Tag Archives: algeria

Evading Tempete can make it a Royal Ascot Coronation for French

• Italian Guineas winner can keep up good work of Gallic raiders • Rainbow Peak rates the best bet on fourth day of meeting 3.50 Coronation Stakes François Rohaut can keep the tricolore flying at Royal Ascot by taking theCoronation Stakes with the bargain basement filly Evading Tempete . While she can expect to be surrounded by bluebloods on and off the track at the Royal meeting, it was for only 3,000gns that the selection changed hands as a yearling at the sales. However, having shown only limited promise as a juvenile, the Rohaut-trained filly found her feet on the all-weather at Cagnes-sur-Mer and Deauville at the start of the year and translated that progression back to turf when a close second to the useful Joanna in the Prix Imprudence at Maisons-Laffitte in April. Special Duty, who finished third that day, may not have been quite at her best but nevertheless it was a fine effort and the winner Joanna has since franked that form. Rohaut also believes her to be a better filly on today’s quicker ground. Fillies who have run in either the 1,000 Guineas at Newmarket or another country’s equivalent of that Classic have a fearsome record in this contest (18 of the last 21 winners) and it was in the Italian Guineas at Capanelle last month that Evading Tempete continued her upward curve of improvement when easily beating 18 rivals. While Maxime Guyon’s success aboard a fellow French raider, Byword, in the Prince of Wales’s Stakes came on his first visit to the track, Rohaut has been here before and missed out on a victory by two short-heads when Turtle Bowl finished third in the Queen Anne Stakes three years ago. 2.30 Albany Stakes Radharcnafarraige was a clear-cut winner on her latest start of the same Group Three event at Naas which Cuis Ghaire took en route to victory here two years ago. That was a hot heat and she appeared to score with plenty in hand. Richard Hannon’s juveniles have been running well all week, even in defeat, and Memory looked potentially smart when scoring at Goodwood on her debut last month. 3.05 King Edward VII Stakes Was At First Sight flattered by finishing second in the Derby? Dedicated clockwatchers will deny that the form of the race can possibly be suspect, given the impressive time recorded by the winner. Furthermore it is entirely conceivable that At First Sight had not been able to run up to his best in that race. But the dreadful record of Derby runners in this contest (four winners in the last 20 years) is enough to persuade me to take him on here with the battle-hardened Monterosso . He has four lengths to find with Green Moon on recent Newbury running but is 6lb better off this time. 4.25 Wolferton Handicap Rainbow Peak failed to handle the drop back in trip when second to Fareer at York last time but he can show his true colours returned to a mile and a quarter. That was only the fourth appearance of his career but Rainbow Peak showed plenty of tenacity to get as close as he did to the winner, given that he was ridden from off the pace in a contest where it paid to be prominent. Connections consider him a Pattern-race performer in the making. 5.00 Queen’s Vase Beaten on his first three starts, Corsica started his handicapping career on a lowly mark of 74 but quickly worked his way through the ranks before taking a Listed contest at Hamilton. He looked to have plenty on his plate off top weight in a red-hot handicap at Musselburgh on Derby Day but battled on courageously to finish third in a big field and the move up to two miles promises to suit. His trainer, Mark Johnston, targets this race and has won it in five of the last nine years. Horse racing Horse racing tips Royal Ascot Will Hayler guardian.co.uk

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Evading Tempete can make it a Royal Ascot Coronation for French

World Cup 2010: USA’s Tim Howard offers Slovenia some trash talk

• Fifa mistranslation gets up Howard’s nose • USA goalkeeper says ‘talk is cheap’ It is not often you hear Tim Howard warn an opponent that “talk is cheap” or tell him to be prepared to “stand toe to toe” – but two words, lost in translation, have spiced up tomorrow’s encounter between the biggest and smallest countries in this year’s World Cup. This week the Slovenia midfielder Andrej Komac, regarded as the most humble member of the squad, told reporters: “We will play to win” – a gentle statement confirming his side’s intentions to book their place in the last 16 before facing England. However, Fifa’s interpreter turned his innocuous words into the more emphatic “We are going to win.” • 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 That statement went on press wires and bulletin boards, and was put to Howard, who warned Komac: “Talk is cheap, he’s got to stand toe to toe and they’ve got to stand toe to toe with us for 90 minutes. And if he’s still standing, then I’ll take my hat off to him. But a lot of boxers talk too and they’re looking up at the lights. And the next thing they know, they’re trying to figure out how they got there.” Howard will have a painkilling injection on his ribs before kick-off but will be fit. Komac is set to be named on the bench. Perhaps it is just as well. Slovenia’s coach, Matjaz Kek, who is expected to stick with the 11 who beat Algeria as he attempts to guide his country into the knockout stages of a major tournament for the first time. Expectations are high in Ljubljana; cinemas will show football instead of films, and bars will be overflowing. And Kek is promising his team will go for it. “We might be the smallest country in this World Cup but we have not come here as tourists,” Kek said. “We are really focused.”Slovenia face a nation a 150 times bigger in terms of population but Kek insists: “We don’t stand in awe of the US.” His team are certainly in form, having won seven of their last eight matches since losing to England last September. As usual, Bob Bradley gave little away in his press conference. But the USA coach is a tinkerer and maybe minded to start Jose Torres in midfield instead of the more defensively inclined Ricky Clark. “Slovenia are a very good team,” said Bradley. “They are very well organised and tactically very smart. We have a great deal of respect for them. Robert Koren is the engine of their team. [Mile] Novakovic is a tall player with a creative side and [Valter] Birsa has a great left foot. They do a good job of staying very tight,” he added. “But we’ve been in many of these games before. I expect the game to be a tactical but we are looking at a way to get an edge.” With the stakes so high, the football might not be pretty. The USA captain, Carlos Bocanegra, was quite upfront about it, telling US journalists: “We will have to approach this game in an intelligent fashion. We have to be smart and not open up because a loss would put us out of the tournament.” But Bradley does not intend to lose too much sleep over what lies ahead. “I sleep from 12am to 6am every night,” he said. “And that’s not going to change.” World Cup 2010 Group C Slovenia USA World Cup 2010 Sean Ingle guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: USA’s Tim Howard offers Slovenia some trash talk

World Cup 2010: What we’ve learned today | Paul Hayward

South Africa have all but been eliminated, leaving Africa desperately hoping at least one of its five other teams avoid a wipe-out This World Cup needs a strong African contender to extend the sense of triumph beyond the continent’s bare staging of the tournament for the first time. To think the six nations who call Africa home would be satisfied with an early wipe-out on the field of play so long as the event itself can be called a success would be to misunderstand the ambitions of football in these parts. South Africa are already in dire peril of becoming the first host country to fail to progress beyond the group stage. At Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria last night, Bafana Bafana fell victim to a striker who is developing a formidable reputation for crushing dreams. Diego Forlán, scorer of two of Uruguay’s goals in the 3-0 win, was Fulham’s tormentor in the Europa League final in Hamburg. • 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 This far weightier blow against romance left South Africans crushed and embarrassed. As they left bars and restaurants they were already haunted by a vision of how this World Cup might feel if they no longer have Carlos Alberto Perreira’s side to cheer. We are in uncharted territory here. Never has a World Cup host had to abandon its prime allegiance and find another so quickly. South Africa must beat France in Bloemfontein to have any hope of advancing. The mantra has been that all Africans would support whichever team was left when theirs went out, but the portents are not good. Nigeria have already lost to Argentina and Greece, Algeria went down to Slovenia, Cameroon were beaten by Japan and the Ivory Coast began with a 0-0 draw with Portugal. Ghana’s 1-0 victory over Serbia remains the continent’s only flourish. There is still time for this unpromising early momentum to be reversed, but it pains all sentient neutrals to imagine South Africa’s energy and their sacrifices off the pitch coming to nought. Most obviously, Africa cannot be a nursery for the rich European clubs without the countries that supply that talent progressing at national level. This World Cup was meant to strengthen the African game. Otherwise it’s just a circus passing through. World Cup 2010 South Africa Paul Hayward guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: What we’ve learned today | Paul Hayward

World Cup 2010: Robert Green’s redemption remains stuck in limbo | Paul Hayward

The England goalkeeper will not know if he can make a return journey from bum to hero until two hours before kick-off Reflecting on Tim Howard’s downfall as Manchester United’s first-choice goalkeeper in the summer of 2005, Esther Howard, his mother, said in a recent interview in the New Yorker: “In England the goalkeeper is treated like a necessary evil. It’s a totally thankless position. One mistake and you’ve gone from being a hero to being a bum.” Not quite, because Fabio Capello is staying true to Robert Green, author of the goalkeeping howler against the USA last Saturday. The England coach will not say whether Green will retain the jersey against Algeria but nor will he join the chorus that says the West Ham man’s mistake was terminal, which is a loyalty of sorts. The two-hour team-disclosure rule stands, so Capello is sticking to one of his golden principles. • 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 The selectorial logic that sent Howard to Everton was not quite as brutal as his mother claims because United had coveted Edwin van der Sar since the end of the Peter Schmeichel era but Mrs Howard’s reading of the goalkeeper’s fear of rejection would have resonated with Green on the eve of England’s second Group

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World Cup 2010: Robert Green’s redemption remains stuck in limbo | Paul Hayward

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

Soccer AM/MW: Football League at World Cup 2010: Update 1

Football League at World Cup 2010 : Update 1. We’re keeping tabs on this summer’s World Cup as we focus on the 11 Football League players who have made their way to South Africa. The first round of matches have almost been completed … way in the second period and, after being reduced to 10 men, a mistake from ‘keeper Faouzi Chaouchi – allowing Robert Koren’s shot to slip past him – gave the Europeans their first ever win at a World Cup . Final score : Algeria 0 Slovenia 1 …

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Soccer AM/MW: Football League at World Cup 2010: Update 1

2010 FIFA World Cup Scores: Slovenia Jumps to Top of Group C with …

2010 FIFA World Cup Scores : Slovenia Jumps to Top of Group C with Win Over Algeria – Transworld News (Football News). Slovenia moved atop Group C in the 2010 FIFA World Cup on Sunday after scoring a 1-0 victory, their first ever in …

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Brazil v North Korea 2010 FIFA World Cup Betting: Robinho Can Make …

brazil v north korea 2010 fifa world cup betting: robinho can make hay. brazil are huge favourites to get their latest world cup finals underway with a big group g win against rank outsiders north korea at the ellis park stadium. … Close Call In Slovenia V Algeria Group C World Cup Betting Novakovic Great Bet to Score Opener, 12th Jun. Odds Look Good For Low Scoring Win For Serbia Over Ghana In World Cup Group D Pantelic is Man to Back in Goal Scoring Markets, 12th Jun …

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World Cup 2010: Koren, Slovenia Down Algeria, 1-0 – SBNation.com

Update : Slovenia, Algeria Reach Halftime Scoreless At World Cup 2010 . When Group C for the 2010 World Cup was drawn, there were quiet fears of the type of soccer fans would see when a number of counter attacking teams faced each other. …

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World Cup 2010: Koren, Slovenia Down Algeria, 1-0 – SBNation.com

Watch FIFA World Cup 2010 Finals – Slovenia vs Algeria

Watch FIFA World Cup 2010 Finals South Africa Slovenia against Algeria The FIFA World Cup 2010 Finals Group C match between Algeria and Slovenia is set to air on 06/13/2010, Sunday at 7:00 PM on ESPN. Group C second match for this years World Cup 2010 in South Africa, where they have USA and England in their group who got a tie in their match last time and now the next game goes to Slovenia and Algeria to get the chance for the first win in their group. Watch this Group C match up between Slovenia versus Algeria Free Online Streaming Full HDTV Replay of the game Video Clip Download: HERE

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Watch FIFA World Cup 2010 Finals – Slovenia vs Algeria