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Eagles, pawns in politics of Nigerian football | The Guardian Nigeria News

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Politics across Nigerian football will dominate the sports landscape starting from AFCON 2022. Politics in the game and its administration have, indeed, become a recurring decimal, like a groove in a broken vinyl record repeating the same ‘lyrics’ over and over again.

In the next three weeks, all eyes will be on the Super Eagles by Nigerians as they commence their limp to AFCON 2022 in Cameroun. Notwithstanding all the recent crisis in the technical composition of the team, the Eagles are still expected to be one of the favorites to win the coveted African trophy.

Around the team now there is plenty of technical politics ongoing. Considering what transpired in the last few weeks, realistically, the chances of winning AFCON are slim. No army ever goes to a war amidst such internal crisis and expects to win. But, football is such an unpredictable game when the whistle is blown for the start of the championship, the crisis recedes to the background, and will not reduce the immediate expectations of Nigerians to win, without any acceptable excuses for failure.

Therefore, what happens at AFCON will determine the fate of various branches of the football tree in Nigeria.

That battle begins on January 10, 2022.
The Nigerian team has 3 weeks from now to get acquainted with, and quickly adapt to a new and different technical set-up with a Nigerian, leading a large consortium of football technicians as they embark on yet another experiment. Many see this development as a set-up to ensure that Nigerian coaches never succeed, or get enough credit to remain at the helm of coaching at national team level after AFCON.

Their success will surely stop the drainpipe that siphons foreign currency out of Nigeria into several wallets abroad in their usual guise of ‘foreign coaches are better than Nigerian coaches’.

The usual pattern is that there will be a few changes here and there, reluctant appointments are made that are never fully supported, there is a ‘shortfall’ in bloated targets, the Nigerians are sacked, and the era of another set of foreign coaches begins again, and the cycle is repeated.
From my observatory, I can see the outlines of this faulted construction again.

But what is likely to happen now with the technical crew on the eve of AFCON?
‘Cerezo’, as Eguavoen is called by his army of fans, is not new to the Nigerian football system and the intrigues that often play out at critical times before major championships in the past. He has been both a beneficiary as well as a victim of some of these last-minute changes in technical crew.

He is inheriting Gernot Rohr’s team and is unlikely to make any earthshaking changes in the list of players he will take to Cameroon.

He has also inherited Gernot Rohr’s Nigerian assistants, including coach Yussuf Salisu, who carries a big baggage into the team with his involvement in a disgraceful corruption incident some years ago that led to his suspension by the world governing body of football. His return to the team raises some serious moral questions about the justification for his recall to national duty. It is obviously a political decision made to fulfill either an ethnic quota in the national team, or for other pecuniary reasons unknown to the wondering public.

Alongside him, for continuity purposes probably, are Alloy Agu, the goalkeeper’s trainer, and a former national team goalkeeper who has served the national team in that position longer than anyone else in Nigeria’s history, and Joseph Yobo, a retired former captain of the national team.

In addition, there are now technical ambassadors (a new addition to the football lexicon) added to the motley crowd. These are renowned former international players without coaching badges or training, but vastly experienced as players and are some of the most celebrated players in Nigeria’s history – Jay Jay Okocha, Kanu Nwankwo and Garba Lawal. They are drafted in obviously to add some colour to the whole drama.

This technical team will have two weeks, at most, to work with their own assembly of players going to the AFCON.

They too may likely throw in one or two players from the domestic Nigerian league to fulfill all righteousness and be seen to be politically-correct.

One major thing that Nigerians should watch out for is happens to Ahmed Musa and Odion Ighalo. Both players have served Nigeria well in the past but have passed their prime. They were lingering at the edges of Gernot Rohr’s set-up before his ouster.

The most influential person in the selection of Nigerian players for the national team in the past two decades (and probably longer) is a Nigerian quietly working behind the scenes, monitoring the performances of Nigerian players all over Europe, and reporting to national team managers. Tunde Adelakun’s name has not featured in the present ouster or consortium. He has become so ‘powerful’ in the Nigeria Football Federation set-up since Taiwo Ogunjobi’s time as Secretary General of the NFA, that he has survived all previous changes and it should not surprise anyone if he is seen on the Nigerian bench again at the AFCON.

Some analysts think that the whole consortium issue is designed to shut up the loud calls for ex-international players-inclusion in football administration in the country, as well as the full indigenization of the coaching staff at national team levels, if they fail.

Should that happen and they fail to win the African Championship in Cameroun, the stage will be set to engage another foreign coach (already in the pipeline) and sustain the old tradition of foreign coaches, a practice that is an invisible lucrative conduit for ‘feeding’ the vampires in Nigerian football administration.

There is also a silent but brewing war going on about the faulty constitution being used to sustain the election racketeering that has crippled domestic football and has been fanning the embers of mediocrity and deep corruption in the bowels of Nigerian football.

A handful of members of the Players Union appear to be the only stakeholders in Nigerian football that are armed with knowledge and the courage to stand up and fight to correct the anomalies and faults in the present constitution of the NFF that are skewed to favor a particular constituency (undeservedly and erroneously).

The players have taken the matter to court. This will definitely rattle the present NFA whose tenure expires before the World Cup in November 2022. The elections into the next NFF Executive Committee must hold before the World Cup, and that presents a big challenge to the present board preparing, as other boards before them, to use the opportunity of taking delegates to the World Cup to finetune their return to power.

This time, with the unusual timing of the World Cup, the scenario will be different and only an elongation of the tenure of the board, which shall be vigorously challenged and made impossible, can make this clandestine plan work.

The excuse that elections before the World Cup would be a distraction to the players will not hold any water. The players are so far away from the shenanigans in administration that it does not matter when elections are held, the politicking will surely take place.

The present board will definitely call for a postponement of their elections until after the World Cup but many of the stakeholders will resist that call vehemently.

The Players Union is already in a civil court challenging the present constitution of the NFF.

The next few months into 2022 will be very interesting as Nigerians follow the battle for the soul of football administration in the country played out with the Super Eagles as the pawns!

Parker vs Chisora fight time tonight: What time is Joseph Parker vs Derek Chisora tonight? | Boxing | Sport

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Going into the fight, Parker said: “It doesn’t really bother me what he does, because I have a focus on what we are trying to do; myself and Andy [his trainer] and the team.

“Going into this fight, we’ve done everything right. So whatever he does, whatever he brings, however he’s prepared, we’re ready for him.

Chisora said: “I’m so keen, I want to fight. The last fight was good, but this one is going to be much better.

“It’s not revenge, I just want to fight and it’s going to be a good fight. I’m going to knock him out in (round) one. I’m coming in fitter and stronger.”

Doc Rivers questions officials after no calls made against Nets in fourth quarter of Brooklyn’s win against reeling 76ers

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NEW YORK — With his Philadelphia 76ers trailing by nine points to the Brooklyn Nets and three seconds left in the fourth quarter Thursday night at Barclays Center, coach Doc Rivers called timeout.

His goal, however, wasn’t to try to draw up a play. Instead, it was to deliver a message to the officials.

So he walked out to center court, stared at the three game officials and held up a “0” — the number of team fouls called on the Nets in the fourth quarter of what became a 114-105 Philly loss, its third in four days, all to teams missing star players.

“They needed to see that,” he said.

Rivers gave the same message to the officials after the buzzer sounded. His biggest issue? Joel Embiid should’ve gotten more calls down the stretch.

“I thought Joel got fouled the last three post possessions, and-ones, and none was called,” said Rivers, whose team is now 15-15 after an 8-2 start. “I don’t know how a team can play the fourth quarter of a game where we’re driving the ball and posting the ball and they have zero fouls. It’s hard to play a quarter in the NBA and commit no fouls. Very surprised by that.”

Embiid, who had a game-high 11 free throw attempts but none in the fourth quarter, agreed.

“I mean, they’re the home team,” said the All-Star big man, who had team bests in points (32), rebounds (9) and assists (6). “I thought we got fouled a few times, especially down there. But, I mean, it’s frustrating when they’re calling fouls for the other teams down there and you don’t get any. I can see what he (Rivers) was talking about.”

After getting blown out Monday in Memphis with Embiid sitting out with abdominal soreness, Philadelphia has now lost games on back-to-back nights to opponents in Miami and Brooklyn that were missing key pieces due to injury or COVID protocols.

Those losses added up to a missed opportunity in Embiid’s eyes.

“It’s extremely frustrating to lose,” he said. “I hate losing. It sucks. We’ve just got to do a better job of basically not spotting the other team by 20 points every first quarter. I mean, we played pretty well after that. We just got to do a better job of starting the game out.”

While Philadelphia did make a strong push to recover from an early deficit, it wasn’t enough thanks to another brilliant performance from Kevin Durant, who finished with 34 points, 11 rebounds and six assists in 39 minutes. Durant hit two huge shots late in the fourth quarter after Philadelphia twice tied the game down the stretch.

“That’s what he does on a nightly basis,” Seth Curry (29 points) said of Durant. “We played good defense. We did a good job … couple at the end of the game he walked into, but we did a good job for the most part.”

Philadelphia hasn’t recovered from Embiid testing positive for COVID-19 last month, as it lost both he and Tobias Harris at the same time. Against the Nets, the 76ers were minus starting guard Tyrese Maxey (quad) and key reserves Furkan Korkmaz and Georges Niang (positive COVID-19 tests after Wednesday’s loss).

“Listen, we got to get right,” Rivers said. “We got to get everybody back. We played a game tonight without a point guard, and with one power forward. We’re just so small. We are in general. We’re a small basketball team. But you lose Georges, now Tobias is your only 4. Danny Green is playing the 4 now for us. That’s difficult. You lose Tyrese and Furk, you lose a lot of ball handling on the floor.”

Embiid couldn’t hide his frustration with the situation after the game, not only with his team losing — the Sixers dropped into a three-way tie for eighth place in the East with the Atlanta Hawks and Boston Celtics — but with the ongoing pandemic raging around the NBA.

“We all got to protect each other,” Embiid said. “Whether it’s wearing masks, making sure whatever you do outside of basketball that you think about your teammate or their family or your own family. It does suck. From the beginning, even when it hit us, I was mad. I thought last year there was great precautions in place, and this year it was just all over the place, and I thought it was just unprofessional and that’s where we are now.”

Rivers, meanwhile, said all he can do is keep pushing his team and reminding it of how it started the season.

“You have no choice,” he said. “My job right now as a coach is to keep them positive. Let’s keep holding water, let’s win a couple games, let’s stay above .500. This stretch coming up is important if we can get healthy because we get a lot of rest.

“I think we have two days off now, we have two days off the following week, we have four days off the week after that. It’s like they made us play all these games and they’re gonna give us a chance to gather ourselves. But it won’t matter unless we’re healthy.”

Would Mercedes have won in court?

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fia mercedes wolff court masi f1 rules, fia rules

Mercedes announced on Thursday that they will not see their appeal through, but had they pursued it, would they have won? Grandprix247 offers some insight with help from legal eagles.

As a result, the outcome of the 2021 Formula 1 season remains unchanged, Max Verstappen is the 2021 F1 World Champion, and Mercedes claimed a record-breaking eighth consecutive F1 Constructors’ Championship.

But the aftermath of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, the 2021 F1 Season Finale, is still raising questions and suspicions, as to the way the Championship was decided.

The FIA has revealed that “a detailed analysis and clarification exercise for the future” has been launched, with Mercedes responding after they announced their appeal withdrawal that: “Thus, we welcome the decision by the FIA to install a commission to thoroughly analyse what happened in Abu Dhabi and to improve the robustness of rules, governance and decision making in Formula 1.

“We also welcome that they have invited the teams and drivers to take part. The Mercedes-AMG Petronas team will actively work with this commission to build a better Formula 1 – for every team and every fan who loves this sport as much as we do.

“We will hold the FIA accountable for this process and we hereby withdraw our appeal,” Mercedes wrote in a statement released yesterday.

Formula 1 rules are inherently unfair

In an effort to bring some clarity to our readers on the subject, Grandprix247 has solicited some legal advice from JMW Soliciters’ Head of Sports Law, Stephen Taylor Heath, as the FIA since Sunday’s controversial decision-making, said the lobbying of the Race Director will stop next year.

“The rules of Formula 1 are inherently unfair in the way they deal with an accident,” he said. “In any sport where the outcome can turn on the discretion of a human-being applying the rules you will get unfairness.

“Most onlookers would regard the application of the rules by Michael Masi to be unfair as he went back on previous precedent and the strict application of the rules to manipulate one more lap of racing.”

Taylor Heath added: “The FIA justification for Mr. Masi’s conduct is that he actually has discretion whether to apply the rules or not and to vary them if he wishes. Needless to say that has raised eyebrows.

“What needs to be established in any appeal is whether Mr. Masi knew a rule but chose not to apply it or whether he believed he had (erroneously or otherwise) discretion to vary the rules in real time as he adapted to the circumstances.

“Formula 1 like many sports sets its own sporting regulations that the courts are reticent to interfere in. The key concern however is independence and conflicting interests that self-regulation can impose.

“Regulation of a sport should be administered by a body entirely independent of the governing body where that governing body is also a key commercial rights holder in that sport.”

Would Mercedes have won the appeal?

That probably is the million-dollar question after Mercedes announced that they withdrew their appeal, as Mercedes Team Principal Toto Wolff was asked by The Race if they expected to win.

Wolff responded: “We believe we had a very strong case and if you look at it from the legal side if it would have been judged in a regular court, it was almost guaranteed that we would have won.”

With Mercedes appealing to the FIA’s International Court of Appeal, Wolff explained: “The problem with the ICA is the way it’s structured.

“The FIA can’t really mark their own homework and there is a difference between being right and obtaining justice,” he claimed, suggesting that despite “potentially” being right, Mercedes would not have been able to reverse the result.

What the lawyers say

Grandprix247 posed the same question – regarding Mercedes’ chances of winning the appeal – to Stephen Taylor Heath, Head of Sports Law at JMW Solicitors.

“The FIA Regulations deal with the process for Protest and an Appeal,” he began. “The hearing on the evening of the Grand Prix was a Protest . Mercedes are considering whether to Appeal.”

Taylor Heath went on: “They will be weighing up legal advice but also commercial considerations as any appeal means dragging the issue out potentially tarnishing the integrity of the sport and Mercedes/Hamilton’s sponsors. No doubt Hamilton has gained goodwill in the way he conducted himself in the aftermath.

“They will be appealing to the International Court of Appeal which whilst set up by FIA is intended to be ‘independent’.

“I would anticipate the advice they will be receiving is that there is strong merit in the argument Article 48.12 was not followed,” the Sports lawyer said. “The FIA statement admitted as much.”

“It is difficult to see how Article 48.13 can override Article 48.12 as that would be an admission the two articles conflict,” Taylor Heath explained. “It is also difficult to see how Article 15.3 which gives the Race Director ‘overriding authority’ to control the use of the safety car gives him authority to ignore or override a regulation.

“Perhaps arguably if safety concerns dictate but it cannot be argued that was the circumstances here as it was clearly the fact the race had only one lap left that was the reason for not allowing all cars to pass.

“Accordingly you would expect the panel of the Court of Appeal made up of esteemed legal minds would agree that FIA has incorrectly applied their own Regulations.

“There is a significant difference between a protest that an official has been incompetent in the way they have exercised their judgment or simply failed to apply a rule and an allegation an official has willfully and knowingly not applied a rule.”

Mercedes’ problem

“The problem for Mercedes and with any appeal of this nature is in seeking a retrospective sanction that alters the outcome of the race and the championship,” the lawyer pointed out.

“You have to consider all the variables as all the cars in the race were affected by the decision not just Hamilton as the other drivers have commented.

“In the FIA statement they said to grant Mercedes protest would be to expunge the last lap of the race.

“I do not agree here as clearly if the rule had been followed the only outcome would have been Hamilton winning behind the safety car unless he broke down in that final lap which has negligible probability.

“Had there been two laps left and rule 48.12 been correctly applied the outcome would have been the same as Verstappen would have been behind Hamilton for the final lap.

“Accordingly the only common sense conclusion you would expect the Appeal panel to come to is that Mr Masi did not apply rule 48.12 properly because it was the penultimate lap which cannot be proper justification,” Taylor Heath claimed.

Finally, what can we make of all this?

“In conclusion, Mercedes might win the battle of obtaining a finding the regulations were wrongly applied but may not achieve the desired remedial outcome,” the Head of Sports Law at JMW Solicitors said.

However, he pointed out another aspect of the situation: “The bigger picture is that presumably, the commercial effect of this is that Mercedes and Lewis Hamilton will miss out on bonuses from their sponsors and whilst the intention is to keep all disputes ‘in house’ their lawyers may be looking at potential damages claims against FIA for their commercial loss.”

So in short, it seems that the legal opinion is aligned with what Mercedes have said, which is; that they might have proven that Michael Masi has erred on Sunday’s F1 finale in Abu Dhabi, but the result of the race, and consequently the championship would not have been overturned.

What Mercedes failed to mention, but was highlighted by the legal opinion is the impact of the appeal process as well on the commercial/sponsorship side, with all the publicity potentially affecting the team’s image as well as its sponsors’.

Had the roles been reversed would Red Bull do the same thing their rivals did?

But then who’s to say – had Masi followed the letter of the rules in article 48.12 on lap 57, ending the race under the Safety Car – that Red Bull wouldn’t have been aggrieved, hence applying the same rationale as Mercedes to prove the FIA and Masi wrong, claiming there were no safety grounds to keep the SC deployed?

Red Bull could have also protested against Masi and the Stewards’ reluctance to ask Hamilton to give first place to Verstappen after the first lap incident when the Briton took to the run-off area keeping his lead.

In all cases, winning also won’t be ensuring justice. It was a damned if you do and damned if you don’t corner Masi was painted into by the circumstances that led to what we saw in Abu Dhabi.

The fact remains that we should be celebrating the two top F1 drivers of their respective generations right now,  Verstappen the worthy Champion, and Hamilton so gracious in defeat. They and we, F1 fans, deserved better.

Instead, we are arguing about the rules…

Note I: If there are legal opinions that differ to the above by Stephen Taylor Heath we would welcome feedback.
Note II: For more details on the clauses of the FIA rules referenced in this article please go here.

NHL, NBA among major sports leagues struggling with COVID-19 outbreaks – National

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North America’s major sports leagues were struggling to contain an explosion of COVID-19 outbreaks on Thursday as fans were bracing for a holiday season of disruption.

For three days the National Football League, National Hockey League and National Basketball Association have faced a surge in positive tests, forcing players into league-mandated COVID-19 protocols and the postponement of games.

The holiday season across the United States and Canada is usually filled with sport action with everything from college football Bowl games to the NBA’s Christmas Day showcase.

Read more:

Three more Calgary Flames placed in COVID-19 protocol

There is no indication yet that any holiday action will be postponed but with the coronavirus spreading through locker rooms, fans may not see all their favourite players.

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The NHL’s Montreal Canadiens hosted the Philadelphia Flyers without fans on Thursday after receiving a request from Quebec public health officials due to the “spiraling rise of COVID-19 cases in the region”.

“We have obtained assurances that beginning with our games in January, we will return to a partial capacity scenario and be able to host fans once more,” the Canadiens said in a statement, encouraging fans to get vaccinated and receive booster shots.


Click to play video: 'Toronto Raptors president tests positive for COVID-19 despite 3rd dose'







Toronto Raptors president tests positive for COVID-19 despite 3rd dose


Toronto Raptors president tests positive for COVID-19 despite 3rd dose

The NFL, which had around 100 players test positive this week, updated its COVID-19 protocols on Thursday, requiring masks regardless of vaccination status, eliminating in-person meals and barring outside visitors while teams are traveling.

The NFL told Reuters there are no plans to limit stadium capacity given that, with few exceptions, players do not interact with fans on game day.

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In Canada, some people who get tickets to see the NHL’s Toronto Maple Leafs and Ottawa Senators or NBA’s Toronto Raptors as Christmas presents may be out of luck as the Ontario provincial government is implementing a 50 per cent capacity limit for sporting events starting on Saturday.

Already dealing with a backlog of 10 postponed games, the NHL on Thursday was looking at the possibility of more scheduling headaches.

With COVID-19 running rampant through their locker room the Calgary Flames said on Thursday that two more players had entered protocol bringing the total to 18.

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With almost the entire team in quarantine, the NHL said it was delaying Calgary’s return to the ice until at least through Dec. 18.

The International Ice Hockey Federation, which organises the world junior hockey championship that will be held Dec. 26-Jan. 5 in Alberta, did not immediately respond when asked by Reuters in an email if there was talk about limiting attendance.

The premier of the western Canadian province, however, said this week there were no plans to change capacity levels in the two arenas that will host the 31-game, 10-team tournament.

The NBA on Monday saw its first games of the season postponed when 10 Chicago Bulls players and additional staff members were placed in health and safety protocols requiring the rescheduling of two contests.

Read more:

Montreal Canadiens game Thursday night held without spectators

The league and its players’ body agreed to new COVID-19 protocols for the holiday season, including increased testing, in a memo sent out to teams, ESPN reported.

A return to using masks in most circumstances was also outlined in the memo, including during travel and while on the bench in games.

The virus has also impacted college sports, including at Tulane University in New Orleans where the men’s basketball team has been temporarily shut down due to multiple positive cases of COVID-19 within the program.





Tyson Fury quashes Oleksandr Usyk fight talk as he reveals his ‘hitlist’ for next year | Boxing | Sport

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After Fury’s clash with Joshua and their proposed rematch, it appears the Gypsy King is hoping to fight British star Derek Chisora. 

Fury has already beaten Chisora on two occasions in the past – by unanimous decision in 2011 and then by stoppage in 2014.

The glaring omission on the list was former undisputed cruiserweight champion and unified heavyweight king Usyk. 

Usyk met and chatted with Fury last weekend, and the Ukrainian won his titles by outclassing Joshua at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in September.

Liverpool shrug off Covid outbreak to beat Newcastle | The Guardian Nigeria News

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Liverpool shrugged off a coronavirus outbreak to keep their Premier League title challenge on track with a 3-1 win over Newcastle that was lit up by Trent Alexander-Arnold’s wonder goal.

The Reds lost Virgil van Dijk and Fabinho to positive cases of Covid before kick-off as a surge of infections across Britain threatens to bring the season to a temporary halt.

Liverpool were further rocked when Jonjo Shelvey opened the scoring against his old club after just seven minutes.

But Newcastle remained mired in the bottom three for a reason as goals from Diogo Jota and Mohamed Salah turned the game around before half-time.

Liverpool’s German manager Jurgen Klopp (R) and Liverpool’s Brazilian goalkeeper Alisson Becker react to their win after the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Newcastle United at Anfield in Liverpool, north west England on December 16, 2021. – Liverpool won the game 3-1. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)

Alexander-Arnold’s thunderbolt four minutes from time rounded off an eighth consecutive win for Jurgen Klopp’s men as they close to within one point of leaders Manchester City.

“What a stunner!” Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp said on Alexander-Arnold’s goal. “The boy has a different level in his shooting technique.”

Before kick-off Klopp spoke out to encourage people to ignore the “lies and misinformation” around vaccination from coronavirus and get their jabs or boosters.

Curtis Jones was also absent for the Reds due to a positive test for Covid.

But Klopp confirmed on Wednesday that his squad are fully vaccinated and therefore did not lose any other players due to being close contacts of those with the virus.

Anfield hosted the final top level game in England in front of a full crowd before the pandemic shut football down for three months in March 2020.

History could be repeating itself as five of the 10 Premier League games scheduled for this weekend have already been called off.

Liverpool’s trip to Tottenham is one of those still going ahead for now, but much will depend on how well the outbreak is contained over the coming days.

“Until we’re told otherwise we’ll be in there every day and making sure we’re fit for Sunday,” said Alexander-Arnold.

“The games come thick and fast so any minor slip can prove costly come April or May.”

Reds break club scoring record
Liverpool had to respond to City’s 7-0 hammering of Leeds on Tuesday.

And they got off to the worst possible start when Thiago Alcantara’s wayward pass fell perfectly for Shelvey to curl home a wonderful strike from outside the box.

However, a clash between the league’s best attack and worst defence quickly showed.

Newcastle felt aggrieved about the source of Liverpool’s equaliser as referee Mike Dean did not stop the play after a clash of heads between Isaac Hayden and Fabian Schar.

Jota took full advantage as he was completely unmarked at the back post and after Martin Dubravka’s stunning save to deny his first effort, the Portuguese slammed home the rebound.

“It was clear to me Isaac went down holding his head and for me the game should be stopped,” said Newcastle manager Eddie Howe. “It’s had a huge bearing on the game.”

That goal saw Liverpool break a club record by scoring in a 32nd consecutive game stretching back to April.

Shelvey then undid much of his good work by gifting Liverpool the chance to go in front.

His backpass played in Sadio Mane and again Dubravka got no help from his defence after saving from the Senegalese as Salah followed up to score his 22nd goal in 23 appearances this season.

Dubravka kept Newcastle in the game during the second period with saves from Mane and Jota.

But there was no stopping Alexander-Arnold’s stunning drive to ensure the Magpies remain in 19th, three points adrift of safety.

Chicago Bulls hoping to return to practice court in next few days after COVID stoppage

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CHICAGO — Bulls coach Billy Donovan said he was hopeful that the team would be cleared by the NBA to resume activities in the next few days, giving the Bulls some practice time before they host the Los Angeles Lakers on Sunday night.

The Bulls have not gathered as a team since Monday morning, just before the league postponed their two games this week amid a COVID-19 outbreak that had landed 10 players in health and safety protocols.

The team hasn’t recorded any new cases of COVID-19 on the roster or coaching staff following the NBA’s decision to postpone Tuesday’s home game against the Detroit Pistons and Thursday’s road game against the Toronto Raptors.

Chicago’s practice facility has been largely dormant this week except for players shuffling in for daily COVID-19 testing or to complete rehab assignments.

“We haven’t been able to do anything at all,” Donovan said during a Zoom call with reporters on Thursday. “Right when [the games were postponed], the league came out with some protocols that we needed to follow.

“In terms of the activities of being able to come in here, get together as a team, work out as a team, do those kinds of things, we haven’t been able to do anything. … I’m hopeful the league will give us some time here, Friday and Saturday, to get the group back together that would be available to play on Sunday.”

Two players — Coby White and Javonte Green — have cleared protocols and have been in the team facility this week for individual workouts following their isolation period. Both should be eligible for Sunday’s game. DeMar DeRozan, Derrick Jones Jr. and Matt Thomas will have cleared their 10-day isolation period by Sunday, but Donovan said they would be day-to-day before returning to the court.

And Donovan confirmed that the players who tested positive most recently — such as Zach LaVine, Ayo Dosunmu, Troy Brown Jr. and Alize Johnson — would all be out until after Christmas.

Players who test positive are required to miss at least 10 days unless they return multiple negative tests in a 24-hour window.

“We’ve had a lot of guys quite honestly that you would consider asymptomatic, where they have not really experienced any illness or sickness, but I still think there’s a period where they’ve got to deal with the medical staff and the league in terms of what they can and cannot do,” Donovan said.

The Bulls are hopeful they are on the other side of this team outbreak that depleted their roster since Dec. 1, when White tested positive. The team should have at least 10 players available for Sunday’s game, including White and Green.

Donovan was encouraged that a break in action this week will rest players that were logging a lot of minutes to pick up the slack.

The Bulls were fully vaccinated as a team as of early November. And while some players have received booster shots, Donovan declined to get into specifics as to how many.

The NBA ramped up testing protocols for teams after the Thanksgiving holiday, and the Bulls have been testing daily since their first positive was triggered. However, the team also felt it was being put at a competitive disadvantage with such a large portion of its roster sidelined.

“I think the league is trying to do everything it can possibly do to play games and also keep teams safe and healthy,” Donovan said. “I don’t know what the right number is in order to say this team should play or this team shouldn’t play. Certainly we got hit really hard with this and we lost a lot of players. Other teams have been hit a little bit, but not as much. I’ve always said this, when you lose key players off your team, it definitely impacts you.

“With the surge that’s going on right now, I think the league is probably in the process of figuring out how they’re going to go about testing everybody else in the league. And certainly when you do more testing like that, you’re going to come across more guys that are going to test positive.”

As of Thursday morning, 60 players — including 43 in December — have entered the protocols this season.

Justin Thomas’ dad marvels at ‘how good’ Tiger Woods’ game looks ahead of PNC Championship

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ORLANDO, Fla. — It is no surprise that Justin Thomas and his dad, Mike, will be paired with Tiger Woods and his son, Charlie, during the opening round of the PNC Championship on Saturday.

They did so during the first round a year ago, and they are neighbors in South Florida.

But what was interesting is what the older Thomas — a former club pro and still a teacher to his son — said about playing with Woods recently.

“It’s crazy how good he’s hitting it and how far he’s hitting, for what he’s been through,” Mike Thomas said Thursday at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.

That ought to add a bit more juice to what already promises to be a high-intensity weekend for what is normally a low-key, offseason golf event among major champions and their family members.

Woods will play competitive golf for the first time in a year — since he and Charlie, now 12, tied for seventh at this same tournament a year ago, in fact.

A Feb. 23 car crash in which Woods suffered significant injuries to his right leg and foot left him hospitalized for weeks and immobile for months. Only recently has he emerged to show the progress he has made, which includes playing golf with his son, something that seemed inconceivable in the aftermath of the accident.

“My excitement level is high just for him being out here and being somewhere other than his house and getting to see a lot of familiar faces,” said Justin Thomas, a 14-time PGA Tour winner who has probably spent more time with Woods in the past several months than any other player.

“And know spending time with Charlie is a huge deal to him. So I know he’s excited for that part.

“In terms of competing, I think his expectations are very low. But at the same time, he is who he is for a reason, so I’m sure he’ll be pissed off if he doesn’t play well.”

Woods, who turns 46 on Dec. 30, tried to keep the expectations down during his news conference at the Hero World Challenge on Nov. 30. He was self-deprecating as to how far he was hitting the ball, and cautioned that he was a long way from playing competitive tour golf.

He acknowledged that “hit and giggle” golf might be in his future, and so here he is at the PNC, with a Friday morning pro-am time a first real opportunity for the world to get a glimpse of his game.

“We all know him well enough to know that he’s never going to admit to being close to where he’d like to be,” Mike Thomas said. “More importantly, where he would normally be compared to now. More importantly is his shot, whatever he has right now. … He’s still got some speed. He’s got some length. Hits a lot of really, really flush shots. I mean, I was surprised.”

A year ago, Charlie Woods stole the show, amazing those who watched with how similar his mannerisms were to those of his father, who has won 15 major championships and 82 PGA Tour titles.

But now the focus will again be squarely on Tiger.

“It shows how Tiger’s changed,” said Padraig Harrington, the European Ryder Cup captain, who is playing with his son Paddy. “Let’s face it. Tiger was always great to play against at his peak. But he was a hired professional. He let nobody in. Nobody knew who Tiger was. “But now as a parent, he’s a completely different person. He’s changed. There’s no way he would be playing any golf at this stage right now only for he wants to have that experience with his son. As you grow older, you realize there’s more to life. Your family becomes the center of your life. And it’s clear with Tiger that’s the case.

“He would do anything to give his son an experience he can’t forget. Tiger doesn’t need to be playing golf this week. I’m sure if this wasn’t on now, you wouldn’t see him at least for three or four more months.”

Regardless how Woods plays, the speculation as to when he will return is bound to be endless. Can he return in time for the Masters? Is The Open at St. Andrews more likely? Does he play at all in 2022?

The PNC is far more subdued than any other public golf he would play. It’s just 36 holes. He is allowed to use a golf cart. And the format is a scramble, which means both players hit a tee shot, play from the best one and continue that process until the hole is completed.

Last year, with a sizable advance from the junior tees, Charlie often hit drives well into play that meant his famous dad didn’t even need to bother. It will be interesting to see how often Tiger hits a driver or any tee shots, given his situation.

“I’m sure some days he’s like, ‘Oh, wow, I can do this,’ and there’s some days where it’s like, ‘Oh, I’m not really sure,'” Justin Thomas said. “But [playing this week] is very impressive and unbelievable.

“But I know that he somewhere deep in there had this circled on his calendar of wanting to come back here.”

Third Valuejet Para Table Tennis Open begins today in Lagos | The Guardian Nigeria News

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Third edition of the yearly Lagos Valuejet Para Table Tennis Open serves off today at the Molade Okoya-Thomas Hall of Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere.

The three-day championship, which will be in 45 events, is aimed at shaping up athletes for future events, especially next year.

Speaking on the occasion announcing the start of the competition yesterday, Chairman of the para-division of the Nigeria Table Tennis Federation (NTTF), Anderson Bankole, said the competition has proven that the country has talents who can compete with the best in the world as demonstrated in the past world event.

“I am happy that we are having this tournament again this year, especially with what our players did at the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) tournament in France. Now, with this kind of competition, our players will be able to compete against themselves and it will also help us to rank them.

“It gladdens my heart that Valuejet has again remained committed to the sport and I hope others will take a cue,” Bankole said, adding that the firm has continued to show faith despite the global meltdown occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to Executive Chairman, Lagos State Sports Commission, Sola Aiyepeku, the state remains dedicated to the championship, as we encourage athletes to work hard in order to be world best.

“We want to continue to raise the bar as a state and we believe hosting the tournament will affirm our position as the continent’s sports hub.

“On our part, we will continue to play a leading role in sports by uncovering and encouraging athletes to aim high.

“We believe that tournament like this will provide the platform for athletes to showcase their talents as well as sharpen their skills,” Aiyepeku said.

ITTF’s representative at the competition, Francisco Nutzo, said the contest would help the world body to establish the eagerness of the country to be looked into as one of the countries hosting major para tournament next year.

“This country is a well-known for table tennis and I am not surprised with what I am seeing. I hope at the end of the tournament, it can get listed on the ITTF for 2022,” he said.

According to Head of Corporate Communications of Valuejet, Adedamola Akingbule, the firm is committed to sponsoring the event, as it also plans to continue to grow the championship yearly.

Coordinator of the tournament, Sunday Odebode, said fans are going to witness the emergence of new stars in the mode of Christian Ikpoyi, who is rated number 10 in the world, to replace the ageing players.

The championship is organised by the Sunday Odebode Sports Foundation in collaboration with the Lagos State Sports Commission and with technical support from the NTTF. The championship ends on December 18.