “huge advantage” in Sunday’s Twenty20 World Cup final against England.

Seven of the likely Australian starting line-up have featured in a World Cup or Champions Trophy final while England skipper Paul Collingwood is the only from his team to have played such a game — back in 2004.

“The guys who have taken part in big cricket matches — it doesn’t necessarily have to be a final — have a huge advantage,” said Clarke.

“There were probably guys in our squad that were picked not only because they are great Twenty20 players but have experience as well, World Cup experience, big test match experience.

“Having a few senior players around will help the youngsters control their emotions.”

The four Australians without final experience are 20-year-old leg spinner Steve Smith, left-arm pace bowler Dirk Nannes and Twenty20 specialists Dave Warner and David Hussey.

The other big difference between the two line-ups is that England’s features three South African-born players and an Irishman in their top five batsmen.

Collingwood is the only player born in England in that top order, a dominance by foreign born players that would be hard to imagine for an Australian team.

“Never say never,” said Clarke with a grin when asked if such a scenario would be possible.

“I haven’t seen it yet in my career, though. But if you asked the guys playing in that England team if they’re proud to be a part of that side I’m certain they’d say yes.

“Kevin Pietersen’s got the Lions tattooed on his arms, so he’s obviously very proud of playing for England.

“Every single player in that England team will come out and try their best, as will we,” said the Australia skipper.

Australia reached the final thanks to an astonishing comeback against Pakistan in St. Lucia on Friday and Clarke said rather than put that game aside, he wanted his team to remember what it showed about them.

AMAZING GAMES

“I don’t think I want the guys to forget that. I think that memory will stick in my mind for the rest of my career. It’s one of the most amazing games of cricket I’ve been involved in,” he said.

“I think we need to understand and accept that game’s gone. But just keep in the back of your mind that what we showed the other day could happen out here as well.”

Mike Hussey hit 60 off 24 balls as Australia hit 23 off the last over to win their semi-final against Pakistan in dramatic style, having looked out of the game.

“In our minds, we need to be very confident that we’re never out of the game, we always have a chance,” he said.

“There will certainly be tough times in the game tomorrow. We’re going to be under pressure, not be getting as many wickets as we’d like or as many runs off a certain over or certain bowler.

“But the acceptance is that, with our team, we can chase whatever total, or bowl a team out for what we need,” he said.

Clarke said though that he was under no illusions that his team would need to be at their very best against England.

“England are a very good team, they have shown that in this tournament they have beaten a lot of good teams and will be tough to beat tomorrow,” he said.

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

Gordon Brown jokes about needing PR lessons after losing Prime Ministership

London, May 14 (ANI): Gordon Brown, not exactly known for his delightful confab skills, revealed a latent lighter side by saying that he needed PR lessons following his poor showing at this year’s General Elections.

His remarks met with resounding applause and laughter from a gathering of students at Adam Smith College in Kirkcaldy, Brown’s Constituency.

””I was actually thinking of coming in today and applying for the course on communication skills, then I thought I might do public relations, then maybe media management, drama and performance,” the Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

Previously, a former First Minster had described the former British Prime Minister as a “dour Scot” with little charm, the paper reports.

He also thanked the students for allowing him to retain his Chancellorship of the institute.

””I may have given up one job but the job that I love in politics is to be your Member of Parliament and I hope we”ll be able to work together,’’ he said.

He also exhorted the students to be kind and compassionate, saying it wasn’t buildings but ””thousands of acts of kindness and service and compassion to each other,”” that made a vibrant community .

Brown said he wanted to help and encourage young people to get involved in community projects and to keep youngsters off the streets. (ANI)

Omar Abdullah accuses separatists of ”arming” valley”s youth with stones

Srinagar, May 14 (ANI): Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah has hit out at the separatists in the region for allegedly ruining the mind-set of youngsters by handing over stones to them to be pelted at security personnel.

Addressing a public meet here on Thursday, Abdullah said: “The state government is trying to curb the trends of stone-pelting by offering certain constructive and progressive prospects to the youth.”

“There are political outfits here which capitalise on the problems of the masses to survive. Their political agenda is met when people die. They would never want that the issue of Jammu and Kashmir is resolved because the day the issue of Jammu and Kashmir is resolved, their very existence will be over,” he added.

“The day people stop dying, their existence will be over; the day there will be no need of strike, their existence will be over. These are the same people who deliver stones to the youngsters,” he said.

Three civilians including a seven-day-old toddler were killed and hundreds other injured in the valley region when unknown miscreants pelted stones during the protests in last couple of months.

He also spoke against the Indus Water Treaty between India and Pakistan.

“As per the terms of the treaty, Pakistan has exclusive rights over waters of three rivers Chenab, Jhelum and Indus, which originate from Jammu and Kashmir, while India has exclusive rights over waters of rivers Ravi, Satluj and Beas in Punjab,” he said.

“Three rivers of Punjab are with India, three rivers of Jammu and Kashmir were handed over to Pakistan. We (Kashmiris) don”t have right over utilisation of our own waters,” he added. (ANI)

Brit girl, 8, lied to mum about rape, fearing ”she wouldn”t get any sweets”

London, May 14 (ANI): An eight-year-old girl in England, who was allegedly raped by two 10-year-old boys last October, has admitted in a court that she lied to her mother about the incident because she feared she would not get any sweets.

In the trial at the Old Bailey, the child confessed that all three kids had pulled down their own underwear.

She believed it was a “naughty” act, and had not wished to tell it to her mother.

The girl answered the questions of Linda Strudwick, who represented the older boy, via videolink connecting her to the court.

On October 29 last year, the girl she had been playing outside her house in Hayes, west London with the boys.

The court heard how the girl joined the older boys and then they all went into a block of flats, then a bin shed next to the flats, followed by a field nearby. It is there that the alleged rape took place.

Strudwick asked about the moment the youngsters exposed themselves to each other, in a form of “I”ll show you mine if you show me yours”, reports The Telegraph.

Referring to her client, she said: “He took his pants down… The younger boy took his pants down… and you took your knickers down?”

To each question, the girl replied “yeah”.

Strudwick said: “That was a little bit naughty, but nothing too terrible. You were all giggling at the time because it was naughty and it was silly.”

The girl smiled and said shyly: “Yeah.”

Strudwick said: “You knew that you had done something that was naughty? You didn”t want your mum to find out because if your mum found out, no sweeties.

“When your mum came up to you, your mum was not looking very pleased with you? You knew you were going to get into trouble?”

Again, each time the girl replied: “Yeah.”

Strudwick said: “You told her the boys had taken your knickers down because you didn”t want your mother to think that you had been naughty? Is that right?”

The girl replied: “Yeah.”

Justice Saunders asked: “What were you worried about with your mother?”

“No sweeties,” the girl replied.

“Because if you had been naughty you would get no sweeties? Had you been naughty?

“A tiny bit,” said the girl.

Justice Saunders then told the child she had done nothing wrong.

“I am a judge and I know when people have done anything wrong, you have done nothing wrong,” he said.

The boys, now aged 11 and 10, have denied two charges each of rape and two charges each of attempted rape of a child under 13.

The trial continues. (ANI)

Viswanathan Anand”s parents proud of him becoming ”King of Chess”

Chennai (Tamil Nadu), May 12 (ANI): Parents of Viswanathan Anand expressed their delight at his winning the ”World Chess Champion” against Veselin Topalov in Sofia, Bulgaria, making it his third title in a row and fourth overall.

Thrilled with his victory, Anand”s parents said that his hard work, dedication and superior play has paid off.

“He was really working very hard for this match because Topalov is a tough player also, and the match was going to take place in Sofia, which is Tolpalov” hometown so people will be rooting for him,” said Sushila, mother of Viswanathan Anand.

“So, against all these odds, Anand played, and I was only hoping and wishing that he gets enough strength to face all this,” she added.

“Anand is the author of one-man revolution of chess. When Anand was starting his chess career, chess was not popular. Today, it has become so popular and it is looked forward by the youngsters because of the inspiration which Anand has given,” said Viswanathan Iyer, father of Viswanathan Anand.

“Now, he has added one more button to his progress and that means one more flower. So it must be added millions of admirers all over the world,” he claimed proudly.

Viswanathan Anand defeated Veselin Topalov with consummate ease on Tuesday. He won the game 6.5-5.5 in the 12th round of the play.

He had earlier won the championship in 2002, 2008, 2009, and has retained the title with this win.

Anand earned 1.2 million euros through this win. (ANI)

Many western youth wanting to join ‘jihad’ after failed Times Square bombing: Taliban

New York, May 10 (ANI): The bungled Times Square bombing plot has actually helped the Taliban gain wide scale publicity which has resulted in more and more youngsters like Faisal Shahzad wanting to join the ‘jihad’ (holy war) against the west, a top Afghan Taliban leader has said.

“We”ve got more publicity from this one failed bombing in New York than from more than 100 bombings in Afghanistan,” a report in the Newsweek magazine quoted the high-ranking Taliban commander, as saying.

The report, however, didn’t disclose the name of the Taliban commander.

He claimed that there are many foreign youngsters like Shahzad, the naturalised American citizen of Pakistan origin who is accused of plotting the Times Square bombing, who send e-mails seeking to join the terror outfit.

“With all this new technology, it”s not difficult to recruit people in the West. It”s hard to contact Al Qaeda. But it”s very easy to get in touch with the Pakistani Taliban,” the Daily News quoted Taliban commander, as adding in the report.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has denied any role in the failed bombing plot, but has praised Shahzad’s ‘noble’ work.

However, US agencies are probing the possibility of the TTP and other banned terror group such as the Jaish-e-Muhammed (JeM) financing and helping Shahzad in getting trained in bomb making. (ANI)