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England's new bats save face

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 04 Januari 2014 | 22.07

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ENGLAND's senior players seem intent on catching an early flight home, leaving their young guard has been left to carry the can.

Resuming play on 1/8 at the SCG on Saturday, England's top order capitulated so quickly it was a struggle to keep up with the comings and goings of batsmen from the visitors change room.

Alastair Cook (7) limped off leg before wicket to Ryan Harris in the second ball of the day and night-watchman James Anderson (7) followed three overs later, undone by Mitchell Johnson.

Kevin Pietersen hung around for just 13 minutes before some lazy footwork saw him drive a full Harris delivery to Shane Watson and Ian Bell was next, caught behind for two off Peter Siddle.

They were tired shots from a tired team.

It left England reeling on 5/23 with debutant Gary Ballance and allrounder Ben Stokes, the only English player to make a noteworthy contribution all match, to begin the recovery mission.

It wasn't anything out of Brad Haddin's book, but the two fought well to reach 50 without further damage, except a dented helmet.

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Ballance tried to duck under a Johnson bouncer at the last minute, but got it horribly wrong and took a whack right on the head.

After a lengthy delay to asses the damage and replace his helmet, Ballance and Stokes survived a testing spell before lunch to go into the break with England on 5/61 and the future of English cricket at least showing signs of life.

When Ballance (18) fell to a wonderful Nathan Lyon delivery early in the second session, it was again up to Stokes to salvage something.

The 22-year-old is a genuine allrounder - as his 120 in Perth and Friday's six wicket haul will attest to - but he regards himself more as a batsman who bowls.

He spent 141 minutes in the middle for his 47. He sustained a bone-crunching blow to his foot from Johnson, a similar delivery to the one that injured Stuart Broad in Perth, and hit four boundaries before being clean bowled by Siddle.

With 247 runs Stokes is England's second-highest run scorer this series behind only Pietersen, but he has played one less Test. He's also taken 14 wickets, so it's little wonder he's been described as the find of the series.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Baseball boss eyes cricket talent

President and CEO of the Arizona Diamondbacks Derrick Hall enjoying the match at the stadium where his team will be playing the LA Dodgers on the 22nd of March. Source: Tim Hunter / News Limited

WITH a chequebook worth $90 million, Derrick Hall isn't the type of bloke who baulks at SCG beer prices.

In fact, when it comes to beers, burgers, even batsman of an Australian Test variety, the Arizona Diamondbacks president speaks enthusiastically about splurging on it all.

"Oh, absolutely,'' the American baseball suit grins.

"Having already met Steve Smith and heard plenty about David Warner, I have no doubt your elite cricketers could make the transition to Major League Baseball".

Currently in Sydney to promote his side's MLB season opener against the LA Dodgers - which, in March, will see the SCG undergo a multi-million dollar transformation - Hall insists he would happily allow swashbuckling cricketers Warner and Smith to trial with his American franchise.

"We could definitely teach baseball to those guys,'' he says.

"In terms of a pathway, Australian cricket is certainly a realistic scouting ground for us.

"With the hitting, the power arms, the hand-eye coordination, there is so much crossover there. I'm just not sure how many Australians who make it to the elite level would want to give that up."

Ah, wouldn't that depend on how many zeroes you offered them?

"I guess our salaries are well above yours, yes,'' Hall grins.

Allan Border talks Ashes Cricket at Manly Beach. Pictured with Major League Baseball stars Patrick Corbin(L) of the Arizona Diamond Backs, and AJ Ellis of the LA Dodgers. Source: News Limited

"But that's another story altogether.

"What I do hope is that we can help build the game of cricket in America. Maybe even have a swap where US baseballers come down here and play.

"But in terms of our season opener, it's about promoting baseball in Australia. This isn't about finances for us. We simply want to break square, grow the game and ... whoa, he just got hit."

Indeed, out in the middle of the SCG, Aussie paceman Mitchell Johnson has just sent a thundering blow into Englishman Ben Stokes. Or maybe it was Jonny Bairstow. Regardless, the Diamondbacks boss is impressed.

"Remarkable sport isn't it?'' he continues.

"My father-in-law, he's from India and has been urging me to watch this sport forever.

"Then about five years back, I actually stumbled across it by accident. I was flicking through the sports channels and when it came on, I stayed with it. Love it."

But do you get it?

"Taking a break to have 'tea' -- that's different,'' the leading US sports suit laughs.

"So is stuff like the absence of leather mitts, fielders being so close to the batsmen, a match taking five days.

"Back home, we're actually trying to speed up our games, which average about three hours. We're playing 162 games a year, so for 81 home games, we don't want our fans sitting around for hours."

No, because as Hall will discover come close, that encourages men wearing watermelons for hats to do some strange things indeed.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Salsa league: Latin NRL goldmine

Latino rugby league players eating tacos at Guzman y Gomez, F.Valley. Jonathan Espinoza and Sebastian Maja with their lunch. Pic Chris Higgins Source: Chris Higgins / News Limited

IN WHAT may be a first for rugby league, Fortitude Valley's nightclubs have actually helped the sport.

League's boldest pioneers, the Latin Heat have little idea who Greg Inglis is.

Several team members were introduced to the code amid salsa music and tequila. But they are pouring their heart into the 13-man game.

A collection of bouncers, scientists, cleaners and university students, the Heat make their international debut against the Philippines Tamaraws on the Gold Coast in a fortnight.

Captain Jonathan Espinoza, who dominated the University league competition last season with an incredible 27-metre average per hit-up, is adamant Latin America is a potential goldmine for NRL clubs in future years.

They just have to make Latinos aware of the sport first, even if it means pitching in night clubs.

"Latino and rugby league aren't used in the same sentence much," said Espinoza, born in Australia to Chilean and Nicaraguan parents.

"The guys have heard of Maradona and Lionel Messi but not Darren Lockyer.

"There is rugby union in places like Argentina and Chile but people are oblivious to rugby league.

"We have the skill and talent to make a good league side and we want to start it here and take it back to Latin America."

Diego Lopez Pinto and Fernando Villegas play for the Latin Heat rugby league team. Picture: Peter Cronin Source: News Limited

The Heat players' English ranges from excellent to non-existent, and their sponsor is South American food outlet Guzman y Gomez.

They all hail from throughout Latin America, with brilliantly named backrower Juan David emigrating from the Columbian town Pablo Escobar made famous, Medellin.

In existence for just 11 months, the Heat have recruited 50 players in Brisbane and Sydney.

They have fallen in love with league as a means of learning more about Australia and adapting to their new homes.

"One of our sponsors has regular events at a nightclub and a lot of Latin boys come in and they ask about us playing rugby," Espinoza said.

"We tell them to come along and while they are a little intoxicated when we ask them they love it when they start training.

"Some of them could be good enough to play in the Queensland Cup and who knows from there.

"It is a beautiful thing because we are embracing the Australian culture with the Latin culture."

Jonathan Espinoza plays for the Latin rugby league team. Picture: Peter Cronin Source: News Limited

Brisbane-based Heat director and league tragic Robert Burgin said there were plans for the team to tour Latin America in the next 12 months, while a Columbian team featuring several Heat players is set to play Jamaica later this year.

There is a combined Latin American population of close to 600 million people, so even a tiny niche in the culture could present incredible opportunities to the code.

While the traditional physique of Latin Americans suits the stocky, powerful, frame required for league.

The Heat were born when Burgin visited his girlfriend's family in Brazil.

"The light bulb moment when I thought it could work was last Christmas, when I was in the tiny Brazilian town of Assis Chateaubriand, in a very rural community and I showed people NRL and State of Origin clips on YouTube and they loved it," he said.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Battle lost but Anderson gives all

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ENGLAND's best bowler heading into this series has maintained an extraordinary workload throughout, but it's easy to overlook James Anderson's contributions in an under-performing team.

Only two Tests - the second in Adelaide and third in Perth - reached five days and, after England were skittled out for 155 yesterday, the Sydney Test will also be over early.

Anderson hasn't had a good series, but he is one of England's only senior players who has at least fronted up to the contest.

Never was that more evident than on the first day at the SCG when he was sent in as night-watchman after England lost Michael Carberry early in their innings.

The 31-year-old had just spent a whole day in the field and bowled more overs than any other English player. He took the wicket of Shane Watson - the tourists' first leg before wicket of the series.

He toiled in the heat for the rest of the day until Australia were finally bowled out for 326. But Anderson was afforded little rest before he was summoned to join his captain Alastair Cook in the middle and forced to face a fierce Mitchell Johnson barrage under the dusk light.

No easy task for any batting specialist, let alone a tired tailender. But he maintained the strike, protecting Cook from Johnson's missiles and glares.

Anderson was dismissed for seven early yesterday and it took just over two sessions for Australia to knock England over. That meant the seamer was back on the field after tea, opening the bowling for the visitors.

And that's been England's biggest problem this series. Not only have the batsmen left their bowlers with so little to defend, but their short innings' have have left precious little time for their bowlers to recover. Anderson has bowled 183 overs - significantly more than any other bowler this series - and has taken 14 wickets.

He was back in the thick of it again late yesterday and struck early, dismissing David Warner for 16 and Watson for nine as Australia ended the day on 4-140. Anderson has 2/36 going into day three.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

The humble story behind Schumi

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 03 Januari 2014 | 22.07

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THERE were 1200 admissions into the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Grenoble in 2013, most of the patients suffering serious ski or other alpine sports injuries.

Rescue helicopters thud almost constantly overhead, particularly in winter, running a sort of relay of medical evacs from all over the slopes of the French Alps to the eastern France hospital.

"They are all very, very important as each other, no one patient more important than the other," an exasperated hospital official insisted yesterday as she fielded calls from all over the world.

SCHUMACHER SENT FLYING INTO THREE OTHER ROCKS IN SKIING ACCIDENT

You would expect that attitude in a country that invented the word egalitarian, but clearly during the week there was one patient whose presence was seen as a little more important than the others, not least by more than 100 media personnel camped outside the hospital's emergency doors waiting for word on his condition.

Corinna Schumacher, the wife of former German Formula One driver Michael Schumacher arrives at Grenoble University Hospital Centre. Picture: Getty Source: Getty Images

Michael Schumacher, 45-year-old father of two, ski enthusiast, adrenalin junkie and the man considered the greatest driver ever strapped into a Formula One machine.

His was an unfortunate, most common of ski accidents but there has been nothing ordinary about the feats of the German who for more than two decades dominated the F1 motorsport with a record 91 wins and seven world championships.

The fact he could be felled by an innocuous turn on a ski slope after a career of high-speed 350km/hr dangers is not lost on anyone.

FAMILY HAILS MICHAEL SCHUMACHER A FIGHTER

But more surprising perhaps has been that his latest death defying injury should attract so much response, from world leaders to sport stars to ordinary people on the street, all offering their desires and prayers for his recovery.

That recovery still remains unknown, as are the events that saw him become just another of CHU Grenoble's 1200 patients.

Michael Schumacher's family has described the Formula One champion as a 'fighter' in a message.

Schumacher is considered to be the first sports star to have become a billionaire. He had humble beginnings with his bricklayer dad building his first competitive go-kart from scrap. As the young Schumacher began winning races and age titles beyond his own age, his father Rolf had to find a second job to help buy him new karts before he was discovered by corporate sponsors.

SCHU'S BIGGEST F1 RIVALRIES

In 1989 he moved up to Formula Three, earning a call-up to the Mercedes junior team before winning the prestigious Macau F3 Grand Prix in 1990.

His F1 debut came with the Jordan team, a Mercedes cheque placing their young charge Eddie Jordan's cash-strapped squad. At the Belgian Grand Prix in 1991 he equalled his team's best grid position for the season at seventh but his race debut was brief.

Schumacher (2L) with Peter Sauber (L) and fellow Mercedes junior drivers Karl Wendlinger and Heinz-Harald Frentzen. Pic: Sauber F1 Source: Supplied

Inexperienced at standing starts, Schumacher burnt out the car's clutch on the starting grid. His race lasted 600 metres.

He switched teams to Benetton by the next race, after a contract mess up, and in 1992 finished third in the drivers' championship. He won his first drivers' championship in 1994, the season marred by the death of driving great Ayrton Senna in a high-speed crash at the San Marino Grand Prix that Schumacher saw first hand as he was driving in second place at the time behind the race leader Senna. Senna was Schumacher's idol as much as rival and his death affected the German although not to the point of him driving any safer. He was a known risk taker, at times considered reckless, and he never changed his style even when he was disqualified from the 1997 season after a deliberate manoeuvre to crash an opponent who stood to win the drivers' championship. It was the second time he had done something like that and he received years of bad press particularly in Britain.

Formula One driver Michael Schumacher skiing in the northern Italian resort of Madonna di Campiglio. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

In 1996, he took on the challenge of helping return the once-great Ferrari team to the top, and between 2000 and 2004 he won more races and championships than any other driver in the history of the sport. When he retired from the sport for the first time in 2006, aged 37, he was being hailed as the greatest driver of all time, even by the British and Italian press which never really took to the German and his cold, almost clinical, persona. That didn't change when he made an unsuccessful comeback to racing in 2010. When he retired again in 2012 he decided to concentrate on skiing as a past time.

He lives in a $70million mansion by Lake Geneva in Switzerland with his wife Corinna, 16-year-old daughter Gina Maria, 14-year-old son Mick and a huge car collection. The family own a large chalet in the exclusive ski village of Meribel in the Tarentaise Valley in the French Alps.

The family move to the chalet each Christmas and were hoping to celebrate the New Year and Schumacher's 45th birthday, last Friday, but on the previous Sunday a ski trip with his son and some friends went wrong.

Paying tribute with a sand sculpture of German Formula One world champion Michael Schumacher at Puri beach, as far as India. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

Schumacher's manager Sabine Kehm, who has spent the past week at Grenoble hospital alongside Schumacher's family, described how the group was skiing down a run when one of them fell. Schumacher stopped and helped them up and had pushed off again before skiing into an off-piste straight with rocky outcrops protruding between the two runs. On one side was the difficult Maudit red run, ungroomed and blighted with moguls on the other the easier La Biche blue run which is steep and races off toward the village. For whatever reason, and the French Gendarmerie based in nearby Bourg St Maurice is investigating, Schumacher elected to head straight for the off-piste basin between the two, littered with rocks and covered with only powder snow, albeit deep, since there had not been any decent snow falls in the area for weeks. Kehm, who visited the site, wont go into the exact details but confirmed Schumacher clipped a rock and his skis catapulted him head first into a boulder.

Fans hold a Ferrari flag in front of the Grenoble University Hospital Centre in the French Alps, where retired seven-time German Formula One world champion Michael Schumacher remains. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

He was wearing a helmet but such was the impact, it split and when those around him called for help blood was spilling from his head.

Two ski patrollers from Meribel were on the scene almost immediately after they received a call since they were attending to another unrelated issue nearby. They immediately called for a helicopter evac. He was initially taken to the nearby town of Moutiers. The resort later issued a statement saying the retired motor ace was fine but was being moved to Grenoble for tests. In reality, he was in an agitated state, a neurological sign something was not right, before he fell unconscious. The prognosis was not good from the start. A scan showed widespread intercranial haematoma (internal bleeding), cerebral contusions (brain tissue bruising) and oedema (fluid build up). He was put into an induced coma, his body kept at near hypothermic levels of 35 degrees. He remains in critical conditions but doctors have said over the past few days he was showing "slight signs" of recovery. Whether there is any brain damage is not something doctors want to speculate about and a number of times they have made the point that no-one is prepared to "predict the future".

Neurosurgeon Professor Stephan Chabardes, Professor Jean-Francois Payen, Assistant Director Marc Penaud, Professor Emmanuel Gay and Professor and Michael Schumacher's friend Gerard Saillant give a press conference about Michael Schumacher's health condition. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

Press, led by a huge German contingent, descended on Grenoble from Sunday night. By the next day with reports of the severity of his injuries other media arrived. Yesterday there were still 17 live TV satellite trucks broadcasting around the clock to their various audiences. Such was the size, police were forced to move the pack to a designated carpark area of the hospital where officials also set aside an auditorium for working press. Former greats of the sport began Tweeting their hopes for his recovery and two days later German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she too was shocked by his accident and joined "millions of Germans" hoping for a full recovery. German fans, many wearing Ferrari colours, then began arriving at the hospital as well as many French locals, bizarrely photographing each other outside the hospital and or with the media pack.

The first of a planned 20 buses, organised by the Italian carmaker and collecting fans from across Italy, began arriving in Grenoble. Some carried flags with well wishes, most wore red. Ferrari, which has 130 clubs across Europe and told fans to wear red and its insignia in honour of their most famous former driver, came in for some criticism with some branding the support as a blatant promotion. President of the Roma-Colesseo Ferrari Club said he did not want to be associated with an event linked to a man's suffering.

"It's very delicate and if I was among those who are close to Michael, such an initiative would not have pleased me," he said. The retired F1 driver's fan club in his boyhood town of Kerpen also said any celebration of the birthday would be in bad taste.

Artwork speculating on the location at the Meribel ski resort France, where Michael Schumacher may have fallen and sustained head injuries. Source: Supplied

Schumacher is being treated by the two top doctors at the hospital, including head of the neurosurgery department Emmanuel Gay and brain surgeon Stephan Chabardes, as well as two other renowned doctors who are also close personal friends of Schumacher's family Dr Johann Peil and Paris-based Prof Gerard Saillant.

Schumacher is likely to have to undergo further surgery. He is still in the intensive care unit and will not be moved for some days if not weeks.

Father Rolf Schumacher arrives at the Grenoble University Hospital Centre where former German Formula One driver Michael Schumacher is being treated for a severe head injury following a skiing accident. Picture: Getty Source: Getty Images

While the media never really warmed to him as a personality during his long career there were none who could refute his abilities and for that he was highly regarded during his years of domination of the sport. The global reaction on social media when it was revealed he was fighting for his life was also testament to his legion of fans and admirers still supporting him seven years after his successful career. His mark on the sport and fans was clearly indomitable.

Some people court publicity others are famous by birthright default but Schumacher is much loved around the world for his unmatched talent and deservedly has been getting huge attention now. While his future remains unknown his past will forever be remembered globally and that's what makes him different to the 1199 other patients who have passed through the CHU doors.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

How Mitch beat his demons

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AS midnight fireworks crackled brilliantly above Sydney Harbour this week, England's heartbroken Ashes squad were urged to rejoice in small mercies.

"Good news,'' tweeted former England captain Michael Vaughan.

"Mitchell Johnson has not taken a wicket this year.''

The fact that the year was one minute old had a bit to with it but the English batsmen were not complaining.

When you are being shot to pieces by a lone gunman, just knowing that his weapon has been put in the holster for a day or two can be comfort enough.

Rarely has a fast bowler created as much terror on Australian soil as Johnson this summer with his hostile pace and fierce body language, including a bristling moustache, adding new lustre to the term mojo.

Such has been his rampant domination you half expected him to storm into England's New Year's eve party, shout "boo,'' then giggle as a handful of English tailenders scattered behind the couch.

All this from a man who retreated from the game physically and mentally broken two years ago almost craving to be dropped.

Throughout a turbulent career Johnson has been described as gifted, enigmatic, fragile, inspirational, unpredictable and intimidating but, for all the snakes and ladders, the bottom line is now quite spectacular.

Johnson's three man-of-the-match awards in this series give him eight best-on-ground performances in 55 Tests.

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The figure deserves a thumping exclamation mark when you realise his man-of-the-match strike rate outshines Test match legends Shane Warne (17 from 145) and Glenn McGrath (11 from 124) who once ruled the world for fun.

Though Johnson's form has hit England with the force of a summer hail storm, those who know him well noted the dark clouds floating in England's direction well before the first Test.

When Johnson visited Brisbane in July to announce his signing for the Heat Twenty20 side team-mates who had grown up with him and watched his demeanour at the launch were taken by how relaxed he was.

"He will go well this year,'' Heat keeper Chris Hartley predicted.

"He is enjoying life again. Being a father has been great for him.''

Minutes earlier Johnson had pulled his mobile phone from his pocket and proudly showed team-mates and pressmen photos of his newly-born daughter Rubika.

He even looked up at their faces to see their reactions and smiled when they smiled.

The joy of fatherhood was there for all to see.

"'It definitely changes your perspective … I'm really enjoying myself more than I was 18 months ago,'' Johnson said of his daughter's arrival.

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"You come home from what may not have been your best day and you've got your family there. Your little one smiles at you and it just makes everything better.

"If I bowl a bad over and go down to fine leg I can think about the good things in life.''

He looked a man at peace with the world and for Johnson, as his team-mates regularly point out, this is highly significant.

Johnson is not a Shane Warne who somehow managed to put a mental fence around his turbulent private life when he took the field and bowl as if he was the happiest man in the world.

Sensitive, shy and, as Ricky Pointing says, sometimes amazingly lacking in confidence despite his supreme talent, Johnson's off-field life shapes his on-field demeanour, often for better and occasionally for worse such as on the Ashes tour of England in 2009 when his form was undermined by a family meltdown featuring his mother.

England's Barmy Army tormented him to the point of despair that tour. He wobbled on for a few years before a toe injury sent him out of the game for seven months, a setback he considered a blessing because it gave him a merciful peep outside the cricket bubble he had lived in since his teenage years. He felt hungry again. He missed the game he had almost hated a few months earlier.

Johnson's father, Townsville-based Kevin, says the setback was a key factor in his current form surge.

"That foot injury was the best thing that happened to him,'' Kevin said. "He was under the pump and it gave him a break from the game. He must have thought he would give it a real crack otherwise he would not be playing again.''

But for all the joy of fatherhood and the freshness of the break Johnson needed some tinkering under the bonnet to become the roaring machine he has been this season and his long-time mentor Dennis Lillee appeared as the man in the blue overalls.

How Mitch beat his demons

Lillee urged Johnson to lengthen his run-up and increase his fitness by going back in time and doing something Lillee swore by but is now far less fashionable - running.

At the start of his career Lillee had a rollicking, wild colonial boy run-up to the crease but refined it under the tutelage of professional sprint coach Austin Robertson who taught him a tighter, more economical running style which saved precious energy he then used to bowl longer spells.

Lillee's instruction to Johnson was not simply to go running but to carry a cricket ball on his journey so it felt like it was part of him and would improve his balance at the crease.

This summer Johnson has faced all comers without flinching but his bashful disposition made him baulk at the thought of running through the streets of Perth with a ball in his hand and risking punters shouting things like "hey mate, I know you are lengthening your run-up but seriously ...''

So, ball in hand, he did some of his running after dark, becoming the night stalker who would eventually bring down England.

The result of Johnson's increased work is that he is fitter and standing higher at the crease with a high bowling arm that is not suffering from the infamous radar scrambles of yesteryear.

In sprinting tests among his West Australian team-mates he does not dominate and nor is he the fittest.

But when they assess strength with squat jumps he soars to the head of the pack to the point where it has been quipped he may have been a frog in another life. His strength is literally his strength.

Johnson was so confident of his form before the Ashes series that when a Brisbane reporter privately said to him before the first Test "be careful about all these big fire and brimstone predictions you are making '' he replied "it's fine ... I am just telling people what they want to hear but after all these years I reckon I finally know what sort of bowler I am.''

Mitch before he was mean - at four months old.

That meant being used in short, hostile spells throwing sticks of gelignite rather than, as was the case previously, being a thoroughbred on same days and a carthorse bowling long draining spells on others.

Kevin Johnson sometimes shakes his head in bewilderment that the fire-breathing enforcer he watches on the field is his bashful, mild-mannered son.

"He is not an extravert who needs the attention,'' Kevin said. "He has never been like that. It seems strange because if you don't know him personally you probably think he is very aggressive but he's not. I still find it strange sometimes to think batsmen are fearful of his bowling.''

At a crucial time of his son's development as a young teenager the Johnson family had a spacious 34 perch backyard in Townsville which encouraged his development in all sports.

"He was always active and running around,'' Kevin said.

"Nowadays most kids spend their times in front of computer screens. They will play a game of cricket on X-Box rather than go out and do it.''

As a youngster Johnson had to overcome the challenges of his parents splitting up.

"Kids are pretty resilient and adaptable,'' Kevin said. "We had our ups and downs. It has never been easy. You hope you put them on the right path.''

But despite the challenging off-field life Johnson was not a difficult child to handle and his father can barely remember Mitchell getting into trouble, apart from occasionally not doing his homework and the police once pulling him over and warning him to wear a helmet on his push bike.

There were no silver spoons in the Johnson household in Townsville and when Mitchell asked his father whether he could have a pair of cricket spikes Kevin reluctantly had to reject the request on the grounds he could not afford it but a compromise was reached when Mitchell loaned a pair of his father's old golf shoes.

"It was that or bare feet - fortunately I think eventually someone at the club had a spare pair of spikes and they helped him out,'' Kevin quipped.

Remarkably, Johnson was powering to the wicket in those golf spikes when Queensland cricket scouts, armed with one of cricket's first speed guns, went on a state wide campaign to try and discover the state's fastest bowler.

They even rechecked their readings when they revealed that a no-name teenage Townsville slinger who was unknown in representative cricket was faster than Queensland's entire battery of Sheffield Shield players. Queensland discovered him when he was months away from joining the army and perhaps abandoning the game.

A few years ago when Johnson was honoured by Australia's cricket media for his outstanding progress his acceptance drew raised eyebrows when he said"one of the reasons I am so happy to win this award is that I haven't really won any awards in cricket before.''

For Johnson's old cricketing mates, his form against England is sweet confirmation of their long held few that he was blessed with a talent given to few.

Hartley knew Johnson had rare talent within him from the time he kept wicket to him in the Queensland under-19s against NSW and he bowled a spell quicker than anything Hartley has kept to in a decade long 99-match first class career at senior level.

"It is still the quickest I have kept to and he was 18 years old,'' Hartley said.

"It was frightening. (Future Test batsman) Ed Cowan was opening the batting and I remember him looking back at me taking the ball above my should 25 metres behind the stumps. That was when we realised if he did the little things right he could have a superb career.''

Kevin Johnson, father of Australian fast bowler Mitchell Johnson, in Townsville. Picture: Evan Morgan

But the cricket gods were determined not to fall at Johnson's feet.

He was injured so often in his early years with Queensland the Bulls terminated his contract in 2003 and he went to live in a house in the Brisbane suburb, The Gap where he and fellow fast bowler Nathan Rimmington paid house-mate, landlord and Bulls batsman Brendan Nash just over $100 a week for a room.

Rimmington claims that being sacked from the Queensland contract list was one of the best things that happened to Johnson for the jolt prompted him to sharply increase his work ethic as he mixed cricket with a new job driving for Brett Mortimer's plumbing supplies.

"When he went to work for Morto I noticed a massive change,'' Rimmington said. "I think when he came down from Townsville things had gone pretty smoothly for him but losing that contract was his first big setback.''

In some ways it was not surprising Johnson had a volatile life in cricket because the game was not his first sporting love. As a boy he played a host of sports with tennis his top choice and Pete Sampras his hero.

Johnson has a tendency to shine at most sports and Rimmington well remembers sharing a night of triumph on the pool table with Johnson at Brisbane's Paddo tavern.

"Pool, table tennis, darts - he takes to everything quickly,'' Rimmington said. "I remember one night at the Paddo we took on allcomers at pool and won about 20 games in a row and I was just hanging off the back of Mitch with the form he was in and other guys were getting frustrated because they could not get on the table.''

Brett Mortimer, the plumbing van driver who once saved Johnson's career believes one of the biggest turn-arounds for the fast bowler has been the calming influence of fun-loving coach Darren ''Boof' Lehmann.

''I think Boof Lehmann has been very good for Mitch ... Lehmann is pretty laid back and Mitch loves that because he has always been a free spirit,'' Mortimer said.

Mitchell Johnson with his wife Jessica Bratich-Johnson and daughter Rubika.

No-one is quite sure of where Johnson's journey will end but those on board have enjoyed the ride.

"This is something I never thought would happen,'' Kevin Johnson said. "I watched cricket when I was younger but you never felt you would have a son or relative in the spotlight. Sometimes it feels like a dream.''

A dream for his father and for Australia but a recurring nightmare for English batsmen who will never forget the tour when Australia's lamb-turned-lion came storming from the darkness.


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Scorchers prolong Thunder misery

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IT was meant to be about Mike Hussey but Mr Cricket was upstaged by another 38-year-old captain at the WACA Ground on Friday night.

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Perth Scorchers skipper Simon Katich blasted 75 off just 42 balls as the home side continued Sydney Thunder's misery in the Big Bash League by chasing down the 158-run target with four balls to spare.

The Scorchers' six-wicket victory condemned the Thunder to their 17th consecutive loss.

The win leaves the Scorchers at 2-2 after four matches ahead of next Tuesday's crucial home clash against Hobart Hurricanes.

Coming into the match with a broken finger, Katich was superb in his man-of-the-match performance.

He flayed the bowlers from the outset after coming in at No.3, before playing an anchoring role to see his side to safety.

The Scorchers were as good as home by the time Katich was caught at mid-off off a Gurinder Sandhu full toss in the 18th over.

Mitchell Marsh celebrates the big wicket of Thunder skipper Mike Hussey for 13. Source: News Limited

Mitch Marsh provided good support with 34 off 29 balls and hit the winning runs in the final over.

The Thunder posted 6/157 from their 20 overs, with Hussey making just 13 on his return to his long-time home ground.

Hussey received a mixture of cheers and boos from the sell-out crowd when he was announced as the incoming batsman in the fourth over.

The retired Test star was unfortunate to be out, slashing Marsh to third man where Craig Simmons took an excellent catch low down.

Eoin Morgan, who was dropped by Hogg in the covers before he had scored, top-scored for the Thunder with 48 off 30 balls.

Morgan was run out in bizarre circumstances by Marsh off his own bowling, with the England limited overs batsman's bat bouncing in the air as he attempted to ground it behind the crease.

Jason Floros' late cameo of 37 off 24 balls was also crucial.

The visitors got off to a bright start before the loss of openers Tillakaratne Dilshan and Daniel Hughes put the brakes on the scoring rate.

Ageless spinner Brad Hogg was the best of the Perth bowlers, finishing with 2/20 off his four overs.

Follow the Scorchers' chase right here with our live blog, featuring social media updates and commentary on all the big moments!


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Stokes England's only positive

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THERE have been precious few highlights for England during this Ashes series, but Ben Stokes has at least provided promising signs for the future.

He, along with James Anderson and Stuart Broad, justified Alastair Cook's decision to bowl first in Sydney on Friday - in the first session at least, when they had Australia 4-94 at lunch.

The Kiwi-born all-rounder has scored England's only ton of the series and on Friday, playing in just his fourth Test match, claimed six wickets to bring his total tally for the series to 13.

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Stokes picked up the crucial wickets of Chris Rogers, Michael Clarke and Brad Haddin, knocked over tailenders Ryan Harris and Peter Siddle in consecutive deliveries, before ending Steve Smith's magnificent knock of 115.

He beat both Rogers and Clarke with extra bounce on a lively SCG wicket, Rogers dragging it onto his stumps and Clarke edging one behind to Ian Bell at second slip.

It's the third time this series Stokes has picked up the prized scalp of the Australian captain.

And he ended the 128-run partnership between Haddin and Steve Smith by getting the in-form Haddin to edge one to Cook at first slip for 75.

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"Haddin has played well all series," Stokes said.

"He's up for it and he's played like that every innings so far. When a guy is playing like that against you I guess you have to hold your hand up to a guy in that form."

Described by former England captain Michael Vaughan as "the find of the series", Stokes has provided Cook with the perfect fourth seam-bowling option.

But it's the 22-year-old's fighting attitude - in a team that has shown so little fight - that has seen him stand out.

In his debut Test in Adelaide he and Mitchell Johnson had to be separated by umpire Kumar Dharmasena after the two collided while Stokes was batting.

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They both escaped further punishment, but Stokes made it clear he relished the contest when he said after the incident: "When someone gets a bit mouthy with you and makes you switch on and really feel like you're in a fight. And if you're in a fight, you want to win a fight."

The following Test in Perth he came out and scored a vintage second innings 120 on a dry and cracked WACA wicket. It wasn't enough to avoid defeat, but his gritty 99-run partnership with Bell showed real character.

Stokes reckons his batting is his strongest point, but with bowling figures of 6-99 on Friday he seems a genuine all-rounder.

Still, it was his ton that pleased him most.

"I couldn't put my finger on why one was more pleasing than the other," he said.

"It was my hundred, but at the same time pretty happy to get six wickets.

"It's all about keeping feet on the floor at the moment and just looking forward to your next innings or match. The success I've had so far I can easily turn around and people will be writing me off."

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Hewitt advances to quarter-final

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 02 Januari 2014 | 22.07

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LLEYTON Hewitt likes his chances of being the last man standing as the Brisbane International men's quarter-finalists prepare for a heatwave double-header today and tomorrow.

Hewitt, with high hopes of a strong Australian summer to lift his ranking of No.60, was as tenacious and almost as efficient as he was when a top-five player a decade ago in inflicting a 7-5, 6-3 win over Spain's sixth seed Feliciano Lopez yesterday.

If forecasts prove correct, players will walk into a furnace in the day session today when three men's quarter-finals and one women's semi-final are played.

Bureau of Meteorology forecasts yesterday afternoon were for a maximum of 37C today and 41C when the two men's semi-finals will be played in the heat of the day tomorrow.

Top seed Roger Federer is spared the heat with his quarter against Marinko Matosevic scheduled to open tonight's session, but the tradeoff is the winner will have a few hours less time to recover for tomorrow's semi-final.

In the second match in the day session, Hewitt will play Marius Copil, a Romanian qualifier who scored the second career win over a top-20 player when he fought off France's third seed Gilles Simon 7-5, 6-3 to make his first ATP quarter-final.

"I feel I can last as well as anyone on the court and it's a good sign leading into the Australian Open,'' Hewitt, ranked No.60, said.

Lleyton Hewitt of Australia hits a backhand volley in his match against Feliciano Lopez of Spain at the Brisbane International tennis tournament. Source: AFP

Chasing his first week-one title win since his Adelaide final win 14 years ago, Hewitt, 32, said he was glad to have "snuck out'' of both his matches in straight sets at Pat Rafter Arena ahead of the gruelling test ahead.

Overhead cover at Pat Rafter Arena and show court 1 are a factor in favour of matches proceeding despite the heat.

The arbiter of whether the men's matches can proceed safely at the Queensland Tennis Centre will be ATP supervisor Lars Graff.

Women's matches can be postponed if readings are too high on a heat stress monitor readings which can be taken three times a day by the WTA physios on site.

This measures both the temperature and humidity, takes into account heat coming off the court and are taken at 30 minutes before play starts, midday and just before the start of the last matches matches.

The courts and balls play faster in elevated heat and humidity, with Hewitt saying the conditions in Brisbane are as fast as any on the tour, owing also to a lack of grit on the courts this year and balls which he believes are different from those used by Tennis Australia last summer.

The winner between Hewitt and Copli, 23, will advance to a semi-final tomorrow against either second seed Kei Nishikori or Croatian Marin Cilic.

Lleyton Hewitt of Australia reacts after he won the first set against Feliciano Lopez of Spain. Source: AP

South Africa's fourth seed Kevin Anderson withdrew with a stomach virus, the sixth player to quit the tournament through injury or illness.

Anderson was to have played Australian wildcard Sam Groth last night.

Caroline Wozniacki (shoulder), Wimbledon runner-up Sabine Lisicki (gastro), Queensland qualifier Ash Barty (torn left adductor), Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (thigh) and Canberra wildcard Nick Kyrgios (shoulder) previously quit the tournament before or during matches at Tennyson.

Lopez served for the first set against Hewitt at 5-4, but the Australian found a way of countering the Spanish left-hander in their backcourt duel, admitting he targeted his opponent's backhand.

Copil, ranked No.147, beat only two top-100 players in 2013 but he says he has made improvements to his fitness since his father Craciun took charge of his fitness in mid-November.

"He is there for a reason. I'm old enough to know I have to back well tomorrow,'' Hewitt said.

Copil, 23, last year beat only two top-100 players but he says he has made improvements to his fitness since his father Craciun, who played flanker and No.8 for the Romanian rugby team in the late 1970 took charge of his fitness in mid-November.

"The heat for me is no problem,'' Copil said.


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The inner sanctum of success

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WELCOME to Australia's inner sanctum, the dressing room at the Sydney Cricket Ground, as Michael Clarke's buoyant team prepares for what they hope will be a 5-0 whitewash against England.

The exclusive access gained by photographer Phil Hillyard has given an unrivalled view into the world inhabited by Australia's elite cricketers for more than a century.

Don Bradman frequented these dressing rooms for NSW and Australia before the parents of these current players were born.

The Australian cricket team poses for a portrait in the SCG dressing rooms. Pic: Phil Hillyard Source: News Limited

The rooms do not ooze the new age glitz and glamour of modern sporting heroes, they are small and functional, reflecting a game as steeped in tradition as the members' stand they inhabit.

Michael Clarke is the only member of the team to have played in Australia's famous 2006-07 whitewash, which was completed in Sydney.

Hillyard was hoping to take the same picture of that exceptional team as greats such as Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath bowed out but was beaten by a lack of time leading into that Test.

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"I'm grateful to Michael Clarke and (coach) Darren Lehmann for allowing me to capture this unique piece of history," said Hillyard, who will be photographing the fifth and final Test in Sydney for News Corp Australia when it begins on Friday.

That history could extend to the same 11 Australian players competing in all five Tests of a 5-0 clean sweep.

Even if Australia does whitewash England, Clarke claims he will be far from satisfied.

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"I think this team can get better. I don't think it would be wise of us to get carried away. We've won four Test matches in our own backyard," Clarke said after training at the SCG on Friday.

"But it seems in international cricket at the moment a lot of teams are having success in their own backyard. It's what you do away from home as well.

"And that's going to be a huge challenge for us over the next 12 months. We play some really tough opposition.

"And we've got to try to find a way to have some success overseas as well. I certainly believe this team can get better."


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Ashes romance looks unlikely

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THE "romance" of trouncing England 5-0 with an unchanged team is in danger of being mugged by a grassy pitch which has James Faulkner in line to play the last Test.

Unless SCG pitch conditions have changed significantly when a final inspection is made on Friday morning by selectors, Faulkner will replace George Bailey for the fifth Test.

Australia was always going to wait until Friday morning before deciding on the fitness of Ryan Harris (knee) and Shane Watson (groin) but both bowled at practice on Thursday without obvious discomfort and look set to play.

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However a grassy strip combined with an uncertain weather forecast means playing the same XI in all five Tests was always going to be seriously challenged.

Certainly Clarke was not ruling out the possibility of change when he spoke after training on Thursday.

"I think it would be extremely romantic," Clarke said of playing the same XI in all five Tests.

"But I think you've got to pick the best 11 players to help you have success in the conditions you're playing."

The state of the pitch will have a major bearing on that, as Clarke observed, with the chance of unsettled weather today.

"I want to see it again in the morning," he said of the pitch.

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"I think a day of sun today and a lot of rolling it might whiten up a bit. But that's as much grass as I've seen on an SCG pitch. It feels pretty hard at the moment. Looking at it today I think it will certainly suit the fast bowlers."

Curator Tom Parker admitted the pitch had a "green tinge" but claimed the more it was cut and rolled the whiter it would become.

"I anticipate it's going to be very similar to what we've seen here last year," Parker said. "We're looking for good consistent carry to the keeper and we should see a bit of bounce in this pitch as well given the amount of grass on it and the mature grass that's on this pitch."

Asked if he would bowl first Parker said it would depend on conditions.

"If it's overcast and the forecast is for some possible light showers or drizzly rain and if it's like that you may well bowl," Parker said.

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"And I think you've seen here in the past when it's overcast and cloudy the ball does move around a bit here at the SCG so we've really got to wait for the day and hopefully it's a bright sunny day."

In the Sydney Test last year, against Sri Lanka, Australia batted then wicket-keeper Matt Wade at six, where he scored an unbeaten century, and Mitchell Johnson batted at seven to fit Mitchell Starc back into the side as an extra fast bowler.

And Clarke bowled first when he won the toss, although he is due to lose one after winning all four this series.

It would be no surprise if Brad Haddin, the second highest run scorer in the series, was moved to six on Friday, ahead of Bailey, and Faulkner was slotted in at seven.

Haddin at six and Faulkner seven is the same line-up Australia also chose for the last Test at The Oval in August.

Likely teams:

Australia: David Warner, Chris Rogers, Shane Watson, Michael Clarke (c), Steve Smith, Brad Haddin, James Faulkner, Mitchell Johnson, Ryan Harris, Peter Siddle, Nathan Lyon.

England: Alastair Cook (c), Joe Root, Ian Bell, Kevin Pietersen, Gary Ballance, Ben Stokes, Jonny Bairstow, Scott Borwick, Stuart Broad, Boyd Rankin, Jimmy Anderson.


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Solskjaer hired as Cardiff manager

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FORMER Manchester United striker Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has been appointed as the new manager of Cardiff City, the Premier League strugglers announced on Thursday.

The 40-year-old joins from Norwegian club Molde and succeeds Malky Mackay, who was sacked on December 27 after his relationship with club owner Vincent Tan broke down.

"Cardiff City Football Club are delighted to announce that Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has joined the club as first team manager," read a statement on the Cardiff website.

"Following discussions with Tan Sri Vincent Tan and club chairman Mehmet Dalman, Ole, joining Cardiff City from Molde FK, today (Thursday) met with his new squad at the Vale training ground and will soon be unveiled to the press at Cardiff City Stadium." Solskjaer, who attended Cardiff's 2-0 defeat at Arsenal on Wednesday in the company of Tan, has signed a "rolling contract".

Cardiff were promoted to the Premier League after a 51-year absence last season, but Solskjaer arrives to find the south Wales club one point and one place above the relegation zone.

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"I feel lucky to be back in the Premier League," said the former Norway international, who was pictured holding a Cardiff shirt on the club website.

"I had to have a talk about it with the family, obviously, but it is a great opportunity."

Tan, who has been likened to a James Bond villain after appearing at matches in dark glasses and wearing leather gloves, sparked angry protests from some Cardiff fans by sacking Mackay, having previously dismissed his head of recruitment, Iain Moody, in October.

The Malaysian also created controversy in 2012 when he forced Cardiff to change their traditional blue colours to red, but Solskjaer described reports that former United manager Alex Ferguson had warned him not to take the job as "absolute nonsense".

"He has wished me the best and given me some good advice, as he always does," Solskjaer added. "I had a good conversation with him." Solskjaer spent 11 years at United after signing from Molde in 1996, during which his boyish looks and razor-sharp instincts in front of goal earned him the nickname 'The Baby-faced Assassin'.

He was renowned for coming off the bench to score vital goals, notably netting a famous injury-time winner against Bayern Munich in the 1999 Champions League final in Barcelona.

He joined United's coaching staff after retiring in 2007 and was appointed manager of Molde three years later, leading the club to glory in the Norwegian top flight in 2011 and 2012 and last year's Norwegian Cup.


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Johnson excited by SCG seam dream

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 01 Januari 2014 | 22.07

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ENGLAND looks set for another Mitchell Johnson humiliation on a surprisingly green SCG pitch as Australia strives for a 5-0 whitewash.

The well grassed strip threatens to make Johnson the most dangerous he has been all summer when the fifth and final Test begins in Sydney on Friday.

"Yeah it looks like there's a fair bit of grass on it," a smiling Johnson said through his bristling moustache.

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"I think they played a T20 game here and it looked like there was a bit of grass on it so judging by that, it's a different game altogether, but it would be nice if they left a little bit of grass on it."

Just who will bowl with Johnson remains a mystery, with injured duo Ryan Harris and Shane Watson not in action at training on Wednesday.

Fast bowlers were given the net session off as they recovered from the fourth Test in Melbourne but they must prove their fitness on Thursday, determining whether Australia can play the same team in all five Tests this summer.

All-rounder James Faulkner is a chance to play if Watson is unable to contribute significantly with the ball while Nathan Coulter-Nile remains on standby for Harris.

Decimated England could not have received a more sobering sight on New Year's Day as they inspected a pitch which once had a reputation as a spinner's paradise.

And captain Michael Clarke is not afraid to send teams in, as he did with England in Melbourne last week. He also asked Sri Lanka to bat first in the Sydney Test a year ago, and subsequently won both those matches.

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Johnson has come from the clouds as a reborn fast bowler, destroying England all summer to have 31 wickets at an average of just 14 and an equally exceptional strike rate of just 32 balls per wicket. Not surprisingly he has won three of four man of the match awards.

If Johnson can take at least four wickets in the last Test he will have had the most successful series in Australia by a fast bowler since Rodney Hogg claimed 41 wickets against England during World Series Cricket in 1978-79.

There will be no respite for England, with Johnson still cranky at the Kevin Pietersen time-wasting tactics which caused their confrontation in Melbourne.

"It definitely is frustrating when it happens all the time but that's part of the game, it's part of their tactics," Johnson said.

"It hasn't really bothered us throughout the series but I thought it was time to just let him know it was inappropriate.

"It probably spurred me on to really get back in the game. Not long after that I got Bairstow out so it was probably a tactic that didn't work on his behalf that time."

Johnson claims he has been able to make such an impact because of decisive instructions from Clarke and coach Darren Lehmann.

"My role has been very clear," Johnson said. "In the past I've felt I've had to play different roles and sometimes that still happens where you have to back off a little bit and maybe tighten it up a little bit.

"In general my role has been to go out there, bowl fast, be aggressive, bowl in short spells. I'm very comfortable with that."


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Barty hopefully fit for Aus Open

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ASHLEIGH Barty's coach is confident the Queenslander will be fit for the Australian Open after a leg injury ruled her out of all warm-up events.

Jason Stoltenberg said medical advice suggested Barty could recover from the tear in her left adductor in time for her home Grand Slam, starting on January 13.

"We're still really confident,'' Stoltenberg said.

"We can only be guided by what the trainers and doctors tell us but they're still confident that she's going to be right by then.''

The pain of the injury ultimately forced Barty out of the Brisbane International, where she won three qualifying matches before upsetting Daniela Hantuchova in the first round.

But giving herself up to 12 days' rehabilitation before hitting Melbourne was another factor in pulling out of yesterday's scheduled match against star Maria Sharapova as well as the Hobart International next week.

"The injury itself did make the decision but considering it's the first day of the year and she's 17 years of age, it was a no-brainer really,'' Stoltenberg said.

"It's just a matter of making the right decision now and giving it a good rest in the next 48 hours.

Hopefully in a week she'll be up and at 'em.

"It's really disappointing because she had such a good start but we're not going to let that take away from the good momentum that she's built and the confidence she's got from the last few days.''


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Ashes victory forged in India: Pup

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OUR stunning Ashes success has been built from the rubble of a 4-0 loss in India earlier this year.

To lose a Test is painful - to lose every match of a series is one of the toughest things I have experienced in cricket.

The low of that tour has given us the drive to want to turn it around.

To follow the Indian tour with a 3-0 loss in England made it nine Tests in a row without a win and we became fed-up with losing.

We've gone out of our way to do extra to make sure we had success. We were sick and tired of not performing.

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That is why there is still so much drive in this team, why we're so keen to win 5-0 in Sydney and why we were so desperate to win the Boxing Day Test in Melbourne when a lot of people thought we would be complacent after regaining the Ashes in Perth.

Experiencing the highs and lows has made us stronger as a team and that's why you see everyone so excited when we've won, because we have been through such a long, lean patch. It is certainly a nice change.

But our celebrations have been measured. They certainly haven't been over the top because we know what life's like on the other side.

Inevitably there will come a time when we're not going to win. We've got some tough tours and opponents coming up over the next year or so, starting with South Africa in February.

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It's about enjoying the good times but not getting carried away because it's a tough game.

It's like when you are struggling for runs. When you do make that next hundred it feels even more special because you've experienced the tough times.

I can relate to that in my own career. As much as I hate taking myself back to it, I think my career turned around the day I got dropped.

It made me realise how hard you had to work to stay in the Australian team and what was required to be good enough to make that level.

Most of all it makes you realise how much you cherish every game you play for Australia and how much it means every time you win.

You never think about being 4-0 up. Of course you want to win every Test you play so I'm not going to say I'm surprised. That's always our mindset. But you never consider what may happen down the track.

There's no point. Many a player, including me, has slipped up worrying about what might be instead of concentrating on the here and now. You can't play international cricket any other way.

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One of the things which gives us most pleasure is being able to reward everyone who has supported us through the tough times by winning back the Ashes.

This success is as much for the fans as it is for the players. We never take that support for granted and are delighted to see how many people have been following us this summer.

We have loved playing in front of near full grounds around the country and look forward to doing it again in Sydney over the coming week in what is one of the great Test matches for all of us.

We are also delighted to see that Channel Nine has been rating up to three million on some days and grateful to all those who tune in to watch us play.

It's a great time for cricket in Australia and we are desperate to ensure that continues at the SCG in the coming days.

So thanks everyone for your support and have a happy and safe New Year.


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France, US at 1-1 in Hopman Cup

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and John Isner shake hands after their match left France and the US level at 1-1. Source: Will Russell / Getty Images

JO-WILFRIED Tsonga of France held off big-serving John Isner to win 7-6 (7-1), 6-3 and level the Group B tie against the United States in the Hopman Cup at 1-1.

The US led after world No.12 Sloane Stephens beat Alize Cornet 7-5 6-0 at Perth Arena, overcoming an early challenge to win in 103 minutes.

But the 10th-ranked Tsonga repeated his win over Isner from last summer's Hopman Cup. Isner holds a 3-1 advantage over the Frenchman in ATP matches, however.

The mixed doubles is still to be played.

Stephens said she was happy with her performance.

"It's not often I win a set 6-0, so I was proud of myself for that. I stayed tough," Stephens said.

"I tried to up my game a bit in the second set to stick into her a little bit.

"I tried to stay solid and stick to my patterns. It worked out well." Cornet said she was disappointed to falter at key times in the second set.

"The first set was very good from both of us," Cornet said.

"Even the second set was quite good.

"I had a lot of game points but I didn't make any of them. That killed me in the second set." The US are in a good position to win a record seventh straight Hopman Cup.

But Australia's title drought will stretch into a 16th year after this summer's pairing of Bernard Tomic and Sam Stosur slumped to losses against Canada and Italy.


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Murray wins in 37 minutes

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Desember 2013 | 22.07

Andy Murray fired a warning to his Australian Open rivals after his "double bagel" win. Source: Kamran Jebreili / AP

HAD this been baseball, the mercy rule would have been invoked as tennis statisticians were left to trawl through the gruesome wreckage of Andy Murray's withering return to the ATP Tour.

Clinical to the point of disinterest in a hopelessly lopsided mismatch, Murray took a mere 37 minutes (and 24 seconds) to pummel Qatari willdcard Mousa Zayed 6-0, 6-0 in the opening round of the Qatar ExxonMobile Open.

Ranked 2099th in the world, Zayed had no chance, claiming only 17 points to the Wimbledon champion's 48.

Thrust into a match he would not have won with an 11-game handicap, Zousa trudged from the court to the lone solace of a $US10,500 loser's cheque.

As brief as it was, Murray's shellacking was not the fastest in ATP Tour history.

That honour rests with fellow Briton Greg Rusedski, who trounced Carsten Arriens 6-0 6-0 in 29 minutes in Sydney in 1996.

Contesting a singles match for the first time since undergoing back surgery, Murray had not played competitively since October.

Unsurprisingly, the Scot headed straight to the practice court after dismissing Zayed.


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'Slight improvements' for Schu

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SEVEN-time Formula One champion Michael Schumacher has undergone further surgery to relieve pressure on his brain as he continues to fight for his life after a skiing accident in the French Alps.

Doctors last night revealed they saw a "surgical window of opportunity" to carry out a second, two-hour operation to remove blood clots after a brain scan revealed a slight improvement in the 44-year-old's condition.

But the medical team say the retired motor ace remains in a "fragile" critical condition.

"The situation is more under control than yesterday but we cannot say that he is out of danger," head anaesthetician Jean-Francois Payen said at CHU Grenoble Hospital.

"We have won some time but we must continue an hour-by-hour surveillance."

Doctors were very pleased there had been no worsening of Schumacher's condition and he was showing "very slight" improvements, but they said they cannot say what will happen in coming days and the situation was still touch and go.

The second operation had its risks but the family gave their permission prior to the operation taking place at 10pm local time.

The F1 legend remained in an induced coma and in a state of hypothermia to give him the best chance to recover from the serious head trauma. Professor Emmanuel Gay, one of the specialists treating Schumacher said the German was not out of danger and he was still haemorrhaging in the brain.

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IN PICTURES: SCHUMACHER'S LEGENDARY CAREER

"We cannot say that we have won because there are still some highs and some lows, but it's better than yesterday," he said. "He is still in a very critical condition, this has not changed. And we still cannot tell how he will be, which state he will be in when he does wake up. We cannot speculate on the future because once again it would be too early to do so."

Brain scans had shown intercranial haematoma (internal bleeding), cerebral contusions (brain tissue bruising) and oedema (fluid build up).

Further operations have not been ruled out but "strategies" would be considered over the next 48 hours.

"There are still many haematomas in the brain, with little bits everywhere," Professor Gay said. "That is what makes the situation critical and it needs to be looked at hour by hour, day by day. The situation can still evolve, but we won't be able to evacuate the other haematomas at the moment because they are not accessible. They are not as big as the one we removed yesterday."

The update on Schumacher's condition came amid revelations he may have been travelling up to 96km/h when he went between two marked ski runs and hit a rocky outcrop. Witnesses said the helmet he was wearing split in two and was full of blood.

Aerial images of the run clearly show the two ski runs with barely 50m between them. There is speculation Schumacher may have been travelling too fast to switch between the two runs and accidentally went off-piste.

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There has been huge global interest in the accident; more than 100 media were yesterday at the hospital waiting for word and broadcasting live updates around the world.

Schumacher, who turns 45 on Friday, was skiing with his 14-year-old son Mick when the accident happened just after 11am on Sunday.

Doctors said the helmet had given him a fighting chance but his head still suffered a very violent shock.

RISK-TAKER: LOVE OF SPEED HAUNTS SCHUMACHER

He was flown from the Meribel resort in the Trois Vallees ski area within eight minutes of the accident, before being transferred to the nearby city of Grenoble for specialist treatment.

Fans have gathered outside the hospital, including some who have made the more than four-hour drive from Germany to be close to their hero.

Schumacher's wife Corinna, his 16-year-old daughter Gina-Marie and son Mick remained at his bedside overnight.

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"We would like to thank the medical team who we know do everything possible to help Michael," the Schumacher family said yesterday in a written statement.

"We would like to also thank the people from all around the world who have expressed their sympathy and sent their best wishes for Michael's recovery."

MEDICOS say the next day or so will determine the future of seven-time Formula 1 world champion Michael Schumacher, including if emergency surgery has saved his life and or if he has suffered any long-term damage.

Schumacher is being watched around the clock by doctors and his family who have maintained a bedside vigilas he continues to fight for his life. following a skiing accident.

The 44-year-old German remains in an induced coma in a critical condition after he suffered internal bleeding and severe bruising to the brain when his head struck a rock during a high-speed off-piste ski run in the French Alps.

Doctors declined to say Schumacher was in a stable condition overnight, rather that he was still in a critical condition and being kept in a coma and in a state of hypothermia to give him the best chance to recover from the serious head trauma.

Professor Stephen Chabardes, the neurosurgeon who operated on the star, said all recommended treatments were being performed and he was being watched hour-by-hour. He said brain scans had shown intercranial haematoma (internal bleeding), cerebral contusions (brain tissue bruising and oedema (fluid build-up).

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FANS, RIVALS SHOW SUPPORT ON SOCIAL MEDIA

"We operated urgently to try to eliminate the (bleeding) haematoma and after the operation we saw that we had been able to eliminate these but also sadly the appearance of various bilateral lesions," he said.

Anaesthetist Jean-Francois Payen said: "We are working day and night at his bedside; it is too early to say anything as far as prognosis is concerned."

And neurologist Jean-Luc Truelle said it would take time for a better indication of the potential lasting damage.

The German, 45 on Friday, was skiing with son Mick, 14, off-piste when he fell and hit a rock, striking his head.

Doctors said Schumacher's helmet had given him a fighting chance but his head still suffered a very violent shock.

Witnesses, who called emergency services,confirmed he had been wearing a helmet but had been knocked unconscious and they saw blood coming from under the damaged helmet, marking the snow about him.

A Ferrari fan waits in front of the emergency department of the Grenoble hospital where Michael Schumacher is being treated for a severe head injury.

Paramedics flew to the Trois Vallees ski area within eight minutes of the accident and had him back to a local hospital before he was transferred to the nearby city of Grenoble for specialist treatment.

SIX OF THE BEST SCHUMACHER FORMULA 1 DRIVES

Outside the hospital, Schumacher's fans have gathered - including some who drove more than four hours from Germany to be close to their hero. There are also more than a dozen television live broadcast vans parked in front of the hospital, broadcasting the latest news around the world.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she was shocked "along with millions of Germans" by the accident to the F1 legend."We listened to the doctors earlier as they described the situation as extraordinarily serious," her spokesman Steffen Seibert said. "We hope, along with Michael Schumacher and his family, that his injuries will heal and he will recover. We wish his wife, his children and the rest of his family strength and mutual support."

Schumacher who lives in Switzerland was on a private trip staying locally at his chalet when the accident happened at the Meribel ski resort.

In a bizarre incident, the Guardian has reported that a journalist dressed as a priest in an attempt to gain access to Schumacher's hospital room.

"I wouldn't have ever imagined something like this could happen," Schumacher's manager, Sabine Kehm, was quoted as telling a journalist.

Michael Schumacher's friend and surgeon Professor Gerard Saillant at a press conference about the F1 legend's condition in Grenoble.

After the ruse was discovered the man was was purportedly escorted off the hospital's premises.

Schumacher is a towering figure in the motor industry and considered the greatest F1 driver ever. He retired from F1 for the final time in 2012 after a three-season comeback with Mercedes.

The race ace, who also drove for Jordan, Benetton and Ferrari, won the last of his world titles in 2004. He won two with Benetton, in 1994 and 1995, before moving to Ferrari and winning five in a row from 2000. The German has 91 career race wins.

Schumacher is considered the first ever self-made billionaire sports star.

Jean Marc Grenier, the deputy director of the hospital, speaks to the press.

Michael Schumacher pictures while announcing his retirement from Formula 1 at the end of the 2012 season.

A file photo shows Michael Schumacher skiing in the Italian Alps in 2006. Schumacher is in a critical condition after hitting his head in a fall while skiing.

A file pitcure of Michael Schumacher from his Ferrari days, Schumacher is in a critical condition after hitting his head in a fall while skiing.


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Late start the best gift: Jankovic

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THE Brisbane International is a very popular tournament with players and fans alike. But there is one change that would make it even better.

To have started the tournament one week later, and have the Australian Open finish a week later, would allow the players to have Christmas with family and friends.

Australians tell me the dates as they are allow fans, volunteers and ballkids to be involved through all the tournaments, as school holidays end when the Australian Open is over.

All these things have been taken in consideration to make everyone happy.

The circuit starts at different dates in different years within a week-long span. Next time the Brisbane tournament starts on January 4 but there are December starts in some circuits.

I made the choice to come to Queensland with my team a few days before Christmas to acclimatise to the heat and practice on the courts here.

How can you celebrate when you have to get some sleep for your match? Sleep is very important when you are playing at this level in this heat.

I was fortunate enough to have Christmas dinner at the home of people from Brisbane who befriended me many years ago and I really appreciate them looking after myself and my team.

The family met me at the Auckland tournament then moved to Brisbane.

They sometimes have gone to Melbourne to watch the Australian Open and support me at my matches. They certainly love their tennis.

Even though Australia is so far from home for me, I kind of feel an atmosphere like I am home, because the people are so nice to the players.

These are our first matches of the season and it takes a while to get used to everything again after the off-season break.

I was a little nervous against Francesca Schiavone on Monday and especially glad to win in two sets as she is a tricky opponent. I lost to her two years ago in Brisbane.

Both times I have been on show court 1, which is a nice court for the spectators. It was really packed, people waiting in line to find a seat or just have a look. I like the atmosphere of playing close to the fans.

I didn't know much about my second round opponent Elina Svitolina, but at 19 she is already in the top 50 and is going to be a good player, no doubt.

Each match in Australia, I hope to lift my level of play and do well at the Australian Open.

There are so many things I would like to have as New Year's resolutions. Eat less chocolate, for one thing. I have a sweet tooth.

I have so much energy and when I finish my tennis commitments I want to do other things. I need to get better this year at saving my energy and make sure I get some rest.

As well, I'd love to spend more time with my family and friends, which is very difficult to do in my job.


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Federer primed for Nieminen

Roger Federer of Switzerland prepares to return serve in his doubles match during day three of the 2014 Brisbane International. Source: Bradley Kanaris / Getty Images

ROGER Federer has declared himself primed and ready for tonight's New Year's tennis feast after an entertaining doubles win on Pat Rafter Arena yesterday.

Federer will play his first singles match in Queensland tonight against good friend Jarkko Nieminen. He gave fans a teaser of the brilliance to come with a 7-5, 7-6 (7-5) win with Nicolas Mahut against top seeds Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau.

The Fed Express is the biggest show in town and after days of appearances, interviews and autographs the 17-times Grand Slam winner finally stepped on court.

Greeted by an enormous roar, plus someone ringing a cow bell, the Swiss star delivered a superb 93-minute performance that left the crowd wanting more and Mahut slightly relieved.

The Frenchman had earlier won his own singles match, but when he left the hotel this morning his wife's only message was a reminder not to mess up playing with Federer.

Roger Federer in action during his doubles match with Nicolas Mahut against Jen-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau at the Brisbane International Tennis. Pic Darren England. Source: News Limited

Ever the gentleman, Federer gave Mahut the credit post game.

"I really enjoyed myself out here. Thanks to Nicolas for playing with me and carrying me at the end," Federer said.

"It has been a pleasure coming out here for the first time on Pat Rafter Arena and I hope to see some of you guys tomorrow."

Federer made a few errors but in the moments that mattered, he was the one who saved a crucial set point in the opening set.

"I'm happy with how my body is feeling and mentally I'm really eager to come out and start my singles campaign," he said.

It was a gathering of tennis royalty at Tennyson yesterday.

Federer had entered the court just 10 minutes after 17-times Grand Slam winner Serena Williams completed her victory and both were watched by Australian tennis great Rod Laver.

No doubt they will cross paths again in Brisbane in the coming days


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Victory is 'title-winning material'

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 Desember 2013 | 22.07

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MELBOURNE Victory claim they've got the character of A-League champions, while John Aloisi pays the price. Read our Round 12 A-League review.

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VICTORY FLEX MUSCLES

Fresh from seeing his side fight back to force a draw with powerhouses Western Sydney Wanderers, Kosta Barbarouses says Melbourne Victory has the self-belief to win the A-League championship this season.

The attacker was asked on Sunday Shootout whether he could repeat his exploits of 2010-2011, where won the A-League title with Brisbane Roar.

"Earlier in the season we were 2-0 down against Adelaide United and we came back. This week we showed the same," he said.

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"That's Championship winning material. We have shown we never give up."

Shootout host and former Socceroo Mark Bosnich was impressed with what he saw from Kevin Muscat's men at AAMI Park, but said the rookie coach could get even more out of his side with more adventurous tactics.

"Victory normally play with wingers on their opposite sides, Barbarouses on the left and Connor Pain on the right," he said.

"You know they're going to cut in. Wanderers knew and they stifled them well.

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"Kevin Muscat needed to swap it over earlier, he did eventually but perhaps he missed a trick."

Fellow shootout host Craig Moore reserved his place for the Wanderers, who still picked up a point, despite missing attacking weapons Tomi Juric and Shinji Ono, and having Yousouff Hersi come off the bench.

"Wanderers are in a really good position, and to achieve what they did without those three was a great result," he said.

"Victory do play a fantastic brand of football and we saw two teams who know what they want to achieve this season."

HEART TRANSPLANT

Melbourne Heart's 1-0 loss to Wellington Phoenix on Friday night was the final straw for the club's board, sacking coach John Aloisi less than 24 hours later.

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Moore said the decision didn't surprise him, but there are worrying signs moving forward for the club.

"We're in a results business. John Aloisi understands how it operates and won't want people to be sorry for him," Moore said.

"The concern going forward for supporters is what is the future of the club.

"What is going to change? Something has to change."

HOW ALOISI BROUGHT UPON HIS OWN DOWNFALL

HEARTBREAK ALMOST AN ACT OF MERCY

SOONER HEART SELL, THE BETTER

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Bosnich admitted the Heart were in turmoil, but hoped good would come of the situation.

"Right now, right here, that (sacking Aloisi) was the most decisive action we've seen from their board for some time. 17 games, they didn't have a choice," Bosnich said.

"They've lost their way and they need to get back on track. They're losing fans by the second. They need to steady the ship.

"They said they still want to make the finals. That's ambitious and that's a good thing. The players have to bear respobnsilbity and start winning now."

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HIGHLIGHT OF THE WEEK

Frank Farina will tell you differently, but Brisbane Roar's dismantling of Sydney FC on Thursday night sent out an emphatic message to their title rivals and re-inforced that Mike Mulvey's side are the competition favourites.

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The Roar played with flair and showed great composure to come from a goal down to hammer the Sky Blues 5-1, a defeat made more bitter with former Sydney FC star Dimitri Petratos scoring a hat-trick against his old club.

The signs are worrying for a Sky Blues outfit who until recently had been cruising. The average age of their starting XI was more than 30, the oldest side they've ever fielded. For the Roar, it's onwards and upwards.

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GAME OF THE WEEK

Melbourne Victory and Western Sydney Wanderers put on a Saturday night show at a rocking AAMI Park. It was billed as the match of round 12, and it didn't disappoint, Gui Finkler's late strike a fitting way to conclude any match.

Kosta Barboruses was closest to the action, and he enjoyed the spectacle.

"It was a great match to be a part of and just a really good game of football," he told Sunday Shootout.

"You saw two teams with good structures. It had a bit of everything."

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INCIDENT OF THE WEEK

Josep Gomabu lit the fuse ahead of Adelaide United's clash with Newcastle - bringing to light his opponents physical style - and it appeared the Jets players were only too happy to stoke the flames.

Referee Chris Beath dished out seven yellow cards as the challenges came flying in from all directions in a spicy affair at Coopers Stadium, with Marcelo Carrusca receiving special attention from the Jets.

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"We need to protect the players we need to protect the football people,'' Gombau fumed after seeing his playmaker hobble off injured.

Injuries aside, the Reds are on the way up, rising to seventh with their latest win.

"They're building nicely. They're starting to become familiar with the style that's expected of them," Bosnich said.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More
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