Category Archives: Sports

Michael Witt’s season-ending injury hits Crusaders’ Super League hopes

• Australian half-back damaged knee ligaments at Harlequins • Crusaders hoping for first appearance in play-offs Crusaders’ bid for a first appearance in the Super League play-offs have been dealt a major blow with news that the half-back Michael Witt is almost certain to miss the rest of the season. The 26-year-old Australian, who has been a revelation in his first season in Super League, damaged knee ligaments in the defeat at Harlequins a fortnight ago and has been told he is unlikely to play again this year. Witt, signed from New Zealand rugby union side Otago in the close season, has kicked 35 goals and scored six tries in his 17 matches. The Wrexham club, whose 44-20 win over Bradford on Sunday took them to within four points of eighth-placed Hull KR, are also without Witt’s half-back partner Jarrod Sammut, who has a fractured cheekbone. The Crusaders coach, Brian Noble, said: “It is a blow. Michael has been one of the top half-backs in Super League this year so we are obviously disappointed to lose him. But I think we have the players to step up to the mark in his place.” Noble is likely to keep Rhys Hanbury and Peter Lupton in the half-backs for Sunday’s trip to Leeds. The Crusaders Super League Rugby league guardian.co.uk

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Michael Witt’s season-ending injury hits Crusaders’ Super League hopes

Germany vs. Serbia 2010 World Cup Live Blog

Filed under: Germany , Serbia FanHouse has a Germany vs. Serbia live blog for a World Cup 2010 Group D first-round match in Port Elizabeth, South Africa on Friday. Germany defeated Australia 4-0 in its World Cup opener, while Serbia lost 1-0 to Ghana. More Live Blogs Friday: USA vs. Slovenia | England vs. Algeria More FanHouse UK: Injuries to Watch | Where Are They Now? | Full Coverage

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Germany vs. Serbia 2010 World Cup Live Blog

Somber Celtics Went Out Like Champions

Filed under: Celtics , Lakers , NBA Playoffs , NBA Finals LOS ANGELES — The celebration and the chaos surrounded them without making a sound. It was quiet in the visitor’s locker room at Staples Center on Thursday night, where one Boston Celtic after another was asked to discuss their own basketball death. They talked about the classic Game 7 in hushed tones and in a painful rotation — Ray Allen , Paul Pierce , Rajon Rondo , Glen Davis , Kevin Garnett — all reliving the Lakers ‘ 83-79 championship survival. The floor was wet over here, too, but it wasn’t because of champagne. “There was a lot of crying in our locker room, a lot of people who care,” Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. “I don’t think there was a dry eye. A lot of hugs. A lot of people feeling awful. That’s a good thing. You know, that means everybody cared.” They went out like champions from beginning to end, these aging Hall of Famers and relentless reserves who came so close to pulling off such a memorable and unexpected feat. They unplugged the electricity in the building early, jumping out to a 10-point first quarter lead that ensured the tension among most of the 18,997 witnesses would not escape.

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Somber Celtics Went Out Like Champions

PHOTOS: Lakers Celebrate Their NBA Championship

Well, that didn’t take long. The Lakers’ web team has posted pictures of their team holding the Larry O’Brien trophy

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PHOTOS: Lakers Celebrate Their NBA Championship

LA Lakers seal 16th NBA championship with victory over Boston Celtics

• Lakers come from behind to secure second successive title • Kobe Bryant named finals MVP The Los Angeles Lakers won their 16th NBA championship last night, dramatically rallying from a fourth-quarter deficit to beat the Boston Celtics 83-79 in Game 7 of the NBA finals. A Game 7 classic and this time it went the Lakers way. Bryant, the finals MVP, scored 23 points despite 6-of-24 shooting. It was earned his fifth title with the Lakers, who repeated as NBA champions for the first time since winning three straight from 2000. Coach Phil Jackson added his 11th, possibly putting a cap on his remarkable career if he decides to leave the Lakers. “This one is by far the sweetest, because it’s them,” Bryant said after the Lakers beat Boston for the first time in a Game 7. “This was the hardest one by far. I wanted it so bad, and sometimes when you want it so bad, it slips away from you. My guys picked me up.” Ron Artest added 20 points for the Lakers, who didn’t exactly show a champion’s poise while making just 21 shots in the first three quarters, even hovering around 505 at the free throw line. Yet with Bryant driving the lane to earn eight free throws and Pau Gasol finally coming alive with nine of his 19 points in the fourth quarter, Los Angeles reclaimed the lead midway through and hung on with a few more big shots from Gasol, who had 18 rebounds, and a remarkable clutch performance by Artest, a first-time champion as the only newcomer to last season’s roster. “I had 20 points, and I still think we did this as a team,” Artest said. “We fought together. This was one of the best games in … I don’t even know, man. I don’t want to be in a game like this, where the game can go either way. I’m just like, OK, what did I get myself into?” He might be into a budding dynasty, with most of the Lakers’ core locked into long-term contracts. With their fifth title in 11 seasons, the Lakers moved one championship behind Boston’s 17 titles for the overall NBA lead. After downplaying the NBA’s best rivalry for two weeks, Bryant acknowledged this banner will loom just a little larger than the rest in those Staples Center rafters, given the opponent, the Game 7 stakes and the history they just made. The teams have met in 12 NBA finals, but the Lakers won for just the third time. Jackson won his fifth ring in Los Angeles to go with his half-dozen from Chicago. And it might be the last: Weary of the regular-season grind and facing a likely pay cut with the Lakers, Jackson hasn’t determined his future, though he previously said another title would make him more likely to chase an unprecedented fourth “threepeat” next season, when he’ll be 65. “I’ve got to take a deep breath. I’ve got to take some time to think about this,” Jackson said, wearing a satisfied grin underneath his championship hat. “This was great. I’ll wait to make that decision in a week.” Bryant has already told Jackson what he believes his coach should do. “He knows how bad I want him back,” Bryant said. “I’ve been openly blunt about how much I want him back.” Paul Pierce had 18 points and 10 rebounds for the Celtics, who just couldn’t finish the final quarter of a remarkable playoff run after a fourth-place finish in the Eastern Conference. Kevin Garnett added 17 points, but Boston flopped in two chances to clinch the series in Los Angeles after winning Game 5 back home. “Listen, give the Lakers credit,” Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. “They were terrific.” Rivers knows changes are coming, even saying afterward that the ’10-11 Celtics will be different than the ’09-10 team. “We were the tightest, most emotional, crazy group I’ve ever been around in my life,” Rivers said, adding that he’ll wait a while before deciding on his oft-speculated future. He called this team “crazy close” and throughout the playoffs, the Celtics only got closer. Down by 14 in their first playoff game against Miami, they won that night and rode that instant burst of confidence not only past the Heat, but through Cleveland and Orlando in the next two rounds. “We were scratching and clawing, trying to do everything we could to try to pull this out,” said Ray Allen, who had 13 points on 3-of-14 shooting. “We had an opportunity to win, but it just didn’t go our way down the stretch. I don’t think we ran out of steam. Lady Luck just didn’t bounce in our corner … There were a lot of tears, a lot of tears.” The Celtics had never lost a seventh game in the finals. Despite nursing a lead through most of the night while holding the Lakers to ridiculously low shooting percentages until the final minutes, Boston couldn’t close it out on the coast, becoming just the seventh team to blow a 3-2 finals lead after winning Game 5, while the Lakers are the first team to recover from a 3-2 deficit to win a finals since Houston did it in 1994. Exactly two years to the day after Boston beat the Lakers by 39 points to clinch the 2008 title, Los Angeles got revenge for perhaps the most embarrassing loss of Bryant’s career – even if he did little more than grab 15 rebounds for most of the night. At least nine people were arrested as rowdy revelers poured out of Staples Center after the game, rocking cars, setting bonfires and throwing rocks and bottles and police. The LA Fire Department said several people were treated for injuries outside the arena. NBA guardian.co.uk

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LA Lakers seal 16th NBA championship with victory over Boston Celtics

World Cup 2010: BBC v ITV

Can ITV recover from missing Steven Gerrard’s goal and Robbie Earle’s sacking? As ITV bosses anticipated the World Cup and its bonanza of bumper ratings and revenue, only in their worst nightmares would the events of the first few days have unfolded as they actually did. There was, briefly, a dream start: England’s opening game was minutes old when captain Steven Gerrard scored . Unfortunately 1.5 million viewers missed it because ITV1 HD had gone to an unscheduled ad break . On the upside, the 15 million watching on standard ITV1 didn’t miss it; on the downside the World Cup is the defining moment for the push into high-definition television. And then ITV found itself embroiled in a row about ambush marketing. Most people have little sympathy for Fifa’s obsession with brand rights and its outrage at the 36 women in orange dresses (hardly inappropriate for a Holland game) advertising Bavaria beer . But, it was ITV’s grave misfortune that they were using tickets obtained via Robbie Earle, an ITV pundit. Earle says he was “naive” – and I hope he was [Full disclosure: I am a Port Vale fan and Earle is a Vale legend ]. ITV had little option but to sack the former Jamaican international . All of which has been unfortunate for ITV when its coverage has been every bit as good as the BBC’s. Adrian Chiles has made a smooth transition to the ITV host slot and is, if truth be told, a much more interesting broadcaster than Gary Lineker. Personally I find the ITV panelists much more interesting than the same old faces on the BBC. In the post-match stakes it’s Colin Murray v James Corden : a battle of the annoying, but I’m voting for Corden on this one (even if it is only because he’s Shouting for England with Dizzee Rascal ). Meanwhile, ITV might even have the edge with commentators in this tournament. Although Clive Tyldesley is not to everyone’s taste he is a familiar voice and has plenty of experience. Meanwhile the BBC will be without John Motson for the first final in aeons. Motty should have been pensioned off years ago, what with his inability to work out what was actually happening on the pitch. Guy Mowbray will instead commentate on the final for the BBC , although I think Jonathan Pearce would have been a more interesting choice. Anyway, unfortunately for ITV, when it comes to the simulcasting of big games, the public choose the BBC without thinking, meaning that the channel will end the World Cup much as it started it: unappreciated. Sport TV ITV BBC World Cup 2010 Steve Busfield guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: BBC v ITV

World Cup 2010: Germany v Serbia – live!

Set the page to update automatically using the button below. Send your thoughts over to rob.smyth@guardian.co.uk The game kicks off at 12.30pm but Rob will be here from midday. In the meantime you can find out who is expected to start for each team with our squad sheets , or keep up with all the latest World Cup news on Sean Ingle’s live blog . Alternatively, you could find out why David Hytner thinks Germany’s football team are reaping the rewards of the country’s liberation generation . Here’s a snippet: When Sami Khedira and his Under-21 team‑mates held aloft the European Championship trophy last summer, after humbling England 4–0 in the final, they dreamed of changing the face of German football. Little did they know that their opportunity would come so quickly. After Euro 2008, Joachim Löw, the Germany manager, accepted the need to “rejuvenate” a squad that had become too heavily seasoned in parts. He has done so in spectacular fashion. Germany have only nine survivors from that tournament here. (It is worth remembering that they were runners-up in Austria and Switzerland.) And once Löw had done with filleting his squad, the players he turned to were almost all from the next generation. World Cup 2010 Germany Serbia World Cup 2010 Group B Germany Serbia Rob Smyth guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Germany v Serbia – live!

Arsenal will sign a defender during World Cup, says Arsene Wenger

• Arsenal manager promises an imminent arrival • ‘Something will happen before the end of the World Cup’ The Arsenal manager, Arsène Wenger, hopes to sign a defender before the end of the World Cup. The Gunners will be left desperately short of central defenders if Sol Campbell, William Gallas and Mikaël Silvestre fail to renew their contracts when they expire at the end of the month. The Frenchman said at the end of last season that Arsenal’s “average” performances at the back cost them dearly in their pursuit of a first Premier League title in six years. He is keen to find a centre half to partner Thomas Vermaelen at the heart of the Arsenal defence for next season and has been splitting his time in South Africa between scouting and commentating for French television. “We are not close (to signing anyone) at the moment,” Wenger told the Arsenal website . “We are quiet. But there will be something happening before the end of the World Cup – certainly on the defensive side.” Arsenal Premier League Transfer window guardian.co.uk

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Arsenal will sign a defender during World Cup, says Arsene Wenger

Horse racing: Your chance to win a £50 bet in our Royal Ascot tipping competition, plus the latest news and best bets in our daily racing blog

The latest news and best bets on day four at Royal Ascot, plus your chance to win £50 in our tipping competition 11.45am Near rail may be the place to go Greg Wood: Going news from Royal Ascot this morning is that Chris Stickels, the clerk of the course, put 6mm of water on the straight course last night and 4mm on the round course. He also “dropped the round course rail back to the inside line to produce some fresh ground.” The GoingStick readings now suggest little or no difference between the stands’ side and the far side, with both reading 10.2, though it is worth remembering that many more horses have been down the far side so far this week, particularly on the final stretch from the home turn, where the round course joins the straight. Thus, it is just possible that the better ground will be against the near rail, if any jockey is brave enough to give it a go. There is also a non-runner in the Wokingham tomorrow. Prime Exhibit has been withdrawn, because of the going, according to the notification, though this seems like one of the more elastic excuses on offer this week, as Prime Exhibit is a runner in the seven-furlong handicap here later this afternoon. Will Hayler previews the day The flourescent-vested man in the car park was still smarting about Eddie Ahern’s tipping prowess as I got out of the car this morning. “He said Berling was his best chance, so I went in on that one, and he went and won on Approve,” he muttered. “Look – his car’s still parked over there. He must have gone out for a celebratory drink after racing.” He didn’t ask me for my opinion, which was probably for the best. I’m mainly focussed upon cheering on every 50-1 shot to cover my spread bet on the biggest winning starting price. Frankly, I’ll be gutted if we get through the next two days without anything bettering Invisible Man’s 28-1 success in the Hunt Cup. Even though I am taking a fairly sceptical view about At First Sight’s second place in the Derby, I’m still a little surprised to see Green Moon ahead of him at the head of the betting for the King Edward VII Stakes. The statistics are clear that Derby runners rarely deliver when they are asked to make a quick return to action at this meeting, but if the clock doesn’t lie then At First Sight finished second in one of the best Derbies of the modern era. I was rather hoping I might be able to lay him at around the 2-1 mark. At 7-2, it’s almost worth thinking about changing sides. Of all the various versions of the 1,000 Guineas represented by the runners in today’s Coronation Stakes, Evading Tempete (3.50) is the only one to have staked her claim for this contest in the Italian Guineas at Cappanelle. She was an effortless winner there and, with her earlier Maisons-Laffite form also looking very good, she looks fair value this morning at the widely-available 14-1 in a wide-open renewal. The man in the car park thought that Rainbow Peak (4.25) was too short to be backed at around the 2-1 mark for the Wolferton Handicap and he’s probably right, but I still wouldn’t want to be against him, now that he’s returned to the right trip. You can read my preview of today’s TV races here . Win a £50 free bet from Paddy Power Paddy Power have very kindly offered a £50 free bet to our champion tipster today. All you have to do is give us your selections for all of today’s races at Royal Ascot. As ever, our champion will be the tipster who returns the best profit to notional level stakes of £1 on each selection at starting price. Non-runners count as losers. Please post all your tips in a single posting, using the comment facility below, before the first race at 2.30pm. There are six races at Ascot today and you must post a single selection for each race. Our usual terms and conditions, which you can read here , will apply, except that this will be a strictly one-day thing. If we get a tie after all the races have been run, the winner will be the one who posted their tips earliest out of those with the highest score. If you don’t win today . . . well, then it’s time for despair because this is our final competition of the week. But we will be back, as always, with a new competition on Monday. ElMatador1 was our champion yesterday, his three winners including the 20-1 Gold Cup hero Rite Of Passage. He is presumably not the same matador that ran out of the ring in Mexico the other day . Alas, Simmorissey picked the same three winners some two hours later and deserves great credit but wins no prize. Two people have already posted their tips for today on yesterday’s blog. Farmy11 picked: 2:30 Crying Lightning 3.05 Monterosso 3.50 Anna Salai 4.25Tartan Gigha 5.00Monterey 5.35 Kiwi Bay While goofs has gone for: Radharcnafarraige at first sight anna salai Steele Tango Total Comman wigams turn. Good luck all! Click here for all the day’s racecards, form, stats and results. Click here for today’s latest odds. And post your tips and racing-related comments below. Horse racing Horse racing tips Royal Ascot Will Hayler Greg Wood Chris Cook guardian.co.uk

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Horse racing: Your chance to win a £50 bet in our Royal Ascot tipping competition, plus the latest news and best bets in our daily racing blog

The Fiver | The Fatal Glare; and The Impostors | Rob Smyth and Paul Doyle

Click here to have the Fiver delivered direct to your inbox every weekday at 12pm(ish), or if your usual copy has stopped arriving NOT SO FAB Fabio Capello was supposed to be different. With eyes so powerful that they can even shut James Corden up – which make him the world’s first purveyor of the fatal glare – and designer spectacles that hint at an ocean of thrilling metro$exuality lurking fractionally beneath the surface, he seemed to have it all. Best of all, he wasn’t English, or a catatonic Swede. Yet Capello is starting to wear the haunted look of a man who has woken up after 18 months of marriage only to realise that the person snoring loudly to his left is the biggest psychopath on the planet ; as a consequence, he is starting to display the managerial behaviour of any other Tom, D1ck or Svennis. Chief among them is his apparent decision to continue the absurd English habit of ripping up and starting again after only one or two games of each World Cup. At every tournament since 1986, the England manager has made dramatic changes to tactics, personnel or both after one dodgy result in the group stages, and it seems Capello has done the same by deciding to replace Robert Green with David James for tonight’s musn’t-lose match against Algeria. Capello has more reason than most to change – Green is clearly mentally shot – and he could have picked Weird Uncle Fiver in goal for a game that England will win comfortably despite not playing particularly well. But the concern is that he is also reportedly planning significant changes elsewhere. The word in the Fiver’s local, the Slug & Manic Depression, is that Jermain Defoe or Joe Cole will replace Mr Em; in their very different ways, either move would represent a shredding of the gameplan that England honed so impressively during their qualification campaign. If it is legitimate to argue that England became a stronger team for those changes in 1986, 1990, 1998 and 2002, it’s also legitimate to argue that making such changes mid-tournament is indicative of weakness and/or a potentially reductive indecision. Either way, Defoe has been doing his best to earn a place by crawling round behind Capello, discreetly blowing as much smoke as possible up his surprisingly-pert-for-a-64-year-old derriere. “Obviously the manager is extremely disciplined but the manager is also cool and he’s got good banter,” brown-nosed Defoe, barely even convincing himself, never mind anyone else. “He joins in and is always laughing and stuff. But when we’re training, we’ve got to do it right.” Capello must also decide what to do on the left, where Shaun Wright-Phillips ran around a bit against USA! USA!! USA!!!. “Being picked was a very good surprise, I couldn’t have wanted any more than that,” said Wright-Phillips. “It was a step getting here and then another giant step to actually get on the pitch and play for the country in such a big tournament.” You’ll note he said nothing about actually playing well. SIGN UP FOR OUR FANTASY FOOTBALL GAME You can still sign up now and play daily competitions with the most exciting fantasy game on the web (oh, it’s free too) . QUOTE OF THE DAY “We looked at the film yesterday – 15 of us – and it was a very moving moment. This is what we need to do to unify the group and keep together” – Algeria midfielder Hassan Yebda reveals how the squad watched The Battle of Algiers war film to prepare for tonight’s game with England. The Fiver thinks they’d have done better to watch The Mouse That Roared. LIVE ON GUARDIAN.CO.UK TODAY Join Rob Smyth for MBM coverage of Germany 2-0 Serbia at 12.30pm, Paul Doyle for Slovenia 0-1 USA! USA!! USA!!! at 3pm and Barry Glendenning for England 3-0 Algeria from 7.30pm . DAYLIGHT RIBERY? France went into last night’s game against Mexico promising a much-improved performance. Instead they delivered an almighty provocation. The French press seized the bait, in the process writing the Fiver for us. Un Résultat! “This French team deserves nothing but scorn and will only be saved if the gods of football fall on their heads,” fumed Le Figaro, though L’Equipe insisted that scorn was too good for them. “No sadness, no desolation and, above all, no anger: that is too much to give to these men who are unable to offer anything,” pounded the organ under the headline THE IMPOSTORS before snapping: “The I-couldn’t-give-a-damn attitude is the only banner under which this team is capable of rallying.” So the French are fried. But La Depèche du Midi did detect at least one thing to smile about. “At the conclusion of a bland – or perhaps bitter – match, something nevertheless happened and it is the major scoop of this World Cup: it turns out that, beneath his arrogance, his Mr Know-it-All air, Raymond Domenech has been hiding a heart. A genuine heart. His dejection at the end of the match proved it, the way he turned to the TV camera and let slip a laconic ‘Today, I am crushed’. The tears he wept, the ones no one believed they saw, also proved it. So Raymond the haughty is human. It was about time he let us know.” Patrice Evra, the man whose attempt to prevent Mexico scoring a second goal consisted of ambling after Pablo Barrera with all the urgency of a man who has time to kill before heading to the gallows, finally found something out too. “We are not a great team,” he told journalists after the match, presumably before revealing that Thierry Henry handled the ball against the Republic O’Ireland and rain is wet. “I’m not going to start saying what the problem is, I’ll tell it to the people involved,” concluded Evra, hopefully on his way to a rendezvous with Raymond Domenech, Franck Ribéry, Sidney Govou, Eric Abidal, Nicolas Anelka and a mirror. WIN! WIN! WIN! Enter our ridiculously easy competition and you could win a shirt signed by one of the World Cup’s biggest names. Is it Maxim Kalinichenko? Wouldn’t you like to know. £66 HAT-TRICK OF FREE BETS WITH BLUE SQUARE Click here to find out more. FIVER LETTERS “Sorry this is a bit stale. but I have been spluttering in indignation for the last three days. Beckenbauer: ‘kick and rush’? Bloody cheek! What about the time he kicked Allan Clarke in the 1975 Big Cup final then rushed to the referee to make sure he didn’t give a penalty?” – Robert Heath. “I think one of Argentina’s strengths is their ability to throw wave after wave of attack at their opposition with strikers of various skill sets and styles of play. It makes them very hard to defend. According to John Harkes on ESPN’s broadcast here in the USA! USA!! USA!!!, the last three Argentinian goals against South Korea were scored by He-Gain, Hig-U-Ann and Hee-Gwan. When you add Messi, Tevez and Aguero to that group it becomes daunting” – R Reisman. “The Oranje ambush marketing campaign (Fiver passim) goes much deeper. How else to explain the prominence of dull Dutch pundits on UK TV screens? Can the Fiver encourage Fifa to investigate and lock them up before the knock-out phase” – Russ Weighton. “Having always been under the impression that the big teams were kept apart on the opening day of the season, I was somewhat surprised to see Liverpool paired with Arsenal on day one this year (yesterday’s bits and bobs). Oh” – Alistair Moffat. “As a fanatical but slightly pessimistic Liverpool fan would it be possible to secure our current alphabetical position in the Premier League ahead of the coming season?” – Mike Astbury. Send your letters to the.boss@guardian.co.uk . And if you’ve nothing better to do you can also tweet the Fiver now. BITS AND BOBS Argentina supporter Ernesto Soldati has been fined R200 (£17.82) and ordered to leave South Africa after attempting to steal 200g of Gouda from a supermarket. He had been due to fly home on Wednesday anyway, but missed his flight due to his court appearance. The Socceroos’ fine start to their World Cup campaign received a further boost today with news that Vincent Grella will miss the game against Ghana with knee-knack. Cameroon’s players have asked their coach Paul Le Guen to rethink his team selection for Saturday’s game against Denmark. “Many young fresh players have been introduced into the team at the expense of experienced ones,” tootled Achille Emana. Four North Korean footballers, who were rumoured to have disappeared, with some hypothesising desertion, are in fact available to the team. So says Gordon Watson, international PR representative for Fifa. “The rumour was started by a transcription error before the game,” chirped Watson. “I met the North Korean delegation last night and was told the players were with the team.” Manuel Pellegrini has held talks with Kenny Dalglish about taking the Liverpool manager’s job, even though Kenny Dalglish’s preferred candidate remains Kenny Dalglish. And a day after Portsmouth’s administrators reached agreement with the club’s creditors, thus saving the club a points deduction for the new Championship season, Steve Cotterill has taken over as manager. THE FIVER FANS’ NETWORK: HAVE YOUR SAY! In the spirit of mutualisation (ie this and this and this ), we’re offering this space to one Fiver reader a day to have their say on whether or not it’s a good idea to let football fans have their say. Here’s Chris Begley: “Have you ever been in a pub and had to listen to somebody explain what Team X should do? Why recreate that experience?” Send your efforts – in 140 characters or less – to the.boss@guardian.co.uk with ‘My say on people having their say’ in the subject heading and we’ll publish … something. STILL WANT MORE? Find out what’s happening at the World Cup right now with Sean Ingle . Rob Smyth’s World Cup paper view brings together nadirs, Winston Churchill and a $ex change. Barry Glendenning is back, and he’s brought beer for the latest edition of World Cup Daily . Kevin McCarra explains why $tevie Mbe needs to get back to his old ways against Algeria tonight. Mick McCarthy was as surprised by Spain’s reaction to defeat as by the fact of it. And Sir Geoff Hurst tells Small Talk whether his wife gets one finger or two . SIGN UP TO THE FIVER Want your very own copy of our free tea-timely(ish) email sent direct to your inbox? Has your regular copy stopped arriving? Click here to sign up . OH GEORGIE, HOW COULD YOU? Rob Smyth Paul Doyle guardian.co.uk

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The Fiver | The Fatal Glare; and The Impostors | Rob Smyth and Paul Doyle