الاثنين، 20 أغسطس 2012

Real Madrid held at home by Valencia


Champions Real Madrid started the defence of their La Liga title with a frustrating 1-1 draw at home to Valencia on Sunday, despite dominating the match at the Bernabeu.

Gonzalo Higuain gave them a 10th minute lead from Angel Di Maria's cross and, in stifling temperatures, Jose Mourinho's side comfortably held the visitors at bay until just before the break.
Valencia, sporting a host of new faces, had few ideas going forward but levelled when Jonas headed in from a free kick.
Goalkeeper Diego Alves was the visitors' outstanding player in the second half, keeping out a string of efforts as Real pressed, to help earn a point for their new coach Mauricio Pellegrino.
"I expected more from my team," Mourinho told a news conference. "We haven't played a great game, but we did enough to win."
Up on the north coast, Real Betis overcame Athletic Bilbao at San Mames in an eight-goal thriller.
The visitors were three goals up in 31 minutes before last season's Europa League and King's Cup finalists responded in the second half.
Bilbao's Oscar De Marcos got a goal back just after the break and Mikel San Jose then struck twice to level the scores with 14 minutes to go before Betis finally triumphed late on through Alejandro Pozuelo and Jorge Molina with his second.

الجمعة، 17 أغسطس 2012

QPR confirm Bosingwa signing


Queens Park Rangers have signed defender Jose Bosingwa on a three-year deal following his release by Chelsea.

The 29 year-old full-back, who arrives on a free transfer following his release from QPR's West London rivals, becomes Mark Hughes's eighth summer signing.
Bosingwa's signing comes too late for him to take part in Saturday's season opener against Swansea at Loftus Road.
However, manager Hughes hailed the arrival of the double Champions League winner and told the club's official website: "I am delighted to bring a player of his undoubted quality to the club. He has got plenty of pace, great technical ability and all the attributes you need to be a top player."
He added: "Jose has a lot of versatility which is something I like my players to have. He can operate right across the back and can also play the holding role in midfield.
"He's another Champions League winner, the third in the squad now with Park Ji-sung and Djibril Cisse, and will add invaluable experience to the group.
"His experience is really important to us. He understands the Premier League and he understands what it takes to win games. He has got a winning mentality and that is what I want to have around the place."

الخميس، 16 أغسطس 2012

Arsenal left behind by Van Persie sale


Given that the symbolic discarding of the captain’s armband is now a near annual ritual at Arsenal’s training ground in London Colney, Wednesday’s news that the club had agreed to sell Robin van Persie to Manchester United should in theory have been greeted with an emotion other than outright shock and horror.
After Patrick Vieira, Thierry Henry and Cesc Fabregas had all come to the realisation that, with Arsenal’s ambitions receding after 2005, their career prospects would be better served elsewhere, supporters who probably should know better by now were consumed by a fresh wave of outrage upon learning that Van Persie had also sought to escape Arsene Wenger’s clutches.
To lose one captain could be considered unfortunate, but to lose four in seven years...
This, undoubtedly, is different. Arsenal can stomach losing players to Barcelona or to Manchester City – indeed they have become inoculated to it to a certain extent. Six players have made the trip to Catalunya and six have journeyed to the blue half of Manchester under Wenger, while Alex Song could yet join the Barca exodus.
Van Persie, though, is the first to make Old Trafford his destination. The only business Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger has done was the frankly bizarre deal that took Mikael Silvestre to Emirates Stadium.
Ferguson did have a sustained interest in Vieira at a time when the Frenchman was engaged in a prolonged war with Roy Keane, but the very thought of Arsenal selling their captain to United during those fractious, ultra-competitive years was unthinkable.
This, we must remember, was a time when even the police threatened to intervene as Ferguson and Wenger’s verbal sparring grew ever more embittered. Arsenal v United was English football’s primary rivalry, bar none.
It became all too apparent those days were gone when Wenger and Ferguson cosied up to each other on stage at an LMA dinner in 2008. With the fate of the two teams diverging on the pitch and in the Premier League table, Ferguson could allow his guard down.
Bitter hate turned to bonhomie. And rapprochement set the clubs down a path where Arsenal could agree to allow their captain, best player and top scorer to reinforce Ferguson’s ranks. There are some who never thought they would see the day.
And whatever spurned Arsenal fans may seek to claim about Van Persie's injury record, or the £24 million fee paid for a 29-year-old, there is no denying this is an epochal transfer. A monster. It entirely overshadowed England's friendly with Italy; commentators broke off from covering Puerto Rico v Spain to announce it to their viewers; it made the front page of the newspapers.
The fear of losing a world class player for free next summer no doubt weighed heavily on an Arsenal board who have a strong track record in operating in net profit, yet whilst it may be financially prudent to accept the £24 million on offer, allowing Van Persie to join Arsenal’s direct competitors for league position is entirely illogical in a sporting sense. A surrender of the strangest kind.
This deal rankles like no other for Arsenal. A transfer to Juventus could have been forgiven. A move to City understandable, and acceptable given Arsenal have absolutely no hope of competing with a side so enthusiastically engaged in what the North Londoners’ manager has termed ‘financial doping’.
But United, stymied by the debt loaded onto the club by the Glazers, were surely vulnerable, surely mortal. Or at least they were before securing what must be considered one of the most audacious transfers in the Premier League era.
With Chelsea spending a huge amount to reinforce again this summer, with players such as Eden Hazard and Oscar joining the club, there is a creeping feeling that Arsenal are already looking at a battle for third, and possibly fourth, as a best-case scenario at the start of the season.
In truth, Arsenal haven’t been close to United for some time – an 8-2 defeat at Old Trafford last season demonstrated that clearly enough – yet having finally spent significant sums on quality players in the shape of Santi Cazorla, Lukas Podolski and Olivier Giroud, there was cause for some optimism that the gap between the clubs could have been significantly closed.
Seeing Van Persie hop over to the other side widens it to a chasm once again, irrespective of Arsenal’s transfer manoeuvres this summer.
There is some truth to the argument that in their three new men, Arsenal have already signed three very good replacements for one excellent player. But that misses the point. These are three signings, or perhaps two, that should have been made last summer, when Van Persie hadn’t set his heart on leaving the club. They were not necessarily mutually exclusive.
The key moment surely came 12 months ago when Arsenal witnessed a severe denudation of the quality of their playing staff. They dragged out the departures of Fabregas and Samir Nasri and brought in Mikel Arteta and Yossi Benayoun at the last minute. Arteta is a good player, yet he is no Fabregas, not by a long stretch.
Wenger should have signed players of the calibre of Cazorla and Podolski last summer if he had serious ambitious of convincing Van Persie to commit his future to the club. That he did so this summer was an admirable shift in his transfer policy, but it came far too late. Instead, the erosive effects of a disappointing 2011 in the transfer market exposed Arsenal’s inhibited ambition, and Van Persie no doubt took note. 
Prior to the sale of both those talented midfielders last summer, Wenger let his guard down and, full of false confidence, memorably asserted that “If [Fabregas and Nasri leave] you cannot pretend you are a big club. Because a big club first of all holds onto its big players.” 
It was a unambiguous statement, and one that Van Persie surely ingested uneasily as he cast his eyes to the side of him and saw Benayoun and Park Chu-young filling up their lockers. Approaching 30, Van Persie surely realised he couldn't wait any longer to start winning trophies, not with just one FA Cup winners' medal to show for his time at Arsenal.
Though the North London club finished third in the end last season, an improvement on the previous year, it was only thanks to Tottenham's implosion and Chelsea's horrid league campaign.
Arsenal even needed a rank performance from Marton Fulop to finish as high as that on the final day, but ultimately it was Van Persie's 30 goals that prevented Arsenal slipping out of the Champions League for the first time under Wenger.
The striker's statement announcing he would not sign a new contract in July was self-serving, ungracious and frankly downright disrespectful to Wenger. But concerns over the club’s “future strategy and their policy” were entirely legitimate. The signing of Cazorla appeared to be a riposte of sorts, but by that point Van Persie had reached the point of no return.
Ultimately, this was a transfer a year in the making. It shouldn’t have come as a surprise. But for those who revelled in the Wenger-Ferguson duels for so many years, the reaction to Wednesday's news can be nothing but bemusement.

Defoe strike seals England win over Italy


Jermain Defoe came off the bench to score the winner for England in a 2-1 victory over their Euro 2012 conquerors Italy in a friendly in Berne, Switzerland.

Daniele De Rossi's header after a quarter of an hour was cancelled out by Phil Jagielka's first international goal, again via a header from a corner, as the half-hour mark approached.
Gary Cahill had a goal disallowed midway through the second half before Italy had goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu to thank for averting an own goal from Federico Peluso, but England were not to be denied a small measure of revenge for their quarter-final exit at the hands of the Azzurri 52 days earlier when Defoe rounded off a quick counter-attack with a sweet strike from the edge of the box with 10 minutes remaining.
The win was England's first over Italy since a 2-0 victory at Le Tournoi in 1997.
The match was part of what could be the final round of August international friendlies and the widespread apathy these fixtures are generally met with was shown by the half-full stadium and the teams both managers sent out.
There were several withdrawals and absentees for both sides for reasons of varying validity, but the result was two experimental line-ups who served up a reasonably entertaining match.
England started marginally the better of the two sides, who were playing out a rematch of their Euro 2012 quarter-final, but an Andy Carroll header sent well over the bar was the only reward for their efforts.
At the age of 19 years and 158 days debutant Jack Butland became England's youngest ever goalkeeper, and he showed his potential early on when he reacted quickly to turn a deflected free-kick around the foot of the post.
However, from the subsequent corner De Rossi lost marker Michael Carrick far too easily and guided his header over Butland into the roof of the net.
Italy then started to take control, with Mattia Destro beating the offside trap and deftly taking a floated high ball on his chest, only for Kyle Walker to recover enough ground to put the new Roma striker off at the crucial moment.
Just as Italy had been on the back foot before their goal, so England found their equaliser having withstood a period of pressure.
Frank Lampard, wearing the captain's armband as he did when England beat Spain last November, sent in a 28th-minute corner that Jagielka guided past Sirigu with a well-executed diving header.
Lampard will turn 36 during the finals of 2014 World Cup, but he showed he can still be of value in at least the qualifying stages for Brazil with an assured performance that also featured a strike from range which was beaten away by Sirigu and a free-kick that skimmed the roof of the net.
As half-time approached AC Milan full-back Ignazio Abate fired a strike across the face of goal after a slick one-two with Alessandro Diamanti, but it remained 1-1 at the break.
Instead of the anticipated slew of changes at half-time there were just three substitutions. One of those saw John Ruddy replace Butland for his own England debut, while Defoe came on for Carroll and Peluso replaced Federico Balzaretti for Italy.
Ruddy was soon called into action by the lively Destro, parrying the striker's low shot at the near post. As both managers began to make more changes it was England who began to take hold of the match, with second-half introduction James Milner particularly influential.
Cahill thought he had put England ahead when he volleyed home a corner from the penalty spot, only for the referee to disallow it for Joleon Lescott tussling with his marker.
Soon afterwards Milner whipped in an excellent delivery that caused Peluso to almost beat his own keeper, but Paris Saint-Germain keeper Sirigu managed to show great reflexes and scoop the ball away off the line. Lescott could only guide the rebound onto the bar before a relieved Italy cleared.
Ruddy was then called into action again when debutant Marco Verratti – a less heralded summer recruit for PSG – forced him into tipping a strike over the bar, and from the subsequent corner England scored.
Ryan Bertrand had not been on the pitch for long when his clearance sent Defoe galloping up the pitch on the break. The Tottenham striker created half a yard of space off Abate and his thundering shot from the edge of the was too solid for Sirigu's fingertips to prevent it from flying into the far corner.
Defoe almost got another late on when more great work from Milner led to a low cross into the box, but the ball was diverted wide at the last moment.
The win should give England renewed confidence heading into their opening World Cup qualifying match away to Moldova next month, while Italy will open their 2014 campaign in Bulgaria.

Scotland come from behind to beat Australia


Scotland recovered from Mark Bresciano's spectacular first-half volley to beat Australia 3-1 at Easter Road.

Bresciano's thumping 30-yard strike put the Socceroos in front, but it was a lead they held for only 10 minutes - with the impressive Jordan Rhodes levelling with a glancing header.
Scotland capitalised on their superiority in the second half and went ahead courtesy of a headed own goal by unfortunate debutant Jason Davidson, barely two minutes after coming off the bench.
Substitute Ross McCormack sealed the win with a low drilled effort 14 minutes from time.
Scotland came flying out of the blocks and Rhodes, making his first senior start for Scotland, could have put the home side ahead in the first few minutes when he collected Robert Snodgrass’s cross from the right – but was muscled out of it by the Australia defence
The home side continued to threaten, but Australia bagged the opener in controversial – yet emphatic - style.
A series of refereeing errors saw the Socceroos denied a penalty when Robbie Kruse hooked the ball into the six-yard area despite it being a yard over the byline.
Play was waved on and Australia squeezed in a shot at goal – only for Danny Fox’s clear handball on the line to go unnoticed.
Australia were perplexed at the lack of a penalty,but they responded in the best way possible. Seizing on Scotland’s half clearance of the resulting corner, Bresciano thrashed the dropping ball into the net with a stunning volley – a goal the Al Nasr midfielder may never top. It was his first international goal in four years – quite a way to end the drought.
But Scotland responded well against a tentative Australia side and deserved their equaliser when it arrived courtesy of Rhodes, who used the pace of Fox’s cross to nod the ball into the far corner.
Scotland pressed for a second and it eventually came via the head of the luckless Davidson, who appeared to be caught in two minds before heading beyond his own goalkeeper Adam Federici.
The game became disjointed after both sides made wholesale second half changes, but one of those to impress from the bench was Ross McCormack.
The Leeds striker could have settled the match when he raced clean through – only to be wrongly flagged offside.
But he wasn’t to be denied moments later, as he drove into a shooting position on the edge of the Australia box before firing low into the bottom corner.
The win may prove a confidence-booster ahead of Scotland's upcoming World Cup qualifiers against Serbia and Macedonia.

Ireland try out new formation in Serbia draw


The Republic of Ireland trialled a new formation as they played out a rather uneventful 0-0 draw with Serbia in Belgrade.

Giovanni Trapattoni has stubbornly stuck to a 4-4-2 formation since taking charge of the Irish team but, after their disastrous performance at the European Championship, he implemented a 4-3-3 in attack that dropped back to a 4-5-1 when not in possession.
James McClean had spells playing in both a central and wide role, while Jonathan Walters played the majority of the match as a lone striker before being substituted in the second-half.
However, while the new formation had some success in stifling the Serbs, this was a match that lacked intensity in a near empty Red Star stadium and neither manager could have learnt much from an outing that had a 'pre-season' feel to it.
Ireland started the match with McClean, James McCarthy and Glenn Whelan as a midfield trio with Simon Cox and Aiden McGeady playing either side of Walters.
The new shape helped Ireland avoid being overrun in midfield like they had been at the Euros although it did leave them looking a little vulnerable at times down the flanks.
Serbia enjoyed more possession in the first-half but the only save that Kieren Westwood, in for Shay Given who retired this week, had to make in the opening 45 minutes was when Alexander Kolarov’s tepid low shot was redirected by Dejan Lekic towards the corner. Westwood got down well to save the shot, although the lack of power in the effort certainly helped him.
Ireland did not pose much of a goal threat themselves but Whelan did force Vladimir Stojkovic into a save with a miracle lob-attempt from halfway that was probably just going wide, while Walters got behind the defence inside the box before having a shot blocked.
Both teams made a number of changes in the second-half and the Serbian subs, such as young striker Lazar Markovic, seemed to settle into the match better, making the hosts the more dangerous team in the second period.
However, while there was plenty of clever build-up play from the Serbs, their final product was poor; former Manchester United man Zoran Tosic was particularly guilty of ruining his clever work with disappointing shots and crosses.
Westwood did have to make one excellent save as he got down low to push wide Zdravko Kuzmanovic's curled free-kick but, despite some more late pressure from Serbia, Ireland always looked good value to hold on for the draw, with Darren O’Dea a particularly impressive presence at the back.
It was hardly a sparkling night for the Irish but the new formation can be put down as a qualified success and Trapattoni must now decide whether he wants to use it during a World Cup qualification campaign that sees Ireland play three of their first four matches away from home.
That journey begins in Kazakhstan on September 7 and, with the likes of Germany, Sweden and Austria also in the group, starting with an away win looks to be imperative if Ireland want the chance to redeem their poor performances in Poland with something more respectable in Brazil in 2014.

الاثنين، 13 أغسطس 2012

Ireland goalkeeper Given quits internationals



(Reuters) - Ireland goalkeeper Shay Given is retiring from international football after winning a record 125 caps for his country, he said on Monday.
"After a lot of thought and consideration, I have made the most difficult decision to retire from international football," the Aston Villa player said on his personal Twitter account.
"It's been a great honour and privilege to play and on occasion captain the team," added the 36-year-old. "I wish to thank all the players, managers, staff and most importantly the most wonderful fans in the world."
The Football Association of Ireland confirmed Given's decision on its website (fai.ie), explaining that Given had informed Irish coach Giovanni Trapattoni of his decision.
The Italian paid tribute to the former Newcastle United and Manchester City player's 16-year international career.
"I understand the difficult decision that Shay had to make, and appreciate all of his efforts during his international career," Trapattoni said.
"He is a strong player, with a great character and his love of playing for his country always shone through.
"It has been a pleasure to work with him during my time with the team. I wish him the very best in his future."
Given made his international debut under coach Mick McCarthy in 1996 against Russia and quickly established himself as Ireland's first-choice keeper.
He played in all his country's games at the 2002 World Cup, when Ireland progressed from a tough group before losing to Spain in the first knockout round.
Given's other major tournament appearance was at the 2012 European Championship, part of an Irish side that lost all three group games.
Trapattoni, keen to try out younger players as he looks towards the 2014 World Cup qualifying campaign, did not pick Given for this week's friendly against Serbia.
According to the website, Given has informed the FAI that he would "happily return to assist with goalkeeping duties" should there ever be any squad emergency.
Sunderland's Keiren Westwood, who has 10 international appearances to his name, is widely expected to be Given's successor as the Irish number one.

Ireland's Given retires from international football


Ireland goalkeeper Shay Given is retiring from international football after winning a record 125 caps for his country.

"After a lot of thought and consideration, I have made the most difficult decision to retire from international football," the Aston Villa player said on his personal Twitter account.
"It's been a great honour and privilege to play and on occasion captain the team," added the 36-year-old. "I wish to thank all the players, managers, staff and most importantly the most wonderful fans in the world."
The news was confirmed by the Football Association of Irelandm, who explained that Given had informed Irish coach Giovanni Trapattoni of his decision.
The Italian paid tribute to the player's 16-year international career, saying: "I understand the difficult decision that Shay had to make, and appreciate all of his efforts during his international career.
"He is a strong player, with a great character and his love of playing for his country always shone through.
"It has been a pleasure to work with him during my time with the team. I wish him the very best in his future."
According to the FAI, Given has informed the FAI that he would "happily return to assist with goalkeeping duties" should there ever be any squad emergency.

McCoist looking at duo

Ally McCoist has taken Brazilian midfielder Andre Moritz and former France under-20 defender Sebastien Faure on trial as Rangers announced they had paid off money owed to Scottish clubs.


Both players trained at Murray Park on Monday morning, with Rangers saying left-sided Moritz, who has an Italian passport, would not need a work permit and would come as a free agent.
The 26-year-old has spent five years in Turkish football with Kasimpasa, Kayserispor and Mersin Idmanyurd. Faure, 21, was released by Lyon at the end of last season and had a trial spell at Leeds last month. He has returned to Murray Park after training with Rangers last week.
McCoist is looking to add to the five players he has signed since the Rangers newco were handed the Ibrox club's Scottish Football Association membership, before a 12-month transfer embargo kicks in on September 1.
One of the conditions of the membership was that the new company paid off the original club's football debts of about £3million, a third of which was owed to Scottish rivals.
Hearts were owed £800,000 when Rangers were consigned to liquidation, while Celtic, Dundee United and Inverness were among the other creditors. Hearts were due £500,000 this summer and the rest of the transfer money for Lee Wallace in a year's time.
The club has said that they would pay Hearts the final payment when it is due in July next year. Chief executive Charles Green said in a statement: "As of now, Rangers do not owe other Scottish clubs a penny. These debts were incurred prior to the club going into administration and there was no obligation on the consortium buying the club to pick them up.
"From the outset, I have made it clear that I firmly believe the correct thing for the club to do is settle these football debts as a priority and we kept our word. That is what we have done and substantial funds were lodged with the SFA 10 days ago to be discharged to settle the outstanding debts.
"Furthermore, the club was given a written commitment from the SPL in May that it would settle an outstanding debt to Dundee Utd.
"It was frustrating to be informed by the SFA several days after they received the funds that they did not wish to be a 'clearing house' and in fact wanted us to settle the debts directly. Arrangements were then put in place by the club."

Special One Mourinho now wants to be the Only One


LISBON (Reuters) - Real Madrid's Jose Mourinho said that he should be labelled the "Only One" instead of the 'Special One', after becoming the only coach to win the top three leagues in European football.
Mourinho has won titles in Spain (once, with Real Madrid), Italy (twice, with Inter Milan) and England (twice, with Chelsea), as well as in his native Portugal (twice, with Porto).
"Like me or not, I am the only one who won the world's three most important leagues. So, maybe instead of the 'Special One', people should start calling me the 'Only One'," Mourinho said in an interview with Portuguese television channel SIC.
Mourinho, 49, was nicknamed the 'Special One' by the English press after referring to himself as just that, during a news conference following his arrival at Chelsea from Porto in 2004.
In an interview televised on Monday he explained that, as his career has progressed, he has become less selfish and less focused on his individual goals.
"Things have been going well for me, thank God. I am focused on others much more these days. The pleasure of winning with Inter Milan was seeing a club which had not won for 50 years winning again.
"That is what entices me more and more, instead of pursuing individual goals."
Real Madrid kick off their 2012-13 campaign against Barcelona in the Spanish Super Cup on August 23.

الخميس، 9 أغسطس 2012

Liverpool ease into Europa League play-offs

Liverpool booked their spot in the Europa League play-off round thanks to a Luis Suarez-inspired 3-0 victory in the second leg of their qualifier against FK Gomel at Anfield.


Suarez, who was sensational throughout the first half, set-up Fabio Borini and Steven Gerrard to put the result beyond doubt by the break; the skipper netting his 150th Liverpool goal in the process.
 Glen Johnson completed the scoring with a volleyed third from outside the box with 20 minutes remaining as a much-improved side that featured Pepe Reina and Lucas in the starting line-up, completed the task with efficiency to run out as 4-0 aggregate winners over their Belarusian opponents.
Liverpool were in the ascendency from the outset; the return of Suarez from Olympic duties with Uruguay adding a dimension that was missing from their trip to Belarus.
The striker, who announced earlier in the day that he would sign a new deal with the Anfield side, was cheered every time he touched the ball, and seemed to use the affection given by the crowd to boost his performance.
Switching between the left and right flanks, he was simply impossible to deal with and fed off the excellent service provided by both Gerrard and Borini to go test Gomel goalkeeper Vladimir Bushma four times inside the first 40 minutes.
And yet it was Suarez who turned provider when the goals were to be had. First he picked up a low pass inside the opposition box, used his skill to skip past his marker and saw his deflected cross fall to the feet of Borini, who scored his first Liverpool goal by volleying the loose ball under Bushma.
Then, after some wonderful build-up play from Jonjo Shelvey and Johnson, he nicked past his man again, drew Bushma off his line and then calmly pulled the ball across the face of goal to leave Gerrard with a six-yard tap-in that the England captain simply couldn’t miss.
Gomel, and in particular their Russian striker Aleksandr Alumona, had looked a threat during the first leg of this third round qualifying encounter, but with Lucas and Shelvey proving excellent where Jordan Henderson and Jay Spearing had been lacklustre a week earlier, the visitors barely got a look-in.
A more concerted effort to close off Liverpool’s attacks in the second half did at least keep the scoreline bearable, but in truth, the home side were worth far more than their three goals; the last of which came when Johnson’s volleyed effort from outside the box took a slight deflection off the back of Sergei Matveychik.
Brendan Rodgers, who oversaw a win on his first game in charge at Anfield, will see his side face more difficult opponents in the coming weeks, but the signs were encouraging. And with Swansea midfielder Joe Allen present in the stands to watch the victory ahead of a potential £10million transfer, there is every reason for the new boss to be optimistic of the season ahead.

US win women's football gold number three at Olympics


Two goals from midfielder Carli Lloyd, a header after eight minutes and a rasping left-foot shot from the edge of the box in the 54th, set the U.S. on their way to a fourth Olympic gold from the five women's tournaments played.
Japan, who beat the U.S. in last year's World Cup final, halved the deficit after 63 minutes when the U.S. failed to clear their lines, and Yuki Ogimi scored from close range. Japan dominated from then on but could not find an equaliser.
The official attendance of 80,203 was a record for a women's match at an Olympics and was the biggest crowd to watch a women's soccer match in Britain.
Canada clinched the bronze medal when a goal seconds from the end of time added on gave them a 1-0 win over France in Coventry.
With extra time looking inevitable and 92 minutes on the clock, midfielder Diana Matheson pounced on a loose ball that bounced off a defender's thigh to break French hearts after they had dominated the second half but wasted chance after chance.
On Monday, Canada were devastated when they lost 4-3 in the semi-final to the United States, whose winning goal came in the third minute of added time at the end of extra time.
On this occasion it was the French women who were left stunned and in despair after losing a game they should have won convincingly.
France hit the post, had a shot cleared off the line and enjoyed most of the possesion, but Gaetane Thiney, Camille Abily, Eugenie Le Sommer and Louisa Necib were all guilty of missing chances that looked easier to score.
To their credit, Canada defended well even if the defending was frantic and frenzied at times but with extra time looming, they counter-attacked swiftly and scored after France failed to deal with the break.

Notts County midfielder Alan Judge has turned down the offer of a new contract at the League One club.
Judge insists he is happy at Notts and is not trying to force a move away from Meadow Lane but the 23-year-old feels he deserves a better deal and is now waiting to see if the Magpies make him an improved offer.
"It's just the way negotiations go," Judge, who has a year remaining on his current contract, told the Nottingham Evening Post.
"I wouldn't say to any of the fans to panic because I'm sure I'll be here for the season. I'm very happy here and it's not about me wanting to leave or anything like that.
"They might come back with a new offer, they might not. We will just have to wait and see. I have just got to sit tight and wait and see what happens. The ball is in their court now.
"I'm very confident I will be here for this season anyway."

Jess joins Posh



Former Scotland midfielder Eoin Jess has joined Peterborough as first-team coach.
Jess, who had two spells with Aberdeen during his playing career but also spent time in English football with Coventry, Bradford, Nottingham Forest and Northampton, as well as winning 18 internationals caps, has agreed a three-year deal at London Road.
The 41-year-old replaces Mark Robson, who left the npower Championship club in June to become Barnet's head coach.
"I have been very patient and quite meticulous in getting the right one in. After doing my research on him, it became apparent that his philosophies are exactly the same as ours and that was the most important thing," boss Darren Ferguson told the club's official website.
Gavin Strachan, son of former Coventry, Southampton, Celtic and Middlesbrough manager Gordon, had been working as acting first-team coach but will now revert to his normal role of youth team manager.
Ferguson added: "It is no slight on Gavin Strachan, in fact it is a compliment to him that I want him to remain with the youth team because I see that as a such an important role in getting players through."

Tottenham's Parker to miss first month of season


(Reuters) - Tottenham Hotspur and England midfielder Scott Parker will miss at least the first month of the season after undergoing surgery on his Achilles, the Premier League club said on Thursday.
"Scott Parker has undergone successful surgery to his right Achilles," Spurs said on their website (www.tottenhamhotspur.com).
"The midfielder is expected to return to training after the international break in September."
Parker missed several games towards the end of last season, but managed to start every England match at Euro 2012 despite the problem.
The Premier League season starts on August 18.

الاثنين، 6 أغسطس 2012

Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Gerard Pique reunited at preseason friendly


Barcelona traveled to Paris for a friendly against PSG on Saturday, bringing about the long-awaited reunion of Gerard Pique and Zlatan Ibrahimovic. Though they only played one season together at Barca, Pique and Zlatan forged one of the most heart-warming friendships the sport has ever known.
When Zlatan went to Milan, both players moved on. Pique started making out with Shakira everywhere, while Ibrahimovic seemed to find a new best friend in Ignazio Abate. But Zlatan has changed clubs once again and, like the true friend that he is, Pique was there to help make his first match at his new home a little easier with a handshake and a smile.
Zlatan went on to score with a penalty in a match that ended regular time at 2-2 before Barcelona eventually won the Paris Trophy in a shootout. Afterwards, Zlatan and Pique probably built a towel fort in one of the dressing rooms. Ibra then spent the rest of the night telling Pique all the ways that his iPad app is way better than Shakira's.
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