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Martin O’Neill looking for quick reaction with Liverpool latest challenge
Perspective is a rare commodity in the Barclays Premier League, but Martin O’Neill, win or lose, manages better than most to take a calm overview in the final analysis. Aston Villa’s 3-0 defeat to Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium on Sunday, he believes, should be taken in the context of an excellent season at the Midlands club. feeds.timesonline.co.uk |
USA waxes Finland 6-2 to reach semis at world juniors
Jerry D'Amigo scored two goals, and Mike Lee made 23 saves to help the United States beat Finland 6-2 on Saturday night for a spot in the world ... rssfeeds.usatoday.com |
Ecclestone wants shortcuts to boost F1
• 'It would be good for TV' says F1 commercial rights holder• Ecclestone also confirms Rome deal has been signedBernie Ecclestone wants to introduce "shortcuts" on race tracks to boost entertainment and allow the top drivers to do more overtaking.The Formula One commercial rights holder said: "I've tried to push the teams with a number of proposals. Imagine a shortcut which a driver can use five times every race. It would stop people getting stuck behind others. It would be good for TV."Ecclestone, who wants to change the points system to aid leading drivers, also complained that brakes in Formula One cars were too efficient and reduced the amount of overtaking which fans like to watch.Despite believing the sport can be improved, he thought this season would be among the best with Jenson Button, Lewis Hamilton, Fernando Alonso and the returning Michael Schumacher all on the grid."We've got four world champions for a start. It's going to be a good year. There'll be good competition inside the teams and between the teams," he said before declining to name his favourite for this year's championship, which starts in Bahrain on 14 March.Ecclestone also confirmed an agreement had been signed to hold a grand prix through the streets of Rome in the coming years, although no date has been set.Formula OneBernie EcclestoneMotor sportguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds guardian.co.uk |
New Era caps get a makeover
Longtime Major League Baseball on-field cap rights holder New Era Cap Co. Inc. is restyling its 39Thirty batting-practice caps in time for the upcoming season. feeds.bizjournals.com |
Ospreys 17-12 Leicester
Ospreys 17-12 LeicesterThere weren't too many numbers to tax the brain here, the scoring being confined to a single try by the outstanding Tommy Bowe, six penalties equally shared between Dan Biggar and Toby Flood, and a drop goal apiece from ÂBiggar and Jeremy Staunton. No, the arithmetic wasn't complicated, but somehow the Ospreys forgot how to count and for a minute, late in the second half, they Âprotected their slender lead with 16 players on the field.It was a bizarre twist to a seriously uncomplicated and utterly enthralling head-to-head between the best of Wales and England. It came about when Lee Byrne seemed to go down with a recurrence of the foot injury that has kept him out of the game for much of the season.He walked off and was replaced by Sonny Parker. Byrne sat on the touchline, put his boot back on and announced he was ready to resume. His coach, Scott Johnson, ordered him back on. Nobody came off, but the full-back took his place at the back, sharing the position with James Hook, as the Ospreys threw themselves into defensive duties.When the anomaly was discovered, Byrne came off, only to come back on to replace Biggar. He wasn't exactly wrapped in red bandages, but apparently his toe had released sufficient life-juice for this to qualify as a blood replacement.Richard Cockerill, the Leicester coach, was remarkably sanguine about the affair: "It's not something I'm going to pursue. It wasn't deliberate and had no bearing on the result." But he did not rule out the possibility of the matter being taken further, should his bosses at Leicester decide to do so.They did and Peter Wheeler, Leicester's chief executive, confirmed that they had lodged an official complaint. "It came at a significant point of the game and the 16th man interfered in play, helping stop the break by Ben Youngs. We think it could seriously have affected the outcome of the game. The players put blood and guts into rugby and deserve to be treated fairly."Scott Johnson, coach of the Ospreys, was less happy to talk about it: "Look, it was in the heat of the moment. There was a lot of confusion out there ... I'd rather be talking about the rugby."Without doubt, but the touchline is packed with officials whose job it is to ensure that this sort of thing doesn't happen, and it's not as if everyone is off guard at the moment, since Bloodgate still makes officialdom squirm.As for the game, it delivered in every respect as a cross-border showdown between old rivals, each devoted to their own very different style. The Ospreys wanted to stretch play, break it down so that opposition tacklers were drawn out of position.The Tigers wanted to keep the game structured, so they might blast away at the scrum and line-out and breakdown. They made sure that the Ospreys had to fight desperately for every ounce of Âpossession.For their part, the Ospreys managed to turn the pattern of scrummage pressure on its head, at the very moment when heavy investment in the shoving Âprocess tends to produce dividends the other way. Having struggled all afternoon, the Ospreys suddenly blasted Martin Castrogiovanni upwards and won a penalty.Even so, Leicester still hammered away and it required more than just a rejuvenated scrum – or even 16 Âplayers – to keep them out. Shane Williams raced back to tackle Scott Hamilton in the dying minutes, and Aaron Mauger knocked on with feet to go.When the Ospreys' single golden chance came, they seized it, James Hook looping in midfield, after a line-out won by Alun-Wyn Jones, and threading a Âdelicate grubber behind the defence. Bowe won the chase to score the game's only try and maintain his record of Âscoring in every Pool game.There was a brief period after half-time when the Ospreys might have pulled away. They led byfive points at the break and in rapid succession had a Âpenalty and two good drop-goal opportunities. All the kicks missed and the game swayed around, caught between hefty collisions and fine margins.Geoff Parling, for example, was immense in the second row for Leicester, snorting and heaving his way Âforward. On the other side, Marty Holah deftly snatched possession away from chargers on the hoof. The scoring in the second half was confined to one penalty each.It should have kept things simple, but this game did nothing but throw up confusion. Once again, rugby has poked itself in the eye.Heineken CupOspreysLeicester TigersRugby unionEddie Butlerguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds guardian.co.uk |
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