Tag Archives: french

World Cup 2010: Arjen Robben returns for Holland after hamstring injury

• Robben recovers to play full part in training • Winger likely to start on the bench against Japan The Holland winger Arjen Robben has completed a full training session for the first time since recovering from a hamstring injury, but is unlikely to start his team’s World Cup match against Japan tomorrow. In training earlier today Robben appeared to be fully recovered from a left hamstring injury he sustained in a warm-up match against Hungary on 5 June. The injury kept him out of his country’s 2-0 defeat of Denmark in their first World Cup game. The Holland coach, Bert van Marwijk, says he is unlikely to play Robben against Japan in the Group E game in Durban, but has not completely ruled it out. Japan beat Cameroon 1-0 in their first match. “It’s quite something that he trained with us today,” said Van Marwijk. “But we have to wait and see how he responds tomorrow.” In a friendly last September the Dutch were frustrated by Japan for over an hour before winning 3-0. “This is going to be a tougher fight,” said Van Marwijk. “Both teams want to win and both sides won their first match. We cannot compare that game to this one. I expect a very aggressive Japan and we are prepared for everything and anything.” Van Marwijk believes Japan have improved since then and that was evident in their 1-0 triumph over Cameroon in their World Cup opener. “They have progressed a lot,” he said. “They have been together for a long time and have played lots of matches. They have been looking for some time to find a style of play which they didn’t have in qualifying. But they appear to have found that style. I have a lot of respect for the Japan coach and his team and we will not be underestimating them.” Van Marwijk believes the Oranje must focus on themselves and not on their rivals. “People who know me know that I concentrate on my team and I don’t make adjustments based on our rivals,” he said. “We have to play the way we know how and make the most of our chances.” The Oranje will have plenty of support tomorrow in Durban with thousands of fans having travelled to South Africa, while there is plenty of optimism back home regarding the team’s chances to go far in the tournament. “We hear a lot about the atmosphere back in Holland and this is great,” said Van Marwijk. “We also have lots of fans here and it’s wonderful that they have travelled such a long way to support us. But we have a long way to go and the most important thing is tomorrow’s match.” Holland World Cup 2010 World Cup 2010 Group E guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Arjen Robben returns for Holland after hamstring injury

World Cup 2010: France quit on the job and end the Raymond Domenech era

The Gallas and Henry generation is over for France and Laurent Blanc will look to Benzema and Ribéry to lead the new one France’s enfeeblement at this World Cup is more chameleon than karma. In Dublin they laugh that Les Bleus are being punished for the double Thierry Henry handball that sent France to South Africa ahead of the Republic of Ireland, but the cause is less faith-based, unless you count Raymond Domenech’s astrological leanings. The chameleon Domenech has led this generation into the Seine with his oddball selectorial whims, tactical aberrations and confrontational modus operandi. Blindingly apparent in Thursday’s 2-0 defeat to Mexico was that these French players are desperate to reach the end of the Domenech era so they can start afresh under Laurent Blanc, even if that means withdrawing their labour during games. Professional footballers who hoist the white bedsheet while on national service take a grave risk, because the public are seldom inclined to support an insurrection that wrecks a major tournament campaign, but the side led by Patrice Evra have plainly had their fill of the great survivor, Domenench, who held on to the post despite France failing to progress beyond the group phase at Euro 2008. The French federation’s refusal to act on the coach’s deep unpopularity in the dressing room exhibited suicide loyalty. In 2006, in Germany, France drew with Switzerland and South Korea before beating Togo to set off on a winning run that was inspired by the senior players, almost in defiance of their leader. Persuading Zinedine Zidane to return from international retirement proved a masterstroke, but only because it gave the rest of the squad a hero to coalesce around, when the alternative was to quit on the job – which they appear to be doing now. A report now confirmed in reliable sections of the French press is that Domenech tried to make Chelsea’s Florent Malouda play in a defensive midfield position in the opening 0-0 draw with Uruguay to allow Yoann Gourcuff freedom to roam. Malouda, arguably the best attacking player in the Premier League after Wayne Rooney last season, objected and was left on the bench. Meanwhile William Gallas expressed his disgust at being overlooked for the captaincy by refusing to talk to the media. France claimed the title of the new Holland: a warring family determined to sabotage their own talent. In theory they could still advance if they beat South Africa and there is a positive result between Uruguay and Mexico but the game is already up, with L’Equipe calling this team ‘The Impostors’ and Zidane diagnosing that Domenech has lost control of the camp. The coach will not have to consult his star signs to know that old pronouncements will be thrown back at him like rotten Brie. Leos, he once said, were “show-offs” who made unreliable defenders. Robert Pires was handicapped by being a Scorpio. Naturally. So for the four years since they lost to Italy on penalties in the 2006 final, French football has been in a race to destruction. The only doubt was who would end up with the bulk of the blame: Domenech or his rebellious players. This mortification will pass, of course, and France will draw on its Clairefontaine academy system to produce new heirs to Zidane, and Blanc will reverse Domenech’s folly in leaving Samir Nasri and Karim Benzema at home. This is the end for the William Gallas-Thierry Henry-Nicolas Anelka generation and now Malouda, Nasri, Benzema, Lassana Diarra and Franck Ribéry, if he gets his mind right, will lead France from the mire in the spirit, Blanc will hope, of fraternité . France World Cup 2010 Group A World Cup 2010 Paul Hayward guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: France quit on the job and end the Raymond Domenech era

Mexico tops France, needs tie to advance (AP)

Substitutes Javier Hernandez and Cuauhtemoc Blanco scored a goal each Thursday in Mexico’s 2-0 win over France at the World Cup, leaving the French on the verge of elimination from Group A. Hernandez ran onto Rafael Marquez’s pass and rounded goalkeeper Hugo Lloris before guiding the ball home in the 64th minute.

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Mexico tops France, needs tie to advance (AP)

James Ward blames All England Club for Wimbledon absence

• Ward loses in straight sets to Alexandr Dolgopolov • Elena Baltacha loses to Sam Stosur at Eastbourne Everton Gayle and Tim Henman has called on British players to start taking more responsibility for themselves. The retired player is frustrated there are no English men in the singles draw at Wimbledon next week and is peeved in particular at Alex Bogdanovic, who has complained he has not had enough support from the Lawn Tennis Association. “When are players going to take more responsibility for themselves? asked the former British No1. “You’re always hearing complaints about lack of funding, demanding to have a new coach or the parents complaining about something. Ultimately it comes down to the player. I know Boggo, he’s a nice lad and has lots of talent but he needs to look at himself in the mirror and ask if he deserves more funding. He’s 26 and after all he’s had, he really shouldn’t be getting any more. “The LTA get a lot things wrong but too often they get blamed for everything,”he added. “I have a problem with a lot of the players, and with the parents. All I ever hear from the players is, ‘I didn’t get this, I didn’t get that, my funding has been cut from X to Y.’ It’s ridiculous. There’s too much of this sense of entitlement. “Part of the problem is that the players get given too much and I find that disappointing. It’s got to be about the individuals, they’ve got to go out and make this happen and do it themselves,” James Ward lost in straight sets to Alexandr Dolgopolov to complete a disappointing day for the two remaining Britons at the Aegon International, after the women’s British No1, Elena Baltacha, was defeated in three sets by Sam Stosur. Ward then stated his frustration with the All England Club for not offering him a wild card into next week’s Wimbledon. Speaking after his 6-3, 6-4 defeat by Dolgopolov, the Ukrainain ranked 47th in the world, Ward said of his absence: “It’s very frustrating [with] obviously beating two good guys here [Feliciano López and Rainer Schüttler] who are going to go on and do very well at Wimbledon in the next two weeks. But it’s not in my control.”Yesterday Leon Smith, the LTA’s head of player development, acknowledged yesterday that it was his organisation’s decision not to propose Ward to the All England Club as a wild card, but Ward said last night that the All England Club was to blame for his absence. “He [Smith] explained a little bit,” said Ward. “I don’t think it’s up to the LTA, it’s up to the All England club itself. I think the LTA wanted me to play but the All England club make their own decisions. He [Smith] certainly would have wanted me involved like he would have wanted a lot of other players involved as well.” Asked if he was disappointed that the All England Club was not supporting English players, Ward said: “Yes it’s disappointing. They offered me a wild card into the qualifying which is great. But I picked this tournament because of the chance of playing good players in a top 250 event and get some good ranking points, which I’ve got and will get my ranking up for the rest of the year.” Baltacha, meanwhile, said of her defeat to Stosur: “She was just too good, she kept serving bombs, kept mixing it up, with great variety. She was taking swings and hitting winners and was too good for me today.” Stosur was the losing finalist in this month’s French Open and Baltacha said that the world No7 is continuing that form. “She was on a roll – there’s a reason why she made the finals of Paris, she’s a very good player.I knew I’d have to perform unbelievable.” Kim Clijsters, the US Open Champion, lost in straight sets to Victoria Azarenka.” Tennis Jamie Jackson guardian.co.uk

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James Ward blames All England Club for Wimbledon absence

France 0-2 Mexico | World Cup 2010 Group A match report

Manchester United have not seen much of Javier Hernández yet but the striker who will join them for the new season delighted the hordes of underdressed Mexican fans in chilly Polokwane by scoring the goal that set his side on the way to victory against a ragged France. Hernández came on as 55th-minute substitute and made the breakthrough nine minutes later, beating the offside trap by a matter of inches and leaving France looking at elimination. A penalty from another substitute, the veteran Cuauhtémoc Blanco made certain of victory 12 minutes from time, taking Mexico level with Uruguay at the top of Group A and leaving France and South Africa with a point each. A point is about all France deserve after two extremely underwhelming displays at this World Cup, and though they could finish their group games with a victory over South Africa, the worry will be that Mexico and Uruguay will draw to both progress. Mexico began as if they meant business, showing much more attacking desire than in their opening game against South Africa and giving France a couple of scares in the first 10 minutes. Giovani dos Santos was in an offside position when he struck a post after only two minutes, but France had been warned. Carlos Vela managed to stay onside when Mexico came forward again, though after expertly gathering Rafael Márquez’s lofted pass, he shot early and high with his left foot. Guillermo Franco, who picked up the game’s first caution for delaying the taking of a free-kick, also shot too high after easily turning Eric Abidal on the adge of the area. France weathered that storm and gradually pushed Mexico back before producing a few attacks of their own. There was no one in the middle when Franck Ribéry crossed invitingly across the face of goal from the right, and though Jérémy Toulalan sent over an even better centre a few minutes later Florent Malouda was unable to get on the end of it. There was a definite sense, missing in most of the opening round of games, that both sides wanted to win this fixture. That would make qualification almost certain, whereas to lose, with Uruguay already on four points, would make life tricky if not impossible on the final day. Carlos Salcido, Mexico’s impressive left-back, brought the first real save of the evening from Hugo Lloris with a galloping run into the box and a shot directly at the goalkeeper, but the El Tri cause was not helped when Vela disappeared after just half an hour. He went down injured after no obvious contact with an opponent and was unable to continue. Little had been seen of Nicolas Anelka until he brought a routine save from Oscar Perez with a tame shot on the stroke of half-time, though he was indirectly involved in Toulalan collecting a caution in the last act of the first half that will put him out of the next game. Anelka tried to shoot from a free-kick for a foul on Ribéry, but shot into the Mexican wall so meekly that the wall broke up and a downfield breakaway was launched. Toulalan could not get back in time and was obliged to block Franco near halfway to prevent the Mexican striker breaking into space. It was hardly the biggest of surprises when Anelka was hauled off at half-time, though Raymond Domenech chose to replace him with André-Pierre Gignac rather than Thierry Henry. PSV Eindhoven’s Salcido continued to show up well, cutting in from the left at the start of the second half and shaping to shoot before Bacary Sagna brought him down. Mexico produced a well worked free move from the free kick to get Dos Santos to the goal-line, only for the former Spurs player to waste the opportunity with a cross played behind his strikers. France came back down the pitch and Malouda brought a save from Perez with a rising shot that the goalkeeper tipped over the bar, before Dos Santos wasted a couple of free-kicks at the other end by a distance that suggested the ball was to blame. Both efforts, from a fair way out, sailed so harmlessly dead it was difficult to know what he was attempting, though the look Javier Aguirre shot him from the bench on the second occasion suggested he might be wiser trying something more reliable next time. That was rendered unnecessary by what happened next, with Hernández taking advantage of a stupendously good linesman’s call to stay onside and put Mexico in front. The substitute passed backwards to Márquez then set off upfield for the return, which was timed to perfection and left Hernández the relatively simple task of gathering in space, then rounding Lloris to score. The French appealed for offside, but the flag had stayed down throughout the move, and replays showed that Hernández was onside, though by no more than a foot, when the ball was played. France gave up without much of a fight, with neither Ribéry nor Malouda succeeding in taking the ball past opponents, and another perplexing attacking substitution by Domenech failing to make any discernible difference. Their off-night was summed up when Eric Abidal brought down Pablo Barrera for the penalty. The defender seemed to have time to pull out of the tackle when Barrera played the ball past him and drew the foul, but Abidal was either too tired or too resigned to be concerned. Contact was made, the referee was correct in pointing to the spot, and Blanco found the bottom corner. Surprisingly good last time, France are right back in the doldrums again. World Cup 2010 Group A World Cup 2010 France Mexico Paul Wilson guardian.co.uk

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France 0-2 Mexico | World Cup 2010 Group A match report

REVIEW: Tilda Swinton Dazzles in Virtuosic I Am Love

A clamorous Italian counterpart to Summer Hours, last year’s lyrical meditation on French tradition in decline, I Am Love also examines fading nationalist notions of legacy and institution through the story of a prominent family’s slow slide from grace. Or that’s one way to look at it: Bold, weird, and a little stalkerish in its intensity, Luca Guadagnino’s third feature is an open cinematic buffet, as ready to satisfy as it is to displease, depending on your taste and appetite. It lends itself to a number of persuasive primary readings — from proto-feminist awakening to sexual-identity crisis; bitter cultural critique to soaring infidelity melodrama; sui generis tour de force to sweaty exercise in the ecstasy of aesthetic influence — and has plenty of flaws that might be dwelled on as well. It’s a lot of movie; the choice is really yours.

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REVIEW: Tilda Swinton Dazzles in Virtuosic I Am Love

Padma Lakshmi Has Really Bad Taste

I actually watch Top Chef quite a bit, not because I’m into food, but because Padma Lakshmi is so hot I’d sit through a show about French mimes if she was the host. Here she is out the other night in her sexy little shorts showing off her delicious long legs. I love her. And yes you’re seeing this right, I don’t know how the hell it happened, but that is David Spade she’s with. I couldn’t believe it either, just the thought of it is disgusting. I won’t hold it against her though, everyone makes mistakes, I know I’ve made a few fat ones, but I think she and I can work through this. Call me.

NBC Sees Gaza as ‘Prison Sentence Imposed by Israel,’ Ignores Reports of Food Abundance

Catching up on an item from last week on the Tuesday, June 8, NBC Nightly News, correspondent Tom Aspell portrayed the residents of Gaza as living through a life prison sentence imposed by Israel: “Israel’s blockade on Gaza isn’t just about preventing goods from getting in, it’s about preventing 1.5 million Palestinians from getting out. It sentences them to life inside a 140-square-mile prison.” Anchor Brian Williams set up the piece: “We are back now with a rare look inside a place 1.5 million people call home. The Israelis call it a hotbed of terrorism, but the people who live there say they are prisoners of poverty and misery.” As Aspell asserted that dire conditions exist for those in Gaza, he barely mentioned reports to the contrary , and placed the burden of blame squarely on Israel as, even though Egypt actively takes part in the blockade, the NBC correspondent only indirectly alluded to Egypt’s participation as he mentioned that tunnels that lead from Egypt to Gaza are illegal, and related that “some supplies” are “smuggled through hundreds of illegal tunnels under the border from Egypt.” But last February, FNC’s Mike Tobin devoted a report to the construction of underground walls by Egypt in an attempt to keep up its end of the blockade by closing off the tunnels: “With each elongated piece of steel Egyptians drive 20 yards into the ground down to the water table, they get closer to completing the iron curtain which will close Gaza’s smuggling tunnels. When construction began a month ago, Palestinians in the Gaza strip rioted killing an Egyptian soldier.” And while the Israel Foreign Ministry’s Web site recounts statistics on the amount of basic supplies that are transported into Gaza over land from Israel on a regular basis, Aspell only briefly relayed the Israeli contention that “Israel says there’s no humanitarian crisis,” and only vaguely related that “some food and medicine is allowed in,” adding that “the United Nations says conditions have never been worse.” While Aspell’s report left the impression that there is not enough food in Gaza, in the June 3 Washington Post article, “Getting What They Need to Live, But Not Thrive,” Janine Zacharia reports that food is plentiful in Gaza, and that people’s complaints have more to do with unemployment, limited travel abilities, and the inability to repair infrastructure: Gazans lament where they can’t go more than what they can’t buy. … Once an exporter of fruits and other goods, Gaza has been turned into a mini-welfare state with a broken economy where food and daily goods are plentiful, but where 80 percent of the population depends on charity. She continued: If you walk down Gaza City’s main thoroughfare – Salah al-Din Street – grocery stores are stocked wall-to-wall with everything from fresh Israeli yogurts and hummus to Cocoa Puffs smuggled in from Egypt. Pharmacies look as well-supplied as a typical Rite Aid in the United States. … Gazans readily admit they are not going hungry. But that, they say, is the wrong benchmark for assessing their quality of life. While Gaza has long been poor, the economy has completely crumbled over the past three years. Aspell’s claim that “Israel won’t let cement into Gaza,” is also contradicted by Israeli Foreign Ministry’s Web site : Building for the future: Infrastructure and economic aid Building materials While the import of cement and iron has been restricted into Gaza since these are used by the Hamas to cast rockets and bunkers, monitored imports of truckloads of cement, iron, and building supplies such as wood and windows are regularly coordinated with international parties. Already in the first quarter of 2010, 23 tons of iron and 25 tons of cement were transferred to the Gaza Strip. On 13 May 2010, Israel allowed approximately 39 tons of building material into Gaza to help rebuild a damaged hospital. The construction material for al Quds hospital was transferred after safeguards in place and French assurances ensured that the construction material would not be diverted elsewhere. On 24 May 2010 Israel opened the Kerem Shalom crossing to 97 trucks loaded with aid and goods, including six trucks holding 250 tons of cement and one truck loaded with five tons of iron for projects executed and operated by UNRWA. Below is a complete transcript of the relevant story from the Tuesday, June 8, NBC Nightly News: BRIAN WILLIAMS: We are back now with a rare look inside a place 1.5 million people call home. The Israelis call it a hotbed of terrorism, but the people who live there say they are prisoners of poverty and misery. It’s the Gaza Strip, and it’s once again gotten the world’s attention after that raid on a ship trying to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza to deliver what many say was food and basic supplies. The Israelis say some of those supplies could have been used as weapons. Israel tonight is still saying no to a UN investigation into the raid, but tonight our own Tom Aspell has a report from behind the blockade. TOM ASPELL: This is what you see when you cross the border from Israel into Gaza, children desperately scrambling for pebbles, pebbles to be ground into cement. Israel won’t let cement into Gaza. It says the cement would be used for tunnels to smuggle weapons. So thousands of homes destroyed in the 2009 offensive can’t be rebuilt. Some supplies, like groceries and even animals, are smuggled through hundreds of illegal tunnels under the border from Egypt. Israel says there’s no humanitarian crisis. Some food and medicine is allowed in, but the United Nations says conditions have never been worse. CHRISTOPHER GUNNESS, UNRWA SPOKESMAN: Eighty percent aid dependency, 44 percent unemployment. Deep poverty tripling in the last year. ASPELL: Deep poverty and also despair. Eighty percent of Gazans, like Rushti Abotawela, get their food from the UN. Born deaf, he has no chance of getting a job here. He and his family, two of them also deaf, live on $70 a month from the Palestinian government. Israel’s blockade on Gaza isn’t just about preventing goods from getting in, it’s about preventing 1.5 million Palestinians from getting out. It sentences them to life inside a 140-square-mile prison. Life here is a struggle from birth. In Gaza’s Schiffer Hospital, the best around, there isn’t enough special formula for premature babies, not even enough incubators. So this baby is only one hour old, but there’s no place for him? UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: Yeah. (LOOKS TO ANOTHER MAN AND SAYS SOMETHING UNCLEAR) UNIDENTIFIED MALE VOICE: No place. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: No place. ASPELL: Fifty percent of Gazans are children under 15. Mental health experts say 95 percent of all children in Gaza suffer from trauma and stress. DR. AHMED ABU TAWAHEENA, GAZA MENTAL HEALTH COMMUNITY DIRECTOR: Most important one of them is their violent behavior, aggressive behavior among school students, for example. ASPELL: Eight-year-old Mahmud Kalil has turned to music to erase memories of bombs and missiles during the 2009 offensive when he spent a month hiding in a basement. Mahmud had extreme mood swings, either laughing or crying constantly. His mother, Anwan, says music therapy now keeps him calm. Music may also be his escape. Given the chance, Mahmud says he’d like to pack up his instrument and leave here forever. Tom Aspell, NBC News, Gaza.

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NBC Sees Gaza as ‘Prison Sentence Imposed by Israel,’ Ignores Reports of Food Abundance

Katy Perry Does That Thing WIth Her Mouth

Yesterday I had some crappy quality pictures of Katy Perry flashing her hipster lady junk on French TV, and now I’ve got her wearing the same latex dress shaking her goods during some concert in Times Square . I don’t care that she’s wearing the same outfit, I’m just glad the picture quality is better so we can finally get a good look at those big old boobs of here. Besides, I like latex 80’s prostitute dresses, she reminds me of the hot hookers on Night Court that Dan Fielding used to hit on all the time. Good times. more pictures of Katy Perry here

David Guetta Wants To Drop Dance Beats On Rihanna’s Next LP

The superstar French DJ/ producer tells MTV News he and the pop diva have discussed a collaboration. By Jocelyn Vena, with additional reporting by Matt Elias and Akshay Bhansali Rihanna Photo: Frank Micelotta/ Getty Images When Rihanna released her Rated R last fall, she showed fans that she was in a darker, more serious mood. Tracks like “Russian Roulette” and “Hard” were decidedly more introspective than her past club bangers. But if superstar French DJ David Guetta has his way, he’ll have Rih back to singing tunes like her mega-hit “Umbrella.” “Well, you know I’m a DJ, so I make beats that make you wanna dance,” Guetta told MTV News at the Activision E3 party in Los Angeles. “And I think she was one of the first to do that in that urban world, so you know, I think it would be good for her to do it again.” While the producer already has some material in mind for the pop star, he said it was just a matter of scheduling. “We[‘re] thinking of doing something together, yes,” he revealed. “Yeah, yeah, yeah [the beat’s ready], we just have to make sure it’s okay with her schedule and my schedule cause we … this is what happens. Unfortunately, it’s not only about the music anymore, it’s also about schedules, which is really boring but, you know.” Dutch DJ/ producer Afrojack has also gotten behind the boards, Guetta said, crafting what he hopes will be the next big Rihanna hit. “Like, he was in the studio with me the first time [after] he finished the new song for Rihanna,” Guetta recalled of Afrojack. “He was like, ‘Oh, my God! You gotta hear this! It’s crazy!’ I was expecting some crazy club sh–. He played me that track and it was a good track. I think pop-wise it’s a fatter sound. Musically, it’s as high a level as RedOne, Lady Gaga’s producer.” Rihanna has been vocal about bringing up the energy level on her next album. ” Rated R, I love the sound of it, in terms of the bass,” Rihanna told MTV Korea in February. “I really like the bottom, the grime of it. But if I were to combine that with more energetic, up-tempo pop records, then I think that will be a happy marriage. And that’s where we’ll probably go next.” Where would you like to see Rihanna go musically on her next album? Tell us in the comments! Related Artists Rihanna David Guetta

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David Guetta Wants To Drop Dance Beats On Rihanna’s Next LP