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England aiming to sign off for summer with rare victory in Australia | Robert Kitson

• ‘Some won’t get a chance to play in a Test in Australia again’ • Defining moment for Martin Johnson’s World Cup planning One game should not define a season, but England know there are exceptions. A big defeat in the second and final Test will confirm the worst fears of those who suspect the coaches are flogging a dead horse. Victory, on the other hand, would allow the management to insist their World Cup plans are gathering momentum. There is hardly any middle ground still available for rent. Even a gallant loss would underline what the rugby world has come to believe: that England talk a better game than they play in terms of beating the southern hemisphere’s finest. Australia are a good side but their current scrum issues make them more vulnerable than they might be. If Martin Johnson’s squad wish to enjoy their holidays, it is important they erase the memory of their diffident display in Perth. Precisely that message will be repeated before kick-off by coaches and senior players alike. “We’ve got a chance to put the record straight,” said Nick Easter, the England No8 who, by his own admission, fell below the required standard last week. “You want to have a summer when you can look back and be pleased with your last performance, otherwise you’ll be stewing. We’ve got to go out and show a lot more than we did last Saturday.” Johnson has also reminded everyone that places in England’s 32-man elite squad to be named next month remain unbooked, well aware that Wednesday’s game against New Zealand Maoris in Napier is unlikely to supply much solace. A potential tour record of one scratchy win from five games will not rank as a great leap forward. “Some of the guys won’t get a chance to play in a Testmatch in Australia again,” he said. Barring a marked upturn, several are unlikely to be tackling the Wallabies at Twickenham this November either. At least the cheery mood during training at North Sydney Oval was encouraging. Maybe the sunshine helped, but the squad contains enough talent and enthusiasm to hint at better days ahead if the players can escape their current underachieving rut. Ben Youngs has the ability to match his contemporary Will Genia as a backline catalyst and his first Test start will be instructive. If the Leicester scrum-half shines, it might even persuade Johnson to start thinking like an Australian and blood the likes of Alex Goode on the enlightened basis that class is permanent and immaturity is temporary. It would also help if the French referee Romain Poite, as he surely will, takes a sadistic interest in the scrum engagements. At times last week England’s tight-head Dan Cole unquestionably used illegal tactics to destabilise his opponent Ben Daley, but he is good enough to make life difficult without resorting to the dark arts. Tim Payne, even so, has cautioned against assuming the Wallabies scrum will be minced again. “Without a shadow of a doubt, they’ll be better,” the loose-head said. “I’m sure they’ll have hit the scrum machine many times this week.” Either way, England crave a collective performance that is not entirely down to their scrummagers or the slowly fading veterans of the 2003 World Cup final triumph in the same arena. Australia remains mystified at Jonny Wilkinson’s non-selection, with the former Wallabies centre Tim Horan declaring it “a decision Martin Johnson is likely to regret”. The hosts should clinch a 2-0 win but the ghost in the white No10 jersey has yet to be exorcised Down Under. If Jonny rises off the bench and slots another winning drop-goal the groans will be audible from Canberra to Cape Tribulation. Sky Sports 1: kick-off 11am England rugby union team Australia rugby union team Martin Johnson Robert Kitson guardian.co.uk

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England aiming to sign off for summer with rare victory in Australia | Robert Kitson

Algeria prepare for World Cup battle by watching The Battle of Algiers

Footballers aim to draw on spirit of Gillo Pontecorvo’s revolutionary classic ahead of tonight’s match with England When football players seek inspiration they normally opt for a round of golf. Not the Algerians, though. Ahead of their big match with England tonight, the north Africans have made a trip to the cinema to watch a screening of The Battle of Algiers. Gillo Pontecorvo’s 1966 classic is set during the Algerian war of the 1950s and details the emergence of the native resistance against the imperial French. It’s a gritty, troubling film that shows the moral compromises that war forces on all sides. It’s also over two hours long, but that doesn’t appear to have stopped the Algerians from being inspired. “I had never seen it before. It was very moving, and it was very moving to spend the time together. This is the kind of thing we need to do to feel together,” said Hassan Yebda, the 26-year-old midfielder who played in England last season with Portsmouth. The screening was arranged by Algeria’s coach, Rabah Saâdane, and Yebda believes it will help the side forge a new mentality after losing to Slovenia in their opening World Cup match last Sunday. Yebda compared their new attitude to that which helped Algeria qualify for the World Cup in a playoff with Egypt. “When we were in Sudan we had an obsession to win and that is what enabled us to beat Egypt. Had we lost that match, we would have been eliminated. The same goes for tomorrow. We must go on to the pitch with the same obsession to win.” Quite whether “an obsession to win” would be the message most viewers would take from The Battle of Algiers remains to be seen. Indeed, the movie’s history as an educational tool is a chequered one. It was also the subject of an infamous screening for Pentagon staff shortly after the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Algeria World Cup 2010 Algeria World Cup 2010 Group C Paul MacInnes guardian.co.uk

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Algeria prepare for World Cup battle by watching The Battle of Algiers

Le Havre settle dispute over Paul Pogba’s move to Manchester United

• Le Havre had accused Manchester United of poaching player • Ligue two club said they have ‘reached an agreement’ Le Havre have settled their dispute with Manchester United over Paul Pogba’s controversial move to Old Trafford. “Le Havre and Manchester United are satisfied to have reached an agreement regarding Paul Pogba’s integration to the Manchester United squad,” the Ligue two side said yesterday. Le Havre had accused the Premier League club of illegally poaching the 17-year-old Frenchman from their academy last August while United said they had not broken any rules. Le Havre had asked the world governing body Fifa to investigate the case of Pogba, who they said had agreed to join them only to leave for United. The case was similar to that of league rivals Chelsea, who were banned by Fifa from signing players until January 2011 for improper conduct when they acquired Gaël Kakuta from the French Ligue 1 club Lens in 2007. The ban was later lifted after the two clubs reached an agreement. Manchester United Le Havre guardian.co.uk

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Le Havre settle dispute over Paul Pogba’s move to Manchester United

World Cup 2010: Spain points finger of blame at Sara Carbonero

• Iker Casillas’ partner accused of distracting goalkeeper • Journalist had filmed behind goal prior to kick-off Some have pointed to their lack of cutting edge. Some have pointed to their opponents’ rugged determination. But many in Spain have blamed their defeat to Switzerland in their opening World Cup game on Sara Carbonero, the partner of the Spain captain Iker Casillas. Casillas was at least partly at fault for Gelson Fernandes’s goal that gave Switzerland their 1-0 win and fingers have already been pointed at Carbonero, a journalist at a Spanish TV station, who prior to the game was filming footage to camera behind Casillas’s goal. Many fans have been angered by her presence in South Africa, fearing it could prove a distraction for the goalkeeper and prove a destabilising influence within the squad. Carbonero was asked by her own TV station, Telecinco, about her influence. “Can I destabilise the team?” she said. “I think it is nonsense.” Carbonero then gave Casillas a difficult time in a post-match interview , opening her questions with: “How did you manage to muck that up?” “I don’t know what to say,” Casillas responded. “I don’t know if this defeat will have consequences. The dressing room is fed up.” Spain World Cup 2010 Group H World Cup 2010 John Ashdown guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Spain points finger of blame at Sara Carbonero

Championship fixtures 2010-11

Full fixture list for the Championship season starting 7 August 2010

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Championship fixtures 2010-11

David Smith visits Soweto for Youth Day during the World Cup

David Smith visits Soweto for Youth Day during the World Cup for the anniversary of the uprising David Smith Peter Sale

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David Smith visits Soweto for Youth Day during the World Cup

World Cup 2010: Algeria aiming to vent their frustrations on England

A disappointing opening loss to Slovenia has Algeria desperate to make amends and Fabio Capello’s team are in the firing line Twenty-four years is an awfully long time to wait for a damp squib. For more than two decades the football-crazy people of Algeria craved another qualification for the World Cup and, once the passage to South Africa was booked, a fever of anticipation spread across virtually the whole country. All of which made for a monumental anticlimax when the Desert Foxes marked their grand return to the global stage last Sunday by slumping to a sorry 1-0 defeat to Slovenia. Against England tomorrow the Algerian team mean to make amends. “It was very disappointing, we were full of regrets after the game,” the Algeria midfielder Karim Matmour says, explaining that what made the defeat by Slovenia all the more agonising was the realisation that the Europeans were eminently beatable. “It was clear that we had a great chance to get off to a good start and we missed the opportunity. But we’ve lifted our heads up and we’ll be 200% determined to atone for that against the English.” • Follow the Guardian’s World Cup team on Twitter • Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game • Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player • The latest team-by-team news, features and more In the unlikely event of such talk tormenting Fabio Capello, England’s manager could soothe himself by rewatching Slovenia’s win – or, indeed, any of Algeria’s recent matches – because recently Rabah Saâdane’s team have seemed impotent. In the run-up to the World Cup they scored once in five games – a penalty against the United Arab Emirates – and there was no trace of their attack having grown teeth against Slovenia, when in the whole match they mustered a mere two shots on target. They looked negative but Matmour said it was not a lack of will that constrained them but the lack of an effective way. “We need to refine the way we move forward,” says the 24-year-old, who earns his living at Borussia Mönchengladbach. “The linkages between midfield and attack were where we had the most difficulty. We need to improve.” Algeria’s plan for improving is counterintuitive. Seeking to end a goal drought by playing with no recognised strikers seems strange but that is what they are likely to do against England. Matmour will probably be the man who shifts from midfield to the unfamiliar role of centre-forward. For most of this week he has been rehearsing the role in training, with the 20-year-old Sochaux midfielder Ryad Boudebouz hinting that he may win only his third cap against England by slotting into Matmour’s usual berth on the right-hand side of midfield. “We have tried a few formats in training but, yes, that system is a possibility,” Matmour says cagily. In truth, the manager Saâdane has little alternative but to try such tinkering. The striker who started against Slovenia, Rafik Djebbour, showed that he is so far out of form he may never find his way back while the player who came on for him as a substitute in that match, Abdelkader Ghezzal, got sent off within 15 minutes and will be suspended tomorrow. The only other striker in the squad is the country’s top scorer, Rafik Saïfi, but after an injury-plagued season the 35-year-old is unlikely to start. Matmour is generally viewed as more of a creator than a scorer – he has struck just two goals in his 23 appearances for his country – but the reason he seems set to start up front tomorrow is that Saâdane believes his speed will trouble John Terry and Jamie Carragher. Matmour said he has not asked his Portsmouth-based team-mate, Nadir Belhadj, about any vulnerabilities in the England team that might be exploited because “we all know the English players already because they play for the biggest clubs in the world and we watch them on television every week”. But Belhadj sounds as if he may have offered some tips anyway. The flying left-back did, after all, tell the Algerian magazine Le Buteur this week that “England’s weakness is their defence. It is easy to penetrate.” Matmour is more diplomatic but agrees that England have imperfections. “Although they are deservedly one of the favourites for the tournament and have brilliant individuals in every position, sometimes great individuals don’t make for a great team,” he says. “Some of them don’t seem to be in form and the team maybe lacks cohesion. We respect them, but we know we can do something against them.” Matmour suggests England’s manager may have erred in his preparation, notably by not publicly committing to Robert Green following the goalkeeper’s gaffe against the USA. Green’s Algerian counterpart, Faouzi Chaouchi, blundered against Slovenia but Saâdane quickly announced that there would be no change in goal against England. The coach could, though, be forced into an alteration because Chaouchi has a knee injury which caused him to miss training yesterday. Saâdane is in the habit of dispelling doubts from the minds of outfield players by revealing his starting line-up two days before matches. “Psychologically you need that time to prepare. I wouldn’t like having to wait until the last minute to find out whether I’m playing.” Plainly Matmour does not like doubt. That is why he scoffs at suggestions that Algeria might play for a draw against England in the hope of beating the USA in their last game and, with other results helping them, reaching the second round with four points. “That’s all too complicated,” he snorts. “The England match is a final for us. We’ll be aiming for victory.” • The PUMA Africa Unity kit is the official third strip of Algeria, Cameroon, Ghana and the Ivory Coast. Sales of the shirt raise money for biodiversity causes in Africa Algeria World Cup 2010 Group C World Cup 2010 Paul Doyle guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Algeria aiming to vent their frustrations on England