Pedrosa to be examined for finger and ankle fractures in Barcelona

A crash suffered whilst leading the Alice Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland could have left Dani Pedrosa with a broken finger and fractured ankle.
Whilst some of his MotoGP World Championship rivals will be making a direct journey to Laguna Seca for next weekend´s Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix, Dani Pedrosa will be making a brief stopover in Barcelona to undergo examination on a suspected broken index finger and ankle injury.
The Repsol Honda rider was leading the Alice Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland when he crashed out of the race, taking a big impact as he was flung from his RC212V. The fall dealt a double blow to the Spaniard, who not only conceded the lead in the World Championship but also could be affected by the latest in a string of injuries.
Pedrosa was examined in the Clinica Mobile immediately after the crash, with MotoGP Medical Director Dr. Claudio Macchiagodena giving an initial diagnosis of a fractured left digit. Further examination at the Clinica Dexeus in Pedrosa´s home city will reveal the full extent of the damage caused by the Sunday afternoon spill, the cause of which he was at a loss to explain.
`It was a little strange. I had only just touched the brake and I crashed. It was a real pity because I´d got a great start and was going well. I had a good feeling. The front felt perfect, the rear was sliding just a little, but the general feeling was good considering the track conditions. It is a real pity, ´ said the rider himself.
Finger fractures are notoriously fickle for riders, as their effects can vary wildly depending on the exact location of the break and how this corresponds to the demands of gripping and operating levers. With this in mind, Pedrosa´s participation in the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix could be in doubt.

source:motogp

pedrosa crash Sachsenring 08


Vittoria Casey Stoner in Sachsenring


Stoner dedicates third straight win to team

World Champion Casey Stoner paid tribute to his team after picking up his third consecutive win and his fourth of the season at Sachsenring.
It was another extraordinary performance from Casey Stoner in torrentially wet conditions at the Alice Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland on Sunday.

Stoner struggled throughout the race with a stomach upset, but held his nerve to take victory in the rain and close the gap to series leader Valentino Rossi to 20 points, having trailed by 50 just three races ago - and is now only four points behind crasher Dani Pedrosa in second place.

In addition to Pedrosa, Marco Melandri was another rider to be caught out by the wet conditions. The Italian was in the process of a stunning charge through the field and had made his way up to seventh place from sixteenth on the grid, only to crash moments after setting the fastest lap of the race.
Casey Stoner - first

`I saw Dani ride off into the distance and I thought `fair play´ - there was no way I could keep that pace in those conditions at that time. We definitely needed a bit more time to get the tyres up to temperature and Dani just kept edging away, but then after a few laps I was coming down the main straight and I could see his bike bouncing around in the gravel at turn one. It´s a shame for him but even though he crashed he was still very impressive today. From then on it was a case of keeping my concentration but that wasn´t easy because I´ve been a little sick all weekend and I wasn´t feeling at all good during the race. Also, we went with quite a hard rear tyre compound and I had quite a few small moments that made me nervous but kept me on my guard. I kept pushing where I could and managed to keep opening out the advantage with every lap, then kept it upright to the end. It´s nice to close the championship down a little bit more and once again I owe a huge thank you to the team, who have adapted the bike to virtually any condition here.´

Marco Melandri - DNF
`This time I feel angry that we didn´t get the result we deserved, not disappointed that we haven´t been fast, as has been the case on other occasions. The crash was a real shame because even though there´s always the chance of making a mistake in the wet I felt good at that time, the tyres were up to temperature, the bike was working well and I was coming through fast. I don´t know how many riders I passed but it was a few and I felt fast, happy and positive. The group ahead of me were some distance away but I felt I could keep improving. In fact, we´d made progress with our pace in the dry and we´ll see how we go from here in America. It´s a nice track and I hope we can start out well.´

source:Motogp

Stoner steals German win as Pedrosa slides out

World champion Casey Stoner claimed his third successive MotoGP victory as series leader Dani Pedrosa crashed out in treacherous, wet conditions in Germany on Sunday.
Former champion Valentino Rossi took over at the top of the standings as he defied the rain at Sachsenring to claim second place behind Stoner, whose fellow Australian Chris Vermuelen was third.

Stoner consolidated third place overall as his nearest rivals Jorge Lorenzo and Colin Edwards joined Pedrosa in tumbling off their bikes.

Pedrosa made a sizzling start to the race as he passed polesitter Stoner to take a comfortable seven-second lead, and then saw compatriot Lorenzo crash out on just the third lap of the 30.

Pedrosa did not last much longer, as his Honda slipped out from underneath him on the next lap on a corner and sent him aquaplaning off the track, across the gravel and into the safety barriers.

He picked himself up after the spectacular spill, seeming to be holding his left wrist, but there were no reports on his fitness ahead of the next round at Laguna Seca in the United States next week.

Stoner took over the lead on his Ducati and experienced no such problems with his Bridgestone tires as he cruised to victory ahead of Yamaha's five-time champion Rossi, who now leads Pedrosa by 16 points

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"I am very excited about the result as it has seen me take back the overall lead," Rossi told reporters. "I eventually got up to a great pace and very close to Casey. These 20 points are very important."

Stoner, who gave Ducati the team's first victory in the event after starting a fourth successive race in pole position, closed to within four points of Pedrosa on 167.

"I have been feeling sick since Saturday morning and my concentration levels were low," Stoner said. "I was losing it in all different places. We were lucky to come out of this with the victory."

Vermuelen claimed his first podium placing this year for Suzuki as he held off Italian Alex de Angelis.

Veteran American Edwards had seemed set to continue his resurgence with another solid placing, but also crashed off the slippery circuit when fifth with 10 laps to go.

Marco Melandri, who before the race revealed that he had secured a release from his Ducati contract for the 2009 season, was another casualty as he also skidded off during the eighth lap.

Earlier, Italy's Marco Simoncelli moved to the top of the 250cc world standings with victory ahead of Spain's Hector Barbera and Alvaro Bautista, while previous leader Mika Kallio of Finland could finish only fourth.

Mike di Meglio of France won the 125cc race ahead of Germany's Stefan Bradl and Gabor Talmacsi of Hungary.

Intelligent Footballers - Is It Possible?

It is a well publicised and widely held belief that footballers are as thick as two short planks. The stereotype of an uneducated ruffian with little schooling and the total inability to string a comprehensible sentence together is confirmed each time you see the likes of Wayne Rooney interviewed!

That is very unfair because many of us would come over as less than the Brain of Britain if we had a microphone shoved under our noses after we had just run ten thousand metres in a European cup tie and some idiot asked us, “how do you feel?” In fact, if I’d just run ten thousand metres they would have to remove my oxygen mask to hear my reply!

There are of course many examples of footballers being thick. David Beckham is the most quoted and his statements like, “we are going to have Brooklyn christened, but we don’t know into which religion yet,” and Rio Ferdinand saying that as England captain he would “take up the mantelpiece,” all go to confirm what most people think.

There are some examples of a few famous English footballers who possess a great deal of intelligence. Former Manchester United winger and current Reading boss, Steve Coppell, famously didn’t join United full-time until after he had completed his degree at university. At my own club, Watford, we had a player called Steve Palmer who also had a degree. The fact that the other players referred to him as ‘the professor’, however, shows just how rare an intelligent footballer is.

On Saturday mornings in England on the TV show ‘Soccer AM’ there is a segment called, ‘Team-mates’ where a player is asked several questions about his colleagues. The questions are like, “who is the quickest at the club?”, “best dressed?”, “best dancer?”, “most stupid”, “joker?” etc, etc.

The players always rattle off the answers very quickly until they come to one particular question. “Who is the most intelligent?” There is always a long pause whilst the player tries to think of someone who possibly possesses more than one brain cell. Eventually, they say something like, “It’s probably so and so. He knows some long words,” or something equally banal.

Graeme Le Saux, the former England left back, was unceremoniously ridiculed by other footballers because he read the Guardian newspaper, a broadsheet, rather than one of the tabloids. It is just not the done thing to be a clever footballer in England.

It is against this background that I salute League Two Notts County midfielder Neil MacKenzie. He is flying in the face of tradition and risking ridicule for the rest of his life by publicly displaying that he is intelligent. He is going someway towards dispelling the myth that all footballers are stupid.

The thirty-two year-old MacKenzie has made football history as the first player to appear on an English Channel 4 afternoon quiz show called Countdown.

Countdown is a legendary programme that has been going for many years. It is watched by almost exclusively the elderly and students. It is a simple game involving two players playing against each other in a test of numeracy and literacy. The players take it in turns to choose nine unknown letters by asking for vowels or consonants and then compete against each other to see who can formulate the longest word with those letters in thirty seconds. There are five or six rounds of that together with two rounds of mathematical tests. The player with the most points at the end is the champion and remains so until he or she is beaten.

Footballer MacKenzie is proving to be a great success on the show, winning five episodes in a row and shooting to the top of the leaderboard. At the time of writing he is still the current Countdown champion and showing no signs of giving up his title without a fight.

MacKenzie was encouraged to enter by his mother, who is a regular viewer of the show. Of course, I guess footballers are another group of people who can watch afternoon television along with the elderly and the students. I would think though that most players would be watching MTV or the Sports channels, rather than Countdown.

So is Mackenzie striking a blow for footballers everywhere? Is he actually more typical of today’s footballer than the stereotypical thicko?

source:Soccerlens

Inter up Lamps offer

There are reports that Inter tabled an improved bid for Chelsea star Frank Lampard late last night.

The Italian champions have chosen Lampard as their main transfer objective for the summer, but Chelsea are said to have rebuffed a £6m advance.

The West London giants claimed yesterday that the England international wasn’t for sale and that they wouldn’t negotiate with the Beneamata, but Inter chief Massimo Moratti insisted that he wouldn’t give up on a transfer.

It is widely believed that Moratti has increased his bid to around £8m and is waiting for a response from the Blues.

Chelsea seem to be keen to keep Lampard for another season, but with his contract set to expire next summer they may opt to cash in their asset.

However, boss Luiz Felipe Scolari has stated that he is looking forward to working with the former West Ham man and may put pressure on the board to fend off Inter’s advances.

source:channel4

Hopkins´ goal to return at Brno after successful surgery

Kawasaki´s injured Anglo-American star John Hopkins underwent surgery in L.A. on Monday and is expected to require six to eight weeks of recovery time.
Following his 230km/h crash at the A-Style TT Assen and the full assessment of his injuries by trusted orthopaedic specialist Dr. Arthur Ting, John Hopkins underwent knee and ankle surgery on Monday and has been told he will need three weeks of complete rest on his damaged leg before an extensive rehabilitation programme can commence.

It had already been confirmed that Hopkins would miss the trips to Laguna Seca and Sachsenring, after he was diagnosed as having sustained a fracture to the bottom of his left tibia, reopened a previous fracture also in the left tibia and fractured the lateral malleolus, at the top of his left ankle.

Further examination by Dr. Ting also revealed a tibial plateau fracture just below the knee, and damage to the meniscus (cartilage), which was causing Hopkins´ knee joint to lock. Surgery took place on Monday to reset the bones in the ankle and repair and reattached the meniscus in the knee.

As a result of the operation Hopkins will not be able to bear any weight on his damaged left leg for three weeks, after which he will undergo extensive rehab, with a full recovery from his injuries expected to take from six to eight weeks in total – meaning that returning to action at Brno in the Czech Republic after the summer break is an optimistic but achievable goal.

Hopkins has already battled back from a painful injury this season after he ruptured his groin in winter testing and he now faces another hard slog as he attempts to turn his difficult debut season with Kawasaki around.

Michael Bartholemy, Kawasaki´s Competition Manager, commented, `I am sorry for John, as I know he was looking forward to racing in front of his home crowd at Laguna Seca, where he always enjoys a lot of support. But it´s just not possible; he has had surgery to fix the injuries he sustained at Assen, and now he needs sufficient recovery time to ensure that he´s fully fit before he makes his racing return.´

`Obviously we are hoping that this return will come in the Czech Republic Grand Prix,´ continued Bartholemy, `but we will be monitoring John´s recovery very closely and we have no intention of putting him back on the bike before he´s ready. If this means he doesn´t race at Brno, then that´s how it will be, because we don´t want to risk making things worse by allowing him to return before he is fully recovered.´

The `Team Green´ boss added, `Now we know the full extent of John's injuries we are looking at the possibility of running a replacement rider at Laguna Seca. We will make a further announcement about this ahead of this weekend´s German Grand Prix.´

(source:motogp)

Can one player make a team? Real Madrid might found out.

Can one player make a team? Is it possible for just one man to be the difference between winning things and losing things?

The reason I ask the question is because of the possibility of Manchester United losing Cristiano Ronaldo to Real Madrid. Would United have won the Premier League and Champions League double last season without him? Obviously they would have missed his forty-two goals, but would someone else have stepped up to the mark and allowed the side to be just as successful?

Looking back at teams of the past there are many examples of where it was a commonly held belief that one man made all the difference. The Argentina World Cup team of 1986 and 1990 would certainly have missed the brilliance of Diego Maradona. Would they have been so successful without him?

Football is a team game and not an individual one. Within teams there are brilliant individuals, but it is rare for them to shine regularly if the rest of the team are not of sufficient quality to supply them with the ball in the right areas, and make the runs to get on the end of their passes.

Real Madrid seem to be desperate to sign Ronaldo. In some quarters you could be forgiven for thinking that they are saying that a Real Madrid Champions League triumph next season is a foregone conclusion if they capture the signature of the Portuguese winger. Whilst a player as good as him is bound to be a target, there is absolutely no guarantee that he will improve an existing side.

History is littered with great players leaving one club for another and not producing the same sort of results. Ask Arsenal fans if they think Sylvan Wiltord is a great player. Liverpool fans will give you an opinion on Morientes and Cisse. Manchester United might be less than forthcoming about the qualities of the world cup winning Kleberson or the previously sublime skills of Juan Sebastian Veron.

I know he is slightly past his best but there is no doubt that Shevchenko should still be a world class striker but you won’t find many at Chelsea who agree. Real Madrid fans were never too taken with England’s own Michael Owen and it will be interested to see if Galatasaray see the great Harry Kewell that left Leeds or the average Harry Kewell who played for Liverpool.

I fully accept that not all of these players are or were in the same class as Cristiano Ronaldo but they all arrived at clubs with huge reputations and failed to live up to them. Some of it can be explained by a simple loss of form, but most of it is down to lifestyle, coaching, team-mates and many things that affect daily life outside of football.

There is absolutely no guarantee that a player who performs for one club will have the same effect at another.

Back to my original point then, I do not think that one player can make or break a team. Every team is a whole lot more than the sum of it’s individual parts. The teamwork, team spirit, style of play and understanding between colleagues is worth more than any one individual. Examples such as Greece winning the Euros, Porto winning the Champions League and several German teams getting to finals when they have been described as ‘the worst German team ever,’ prove that there are many things that bring success rather than having one or more outstanding individuals.

If Cristiano Ronaldo isn’t the best player in the world at the moment, who is? Messi, Kaka, Xavi? How did Barcelona and Milan fare this year?

It is, of course, a major bonus to have great players in your team but it is not a pre-requisite for success. Having one outstanding individual can have the opposite affect on a team if their personality, playing style or the publicity they bring with them, damage the balance of a previously harmonious dressing room.

I’m sure Ronaldo will do well if he goes to Real Madrid because he is indeed a great player. However, I wouldn’t necessarily bet on them to lift the Champions League or La Liga. In Europe, Chelsea and Manchester United will be very strong again and we await to see if a Mourinho inspired Inter can join the battle. In La Liga, Pep Guardiola will be looking to develop Barcelona into a whole team who play together and for each other in order to exact revenge for Madrid’s title triumph of last year. If he can get that team playing to the ability of the sum of those individual parts, they will be difficult to beat.

We all love watching the great players, but they can only be effective if they are at the right club at the right time and are surrounded by players who compliment them. Before Real Madrid genuinely offer ridiculous amounts of money to Manchester United they should be very sure that the arrival of Ronaldo would provide a missing piece of a jigsaw rather than just another great player.

source: soccernews

Scolaari sparks lampard row

Luiz Felipe Scolari's claim during his introductory press conference that Frank Lampard would stay at Chelsea is reported to have sparked an extraordinary confrontation between the midfielder and chief executive Peter Kenyon that has seemingly made his departure to Inter Milan inevitable.

While Scolari's debut performance in front of the press was composed and confident, his announcement that Lampard would be staying at the club may prove a terrible error of judgement.

Far from settling the issue, the repercussions of Scolari's claim saw Inter Milan table a £8m bid for the midfielder last night and his departure is now depicted as merely a matter of time.

"He wants to stay and to play for Chelsea for many years. I was very happy because I think Chelsea needs Lampard and Lampard likes Chelsea. Now it's a minimum of questions to solve it and Lampard will be with us more time than one year," Scolari declared.

The announcement was immediately countered by Lampard's agent, Steve Kutner, stressing that while his client 'wanted' to stay, that didn't mean he would be staying. "He made it categorically clear that although he would love to finish his career at Chelsea, with the deal he has been offered that is not possible," Kutner's statement read.

Yet while Kutner was issuing his statement, Lampard's reaction is reported to have been even less restrained. According to the Times, 'Lampard, who watched the press conference at the training ground in Cobham, Surrey, between double sessions, confronted Peter Kenyon in the canteen when the chief executive returned from the nearby Hilton Hotel, where Scolari had been speaking.'

An irretrievable breach has apparently opened between Lampard and the club's hierachy, with Chelsea unwilling to meet his demand for a five-year contract worth approximately £135,000 a week. No doubt delighted at the unexpected turn of events, Inter Milan, now under the management of Jose Mourinho, made their first formal bid for Lampard's services last night and saw the odds on the player moving to Italy tumble.

(source: football365)