Tag Archives: Match

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

Tim Howard Turns Tourette’s from Challenge Into Advantage

Watch Tim Howard as he glides with acrobatic grace through the crosshairs, making whiplash saves and reading the ball as if it were a child’s book. He is generally so clear-headed, so cool in the heat of all that mayhem, and when the match is over, when the anxiety that rivals running through traffic has simmered, Howard bolts for the locker room and inhales peace. It’s not exactly fair to say soccer saved Howard, because the bubble that nurtures him is ripe with his Christian faith, his family and an extended athletic Rolodex that stretches from North Brunswick, N.J., where he was raised, to the cathedrals of the English Premier League, where his airborne feats have tweaked the perception of the United States as a country not quite ready for the beautiful game. Howard is the 31-year-old goaltender who Friday will be the last line of defense for the U.S. national team in a World Cup Group C game against tiny Slovenia. He also happens to have Tourette Syndrome (TS), a condition that these days is far less worrisome than the bruised ribs that have been screaming ever since an English player slammed into Howard cleats-first, at full speed, in a collision during last Saturday’s match.

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Tim Howard Turns Tourette’s from Challenge Into Advantage

World Cup 2010: Algeria’s Madjid Bougherra ready to tackle England

• Defender says playing Wayne Rooney ‘the ultimate test’ • Algerians out to settle score from 1982 travesty Algeria’s Madjid Bougherra has described the match against England tomorrow night as “the game of my life”. Walter Smith, his club manager at Rangers, is just delighted it will be over long before the start of the new Scottish Premier League season. Bougherra has made something of a habit out of late returns from international duty. Lost passports, keys and phones have played a part in the reasoning relayed back to Smith at Ibrox. Last November, after Algeria sealed their qualification for the World Cup, there was no elaborate excuse given for Bougherra’s delay in reaching Glasgow: the players were simply partying in the company of the country’s president. Bougherra’s journey to the grand stage ranks as one of the more circuitous at this year’s World Cup. Dario Gradi plucked him from France’s second tier in 2006 for a loan deal at Crewe Alexandra, during which Bougherra could not prevent relegation to League One. A short spell at Sheffield Wednesday followed, before Charlton Athletic paid £2.5m for the centre-half’s services. The same fee took him to Rangers in August 2008 with Charlton by then a Championship side. Tomorrow, Bougherra will come up against Wayne Rooney. The pair have faced each other before although the England striker may well have erased it from memory. “I only played five games for Charlton in England’s top flight,” Bougherra said last month. “But one was against United and I can tell you that I managed to keep Rooney off the scoresheet. I’d love to do it again when we face England in Cape Town.” Smith was only partly jesting when Bougherra publicly stated he would remain at Rangers for the second half of last season, rather than seek a return to the Premier League. “That’s good of him,” Smith said. “He’s come a long way since Charlton reserves, you know.” Indeed he has. Bougherra was the subject of speculation linking him with Barcelona and Sevilla in recent months despite only featuring 23 times for Rangers in their title-winning campaign. The 28-year-old has played in just three Champions League matches in his career. Occasional lapses in concentration are Bougherra’s main on-field flaw; his clear attacking sense either a benefit or hindrance depending on the circumstance. Defensively, however, Bougherra is robust yet composed. His physicality is suited to Scotland. Those who may scoff at the reported valuation put on his head by Rangers – in excess of £5m – should recall that Carlos Cuéllar earned a £7.8m move to Aston Villa from Ibrox. The Spaniard’s replacement, Bougherra has enjoyed a more fruitful period in the SPL. Alan Hutton’s £9m transfer from Rangers to Tottenham is another for sceptics of Bougherra’s lucrative worth to consider. Internationally, Bougherra and Algeria have a score to settle. In the year he was born, West Germany and Austria played out a famously dubious World Cup group match which prevented the Algerians from progressing in what was their debut in the finals. “Now is the time to bring closure for the stars of 1982,” Bougherra says. Rooney and England have been warned. Algeria England World Cup 2010 Group C World Cup 2010 Ewan Murray guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Algeria’s Madjid Bougherra ready to tackle England

Sir Geoff Hurst | Small Talk

The 66 World Cup winner on Alf Ramsey’s tanning rules, playing first-class cricket and being tripped up by a strange presence Hello Geoff. Hello Small Talk. Let’s crack on shall we? Does winning the World Cup feel like yesterday or does it feel like 44 years ago? It’s both. Because of the nature of people reminding you about the day, not only every four years, but people still talk about it on a daily basis. It really brings it home how significant and important a national occasion it is and how the support of the country is behind that. The players will be aware that there’s public support, but they will never really be aware how much support and feeling there is in the country until they actually go and win it. Nobody can tell them apart from myself and twenty-one other guys who played. Indeed. An old opponent of yours, Franz Beckenbauer, has had a few things to say about England. Do you think he’s right or do you just think he’s starting the mind games? I never felt it appropriate for any level of football, where a manager is talking disparagingly about another team. If we get through and we play Germany that will be the most motivating speech they can give to the team. Small Talk spoke to George Cohen a while ago, he thought the Argentina team you played that tournament were the best team you faced throughout it … I wouldn’t necessarily say the best. They were the toughest. I think the three teams we played in the quarters, semi and final were terrific sides. I mean the Portugal side in the semi-final was fantastic and with Eusebio scoring eight or nine goals in the tournament arguably one of the best players that’s played up front in any year of football. And that German side was a terrific team, they were going on to win the European Championship in ’72 and the World Cup in ’74. I would put them very close together. Certainly in terms of the tough game, really tough physical game, Argentina sticks out way above the others. Are the rumours true about it all kicking off a bit in the tunnel afterwards? Yes that’s very true. It was kept quiet. It was obviously a very physical match on and off the field. Controversial incidents with the captain being sent off. As it was in those days, it was much easier to keep things quiet. It would be impossible to keep things quiet today because of the huge media coverage. You then played against one of the greatest teams of all time, that Brazil team in Mexico … Arguably the greatest Brazilian side that won a world cup. Quite. Can you remember that game well? I remember the game for a number of things. For one you’re playing against one of the greatest sides ever. We were as strong if not stronger at the time but we were that close with the result in the match playing in their backyard under their conditions, in their heat. If you analyse the game we were fantastic and should have at least drawn or possibly won. A couple of misses and also the performance of Bobby Moore who arguably was better in ’70 than he was in ’66 if that’s possible. Bearing in mind he’d been locked up under house arrest only three days before the tournament. There were a couple of misses. Everybody remembers Jeff Astle’s horrible miss towards the end. Were you on the pitch when that happened? I was and people relive that moment saying it was me who missed it but I do remember it. I love looking at that film today and realising what a good side we had, the bulk had been together since ’66, the backbone of the side was there. In ’68 we were close in the European Championships but ’70 we looked like we were going to go there and play in the final again. I read in Alf Ramsey’s biography recently that he had one of his coaches blowing his whistle every 10 minutes so you wouldn’t get too much sun when you were in Brazil? Yes that’s absolutely true. Five minutes on your front, five minutes on your back, five minutes in the pool. The discipline was very strict. On the floor we were on in the hotel, you’d have either Alf or Les Cocker sitting outside the door of the lift to check on people’s whereabouts. Sounds harsh. How late would you they be there till? Probably midnight. Very few people would be late. It’s how it should be. Now, just away from football you also played a single game of county cricket for Essex … That’s correct. In 1962. Essex v Lancashire in a district of Liverpool, which was interesting. West Ham went away on tour to Ghana that year but because I was split between the two sports at that stage I decided to stay behind and got an opportunity to play one first-class game. Did you have real hopes of making a go of the cricket? Well yes I did. The big downfall for me was trying to do two. Looking back, like in anything in life you have to focus on something 100%. I wasn’t. All my life I played cricket in the summer and football in the winter, it was how I was brought up. In many respects it was the end of an era for me. Prior to that you could probably do the two. When you hear now of Dennis Compton, William Watson and many other players who played cricket for England and football for England. You look at it today and think how did anybody play those sports? What was your strongest suit? I’ve read that you were a very good fielder. I was a good fielder because I had the hand-eye coordination. Primarily I was a batsman and we didn’t have a wicketkeeper in Essex’s second team so I kept wicket a fair bit. And then I had the opportunity when there were a couple of injuries to play in that game against Lancashire, which we won. Do you think England will ever win another World Cup or do they have they to change all the coaching and everything like Trevor Booking has suggested? Yes we can win the World Cup. But certainly there is a concern from Trevor quite rightly and the current situation clearly illustrates that with the strength of the squad. We’re not producing enough international players of the Wayne Rooneys and Steven Gerrards. It’s quite clear that the system we have isn’t working. The system we had in my day which was pretty simplistic. You kick the ball in the road, the streets, the playground till you were 15, you played for your schools a bit maybe for the county. The people in charge were not coaching – they were probably a PE teacher who’s second subject was art. And that system produced some of the greatest players at that time and any other time. When we do get a good player like Joe Cole they get wasted because we don’t trust the more skilful player. Do you think that’s a problem with English football? Glenn Hoddle is an outstanding example of that in the game Had he been in another country he would have got 150 caps. Whatever the coaching is, it can try and replicate what happened in our time to an extent. Let the guys play, let them enjoy, let them have some freedom. We should be producing more street players like Wayne Rooney shouldn’t we … You also get your players, currently Frank Lampard, who’s not quite as gifted but appears he has a fantastic attitude. Makes the most of what he’s got … ‘Makes the most of’ is probably unfair, he’s made himself into great player. Bobby Moore probably wasn’t as gifted as many people think when he joined the club but he made himself into one of the great players by the other attributes you need as a great player, your attitude, determination, learning, leadership. You mentioned Harry Redknapp before. You played with him at West Ham. Wasn’t he a speedy winger … I think that was about it. With very skinny legs … Yeah he was quite a lean individual. Very quick and very fit and could run all day. Unfortunately he had to pack-up from injury very quickly. Do you believe in God? That is quite a difficult question to answer. That’s a fairly serious question. I don’t think that’s a silly question. I need time to think about it, is my answer to that. What about extra-terrestrial life? No. You don’t think anything’s out there, the universe is empty? Eh? er, yes. What about ghosts then? Have you ever seen one? No. Have you ever felt or sensed a presence? Yes. Last Sunday. This is a serious answer. When I tripped over my suitcase and banged my head and had four stitches in it. I sensed that when I tripped over the suitcase something was holding my leg in the suitcase. And was it? Normally when you trip, you know, you recover and stumble over something like a suitcase. Really? This was in the hotel? In the hotel in South Africa. And that’s an honest, genuine answer. Small Talk likes honest, genuine answers. How was the South African healthcare? Fine, fine, very good. We were looked after. The security guys who look after a lot of people, one of the roles seemed to be that they ensured that if anything did happen to us, physically, not by a terrorist, but a simple little trip, they were there to look after us. So they took me to a clinic, had a tetanus injection, antibiotics, painkillers and they got me a hat to wear. Have you still got a headache? No it was OK. I think it just caught the corner of the table. It was a big enough gash to have four stitches. My wife still doesn’t believe that I wasn’t drunk … She actually didn’t say that. And after I did it I couldn’t believe how stupid it was to do that and I was cursing like mad. What have you got in your pockets? A handkerchief. Always carry a handkerchief? Mostly. What was the favourite toy you played with as a child? A football. Always the football? Yeah. And if you could describe in one sentence what it was like in Essex in the 1950s … My first answer would be it’s impossible to answer. Eh? How is it different then? The most noticeable change is the amount of cars on the roads now. Now there’s a line of cars outside all the houses. I’m giving you a two pound coin in the petrol station and you can go in and buy any chocolate bar you want, what’s it going to be? Kit-Kat. The chunky or the four finger? Four finger. I can share that with my wife. Exactly. Does she get one finger or two? It’s two mostly, but occasionally she doesn’t fancy too much so she’ll have one and I’ll have the three. But I do like the chunky one as well. Who doesn’t? Thanks Geoff. Goodbye … Bye Small Talk. World Cup 2010 England Barney Ronay guardian.co.uk

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Sir Geoff Hurst | Small Talk

Andy Murray not worried by mediocre form as Wimbledon approaches

• ‘It doesn’t weigh on my mind’, says British No1 • Scot beats Mikhail Youzhny 6-4, 6-3 at Hurlingham The Hurlingham club is not necessarily a place one would associate with suffering and pain, more strawberries and Panamas. For Andy Murray, though, it was the venue for the final part of some especially arduous Wimbledon preparations. “I don’t worry about working on my mental strength,” said Murray after completing a 6-4, 6-3 win over Mikhail Youzhny. “I just go out on the running track and suffer and practice and put myself through pain. Then I go into matches feeling mentally strong.” Perhaps that masochistic streak was why he spent so much of his match cursing himself after playing poor shots. Otherwise the only noises that broke the respectful silence were the sharp cries of encouragement from his mother Judy, sitting a few yards away from the court. With Murray having been knocked out of the Queen’s Club tournament in the third round by Mardy Fish last week, this match was an exercise in restoring a little of the confidence that has been gradually ebbing away from Murray’s game since he lost the Australian Open final earlier in the year. Yesterday he played poorly and still won, no mean feat given that Youzhny, seeded 13th in the Wimbledon draw, has been in good form through the season, unlike his opponent. Murray says his mediocre form is not a worry. “It doesn’t weigh on my mind you have just got to move on, the last couple of years have been very good and very consistent and I have just had a bad few months.” Still, his slight slump has helped to ease the pressure put on him by the British public. Maybe it is just that the nation’s fair-weather sports fans have heaped all their unrealistic expectations on England’s football team instead, but the run-in to Wimbledon this year has been conspicuously free of Murraymania. Judy Murray believes that will work to her son’s advantage, as he will not be subject to the suffocating pressure he normally suffers at this time of year. Murray just wishes that he had a few fellow players to help share the hopes of the nation rather than the footballers. He is one of only two British males in the main draw. “It’s not great but that’s where we are right now. It’s a shame there’s not more guys playing in the main draw and I more than most people would like that to change. But we don’t have guys with rankings that would justify wild-card places. Rather than moaning about it it is better to get on and try and find a solution.” Andy Murray Tennis Andy Bull guardian.co.uk

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Andy Murray not worried by mediocre form as Wimbledon approaches

Pepe Reina fears Fernando Torres and Steven Gerrard may quit Liverpool

• Liverpool goalkeeper says ‘there is concern’ stars may leave club • ‘Without them it would be really tough to be up at the top’ Pepe Reina broke off from the Spanish inquisition into their improbable defeat to Switzerland to express his concerns that Liverpool could regress even further if Rafael Benítez’s departure as manager is followed by either Fernando Torres or Steven Gerrard leaving Anfield. While Reina has committed himself to the club, signing a six-year contract in April, the goalkeeper is acutely aware that when he begins next season at Liverpool there are no guarantees Gerrard or Torres will be there. The two most important players at Anfield are both giving serious consideration to their future because of the problems afflicting the club, most notably the ownership of Tom Hicks and George Gillett and the lack of transfer funds to improve a squad that may need major restoration work if they are to improve significantly next season. Liverpool finished seventh last season, 23 points behind the champions, Chelsea. With no manager in line to replace Benítez and no sense that a takeover is close, Reina’s fear is that Torres and Gerrard may also sever their ties with the club. “Of course there is concern about Fernando and Stevie,” he said. “Not just them, but others, too. Any team would count on Stevie and Fernando as big names and, for us, it’s the same. Without them, it would be really tough to be up there at the top next season.” Those concerns have been compounded by the news that Yossi Benayoun, one of Liverpool’s more creative players, is on the verge of moving to Chelsea while Javier Mascherano could conceivably link up again with Benítez at Internazionale. Torres has been prominently linked with Chelsea and Manchester City, both of whom have resurrected their interest since Benítez left Anfield, whereas Gerrard is reputedly among José Mourinho’s targets at Real Madrid and has resisted the opportunity to distance himself from all the talk of a possible move, saying he will not talk about his future until after the World Cup. Torres has spoken of Liverpool needing to be powerful movers in the transfer market this summer and Reina believes it is crucial that the club’s ownership issues are settled quickly. “Fingers crossed, once we sort out the situation with the manager and the owners, which we hope is soon, hopefully we can focus on building a squad for the future,” he said. “We are all on the same boat and we want to redecorate the ship. We want to be a lot stronger, more consistent and create and build a proper squad to be contenders for the title once again.” Reina, like Torres, had a strong working relationship with Benítez, but Iker Casillas’s understudy as Spain’s goalkeeper said he had come to terms with recent events. “I’ve had time to think about it and I guess it’s one of those things. Football is football, it happens, and I always say the same thing – Liverpool will remain forever; which is the most important thing.” Liverpool Steven Gerrard Fernando Torres Transfer window Daniel Taylor guardian.co.uk

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Pepe Reina fears Fernando Torres and Steven Gerrard may quit Liverpool

World Cup 2010 team news: Slovenia v USA

Venue Ellis Park, Johannesburg Referee K Coulibaly (Mli) TV BBC1 Radio BBC 5 Live Odds Slovenia 3-1 USA 15-13 Draw 12-5 Slovenia Manager Matjaz Kek Fifa ranking 25 Doubtful None Injured None Suspended None USA Manager Bob Bradley Fifa ranking 14 Doubtful None Injured None Suspended None Match pointers • This will be the first ever meeting between Slovenia and USA • USA have kept just one clean sheet in 20 World Cup matches • Slovenia have won seven of their last eight matches • Eight of USA’s 10 goals in the last three World Cups have come in the first half • Landon Donovan was involved in six of USA’s 12 shots against England Slovenia USA World Cup 2010 Group C guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010 team news: Slovenia v USA

World Cup 2010, Nigeria Vs. Greece: Dimitrios Salpingidis Sends Teams Into Halftime Drawn 1-1

A lay-off at the edge of the area from Kosta Katsouranis to Dimitrios Salpingidis hit midfielder Lukman Haruna and went into the Nigerian goal, evening their match with Greece at one just before half time. The goal came in the 44th minute, 11 minutes after Greece went up a man with Sani Kieta’s ejection.

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World Cup 2010, Nigeria Vs. Greece: Dimitrios Salpingidis Sends Teams Into Halftime Drawn 1-1

Argentina 4-1 South Korea | World Cup 2010 match report

Gonzalo Higuaín scored the first hat-trick of the 2010 World Cup as Argentina overcame a protracted second-half wobble to secure a comfortable win over South Korea today. After scoring twice from set-pieces before the interval, the first of them an own goal, Diego Maradona’s side notched their first goals from open play as Higuaín scored his second and third from moves inspired by Lionel Messi and Sergio Agüero, a substitute for Carlos Tevez. On another freezing day under a cloudless Johannesburg sky Maradona replaced Juan Sebastián Verón, nursing a calf injury, with Maxi Rodríguez, reverting to a straightforward 4-3-3 with Messi, Tevez and Higuaín interchanging across the front line. Effective set-pieces are becoming the unexpected hallmark of Maradona’s Argentina. After enjoying untroubled possession in the early stages against curiously tepid and unadventurous opposition, they took the lead in the 16th minute after Angel di María had been fouled by Oh Beom-seok on the left, level with the edge of the South Korean area. Messi took the kick, which brushed off the head of Martín Demichelis and struck the right leg of the unsighted Park Chu-young just below the knee, skimming into the net past the helpless Jung Sung-ryong. Sixteen minutes later, another foul in the left corner – this time on Tevez, by the combination of Kim Jung-woo and Oh – led to the second goal. Rodríguez tapped the ball to Messi and looped round to take the return before clipping in a diagonal cross that Nicolás Burdisso, a 23rd-minute replacement for Walter Samuel, glanced on to Higuaín, who headed in at the far post. A minute before half-time Messi came close to producing exactly the goal his fans have been anticipating when, from inside a thicket of six defenders around the D, he chipped a delightful shot that floated just wide of the right-hand post. The South Americans’ virtually unbroken dominance was rudely interrupted, however, in first-half stoppage time, when Lee Cheung-Yong stole in to rob the dilatory Demichelis on the edge of the area and flipped the ball neatly over Sergio Romero. In the third quarter of the match the South Koreans’ confidence grew along with their sense of adventure and Yeom Ki-hun should have equalised just before the hour, after Lee Chung-yong put him through with a fine pass. As Argentina defended with increasingly furrowed brows Jonás Gutiérrez picked up a yellow card that will cost him an appearance in Argentina’s final group match, against Greece. But then came the substitution of Agüero for Tevez and immediately the Atlético Madrid forward’s pass to Messi, provoked a jinking run which led to a first shot hitting Jung’s left foot and the follow-up effort deflecting off the near post to Higuaín. The Real Madrid centre-forward then completed his hat-trick with a far-post header from Agüero’s cross, the move again set up by Messi. World Cup 2010 World Cup 2010 Group B Argentina South Korea Richard Williams guardian.co.uk

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Argentina 4-1 South Korea | World Cup 2010 match report

Allan McGregor will not face charges after sexual assault allegations

• Rangers goalkeeper had described claims as ‘a vile lie’ • Crown Office says there was insufficient evidence The Rangers goalkeeper Allan McGregor will not face charges following allegations of a sexual assault on a woman, prosecutors said today. McGregor, 28, had been accused of sexual assault and questioned along with the Big Brother contestant Kenneth Tong and the former St Johnstone player Filipe Morais in Glasgow last November. Strathclyde Police launched an investigation after the allegation was made but the Crown Office said today there was “insufficient evidence” to prosecute the three men. A Crown Office spokeswoman said: “A report was submitted to the procurator fiscal at Glasgow concerning Kenneth Tong, Allan McGregor and Filipe Morais in connection with an alleged sexual assault in Glasgow in November 2009. “After very careful and detailed consideration of all the facts and circumstances following an extensive police enquiry, Crown Counsel have decided that there is insufficient evidence to satisfy legal requirements to institute a prosecution. “We have sought to keep the complainer informed throughout the investigation. The Procurator Fiscal has informed her of the decision and has offered her a meeting if she wishes to address any questions she may have.” “The former suspects have been informed that in the circumstances there will be no proceedings,” the spokeswoman added. McGregor had denied the claims as a “vile lie”. “There is not one iota of truth in the allegations,” he said. “I’m devoting myself to clearing my name of these claims.” Rangers Crime guardian.co.uk

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Allan McGregor will not face charges after sexual assault allegations