Tag Archives: award-as-finals

World Cup: Unseen photos from 1966

As World Cup fever takes hold of the country ahead of tonight’s England’s match, we take a look back to the 1966 tournament, courtesy of Life.com, at a selection of never seen before images taken by Time & Life magazine’s photographer Art Rickerby

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World Cup: Unseen photos from 1966

World Cup 2010 paper view: Nadirs, Churchill, 4-2-3-1 and a sex change

The English press get excited about tonight’s game, and the French press get the knives out After the frustration and false hope of the USA game, the English press have gone with a mature, low-key build up ahead of tonight’s match against Algeria, instead prioritising a detailed analysis of the likely tactical battle between the two managers. ‘THEIR FINEST HOUR (AND A HALF)’ screams the front page of The Sun, a reference to the fact that this is the 21st anniversary of the day the woman from cutepop band The Sundays found a pound on the underground . See, if England win tonight they’ll be quids in too! Eh? What? Oh, apparently it’s a reference to the fact that today is the 70th anniversary of Churchill’s famous speech , an obvious reference point when talking about a bloody football match against Algeria . It’s also 27 years to the day that we last wet ourselves, so that’s a good omen too: clean up your act lads and you can go all the way! The Sun’s front-page preview also includes the heartwarming tale of newlyweds Dave and Serena Stone, who will display a 15ft St George’s flag with the words ‘Serena and Dave’s World Cup honeymoon’ at the game. “We’ve been more excited about the World Cup than the wedding,” said Serena, suggesting this one will go the distance. The Mirror, meanwhile, have an interview between John Terry and James Corden , and features a picture that gives a whole new range to the “one bullet” dilemma . They also report that the reason England’s passing was so awry against America on Saturday is not, in fact, because they are almost to a man a bunch of overrated clodhoppers, but because the FA contrived to lose 25 Jabulani balls that were delivered in February. The upshot is that England did not get to train with the official World Cup beach ball until they reached Austria in May, with the idea of getting 25 more delivered apparently beyond the wit of man. In other news, the Daily Mail reports that Warren Beatty’s teenage daughter Kathlyn plans to have a sex change . This is clearly a good omen for England, who are also looking to change their identity tonight. In the same paper, Martin Samuel is happy that the “moribund 4-4-2 formation that made such little impression on the United States will be abandoned” , with Gareth Barry returning and Steven Gerrard moving to the left in a 4-2-3-1 system. We were going to point out that England actually played something resembling a 4-2-3-1 against the US, and the way in which England play 4-2-3-1 and 4-4-2 makes them blurred almost to the point of indistinguishability, and that tactics aren’t really the problem anyway, it’s that the team are naffing useless at the highest level, but we can’t really be bothered. In the Telegraph, Henry Winter says that “England face a Nadir on Friday night but it is only Belhadj” , a neat pun in no way compromised by the pesky culture of capitalising proper nouns. If England do manage a nadir tonight, they will doubtless take one hell of a beating from the press tomorrow. But it will do well to match the scorn on show in France. ‘THE IMPOSTORS’ roared the headline of L’Equipe, landing a range-finding right-hander before really getting to work. “The rubbishness of the France team belies the claims by Raymond Domenech and his players about their strength of character and their ability to respond to adversity. France wakes up this morning to survey a field of ruins: its national team. “No sadness, no desolation and, above all, no anger: that is too much to give to these men who are unable to offer anything … the I-couldn’t-give-a-a-damn attitude is the only banner under which this team is capable of rallying . It is now highly probable that the France team will exit the competition, their immense failure sealed.” Le Figaro was not much kinder. “One cannot see how this team with no backbone and no soul can hope for a miracle,” they said. “This French team deserves nothing but scorn and will only be saved if the gods of football fall on their heads.” The last word goes to La Depeche Du Midi. “There can be no quibbles. There were no refereeing errors. No nasty twists of fate. No. Just another defeat for a France team that has no soul, no desire, no way of playing . The final team rejig yielded nothing – absolutely nothing – and the Mexicans, rapid and technically adept, gave the invisible Bleus a lesson on rigour, tactics and spirit. “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 it transpires that Raymond The Haughty is human. It was about time he let us know.” World Cup 2010 England Algeria Rob Smyth guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010 paper view: Nadirs, Churchill, 4-2-3-1 and a sex change

Tiger Woods bemoans greens as US Open gets tough

• World No1 shoots three-over-par 74 at Pebble Beach • Paul Casey, Sean Micheel and Brendan de Jonge share lead Tiger Woods will not break his record 15-shot victory at Pebble Beach a decade ago but the world No1 retained hopes of repeating his famous US Open victory on the northern Californian coast last night despite a disappointing first round of 74, three over par. A woeful bogey on the par-five 18th, following on from a woeful exhibition of putting on the 17 holes that had gone before, left Woods bemoaning the greens. “Awful,” he said immediately after completing his round and – in case he was misunderstood – he used the same adjective to describe the putting surfaces again a few minutes later. “There’s no one making a lot of putts out there. No one is going low. You just can’t. [At least] the afternoon guys can’t. The morning guys have a chance. I’ve played, as I said, my practice rounds in the morning and the greens are smoother, but they’re still very firm.” Woods’ disgust was easily explained – he played better from tee to green than he has done since his return from his self-induced hiatus only to fritter away his chances – but his haste in blaming the elements was inexplicable, not least because the three co-leaders at the close of play had all, like Woods, teed off in the afternoon. Paul Casey, Sean Micheel and Brendan de Jonge finished on two under par, one shot ahead of group of six players including the Japanese teenager Ryo Ishikawa and Ian Poulter, who confirmed what was obvious from average score for the day (75.25) – that the 2010 version of Pebble Beach is a brute. At this rate, level par looks destined to finished on top. “I’m not thinking about what kind of score might win this golf tournament,” Poulter said after his one under par 70. “I’m just happy to go out there and play as good as I possibly can. But I will tell you the golf course is difficult. There’s not going to be many good scores on it today. And I can’t see it getting easier.” That will surely be good news for the likes of Woods, and Lee Westwood, who struggled to an opening 74, as well as the pre-tournament favourite Phil Mickelson, who was one shot worse on 75. Despite their poor return on the day – at least by their own high standards – all three players can look forward to the next three days with an optimism that would be misplaced in any other event but the US Open. “There’s a long way to go,” said Woods. “I’ll just keep plugging along and see where I come Sunday afternoon.” Tiger Woods US Open Golf Lawrence Donegan guardian.co.uk

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Tiger Woods bemoans greens as US Open gets tough

Fifth Time Is A Charm For Bryant

Kobe Bryant was named the Finals MVP after helping the Lakers rally in the fourth quarter for a 83-79 victory over the Celtics in Game 7 in Los Angeles. “This is the sweetest (of the five),” Bryant said as he accepted the Bill Russell Award as Finals MVP . “We understood how badly the city wanted it. This one is by far the sweetest because it was against (Boston) and it was the hardest, by far.” Not only was it Bryant’s fifth NBA championship but it was the first time in five tries that the Lakers defeated the Celtics in a Game 7.

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Fifth Time Is A Charm For Bryant