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World Cup 2010: Steven Gerrard hopes old habits bring England progress | Kevin McCarra

The midfielder is set to return to a more advanced role and revive his ‘fantastic understanding’ with Wayne Rooney Steven Gerrard believes a return to old ways will bring impetus to England’s World Cup campaign in their match with Algeria tomorrow night. The Liverpool midfielder, who scored the opener in the 1-1 draw with the USA, expects to revert to the more advanced role he had in qualifiers that saw Wayne Rooney score nine times. There have been no further international goals for the striker since the 5-1 rout of Croatia at Wembley last September. The balance of the line-up will alter now that Gareth Barry is free of his ankle injury. With the holding midfielder in place, Gerrard should be liberated as he roves from an attacking post towards the left. “I think that’s the plan,” he agreed, as he anticipated linking with Rooney. “We’ve had a fantastic understanding in qualification. “I like playing with good players and I enjoy playing with Wayne. Hopefully I can provide a goal for him to get off the mark. I’ve said all the way through qualifying that, if we got to the World Cup, we’d need Wayne to be our top goalscorer and to score the goals to take us to the later stages because he’s our main player.” Gerrard, after a trying season with Liverpool, exudes a confidence now that he has been released into a World Cup campaign. Few anticipated that Rooney might be the person in need of a fillip, yet his one goal in an England shirt

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World Cup 2010: Steven Gerrard hopes old habits bring England progress | Kevin McCarra

Bradley Wiggins set to lead Sky for team’s Tour de France debut

• Team principal David Brailsford has decided eight of nine riders • Steve Cummings and Geraint Thomas to be included Team Sky’s Tour de France line-up will be announced next week but the Guardian understands that eight of the nine riders have been decided by the team principal Dave Brailsford. Bradley Wiggins will lead the squad in their debut Tour, with two other British riders, Steve Cummings and Geraint Thomas, set to be included. The other five definites are understood to be Juan Antonio Flecha of Spain, the Norwegians Edvald Boasson Hagen and Kurt Asle Arvesen, Thomas Löfkvist of Sweden and Simon Gerrans of Australia. Michael Barry of Canada, Sylvain Calzati of France and Greg Henderson of New Zealand are believed to be the riders still under consideration. If there remains a degree of uncertainty around the identity of the riders who will go to the Tour, there is none about the team’s raison d’être. It will be built around Wiggins as the British rider sets out to follow last year’s fourth-place finish, though Boasson Hagen will be expected to challenge for stage wins, as will Henderson, the team’s sprinter, if he is selected. Otherwise the experienced Flecha and Arvesen, together with Cummings – who is making his Tour debut – will act as domestiques for Wiggins on the flat stages, with Löfkvist and Gerrans providing back-up for the Englishman in the mountains. Wiggins has stepped up his preparation this week with a reconnaissance of some of the Tour’s key stages. It began in the Alps on Monday, has continued in the Pyrenees (FRI), and will conclude on Saturday with a rehearsal of the potentially decisive penultimate time trial stage in Bordeaux. It is the first time Wiggins has undertaken such a mission, and the scale of the week-long reconnaissance indicates the seriousness with which Team Sky are approaching July’s Tour, with Wiggins accompanied by seven staff and two team-mates in Cummings and Barry. Brailsford is not there, running the rule over his Tour team contenders at the Tour of Switzerland instead, but Rod Ellingworth, the race coach, and Sean Yates, the sports director, have joined Wiggins, along with a mechanic, soigneur, physiotherapist, performance analyst, and even the team chef. Wiggins was caught out last year when he found himself in contention for the podium but oblivious to the challenges that lay ahead, having not ridden any of the route in advance. He admitted later that a rest day dash in a helicopter to look at the time trial stage in Annecy hardly compensated for having not checked the Tour’s decisive climbs. This year, it is clear that he is taking no chances. Team Sky probable Tour de France team, British unless stated: B Wiggins , S Cummings , G Thomas, T Lofkvist (Sweden), K Asle Arvesen (Norway), J A Flecha (Spain), S Gerrans (Australia), E Boasson Hagen (Norway), plus M Barry (Canada), G Henderson (New Zealand) or S Calzati (France) Team Sky Bradley Wiggins Tour de France Cycling guardian.co.uk

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Bradley Wiggins set to lead Sky for team’s Tour de France debut

Opta world cup 2010 data: every shot, every tackle and every goal

How does this world cup compare to previous tournaments? Take a look at the data • Get the data Well, we’re at the end of the group stage of World Cup 2010 and what have we learnt so far? Opta (this is their Twitter feed ), which covers 30 different sports in around 70 countries, has agreed to let the Datablog publish the complete statistical analysisall the games so far in the tournament. Owen Gibson writes today that “At the end of Spain’s shock defeat by Switzerland, which may actually prove to be the moment at which the tournament caught fire, there had been a total of 1.56 goals per game.” Opta’s statistics, which measure the opening round of games against the same stage at the last three World Cups, show that the goal per game ratio compares poorly. In Germany in 2006, it was 2.44, in Japan-South Korea in 2002 it was 2.88 and at France 98 it was 2.31 … Opta’s figures show that the number of shots in each game is about 10% down on 2006. They also show that the goals-to-shots ratio, at 7.9%, is also well down. In the past three tournaments, it never went below 10.8% in the opening round of matches. Shooting accuracy – the ratio of shots to efforts on target – is 33% at this World Cup so far, compared with 40% at the same stage in Germany, 43% in Japan-South Korea and 41% in France. At the top of the page is how we visualised the data in today’s paper (click on it to get the full graphic) – you can download the data below too. What can you do with it? Download the data • DATA: download the full datasheet World government data • Search the world’s government data with our gateway Can you do something with this data? Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk • Get the A-Z of data • More at the Datastore directory • Follow us on Twitter Data summary World Cup 2010 Fifa World Cup 2010 Group A World Cup 2010 Group B World Cup 2010 Group C World Cup 2010 Group D World Cup 2010 Group E England Simon Rogers guardian.co.uk

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Opta world cup 2010 data: every shot, every tackle and every goal

Laura Robson has attitude to excel at Wimbledon says Lindsay Davenport

• Laura Robson backed to rise above interview controversy • ‘I like her desire and her work ethic’ If anyone starts singing Tell Laura I Love Her in the women’s locker room at Wimbledon this year, it will be laced with sarcasm. Only her natural charm enabled Laura Robson, the 16-year-old Londoner, to limit the damage of her recent Vogue interview, in which she dismissed some of the girls on the circuit as “sluts” who “go with every guy”, a remark for which she apologised and insisted was taken out of context. The nudge-nudge sniggers doing the rounds in tennis subsequently questioned not the veracity of the allegation but why it was exclusively trained on heterosexual activity. Remarks such as, “Do you think we will have an all-lesbian final this summer?” raised the usual “fnah-fnah”. The tennis circuit may be marketed as a whistle-clean marketing opportunity, but it is as prone to human frailty, back-biting and hypocrisy as any other walk of life. Shenanigans aside, the substance of Robson’s observation revealed more about her own upright views and Home Counties upbringing than it did about her intended targets. It also showed a steeliness of character and independence that might stand her in good stead for as long as she lasts in the tournament – not to mention her career – against some of these flighty young things from backgrounds of lesser righteousness. Laura is a wild card here in more ways than one. Lindsay Davenport also brought with her to the imposing halls of Wimbledon the values and habits of a spotless middle-class background, winning the championship from nowhere and gracing the top of the game earlier this decade with the sort of low-key Californian charm that almost went unnoticed. “I’m not that interesting!” she insists. “I’m just very normal, on an even keel. I never had tons of friends on tour. I was quiet and went about my business. To be honest, it wasn’t a huge story to tell.” But Davenport, who just turned 34 and returns to Wimbledon this year in the mixed doubles with Bob Bryan, alongside her broadcasting duties with the BBC, recognises the pressures on young players and sounded a warning for Robson and the other “poppets”. “Some of them can’t handle the world in general. A great example is Nicole Vaidisova, such a great player. Whether it was the money or the lifestyle, she had a meltdown. It’s a shame she’s still not out there winning. There are a lot of components you have to be comfortable with: winning, losing, the media, travelling, the people around you. Not a lot of players have done it successfully for a long period of time.” The pressures on Robson, she says, are multiplied by the expectations of a nation, especially at Wimbledon. “I couldn’t imagine being from a country where all the pressure is on a particular player. I don’t know if I could have handled it, the way the media would have been so intense, especially on a teenage girl like Laura – and I also didn’t have people following me or reporting on my every move.” So, where did this nice, unblemished survivor of the system, a former world No1, think Robson’s tennis was at the moment? “Hmm … developing. She’s obviously got a pretty long way to go to get up to the top but, from everything I’ve heard about her, she works very hard. From what I’ve seen about her as a player, she’s trying to develop a bigger weapon – and it does take a certain amount of time to get comfortable on the tour – comfortable winning matches, managing your schedule. “But she’s great. I like her attitude, I like her desire and her work ethic. She also has to learn how to lose. Some times you lose more than you win. It’s about handling losses and trying to turn them into positives. You get out into the big leagues and there’s a period of adjustment to be made. You’ve got to handle it.” Davenport says, though, that the younger girls are finding it tougher than they used to – partly because older players are extending their careers, notably Justine Henin and Kim Clijsters, not to mention the Williams sisters. “I read a stat that [Caroline] Wozniacki is the only teenager in the top 25. We have a couple who just turned 20. In the history of women’s tennis, it never happened. There’s always been someone 16 or 17 that’s burst on to the scene and gone to the top. “The sport has become more athletic, so it favours some players later in their development. They’re stronger, faster, not just blessed with phenomenal skills. It’s nice to see some players in their 30s [doing well], because players I grew up with pretty much all retired in their 20s. It shows a lot of people in other sports that we can still play, even though we’re a little bit older.” And wiser, maybe. Laura Robson Wimbledon Tennis Kevin Mitchell guardian.co.uk

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Laura Robson has attitude to excel at Wimbledon says Lindsay Davenport

Christina Aguilera To Sing At NBA Finals Tonight

Singer will perform the national anthem for the second time during the NBA basketball championship series. By Mawuse Ziegbe Christina Aguilera performs the national anthem before game six of the NBA finals on Tuesday Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images Christina Aguilera is once again using her formidable pipes to grace the NBA finals: The singer will belt out a rendition of “The Star Spangled Banner” at tonight’s seventh and final game of the series. The singer, whose latest album Bionic recently debuted at #3 , on the Billboard albums chart, sang at Game 6 at Los Angeles’ Staples Center on Tuesday (June 15) before the Lakers defeated the Boston Celtics and tied the series. The Lakers — who have lost their last four game-seven matchups to the Celtics — are apparently hoping Aguilera will bring them similar good luck tonight. The singer may be hoping that the Lakers are a good luck charm for her, as she’s had a some rough luck over the past few weeks . Bionic ‘s first-week sales were softer than expected, she recently postponed her tour until next year, and the response to her sexed-up video for the album’s first single, “Not Myself Tonight,” has been mixed. “I don’t know if it’s because she went away for a while, or because she tried to do something different with this project, but it feels a little crass and calculated,” Entertainment Weekly ‘s Leah Greenblatt told MTV News. “From her choice of collaborators [The-Dream, Polow Da Don, Le Tigre] to her first single, it doesn’t feel fully organic. What’s missing so much with her this time out is that, while she can still sing the crap out of her songs, you don’t get a sense of vulnerability, or even really know who she is.” Related Photos The Evolution Of: Christina Aguilera Related Artists Christina Aguilera

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Christina Aguilera To Sing At NBA Finals Tonight

England leave out Jonny Wilkinson for second Test in Australia

• Toby Flood and Shontayne Hape preferred • Wilkinson on the bench at stadium where he won World Cup It is so long since England won the 2003 World Cup at Stadium Australia that Jonny Wilkinson says he has forgotten at which end he kicked his life-changing drop-goal. If that sounds bizarre to an Australian audience, his exclusion from Saturday’s England starting XV at the same location has similarly baffled the locals. There was an obvious horses-for-courses case for fielding Wilkinson at either 10 or 12 but it has been pointedly ignored in favour of a line-up featuring only two changes from the team unable to capitalise on their scrum superiority in Perth. This is a game England dare not lose tamely and the temptation to include Wilkinson for his goal-kicking alone must have been significant. Robbie Deans, the Wallabies coach, was convinced England would play the Wilko card. Instead Martin Johnson has opted to retain Shontayne Hape at inside-centre and Toby Flood at fly-half, a decision which indicates Wilkinson is no longer seen as a must-have item for England’s biggest games. “We like what we’ve got with Toby starting and Jonny on the bench,” Johnson said. Courtney Lawes and Ben Youngs getting first Test starts is also a sign of the times. Johnson has finally confronted the reality that Simon Shaw is unlikely to make next year’s World Cup and that Danny Care has not nailed down the No9 jersey, although he phrased it rather more diplomatically. If they respond well, Lawes and Youngs can now expect a decent run in the side. This will be an auspicious day for them and England. While Lawes’s athleticism is considerable he must prove he can perform a mountain of unglamorous physical work for 80 minutes at the highest level. Youngs, having endured a stellar season for Leicester, will find himself required to subdue Will Genia, such a pivotal figure that Deans has omitted Luke Burgess despite the latter’s fine first Test efforts. This time last year the two Premiership tyros were featuring in the World Under-20 final in Japan and have been regarded as the rising sons of English rugby ever since. “Some players don’t really want to put their heads where it’s going to hurt but I’m not too fussed,” the 21-year-old Lawes said, shrugging. “I’ll put my body on the line for my team.” Youngs, only 20, has the vision and the sharpness around the fringes to profit if England’s scrum does start rumbling forward again. “It’s the opportunity of a lifetime and hopefully one I’ll take,” he said. England’s forwards coach, John Wells, is also among those hoping for a more physical effort up front, not least from Tom Palmer and his new second-row partner Lawes. “They’re both big, heavy lads. They need to use some of their pace and weight and start knocking some players back a bit.” Shaw remains on the bench – “I’ve said to Simon: ‘If you want to compete until 2011 we’ll let you do that, we’re not writing you off,” insisted Johnson – alongside Delon Armitage, who has ousted Mathew Tait as the utility back. Given Armitage can barely muster a thimble-full of self-belief at the moment, it has to be interpreted as a shot across the bows of both Tait and Ben Foden as this tour enters its final, defining days. With Matt Giteau also back in the Wallabies’ midfield, Johnson has reiterated the need for England to display more alacrity across the park from the first whistle. Some of the tour squad spent their free time this week diving with sharks and climbing the Harbour Bridge but Johnson, who has summoned Saracens’s Brad Barritt from the Churchill Cup as cover for the injured Dominic Waldouck, has not travelled this far to be a tourist. “I don’t like losing games. Do I worry about my personal record? I just want us to get better. Of course I worry about losing but being under pressure is what playing for England is all about. That’s the whole game. If you don’t want pressure, you might as well sit there with a notepad.” England, though, have to demonstrate they have the makings of a genuinely competitive World Cup squad rather than build foundations on shaky ground. “If you paper over the cracks too many times, ultimately you set yourself up for a big fall,” Wilkinson said, stressing the importance of not looking too far ahead. Given he can remember so little about his 2003 kick – “It’s lost in a bit of a blur” – that should not be a major problem. Australia: O’Connor (Western Force); Ioane (Reds), Horne (Waratahs), Giteau (Brumbies), Mitchell (Waratahs); Cooper (Reds), Genia (Reds); Daley (Reds), Faingaa (Reds), Ma’afu (Brumbies), Mumm (Waratahs), Sharpe (Western Force), Elsom (Brumbies, capt), Pocock (Western Force), Brown (Western Force). Replacements: Edmonds (Brumbies), Slipper (Reds), Chisholm (Brumbies), Hodgson (Western Force), Burgess (Waratahs), Barnes (Waratahs), Ashley-Cooper (Brumbies). England: Foden (Northampton); Cueto (Sale), Tindall (Gloucester), Hape (Bath), Ashton (Northampton); Flood (Leicester), Youngs (Leicester); Payne (Wasps), Thompson (Brive), Cole (Leicester), Lawes (Northampton), Palmer (Stade Français), Croft (Leicester), Moody (Leicester, capt), Easter (Harlequins). Replacements: Chuter (Leicester), Wilson (Bath), Shaw (Wasps), Haskell (Stade Français), Care (Harlequins), Wilkinson (Toulon), D Armitage (London Irish). England rugby union team Jonny Wilkinson Martin Johnson Rugby union Robert Kitson guardian.co.uk

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England leave out Jonny Wilkinson for second Test in Australia

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

Christina Aguilera: What Should Her Next Move Be?

After soft first-week sales for Bionic, experts weigh in. By James Montgomery Photo: Ronald Martinez/ Getty Images Between the unexpectedly soft first-week sales for her comeback album, Bionic, constant criticism from Perez Hilton and a barrage of Lady Gaga comparisons , it hasn’t been an easy few weeks for Christina Aguilera. While the negative press is nothing new (remember the public outcry over her explicit “Dirrty” video? ), the less-than-stellar album sales, controversy over her sexed-up “Not Myself Tonight” video and the recent postponement of her tour are not adding up well. So what should she do next? We decided to pose the question to some experts, all of whom seem to agree that Aguilera has bucketloads of talent — but also has her work cut out for her. “She’s still under 30, she still has a fantastic voice, but I think her time has passed. I don’t know if it’s because she went away for a while, or because she tried to do something different with this project, but it feels a little crass and calculated,” Entertainment Weekly music critic Leah Greenblatt said. “From her choice of collaborators [The-Dream, Polow Da Don, Le Tigre] to her first single, it doesn’t feel fully organic. What’s missing so much with her this time out is that, while she can still sing the crap out of her songs, you don’t get a sense of vulnerability, or even really know who she is.” “She just seems a little confused, and that’s not like her, and it’s not what we want from her,” Julianne Shepherd, executive editor of The Fader magazine, added. “The image she’s been projecting, she just doesn’t seem comfortable doing it. She’s always done vamping, but now it’s like ‘I’m wearing these insane PVC outfits and singing to this music that I don’t relate to.’ No matter what she says, I don’t see her sitting around listening to old trance records.” Both agreed that Aguilera should essentially do her — focus on putting out the kind of songs that showcase her strengths — and stop chasing her competitors. “I think honestly, she’s trying to be a little too Gaga, and it’s not working for her,” Shepherd said. “She’s such a talented singer that she doesn’t need to do what everyone else is doing. It just seems too forced and too in the mold of the Gagas and the Rihannas of the world.” “She’s very much into the concept of ‘the future’ on this album, but the first single doesn’t sound like the future: It sounds like a song they’d play in a spin class, circa 1998,” Greenblatt said. “When you look at the other girls on the pop charts, it doesn’t feel fresh. It’s not compelling enough to pull herself away from the field. If you look at something like Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls,’ it’s a retro song, but it’s fun. There’s a heaviness to the Christina album. She may say she’s having fun, but you don’t believe her.” Both Greenblatt and Shepherd singled out the M.I.A. collaboration “Elastic Love” as a potential game-changer, a song that perhaps best sums up whatever it was Aguilera was hoping to achieve on Bionic, and one that might reinvigorate a public that’s grown tired of more of the same old pop. And both added that Christina should get back to basics (the title of her last album, as it happens), or maybe line up a new collaboration or two. “She’s got to re-calibrate her image, like do a fun video that treats sexuality as a garnish, not the entire meal,” Greenblatt said. “If she reins herself in and releases the right single, things might be OK. There are plenty of artists who hit it big with the second, third single, and she’s definitely big enough for that to happen here. People want her to succeed, she just needs to give us an iteration of herself that people like.” “I think that, maybe if she steps back a bit, tries to ease our of where she’s going, and trusts herself more, she will probably be okay. I think it’s just a bump in the road,” Shepherd added. “Or maybe she should collaborate with all of Young Money. That would probably work too.” What do you think Christina Aguilera’s next move should be? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Christina Aguilera

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Christina Aguilera: What Should Her Next Move Be?

Travie McCoy Joins Rihanna, Ke$ha On Last Girl Tour

Gym Class Heroes frontman hits the road with the ladies for tour kicking off July 2. By Mawuse Ziegbe Travie McCoy Gym Class Heroes’ Travie McCoy will hit the road with pop princesses Rihanna and Ke$ha on this summer’s Last Girl on Earth Tour , which kicks off on July 2 in Auburn, Washington. The tour will crisscross the U.S. and Canada and wrap up on August 28 in Syracuse, New York. McCoy’s addition to the lineup comes after the tour was originally announced in April as a girl-power outing, with Young Money’s Nicki Minaj as one of the openers. Minaj later dropped out of the tour , saying she was going to focus on wrapping up her debut instead. “Barbz I’m sorry 2 say I will not be going out on RiRi’s tour. I’ve decided 2 use that time 4 the completion of my album. Hope u understand,” the star tweeted just days after the tour was announced. McCoy will rock stages this summer in support of his solo debut, Lazarus, which features the single “Billionaire” with Bruno Mars . The hip-rock star — who goes by Travie instead of Travis for his solo work — premiered the video for his new single “The Manual” featuring T-Pain and Young Cash online on Friday. Travie recently told MTV’s Buzzworthy that the solo effort is just one of the many side projects he tinkers with while still being a part of the Gym Class Heroes. “Since the beginning of Gym Class Heroes, we’ve all kind of had side projects,” he said. “This is just an extension of that.” Last Girl on Earth tour dates with Rihanna and Ke$ha according to McCoy’s label:

Britain to Chris Brown: No Visa For You!

UK officials announced that they have barred Chris Brown from entering Great Britain for a concert due to his vicious 2009 attack on his former girlfriend. “Team Rihanna,” Britain’s Home Office said in a statement. Just kidding, they didn’t say that, though it was basically the same sentiment they expressed. “We reserve the right to refuse entry to the U.K. to anyone guilty of a serious criminal offence. Public safety is one of our primary concerns,” the office said . “Each application to enter the U.K. is considered on its individual merits.” Chris Brown was apparently found meritless. “SORRY to all the fans in Europe!!! my tour is cancelled. Im pretty sure yall know. my entry was denied in your country. I love you. SORRY!!” Brown tweeted in a post subsequently deleted in favor of this official statement from his publicist: “Due to issues surrounding his work visa, the Ireland and United Kingdom leg of Chris Brown’s Keep Me Relevant Fan Appreciation Tour has been postponed. Chris looks forward to performing for his fans abroad in the near future.” Brown had been scheduled to perform in Glasgow, London and Manchester in the U.K., along with a stop in the Irish city of Cork. Not gonna happen. The 21-year-old R&B star remains on trash detail as part of his five-year probationary sentence following his guilty plea in the Rihanna assault case. Rihanna didn’t have any visa woes for her UK tour dates this year. Just saying.

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Britain to Chris Brown: No Visa For You!