January World Cup Possible, Says Blatter

Qatar's Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani accepts the World Cup trophy

Fifa president Sepp Blatter expects the 2022 World Cup in Qatar to be held in January because of the country’s intensely hot summers.

The tournament is traditionally held in June and July but temperatures in Qatar at that time of year can top 40C.

Speaking in the Qatari capital Doha, Blatter said: “I expect it [the 2022 World Cup] will be held in winter.

“It is 11 years away but we must decide the most adequate period, which means January or the end of the year.”

Blatter, who is in Doha for the start of the Asian Cup, added: “Although we have the basic conditions of their bid for a June and July World Cup, the Fifa executive committee is entitled to change anything that was in the bid.

“When you play football you have to protect the main people – the players.”

Fifa general secretary Jerome Valcke also supports the prospect of the 2022 World Cup being rescheduled.

Speaking in December, he said: “Why not? It means you open the World Cup to countries where they can never play it in June and July because it’s never the right period of time.

“If you can do so, it would be a solution to open the organisation of the World Cup to a number of countries in this period which is winter in Europe but not winter in the rest of the world.”

He added: “You can’t just make a decision to move the tournament and that is it.

“It means you have to change completely when the leagues will play, mainly I would say in Europe. It’s less difficult in the rest of the world.”

Qatar beat Australia, Japan, South Korea and the United States to host the tournament in the vote by Fifa’s executive committee on 2 December in Zurich.

Initially, former German World Cup-winning captain and coach Franz Beckenbauer had aired his worries about the health risk of the heat to players if the World Cup was staged during the Gulf nation’s summer.

Meanwhile, Blatter also revealed in December that several nations in the Middle East were interested in hosting games during the 2022 World Cup and that he had met with officials in Oman, Bahrain and Kuwait during a tour of the region.

However, he did not elaborate on which of Qatar’s neighbours wanted to host the games, or how many could be hosted, but he pointed out that such a decision would have to come first from Qatar and then from Fifa’s 24-man executive committee.

“This demand has to come from the Qatar football organisation by saying we would like to have such and such things and this has to go back to Fifa and the Fifa executive committee has to say open it or don’t open it,” he said.

“I can say all these countries are very happy. First of all, the World Cup is going to the Middle East and they are interested – I would say a little bit more than interested – to be part of this competition.

“It is a wish. It is easy to say but it is not so easy to realise. For the time being, it’s too early.”

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Ghana: Award List Dominated by Football Players

Black Stars of Ghana
Ghana Black Stars

Two members of the Black Stars are in the running for the Personality of the Year 2010 award, the highest honour by the Sports Writers Association of Ghana (SWAG).

Ghana’s Asamoah Gyan and Richard Kingson face competition from national bantamweight boxing champion, Joseph Agbeko for the award to be decided later in May. The public will contribute to deciding the overall winner via a mobile text poll.

Just like recent times, football again dominates the 2010 nominations.

Both Gyan and Kingson are again nominated for the Footballer of the Year prize with Andre Ayew as the third nominee.

Ex-Ghana coach Milovan Rajevac and coach of the local Black Stars side Herbert Addo have been put up for the Coach of the Year award.

President of the Ghana Football Association Kwesi Nyantakyi would be honoured with the Chairman of the Year prize.

A successful run of results in 2010 has seen the Black Stars selected for the Team of the Year while ex-Ghana captain Stephen Appiah would be presented with the Dedication and Valour award.

Kevin-Prince Boateng and headline sponsor of the Black Stars, Gold Fields Ghana would be presented with Special Awards.

The sports media group today announced the nominees for the various sporting disciplines in the country during the year under review.

According to SWAG, the performance of the sportsmen both at the national and international levels served the criteria for settling on the nominees.

Award Nominees

Personality of the Year – Asamoah Gyan, Richard Kingson, Joseph Agbeko

Footballer of the Year – Andre Ayew, Asamoah Gyan, Richard Kingson.

Coach of the Year – Milovan Rajevac, Herbert Addo

Chairman of the Year – Kwesi Nyantakyi

Team of the Year – Black Stars

Dedication and Valour – Stephen Appiah

Special Awards – Kevin Prince Boateng, Gold Fields Ghana Limited

Source: Ghanafa.org

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Ghana Is Not Moved by Nigeria, Coach

Ghana Black Satellites (bottom) and Nigerian Flying Eagles (top)
Ghana Black Satellites (bottom) and Nigerian Flying Eagles (top)
Seth Appiah

THE coach of the Ghana Black Satellites, Orlando Wellington has told Goal.com he is aware of the pressure that comes with it to lead the defending champion to the upcoming African U-20 Championship in Libya.

“It’s not going to be easy but we’re ready for it. We have been there before and we know how it feels to get to the top and we’re ready to repeat history,” he said.

Ghana is in Group B described as the ‘Group of Death’ that comprise Nigeria, Cameroun, and Gambia while host Libya has been paired in Group A alongside Mali, Egypt and Lesotho.

Wellington noted he is aware of the capabilities of his opponents but the challenge spurs his side on to go for laurels.

“We’re in a tough group but with deter-mi-nation we can scale over them. I have confidence in my boys and they are ready for the task,” he assured.

The semi-finalists will represent the continent at the FIFA U-20 World Cup slated for Colombia later in the year.

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I’m Still Not My Best, Drogba

Chelse striker, Didier Drogba
Chelse striker, Didier Drogba

Didier Drogba has admitted the Chelsea dressing room has been an “unhappy” place during their recent slump in form and says his own performances have been hampered by his battles with injury and malaria.

Both Chelsea and their Ivorian forward have been some way short of their best since a promising start to the season, with the Blues recording just one win in nine and Drogba contributing only eight goals in all competitions.

His fitness problems have been well documented, and he told The Sun: “Injuries and the malaria have damaged my performances. I am still not 100% but I am fighting in each match to improve my playing levels and help the team.”

He added: “This season has been complicated for me by physical problems.

“It has not been easy to regain my strength but we need the points and my presence is necessary. I have always sacrificed for the team – and Chelsea need me.”

As for the team’s struggles, during which they have slipped from pace-setters to outside the Champions League spots, the 32-year-old added: “Chelsea’s current position compared to last season is actually very similar but maybe our injuries and less goals have brought about a negative mood.

“In the last weeks Carlo Ancelotti has been unhappy – and the squad, too. Chelsea are not accustomed to defeats and the dressing room has suffered.

“But the season is long and it is normal to suffer lots of changes.

Copyright © 2011 The Press Association

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African U20 Draw Complete

The next generation of Ghana players want to emulate their 2009 double winning colleagues.
The next generation of Ghana players want to emulate their 2009 double winning colleagues.

Defending champions Ghana have been paired with Nigeria, Cameroon and Gambia in the draw for the upcoming African U20 championship in March.

Hosts Libya are in the other group, along with Mali, Egypt and Lesotho.

The tournament takes place from 18 March to 1 April and the four semi-finalists will qualify for the U20 World Cup later in 2011.

Ghana are also defending World champions and the Black Satellites are determined to hold on to both crowns.

“It’s very important for us,” coach Orlando Wellington told the BBC before the draw was made.

“It’s a big challenge for me and the players – we have to work very hard to go to the World Cup. It’s not easy but financially and physically we are prepared.”

Wellington insisted that his crop of youngsters have even more potential than their double-winning predecessors.

“When you talk about technique this team is far ahead of the past champions,” he told the BBC’s African sports programme Fast Track.

“These people are tactically and technically [more] sound than the other team. The others play more aggressively but this team can play very good football.”

The four teams in each group will meet in a round robin format, with group winners and runners-up progressing to the semi-finals – and a place at the World Cup in Colombia in July.

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Transfer rumour: Kingston for Blackpool?

Ghana midfielder Laryea Kingston
Ghana midfielder Laryea Kingston
Prof. Emmanuel Boakye

Blackpool Football Club an English Premier League side wants to finalize a deal for Ghana midfielder Laryea Kingston ahead of the January transfer window.

The Club Manager Ian Holloway is desperate to bolster his squad after an impressive debut campaign in the Premier League and Kingston is close to a switch to Bloomfield Road.

The 30-year-old, who is the brother of Seasiders keeper Richard Kingson (despite the different spelling), is available on a free having terminated his contract with Dutch side Vitesse Arnhem and Holloway is ready to offer him a deal at Blackpool.

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Poor World Cup final sums up bad year for soccer

Reuters

From the earliest days of January to the last days of December, this was a year of tragedy, scandal and controversy for the world’s most popular sport. Even the first World Cup finals in Africa, held in South Africa in the southern hemisphere’s winter months of June and July, left a bitter-sweet memory, rather than a golden one to cherish for generations.

As well as a poor World Cup, soccer suffered tragedy when gunmen attacked the Togo team at the Africa Cup of Nations in Angola at the start of the year.

There was scandal at the pinnacle of the game with FIFA suspending two of its executive committee members after allegations that they were prepared to sell their votes to decide the hosts of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

FIFA’s controversial decision to award the 2022 finals to Qatar, despite fears from FIFA’s own inspectors about playing in the Arabian summer heat, also made headlines around the world.

While there were great on-field triumphs, including Inter Milan becoming European champions for the first time since 1965 and the continuing brilliant form of Lionel Messi at Barcelona, some top clubs, afflicted by poor financial management, struggled to cope with debts.

The World Cup represented a success for South Africa which organised a safe, largely crime-free tournament with enthusiastic crowds and a unique atmosphere, but it had few memorable matches and a truly awful final.

The game, which ended in a deserved 1-0 win for Spain over a cynical Netherlands side thanks to Andres Iniesta’s winner four minutes before the end of extra time, was a spiteful affair of 13 yellow cards and a sending-off for Dutchman Johnny Heitinga.

A lack of goals, bitterly cold weather at the first winter World Cup in 32 years and a shortage of stand-out performances throughout, all contributed to the sense of anti-climax.

The unpredictable flight of the Jabulani ball may have been one factor; others were the lack of goals and a prevalence of draws in the opening round.

That trend concerns FIFA so much it has convened a task force to try to improve matters for the 2014 finals in Brazil.

The game’s biggest names failed to impress in South Africa. Perhaps the players were tired after long, tough European seasons but Messi, Kaka, Fernando Torres and Wayne Rooney did not score a goal between them, while Didier Drogba and Cristiano Ronaldo scored only one goal each.

Italy’s reign as world champions ended in first-round elimination while France, runners-up four years earlier, imploded with a player revolt over the expulsion of Nicolas Anelka and they went home, like Italy, without winning a match.

France was convulsed by the antics of its team, sparking a national inquiry which ended with some players receiving bans and unpopular coach Raymond Domenech losing his job.

His replacement Laurent Blanc suspended all 23 World Cup squad members for his first match in charge while Anelka’s 18-match ban effectively ended his international career.

African teams also disappointed with five of the six eliminated in the group stage, including South Africa, the first host team to fail to reach the knockout rounds.

While the World Cup was disappointing, at least it avoided much of the crime many in the West had predicted, especially after the attack on the Togo team in January when a bus carrying the squad came under gunfire in the Angolan separatist enclave of Cabinda. A bus driver, the team’s assistant manager and a media officer died.

The Togo squad returned home and withdrew from the tournament which continued without them and was eventually won by Egypt.

FIFA scandal

At the end of the year FIFA’s decision to name the hosts for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup finals on the same day effectively led to the governing body’s biggest scandal since it came into existence 106 years ago.

Following allegations by the Sunday Times newspaper in London that two FIFA executives were prepared to sell their votes for cash, FIFA were forced to investigate and somewhat reluctantly suspended and fined six officials, two of them from the decision-making executive committee.

Allegations of collusion among voting committee members continued to dominate headlines after FIFA awarded the 2018 finals to Russia and, more surprisingly, the 2022 finals to Qatar, the tiny Arab country of 1.6 million people where summer temperatures can reach 50 degrees Celsius.

Since those decisions were taken on Dec. 2, FIFA president Sepp Blatter has fiercely defended them, saying taking the World Cup to new territories such as eastern Europe and the Middle East made perfect sense and was part of FIFA’s gift in developing the game around the world.

Much of the world’s attention, as always, was focused on UEFA’s Champions League which ended in triumph for Jose Mourinho who became only the third man to win the European Cup with two different clubs when his Inter Milan beat Bayern Munich 2-0 in the final in Madrid in May.

It was Inter’s first continental triumph for 45 years and followed an Italian Cup and League double, before Mourinho left for Real Madrid. They added the Club World Cup to their honours this month — their fifth trophy of the year.

Although Messi had a poor World Cup he inspired Barcelona to the Spanish title, while Atletico Madrid brought more success to Spain by beating unlikely finalists Fulham in the Europa Cup final in Hamburg.

There were also Cup and League doubles for Chelsea in England and Bayern Munich in Germany.

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Samuel Eto’o is African footballer of the year

Samuel Eto’o has been named African Footballer of the Year for 2010 ahead of Didier Drogba and Asamoah Gyan.

The three forwards made up the shortlist at the annual Confederation of African Football awards ceremony in Cairo, with the winner being voted for by the coaches and captains of the continent’s 53 national teams

Eto’o came out on top despite enduring a wretched 12 months with Cameroon, who lost all three of their group games at the World Cup and disappointed at the African Cup of Nations.

He was in stunning form at club level though, helping Inter Milan win a spectacular treble last season and then clinch Club World Cup glory earlier this month.

Samuel Eto'o, 2010 African Footballer of the Year
Samuel Eto'o, 2010 African Footballer of the Year

It is the fourth time in his career that Eto’o, 29, has claimed the prize after winning three times in a row from 2003.

TP Mazembe, the four-time African Champions League winners who stunned Internacional of Brazil 2-0 in the United Arab Emirates last week before finishing runners-up to Inter Milan, were named Club of the Year.

Milovan Rajevac, the humble Serbian coach who made 2010 such a memorable year for Ghana, took the Coach of the Year award. He resigned after the World Cup to join Saudi Arabian club Al-Ittihad Jeddah.

Other award winners included Al-Ahly and Egypt midfielder Ahmed Hassan (Africa-based Player) and Ghana midfielder Kwadwo Asamoah (Most Promising Talent) while Ghana were predictably named best national team after reaching the World Cup quarter-finals.

Skysports

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