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Tuchel fights to rekindle Chelsea fire to ‘survive’

By - Feb 21,2022 - Last updated at Feb 21,2022

Chelsea’s German head coach Thomas Tuchel reacts against Crystal Palace during their English Premier League match in London on Saturday (AFP photo by Glyn Kirk)

LONDON — Thomas Tuchel admits Chelsea are fighting to “survive” as the spluttering Champions League holders prepare to face Lille in the last 16 first leg on Tuesday.

Tuchel’s side have won their last five games in all competitions, but there was little joy on the German’s face when he reflected on Saturday’s 1-0 victory at Crystal Palace.

The honeymoon is definitely over for Tuchel as he approaches the business end of his first full season as Chelsea boss.

In just five months in charge last term, Tuchel led Chelsea to the Champions League crown and the FA Cup final, as well as a top four finish in the Premier League.

When Romelu Lukaku was signed from Inter Milan for a club record £97 million ($131 million), it was expected the Belgium striker would help Chelsea enjoy a period of sustained dominance.

Chelsea were tipped to emerge as serious challengers for the Premier League title and in the early weeks of this season it seemed they might live up to the hype.

But in the grip of a windswept winter in Britain, Tuchel has found it increasingly tricky to keep Chelsea from being blown off course.

The first signs of discontent behind the scenes emerged when Lukaku went public with complaints about the way he was being deployed by Tuchel.

Forced to apologise, Lukaku has cut a disconsolate figure ever since and remains without a league goal since December.

Lukaku was completely anonymous against Palace and had only seven touches — the lowest by a player over 90 minutes since Opta started recording the statistic in 2003-04.

That victory at Palace was only Chelsea’s third in their last nine league games, a dismal run that effectively shattered their title hopes.

Chelsea are 13 points behind leaders Manchester City, making retaining the Champions League their main goal for the rest of the season.

Somehow, it was fitting that Tuchel revealed after the Palace game that six of his players were suffering with colds caught on the flight back from Abu Dhabi, where Chelsea recently lifted the Club World Cup.

Even winning that competition for the first time in Chelsea’s history felt like something of a pyrrhic victory for Tuchel.

The Blues laboured to their wins against Al Hilal and Palmeiras in Abu Dhabi and it was more of the same when they returned to domestic action at Selhurst Park.

With Chelsea unable to establish any rhythm, it needed a last-minute goal from Hakim Ziyech to consolidate third place.

Amid talk that a section of the squad are unhappy that senior stars like Cesar Azpilicueta and Antonio Rudiger have yet to be given new contracts, Tuchel is searching for a winning formula.

He ditched his favoured 3-4-3 wing-back formation to go with a flat back four at Palace, but although the result was positive, he conceded there is still plenty of room for improvement.

“We are trying to survive at the moment and you can see. There is a lot of pressure going on if you go to a Club World Cup and want to win it for Chelsea,” he said.

“The players put a lot of pressure on themselves and then we haven’t played Premier League for four weeks.

“It is a huge and strange mix of a lot of reasons why I personally did not over-expect today performance-wise. I know we can play better, I want to play better.”

Two crucial fixtures this week will serve as a barometer of Chelsea’s morale.

If they win their European assignment against Lille at Stamford Bridge, then beat Liverpool in Sunday’s League Cup final at Wembley, the mood music around Chelsea will be more uplifting.

But a pair of negative results would only cement the impression that all is not well.

“Of course it is hard but that is why you play football, to win trophies,” Ziyech said. 

“That is what we are trying to do. We have won two already this season and still have more to go.”

Beijing Olympics closes after sporting drama, doping and golden Gu

By - Feb 20,2022 - Last updated at Feb 20,2022

The Olympic flame is extinguished during the closing ceremony of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at the National Stadium in Beijing on Sunday (AFP photo by Wang Zhao)

BEIJING — A Beijing Winter Olympics which saw sporting drama and milestones but was tarnished by a Russian doping scandal ended on Sunday with an uplifting closing ceremony.

The Games will be remembered for new stars such as Eileen Gu but also for the doping controversy which engulfed 15-year-old figure skater Kamila Valieva and because they took place inside a vast Covid-secure “bubble”.

The “Bird’s Nest” stadium, which also took centre stage when Beijing hosted the 2008 Summer Games, was the scene for a celebratory, snowflake-themed closing ceremony attended by President Xi Jinping and a socially distanced crowd seated among red lanterns.

Declaring the Games closed and handing over to 2026 hosts Milano-Cortina, International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach hailed an “unforgettable Olympic experience”.

There was no feared mass outbreak of Covid at the Games or in the wider community in the Chinese capital, but Bach said: “If we want to finally overcome this pandemic, we must be faster, we must aim higher, we must be stronger — we must stand together.

“In this Olympic spirit of solidarity, we call on the international community: give equal access to vaccines for everybody around the world.”

Fireworks lit up the night sky as the ceremony reached its crescendo, spelling out the words “ONE WORLD”.

 

Doping overshadows Games

 

Since the opening ceremony on February 4, a new global star emerged in the form of 18-year-old freestyle skier Gu, who was born in California, but switched to China in 2019 and became the unofficial face of the Games.

There was a new men’s figure skating champion in 22-year-old Nathan Chen of the United States, who dethroned two-time Olympic champion Yuzuru Hanyu, in what could be the Japanese legend’s final appearance at a Games. 

Another iconic figure of winter sports, the American snowboarder Shaun White, will definitely not return to competition of any sort after calling it quits.

The 35-year-old’s last event ended agonisingly out of the medals and he was in tears as he bid farewell to snowboarding — “the love of my life”.

There was bitter disappointment for his fellow American, the alpine ski star Mikaela Shiffrin, one of the biggest names at the Games but who went home without a medal.

There were tears from Valieva after it emerged that she had failed a drugs test prior to the Games, catapulting her to the forefront of yet another Russian doping controversy to mar an Olympics and piling intense pressure on the teenager.

In what will go down as a notorious episode in the history of the Winter Olympics, the pre-tournament favourite for singles gold fell several times on the ice in the finals, to audible gasps from the socially distanced crowd of hand-picked spectators.

Her doping case looks certain to drag on in the coming months, long after the Games have packed up. She was allowed to skate in the Chinese capital but has not been cleared of doping.

In a Games first, the skating team medals were not awarded after Valieva played a starring role in propelling the Russians to gold, ahead of the United States and Japan.

The American skaters made an 11th-hour court bid on Saturday to get their hands on their medals before they went home, but the Court of Arbitration for Sport rejected it.

 

Milestones

 

China will look back on a soft-power success.

Fears about a mass Covid outbreak in the “closed loop” bubble sealing the nearly 3,000 athletes and about 65,000 others never materialised.

Some athletes did though catch the illness and the pandemic was never far away — Russia and Canada’s women ice hockey teams played each other wearing medical masks after the results of their daily PCR tests failed to arrive in time.

There were numerous records — among them American bobsleigher Elana Meyers Taylor becoming the most decorated Black athlete in the history of the Winter Olympics.

Snowboarder Zoi Sadowski Synnott made history for New Zealand, winning her country’s first Winter Games gold; with Gu pocketing two golds, the hosts enjoyed a significant medal bump and finished third in the medals table with nine golds.

That was easily their best performance in the Winter Games, a place ahead of chief geopolitical rival the United States, on eight golds.

Winter powerhouse Norway was in first place, for the second Games in a row, with 16 gold medals and a total of 37. Runner-up Germany received 12 golds and 27 medals in total.

China celebrated a record gold medal haul narrowly beating out chief geopolitical rival the United States to rank third in the medal count. 

Traditionally much stronger in the Summer Games, China earned an unprecedented nine gold medals during its home-hosted winter edition after the state ploughed resources into training. 

By Sunday afternoon, at least four trending hashtags related to China’s best haul had received almost 200 million views on the Twitter-like platform Weibo.

Much of that commentary was as pleased about beating the United States by one place as it was China’s best winter finish.

“Last year the US surpassed China by one gold medal in the Summer Olympics, this year China surpassed the US by one medal,” read one comment liked more than 2,800 times.

The Chinese team won 15 medals in total — nine golds, four silvers and two bronzes.

Figure skating duo Han Cong and Sui Wenjing secured the country’s last Olympic gold — and broke a previous world record — in an emotional pairs event on Saturday evening.

 

Jordan has hard task in upcoming basketball qualifiers

By - Feb 19,2022 - Last updated at Feb 19,2022

Jordan takes on Tunisia at the Arab Nations Basketball Championship on February 10 (Photo courtesy of Jordan Basketball Federation)

AMMAN — As Jordan’s national basketball team now switches focus to the Asian qualifiers for Basketball’s World Cup, the draw for the 30th FIBA Asia Cup 2021 has placed an added burden on the national squad.

The draw held in Jakarta, Indonesia over the weekend placed Jordan in Group A alongside a host Indonesia, titleholder Australia and Saudi Arabia. 

Group B includes China, South Korea, Chinese Taipei and Bahrain, Group C includes Iran, Japan, Kazakhstan and Syria while Group D includes New Zealand, the Philippines, Lebanon and India.

The FIBA Asia Cup 2021 will be played in Jakarta, Indonesia, this year and has been rescheduled to July 12-24, right after the window of the FIBA Basketball World Cup Asia qualifiers.

Jordan moved to the FIBA Asia Cup — the continent’s leading basketball tournament — after an unbeaten run in qualifiers hosted in Amman. The team was then led by former national team star Marwan Ma’touq as head coach and the squad qualified alongside Kazakhstan from Group F to be one of 16 teams in the upcoming tournament.

Jordan’s best showing at the FIBA Asia Cup (previously called FIBA Asia Championship) was third in 2009 and runner-up in 2011 when they reached the final for the first time in the country’s history, but lost the chance of qualifying to the 2012 Olympic Games after losing the final 70-69 to China. Jordan then played the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament, but lost to Puerto Rico and Greece and was eliminated. 

The team is now preparing for Window 2 of Asian qualifiers for the FIBA Basketball World Cup and are set to play Lebanon and Indonesia on February 24 and 27. Jordan is now second in Group C after winning 68-61 and losing 72-64 against Saudi Arabia in window 1 of the qualifiers as national sides play home and away games across three windows in Round 1. Lebanon currently lead the group with two wins.

Twelve teams will make it to Round 2, which will also have three windows running up to February 2023. From the sixteen Asian nations competing there will be seven representing the continent at the 2023 World Cup.

Jordan’s squad has an uphill battle after returning home from four consecutive defeats at the Arab Nations Basketball Championship which concluded in Dubai. Jordan lost to Libya, and the UAE before their form slightly improved despite losing its last two matches against Tunisia and Lebanon in the 24th edition of the championship which had only seven teams competing.

Lebanon won the title for the first time beating Tunisia 72-69 in a strongly contested match as Algeria beat Somalia to take third place. Egypt is a record 12-time champs, Tunisia won four times, Saudi twice, Jordan won in 2007 and was runner-up four times, while Algeria, Syria, Sudan, and Lebanon have all also won once each.

Jordan’s coach, former team star Wisam Al Sous, who played in the 2010 World Cup, acknowledged that the Arab Championship exposed lots of gaps, but noted it also had its positive sides. The coach, who admitted his team lacked the fighting spirit noted “we have to be realistic, the squad and preparations were not at its best”.

Sous underlined the absences of leading players had its toll, however, the team improved from one match to the other. Jordan’s squad was missing Zeid Abbas, Hashem Abbas and Mousa Awadi due to injury, as well as naturalised pro Dar Tucker, Mahmoud Abdeen and the towering Ahmad Dweiri, who plays in the Turkish League.

Jordan previously reached the World Cup in 2010 and 2019, becoming the first and only Jordanian team to actually reach a World Cup in a team sport alongside the junior men’s team in 1995.

The next World Cup will take place from August 25 to September 10, 2023 with seven nations from Asia and Oceania qualifying for the 32 country field. As event hosts, Indonesia, Japan and the Philippines automatically qualify. Asia was last on the World Cup podium back in 1954 when the Philippines placed third.

The tournament will serve as a qualifier for the 2024 Summer Olympics, where the top two teams from each of the Americas and Europe, and the top team from each of Africa, Asia and Oceania, will qualify alongside the tournament’s host France.

Jordan U-23 football team gets tough Asian draw

By - Feb 19,2022 - Last updated at Feb 19,2022

AMMAN — Jordan’s national U-23 football team was drawn in a tough Group B alongside Australia, Iraq and Kuwait as the draw for the 5th Asian Football Confederation (AFC) U-23 Championship was held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan on the weekend.

The June 1-19 event will bring together the qualifying teams playing in four groups with Iran, Qatar, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan in Group A. Titleholders South Korea, Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia in Group C. Japan, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Tajikistan in Group D.

Jordan booked the qualifying spot from Group F qualifiers as 39 teams played for 15 spots to join hosts Uzbekistan in the championship which will be held in Central Asia for the first time. 

It will be the 5th time for Jordan in the Asian U-23 championship. In 2014, Jordan finished third; in 2016, it reached the quarter-finals; in 2018, Jordan was knocked out of Round 1; and in 2020, it reached the quarter-finals.

On the regional scene, Jordan won 2021 West Asian Football Federation (WAFF) U-23 Championship title after they beat hosts Saudi Arabia in the final.  In 2015, Jordan was eliminated in the group stages of the first edition of the event won by Iran, who later moved to the Central Asian Football Association. 

On the other hand, the senior national team is also preparing for another stage of qualifying to get to the 2023 Asian Cup after an early exit from the 2022 FIFA World Cup qualifiers.

The squad last played two friendlies as they beat 110th ranked New Zealand 3-1 in a friendly in Abu Dhabi and also beat South Sudan 2-1 before wrapping up their training camp in the UAE.

In the team’s earlier friendlies, Jordan beat world 113th ranked Kosovo 2-0, 84th ranked Uzbekistan 3-0, 154th ranked Malaysia 4-0 and 90th ranked Bahrain 2-1. The team lost to 95th ranked Belarus 1-0 and to 87th ranked Haiti 2-0. Despite some wins, observers noted the team was not playing better-ranked sides to determine its competitive readiness.

Jordan last stayed at 90th in the latest FIFA Rankings, holding 13th spot in Asia, and still lagging behind relatively uncompetitive Asian teams compared to their best ranking of 37th in 2004.  Iran leads Asian standings followed by Japan, Korea, Australia, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iraq, China, Oman, Uzbekistan and Bahrain.

The squad ended 2021 on a good note after an impressive showing in the FIFA Arab Cup — Qatar 2021 which was organised by FIFA and included 16 teams from Africa and the Middle East returning to the competition after a 9 year break. 

Looking back at the Jordan’s best performance, the team was on the verge of qualifying to the 2014 World Cup for the first time and advanced to play then World’s 6th ranked Uruguay in an intercontinental qualifying tie. The World Cup qualifying Round 3 was the furthest Jordan reached in the past seven times since taking part the 1986 qualifiers. 

In the Asian Cup, Jordan has reached the tournament four times since first taking part in qualifiers in 1972. The highlight was at the 13th Asian Cup in 2004, when it lost to Japan in the quarter-finals and jumped to the best ever FIFA Ranking of 37th. They also reached the Asian Cup in 2011, 2015 and 2019.

 

Jordan Baja set to be flagged off

By - Feb 16,2022 - Last updated at Feb 16,2022

Competitors will pass stunning terrain in southern Jordan this weekend (Photo courtesy of Jordan Baja Media Service)

AMMAN — The global cross-country rallying spotlight will be on the Red Sea city of Aqaba when the Jordan Baja officially starts at the nearby Ayla Marina Village on Thursday evening, according to the Jordan Baja Media Service. 

Ahead of a quality international field of drivers and riders from 20 nations lie two challenging days of high-speed action in nearby Wadi Rum and Wadi Araba. Competitors will face off in round two of the FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas, the opening round of the FIA Middle East series and the first event in the FIM Bajas World Cup. There will also be a National Rally running behind the main FIA Baja. 

Saudi Arabia’s leading driver, Yazeed Al Rajhi, starts as the favourite to challenge for the outright win in the FIA section. Rival Yasir Seaidan came up trumps in 2021 in a Mini John Cooper Works Rally, but extensive damage sustained to his car at the Dakar Rally means it is doubtful whether the Saudi will be able to defend his title against the hard-charging Rajhi, the latter fresh from a fine third place at the Dakar last month. 

Czech veteran Miroslav Zapletal and Saudi’s Arabia’s Mohammed Al Tuwaijri stand in Al Rajhi’s way in the battle for FIA T1 honours. While Muneef Al Salmani only needs to finish to secure the T2 category win for showroom production vehicles, 19 Can-Ams line up in the increasingly popular T3 and T4 sections.

Eleven of those are entered in the T3 category for lightweight prototype machines, with drivers from Saudi Arabia, Spain, the UAE, Portugal and Russia ably supported by co-drivers from France, Spain, Argentina, Portugal, Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Saleh Al Saif is, perhaps, the most experienced of the bunch and won the FIA T4 section in Jordan last season. His list of rivals on this occasion include Spain’s Fernando Alvarez, UAE-based Briton Thomas Bell, the Russian duo of Pavel Silnov and Armen Puzian, Saudi’s Dania Akeel and the 17-year-old twin sisters, Yasmeen and Aliyyah Koloc, from the UAE. The youngsters are aiming to tackle the Dakar Rally in 2023 with Buggyra ZM Racing.

Eight crews line up in T4, all of whom will drive Can-Am Maverick XRS Turbos for several teams now active in cross-country racing. Dutch businessman and Dakar veteran Kees Koolen will be hoping to claim a first win in Jordan against the likes of Spain’s Eduard Pons, Brazil’s Cristiano de Sousa Batista and the Saudi trio of Saeed Al Mouri, Yousef Al Dhaif and Abdullah Al Haydan.

There are 22 motorcycles, six quads and a pair of SSVs on the entry list for the first FIM Bajas World Cup round of the season. Emirati Mohammed Al Balooshi will be aiming for a third successive win in Jordan on his KTM and rekindles his duel with local rider Abdullah Abu Aishah. Jordan will also be represented by Zaid Jaber and Rakan Al Batayneh.

The list of riders also includes four Qataris, with Sheikh Mohammed Al Thani leading the way on his Honda CRF 450 Rally and accompanied in the Hashemite Kingdom by Mohammed Al Kaabi, Yagoob Azadi and Abdulrahman Al Sheeb.

Saudi Arabia has supplied five of the six quad entrants: Faisal Al-Suwayh won the category in Jordan last year on his Yamaha YFX 450R, but he faces Haitham Al Tuwaijri (the defending FIM Bajas World Cup champion), seven-time Hail Rally winner Abdulmajeed Al Khulaifi, Hani Al Noumesi, Sultan Al Masoud and the lone Jordanian quad rider Saif Al Zyoud.

The National Rally category is dominated by entrants from Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Palestine. Al-Mashna Al Shammeri is a former winner of the Hail Baja National event and leads the way in a Nissan Patrol. Jordanian competition comes from Gaith Qubti (Range Rover), Al-Hassan Khatib (Toyota FJ) and Hassan Kalbouneh (Toyota Hilux).

As competitors make their final preparations for the pre-event press conference and ceremonial start at the Ayla Marina Village on the outskirts of Aqaba on Thursday afternoon, the weather has shown a slight improvement. The city of Amman and northern Jordan have recently been covered by a blanket of snow and it was decidedly chilly in the south of the country last week. 

Baja organisers are expecting temperatures in the low twenties Centigrade in Aqaba over the weekend, but it is decidedly chillier inland in the exposed deserts, especially in the mornings and evenings.

The event is being based out of the Hyatt Regency Aqaba Ayla Resort and official support comes from Mountain Dew, Budget, the Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority, the Aqaba Development Corporation, Hala and Bliss FM. 

 

Dzeko faces off with Salah as Liverpool lay in wait for Inter Milan

By - Feb 15,2022 - Last updated at Feb 15,2022

Liverpool’s Egyptian midfielder Mohamed Salah runs with the ball against Burnley during their English Premier League in Burnley on Sunday (AFP photo by Paul Ellis)

MILAN — Edin Dzeko will take to the San Siro pitch with old friend Mohamed Salah when Inter Milan take on Liverpool in the Champions League last 16 on Wednesday, a reminder of the havoc the pair used to cause together at Roma.

After an anonymous time at Chelsea and signs of promise at Fiorentina, Salah’s career really started to take off after arriving in the Italian capital in 2015.

Once firmly established as strike partners under Luciano Spalletti, Dzeko and Salah hit it off in a big way, scoring 58 goals in all competitions in 2016-17 and helping Roma to second in Serie A as an ageing Francesco Totti was shunted aside.

Salah’s inconsistent but at times unstoppable performances earned him a move to Merseyside, where under Jurgen Klopp he quickly became one of the world’s best, for what now looks a paltry 50 million euros (at the time £43 million).

“I must say, in some little way, I helped Momo become what he is now,” Dzeko said in an interview published by the Daily Mail last week.

“We had a great time together in Rome... I’m so happy for him, a great guy who deserves everything he has achieved.”

Dzeko looks a player reborn since making the move north from Roma in the summer, and has been such a hit with Inter fans that they have largely forgotten Romelu Lukaku, the key man behind last season’s league triumph.

Lukaku’s now infamous interview with Sky Sport Italia was met with little more than shrugged shoulders from Inter fans.

Less prolific than Lukaku, Dzeko has nonetheless scored 14 goals in all competitions and often pops up when it matters.

 

Dzeko conquers Milan

 

His equaliser in Saturday’s pulsating title clash at Napoli ensured that Inter, a point behind new leaders AC Milan but with game in hand, still hold the advantage in the race for the league crown despite almost being blown away in the first half at the Stadio Diego Armando Maradona.

It was his double against Shakhtar Donetsk which effectively secured Inter’s place in the last 16 with a game to spare, taking Inter into the knockouts for the first time in a decade.

Dzeko said he didn’t expect to move when Jose Mourinho took over at Roma, and it was a transfer which was greeted with some scepticism in Milan after a poor final season at Roma, which also included a public spat with former coach Paulo Fonseca.

However, he has added a new dimension to Inter’s play under Simone Inzaghi, who like Dzeko spent the summer with fans in open revolt at the sale of Lukaku and Achraf Hakimi but has improved on what Antonio Conte’s Lukaku-centric iteration served up.

Inzaghi has a near full squad from which to pick his starting line up after Alessandro Bastoni recovered from an ankle injury, although Italy midfielder Nicolo Barella is suspended for both legs after being sent off in Inter’s final group game at Real Madrid.

The only real question is whether Lautaro Martinez or Alexis Sanchez will start up front alongside Dzeko, who will be looking to beat Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker, who was a key figure in Roma’s run to the 2018 Champions League semifinals where they were beaten by a Reds side led by Salah.

Liverpool have already been to the San Siro once this season, strolling past AC Milan and knocking Inter’s local rivals out of Europe. 

But Dzeko doesn’t think the gap between Italy’s top sides and Europe’s best is as big as that match made it seem.

“We played two even matches with Real Madrid, we should have won the first one but we weren’t at the level we are right now,” Dzeko recently told the Corriere Della Sera.

French ice dancers win ‘unreal’ first Olympic gold

By - Feb 14,2022 - Last updated at Feb 14,2022

France’s Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron compete in the ice dance free dance of the figure skating event during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games in Beijing on Monday (AFP photo by Sebastien Bozon)

BEIJING — French figure skaters Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron said it felt “completely unreal” as they won their first Olympic gold in ice dancing on Monday, breaking their own world record again in the process. 

The duo, who scored 226.98 in total in Beijing to beat their previous high score of 226.61, are five-time European and four-time world champions. 

But it is their first Olympic title after coming second at the Pyeongchang Olympics in 2018, when an unfortunate problem with Papadakis’ costume disrupted their performance.

This time, sleek in shimmering red and gold, there were no such issues as they spun across the ice to “Elegie” by Gabriel Faure. 

“I think we don’t believe it yet,” 26-year-old Papadakis said. “Honestly it feels completely unreal.

“For years this was the only medal that we wanted and the past four years were just about that moment.”

Russia’s Nikita Katsalapov and Victoria Sinitsina, the reigning European and world champions after the French skipped those competitions because of Covid, had to settle for silver. 

Americans Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue took bronze in what they have said will be their last Olympics.

 

‘Time stops’

 

Papadakis and Cizeron went into the free dance after another record-breaking performance in the rhythm dance on Saturday. 

They came close to breaking yet another of their own world bests with their free dance score of 136.15.

Cizeron said that dancing on Monday was “like time stops”.

“We just relied on our trust and we borrowed energy from all of our teammates and coaches,” he said.

The 27-year-old is the first openly gay man to win gold in an individual Olympic figure skating event — Canada’s Eric Radford won a gold in 2018, but in the team event. 

Cizeron said “Elegie” was “a melting pot of all the extreme emotions we can feel as humans and what we have been through ourselves, through our lives and through our careers”.

Dressed in billowing black and white, Sinitsina and Katsalapov rippled through their passionate interpretation of Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2, earning 131.66 for an overall score of 220.51.

“I was so aware of every single motion that the entire programme was both very swift and very emotional for me, I wanted to shout out at the end,” Sinitsina said. 

“We put all our energy on the ice and now we’re empty, but we’re happy,” said Katsalapov. 

 

Aliens and Zorro

 

Hubbell and Donohue kissed the ice at the end of their dance, set to “Drowning” by Anne Sila. 

“It was just a moment I think for both of us to say goodbye to Olympic ice and thank this journey that’s created the people that we are today,” said Hubbell, who at one point span her whole body several times around Donohue’s just by holding onto his neck. 

They beat their compatriots Evan Bates and Madison Chock by just 0.26 in the free programme, though were further ahead on combined scores. 

“We really wanted to be on the podium,” said Bates. “I think the fourth place sometimes can be one of the hardest places to finish.” 

His and Chock’s dance was one of the more unusual, the story of an alien and astronaut falling in love to a Daft Punk soundtrack. 

Spain’s Adrian Diaz and Olivia Smart, who finished eighth in a new personal best, mimed a swordfight and whipcracks in unison during the course of a simmering “Mask of Zorro” performance.

 

Odermatt wins Olympic giant slalom

By - Feb 13,2022 - Last updated at Feb 13,2022

Switzerland’s Marco Odermatt competes in the second run of the men’s giant slalom during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games in Yanqing on Sunday (AFP photo by Fabrice Coffrini)

BEIJING — Sport’s top court convened on Sunday to decide if 15-year-old Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva can compete again at the Beijing Olympics after she failed a drugs test, while Switzerland’s Marco Odermatt won giant slalom gold in the snow and fog.

The buildup to the Games in the Chinese capital was dogged by concerns about COVID and human rights and have now passed the halfway point with yet more controversy surrounding them.

This time it involves skating sensation Valieva, whose Games hang in the balance after it emerged that she tested positive before the Olympics for a banned substance.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) was to hold a video hearing before delivering its verdict on Monday afternoon, just a day before Valieva is scheduled to compete in the women’s singles competition, one of the most closely watched events at the Olympics.

Valieva was a strong favourite for gold, but her Olympics and her fledgling career are now in jeopardy.

Christophe Dubi, Olympic Games executive director, said it was important to remember the “human side of this story... to think about a person of 15 in this situation”.

“We need to treat this situation extremely carefully,” said Dubi.

Valieva, who became the first woman ever to land a quadruple jump in Olympic competition as Russia won team gold on Monday, tested positive for trimetazidine after competing at an event in Saint Petersburg on December 25.

However, the International Testing Agency says the World Anti-Doping Agency-accredited laboratory in Stockholm only reported that Valieva had returned a positive case on February 8 — the day after she won team gold in Beijing.

The Russian team and their government have raised questions about why it took six weeks for the result to come out.

Valieva again practised on Sunday, watched by her coach Eteri Tutberidze, who has herself come under scrutiny in the wake of the affair.

The teenager declined to comment to reporters afterwards but appeared in good spirits, laughing and joking with members of the Russian coaching team.

The case is just the latest doping scandal surrounding Russian athletes at recent Olympic Games, which led to a two-year ban.

Russian competitors are taking part in Beijing under the flag of the Russian Olympic Committee, providing they have been able to prove they were not tainted by a massive state-sponsored doping programme focused on the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

The Russian flag cannot be displayed at the Games and the national anthem cannot be played.

 

Odermatt wins in the snow

 

Heavy snow fell on Sunday but Odermatt lived up to expectations by holding his nerve to win the men’s giant slalom.

Odermatt, who finished a disappointing seventh in the downhill and skied out of the super-G, clocked the best combined time over the two legs down the “Ice River” course, where snow and fog made conditions tricky and visibility poor.

“It was a hard day with the conditions, with such a long wait between the two runs,” said Odermatt, who estimated it was five hours between his first and second runs.

These Olympics are being held on mostly manmade snow because Beijing is one of the driest parts of China.

However, snow tumbled steadily throughout the day in the capital and in the mountains outside Beijing where skiing, snowboarding and sliding events are taking place. The snow was forecast to ease up by Monday morning.

The weather forced off several events including qualification in the women’s freestyle skiing slopestyle, in which Californian-born Chinese sensation Eileen Gu was going for a second gold medal.

Norway’s Marte Olsbu Roeiseland won the women’s 10km pursuit in biathlon and in cross-country skiing the Russians took gold in the men’s 4x10km relay.

There was also an emotional gold for the Dutch women in the 3000m short track speed skating.

They dedicated it to former team-mate Lara van Ruijven, who died suddenly in 2020 aged 27.

“She is always in our minds and we know she’s here with us,” said Yara van Kerkhof.

These Games are over for Slovakia’s newly crowned slalom champion Petra Vlhova, who has picked up an injury.

 

FIFA backs semi-automated offside system to boost VAR

By - Feb 12,2022 - Last updated at Feb 12,2022

ABU DHABI — FIFA hopes the rolling out of its semi-automated offside technology being trialled at the Club World Cup will not only speed up decision-making but offer increased clarity for football supporters.

The optical tracking system was first tested at last year’s Arab Cup in Qatar, and the ultimate goal is for it to be fully in use for the World Cup in the Gulf state later this year.

Pierluigi Collina, chairman of FIFA’s referees committee, on recently told reporters VAR had proved “very successful” since its introduction but conceded more consistency is needed.

“It’s not yet at the very, very top... the same speed decision-making process. Being fast and being accurate don’t work together,” Collina said at the Club World Cup in Abu Dhabi.

“It’s important the video officials get an accurate decision, but we are aware we need to reduce the time, particularly with offside.”

“Sometimes it takes a bit longer to assess an offside decision, particularly in very tight incidents,” he said.

“The goal is already celebrated, everybody is waiting and then there is a goal disallowed, or the other way round... and then after quite a long time there is the final decision.”

The data-driven, limb-tracking technology relies on a series of dedicated cameras and broadcast cameras around the stadium to give the exact position of players on the pitch, offering referees precise information within seconds.

To provide improved accuracy, the system currently generates 18 data points per player — tracking the various parts of the body to create a skeletal, three-dimensional model.

The aim is to increase that to 29 for the World Cup to provide further precision, according to the head of football technology at FIFA, Sebastian Runge.

Once a final decision is made, the artificial-intelligence driven technology turns the images into a 3D animation that can be displayed on the big screen at grounds.

“By taking that data, we can enter the 3D world and we can create animations, that can explain perfectly whether a player was onside, how much of that player was offside or onside,” said Runge. 

“We put that in an animation that will be shared with TV and our giant screen operators and we can inform the spectators in a clearer way on offside and onside decisions.”

More than just a robot

Despite the ever-growing influence of technology, FIFA insisted the match officials will always make the final call.

A dedicated VAR assistant is responsible for monitoring offside, checking incidents as they happen rather than waiting for a stoppage in play.

The assistant notifies the main VAR official, who makes the decision and then speaks to the referee.

“I know that someone called it ‘robot offside’; it’s not. The technology is simply a tool used by human beings,” said Collina.

“The referees and the assistant referees are still responsible for the decision on the field of play. The technology only gives them valued support to make more accurate and quicker decisions.”

Collina used the example of a goal ruled out for offside in Palmeiras’ 2-0 semifinal win over Al Ahly as an area where more can be done to keep fans fully informed.

“We were discussing before how to get the attention of the people in the stadium because if you don’t know [the animation] is coming... you don’t look at the giant screen,” he said.

“It’s not possible to get this image within the same stoppage of play. It takes roughly 30 seconds, that’s why it’s shown at the next stoppage of play.

“Maybe we need a way to alert fans to the image on the big screen.” 

Skater Valieva to learn doping fate on Monday

By - Feb 12,2022 - Last updated at Feb 12,2022

Russia’s Kamila Valieva attends a training session prior the Figure Skating Event at the Beijing 2022 Olympic Games on Saturday (AFP photo by Manan Vatsyayana)

BEIJING — The 15-year-old Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva will learn on Monday whether she can remain at the Beijing Olympics, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) said, as questions grew over why it took six weeks for her failed drug test to come to light.

The doping scandal surrounding the prodigious teenager threatens to tarnish the Games after the build-up was overshadowed by concerns about Covid and human rights in China. 

Valieva’s Beijing Olympic fate is now in the hands of CAS, which said that it would hold a video hearing on Sunday.

“Following the hearing, the panel will deliberate and prepare the Arbitral Award containing its decision,” the top sports tribunal said in a statement on Saturday.

“It is anticipated that the decision will be notified to the parties in the afternoon of Monday, 14 February.”

That is just one day before Valieva is scheduled to compete in the women’s figure skating singles competition.

Valieva, who played a starring role in helping Russia win team gold in Beijing on Monday, tested positive for the banned substance trimetazidine after competing at an event in Saint Petersburg on December 25.

However, the International Testing Agency says that the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)-accredited laboratory in Stockholm only reported that Valieva had returned a positive case on February 8 — the day after she won team gold in Beijing.

In an interview with AFP, United States Anti-Doping Agency chief Travis Tygart questioned the delay.

“The failure to report a test taken in December until after the team event in the Games is a catastrophic failure of the system to protect the public, the integrity of the Games and clean athletes who had to compete,” Tygart said.

“It shouldn’t have happened.”

Tygart said US authorities and other nations routinely expedite test results for athletes due to be participating in major championships, precisely to avoid situations like the Valieva case.

Russia’s anti-doping agency RUSADA said it had been informed that a sharp rise of COVID-19 infections at the start of the year was to blame for the delay.

International Olympic Committee spokesman Mark Adams said he had also heard that the pandemic may have been the reason, but could not give confirmation because the testing in this case was the responsibility of WADA.

“I had understood — but I would like to get this confirmed — that there was some issues around Covid, but I don’t know about the exact delivery of the testing and the delivery of the sample,” he said on Saturday, as the doping scandal simmered.

Valieva practised in Beijing on Saturday.

The president of the Russian Figure Skating Federation, Alexander Gorchkov, said: “I repeat once again that we have no doubts about the honesty of our athlete. This affair should be carefully thought through because this crazy story raises so many questions.

“We have to find out, on one hand, all the circumstances of what happened and on the other, what happened to the December 25 doping sample almost a month and a half after it was sent to a foreign laboratory.”

It is just the latest doping scandal surrounding Russian athletes in recent years at Olympic Games, which led to Russia as a country being banned for two years.

Russian competitors are allowed to take part in Beijing under the flag of the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) if they have been able to prove they were not tainted by the massive state-sponsored doping programme that targeted a range of summer and winter Olympic sports over a four-year period.

The scheme included manipulating doping tests at its home 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics when Russia topped the medals table.

In Beijing, the ROC team cannot have the Russian flag on its clothing and the Russian anthem is not played.

Golden oldies

Six golds were up for grabs on the eighth day of competition at the Games, in biathlon, cross-country skiing, skeleton, ski jumping, snow boarding and speed skating.

US pair Lindsey Jacobellis and Nick Baumgartner triumphed in the mixed team snowboard cross final.

With a combined age of 76 they were the oldest pair in the event. It was a second gold of the Games for Jacobellis.

The 40-year-old Baumgartner said experience had been key. “That’s something about being the veterans,” he said.

“We are looking younger than everybody,” he added.

In cross-country skiing, Russia’s women took gold in the 4x5-kilometre relay, ahead of Germany and Sweden.

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