Adam Gilchrist plugs cricket as an Olympic sport


Adam Gilchrist, the retired Australian cricket international, has used his Colin Cowdrey Spirit of Cricket address to call for the sport to make a concerted effort to be included in the Olympics. "The single best way to spread the game globally," said Gilchrist, "is for the ICC to actively seek its inclusion as an Olympic sport."
He observed: "Without doubt the Olympic movement provides one of the most efficient and cost effective distribution networks for individual sports to spread their wings globally. It would be difficult to see a better, quicker or cheaper way of spreading the game throughout the world."
Several moves have been made by the game's administrators in recent years to begin a campaign to get cricket back in the Olympic programme for the first time since 1900, when a Devon and Somerset Wanderers side representing Britain beat France in a one-off match. In 2007 the IOC recognised cricket as a member sport and the ICC has repeatedly said it intends to push for full inclusion.
The earliest point at which cricket could be included would be 2020, with seven sports already competing for two spare spaces on the roster for 2016. Gilchrist believes cricket has one key advantage over rugby sevens, golf and squash, all of which are among the seven currently pushing for inclusion.
"The Olympic movement's only remaining dead pocket in the world happens to coincide with cricket's strongest – the subcontinent," said Gilchrist. "This region, which includes India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, represents just over one fifth of the world's population. But with the exception of their great hockey teams of the past, these cricket powerhouses have received barely a handful of Olympic medals in nearly 100 years of competition.
"What better way for the IOC to spread the Olympic brand and ideals into this region than on the back of T20 cricket? The rewards for both the ICC and IOC getting this right would be enormous."

source: http://guardian.co

Time to make cricket the only religion on the subcontinent

Just down the corridor from me at the Hotel Plaza in Havana is the suite where George Herman Ruth – Babe or the Bambino to baseball fans – stayed 90 years ago. It's a shrine of sorts to the first of baseball's marquee names, a supreme slugger who captivated fans and divided opinion wherever he went. In so many ways, Ruth was an iconic symbol of pre-Depression America, just as Sachin Tendulkar became the face of post-liberalisation India. But while the Babe was a larger-than-life character in every sense, Tendulkar's time in the spotlight has been notable mainly for the near-complete absence of controversy and an almost painful shyness.
Baseball runs through the veins of people on this island. While a small number of top players have defected to the major leagues across the water, the vast majority of those who have played for a wonderfully talented amateur side have lived by the Teófilo Stevenson adage that a few million dollars is nothing compared to the love of eight million compañeros.
Having just covered the climactic stages of the ICC World Twenty20, it is enough to make you wonder why Cuba is nowhere in the picture when it comes to cricket. Certainly, there is an awareness that such a sport exists. At immigration I was grilled on account of being a journalist, until the young man asking the questions inquired which topics I covered. When I said sport, and cricket in particular, he took a step back and imitated a big hit that would have gone a fair distance over cow corner.
Given how the Chappell brothers played baseball as a winter sport, and how naturally athletic Cubans are, they'd have a crack Twenty20 outfit in no time with the requisite guidance. That, in turn, leads to the ICC and promotion of the game worldwide. The sooner they reduce the farce of a 50-over World Cup to a manageable four weeks or less with fewer teams the better. For spreading the gospel, the only format that works is Twenty20. Rugby realised that nearly two decades ago with Sevens and cricket has to follow suit if it harbours serious ambitions of being an Olympic sport.
Test cricket may be the pinnacle when it comes to skill and even drama but it's never going to rival the slam-bang version for popularity. To expect that would be to expect Vivaldi to outsell the Beatles. There's a place for the purist but snobbery is something the game can ill afford if it wants to be globally relevant.
Ideally, the World Cup would be restricted to just the top eight or 10 teams (once the anomaly of a tournament called the Champions Trophy disappears from the calendar) and the World Twenty20 could then be thrown open to more teams. Had Afghanistan or Kenya been able to play this time, we might have seen even more upsets. In a 50-over game, a team like Kenya wouldn't have a prayer against Australia or South Africa but in the abbreviated form anything's possible. You only have to look at Fiji's magnificent Sevens side and the emerging Kenyans to see how much deeper the talent pool becomes when an additional element of chance is introduced.
Perhaps in the future, teams touring the Caribbean could play a one-off Twenty20 game at a non-traditional venue such as Cuba or the Dominican Republic. Plant the seed and see how it germinates. Unlike many of the world's big banks, the ICC and some of the individual boards certainly have enough cash to spare.
Fortunately, though, money isn't everything. The sweetest aspect of the World T20 was the early exit of Australia, India and England, the three countries that seem to regard the Future Tours Programme as some kind of personal fiefdom. While it could be said that the security situations in Pakistan and Sri Lanka have prevented more matches being scheduled there, it still doesn't explain the reluctance to invite them. The Pakistanis were once Asia's biggest drawcard, while the Lankans have reached the final in two of the past three global events.
A recent study revealed that the Indian Premier League has already become one of the world's most lucrative sporting properties but it was probably their exclusion from it that provided one of the spurs for Pakistan's players on the world stage. The players who had their contracts torn up, including a certain Shahid Khan Afridi (Deccan Chargers), had a point to prove and they did so to thrilling effect. Like the Cubans, the Pathans have a natural aptitude for ball sports – the squash Khans, Jahangir and Jansher, both hail from Nawankali, Umar Gul's home town – and it would be foolish to underestimate the role cricket could play in keeping restless youth away from guns and other malignant influences.
The Taliban may have succeeded in shutting down girls' schools and hairdressing salons but if the reaction to the World Twenty20 triumph is any indicator they will need to fight a thousand years or longer to eradicate cricket's grip on the nation. "It means everything to us and our nation," said Younus Khan, another Pathan, and that's not hyperbole. Given the game's power to unite and the tendency of religious leaders to divide, maybe it's time to abolish all other faiths and make cricket the only religion on the subcontinent. Once that happens, maybe we can send a few missionaries over to Cuba.

source: http://guardian.co.

Andy Murray accused of using gamesmanship to upset opponent

takes his second step towards what he hopes will be the Wimbledon final today after defending himself from accusations by his Latvian opponent, Ernests Gulbis, that he feigned injury during their match at Queen's last year. Gulbis felt Murray used a medical time-out to change the course of the tie before going on to win in three sets.
The British No1 injured his right thumb during a fall and also had problems with his neck, pulling out of his quarter-final against Andy Roddick the next day. However, Gulbis claimed yesterday that Murray did not have anything wrong with him. "He just broke my rhythm and I was not an experienced enough player to deal with that at the time," he said.
Responding to the 20-year-old's claim, Murray said: "That's very disappointing to hear. I never once used any of the rules that certain players have used to try to gain an upper hand in a match or to slow my opponent down. Definitely when I played him at Queen's that was not the case. I didn't know there was a problem but I couldn't grip the racket the following day. There are so many things in matches where guys take toilet breaks, injury time-outs, delay you sometimes when you are trying to serve and take a little bit longer between the points than they are meant to. It happens all the time. It's just part of sport."
Murray added he had never resorted to gamesmanship. "It's a form of cheating. It's bending the rules to gain an advantage. It's a bit like diving in football. It does go on and certain players do it and certain players don't. I'm one of the guys who doesn't do it."
Murray, third on Centre Cout today, said he would have preferred to have won his opening match against Robert Kendrick in straight sets and was hoping for a more straightforward victory today. "It is sometimes good to have tight matches early in tournaments but, if I had won in three sets, I would have been just as happy as I am just now. At the US Open when I got to the final I had some tough matches right at the start and when I managed to come through them it gave me confidence. But the easier you win the better, normally."
Murray revealed that he and his brother, Jamie, had agreed to buy a share in Stirling Albion for whom their grandfather played. "I went to watch them a few times when I was younger and we used to play five-a-side at their training facility. It would be nice if they could stay alive but it's so tough nowadays. And it's not like they are doing a whole lot of winning either." Unlike him.

source: http:/guardian.co.

Euro: the way to frcovery


Are the indications of development in the Euro Zone by now so intense that the government is not able to begin excluding is monetary spur and the ECB start talking about rate hikes or not. Although they are keeping their sense of concern, apparently the region’s finance ministers are to be leaning this way, and even a small bend from official can be interpreted into firmness by speculators. Examining the eminent week, there is abundance of economic fodder on the docket – and most of it is powerful enough to ignite instability and change timing on the ultimate economic upturn. But the actual fundamental theme is going to be in formative whether policy officials’ fortitude to ease a recovery is creditable or setting the economy up for another catastrophe should the rebound collapse.
source: forexcult.com

Euro: the way to frcovery

us dollar consolidation keeps on going


The US dollar finished week up against almost all of the majors, except the British pound and Japanese yen, but the currency actually did little but combine. Looking to the DXY index, one can indicate that the US dollar dropped on Friday was eventually advocated by an increasing trend-line around 80 linking the June 3 and June 11 lows. With struggle threatening just up at 81.35, this period of tense range-bound trade gives the currency at risk to breakouts this coming week, particularly since there is going to be quite a bit of event risk on hand from the US. On Tuesday, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) is expected to give details on that existing home sales went up for the 2nd straight month at a rate of 2.6 % in May to a yearly speed of 4.80 million from 4.68 million.

Gov. Sanford Admits Affair and Explains Disappearance

But his confession and apology, in a rambling, nationally televised news conference, left other mysteries unsolved, like whether he had lied to his staff members as late as Monday about his whereabouts, whether the affair had definitively ended, whether he would resign from the governorship and whether he would even have acknowledged the affair had he not been met at the airport in Atlanta by a reporter upon his return.
Mr. Sanford, 49, admitted that he had been in Buenos Aires since Thursday, not hiking on the Appalachian Trail, as his staff members had said.
Standing in the rotunda of the South Carolina Statehouse, the governor, a Republican who had been considered a possible presidential candidate in 2012, teared up as he spoke, taking more than seven minutes to apologize before getting to the crux of the matter.
“The bottom line is this,” he said. “I have been unfaithful to my wife.”
The governor’s wife, Jenny, 46, who did not attend the news conference, issued a statement later in the day saying that while she loves her husband, she asked him to leave the family two weeks ago in a trial separation, though she still believes the marriage can be repaired. The couple have four sons, the youngest 10.
“We reached a point where I felt it was important to look my sons in the eyes and maintain my dignity, self-respect, and my basic sense of right and wrong,” she said. Because of the separation, she said, she did not know where he was in the last week.
The governor, who raised his national profile by opposing the Obama administration’s economic stimulus plan, said he would resign from his position as chairman of the Republican Governors Association. He will be succeeded by Gov. Haley Barbour of Mississippi. A reporter tried to ask Mr. Sanford if he would resign from the governor’s office, but he did not answer.
Coming a week after the admission of an extramarital affair by Senator John Ensign, a Nevada Republican who had also begun exploring a presidential run in 2012, the governor’s acknowledgment was yet another blow to Republican hopes for a strong field of challengers to President Obama.
“Personal circumstances over the course of the last week have managed to shrink the front line of the 2012 possible contender list by 30 percent,” said Phil Musser, a former executive director of the Republican Governors Association.
Mr. Sanford is regarded as a political lone wolf and has made numerous enemies even within his own party, which controls both houses of the state legislature. Scott H. Huffmon, a political science professor at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, S.C., said it was unclear whether there would be pressure on the governor to resign. “His opponents,” Dr. Huffmon said, “are sitting back trying to figure out if they’d be better off with a completely emasculated governor to deal with or if they’d be better off with André Bauer,” the lieutenant governor, who would take office if Mr. Sanford resigned.
Mr. Sanford made at least one state-sponsored trip to Argentina during the period of his relationship. In an interview late Wednesday, Daniel Scioli, the governor of Buenos Aires Province, said he met with Mr. Sanford on June 26, 2008, in La Plata, a town outside Buenos Aires. Mr. Scioli said the request for the meeting had come from Mr. Sanford’s office via the United States Embassy.
The governor was not known as a moralist but has frowned on infidelity and as a congressman voted to impeach President Bill Clinton after the Monica Lewinsky affair. “He lied under a different oath, and that’s the oath to his wife,” Mr. Sanford said at the time on CNN. “So it’s got to be taken very, very seriously.”
Mr. Sanford and his wife had joined an intensive Bible study group for couples in the last few months, according to William H. Jones, president of Columbia International University, a conservative evangelical college. Dr. Jones said the governor and his wife had been encouraged to join the Bible study by a longtime friend, Cubby Culbertson, a businessman in Columbia who teaches the Bible and who was thanked by the governor in his news conference.
At the news conference, Mr. Sanford said his friendship with the unnamed woman began eight years ago and became a romance about a year ago. He said he had seen her three times since then. The relationship was “discovered” five months ago, he said, and he had been trying to reconcile with his wife.
Mr. Sanford strongly implied that he had ended the affair. “The one thing that you really find is that you absolutely want resolution,” he said. “And so oddly enough, I spent the last five days of my life crying in Argentina.”
On Wednesday afternoon, The State, the leading newspaper in Columbia, published on its Web site several e-mail messages it said it obtained in December between Mr. Sanford and a Buenos Aires woman the newspaper identified only as Maria.

source: http://nytimes.com

Launch the BMW 730d gallery


I had more than a month concentrating on regular road test cars following the repatriation of my long term Citroën C5, but now I have taken over Richard's BMW 730d while he enjoys his new Volvo C30. The 7 Series should be my kind of car. In my fifties, I am not after kicks in fast four-door cars. I have my old 911 and even older Lotus Elan for that type of fun, and frankly I have given up on modern cars offering the sense of involvement I get from these two. 

But I do value a quiet, comfortable, sophisticated drive for regular motoring. The 730d, you won't be surprised to know, serves all this up rather well, along with impressive economy. Richard's 42mpg average was never something I could hope to match on the type of driving I do, but in my book 36mpg is excellent for the shorter journeys I make and heavier foot I undoubtedly have.

source: cars.uk.msn.com

Petrol or diesel?


The debate at the pumps has been raging for years. But how do you choose between petrol and diesel power?ring up this subject and you will quickly realise that there are no grey areas in drivers' minds on the matter of petrol versus diesel. As both diesel and petrol technology improves, the difference increasingly comes down to personal driving preferences.One group will insist that petrol is far better, largely because petrol cars are faster, quieter and cheaper. Diesel fans will, of course, highlight the vastly better fuel consumption plus the improved torque from a diesel engine, which gives good pulling power and less gear changing, making driving in everyday, rather than race-track, conditions a pleasant experience. There are also the muddy waters of exhaust emissions, with strong arguments on both sides of the fence.
So what is the objective truth? Diesel engines inherently use less fuel than petrol cars, and so will undoubtedly save you money in the long run. This is particularly true in town driving, if you make a lot of short runs, or if you do towing, where the differences are even more marked. On long trips at motorway speeds the differential closes. Diesel fuel in the UK is usually priced close to unleaded petrol, so figure out the difference in hard figures comes down to a straight MPG comparison. However, if you travel a lot through France, you'll find that diesel is approximately two-thirds the price of petrol, enhancing the savings even further.

source: cars.uk.msn.com

Tears for Anne Keothavong as Britons slip away


Tears, valiant efforts, a disappointing display and an inevitable defeat. All in a day's work for Britain's tennis players at Wimbledon yesterday as hope and belief turned to dejection and wounded pride.

The tears and disappointing display belonged to Anne Keothavong, whose rise up the rankings had raised expectations of a good run. The valiant efforts came from Katie O'Brien, Georgie Stoop and Josh Goodall, all of whom took higher-ranked opponents to a final set. And the inevitable defeat came from Dan Evans, who was unsurprisingly outclassed 6-2, 6-3, 6-3 by the Russian No12 seed, Nikolay Davydenko.

Having broken into the world's top 50 this year, Keothavong would have expected to beat Patricia Mayr, an Austrian ranked 80 who was appearing in her first Wimbledon. But it seems that her 6-0, 6-0 defeat by the world No1 Dinara Safina in the first round of the French Open last month affected her more than first thought.

After going up by an early break in the first set she completely lost her way and slipped to a 7-5, 6-2 defeat, before breaking down in the press conference.

"I feel like I've let myself down more than anything," Keothavong said. "Wimbledon is such a special tournament to me. This year, especially, I just felt ... I've overcome so much just to get where I am.

"I felt like I was on the way to winning that first set and was doing what I had to do, and then it all just kind of seemed to fall apart. There's no way around it. It's been disappointing. I have higher expectations for myself as well. I feel like I'm a better tennis player compared to where I was this time last year, but maybe that match in Paris actually dented my confidence more than I realised at the time."

Keothavong had been troubled by a shoulder problem in recent weeks and, although she said she only had herself to blame for the loss, she was determined to look forward. "Although right now it's really hard to look at all the positives, I've still got a lot to look forward to in the summer and have another bash at it."

Stoop, the world No185, resumed her match with the seventh seed Vera Zvonareva yesterday morning at one set apiece but eventually succumbed 7-6, 4-6, 6-4, a superb effort against a player who reached the semi-finals of the Australian Open earlier this year. In the end, Zvonareva's greater experience showed and one break, in the ninth game of the final set, was enough as the Russian served out for victory.

"I'm feeling pretty down," the 21-year-old said. "But on the other hand, that was a great experience for me today. I fought as hard as I possibly could and I thought I gave a really good performance. Obviously I'm a bit disappointed because obviously I would love to have won."

O'Brien looked on course for a shock win when she led Iveta Benesova, a Czech ranked 73 places above her at No35, 3-1 in the final set. But Benesova broke back immediately and then broke once more on her way to a 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 win.

The British men's No2 Goodall, who resumed at one set apiece with Michael Llodra, pushed the Frenchman hard before being beaten 4-6, 7-6, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4. "I was disappointed but I think in general I'm pretty proud of myself," he said. "I've improved massively, even in the last couple weeks since Queen's so I can take that match and obviously look at what I need to work on. I'm quite happy with the performance."

Evans, at 19 the youngest of the British men, had the toughest draw of all against Davydenko but acquitted himself well enough, even if it was rather one-sided. "On paper, it's horrible for me," he said. "He hits quite hard. It could have been a nasty first-round scoreline but I think I did well out there."

source:  guardian.co

Willem de Waal's late leveller rains on Lions' stormy parade


Until the final kick of the game the midweek Lions had restored at least a measure of momentum to a faltering tour in a storm-lashed Cape Town today. They reckoned without Willem de Waal's fine touchline conversion in injury-time which earned a persevering Emerging Springboks side a draw and left the touring side wondering if their luck is ebbing away. At least the class of 2009 will return home as the first Lions side since 1989 to be unbeaten against provincial opposition, a strictly relative achievement but something to cling to nonetheless.

In many ways this was a game the Lions could have done without, given the precarious state of the series. In desperately tricky conditions not many individuals advanced their weekend Test prospects, although the appearance of Phil Vickery as a second-half replacement did at least offer the chastened prop a chance to put last Saturday's grim experience behind him. Keith Earls at full-back had his best game of the tour and scored the Lions' solitary try, while Tim Payne did not let anyone down on his Lions debut in the front row. The sight of James Hook replacing the captain Ronan O'Gara with just 45 minutes gone raised a few eyebrows but the selectorial jury remains out in both cases. The same is true on the wings where neither Luke Fitzgerald nor Shane Williams had much chance to heap pressure on the incumbent Ugo Monye ahead of tomorrow's team annuncement.

It would have been a minor miracle if anyone had dazzled in conditions which tested everyone's resolve. The Submerging Boks would have been a more appropriate name given the weather which bore scant resemblance to the cloudless blue skies in Pretoria awaiting the Lions this weekend. In sporting terms it was the equivalent of Andy Murray limbering up for Wimbledon with a trip to the Cairngorms. Rain is forecast to stick around for the rest of the Lions' stay on the Cape but the management, having taken expert medical advice, have chosen not to return to altitude until 24 hours before Saturday's kick-off.

Come rain or shine, this was still a special occasion for Payne, the newest Lion in the pack. One minute the 30-year-old Englishman was sitting at home wondering if he had made the right decision not to join some mates in Las Vegas, the next he was standing toe-to-toe with the next generation of Bok forwards. As if anxious to show solidarity with his club colleague Vickery, the 30-year-old conceded a penalty for collapsing the game's first scrum but generally the Lions held the whip hand against their enthusiastic young opponents at the set-pieces, in contrast to their travails in Durban.

As far as the scoreboard was concerned the touring side could have done without O'Gara missing an initial penalty goal attempt from bang in front of the sticks but the wind was on the evil side of capricious from the start. O'Gara soon made amends from point-blank range and the Lions established a handy 10-point cushion when Earls stepped neatly over after Zane Kirchner's attempted clearance had been charged down by Martyn Williams.

Kirchner is supposed to be among the brighter new kids on the South African block, as is the fly-half Earl Rose, a Danny Cipriani-style lookalike with a black headguard and a similar sense of adventure. Both possess talent but life is rarely that straightforward. Rose was abruptly reminded of the fact when a violent squall blasted through the stadium as he was lining up a long-range penalty attempt. It was not a night for delicate flowers.

A lead of 10–3 at half-time was, in the circumstances, worth more to the Lions than it might have seemed to the sizeable number of chilly travelling supporters. When the latter signed up for a trip to the sun-drenched Cape, they probably did not envisage watching two games in 10 days clad in oilskins and waders but they were rewarded with a last quarter display of grit and purpose, not least from Vickery. It was the former England prop who forced the scrum penalty from which Hook restored his side's lead to seven points with three minutes left, poetic justice in all sorts of ways, but the Lions defence had one more challenge to face. An attacking lineout move was initially repelled but the ball was recycled and the replacement wing Danwel Demas scored wide on the right. De Waal, who kicked well for Western Province last week, had no right to curl the ball over in driving rain but splendidly ignored the law of averages. The Lions will move on to Loftus Versfeld cursing De Waal's name and aware this tour is not going to get any easier.

source:     guardian.co

Andy Murray made to work hard as he begins title pursuit


Roger Federer used to loathe first-round matches, losing three of his first four Wimbledon appearances at the earliest stage including in 2002, the year before he won the first of his five titles. Andy Murray has never had this problem at the All England club, his earliest exit being in the third round on his debut four years ago, although with the pressure at its most intense this year, Murray being seeded second behind Federer, he was undoubtedly mightily relieved to see off Robert Kendrick yesterday evening, beating the American 7–5, 6–7, 6–3, 6–4.

"It was a tough match. He served great and made it very difficult," said Murray. "He was very aggressive and he does not give you a whole lot of rhythm. I didn't return as well as I would have liked, though I served OK. There were a lot of big points and it's good to have them early in the tournament. I was disappointed I lost the second set but in the whole match he only had two break points on my serve. And once I took the third set I felt good."

While satisfied with his own progress Murray, after a grim day for British players at SW19, felt it was "unacceptable" that he was the only male Briton left in the draw last night while Elena Baltacha, who beat Alona Bondarenko yesterday, was the only woman left standing. "It's disappointing," he said. "The depth needs to get way better. It's unacceptable. It's not picking out any of the players in particular, because I watched some of them play – and some played well. But they aren't at the same level as a lot of guys."

Kendrick had only ever won one previous match in the Championships in three visits. Indeed the one match that he is remembered for was one he lost in 2006, when he led Rafael Nadal by two sets in the second round. The American had lost all his previous three matches against Murray but served well, sometimes exceptionally well, and his forehand was also frequently a potent weapon. Murray, however, has not become the third best player in the world by chance. He gradually wore Kendrick down, forcing him to play one shot too many.

Allied to his huge natural talent, something that has never been in doubt, Murray has embraced a work ethic off the court that has transformed him physically and made him believe he can now win one of the world's four major titles.

Kendrick's game, for all his lack of success at grand slam level, is ideally suited to grass, although when he was broken in the opening game, hitting a forehand long and then double-faulting, it appeared that Murray might not be in for a particularly testing afternoon. The Californian, 29 years old, had previously won only three matches at this level and he had not won one on grass in the build-up tournaments at Queen's and Eastbourne.

By comparison Murray had won at Queen's, when his serve was broken only twice in five matches. Here, in only the eighth game of this match, he dropped it with a double fault, Kendrick levelling at 4–4. By then Murray's opponent was mixing his own serve up beautifully and from time to time striking his forehand with an intensity Murray could not match. However, for all that Murray's serve has improved – it is now a particularly potent weapon on grass – it is his return game that is his huge strength. He has wonderful hands and can counter-attack on both the forehand and backhand. Some of his backhands in particular had Kendrick gently shaking his head in admiration.

Murray took the first set and, with the sun dipping, the Centre Court eased back in their seats. Murray, now far less likely to expend unnecessary emotional energy, was calmness personified at this stage, though when Kendrick took the second- set tie-break, running round a second serve to crash a forehand beyond Murray's reach, there was an outbreak of nervous fidgeting and wan smiles in the crowd.

There was always huge tension whenever Tim Henman was playing on Centre Court. Their faith in Murray, or so it seemed, was already greater and he duly responded by taking the third set, Kendrick being perhaps unduly rattled by a foot fault that saw him lose his serve to go 4–2 down in the third set. "Staying calm was a huge part of winning," said Murray.

The American endeared himself to the crowd with several plunging, diving volleys that brought back memories of Boris Becker or, for the older ones, Chuck McKinley. He played at the top of hisgame; Murray did what he had to do, though he would surely have taken a deep breath in the locker room, pleased that it was over. Tomorrow he will face the talented Latvian world No74Ernests Gulbis.

source:   guardian.co.

2012 BMW 3-series Adds a Turbo Four, Hybrid, and Hatchback to the Range - Car News


BMW is planning to dramatically expand the number of offerings within its various model ranges, especially the strong-selling 3-series that is the backbone of the brand. All eyes are on the next 3, due for 2012. 

Aside from the usual body styles—sedan, station wagon, coupe, and retractable-roof convertible—BMW will also build a five-door hatchback version featuring an aggressive design that will combine station-wagon practicality with coupelike style. In other words, the 3-series range will get its own version of the 5-series GT concept, BMW’s attempt to cross-pollinate an SUV and a station wagon. Like the 5-series GT, the 3-series GT will offer two adjustable seats with a center console in the rear and straddle the fine line between BMW SUV and BMW wagon in regard to overall height. 

Optional equipment such as a lane-departure warning system, night vision, a system to prevent the driver from nodding off, and radar-based adaptive cruise control with collision-mitigating automatic braking will bring tech features of the 5- and 7-series into the realm of the 3. 

Like the current 3-series, powertrain and suspension tuning will remain sporty. But for those who want greater control, BMW will offer a three-stage driving-dynamics button similar to that of Audi’s drive select. It will sharpen or soften damping as well as steering, gearbox, and throttle responses. 

A new line of aluminum four-cylinder gas engines will get the latest technology, including variable intake- and exhaust-valve timing, sequential turbochargers, and direct fuel injection. Power output for the four-cylinder line will range from 135 to 220 horsepower—in the U.S., we’ll likely only get the 220-hp version. Purists need not fret; at least one gas inline six-cylinder engine is expected to survive the downsizing to four-cylinder power. But the 300-hp, twin-turbo six-cylinder in the 335i may be replaced by a 2.0-liter, sequential-turbo four-cylinder gas engine making nearly as much horsepower. 

BMW will also offer a hybrid version of the 3-series. Like the system in the upcoming X5 hybrid, developed in a joint venture with GM, Chrysler, and Daimler, this one will augment the transmission with two electric motors. Expect a fuel savings of about 20 percent. 

 
source:  caranddriver.com

2009 Artega GT - First Drive Review


Every year, new wannabe Porsches, Ferraris, and Lamborghinis turn up at the world’s motor shows, though most are incomplete and underfunded and never progress beyond the prototype stage. 

The Artega is the exception. The GT was developed in secret by a respected auto-industry supplier. It took two years before it was ready, and there was no advance hype. The car emerged fully formed in 2007 at the Geneva show, ready for production. 

And in October 2008, production began at a purpose-built plant in Delbrück, Germany. Clearly, there is a depth of planning and commitment here. The company behind the Artega is Paragon AG, an electronics supplier best known for the stopwatch/lap timers fitted to Porsches. 

Paragon’s CEO is Klaus Dieter Frers, a prominent historic-car racer with an enviable collection of Porsches. So perhaps it is not surprising that Porsche was the inspiration for his very own sports car. The Artega is a lightweight, two-seat, mid-engined coupe with a transverse-mounted VW/Audi V-6 and DSG six-speed, double-clutch, automated manual transmission. It is short (157.9 inches), wide (74.0 inches), and low (46.5 inches). The closest equivalent is the Porsche Cayman S, although the Artega is more than a foot shorter.
Designed by Henrik Fisker—whose portfolio includes the aluminum-bodied BMW Z8, the Aston Martin V-8 Vantage, and the upcoming Fisker Karma plug-in hybrid—the Artega GT is shapely and well finished. And the company lured Karl-Heinz Kalbfell, the ex–sales supremo at BMW who has since headed Rolls-Royce, Alfa Romeo, and Maserati, to handle sales and marketing. 

Paragon’s small engineering team had never done a complete car before, but thanks to the close cooperation of some blue-chip suppliers—Bosch, Brembo, Bilstein, Michelin—it succeeded in producing a car that drives better than any first-time model of our experience. 

The Artega’s chassis is made largely from aluminum, with carbon-fiber-reinforced plastic body panels. The suspension is a classic unequal-length control-arm layout with coil-over shocks front and rear. 

The 3.6-liter engine is the latest direct-injection V-6 found in the Volkswagen Passat CC. It produces 295 horsepower, which, in a car that weighs just 2600 pounds, should provide better-than-Porsche performance: 60 mph arrives in less than five seconds, and there’s a claimed top speed of at least 170 mph. 

At higher revs, the exhaust sound is terrific—it’s more like an Italian V-8 than a modest German V-6. A less pleasant booming inside the cabin at about 2500 rpm is one of the few things that needs fixing. 

This is one of the first cars outside the Volkswagen Group to use VW’s excellent DSG gearbox, which operates either automatically or manually via paddles behind the steering wheel. The Artega has its own software to dictate the shift program. 

The smoothness of operation and the compatibility of all the car’s controls are impressive. The steering, with electric power assistance, is direct and accurate yet not deflected by bumps. Body control is tight in fast cornering, yet the ride is settled and unusually comfortable for a sports car. The Artega has a nearly ideal suspension setup for normal road driving. 

Although the exterior is voluptuous, the Artega’s interior is almost austere. It is neat, tidy, and spacious but does not look very special. Naturally, Paragon wants to showcase its “cockpit system.” The main analog instrument has a dual function: The rev counter is in the top arc, and the speedo is below it—both needles from the same axis. Electronic displays, which can be selected by the driver, emerge from a black panel that surrounds the center dial. 

With a couple of refinement issues addressed, the Artega would compare favorably with sports coupes from the established premium automakers. The price—75,000 euros, or about $100,000—is some 25 percent higher than that of a Cayman S in Germany, but there is an element of exclusivity: In full production, only 500 Artegas are expected to be made a year. The first cars were delivered to customers in April, and the plan is to bring the car to the U.S. by 2011. 

 
source:  caranddriver.com

Roger Federer opens Centre Court with stylish win over Lu Yen-hsun


How much of a tease was that? They spend millions of pounds on a sliding roof for the Centre Court, the sky darkens throughout the opening match until it seems certain that rain must fall before Roger Federer has polished off Lu Yen-hsun, and then the weather god – the one who so often brings "aahhs of shaahhs" to Wimbledon – decides to stay his hand.

Spectators were even holding out their bare arms and claiming to have felt a drop or two in the hope of being the first to see the roof closed over the tournament before the match ended with a straight-sets victory for the Swiss genius.

Even Federer could not resist the idea, pointing out that he had already experienced the court in a variety of guises, since the several stages of demolishing the old roof and building the new one had coincided with his run of consecutive appearances in the final. "I guess the moment will come when I'll play indoors here, too," he said. He had not really noticed it, he added, until he got to the end opposite the royal box. "Then I saw the structure for the first time, because this is really where it stands out the most. It was different, you know. It looks good, I think."

The five-times champion had madehis own effort to look good, arriving on court in a eye-popping new all-white warm-up ensemble of military jacket and long flannels. On an afternoon when the dull light drained the colour from the banks of spectators he may have beena little overdressed but he certainly stood out against the rich green of a virgin court.

Rafael Nadal's late withdrawal meant that Federer was given the honour of opening the court for the sixth time in a row but for the first time as the previous year's beaten finalist."It's a very privileged spot, you know," he said. "So of course I felt honoured. I know that Rafa deserves it more than I do this year. But somebody had to do it, so of course I'm very happy that they chose me. It gets your heart beating, that's for sure."

Yen-Hsun Lu did his best to lift Federer's pulse rate above what appears to be its normal placid cadence. At times, indeed, it was hard to believe that there are 64 players in the world better qualified than the 25-year-old from Taipei, who removed Andy Murray from contention for an Olympic medal in Beijing last summer and aspires to become the first Chinese player to enter the world's top 10.

In five previous visits to the tournament, however, he had never made it beyond the second round and this encounter was never destined to encourage his vision of higher things. In three sets Federer dropped a total of 17 points on his own serve – four of them in the fifth game of the match, when Lu rather astonishingly broke to take a 3-2 lead only for his opponent to nullify the advantage in the next game.

Refusing to be overawed, Lu from time to time Lu Federer enough to give the former champion a useful work-out, going for the lines and showing no reluctance to meet touch with touch. Once or twice, however, Federer unwrapped strokes of such silken subtlety that it was easy to be reminded of the old story about the samurai whose blade was so fine and sharp that he once decapitated an opponent without the man realising – until the executioner ordered him to shake his head.

In the third game of the second set Lu drove a return down towards the incoming server's feet, only for Federer to meet the ball on the half-volley with wrist so soft that the ball seemed to emit a sigh of apology as it popped over the net and died in front of the receiver's despairing lunge.

There was one moment of inelegance in the fourth game of the third set, when Lu manoeuvred Federer around the baseline so effectively that a disguised forehand winner down the line had the great man sprawling as he tried to change direction but the match was closed out with a minimum of fuss in 104 minutes with a score of 7-5, 6-3, 6-2.

Federer paid tribute to his opponent - "I knew the danger today – he's beaten good players in the past" – and sympathised with Nadal's lost chance to experience the feeling of being the defending champion on opening day. "That first moment, walking out, warming up for the first time here at Wimbledon, sometimes is not an easy thing to do," he said. "You want to get off to a good start, get it out of the way, find your way into the tournament. But it's what you dream about."

source: guardian.co.

Laura Robson gives glimpse of a stellar future


Laura Robson showed enough power and poise to give British tennis real hope that she could become a top player on the circuit. Photograph: Paul Gilham/Getty Images

Laura Robson was understandably upset. She was also proud. Her first grand slam match ended in defeat against the experienced Daniela Hantuchova of Slovakia but the 15-year-old Robson, last year's junior Wimbledon champion, did enough to show the near capacity crowd on the new No2 court why the tennis world is expecting her to follow Andy Murray's path to the top. Hantuchova won 3–6, 6–4, 6–2, though it took the former world No5 every ounce of her professional acumen to prevent the British teenager from winning in straight sets after she established a 6–3, 3–2 lead with a break of serve.

"It's different to the juniors but it's not that much different," said Robson, who was runner-up at this year's junior Australian Open. Summer in Britain is a little less severe, though here was an intensity of pressure that she had never experienced before, in front of 4,000 spectators. "If I would have got killed love and love, then I would have a different opinion but it was not too different from the level I am already playing."

When she won the junior Wimbledon title last year her brother, Nick, took to shouting out "mess her up" to encourage her. "This time he changed it to like a woof? Completely random. Apparently he did it quite often but I didn't hear it," said a smiling Robson. She is endearingly sparky off court, though also immensely and naturally shrewd for one so young. Her brother may be barking (if temporarily) but she clearly knows precisely where she is going and how she is going to get there. And the general opinion within the game is that this will be towards the pinnacle.

For the moment it is all a learning process and that process will become all the more difficult as the leading women get to know her game and begin to work out how best to play her. "Actually she reminded me a lot of myself at that age," said Hantuchova, who at No32 in the world was 456 places higher than Robson and with nearly nine years' more experience at major level. "She's got a great feel and is not afraid to go for her shots. She had nothing to lose and could just take a swing at the ball. I was thinking, 'Gosh, that feeling is so good.' It was nice to see."

It would not have been so nice if Hantuchova, whose career has never taken off as it should, had lost. Robson, serving for a 4–2 lead in the second set, pressed a little too much and double-faulted twice, two of 14 in all. The serve is her most potent weapon and Robson conceded that "the whole atmosphere and all the nerves" had affected her. Her calm temperament frayed towards the end of the second set and she banged a ball into the lush turf in frustration. However, this show of annoyance is much better than any limp response towards adversity. Hantuchova gradually, almost imperceptibly, increased the pressure, making sure she held her own serve and forcing Robson to make the play.

"Obviously she's got talent and she's a nice girl. It's important now that she has the right people around her," said Hantuchova. "Its still a long way for her to go. Her serve is very good and she is very smart how she varies it. Obviously she still has a lot of things to improve but she is on the right way for sure. I tried to keep focused, keep focused. I didn't feel very good being a set down and getting kicked by a girl 11 years younger than me."

Junior tennis is all about hitting winners; at Tour and grand slam level the emphasis is on the right shot at the right time. It is something Robson struggled with at first when she began working with her LTA employed Dutch coach, Martijn Bok. "I just banged the ball again and again, like in the same place. I basically always hit it down the line but now we have worked on mixing it up and that has really helped."

There is much more to come from Robson, who next week will defend her junior title. Her principal limitation is her movement, although that is sure to improve. This morning she will doubtless think she should have beaten Hantuchova and, but for those double faults, she might have. "I thought I played really, really well for a good part of the match. I'm a little bit upset but I'm pretty proud of myself." And so she should be.

source: .guardian.co.

UK powers up plans for world's largest green car trial


UK government's £25m scheme to slash emissions from transport will allow public to take part in long-term trials of a range of electric carsFrom the end of 2009, around 340 electric vehicles will be available to qualifying members of the public in eight different locations around the UK. Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters


The UK government will today unveil the world's largest ever coordinated trial of environmentally friendly vehicles. The £25m scheme, which is designed to accelerate the introduction of electric cars to the UK will allow people to take part in long-term trials of everything from electric Minis and Smart city cars to sports cars and electric vans.
From the end of this year, around 340 of the vehicles will be available to qualifying members of the public in eight different locations around the country including Oxford, London, Glasgow, Birmingham and the north-east. Power companies, regional development agencies and universities will also be involved in coordinating the experiments, building infrastructure such as charging points and analysing the way the cars are used.

"Here's an opportunity to position the UK as a world leader in the adoption of this technology by supporting the largest ever trial of such vehicles," said Paul Drayson, the science minister. "That encourages companies working in this field to do their research and development here. That knowledge generated by the trial then gets fed back to the follow-on systems that come through."

Around 22% of the UK's carbon emissions come from transport, with 13% of these from private cars. According to a study for the Department for Transport (DfT), widespread adoption of electric vehicles capable of a range of 50km or more could cut road transport carbon emissions in half.

"We have about 33m cars on the road at the moment and it's going to go up by another 4-5m in the next 10 years," said David Bott of the Technology Strategy Board (TSB), the government-backed agency that promotes the development of new technologies and is coordinating the national demonstration project. "There's a lot of people buying new cars anyway so the question is how quickly can we get credible alternatives out there?"

Moving the UK's drivers onto cleaner forms of road transport would not be addressed by a single piece of technology, said Bott, and so the demonstration project had been designed to try out different cars in different places. "We get to find out what we can't do and we get a whole bunch of new problems that are real. We get confidence that we're on the right path or the knowledge that we need to change."

One branch of the trial will involve around 40 of BMW's Mini E available to those living in Oxford and south-east England. The 12-month project will evaluate the technical and social aspects of living with an all-electric vehicle and scientists at Oxford Brookes University will keep track of the drivers.

Anyone interested in taking part will need to meet certain criteria. "You'll have to have a garage, for example, and you'll have to have a fairly modern electrical wiring system," said Emma Lowndes of Mini UK. "A conventional cable on a normal socket would take over 10 hours to charge the Mini's battery. We're talking with Scottish and Southern Energy about putting in a 32 amp box into homes which would mean a charging time of just over 4 hours."

The cost of the Mini E has not been finalised but, in a similar scheme in the United States, the company charged customers around $850 (£520) per month to lease the car, a cost that included maintenance and insurance.

In Glasgow, 40 battery-powered cars will be made available by Peugeot, the local council and in partnership with the battery company Axeon. Scottish Power will provide 40 charging points around Glasgow and, during the year-long trial, the cars will be monitored using GPS to record the number and length of individual journeys. That data will be analysed by researchers at Strathclyde University.

Mercedes-Benz will make 100 of its latest electric Smart cars available in the west Midlands and in London."We're asking the public to come forward and apply to be one of the drivers of these vehicles," said Dermot Kelly, managing director of Mercedes-Benz cars.

"What we want is a diverse group who are commuting to work every day, who have the ability to charge their cars at home. The power supply companies will be supplying smart metering to work out when people would charge their cars up and when they would use them."

Kelly said he wanted to know how people used electric cars. "What we're hoping to learn is ... what we need to do to make the car as friendly and adaptable as possible to people's lifestyle."

For those who want their environmentally friendly cars with a bit more power, the EEMS Accelerate consortium — a group of small independent manufacturers — are making 21 electric sports cars available. These will include models from the Lightning car company, Westfield and Delta Motorsport. In addition, wind energy company Ecotricity will build and test an electric sports car that it claims will be the world's first charged only using energy from wind turbines.

Friends of the Earth's transport campaigner Tony Bosworth welcomed the new scheme, but said: "Ministers must boost the UK's flagging renewable energy industry because electric vehicles are only as green as the power they run on. Low-carbon vehicles are certainly needed, but we need broader changes to make the necessary cuts in transport emissions. Urgent action is needed to get people out of their cars by making public transport, cycling and walking more attractive options."

The government's demonstration project will also examine people's attitudes and behaviour around owning electric cars. Some people might hesitate to buy a typical electric car that might only have a range of 100 miles on a full charge, said Bott, but their attitudes might change if they tried the cars in question or realised that 95% of all UK journeys tend to be under 25 miles.

The demonstrations announced today are part of the government's wider £250m electric car strategy, unveiled in April, which includes potential incentives of up to £5,000 for consumers to buy electric cars. London's mayor, Boris Johnson, has also announced his intent to make the city the electric car capital of Europe. He wants to introduce 100,000 electric cars to the capital's streets and build an infrastructure of 25,000 charging points in public streets, car parks and shops.

source guardian.co.

New Commons Speaker John Bercow says he will revive parliament


John Bercow, a one-time Conservative rightwinger, last night won the first secret ballot in parliament's 700-year history to become the new Speaker of the Commons, pledging to revitalise parliament and end the relentless erosion of its strength.

After leading the field through every round, he defeated his more establishment oriented Tory rival, Sir George Young, on the third ballot by 322 votes to 271. The hotly tipped former Labour foreign secretary Margaret Beckett failed to poll as well as expected, and dropped out after the second round of voting.

Bercow's election was greeted by warm applause from the Labour side, and notably more sullen support from the Tories. Though he was elected as Tory MP for Buckingham in 1997, he has long been regarded as a turncoat. The Conservatives are frustrated that Labour MPs had used what is likely to be a brief remaining period of control of the Commons to elect a Speaker who they believe long ago abandoned their values, and was in effect a Labour candidate.

Bercow told MPs he was the "clean break" candidate able to draw a line under the expenses scandal that forced his predecessor, Michael Martin, out of office. "I want to implement an agenda for reform, for renewal, for revitalisation and for the reassertion of the core values of this great institution in the context of the 21st century," he said in his appeal for votes.

"That this election is being held at this moment testifies to the turmoil engulfing this place and to the crisis of confidence in parliamentarians themselves. Until we can move the debate on from sleaze and second homes to the future of this house, we shall remain in deep trouble."

After his election MPs laughed as he told them he would fulfil the pledge to "immediately and permanently cast aside all of his or her previous political views".

Bercow could find only one Tory nominee on the backbenches, Charles Walker. But his campaign manager, Martin Salter, dismissed claims that he had the backing of only three Tory MPs.

David Cameron, in congratulating him on his election, made a barbed reference to Bercow's changed views, and the Speaker will have to work hard to prove his independence, discretion and willingness to listen as well as lead. "We share a collective responsibility for what went wrong, we share a collective responsibility for putting it right," Cameron said.

The role of Speaker at one level is confined to chairing debates in the Commons, but in the current crisis caused by the expenses row, there is a consensus that the position is more public and will require driving a reform agenda that sees the executive brought under control.

Bercow said that there must be a cross-party business committee that really runs parliament, rather than simply leaving the agenda to the government. He also promised that "urgent questions must be more readily granted; scrutiny of budgets and legislation, both domestic and European, must be enhanced and, once and for all, ministers must be obliged to make key policy statements in the Commons".

He will have to prove he is genuinely a clean break candidate, since he has agreed in recent days to pay back more than £6,000 in previous expenses claims, including nearly £1,000 claimed for accountant advice. He is also reported to have profited from redesignating the status of his second home and not paying capital gains tax.

Bercow is the first of 157 Speakers to be Jewish and, at 46, the youngest for 170 years. He follows two Labour Speakers and is the first Tory to be elected to the role since Bernard Weatherill in 1983.

He said he would serve just nine years – in effect two full parliamentary terms.

Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, urged Bercow to use his "mandate for change" to "reinvent" the role of Speaker. To Tory jeers, Gordon Brown told MPs : "We have shown today we can cross party divisions in our choice of Speaker." Brown went on: "Undoubtedly the road ahead will not be easy but with your leadership and integrity, this house has begun the path to renewal."

source:  guardian.co.

Street clutter threat to conservation areas

The nicest streets in England are gradually being wrecked – sinking under a tide of plastic windows, concrete roof tiles, replacement doors, satellite dishes, smashed-out front gardens and streetscapes cluttered with ugly broken paving, bollards, barriers and traffic signs.

This is the verdict of English Heritage, which has for the first time included England's 9,300 conservation areas in its annual register of historic sites at risk, which is published today.

The news is dismal: one in seven of these conservation areas are judged to be at risk, increasing to almost one in five in the 955 in London.

The problem may be exemplified by an Heritage city such as St Albans, Hertfordshire, which has a glorious abbey, medieval buildings, parks and some of the best Roman remains in Britain.

Look closer, English Heritage says, and there are problems of over-development: front gardens lost to parking, lumpen extensions, new shopping complexes punched into warrens of ancient alleys.

"This is heritage where people live," English Heritage's chief executive, Simon Thurley, said.

"Many people might never visit a castle or a stately home, but very few people in this country could spend a whole day without passing through a conservation area."

By far the greatest threat is plastic replacement windows and doors, affecting 83% of the areas at risk, followed by poorly maintained roads and pavements, 60%; street clutter, 45%; lost front gardens, walls, fences and hedges, 43%; and satellite dishes, 38%. Some measures intended to help have made things worse: traffic calming such as pinch points, barriers and speed humps blight a third of areas at risk.

Most of the buildings are not listed, but the conservation area distinction has been conferred since the 1960s on places ranging from urban terraces to rural villages, with strong local character and interesting original features.

Many have never been reappraised since, but this year English Heritage asked every local authority in England to have a fresh look, and the results are depressing.

The list includes conservation areas of former coalmining and industrial areas such as Mansfield, Sheffield and Doncaster, but also tourist magnets in the south such as Boscastle, Cornwall, the outskirts of Bath, with 19 separate areas judged at risk, Winchester, with 24 areas at risk, and the entire centre of St Albans.

Urban areas are twice as likely to be at risk as rural ones, and only 13% of local authorities have imposed the article 4 directions that allow them to ban plastic windows or other alterations.

English Heritage – which has no responsibility for the millions of unlisted buildings in conservation areas – has poured £60m in grants into listed buildings over the last four years but only 15% have shown any improvement. "It is very specifically not our responsibility [to look after unlisted buildings] - and at English Heritage we don't want extra powers, we want residents and local authorities to take on this challenge themselves," said Thurley.

Rescuing blighted conservation areas would not only be noble but practical. English Heritage also commissioned a survey from estate agents which shows that most - 82% - think original features add value to a property, and 75% think a well kept conservation area boosts house prices.All the areas at risk are published today on the English Heritage website, and the quango has also produced a campaign pack showing local residents how to identify problems and improve the streets where they live.

The picture is also grim for the rest of the heritage sector. The at-risk register lists 5,049 sites at risk of neglect, decay or actual destruction, including for the first time all scheduled monuments, including archaeological sites, on agricultural land, parks and gardens, shipwrecks and battlefields.

One in 30 of all Grade I and II* buildings are at risk; one in five of scheduled monuments; one in 15 of parks and gardens; a sixth of battlefields; and one in five shipwreck sites.

"The recession is bittersweet for us," Thurley said. "It undoubtedly lifts the pressure off some endangered sites, but it has also brought proposed developments that might have saved and found new uses for others to a juddering halt.

"There are some really hard cases on the list where we used to do a little dance in the office when we heard of a solution – but we're not doing a lot of that these days."

English Heritage is still seeking a millionaire to buy, live in, and finish the work on Apethorpe Hall, a ravishing Grade I listed Jacobean mansion in Northamptonshire which it bought in despair five years ago after an absentee Libyan owner left it to decay to the point of near collapse. Although the quality of the conservation work on the property is immaculate, the amount of public money poured into the house was pilloried in a recent television documentary. Several offers are currently being considered, but nobody has bought it yet and the glorious house remains on the Heritage at Risk register for yet another year.


source:  ardian.cogu.uk

Natick Softball

The 2005 Night League campaign opened in late April and closed in late August. The final touch was last Sunday's annual one-pitch tourney which in the heat and humidity feels like it lasts as long as the 22-game regular season. The 11-team extravaganza lasted from 8:30 A.M. until 6 P.M. and was played proudly in memory of players Mike Breau and Brian Leshinski who recently passes away.
After nine teams were eliminated having each lost twice, George's Pizza and Natick Federal played a one-game showdown. Entering the battle both clubs were 3-0 but George's squeezed every bit of sauce and cheese there was to be squeezed out of the Feds. Before Federal had even batted in the first inning George's had built a 12-0 command sparked by eight walks. From there George's coasted to a 23-9 triumph.
Stars of the tournament for George's were many and included shortstop Aldo Donnelly, hot corner whiz Mitch Bobinski, second baseman Mike Coco and pitcher Pete Putnam. 'Every year this tourney is a ball for every participant and all the families,' said player/coach Putnam. 'It really is not about winning but I would be lying to say that winning this thing wasn't wonderful.'
Outfielder Tom Kelly, Federal's MVP(.500,8 RBI, 8RS and great D) on the day, agreed.'Jim Lavezzo and Paul Adams deserve a ton of credit for consistently making this work. From the umps to the food and soda to the games themselves. Just super,' said the outfielder whose amazing catch with two on and two out in the last of the seventh allowed Federal to hold on for a 10-9 win over JFK Transportation in his team's third contest.
Fed pitcher Paul Adams was instrumental during his club winning its first three games but no single play was as dramatic as Kelly's running grab in right field. 'Tom simply outran the line drive and caught it next to the tent. I thought he was going to bring the tent down on the fans who were sitting inside hiding from the sweltering sun,' said Adams.
Jerry McCarthy and Dan Detatie each hit .563 for Federal during the marathon while Scott Moore and Shawn Connors each batted .500. The squad was rounded out by Tom Kampersal, Gary Repella, Jack Collins,Mike Savard, Frank Maguire and Phil'I used to be very good' Mazzocchi.
Noteworthy highlights'.Jay Nesbit's clutch hit to help JFK help beat Muddy Waters'Jamie Murphy's clutch hit to help George's beat the Hogs'Kevin Kearns' walk-off 2-run homer against Hutchinson's to lead Connolly's to a one-run decision'Coach Tim Dempsey of the Hogs losing an arm wrestle to Coach Dan Skinner of Wellesley Carriage'umpire/cook Mike Lavezzo winning a hot dog-eating contest against Jim Argir of Atlantic Management and Mike Fennell of Morn's with the winner devouring four plus buns.
Team Cheryl Sizzles Again in Road Race
The annual Falmouth Road Race featured for the eighth straight August Team Cheryl, a 26-person crew of mostly Natickites including courageous wonder girl Cheryl Chagnon. Team Cheryl runs for fun and more importantly to raise money for lymphoma research. Chagnon was diagnosed with this type of cancer eight years ago at age 37.
Natickites on Team Cheryl were the Connolly Clan(Dana, Jesse and D-2 Night League star John plus his sister-in-laws Dale Finger and Darlene McKenzie), the Jennings Family(Sandy and state police officers Jessica and Mike),the Chagnons(Tara, Andrew and Cheryl), Audrey DeMaio(sister of the late NHS athletic star Tom Tower), Larry Frederick, Beth and Bill Lederman, popular Natick Police Seargents Cara Rossi Cafarelli and Paul Thompson, Dr. Cliff Scott and former NHS football star Detective John Haswell.The speedy platoon was rounded out by Melissa Bosselman, Karen Plescia, Callie Rose, Steve Schoen, Ed Lynch, Maurice Prendergast and Paul Piselli.
Lesniak's 2005 D-1 All-Star Team

1B Ryan Hogan, Morn's. Probably his finest season ever, batting over .500 and absolutely sparkling on defense.
2B Tim Nelson, Owen O'Leary's. Despite a campaign-ending injury with two weeks remaining Tim hit .560 and was the best defensive second baseman in the division, earning a slight nod over Brett kane and Jack Collins.
SSJoe Arena, Hogs and Allen Donnelly, George's. Somehow..some way.. as Arena gets older he actually gets better. At age 37 Joe's defensive play was a level above all other shortstops in the division EXCEPT for Allen Donnelly. The 22 year-old hit for a higher average than arena but Arena owned a defensive edge.
3B Mitch Bobinski, George's. One of Natick softball's most unknown, unsung and underrated players. Mitch batted .550 and was clearly the league's best defensive hot corner star.
C Eddie Arena, Hogs. Clutch defensive plays, clutch base hits, always there to back up an incoming throw, a leader. Can anyone say Johnny Bench'
P Joe Gallarani, Sr., Morn's. At age 70 the oldest but one of the best players in the league. On the mound Joe utilizes the 12-foot arc to the max and rarely walks a batter. He was the main reason that Morn's won the pennant and allowed the fewest runs(161) in the division. Joe hit .540.
LF Brian Linton, Hogs. For the second straight year Brian was the best all-around leftfielder. He hit .550 and consistently made great catches a la Yaz.
LCF Joe Gallarani, Jr.,Morn's. No outfielder in the league was better than Gallarani. He batted .600 and led Morn's in RBI, helping the team to 217 runs, second only to the Hogs' 223 runs. Defensively nobody does it better and with Steve Zwick and John Stolarczyk now retired Gallarani could be the absolute top active player in D-1.
RCF Dave Anslem, George's. With seven homers during the year of the dead ball Southern Dave led the division and hit over .500. Defensively he was outstanding and owns one of the several best arms in town.
RF Rich Brothers, Hogs. A superb defender and along with Anslem, Mike McCarthy and Mike Tarrentino among the most feared lefty sluggers in the league.Like Bobinski Rich goes relatively unnoticed.
DH Sam Gifford, Morn's. Despite playing injured all season the 6'4'' infielder batted nearly .600 and played well at third base after moving from short due to injury.
Utility star Randy Dale, Dawgs. The longtime veteran hit a career-high .600 and shined in both the infield and outfield.
Unsung Hero Bobby Harless, Carriage. Over the final two- thirds of the campaign Harless was outstanding on the mound,consitently giving his club a realistic shot at winning.
Best sub Tom Kelly, Federal. Due to an unstable and constantly changing group of outfielders Federal called for Kelly's services in 13 games. Defensively he was fantastic in all four outfield slots and hit .545(24 for 44) with 17 runs scored from the lead-off spot.
Coach of the Year Dan Skinner, Carriage. While five teams remained in the top five spots in the standings all season three fought hard for the sixth and final spot. Until the last two weeks of the race Carriage was dead last but sparked by the inspirational Skinner ultimately secured the sixth playoff seed.
Infield reserves Ken Fleming 3B Carriage, Rod Spinazola 3B Roche Brothers, Ryan Van Tassell SS, O'Leary's
Outfield reserves Jerry McCarthy LCF George's, Billy Gassett LCF Hogs, Matt Washek RCF Morn's
Regular Season MVP Joey Gallarani, Morn's. In a league of sensational left centerfielders(McCarthy, Gassett, Steve Keniry, Jim Gavagan,etc) Gallarani is as the song says simply the best. He was the number one star on the first-place squad. Period.
Playoff MVP Joe Arena, Hogs. Ozzie smith he is not. Actually Arena plays short like Ken Dryden played net. Arena's style is aggressive and unique. Often when he makes a play one feels as if he or she is watching Jake LaMotta. Very little grace and a lot of heart. Arena's defensive antics almost single-handedly pushed the Hogs past George's in the semifinals.



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'Everyone's a pagan now'
From morris dancers in mirror shades to green activists getting in touch with their spiritual side, paganism is going mainstream. Cole Moreton reports on a new national faith
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Cole Moreton
The Guardian, Monday 22 June 2009
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The Beltane Bash, following The Pagan Pride Parade, London, 2009. Photograph: Teri Pengilley
Look out, here come the pagans. It's late May in central London and a man dressed as a tree, a witch in a velvet robe and a woman pretending to be a raven with a long black beak are dancing through the streets of Holborn, with several hundred others, moving to the rhythm of a dozen loud drums. They could wake the god of thunder with their noise but it's OK, the people at the back with the broadswords and shields are followers of Thor. This is a parade to celebrate pagan pride, and it would be wise not to get in the way.
"We are moving into a new time," says the leader, brandishing a huge set of antlers. "We are becoming more accepted. Paganism is reasserting itself."
Who is going to argue? Her name is Jeanette Ellis and she looks like the figurehead of a mighty galleon, cleavage pushing up out of a medieval dress (although her bottom half is mostly foliage). Ellis has been organising parades for more than a decade. "There has been such a dramatic change," she says, "in the way we are perceived."
Paganism is casting its spell over more people now than ever before in the modern age. There are said to be a quarter of a million practising pagans in this country, double the number of a decade ago.
That would make them more numerous than Buddhists (of which there are 144,500, according to the 2001 census) and almost as numerous as Jews (259,000) - and it doesn't even allow for the growing tribe of unofficial, instinctive pagans such as my friend Cath, who planned to celebrate the summer solstice in the early hours yesterday by "going out into the garden at dawn and just tuning in". At Stonehenge at least 30,000 people were expected to watch the sun rise in the company of the druids who see themselves as practising the ancient faith of pre-Christian Britain. For them, the sun is symbolic of one aspect of the "universal force which flows through the world and which can be encouraged to flow through us", according to Philip Carr-Gomm, founder of the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids and author of the new Book of English Magic. The druids are only a small part of modern paganism, which encompasses a bewildering number of traditions or "paths", but central to them all is this idea of a divine force inherent in nature. It is an individualistic faith that encourages each person to respond in their own way, so you don't have to be a druid, or belong to any kind of order at all.
Away from Stonehenge, much smaller groups of people celebrate the summer solstice by gathering before sunrise in gardens or woods, on beaches or hilltops across the country, some for organised rituals and some, like Cath, just responding to their own understanding of a spirituality that seems to work best in the open air. Ask her faith and she says "pagan" straight away. She sees no need to join in with anybody else, but Cath is far from alone.
"What we believe is suddenly everywhere," says Bantu, a dreadlocked 29-year-old who planned to be on a hill in Wales when the moment came. He started to worship Gaia, the earth goddess, after going to a workshop at a climate camp. "Everyone's a pagan now."
Not quite, maybe, but the rise has been dramatic. The census in 2001 recorded 40,000 pagans, but the true figure may be higher. "Pagans don't like telling the government what they're up to," says Ellis. A decade ago Ronald Hutton, a professor of history at Bristol University, calculated that there were 120,000 people going to rituals or meetings (often in pubs) called moots. That was before Harry Potter and Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Lord of the Rings, Charmed and Sabrina the Teenage Witch made pagan spirituality and mythology part of pop culture.
The Pagan Federation, which aims to represent all "followers of a polytheistic or pantheistic nature-worshipping religion", claims the number of adherents has trebled at least. That would mean there were 360,000 committed, practising pagans, putting them ahead of the Sikhs (329,000) and fourth behind Hindus (552,000), Muslims (1.5 million) and Christians (42 million, according to the census).
Hutton adds that there has been a much greater acceptance of pagan ideas among the wider public. "It is best to think in terms of concentric circles," he says, "from those who are initiated members of a group such as a coven, out to those who go to Stonehenge for a drink and a party."
The Pagan Federation's membership list includes druids as well as wiccans, practising modern witchcraft; shamans, engaging with the spirits of the land; and heathens, worshipping the gods of the north European tribes (including Thor). But then there are the neopagans such as Bantu, always visible at environmental protests, who wouldn't think of belonging to any kind of federation and who pursue a rainbow of revived, recreated or invented beliefs with nature at their heart.
All you have to believe to be a pagan, according to the federation, is that each of us has the right to follow our own path (as long as it harms no-one else); that the higher power (or powers) exists; and that nature is to be venerated. If you asked everyone in Britain if they agreed with those three statements, millions would put their hands up. At its loosest, paganism is beginning to look like our new national faith.
The circles can be seen widening in the most unlikely places. Nine years ago, Ray and Lynda Lindfield and their friends tried to start a pagan festival on the seafront in ultra-conservative Eastbourne in East Sussex, and were threatened with arrest. "It had to be pointed out that we had a right to practise our religion in public," says Lynda. Lammas is now one of the big local draws of the summer.
These public events usually include a re-enactment of whatever stage of the pagan cycle is being marked. In Eastbourne they needed some dancers to perform the cutting down of the male sun god, represented as the mythical character John Barleycorn, and so a morris-dancing group, Hunters Moon, was born. It is now the most fashionable side (as morris-dancing groups are sometimes known) in the country, having recently been hired to perform at a party in London for Tim Burton and Helena Bonham Carter, among others. It is also part of what amounts, in morris dancing, to a pagan coup.
The Morris Ring, which represents the hanky-waving sides everyone thinks of as morris dancers, announced in January that young people were not interested. That was news to Hunters Moon, and other recently formed, pagan-inspired sides across the country such as Wolf's Head and Vixen, the first gothic morris outfit, whose members wear mirror shades and look like the Sisters of Mercy.
Half of the two-dozen dancers at a recent Hunters Moon rehearsal were under 30, including teenage students. They hopped, they skipped, they smashed big sticks together until the splinters flew and then used them for gestures that were, quite frankly, rude. Hunter's Moon dance with blacked-up faces (not racist but medieval, they insist, having been a way for mummers to hide their identities from their daytime employers as they went door to door for trick or treat) and outfits that make them look like ragged crows that have mated with Hell's Angels. Not every member is a pagan, but they wear pentagrams and the dances include arcane elements such as the spiral. "Those that know what it is," says Armstrong, "know what it is."
Witchcraft is another driving force in the rise of paganism. Leading members of the Federation are part of this closed tradition that became public in 1954 when a retired civil servant called Gerald Gardner claimed to have been introduced to pre-Christian occultism by one of the last surviving covens. Their version of the divine force is embodied in a horned male god and a mother goddess, and their response to its energy all around us involves the casting of spells and incantations to influence real events. Gardner's critics called it fiction, but wicca now has 7,000 adherents, according to the census, which again is probably an understatement. What do you have to do to join? "If I told you, I would have to kill you," says Chris Crowley, a wiccan high priest who speaks for the Federation.That's a joke, I think.
His partner, Vivienne, has written acclaimed books on wicca, or at least on its public side. Wiccans believe in the ability to communicate directly with the divine by calling down the god or goddess to enter the body, which can involve going into a trance and allowing them to speak through you. The most common wiccan symbol is the pentagram, whose points represent the elements essential to life: air, fire, water, earth and the spirit that ties them all together. They see themselves as inheritors of the "wise craft" that led men and women to be ducked and burned in previous ages, so if you want to know their deepest secrets you have to prove you are sincere and committed. Joining a coven traditionally takes a year and a day. "It is a mystery religion," says Crowley. "You do have to be initiated."
Crowley is a head-hunter for public sector recruitment, and dresses in jeans and blue blazer. "We look normal," he says, "because we are."
Jeanette Ellis is not a wiccan but a "traditional" witch, who follows a path she found among her family roots in the west of Ireland. "I work with the Morrigan, a Celtic goddess." One associated with death and war (and ravens), I subsequently discover. "We do not target people in our spells," insists Ellis, who calls her home in east London her "covenstead". The 13 members meet when the moon is full. "People bring ideas for spells. If someone has split up with her boyfriend, for example, we may cast a love spell that will make her more confident and attractive."
She is not so shy about ritual and is able to explain why so many people on the parade are wearing knives, including those broadswords (with the police turning a blind eye). "That is the athame, a director of energy. It must not touch blood. There are no sacrifices going on." The knife is placed in a chalice to bless wine. She also describes the male high priest pushing the athame into a scabbard held by the high priestess. Hang on, this is all about sex, isn't it?
"There is a sexual energy, I wouldn't deny it," says Ellis, chuckling. "The sexual union happens within every ritual, usually symbolically." Usually? "It's not about orgies. Of course, after any full moon, if you want to go out into the garden and have ... that's fine, as long as you're a couple. You don't just go off with whoever you fancy." Do they ever do it as part of the ritual? Expecting a denial, I am surprised by her answer. "Some do. Less and less, I think. I don't know what other covens get up to."
Nobody does. That's the point. It's hard to join. (Once in, you presumably become as vulnerable to exploitation as any other member of a closed religious group whose initiated members are taught secret information by a caste of self-elected priests.)
Some wannabe wizards did go on to take an adult interest in the esoteric after reading Harry Potter, but the boy wizard's bigger impact has been in the adoption of pagan ideas into the mainstream: the BBC uses pagan spirituality as a source of inspiration even for children's shows such as Raven and Merlin, or Saturday tea-time blockbusters Robin Hood and Doctor Who.
It is in pop culture that witchcraft meets the other main force behind the rise in paganism: environmentalism. James Lovelock made the link explicit in his influential 1979 description of the earth as a single, living organism, which he named after the Greek goddess Gaia. Some take this more theologically than others, but it remains the most famous example of how the desire for alternative lifestyles that began to flourish in the 60s has led to both a questioning of our attitude to the natural environment and a turning away from the established, patriarchal faiths towards new forms of spirituality. Of course, you don't have to be a pagan to be a green. Far from it. But the two movements have given each other energy, as each has grown.
For many pagans, becoming a green campaigner is a way of demonstrating faith with practical action. For many activists who come at it from the opposite direction, the pagan idea of an ancient and universal spirit that animates the earth gives their actions a personal, spiritual framework. Not that you have to read eco-theory to get it these days, just watch Teletubbies. "The indoctrination into things like recycling starts at an early age," says Catherine Hosen, a druid from Kent who watches a lot of CBeebies with her children. "If you start off trying to be environmentally aware, it is not much of a step to seeing all of nature as sacred, and from there to becoming a pagan."
Perhaps. This, don't forget, is mostly a loose faith. That is why it is so popular in these individualistic, iconoclastic times. Wander towards the centre of Hutton's concentric circles where the covens wait and you will be asked to pass tests, obey priests, follow rituals and keep secrets; but on the outer edges, at festival times such as the summer solstice, there is none of that - just a dance, a beer and a "Merry meet, merry part and merry meet again". Just watch yourself with those knives.


source: .guardian.co