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Wihdat aim to boost league lead as top teams play catch-up

By - Feb 28,2018 - Last updated at Feb 28,2018

AMMAN  — Week 17 of the Jordan Professional Football League kicks off on Thursday with Wihdat having a clear lead after last week’s matches and no changes in the standings.

The veteran team beat Ramtha 1-0 to lead by five points and next play Baqa’a while second placed Ramtha play Shabab Urdun who were held with Hussein 1-1.

Jazira beat Baqa’a 3-0 and remained third ahead of their match against Ahli who went down to last placed Yarmouk 2-0.

Faisali held on to fourth after a 1-0 win over That Ras and next play Hussein. Aqaba who beat Manshieh 2-0 as they try to move out of the relegation zone next play That Ras while Manshiek play Yarmouk.

This week, Jazira beat Bahrain’s Malikieh 1-0 while Faisali beat Lebanon’s Ansar 3-1 in Stage 2 of the 15th Asian Football Confederation Cup to take the lead atop Groups A and C. Both Jordanian teams upset the group leaders of the second-tier Asian club competition after both were held to draws in stage 1 as Jazira held Iraqi Air Force Club and Faisali held Syria’s Wihdeh 2-2. 

So far this season, reigning League and Jordan Cup champs Faisali beat Jazira to win the 35th Jordan Super Cup. Wihdat beat Jazira to win the Jordan Football Association (JFA) Shield. In the Jordan Cup, Jazira ousted Faisali while Shabab Urdun eliminated Wihdat to reach the final.

Last year, Faisali won their 33rd league title after a four year break and combined it with the Jordan Cup. Ahli beat reigning league champs Wihdat to win the Super Cup, Shabab Urdun beat Faisali to win their second JFA Shield title after they first won in 2007. Sarih and Sahab were relegated and replaced by Aqaba and Yarmouk from the First Division.

Jordan beats Syria in FIBA Asian qualifiers

By - Feb 27,2018 - Last updated at Feb 27,2018

AMMAN — Jordan beat sSyria 87-62 on Monday in their fourth Asian Group C qualifiers for the FIBA Basketball 2019 World Cup.

Jordan tops Group C after it also beat India 102-88, Lebanon 87-83 and Syria 109-72.

Ambitious Hanyu fancies audacious quintuple jump

By - Feb 27,2018 - Last updated at Feb 27,2018

Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu performs during the figure skating gala event during the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Gangneung on Sunday (AFP photo by Aris Messinis)

Japanese Yuzuru Hanyu, the first man in 66 years to win back-to-back Olympic figure skating gold medals, said on Tuesday he would like to successfully land a quintuple jump and break the five-spin barrier.

Hanyu, who took gold in men’s singles competition in the just-ended Pyeongchang Olympics, said he still had significant pain in his injured ankle, suggesting any such achievement, with half a turn more than a quadruple axel, will come later than sooner.

“Scientific research has shown that humans will likely be capable of up to a quintuple jump. I would like to give it a shot if possible, although a quintuple axel could be out of reach,” Hanyu told a news conference in Tokyo.

An extra half-turn in the air is needed for a quintuple axel on top of the five already needed for any successful quintuple jump.

After winning a second gold, his goal now was to complete his “dream” of landing the quadruple Axel in competition, he said.

He added that he “wants to try to challenge” for an unprecedented quintuple jump, something his coach has encouraged him to believe he can achieve.

“Since my childhood, I have been told to go for a quintuple jump. So, I feel like giving it a try.”

After hurting his right ankle in training last November, Hanyu was unable to practise properly before the Olympics and won his second gold — in his first competition since October — while on painkillers.

Shortly after topping the podium in the Winter Olympics, the 23-year-old Hanyu said he aims to successfully land a quadruple axel, a half-turn more than other quadruple jumps.

“To tell you the truth, the pain has reduced only 20 to 30 per cent from the time it really hurt,” he said.

“But, in the end, with help from painkillers, I have managed to win the gold medal. I want to go on skating while being grateful to my support members who helped cut the pain by 20, 30 per cent.”

The 23-year-old told an overflowing press conference on his return from Pyeongchang that he had spent his time off the ice studying his injury online.

Japan was distraught when he fell and twisted his ankle attempting the ultra-tough quadruple Lutz jump during practice on the eve of the NHK Trophy in November, threatening his Olympic participation.

Hanyu’s recovery was completed in secrecy with the Japanese media poring over every snippet of news or hint from his camp as to whether he would be able to compete in Pyeongchang.

Hanyu also revealed an unusual gold medal-winning diet: He always eats rice before a competition as he said it gives him power to complete jumps and twists.

“Maybe this is very Japanese, but personally, bread, cereals and pasta don’t give me power.”

Asked what he would like to eat to his heart’s content if he were not competing at figure skating, Hanyu said hamburgers and potato chips are already part of his diet.

“No matter how much I eat, I don’t put on weight. So, perhaps, I am having a different lifestyle from other athletes,” he said.

“I go to McDonald’s. I very much like carbonated soft drinks, with which I quite often eat potato chips.”

Upstarts Ledecka, Goggia upstage American snow queens

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

Sofia Goggia of Italy celebrates winning the FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup Women’s Downhill in Bad Kleinkirchheim, Austria, January 14 (Reuters photo by Leonhard Foeger)

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea — Czech shredder Ester Ledecka and Italian Samurai Sofia Goggia left indelible marks on the Alpine skiing at an Olympics that were supposed to be about Americans Mikaela Shiffrin and Lindsey Vonn stamping their authority on the sport.

Snowboarder Ledecka’s win in the super-G was quite simply the most stunning result in the sport for years, perhaps ever, while the irrepressible Goggia’s downhill triumph took the marquee title to Italy for the first time.

The freezing winds that tore through Pyeongchang in the first week of competition not only severely disrupted the Alpine schedule, but also quickly put paid to Shiffrin’s ambitious bid for titles in all five individual events.

Once her campaign did get underway, the 22-year-old struck gold at the first attempt in the giant slalom, but having to back up 24 hours later in her pet event, the slalom, proved too tough and she had to settle for fourth behind Swede Frida Hansdotter.

If Shiffrin finishing off the podium with a sub-par performance in her slalom title defence was a major surprise, it was nothing to what would follow the next day at the Jeongseon Alpine Centre.

Anna Veith looked to have become the first woman to have successfully defended the super-G title and was receiving the congratulations of her rivals as the last few outsiders took their turns. 

Suddenly, screaming down the mountain on a pair of skis which once had a home in Shiffrin’s extensive quiver came Ledecka, a gold medal favourite in snowboard but ranked 43rd in the World Cup super-G.

The lights flashed green as competitor number 26 crossed the line indicating a new race leader but no one — not Ledecka, not her rivals, not the crowd, not the TV stations who had already crowned Veith champion — could quite believe what she had done.

There was no mistake, though, and the 22-year-old was soon gifting the Games one of its iconic images by answering questions at the press conference in her ski goggles, unprepared to face the cameras without make-up.

If Ledecka, who went on to score an unprecedented double gold by winning the snowboard parallel giant slalom, presented the new, slightly obscured, face of Alpine skiing, Vonn was very much the establishment.

The most successful female skier of all time, the 33-year-old won downhill gold and super-G bronze in Vancouver but had been forced to sit out the Sochi games with one of the many injuries that have scarred her career.

A mistake when she skied wide right at the end of the super-G at Jeongseon almost certainly cost her a medal, if not the gold, but her hopes had always been pinned more on regaining the downhill title.

Goggia was no Alpine unknown like Ledecka and had fought a running battle with Vonn in the downhill on the World Cup circuit, her capacity for making mistakes at key moments having undermined her natural pace.

There were to be no mistakes when it mattered most, however, as the 25-year-old from Bergamo reined in the “crazy horse” of her reputation and tapped into her inner Samurai to produce a run that Vonn and none of her other rivals could match.

Vonn shed tears of joys after claiming a bronze and declared that Pyeongchang would be her last Olympics — “probably”. 

Having learned her lesson from the quick turnaround between the two slalom races, Shiffrin skipped the downhill when a forecast return of the high winds prompted organisers to move the combined forward by a day.

After playing it safe in the downhill leg, she produced a brilliant performance in the slalom run only to come up just short of the gold medal-winning time set by Swiss Michelle Gisin, whose sister Dominque shared the downhill gold in Sochi.

Shiffrin was delighted with her silver, which made her the most successful individual woman Alpine skier at the Games ahead of Norway’s Ragnhild Mowinckel, who won silvers in the downhill and giant slalom, and Wendy Holdener.

Swiss Holdener won a silver in the slalom and a bronze in the combined before rounding out her games and completing her set with a gold in the inaugural team competition.

Jazira beats Malikieh in AFC Cup

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

AMMAN — Jazira beat Bahrain’s Malikieh 1-0 on Monday in stage 2 of the 15th Asian Football Confederation Cup. Faisali play Lebanon’s Ansar Tuesday in Beirut.

Russia outlast Germany in overtime in ice hockey

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

The Olympic Athletes from Russia celebrate winning the men’s gold medal ice hockey match against Germany during the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Gangneung on Sunday (AFP photo by Kirill Kudryavtsev)

GANGNEUNG, South Korea — Kirill Kaprizov scored in overtime to lead the Olympic Athletes from Russia (OAR) past a feisty Germany 4-3 on Sunday to win the men’s ice hockey gold before joining his team mates to defy a ban by singing the Russian national anthem during the medal ceremony.

The Russians, competing as neutral athletes at Pyeongchang as punishment for a years-long Russian doping scandal, came back from one-goal down on a goal by Nikita Gusev with less than a minute left in regulation time to force overtime in one of the most pulsating finals in the history of Olympic hockey.

At their medal ceremony, the players team sang the Russian anthem over the sound of the Olympic anthem at the Gangneung Hockey Centre despite being barred from having their flag raised or anthem played. 

The game was played hours after the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided not to restore their delegation’s Olympic status, which would have enabled them to march under their flag at the closing ceremony later on Sunday.

The team’s assistant captain Ilya Kovalchuk said the players had discussed beforehand whether to sing the anthem if they were to win, and they agreed they would.

“We knew that we will do it if we win,” said Kovalchuk, the all-time leading Russian goal-scorer in Olympic play.

Singing the Russian anthem on the field of play is a violation of the IOC’s rules on neutrality, which were imposed on Russia as part of sanctions punishing the nation over systematic doping across many sports.

The victory marked the first time a team from Russia have won the gold medal in hockey since 1992, when the so-called Unified Team representing Russia and five other former Soviet republics beat Canada for the Olympic championship.

“It means a lot. We didn’t win Olympics since ‘92,” Kovalchuk said. “It was a while ago. That was our dream. That was my dream for when I was five years old, when I started playing. It’s great and it feels good.”

 

Wild game

 

The game was a thriller from the start and ended with flair, a perfect one-time slap shot from Kaprizov that ripped past German goaltender Danny aus den Birken with Germany’s Patrick Reimer off for high sticking. 

Kaprizov had been fed the puck by the other Russian hero of the game, Gusev, who netted two third period goals, including the one that tied it, sending the game to overtime with less than a minute to go and the Germans looking like they were about to pull off a huge upset. Gusev finished as the Olympic tournament’s points leader with four goals and eight assists.

The Russians found themselves evenly matched by a German team who surprised the hockey world by making it to their first Olympic final. With the loss, the Germans won silver, their best finish ever in Olympic ice hockey and their first medal since a bronze at the Innsbruck games in 1976.

On paper the final shouldn’t have been a fair fight, but the Germans, playing hockey for a country primarily obsessed with football, skated evenly with the OAR, a team loaded with top home-grown talent from Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League, seen as the world’s second-best league after the NHL, and led by ex-NHL all stars Pavel Datsyuk, their captain, and Kovalchuk.

“It’s a little tough right now because we all felt we could have won that game, but that’s hockey, that’s just the way it is,” German coach Marco Sturm said. “The boys are going to bring silver home and they should be proud.”

Jordan hosts Syria in FIBA Asian qualifiers

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

AMMAN — Jordan hosts Syria on Monday as India hosts Lebanon in their fourth Asian Group C qualifiers for the FIBA Basketball 2019 World Cup.

Jordan tops Group C after they beat India 102-88, as Lebanon beat Syria 87-63. Earlier, Jordan beat Lebanon 87-83 and Syria 109-72. Lebanon is second after they beat India 107-72 and Syria beat India 74-57.

Currently, New Zealand top Group A, Australia Group B and Qatar top Group C. Out of 16 competing teams 12 teams (the top three teams from each group) will move to the second round following which seven teams (the top three teams from each group and the best 4th ) in addition to host China will move to the World Cup set for August 31, 2019 which will include 32 teams.

Fans are elated at the team’s current results especially that the Jordanian squad is striving to get into competitive form after discord among the governing body of the game ended with the resignation of the Jordan Basketball Federation Board. A transitional care-taking body of former players and marketing experts has taken over until a new board is elected within the coming year.

Support for Jordan’s second most popular game is seen as below par by most observers, leading to a decline in the game locally and less competitive advantage on the regional scene although Jordan was the only Jordanian team to actually reach a World Championship in a team sport in 2010 alongside the Junior team in 1995.

Fans pin their hopes that the qualifying group will provide Jordan the chance to move to the FIBA Basketball World Cup finals. Last year, Jordan took third place in the West Asian Basketball Association (WABA) as Lebanon were crowned champs. The top four qualifiers then played at the 29th FIBA Asia Cup in Lebanon where Jordan finished at a disappointing 8th place as Australia won the title, Iran came second and South Korea third.

Apart from the 2010 milestone, Jordan’s basketball team won the West Asia title in 2002 and repeated it in 2014, when Jordan managed to win the WABA title for the second time in the absence of both the Lebanese and senior Iranian teams.

In WABA 2010, Jordan finished second behind Iran and qualified to the 26th FIBA Asia Championship where, for the first time in the country’s history, Jordan reached the final but lost the chance qualify to the 2012 Olympic Games after losing the final 70-69 to China. Jordan then played at the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament for Men but lost to Puerto Rico and Greece and was eliminated.

As of 2017, the Asia Championships and the FIBA Oceania Championship merged into a one tournament to be known as the FIBA Asia Cup. It will now be held every four-years like the EuroBasket, AfroBasket and Americas Championship. The tournament will determine the composition of the joint FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania qualifiers for the 2019 FIBA World Cup.

Jordan’s Sharabati gets gold medal in Taekwondo at Egypt tourney

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

AMMAN  — Saleh Al Sharabati has clinched gold for Jordan in the G2 International Taekwondo Championships in Cairo, according to the Jordan Olympic Committee News Service.

Sharabati beat Kazakhstan’s Rakhim Adelkhaove in the final of the -80kg, 15-14, to launch Jordan participation at the tournament with a gold medal.

Earlier he beat Egypt’s Mohammad Mursi, 35-2, and then he beat Austria’s Alexander Radjovek, 15-2, before beating Italy’s to seed Roberto Buta. Meanwhile, his teammate Ruslan Libzo lost early to the fourth seed in the -58kg, Sergi Oksove, of Moldova. Juliana Al Sadeq also lost early, by just one point in the women’s 67kg category, to Italy’s Dalila Diambra.

Records broken at Jordan swimming nationals

By - Feb 25,2018 - Last updated at Feb 25,2018

AMMAN — Two-time Olympian Talita Baqlah and up and coming sensation Amro Al Wer have set new records at the National Winter Swimming Championships, according to the Jordan Olympic Committee News Service.

Baqlah, one of Jordan’s most successful female swimmers, set a new Jordan best in the 100m Medley with a time of 1 minute 8.20 seconds, beating the former record set by Sara Al Haiajneh.

Wer broke his own record in the 200m breaststroke after clocking 2 minutes 22.26 seconds.

Jazira, Faisali play tough matches in AFC Cup

By - Feb 25,2018 - Last updated at Feb 25,2018

AMMAN — Jazira host Bahrain’s Malikieh on Monday while Faisali play Lebanon’s Ansar on Tuesday in Beirut in stage 2 of the 15th Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup.

Both Jordanian teams will be facing the group leaders after the second-tier Asian club competition kicked off around the continent with both Jazira and Faisali held to draws. Jazira held Iraqi Air Force Club 2-2 in Group A in which Malikieh beat Oman’s Suweiq 4-1. 

On the other hand, Faisali held Syria’s Wihdeh by the same score in Group C in which Ansar beat Oman’s Dhofar 2-0. The top teams from each group in addition to the best second placed team will move to the second round of the competition.

Earlier this season, Faisali lost their 2018 AFC Champions League play-off match to Uzbekistan’s Nasaf Qarshi 5-1 and failed to reach the group stages of Asia’s elite club competition. They have now settled to play the AFC Cup alongside their compatriots Jazira. Jordanian teams have never before made it past the ACL preliminary round. Wihdat were knocked out in 2017, 2016 and 2015, while Shabab Urdun were eliminated in 2014.

Reigning Jordanian Professional Football League and Cup champs Faisali finished runner-up to Tunisia’s Tarajji in the last edition of the Arab Clubs Championships after an impressive performance which included two wins over Egyptian veterans Ahli.  This year, they are so far fourth in the league and hope to make up on the regional scene.

Last season, Ahli played the AFC Cup for the first time and Wihdat reached the West Asia zone semifinals the winner of which faced the winner from the rest of the Asian zones to decide the AFC Cup champion, won by Iraqi Air Force Club for the second year running. The AFC Cup was previously won three times by Jordanian teams: Faisali won titles in 2005 and 2006, and Shabab Urdun won in 2007. Other Jordanian teams that competed are Wihdat, Jazira, Ramtha, Hussein and That Ras.

Locally, so far this season, reigning league and Jordan Cup champs Faisali beat Jazira to win the 35th Jordan Super Cup. Wihdat beat Jazira to win the Jordan Football Association Shield. In the Jordan Cup, Jazira ousted Faisali while Shabab Urdun eliminated Wihdat to reach the final.

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