Rio state declares financial emergency, requests funding for Olympics

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RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) – Rio de Janeiro’s governor declared a state of financial emergency Friday and requested federal funds to help fulfill obligations for public services during the Olympics that start Aug. 5.

Emergency measures are needed to avoid “a total collapse in public security, health, education, transport and environmental management,” a decree in the state’s Official Gazette said.

The state’s revenue, largely tied to the petroleum industry, slumped in the last two years as global oil prices collapsed.

The announcement followed this week’s visit to Rio by Brazil’s Interim President Michel Temer, who said the federal government would ensure all obligations are met for a successful Games.

Rio is expecting about 500,000 foreign visitors during the Olympics, which has coincided with Brazil’s worst recession since the 1930s and a political crisis that last month led to the suspension of President Dilma Rousseff.

“The state’s financial emergency in no way delays the delivery of Olympic projects and the promises assumed by the city of Rio,” Mayor Eduardo Paes said on Twitter.

He also underscored that legacy construction projects, with the exception of an 8.79 billion-real expansion of Rio’s metro that is expected to be finished just days before the Games open, are the responsibility of the city and that most have been completed.

The local organizing committee for the Games said the state’s fiscal situation did not impact its actual running of the Olympics, which relies entirely on private funds.

While the majority of Olympic infrastructure costs have been spread across city, state and federal budgets, with some financing from private companies, the state is responsible for most day-to-day security and health services in Rio.

The financial pinch resulted in a 30-percent cut in the state’s security budget – just as Rio has seen a jump in homicides and assaults in recent months, raising concerns about safety ahead of the Olympics.

The state of Rio expects a budget deficit of over 19 billion reais ($5.56 billion) this year as spending planned before oil prices fell outstrips revenue that is tumbling during Brazil’s recession.

Rio state’s debt has been downgraded several times.

On Wednesday, Fitch Ratings downgraded Rio’s debt rating to ‘B-’ from ‘B+’, saying the state was suffering “a fast-deteriorating liquidity position.”

Since late last year, the state has been forced to delay pension and salary payments and shutter some schools and hospitals, where crucial supplies, including medicines and syringes, are lacking.

Brazil is also facing an outbreak of the Zika virus, which has been linked to the birth defect microcephaly in which babies are born with abnormally small heads frequently associated with developmental issues.

Irrational Copa America yellow card suspension rule hurts USA

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Stars and Stripes FC – Bobby Wood and Alejandro Bedoya are missing the United States’ Copa America semifinal due to yellow card accumulation. Two of the team’s best players will be missing a high profile match because they received yellow cards during the group stage and the quarterfinal round.

Bedoya’s suspension is particularly egregious because he received his first yellow card during the opening match against Colombia. A player being suspended for a huge match because he was given two yellow cards in four matches? It seems a bit silly whether you look at it from a business or a quality of play standpoint.

Yellow cards are erased after the quarterfinal, so at least the U.S. can look forward to not having players suspended for the championship or third-place match. It’s like being told you can get a free refill on soda after the restaurant refuses to accept your $100 gift certificate.

In a perfect (and rational) world, yellow cards would have been erased at the conclusion of the group stage. I’m struggling to come up with the reasons why they carried over into the knockout rounds.

The majority of fans around the world (and I’m sure tournament organizers) won’t care about the United States missing a few key players. This tournament is about the star players of Argentina and Brazil and Colombia.

But what if it was Lionel Messi who was suspended? What if Lionel Messi was given a yellow card in Argentina’s opening match and then was giving a card for something minor in the quarterfinal (let’s say time wasting). Now the best player in the world is missing the semifinal of a major international tournament because he received two cards in four matches. I imagine the rules would then be reexamined and altered to prevent it from happening again.

The U.S. is rumored to be appealing Wood’s suspension, but it’s doubtful it’ll be overturned. They’ll be heading into the semifinal without their best striker.

 The card accumulation rules for Copa America are silly, and unfortunately the USMNT is paying the price.

Nigeria: Sports Minister say Government will immortalize Stephen Keshi

Keshi died on Wednesday morning from cardiac arrest in Benin City and Dalung has condoled with his family and the country's football fraternity.
Keshi died on Wednesday morning from cardiac arrest in Benin City and Dalung has condoled with his family and the country’s football fraternity.

Sports minister Solomon Dalung has announced that the Federal Government will adequately preserve the great memories of the late former Super Eagles coach Stephen Keshi.

Keshi died on Wednesday morning from cardiac arrest in Benin City and Dalung has condoled with his family and the country’s football fraternity.

“It is with a heavy heart but gratitude to the almighty God, that I, on behalf of the Federal Government of Nigeria, sympathize with the family of coach Stephen Keshi (MON) and the entire Nigerian football family over the untimely death of our amiable, dedicated and outstanding hero,” Dalung said.

“I was really shocked by the news of his death. He was one of Nigeria’s heroes whose contributions to the development of football and Nigeria’s sports in general cannot be quantified.’

While eulogizing the late former international, Dalung lauded the great dedication and contributions of the former Super Eagles captain and coach to the country.

“I will formally inform the government of the death of this great Nigerian, and I want to assure Nigerians that government will seek ways to immortalize him.

“I join millions of soccer followers across the world to mourn this illustrious son of Nigeria, Africa and the world.

“I pray for the repose of his soul and that the family, especially the children he left behind will find the strength to bear this devastating loss,” he said.

Muhammad Ali, simply ‘The Greatest’, dead at 74

Muhammad Ali, simply 'The Greatest', dead at 74
Muhammad Ali, simply ‘The Greatest’, dead at 74

Muhammad Ali, the eloquent, colorful, controversial and brilliant three-time heavyweight boxing champion who was known as much for his social conscience and staunch opposition to the Vietnam War as for his dazzling boxing skills, died Friday.

Ali, who had a long battle with Parkinson’s disease, was taken to a Phoenix area hospital earlier this week where he was being treated for a respiratory issue. He was 74.

Once the most outrageous trash talker in sports, he was largely muted for the last quarter century of his life, quieted by a battle with Parkinson’s Disease.

Born Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr. on Jan. 17, 1942, in Louisville, Ky., Ali learned to box after his bicycle was stolen when he was 12 years old. When young Clay vowed to “whoop the behind” of the thief, a local police officer encouraged him to learn to box to channel his energy.

He would go on to become known as “The Greatest,” and at his peak in the 1970s was among the most recognizable faces on Earth.

He was known for his tendency to recite poems while making predictions about his fights – “Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee. The hands can’t hit what the eyes can’t see.” – as well as for giving opponents often unflattering nicknames. He referred to Sonny Liston as “the big ugly bear,” George Chuvalo as “The Washerwoman,” Floyd Patterson as “The Rabbit” and Earnie Shavers as “The Acorn.”

But his most controversial, and some would say cruel, nicknames were reserved for his fiercest rival, Joe Frazier. He first dubbed Frazier “Uncle Tom” and then later called him “The Gorilla.”

When Ali prepared to meet Frazier for a third time in Manila, Philippines, on Oct. 1, 1975, he frequently carried a toy rubber gorilla with him. At one news conference, he pulled the gorilla out of his pocket and began punching it as he said, “It’s going to be a killa and a thrilla and a chilla when I get the gorilla in Manila.”

Frazier, though, took it personally and harbored a decades-long grudge.

“It sure did bother him,” Gene Kilroy, Ali’s friend for more than 50 years, told Yahoo Sports.

Kilroy said Ali was simply promoting the fights and meant no harm, and said Ali regretted the impact his words had upon Frazier.

“I used to tell Ali, ‘Someday, me, you and Joe are going to be three old men sitting in the park laughing about all that [expletive],’ ” Kilroy recalled. “And Ali said, ‘That would be great!’ I talked to Joe and Joe said, ‘No, [expletive] him. I don’t want to be with him.’ But he loosened up later and they mended fences.

Not long before Frazier’s death in 2011, he attended an autograph signing and memorabilia show in Las Vegas. Frazier grabbed a copy of an old Sports Illustrated magazine that had a photo of the two fighters and promoter Don King on the cover.

“Man,” he said, sounding wistful, “we gave the people some memories, me and Ali.”

Ali was at the peak of his professional powers after knocking out Zora Folley in New York on March 22, 1967. He battered Folley throughout and stopped him in the seventh.

After the bout, Folley shared his thoughts with Sports Illustrated.

“The right hands Ali hit me with just had no business landing – but they did. They came from nowhere,” Folley said. “… He’s smart. The trickiest fighter I’ve seen. He’s had 29 fights and acts like he’s had a hundred. He could write the book on boxing, and anyone that fights him should be made to read it first.”

But Ali’s boxing career came to a screeching halt after that fight. He’d refused induction into the U.S. Army because he stated he was a conscientious objector.

Ali had converted to Islam in 1964 after the first of his two wins over Liston, and changed his name from Cassius Clay. He said Islam was a religion of peace and that he had no desire to engage in combat with those who’d done him or his family no harm.

This all went down at the height of the civil rights movement.

“Shoot them for what?” Ali asked in an interview after he refused induction. “They never called me nigger. They never lynched me. They never put dogs on me. They didn’t rob me of my nationality, rape and kill my mother and father. What do I want to shoot them for, for what? Why do I want to go shoot them, poor little people and babies and children and women? How can I shoot them? Just take me to jail.”

Heavyweight boxing champ Cassius Clay, paused on the step and greeted a friend, March 17, 1966, as he arrived at the Veterans building to appeal his 1A draft classification. Behind him, dark coat and hat, is his attorney, Edward Jocko of New York.  (AP Photo)
Heavyweight boxing champ Cassius Clay, paused on the step and greeted a friend, March 17, 1966, as he arrived at the Veterans building to appeal his 1A draft classification. Behind him, dark coat and hat, is his attorney, Edward Jocko of New York. (AP Photo)

He went on trial in Houston on June 20, 1967. The jury deliberated for only 21 minutes before finding him guilty. He was fined $10,000, faced five years in jail and had his passport taken.

He was stripped of the crown and deprived from making a living, but he wasn’t silenced. Ali would go on a lecture circuit, speaking at colleges for as little as $1,500 and as much as $10,000.

He desperately needed the money because he wasn’t making a lot after being stripped and he was paying an expensive team of attorneys.

Always conscious of his image, Ali joked in one interview that he couldn’t allow people to see his car.

“I didn’t want people to see the world heavyweight champion driving a Volkswagen, while all them guys were driving their Cadillacs,” he said.

At first, there was a lot of tension in the crowds, as opposition to the war had only just started. Gradually, though, Ali swung the crowds to his point of view as the country’s opinion of the situation in Vietnam turned dramatically.

Ali said that on one series of lectures he was set to make $1,500 a speech for talking to students at Canisius, Farleigh Dickinson and C.W. Post. He opened his wife’s piggy bank and found, he said, $135, which he needed to buy gas and food for his trip.

Kilroy said that whenever Ali was paid, the first thing he did was find a Western Union.

“Whenever he’d get paid, he’d go send some money to his mother and father so they were OK and then he sent what was left to his wife and kids,” Kilroy said.

Despite his financial difficulties, Ali never lost the courage of his convictions. At one of his speeches, he insisted he had no regrets.

While many tried to convince him of the errors of his ways, he remained steadfast and resolute. He told the crowd that sticking for his beliefs led him to come out on top.

“There have been many questions put to me about why I refused to be inducted into the United States Army,” Ali said in the speech to students. “Especially, as some have pointed out, as many have pointed out, when not taking the step I will lose so much. I would like to say to the press and those people who think I lost so much by not taking the step, I would like to say I didn’t lose a thing up until this very moment. One thing, I have gained a lot. Number one, I have gained a peace of mind. I have gained a peace of heart. I now know I am content with almighty God himself, whose name is Allah. I have also gained the respect of everyone who is here today.

“I have not only gained the respect of everyone who is here today, but worldwide. I have gained respect [from] people all over the world. By taking the step, I would have satisfied a few people who are pushing the war. Even if the wealth of America was given to me for taking the step, the friendship of all of the people who support the war, this would still be nothing [that would] content [me] internally.”

The Supreme Court would reverse Ali’s conviction in 1971 by an 8-0 vote. But by then, Ali was already back in the ring.

He actually returned from exile in 1970. Georgia didn’t have an athletic commission and so he wasn’t banned there. He faced Jerry Quarry on Oct. 26 in Atlanta, a fight Ali won via a third-round stoppage.

After one more fight, a knockout of Oscar Bonavena in the 15th round, Ali was ready to face the undefeated Frazier.

According to boxing promoter Bob Arum, the fight nearly took place in Las Vegas, with then-Nevada Governor Paul Laxalt endorsing the fight.

“The bad luck was [when arranging the fight] we stayed at the Desert Inn,” Arum told Yahoo Sports.

The Desert Inn was owned by Moe Dalitz, a one-time bootlegger and racketeer who was the most powerful figure in Las Vegas. He was also a reputed mobster.

Dalitz didn’t care for Ali because he didn’t serve in the war.

He saw Arum and Conrad eating breakfast and asked Conrad why they were there. Dalitz went crazy, Arum said.

“He said, ‘I don’t want that [expletive] draft dodger in this town,’ ” Arum said. ” ‘It’s not good for the town.’ ”

And so the biggest fight in history went not to Las Vegas but to New York a few months later.

FILE - In this March 8, 1971, file photo, boxer Joe Frazier, left, hits Muhammad Ali during the 15th round of their heavyweight title fight at New York's Madison Square Garden. Michigan State’s offensive line expects a fight when it plays Alabama’s talented defensive line on Thursday night, Dec. 31, 2015 in the Cotton Bowl. So why not prepare by watching one of the greatest fights of all time? Michigan State offensive line coach Mark Staten had his unit watch and score the 1971 Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier heavyweight title match dubbed the Fight of the Century. (AP Photo, File)
FILE – In this March 8, 1971, file photo, boxer Joe Frazier, left, hits Muhammad Ali during the 15th round of their heavyweight title fight at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

It was an epic night that featured scores of celebrities in the crowd. Frank Sinatra was a ringside photographer. Burt Lancaster did color commentary.

It was an outstanding fight, but Frazier’s pressure carried the day. He floored Ali in the 15th round with one of the most famous and perfectly executed left hooks in boxing history, sealing the fight.

But Ali would have his days against Frazier, defeating him twice, in a non-title bout on Jan. 28, 1974, in New York, and for the heavyweight title in Manila on Oct. 1, 1975. That was a fight for the ages, remembered as one of a handful of the best in boxing history.

Ali won by 14th-round stoppage when Frazier’s trainer, Eddie Futch, asked referee Carlos Padilla to stop the fight. There has long been question about whether Angelo Dundee, then Ali’s trainer, would have allowed Ali to go out for the 15th had Futch not stopped it.

In his brilliant 2001 book, “Ghosts of Manila,” Mark Kram wrote, “After the press conference, Joe retired to a private villa for rest. He had been sleeping for a couple of hours when George Benton entered with a visitor. The room was dark. ‘Who is it?’ Joe asked, lifting his head. ‘I can’t see. Can’t see. Turn the lights on.’ A light was turned on and he still could not see. Like Ali, he lay there with his veins empty, crushed by a will that had carried him so far and now surely too far. His eyes were iron gates torn up by an explosive. ‘Man, I hit him with punches that bring down the walls of a city. What held him up?’ He lowered his head for some abstract forgiveness. ‘Goddamn it, when somebody going to understand? It wasn’t justa fight. It was me and him. Not a fight.’ ”

Ali wasn’t nearly the same fighter after that. He’d taken a fearsome pounding in his second career, after his return from exile. His three fights with Frazier, his 1974 fight with George Foreman in Africa and his 1980 bout with Larry Holmes were particularly brutal.

Ali’s win over Foreman became known as “The Rumble in the Jungle,” fought in then what was called Zaire and is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

He employed his famous “Rope-A-Dope” strategy in that fight. Foreman was a fearsome opponent at the time, the hardest hitter in boxing with a 40-0 record and 39 knockouts.

There were many sportswriters and boxing experts of the day who feared for Ali, such was Foreman’s reputation at the time.

“I thought I was going to go in there and just go out and go, ‘Boom, boom, boom,’ and hit him and get him out of there and then go home,” Foreman told Yahoo Sports in 2014. “That was my mistake. This was Muhammad Ali. He was ‘The Greatest,’ and they called him that because he was, but he was also the smartest. He knew what to do. And he did a great job of it.”

Ali no longer had the foot speed or the elusiveness to dance away from Foreman as he’d done with Liston a decade earlier. Instead, he figured out the best strategy was to lay back against the ropes, lean back as far as he could, cover his face with his gloves and as much of his body as he could with his arms and let Foreman pound at him.

Foreman obliged and threw crunching, punishing shots. Ali took them and waited until Foreman became so tired he could no longer raise his arms. When he couldn’t, Ali struck back and knocked out Foreman in the eighth round in the most remarkable upset of his career.

“It was my honor to get beaten up by that man,” Foreman said, chuckling, in 2014. “I hated him at the time, because I didn’t understand. But we grew to love each other. I love him like a brother.”

Ali slowed down even more after the win over Frazier and never again looked like the electric, blazing-fast athlete he’d been years earlier.

“Nobody would have beaten Ali prior to the three-and-a-half years he lost [objecting to the Vietnam War],” Arum, who has promoted boxing for 50 years, told Yahoo Sports. “Nobody, and I mean nobody, could have come close to him. He was as fast and as elusive as Sugar Ray Robinson and Sugar Ray Leonard, and he was a heavyweight. His punching power was way better than people gave him credit for, but you never saw it a lot in those days because he was up on his toes moving.”

After the Frazier fight, Ali became a personality as much as an athlete. He appeared on CBS’ “Face the Nation” in 1976 during the Ford-Carter presidential race. He was asked whom he favored, and he declined to answer, saying he didn’t know enough and didn’t want to influence people who followed him and would vote for whomever he would say.

He officially retired from boxing in 1981 after a unanimous decision loss to Trevor Berbick, ending his career with a 55-5 record. He remains the only three-time lineal heavyweight champion, having won titles in 1964, ’74 and ’78.

As he aged, Ali began to think of his role in the world and what he could do to improve it. And he talked on “Face the Nation” about his desire to do charitable acts.

“We only have so many hours a day to do what we have to do, so many years to live, and in those years, we sleep about eight hours a day,” Ali sad. “We travel. We watch television. If a man is 50 years old, he’s lucky if he’s actually had 20 years to actually live. So I would like to do the best I can for humanity.

“I’m blessed by God to be recognized as the most famous face on the Earth today. And I cannot think of nothing better than helping God’s creatures or helping poverty or good causes where I can use my name to do so.”

In a 1975 interview with Playboy that was released around the time of his third fight with Frazier, he spoke of how his view of the world had changed.

He said it was his responsibility to take advantage of his notoriety by helping his fellow man.

“You listen up and maybe I’ll make you as famous as I made Howard Cosell,” he said in the Playboy interview. “Wars on nations are fought to change maps, but wars on poverty are fought to map change. The man who views the world at 50 the same as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life.

“These are words of wisdom, so pay attention, Mr. Playboy. The man who has no imagination stands on the Earth. He has no wings, he cannot fly. When we are right, no one remembers, but when we are wrong, no one forgets.”

Kilroy, King and Arum said they knew of many charitable acts Ali had done. Kilroy said Ali, who was the most popular athlete in the world for years and commanded attention everywhere he went, would always be willing to do charitable acts, but said he didn’t want cameras or reporters around because he didn’t want anyone to think he was doing it for the publicity.

In 1973, for example, Ali learned that a home for elderly Jewish people was going to close because it was out of money.

“I’ll never forget that night,” Kilroy said. “It was a cold January night and we saw it on the news. Ali really paid attention to it and you could tell it bothered him, that all these people were going to be put out. They had nowhere to go. He told me to find out where it was, so I called the TV station and got the address.

“We drove over there and walked in and some guy comes up to me. I said, ‘We’re looking for the man in charge. Where is he?’ And the guy says, ‘I am. What do you want?’ And Ali tells him he wants to help. He wrote him a check for $200,000 and tells him to put it in the bank that night. And then he writes another check for $200,000 and tells him to wait four days, because he has to get home and put some more money in the bank to cover the check.”

FILE - In this Nov. 9, 2005 file photo, President Bush presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to boxer Muhammad Ali in the East Room of the White House. He is now so much a part of the nation's social fabric that it's hard to comprehend a time when Ali was more reviled than revered.   (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)
FILE – In this Nov. 9, 2005 file photo, President Bush presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to boxer Muhammad Ali in the East Room of the White House. He is now so much a part of the nation’s social fabric that it’s hard to comprehend a time when Ali was more reviled than revered. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)
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In 1990, shortly before the first Gulf War between the U.S. and Iraq, he flew to Baghdad to speak with Saddam Hussein to secure the release of 15 U.S. hostages.

Hussein agreed to release the hostages.

For the rest of his life Ali worked to promote the cause of peace and charity. In December 2015, he condemned ISIS and took a shot at Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump (without mentioning Trump’s name) when Trump suggested temporarily banning all Muslims from entering the U.S.

After the terrorist shootings in San Bernardino, Ali released a statement through his publicist. The headline said, “Statement From Muhammad Ali Regarding Presidential Candidates Proposing to Ban Muslim Immigration to the United States.”

“I am a Muslim and there is nothing Islamic about killing innocent people in Paris, San Bernardino or anywhere else in the world,” Ali said in the statement. “True Muslims know that the ruthless violence of so-called Islamic Jihadists goes against the very tenets of our religion.

“We as Muslims have to stand up to those who use Islam to advance their own personal agenda. They have alienated many from learning about Islam. True Muslims know or should know that it goes against our religion to try and force Islam on anybody.

“Speaking as someone who has never been accused of political correctness, I believe that our political leaders should use their position to bring understanding about the religion of Islam and clarify that these misguided murderers have perverted people’s views on what Islam really is.”

It’s the last major public statement Muhammad Ali ever made.

 

International Friendly: Late Vardy goal gets Euro 2016 preparations off to winning start

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Jamie Vardy spared Harry Kane’s blushes as his late winner ensured England started their preparations for Euro 2016 with a 2-1 win over Turkey at the Etihad Stadium.

Tottenham striker Kane had put England into an early lead in Manchester, only for Hakan Calhanoglu to restore parity in the 13th minute.

Kane, top scorer in the Premier League this season, then missed a second-half penalty as it appeared Turkey would frustrate England in their first warm-up fixture for the European Championship in France.

However, Vardy – whose goals helped Leicester City to an unlikely Premier League title this season – fired in a late winner from a goalmouth scramble to boost his chances of starting England’s opener against Russia in Marseille on June 11.

Manager Roy Hodgson was without most Manchester United and Liverpool players due to their involvement in the FA Cup and Europa League finals, but he will have been pleased to see fit-again Jack Wilshere last 65 minutes, before being replaced by another returning midfielder in Jordan Henderson.

Turkey, drawn in a tough-looking Group D with Spain, Czech Republic and Croatia, saw their unbeaten run end at 13 games and they have now failed to beat England in 11 meetings between the sides.

The visitors may have feared a worse outcome when England took the lead inside three minutes.

Dele Alli slipped in club-mate Kane to slot home a straight-forward finish, although the striker was seemingly offside when the pass was played.

Turkey coach Fatih Terim was incensed by the decision to allow the goal, showing the fourth official Kane’s illegal positioning on a mobile phone.

The visitors responded strongly, though, first Kyle Walker blocked Ozan Tufan’s strike before Cenk Tosun forced a good save from Joe Hart with a snapshot.

And the hosts’ backline was breached after 12 minutes with Turkey scoring for the first time against England.

With left-back Danny Rose caught out of position, Hart misjudged a throughball into his penalty area and Sen got there first to pull a cross back for Calhanoglu to apply a simple finish.

England had chances to regain the lead before half-time with Volkan Babacan saving a Wilshere drive before Eric Dier glanced a free header wide and Kane shot straight at the Turkey goalkeeper on the half-hour mark.

Kane had the ball in the net again five minutes into the second half after patient England build-up play, but this time the striker was correctly flagged for offside by the assistant referee.

Cenk then planted a free header off-target before the Besiktas striker swivelled and fired just wide of Hart’s left-hand post.

The hosts had a great chance to regain the lead in the 72nd when Vardy was pushed from behind in the box by Mehmet Topal having run in behind the Turkey defence, but Kane’s fierce effort smashed the left post and went wide.

England did find a winner, though, when Babacan fumbled Gary Cahill’s downward header at a corner and Vardy reacted first to smash in his third international goal.

Hart then preserved England’s victory in injury time with a brilliant instinctive from Olcay Sahan’s superb volley, and Hodgson’s men can now turn attentions to warm-up fixtures with Australia and Portugal.

What Canelo Alvarez’s knockout win over Amir Khan means for boxing

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KEVIN LOLE /LAS VEGAS – Ever the showman, Canelo Alvarez raced to the ropes only seconds after knocking out Amir Khan with a perfectly placed right hand and asked Gennady Golovkin to enter the ring.

It was a positive sign that perhaps the most exciting big-money fight that could be made in boxing may come to fruition.

Alvarez retained the WBC middleweight title with the devastating knockout, which came at 2:37 of the sixth round before 16,540 rabid Alvarez fans at the new $375 million T-Mobile Arena.

Golovkin, who holds the IBF, WBA and interim WBC belts, is an undefeated knockout artist who is drawing huge ratings on HBO and a massive cult following. But he has been frustrated by his inability to coax one of boxing’s big names into the ring.

WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman allowed the Alvarez-Khan fight to proceed with the stipulation that the winner must fight Golovkin next.

Alvarez seemed to indicate that he’s ready to make the mega-bout. Promoter Oscar De La Hoya called T-Mobile Arena Alvarez’s new home, but invited Cowboys owner Jerry Jones to the fight. He said AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, was in the running to host the bout.

After celebrating his knockout briefly with members of his team, Alvarez ran to the ropes and shouted to Golovkin.

“I invited him into the ring,” Alvarez said. “Like we say in Mexico, ‘We don’t [expletive] around.’ I don’t fear anyone. We don’t come to play in this sport [and] I fear no one in this sport.”

When he got to the post-fight news conference, De La Hoya dramatically began shouting, as if Golovkin were still in the nearly deserted arena.

“Golovkin, make sure you answer your phone tomorrow morning,” De La Hoya said. “We will call you. We will call whoever deals for you.”

But sources told Yahoo Sports that even if De La Hoya makes those calls to Team Golovkin, there is momentum to make a rematch with Miguel Cotto.

Golden Boy promotes Alvarez and Roc Nation Sports promotes Cotto. Alvarez won the WBC belt from Cotto in November with an impressive unanimous decision.

Sources told Yahoo Sports that Golden Boy and Roc Nation came to terms on a grievance they had with each other that arose following the November fight.

Cotto had a 55-45 revenue split edge per contract in the fight, because he came in as the champion. But several days before the fight, Cotto dumped the belt because he was in a dispute with the sanctioning body over the amount he had to pay in fees.

So Alvarez, who paid the fees that night, could win it and Cotto could not. Afterward, when it came to splitting the revenues, Golden Boy wanted to change the 55-45 split in favor of Cotto since he was technically no longer the champion when the fight happened.

After they settled their dispute, Golden Boy and music mogul Jay-Z’s Roc Nation have made progress toward a rematch.

De La Hoya, though, insisted he was only focusing on Alvarez.

“I’m not thinking of anyone else but Triple-G,” De La Hoya said.

With the retirement of Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao, Alvarez has become boxing’s biggest star. Fans have pleaded for a fight with Golovkin for more than a year, but De La Hoya opted first to go with Khan.

Khan, who was fighting for the first time above welterweight, gave Alvarez a battle for most of the six rounds.

Alvarez was up on two of the three scores, leading 49-46 on Glenn Trowbridge’s card and 48-47 on Glenn Feldman’s at the time of the stoppage. Adalaide Byrd had Khan up 48-47, the same score as Yahoo Sports.

But Khan boxed beautifully for much of the night, using angles and controlling the distance to frustrate Alvarez. Alvarez was swinging and missing quite a bit in the early going, though it was clear his size and power were going to be major factors.

“If he didn’t adjust and change his game plan, [Khan] would have frustrated him the whole 12 rounds,” De La Hoya said.

Khan cracked Alvarez with a straight right that landed squarely on the chin and it had no impact on Alvarez. He just kept moving forward.

The reason the announcement of the fight with Khan wasn’t met with joy was obvious when Alvarez landed his first square right hand. The punch landed and Khan was looking at the lights in an ending eerily similar to the 2009 bout between Pacquiao and Ricky Hatton did.

Alvarez has gotten to the point in his career where he is bigger than the belt, so he’ll be able to dictate terms to Golovkin in things such as the purse split, the weight limit and the venue.

Loeffler’s strategy is to collect as many belts as he can while awaiting one of the sport’s big names, like Alvarez, to agree to face Golovkin. So if an Alvarez-Golovkin deal doesn’t get done, Loeffler will push the WBC to live up to his promise and strip Alvarez of the belt and give it to Golovkin.

“If we get all the belts, eventually if they want to fight for a title, they’re going to have to come to us sooner or later,” Loeffler said earlier Saturday.

Golovkin has been surprisingly patient as he’s sought one of the sport’s big names. He said he wasn’t worried so much about winning as getting into a battle of heart with Alvarez.

“I don’t care about the scorecards,” he told Yahoo Sports with a dismissive wave of his hands. “Let’s fight. Let’s go and see who forces who to back up. I want it to be a battle of wills and see what happens.”

Based on the way Alvarez looked much of the night against Khan, who was fighting for the first time at 155 pounds, it would be a long night against Golovkin.

It’s long past time for the fight to happen, though. Golovkin wants it. Alvarez wants it. And clearly, the fans want it.

It’s time for De La Hoya to do the right thing and make the biggest bout that can be made in the sport.

Bucharest Dinamo player Ekeng dies after collapse at match

Patrick Ekeng collapsed on the pitch during his team's Romanian Liga 1 match at home against Viitorul on Friday, and was pronounced dead at the hospital approximately 90 minutes later.
Patrick Ekeng collapsed on the pitch during his team’s Romanian Liga 1 match at home against Viitorul on Friday, and was pronounced dead at the hospital approximately 90 minutes later.

BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) — Dinamo Bucharest player Patrick Ekeng died after he collapsed during a match in the Romanian capital on Friday, doctors said. He was 26.

Cristian Pandrea, a spokesman for the Floreasca Emeregency Hospital, said doctors tried for an hour to resuscitate the Cameroon midfielder but failed. He said the cause of death was not known.

The home match between Dinamo and Viitorul Constanta was at 3-3 and being broadcast live when midfielder Ekeng fell to the ground in the 69th minute, seven minutes after he went on as a substitute. Local media said he had a heart attack.

Ekeng was immediately taken to the hospital, where dozens of fans gathered outside.

Players and staff could be seen crying as events unfolded. Some went with him to the hospital.

He has played for Spanish club Cordoba CF, Swiss club Lausanne, and French club Le Mans. He moved to Dinamo in 2015.

Ekeng is survived by a wife and daughter who are in Paris. Prosport.ro, an online sports publication reported he was due to fly to Paris after the Romanian Cup final on Tuesday between Dinamo and CFR Cluj.

Local media reported his wife will arrive in Romania on Saturday.

In October 2000, Dinamo captain Catalin Hildan collapsed and died during a friendly.

Transfer news: Renato to Man United; $50 million Batshuayi to West Ham

Renato

By Joe Prince-Wright  / Benfica teenager Renato Sanches could cost Manchester United $60 million this summer and the Portuguese youngster is already preparing for his move. According to Record in Portugal, Sanches is “prepared and excited” about a move to United and knows a deal is being discussed about a move this summer. It is believed the deal could cost in excess of $80 million when all is said and done.

The 18-year-old box-to-box midfielder is one of the hottest properties on the planet and despite Louis Van Gaal‘s struggling to get into the UEFA Champions League for next season, it still won’t stop them splashing some serious cash on Sanches. Plus, it worked out pretty well for United the last time they signed a teenager from Portugal… (ahem, Cristiano Ronaldo).

Another big money move, and a surprising one at that, could see West Ham United move for Belgian striker Michy Batshuayi.

The Guardian believes that the Hammers have put in a bid in excess of $50 million for the Marseille striker who has scored 16 Ligue 1 goals this season. He is 22-years-old and it is believed Slaven Bilic wanted to sign him in January but was told he wouldn’t be available until the summer.

With the 2016 European Championships coming up, Batshuayi should be included in Marc Wilmots’ 23-man Belgian squad but will face competition to get into the team from the likes of Romelu Lukaku, Divock Origi and Christian Benteke. Like the aforementioned trio, Batshuayi is a powerful striker who can hold the ball up but is also able to get in-behind opposition defenses.

West Ham have enjoyed great success in plucking Dimitri Payet from Marseille for $15 million last summer but they will likely face competition from Juventus, Roma, Borussia Dortmund and others for the Belgian’s signature.

The Daily Mail claims that new Chelsea boss Antonio Conte has earmarked Gonzalo Higuain as his main transfer target this summer.

Higuain, 28, has been in fine form for Napoli this season, scoring 34 goals in 40 appearances in all competitions. Per the report, the Argentine striker is said to be concerned of playing second fiddle to Diego Costa at Stamford Bridge. However, if Costa is moved on with lucrative offers from China reportedly lined up, then Higuain could provide the goals to kick off Conte’s reign in west London.

The former Real Madrid striker has scored 223 goals in 451 career games and has 25 goals in 52 games for Argentina. It is clear Conte wants to stamp his authority on this team and with Costa scoring just 11 times this season, getting in a goal-machine will be the biggest target for the new Chelsea boss. Higuain will cost Chelsea over $60 million.

 

Khan ready for ‘dream’ boxing showdown with Alvarez

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Amir Khan (right) will have to produce one of the greatest displays ever seen by a British boxer if he is to beat WBC middleweight champion Saul Alvarez in Las Vegas on Saturday

 

Los Angeles (AFP) – Amir Khan insisted he is ready for the fight of his life when he steps up two divisions to take on Mexican world middleweight champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez in Las Vegas this weekend.

The British boxer, who normally boxes at welterweight, faces a daunting battle against the hard-hitting Alvarez on Saturday in a fight which many believe is a risk too far for the 29-year-old from Bolton.

However Khan insists he is relishing the prospect of star billing after enduring years of frustration trying unsuccessfully to land a bout against the now retired Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao.

“It’s my time and I’m going to grab it with both hands,” Khan told a press conference.

“It’s been my dream to get a big fight like this in Las Vegas and I’m not going to let it go.

“Come this fight you’re going to see the best Amir Khan. Canelo’s a tough guy. He’s strong but we’re going to be ready for what he brings to the table,” added Khan, who is 31-3 with 19 knockouts.

Khan, who is of Pakistani descent, also referenced the US presidential election campaign rhetoric of likely Republican nominee Donald Trump, who has vowed to bar Muslims from entering the United States while promising to build a wall on the US-Mexico border.

“Who knows? This could be the last fight for me and Canelo in Las Vegas if Donald Trump becomes president,” joked Khan, a Muslim.

World Boxing Council middleweight champion Alvarez (46-1, 32 knockouts) meanwhile said he was confident his power would be too much for Khan.

“Who knows? This could be the last fight for me and Canelo in Las Vegas if Donald Trump becomes president,” joked Khan, a Muslim.

“I’m very happy with the work that I’ve done — he’s a very fast, elusive, tricky fighter. I know the work I’ve done and I’m confident I can go in there and break him down,” Alvarez said through an interpreter.

The bout’s promoter Oscar De La Hoya described the fight at Las Vegas’ new T-Mobile Arena as a “classic case of speed versus power.”

De La Hoya insisted that the idea of a Khan upset was not outside the realm of possibility — citing the example of Leicester City’s remarkable title triumph in the English Premier League.

“Whovever thought that Leicester City, a 5,000-1 shot could win? Whoever thought that Muhammad Ali could knock out George Foreman?,” De La Hoya said.

“This is a fighter who is willing to fight the very best. There’s a reason why Floyd Mayweather didn’t want to fight him, why Manny Pacquiao didn’t want to fight him.”

Emmanuel Amuneke axes six players from Nigeria U20 camp

The coach has decamped six players as battle for a shirt ahead of the U20 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Burundi
The coach has decamped six players as battle for a shirt ahead of the U20 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Burundi

Nigeria U20 coach Emmanuel Amuneke has announced that he has cut down his provisional squad for the U20 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers to 31 players after removing six footballers from the list.

The decision was taken after the Flying Eagles defeated Nigeria National League side, Supreme court 1-0 in a friendly game with Kingsley Michael getting the only game of the encounter via a penalty kick in the 65th minute.

Coach Amuneke thanked the dropped players for their perseverance during the screening exercise and advised them to stay fit as their services may still be needed in the future.

One more player will be dropped next week to reduce the number in camp to thirty. The Flying Eagles have so far played five matches defeating Sia-One Academy 4-1, Dabo Babes 5-0, Ace FC of Kaduna 6-2 and holding Dreams FC to a 0-0 draw.

Nigeria must beat Burundi over two legs to advance to the final round of the qualifiers in July this year.

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