Spanish flair, Dutch connection liven local fans

(Reuters) – At a morning kick around on a dirt soccer pitch in South Africa’s Soweto township, there is only one team the boys all want to emulate — Spain.

“They play such easy, one-touch football. Tap and push, tap and push, then shoot and goal!” said Dumisani Motye, 13, lining up the ball repeatedly to try and curl shots like David Villa.

The Spanish striker and World Cup joint-top scorer is a hero for Motye and his friends from the local ‘Newcastle F.C.’ team. They are all backing Spain against Netherlands in Sunday’s final just down the road at Johannesburg’s Soccer City stadium.

“Spain have great strikers, great playmakers, we love them,” Motye said, to nods of approval from a crowd of kids practicing shots and moves by themselves in the sunshine.

After hosts South Africa were knocked out in the first phase, most locals transferred their allegiance to the only African team that reached the second round — Ghana.

When the Ghanaians lost to Uruguay in an agonizing quarter-final shootout, African loyalty ended and local fans have since been picking teams based on who shows the most flair or has the big names they like following on TV.

Spain fit that bill on both fronts, and in Soweto it was hard to find anyone backing the Dutch for Sunday.

“We are so much disappointed with our own teams,” said perfume-seller Jack Lutaaya Kato, 22. “In Africa, we admire teams who play beautiful football and Spain make us happy.”

Jobless Siyabonga Zulu, 35, said Spain played the South African style, but better: “They have a very nice system. I do not like the long passes the Netherlands play.”

HISTORICAL TIES

The Dutch, however, have had plenty of local support too throughout the tournament. Their loud and friendly orange-clad fans have made a positive impression on locals, and they have historical connections with South Africa.

In Cape Town, where Dutch colonizers first arrived in the mid-17th century, orange flags, scarves and other fan gear have dominated the displays on stalls and in shops.

“We have lots of cultural ties with Netherlands here, through history and the Afrikaans language which is just like Dutch,” said 46-year-old Benny Roberts.

“The Dutch also play good soccer. I love to watch them.”

It was, of course, the Dutch and British colonizers who paved the way for white rule and apartheid in South Africa, but there seems little resentment towards Netherlands for that.

“My friends say in fact that it was Netherlands people who made this country advanced, who helped develop South Africa,” said 18-year-old Johannesburg student Mzwakhe Tyali.

“Apartheid is in the past now. Let bygones be bygones. Anyway, what does it have to do with football?”

(Additional reporting by Alexandra Hudson in Cape Town; Editing by Ken Ferris)

Spanish flair, Dutch connection liven local fans

(Reuters) – At a morning kick around on a dirt soccer pitch in South Africa’s Soweto township, there is only one team the boys all want to emulate — Spain.

“They play such easy, one-touch football. Tap and push, tap and push, then shoot and goal!” said Dumisani Motye, 13, lining up the ball repeatedly to try and curl shots like David Villa.

The Spanish striker and World Cup joint-top scorer is a hero for Motye and his friends from the local ‘Newcastle F.C.’ team. They are all backing Spain against Netherlands in Sunday’s final just down the road at Johannesburg’s Soccer City stadium.

“Spain have great strikers, great playmakers, we love them,” Motye said, to nods of approval from a crowd of kids practicing shots and moves by themselves in the sunshine.

After hosts South Africa were knocked out in the first phase, most locals transferred their allegiance to the only African team that reached the second round — Ghana.

When the Ghanaians lost to Uruguay in an agonizing quarter-final shootout, African loyalty ended and local fans have since been picking teams based on who shows the most flair or has the big names they like following on TV.

Spain fit that bill on both fronts, and in Soweto it was hard to find anyone backing the Dutch for Sunday.

“We are so much disappointed with our own teams,” said perfume-seller Jack Lutaaya Kato, 22. “In Africa, we admire teams who play beautiful football and Spain make us happy.”

Jobless Siyabonga Zulu, 35, said Spain played the South African style, but better: “They have a very nice system. I do not like the long passes the Netherlands play.”

HISTORICAL TIES

The Dutch, however, have had plenty of local support too throughout the tournament. Their loud and friendly orange-clad fans have made a positive impression on locals, and they have historical connections with South Africa.

In Cape Town, where Dutch colonizers first arrived in the mid-17th century, orange flags, scarves and other fan gear have dominated the displays on stalls and in shops.

“We have lots of cultural ties with Netherlands here, through history and the Afrikaans language which is just like Dutch,” said 46-year-old Benny Roberts.

“The Dutch also play good soccer. I love to watch them.”

It was, of course, the Dutch and British colonizers who paved the way for white rule and apartheid in South Africa, but there seems little resentment toward Netherlands for that.

“My friends say in fact that it was Netherlands people who made this country advanced, who helped develop South Africa,” said 18-year-old Johannesburg student Mzwakhe Tyali.

“Apartheid is in the past now. Let bygones be bygones. Anyway, what does it have to do with football?”

(Additional reporting by Alexandra Hudson in Cape Town; Editing by Ken Ferris)

“Perfect football” for WC is 20 percent more accurate than any made before

London, May 16 (ANI): Andy Harland, who used to keep goal for Shepshed Dynamo in Leicestershire, has spent four years creating the “perfect ball” that will be 20 percent more accurate than any made before and will be used during the 2010 World cup.

Called the “Jabulani” – Zulu for “to celebrate” – the ball has tiny grooves in its eight-panelled surface to give it very true flight, the Daily Express reports.

Dr Harland, 34, admits that he “wasn’t the best” when he used to keep goal, but having the world’s top players kick his ball about at the Soccer City Stadium in Johannesburg in July is as good as being there himself.

“I’ll take that achievement as the next best thing to actually playing there,” said Dr Harland.

With the help of a wind tunnel and a robotic kicker called Dave, the engineer designed the ball with the sports technology research group at Loughborough University, in Leicestershire, the paper reports.

The grooves are designed to balance out the effects of the spherically moulded panels, equalising airflow over the surface and giving it the truest flight of any ball yet made. (ANI)

Veteran leader urges Indian and African unity in South Africa

Mon, Mar 29 09:46 AM

Veteran politician Mangosuthu Buthelezi, President of Zulu Inkatha Freedom Party, expressed concern that South African Indian and African youth were lacking the united spirit previously seen between the two communities in the fight against apartheid.

In an opening address at the 10th annual conference of the Global Organisation for People of Indian Origin (GOPIO), Buthelezi detailed history of the struggle and involvement of South African Indian leaders like late Monty Naicker and Fatima Meer.

“But I do not see that close getting together between our Indian youth and African youth in this province that existed (before),” Buthelezi said.

“I think that we should urge our youth to join hands, just as we did in the past. We achieved our freedom because we all joined hands across the racial divide which apartheid imposed on us. Today there are no such barriers.”

He acknowledged the perceptions within the Indian community that the government’s policy of Affirmative Action favoured Africans more than Indians, despite both groups being officially regarded as blacks.

“I know that these policies have made young Indians feel alienated. Deputy President, Kgalema Motlanthe, once suggested that these policies be revisited. I feel that there is urgency in doing so, if the foundation of brotherhood between Indian and Zulu youth is to flourish once again.”

Late Professor Fatima Meer had proposed setting up an Indo-African Institute to foster this objective, but her illness prevented her to complete the task, he said.

“Her idea of setting up this Institute remains a challenge to all of us as the Indian and Zulu communities of this province – we can’t blame apartheid as an excuse.”

Activist Ahmed Kathrada, supporting Buthelezi’s view on unity, called on young leaders to come together in the interest of the people.

“If we could stand united against apartheid, why can’t we unite against poverty and hunger..,” the activist wondered.
Agencies

South African election winner Zuma calls for national unity

Johannesburg – Jacob Zuma, the leader of South African’s African National Congress party and the country’s most-likely next president, called Saturday for national unity in a speech after his party was re-elected to a fourth five-year term. “This country belongs to everyone – blacks, whites, Indians and coloured: we must work together,” Zuma said in a speech shortly after the country’s Independent Electoral Commission announced final results of Wednesday’s elections.

The party leader also confirmed that he would seek to cooperate with all political parties, adding that the ANC stood behind its election campaign promises to root out inefficiency and corruption in government.

The 67-year-old Zulu politician also made reassurances that his party would not seek to change the constitution, a charge made by the opposition Democratic Alliance party, who feared Zuma might try to muzzle his critics through constitutional amendment. (dpa)

New York man holds 100 Guinness records

New York – A New York businessman achieved the record of all records, becoming the first person to simultaneously hold 100 Guinness World Records.

Guinness World Records confirmed Wednesday evening that 54-year-old Ashrita Forman is holding 100 records that have never been bested. Furman made his first entry into the Guinness Book of World Records 30 years ago, by doing 27,000 jumping jacks within 5 hours.

He said he has achieved about 230 records, but many of them have since been broken.

Furman, who manages a health food store in Queens, earned his 100th title Tuesday by arranging the group reading of a poem in 110 languages, including Zulu and Rhaeto-Romanic.

The poem read was titled Precious, by Indian spiritual leader and artist Sri Chimnoy, who before his death in 2007 also held several records. Furman recruited more than 100 New York friends to recite the poem in their language, beating Hong Kong’s International Social Service who five months ago presented a text in 79 languages.

Other records included eating 38 M and Ms with chopsticks in one minute.

Guiness World Records, formerly known as the Guinness Book of World Records, has been published each year since 1955 and sold 100 million copies until 2003.