Tag Archives: south-africa

World Cup 2010: Will attacking full-backs win the competition …

World Cup 2010 : Will attacking full-backs win the competition? | Jonathan Wilson. The last four winners relied on marauding defenders but is a tactical change under way in South Africa? Correlation is not necessarily causation. … That, though, is a risk: Theo Walcott didn’t just score a hat-trick in Zagreb in 2008, he destroyed Croatia’s entire left side by making Danijel Pranjic, a full-back so attacking he usually plays in midfield, try to defend. … Excerpt from: World Cup 2010: Will attacking full-backs win the competition …

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World Cup 2010: Will attacking full-backs win the competition …

Sunderland sign Belgium Under-21 goalkeeper Simon Mignolet

• 6ft 4in keeper brought in to battle Craig Gordon for No1 slot • ‘I’m sure he will push our current goalkeepers all the way’ Sunderland have completed the signing of Belgium Under-21 international goalkeeper Simon Mignolet from Sint Truidense for an undisclosed fee. Mignolet, 22, rose to prominence when helping his hometown club to a fourth-placed finish in last season’s Jupiler League and was also chased by PSV Eindhoven. But he opted for a move to Wearside where he will challenge Scotland’s No1, Craig Gordon, for a place in the starting XI. The 6ft 4in stopper becomes Steve Bruce’s second summer signing following the capture of the midfielder Cristian Riveros, who is currently on international duty with Paraguay at the World Cup. “Simon is an excellent young goalkeeper and he has a lot more to offer,” said Bruce. “I’m sure he will push our current goalkeepers all the way next season. “He is a player that we have watched on a number of occasions, as have a lot of clubs in Europe over the last couple of seasons. We’re delighted to bring him to Sunderland. He’ll come back ready for the start of pre-season training and will be looking to push for a place in the team.” Sunderland Transfer window guardian.co.uk

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Sunderland sign Belgium Under-21 goalkeeper Simon Mignolet

World Cup 2010: Rio Ferdinand will not return to South Africa

• Injured England captain to take break with family • ‘Rio is making good early progress from his knee injury’ Rio Ferdinand will not rejoin the England party for the remainder of the country’s World Cup campaign. Ferdinand returned to Manchester on Sunday to have his knee injury assessed having sustained the injury – and been ruled out of the tournament – following a training ground accident with Emile Heskey. He had stayed in Rustenburg to watch England’s first game against the USA last Saturday. It had been thought the 31-year-old would head back South Africa but, having been assessed by Manchester United’s medical staff, it has been decided Ferdinand will take a short break with his family before returning to Carrington for more intensive treatment. “Rio is making good early progress from his knee injury,” United said. “Medical staff have advised a two-week recuperation period with his family before returning to Carrington to complete the rehabilitation process.” Although United have not put a timescale on Ferdinand’s likely return to action, given the two-week break he has now embarked on, there must be a doubt over the defender being part of the club’s summer tour to North America for which they depart on 12 July. There would be more confidence of him being available for the Premier League opener against Newcastle United at Old Trafford on 14 August and England’s friendly with Hungary at Wembley three days before that. Rio Ferdinand England World Cup 2010 Group C World Cup 2010 guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Rio Ferdinand will not return to South Africa

Gavin Thomas in Wales line-up to face New Zealand

• Flanker to end three-year exile from national side • ‘We are capable of producing a performance to be proud of’ Gavin Thomas’s exile from international rugby will end on Saturday after he was named in Wales’ starting line-up for the first Test against New Zealand in Dunedin. As expected, the 32-year-old, who has not played for Wales since the tour of Australia in 2007, has been named to start on the openside flank in one of three changes to the team that lost 34-31 to South Africa at the start of the month. The other change in the pack is lock Alun Wyn Jones who gets the nod ahead of Deiniol Jones, who moves to the bench. “Gavin Thomas is an experienced flanker who knows all about what it takes to perform at international level,” said the Wales coach, Warren Gatland. “He and Alun Wyn Jones have both impressed in training and deserve their chance this weekend.” Thomas gets his chance due to the absence of Martyn Williams, who is being rested, and Sam Warburton (out with a broken jaw) and will have no better opportunity to press his claims for World Cup selection after an impressive season with the Newport Gwent Dragons. In the back line Andrew Bishop comes in at centre in place of James Hook who has remained in Wales to have surgery on his shoulder. “Andrew has been one of the form centres in Wales this year and after helping the Ospreys lift the Magners League title was something of an unsung hero in their team,” said Gatland. Elsewhere on the bench, the Scarlets scrum-half Tavis Knoyle is in line to make his international debut if needed and is joined by the Ospreys fly-half Dan Biggar and his fellow Scarlet Jonathan Davies in providing cover for the backline. Rob McCusker will once again provide the back row cover after stepping in when Andy Powell was ruled out against the Springboks in Cardiff. Powell, Williams and Hook are three of several top-line players missing through injury or unavailability for the two-Test series in New Zealand. Others who are absent include Gethin Jenkins, Tom Shanklin, Shane Williams, Luke Charteris and Duncan Jones. “We are playing one of the best sides in the world at the moment on home soil and they don’t come much bigger than this,” said Gatland. “But we are determined and there is a quiet self-belief creeping through the squad at the moment which makes me feel we are capable of producing a performance to be proud of against the All Blacks.” Wales only arrived in Dunedin today after choosing to do the bulk of their preparations in Wellington, where they will be playing South Africa in next year’s World Cup. New Zealand, fresh off a 66-28 rout of Ireland last weekend, have spent all week in Dunedin getting ready for what will be the final international at the famous Carisbrook ground after 102 years. From next year matches will be played at the under-construction, indoor Forsyth Barr Stadium. “It’s going to have a bit of emotion for the New Zealand team,” said Gatland. “It’s something I understand. It’s important that we front up mentally and physically for what’s hopefully going to be a really tough game.” Wales rugby union team Rugby union guardian.co.uk

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Gavin Thomas in Wales line-up to face New Zealand

Real Madrid to sign £21m Angel Di María – reports

• Winger’s move from Benfica to be confirmed next week • Argentina international had interested Premier League clubs Real Madrid are poised to sign Argentina’s Angel Di María for about €25m (£21m), according to reports in the Spanish press. The deal to bring the winger from the Portuguese champions, Benfica, was agreed in a meeting between the two club presidents yesterday and is expected to be confirmed early next week. Benfica had initially insisted on the €40m fee specified in the player’s buyout clause but after Di María lobbied hard for a move to the Spanish club, Benfica’s president, Luis Felipe Vieira, agreed to settle for a lower amount. The Argentina international will sign a five-year contract worth about €2m a year, making him one of Madrid’s more modestly rewarded first-team players. Di María is currently with the Argentina squad in South Africa and played in their opening World Cup victory over Nigeria on Saturday. Di María had attracted interest from a number of Premier League clubs including Manchester City. In April Roberto Mancini confirmed that Di María was a player he was studying: “Di María is a good player and, in the future, we’ll see.” Real Madrid Benfica Transfer window Chris Taylor guardian.co.uk

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Real Madrid to sign £21m Angel Di María – reports

World Cup 2010: Spain points finger of blame at Sara Carbonero

• Iker Casillas’ partner accused of distracting goalkeeper • Journalist had filmed behind goal prior to kick-off Some have pointed to their lack of cutting edge. Some have pointed to their opponents’ rugged determination. But many in Spain have blamed their defeat to Switzerland in their opening World Cup game on Sara Carbonero, the partner of the Spain captain Iker Casillas. Casillas was at least partly at fault for Gelson Fernandes’s goal that gave Switzerland their 1-0 win and fingers have already been pointed at Carbonero, a journalist at a Spanish TV station, who prior to the game was filming footage to camera behind Casillas’s goal. Many fans have been angered by her presence in South Africa, fearing it could prove a distraction for the goalkeeper and prove a destabilising influence within the squad. Carbonero was asked by her own TV station, Telecinco, about her influence. “Can I destabilise the team?” she said. “I think it is nonsense.” Carbonero then gave Casillas a difficult time in a post-match interview , opening her questions with: “How did you manage to muck that up?” “I don’t know what to say,” Casillas responded. “I don’t know if this defeat will have consequences. The dressing room is fed up.” Spain World Cup 2010 Group H World Cup 2010 John Ashdown guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Spain points finger of blame at Sara Carbonero

World Cup 2010: France are the common enemy for Mexico and Ireland

There is an affinity between the Irish and the Mexicans, and a mutual antipathy towards France “It’s ABF for us,” says Dara Murray, a 40-year-old Dublin native married to a Mexican and living in Guadalajara, Jalisco. “Anyone but France.” Thierry Henry’s handballed goal booked France’s ticket to South Africa and broke Irish hearts in all corners of the world, so it’s hardly a revelation that Irish will be adopting the green shirt of Mexico when El Tri take on France in Polokwane today. • 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 It won’t be the first time the Irish have come together with Mexicans though. The most notable, and incredible bonding came with the Saint Patrick’s battalion when Irish troops fighting in the US army deserted to join the Mexican army during the 1846-48 Mexican-American War. The event is still celebrated in both Mexico and Ireland today via street names, annual parades and songs. Then, in the 1860s, Irish veterans of the war helped kick out the French. “It gives us a common bond with the Mexicans,” says Paul Kenny, another Irishman living in Guadalajara with two young children with dual citizenships. “We’ve both had to try to defeat imperial might.” The story starts with the immigration of over one million poor, Catholic Irishmen to the United States and Canada between 1840 and 1850. “They got there and couldn’t get work. Job adverts said ‘No Irish, No Niggers,'” explains Dr Michael Hogan, the author of The Irish Soldiers of Mexico and the historical authority on the episode. With tensions between Mexico and the United States rising, many of the new migrants were offered citizenship and land to fight against Mexico. With little option, they accepted. “They got to Mexico and realised they were being used to invade a Catholic country and while they were on the border they could hear the church bells in Mexico,” Hogan says. The Irish made up about a third of the US army but there was not even one Catholic chaplain and soldiers were forced to go to the Protestant service every Sunday. Asked to fight and kill other poor Catholics and being denied the chance to go to mass, which would’ve been in Latin as in Ireland, around 75 Irish soldiers awaiting orders to attack trickled into Mexico and didn’t come back. And that was even before the war had begun. “Then the war started,” Hogan says. “The US artillery attacked the Catholic cathedral in Monterrey where the Mexican general had sent civilians.” Many innocent deaths later, more Irish started deserting the US army and one Irishman, John O’Riley, organised them into the Saint Patrick’s battalion. O’Riley, about whom there is a slightly cheesy Hollywood film entitled One Man’s Hero, starring Tom Berenger, rose to the rank of major in the Mexican Army and the battalion became a thorn in the side of the US army. Although the battalion consisted of ferocious fighters and had a decisive influence in some battles, the Yankee army could not be stopped and Mexico lost 55% of its land in the decidedly dodgy Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848. Those Irish that deserted during the war were hung, while those that had switched sides before hostilities were let off with a branding, public whipping and hard labour. Nevertheless, the battalion became heroes in Mexico and part of Mexican folklore. Every 12 September in Mexico City a military parade and mass is celebrated in the plaza where the first soldiers were hanged, and street names such as “Irish Martyrs” and “St Patrick” are found in many Mexican cities. Fourteen years after the Mexican-American War ended in 1848, the French successfully invaded and took Mexico City, leading to the crowning of an Austrian prince, Maximilian, as Emperor of Mexico. He didn’t last long and was booted out and executed in 1867. Many Irish veterans of the Mexican-American War were present. In football, the French have irked the Mexicans, too, when a journalist dubbed their team les rats verts , the green rats, at the 1966 World Cup. Mexicans seem happy to have the Guadalajara Irish community’s support against France, according to Frank Cronin, a Dubliner who runs the Irish-themed Temple Bar in Guadalajara: “A lot of Mexicans are coming into the bar and telling me that the team is going to kick France’s arse for us.” Mexico France World Cup 2010 Group A World Cup 2010 guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: France are the common enemy for Mexico and Ireland

World Cup 2010: Australia’s Tim Cahill gets one-match ban

• Socceroos midfielder had feared a two-match suspension • Everton player will only miss Ghana game on Saturday Tim Cahill has been reprieved to continue in the World Cup after Fifa decided to show him leniency for the red card that had threatened to end his tournament. Cahill was sent off for a challenge on Bastian Schweinsteiger during Australia’s 4-0 defeat to Germany in Durban on Sunday. The Everton player broke down in tears after the match, believing it would mean a two-match ban that would rule him out of the rest of Australia’s group matches. Instead Fifa’s disciplinary panel have decided the offence merited only a one-game suspension, meaning Cahill will be unavailable for the game against Ghana on Saturday but can play against Serbia next Wednesday. Australia World Cup 2010 Group D World Cup 2010 Daniel Taylor guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Australia’s Tim Cahill gets one-match ban

The Fiver | Footballing Rod Hulls; and An Adequately Resourced Pele Museum | Paul Doyle and Barney Ronay

Click here to have the Fiver delivered direct to your inbox every weekday at 12pm(ish), or if your usual copy has stopped arriving SWISS OF LIFE Phew! It’s a good thing that celebrated, squat, slightly penguin-shaped pillar of moral rectitiude, Sepp Blatter, was at Durban Stadium yesterday. Because if Above-Board Blatter hadn’t been personally supervising events, many folks might have suspected that jiggerypokery was responsible for the defeat of seemingly invincible Spain by Switzerland, the country of Above-Board’s birth and home to Fifa HQ. How else, such folks might have asked, to explain that a side universally hailed as the best in the world could be beaten by a team who began their qualifying campaign by losing at home to Luxembourg? How else could a free-scoring machine that went into the match having won 19,754 consecutive matches be shut out by a defence led by Philippe Senderos? Ottmar Hitzfeld knows how else. “We concentrated and were organised from the start,” yodled the manager whom the Swiss now worship as Gottmar. “We didn’t allow any chances for Spain in the first half and that gave us self-confidence. In the second half, Spain rolled one attack after another and we knew they would open their defence. After we took the lead, we gained even more confidence.” Simple, see? Especially as Spain could not adapt their approach to overcome Hitzfeld’s tactics, suggesting, perhaps, that the most feted team on the planet are mere one-trick ponies, nothing more than footballing Rod Hulls. Or, if you prefer, the international equivalent of Arsenal or Barcelona. Spain manager Vicente Del Bosque thinks otherwise. That, of course, confirms they are the international equivalent of Arsenal. ”I feel [the win] is an excessive prize for them considering the football they displayed,” harrumphed Del Bosque in tones familiar to anyone used to hearing Arsene Wenger suggest that any defeat for his team means not that there is something wrong with that team, but that there is something wrong with football itself. 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 “How did you manage to muck it up?” – Telecinco touchline reporter Sara Carbonero, Spain’s very own version of Nick Collins, asks the question on everybody’s minds to Iker Casillas – her other half – after yesterday’s game. LIVE ON GUARDIAN.CO.UK TODAY Join Paul Doyle for MBM coverage of Argentina 1-1 South Korea at 12.30pm, Barney Ronay for Greece 0-1 Nigeria at 3pm and Barry Glendenning for France 1-1 Mexico from 7.30pm . GAUCHO GARDEN GNOME The Fiver is astonished to detect, sifting through its daily media monitor portfolio of yellowing free-sheet newspapers, eavesdropped stairwell conversations and the Text Maniacs section of the Daily Star, a sense out there that this might, in fact, be quite a boring World Cup so far. Not enough goals they say. Where’s the drama, they ask. WOT U MUPPET WENGA NO WAY FERGIE LOL WC INNIT SORT IT AWT, they rage. This is all news to the Fiver, for whom the World Cup has so far been an intoxicating ride, a feast of the senses, a palm-drenchingly humid sensory journey of sounds and smells – and particularly smells, given that the Fiver has observed the entire tournament from its prime vantage point in the inside suit jacket pocket of Diego Maradona, previously a star of the World Cup, and currently shaping up as its saviour from the sidelines. Not content with capering wildly, with performing furiously sweaty touchline man-hugs, with roughing up his players, and with appearing in public displaying a peculiar gaucho garden gnome facial hair arrangement, Maradona has now decided to enter into a full-combat joint comedy roast of two of his fellow old-style WC hall-of-famers, the invariably wrong Pele and the invariably sniffy Michel Platini, incumbent Uefa chief blazer and outspoken critic of all things non-Michel Platini. “Pele should go back to the museum,” Maradona opined at yesterday’s knockabout press session, responding to criticism of his “coaching” “style” by the man who once attempted to defeat a crack Nazi XI with a selection that included Sylvester Stallone in goal and the aged Michael Caine in a kind of strolling EBJT role. And to be fair to Maradona this isn’t actually a bad idea. The Fiver would be among the first to visit a properly kitted out, adequately resourced Pele museum, with its Pele waxwork hall, its stuffed and cured Pele exhibit, its Pele fossils and interactive Pele experience with the sounds and smells of Pele through the ages, not to mention its Pele gift shop crammed with Pele lavender biscuits and bracing Pele throat lozenges. Platini, meanwhile, thinks he “is better than all the rest”. “I’ve always had a very distant relationship with him, it’s always just hello and goodbye, nothing more than that,” Maradona shrugged, producing a sheathe of unanswered RSVP invitations to a cigar-smoking, burger-cramming, shark-fishing speedboat expedition in Cuban territorial waters. He also had a pop at the ball, fingering it for the dearth of non-Maradona-related thrills. “I’m having a wonderful time, to me a World Cup is something that’s quite amazing,” he gurgled, taking the first steps in a small, capering improvised dance and balancing a goldfish bowl on his nose. “I don’t want to go into the ball again because everyone is talking about it, but it is important and it does play a part and I would ask Pelé and Platini to go out there and play with the ball and take a closer look at it to see if it’s a good one or bad one, and to stop talking rubbish about me.” Which is something the Fiver, for one, would be willing to pay a lot of money to witness, in a kind of blazered, sweating, ankle-hacking middle-aged great dream three-and-in tournament sense. As for the rubbish-talking, keep it coming. Right now it’s pretty much all we’ve got. 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 “It may have taken longer than originally anticipated, but kudos to the Fiver. The World Cup in South Africa proves that the Stop Football campaign has indeed succeeded beyond anyone’s wildest dreams” – Central Park Rangers. “I’m no expert but surely fans attacking power distribution centres to protest against power outages during World Cup games (yesterday’s bits and bobs) is not going to help” – Ian Manning. “Re: Robbie Earle asking for tickets to a match being played in a city he doesn’t live in, between two countries he doesn’t come from (yesterday’s Fiver). Surely it worked in the past for Jamaica matches?” – Gareth Deeble. 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 The fixtures for The Best Tournament In The World That Sky Does Have Rights To have been announced and Liverpool will host Arsenal on the opening day of the season. Click here for the fixtures from across the leagues . World Cup chief Danny Jordaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan hopes South Africans will retain an interest in the competition when … sorry, if the hosts crash out, following their defeat to Uruguay. “[The fans] were dragged along in silence and pain, not a sound from the vuvuzela,” he said a tad dramatically. “What is important now is that the fans embrace the tournament beyond the Bafana team.” Fifa has handed Tim Cahill just a one-game ban for his red card during the Sheilaroos’ opening defeat to Germany. Chris Evans, the man who spawned TFI Friday and is therefore directly responsible for James C****n’s World Cup Live, has apologised for posting a joke about poverty in Africa and the World Cup on Twitter. “Apologies for last retweet didn’t read it properly,” he said. “Never meant to offend. Not funny at all.” A frozen pitch caused Ghana’s training session to be postponed by two hours today. “We were informed early this morning that we had to reschedule training due to the freezing conditions,” chattered a chilly Ghana FA suit. Darlington boss Simon Davey has quit the club, handing in his resignation to the Conference club via email. “I’m off XOXO,” he didn’t write, while Stockport boss Gary Ablett has also left his position. And Peter Andre has somehow, somehow prised the Celebrity Dad of the Year title away from England’s Brave John Terry. Wayne Rooney was ninth and $tevie Mbe 10th, both finishing behind Ronan Keating. Hmm … 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 Phil West: “Better for a football fan to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to have their say and remove all doubt.” 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? Jonathan Wilson is so obsessed with tactics that he thought the Jackson 5 were an experimental defensive formation. So listen up when he says attacking full-backs could be vital at the World Cup . James Richardson and his pod chums discuss Spain’s defeat and today’s fixtures on the latest edition of Football Weekly World Cup Daily . Rob Smyth is a registered tacticphile himself and has pored over Opta’s stats to tell you why the World Cup has been a little on the flat side so far . Finally 44 years of hurt are over: an article about 1966 without one mention of England. Richard Williams says the current North Korea side could emulate their illustrious predecessors . And Fabio Capello has got all sorts of problems ahead of the England-Algeria game: our writers have put their heads together to try to solve them . 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 . WE ALL KNOW WHOSE RADIO ROCKS Paul Doyle Barney Ronay guardian.co.uk

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The Fiver | Footballing Rod Hulls; and An Adequately Resourced Pele Museum | Paul Doyle and Barney Ronay

‘Stay if you have a vuvuzela’: the inevitable Hitler Downfall parody has landed

You thought that the droning of Downfall videos had been stopped by the action of the original film makers? Nah – you’ll never stop people sneaking these things in. Yes, of course it had to happen – and of course a Briton has written the dialogue: the inevitably Hitler Downfall parody (no, they haven’t all been killed off ) about those damn delightful vuvuzelas that so add to the atmosphere at the World Cup and have audiologists all over South Africa’s cities rubbing their hands at the hearing aids they’re going to be selling in 20 years’ time. For – we take up the story – Hitler is looking forward to Germany’s onward march to the World Cup final, where it will meet Brazil, of course, with all their lovely drums and singing. What? What’s that? Fifa hasn’t banned the vuvuzela? And off we go… “Stay. If you have a vuvuzela.” “Are you insane? Ruining the World Cup with a plastic bloody horn?” “There are over 300 million people like me watching in their slippers at home suffering through 90 minutes of tuneless droning trumpet.” Written by Ken McHardie , who describes himself as a “Sometime filmmaker, photographer, IT Consultant & Technical Author (the bit that pays)” from St Albans (can you imagine any other nation than Britain using “slippers” in that above sentence? No), we have to say – nice one Ken. Vuvuzelas World Cup 2010 Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk

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‘Stay if you have a vuvuzela’: the inevitable Hitler Downfall parody has landed