Tag Archives: boxer-or-rapper

World Cup 2010: Apologies in advance for agony of watching England | Clive Tyldesley

The boys at ITV were upset about technical problems last week but hope England v Algeria tonight is painless for everyone Imagine completing your GCSE maths exam without too many wrong answers, then finding that someone at your school forgot to send the paper off for marking. Imagine compiling a long and detailed report for your boss, only for your computer to crash inexplicably and propel your work into the ether. It has been a bruising week at ITV. Official apologies do not really wash but whether you thought our coverage of England’s opening game was good, bad or indifferent, I can confirm it did leave us in Rustenburg in one piece. Learning that the most important 10 seconds of it never arrived on the nation’s HD sets left post-match morale among our team in South Africa at Rob Green levels. Unlike Fabio Capello, ITV’s management did not select the individual who made the costly error. But, like the England manager, we can now only do everything within our powers to come up with a better result tonight. Capello and Co’s performance against USA divided opinions like most television programmes do. Football and telly are largely matters of opinion. A dozen different informed radio and TV pundits

Read the original post:
World Cup 2010: Apologies in advance for agony of watching England | Clive Tyldesley

World Cup 2010: David Platt relives Italia 90 volley against Belgium

Flashback to 26 June 1990: Bologna, Italy: with penalties looming David Platt volleys England to a stunning second-round victory over Belgium David Platt, England midfielder “I started as a substitute. I can remember little snatches of the game. John Barnes having a volleyed goal harshly disallowed, Belgium hitting the woodwork twice, I can still see Enzo Scifo hitting the post with a tremendous strike from 25 yards. I was at the other end of the bench from Bobby Robson and didn’t have much contact with him. Having since been a manager I now know that the emotions he must have been going through were far more intense than mine. I came on for Steve McMahon [in the 71st minute].” John Motson, commentating on BBC1 in extra-time after 119 goalless minutes: “Gerets challenges Gascoigne. Free-kick given to England …” Platt: “It was the last minute. There was a free-kick in the centre.” Motson: “… Gascoigne shaping to take it …” Platt: “Gazza was on it. I was in the box trying to get a yard or half of space.” Motson: “… and chipped in …” Platt: “I was spinning, the ball dropped over my shoulder and I just tried to get something on it.” Motson: “… and volleyed in …” Platt: “There wasn’t a great deal of power. It was all technique.” Motson: “… and it’s there! …” Platt: “I saw it going in and fell to my knees.” Motson: “… by David Platt! …” Platt: “Everything was intuitive, the way I met and hit the ball and then dropping to my knees. Instinct just took over. I’d never ever dropped to my knees after scoring before, I don’t know why I did.” Motson: “… England have done it! In the last minute of extra-time!” Platt: “But when you score a goal like that you just go outside yourself for a bit, everything is surreal. The adrenaline surge is so great it’s as if I really was in a different place, a different world.” Motson: “… That’s the biggest smile in world football tonight – David Platt of Aston Villa.” Platt: “Don’t get me wrong, the goal wasn’t a fluke. I had an eye for getting on the end of that sort of ball and the technical ability to finish those chances off. I worked hard on practising overhead kicks and volleys in training at Aston Villa but, even so, if I had re-enacted that chance against Belgium 10 times in training the next day there’s a very good chance I wouldn’t have scored once from it. It was just one of life’s rare, perfect moments.” Motson: “He turned, volleyed and what a good finish.” Platt: “The one place where things didn’t go right was almost as soon as I left the pitch. One minute I was euphoric and the next I was being hauled off for a random drug test. It was hot and you’re so dehydrated after playing that it took 40 minutes – which passed very, very slowly – for me to produce a sample. I was in a room with a couple of Belgians who were seriously unhappy because they’d just been knocked out. I didn’t know what to say. By the time I came out the other players all had their suits on and the euphoria had passed.” Motson: “One of the most dramatic goals in the World Cup – and probably one of the best. England through to the quarter-finals of the World Cup.” Platt: “After finally getting back to the hotel and having something to eat I decided it was too late to phone my then girlfriend, now my wife, Rachel. For some reason I thought she’d be in bed and annoyed if I woke her up. In reality everyone was having a party and expecting a call from me. Nowadays my mobile phone would have been going mad with texts and voice messages but in 1990 the England squad were isolated from everything. “If I hadn’t scored that goal, I might still have ended up playing in Italy [Platt went on to play for Bari, Juventus and Sampdoria] but, realistically, I’m sure it was the catalyst. Italian clubs were looking for international names and, before that goal, I was only really known as a club player with Aston Villa. We’ve got a home in Sardinia now. The goal was a big catalyst.” World Cup 2010 Louise Taylor guardian.co.uk

View post:
World Cup 2010: David Platt relives Italia 90 volley against Belgium