Under fire Clark calls for more bravery from Birmingham players after latest home loss

Under-fire Clark calls for more bravery from Birmingham players after latest home loss

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UPDATED:

19:31 GMT, 6 October 2012

Under-pressure Birmingham boss Lee Clark called for his players to stand up and be counted and stop hiding behind him after City were again booed off following another home defeat.

A hurt Clark cut a frustrated figure following this afternoon's 1-0 defeat to former employers Huddersfield, leaving Blues fourth-bottom in the npower Championship.

Former Sunderland and Newcastle player Lee Clark

Under the spotlight: Lee Clark is feeling the heat after another home defeat

Blues' fifth defeat from 10 games was a second successive setback on home soil in the league for the first time in 19 months, and came after the abject 5-0 rout by Barnsley, the club's biggest home league defeat in 25 years.

Reports of a player revolt were dismissed this week but Clark saw his side put in a disappointing display, especially in the first half, and felt his charges handed the initiative to the visitors from the first whistle due to a lack of competitiveness.

Jermaine Beckford's 25th-minute strike settled matters for high-flying Huddersfield, while substitute Nikola Zigic was sent off 16 minutes from time for a high challenge on Callum Woods.

Clark said: 'It's our home, it's where the majority of our fans are. They come to see us and want to see a performance. Any football fan in the world wants to see a bit of drive.

'Some good tackles are as good as a good shot, they get the crowd lifted, they get them behind the team, they drive you forward.

Jermaine Beckford of Huddersfield Town scores a goal to make the score 0-1

Twisting the knife: Huddersfield's Jermaine Beckford scores to inflict another loss on Lee Clark – this time against his former club

'Football fans are working-class people, they want to see someone having a right good go for their team, in terms of tackling, heading, competing.

'You see the size of me, I'm not a big fella but I competed, I put my head in there, I put my foot in there. Maybe seven times out of 10 the opposition came through me with the ball but I was still putting some sort of challenge in.

'There were four of five players in the first half who never did that. They've got to stand up and be counted.

'Okay, I'm responsible but I can't keep saying that. Can they start taking responsibility

'I'm getting the flak from supporters, no problem I can take that. But I'm not sitting in the dressing room telling them not to tackle, to pussyfoot around, telling them to mis-place passes.

'They can't just hide behind me all the time, they've got to come out fighting.'

Huddersfield boss Simon Grayson backed Clark to turn things around at St Andrew's after watching his side end a run of back-to-back home defeats with a third successive win on the road.

It takes Town – who were impressive here, more so in the first half – up to sixth in the table.

'I think deservedly we got the win, getting any points in the Championship is never easy,' Grayson said.

'We started the game very well, very brightly, pressurised Birmingham when we needed to, played in the right areas with purpose and created some good opportunities. I'm delighted from that point of view.

'The back end of the game when Birmingham had nothing to lose we were resilient and withstood some pressure.

'To come here and get a result is satisfying from my point of view after two tough previous defeats.'

London 2012 Paralympics: Great Britain can top 103 medal target – Craig Hunter

GB can break the 100-medal barrier at London Paralympics, insists team chief

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UPDATED:

11:06 GMT, 26 August 2012

ParalympicsGB chef de mission Craig Hunter is optimistic the team can achieve their targets as the countdown to London continues apace.

UK Sport have set ParalympicsGB the minimum target of winning 103 medals from at least 12 different sports, with the overall goal of once again finishing second in the medal table.

Britain won 102 medals, including 42 golds, in Beijing four years ago to claim second place for a third consecutive Paralympic Games.

Ceremony: Rosie Smith (second left) lights a Paralympic cauldron in Edinburgh on Sunday

Ceremony: Rosie Smith (second left) lights a Paralympic cauldron in Edinburgh on Sunday

ParalympicsGB's campaign has been backed to the tune of more than 49million of funding over the last four years, with money being distributed to 18 different sports.

Hunter acknowledges how the funding underpins the continued competitiveness of the British team.

However, with funding comes not only expectation but also targets which will in turn help define future support.

Hunter told BBC Five Live: 'We would certainly not be able to be competing at the level we are without that support and we are extremely grateful that with that support and with other organisations that have come in to help us in all sorts of ways the team is absolutely best prepared.

'One of the things we pushed for is parity of funding of Olympics and Paralympic sport so absolutely the model needed to be consistent.

Burining bright: The cauldron is lit on the Mound in Edinburgh as part of the Paralympic Torch Relay

Burining bright: The cauldron is lit on the Mound in Edinburgh as part of the Paralympic Torch Relay

'We are hopeful that all our sports will come through and will beat their medal targets and performance targets and the funding will come their way.

'But let's not focus on funding at the moment the important thing for us absolutely is the opening ceremony on Wednesday and then 11 days of outstanding competition and everybody getting behind our team and making sure we win plenty of medals.'

He added: 'We have got our biggest ever team: 300 athletes competing on behalf of Great Britain which is an amazing achievement by those athletes.

Great Scot: Scouts holding the Paralympic Flame at the lighting ceremony at Edinburgh Castle

Great Scot: Scouts holding the Paralympic Flame at the lighting ceremony at Edinburgh Castle

'All of them are absolutely capable of winning medals, the traditional sports of cycling, rowing, swimming, athletics – they are going to be bags full of medals.

'But also ones to watch are things like basketball, rugby – amazingly exciting and powerful sports – and sitting volleyball on the team for the first time. Who knows what they might do They are certainly inspired to get in there in the medal hunt, we are going to be looking for medals across more sports.

'They are out there to prove some points about how wonderful Paralympic sport really is.'

Robin van Persie is right to want to leave Arsenal – Sol Campbell

Van Persie is right to want to leave Arsenal, says former Gunner Campbell

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UPDATED:

08:17 GMT, 7 July 2012

He's Gunner leave: Van Persie (left) played alongside Campbell

He's Gunner leave: Van Persie (left) played alongside Campbell

Former Arsenal star Sol Campbell understands how Gunners captain Robin van Persie has lost patience with the club.

Campbell, who was a key part of Arsenal's “Invincibles” side in 2003-04, believes the Dutchman, who has announced he will not sign a new deal at the Emirates, has become disillusioned with the club's lack of competitiveness for top trophies.

Van Persie's current deal expires at the end of the season and the striker looks certain to leave this summer – a position Campbell can appreciate.

'I can understand why Van Persie has decided not to sign a new contract,' the former England defender told the Daily Mirror.

'When you go back to your club for pre-season, and you look around the changing room, you want to see top players around you and think, “Yeah, we're going to do something this season. This is where it's happening”.

'That's what van Persie is looking for. And maybe he's had a look and thought, “Is this it”

'Robin has seen the good times, and been part of the good times, and he wants more of it. Basically, his statement is shorthand for saying his patience has run out, and that he can't wait for ever if he's going to win major trophies in his career.

'From the outside, it looks as though he wants to go to a club who will start the season expecting to win things, not just to be in contention with a lot of ifs, buts, maybes and strings attached.'

Jumping ship: Van Persie says he wants to win trophies

Jumping ship: Van Persie says he wants to win trophies

Campbell believes reconciliation is not impossible, but thinks Arsenal would have to make some serious statements in the transfer market.

'Maybe he could still sign a new contract if Arsenal rustle up 100m from somewhere and make a serious statement by signing three world-class players,' he said.

'But they lost Fabregas and Nasri last summer, so we've been here before and I don't see how it's going to be any different this time.

'Arsenal have established this model of financial prudence, they have a fantastic new stadium, they are bringing the club's debt down ahead of schedule and everything is tickety-boo off the pitch.

'They are making money, they are in good shape and everything is well-run… but they are not winning. The real sting is in the punchline.'

Rangers in crisis: Neil Lennon expects absence to hurt Celtic

Best of enemies: Lennon expects Rangers absence to hurt Celtic

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UPDATED:

13:45 GMT, 6 July 2012

Celtic manager Neil Lennon expects the collapse of Rangers to hit his club financially but his budget for next season is unaffected by the absence of their Old Firm rivals in the Clydesdale Bank Premier League.

Celtic were among 10 clubs who voted against the Ibrox newco's application to join the SPL, with their future now uncertain.

SPL clubs face a shortfall of revenue next term with huge uncertainty if the new Rangers have to start life in the Third Division.

Firm interest: Lennon thinks Rangers' struggles will impact Celtic financially

Firm interest: Lennon thinks Rangers' struggles will impact Celtic financially

Celtic have consistently insisted they do not need Rangers to flourish but Lennon expects some sort of impact.

'Financially and commercially it will bite us a bit but the club has its own financial structure and strategy in place and we'll move ahead regardless,' Lennon said.

'We always try and maintain a level ground on the spending going out and the money that we bring in.

'That hasn't changed and that was the plan going into the season anyway, regardless of the outcome of Wednesday.'

Fixed budget: Lennon doesn't expect his summer spending to be affected

Fixed budget: Lennon doesn't expect his summer spending to be affected

Lennon admits he will miss the Old Firm derbies and the challenge throughout the season.

'There's that competitiveness, that rivalry, you are obviously going to miss the games,' said Lennon as the club held a media conference to mark the permanent signing of goalkeeper Fraser Forster and the launch of their 2011-12 season review DVD.

'It's a great selling point for Scottish football but they are not here and there's nothing I can do about that.

'What I will say is we need our supporters to back the team now more than ever, to come and support us and invest in the club because we are going to be hit financially by the loss of Rangers in the SPL.'

Tell us why you won"t pick world No 1 Cook, BOA will ask taekwondo chiefs

Tell us why you won't pick world No 1 Cook, BOA will ask taekwondo chiefs

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UPDATED:

23:25 GMT, 29 May 2012

Aaron Cook's Olympic dream is still alive after the British Olympic Association summoned taekwondo chiefs to explain his omission from the London 2012 squad.

European champion Cook, who will become world No 1 in his weight category when new rankings are published on Friday, appealed to the BOA this week.

And the BOA Qualification Standards (OQS) panel of chief executive Andy Hunt, Sir Clive Woodward, deputy chef de mission Mark England and Sarah Winckliss, chairman of the BOA athletes commission, have demanded selectors spell out their reasons for picking Lutalo Muhammad ahead of Cook in the -80kg category.

Fighting chance: Aaron Cook

Fighting chance: Aaron Cook

‘Once the OQS Panel has had an opportunity to ask further questions of and receive additional information from the British Taekwondo Selection Committee, it will be in a position to act upon the nomination,’ said a statement.

The panel will also consult the world taekwondo federation before deciding whether to overturn the selection but they seemed to be on Cook’s side last night.

Secretary general Jean-Marie Ayer said that one of the criteria in the guidelines for Team GB’s four host nation places is that athletes should be ranked in the world top 20 between May 2010 and April 2012. Cook has been in the top 20 throughout this period but Muhammad has never been ranked that high.

Training on his own: Cook

Training on his own: Cook

‘We believe our rankings are a non-subjective indicator of a player’s proven form over a period of time and potential competitiveness at future championships,’ he said.

British Taekwondo said: ‘We will continue to work with the BOA to finalise the fourth selection place. We maintain the overriding aim of the selection panel has been to select athletes who provide the team the optimal chance of winning the best set of medals at the Games.’

The selectors will also have to explain how they can be sure Cook didn’t meet their criteria when he has been training on his own in his garden shed for the past year having quit the official set-up.

London 2012 Olympics: One journey from 7/7 bombings to Paralympics

Wright set to complete amazing journey from 7/7 agony to Paralympics

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UPDATED:

09:28 GMT, 22 March 2012

Martine Wright was running late for work. Staying out to celebrate London winning the 2012 Olympics had caused her to oversleep.

In the underground, she didn't reach her usual car, which dropped her off nearest to her exit. Instead, she jumped onto a closer one just as the door closed. Moments later, chaos.

A white light flashed and she felt herself being thrown. An off-duty policewoman found Wright in the wreckage and held her hand. Wright looked up. She saw a trainer; it had been blown off her foot and skewered on a piece of metal.

Horror: The 7/7 bombings in London killed more than 50 commuters

Horror: The 7/7 bombings in London killed more than 50 commuters

The marketing manager lost both legs on the morning of July 7, 2005, in the bombings that killed 52 commuters and all four suicide bombers. She was in a coma for 10 days. Her body was swollen to twice its normal size. Her brother and sister saw her in the hospital; they told the police it wasn't her.

Seven years later, Martine Wright is a full-time athlete. Her goal: this summer's Paralympics.

Martine remembers her mother holding her face, telling her she could have died or been brain damaged. But that didn't happen.

Wright, 39, learned to walk again with the help of prosthetic legs. She learned how to fly. She did a sky diving jump for charity. She got married to her long-time boyfriend, Nick Wiltshire.

Competitive: Martine Wright lost both legs in the bombings but will now compete for Great Britain this summer

Competitive: Martine Wright lost both legs in the bombings but is set to compete for Great Britain

But somehow, moving on required something more. She needed a goal. Always athletic – she had played field hockey at university – she looked to sports.

'I wanted to feel that competitiveness I used to feel at work – that sort of hunger for success,' she said.

She tried wheelchair tennis, but dropped it because she doesn't like wheelchairs. The relatively new sport of sitting volleyball caught her eye. Imagine regular volleyball, but with a lower net and the players with their backsides on the floor. That's sitting volleyball.

Wright jokes that the courts gleam after games.

It was at gyms like one at West London's Roehampton University, where the team trains, that Wright found camaraderie. Where else can an athlete walk in and toss her fake legs against a wall, like galoshes piled up after children come in from the snow

On a recent day, team-mates goofed around throwing balls at Martine's head while she chatted on the sidelines with a reporter. They support one another even as they fight for their place on the squad.

'They're all fighters really,' said team captain Andrea Green. And team-mates. And friends.

London's organizers make a point of giving attention to the Paralympics, which take place from August 29 until September 9.

Queen Elizabeth II will open the Paralympics as well as the Olympics, a reflection of the nation's interest in offering equitable treatment to Paralympians.

But it isn't just about attention. As the host nation, London was able to automatically qualify to send a team. But the British Paralympic Association had worries about the sitting volleyball team, which was relatively inexperienced.

The association was determined that the team rise to the competition, to be able to take to the court with powerhouses like China and hold its own. The association gave the team an ultimatum in the autumn. They had to up their game, or they would not send a team to the Paralympics.

Clock is ticking: Britain is gearing up for this summer's extravaganza

Clock is ticking: Britain is gearing up for this summer's sporting extravaganza

Penny Briscoe, the performance director for the British Paralympic Association, said the organization was determined to make sure they were ready, focused and gelling as a unit. Home team berth or no, the team was going to have to be good enough to compete against the best.

'It is about inspiring a nation of potential athletes who want to come and play,' Briscoe said, explaining the tough line. 'It is also to do with integrity. There are no free tracksuits for a Paralympics GB athlete.'

The association ruled last week that the team will compete. But now there will be a decision on who should play. That goes for Wright as well.

Despite being one of the more high-profile survivors of the July attacks and becoming an unflinching ambassador for the sport, Wright will not get a free pass. She must earn her place like any of the other players.

Equal billing: The Paralympics follow the Olympics in London this summer

Equal billing: The Paralympics follow the Olympics in London this summer

'If you said to me seven years ago, look Martine, you're going to be going to one of the biggest shows on earth – London 2012… I would think you're absolutely mad,' she said.

'But I'm riding the wave. Who knows what the future can hold But what I've got to do now is keep training and make sure I get selected.'

If she does, she will wear No 7, the date that the bomb went off – moments after she sat down, looked at the Olympics story in the newspaper and wondered how she might get tickets.

Wright doesn't feel angry. She feels lucky. So many died, and so many relatives lost loved ones. The fact that she's tied to the Olympics and the Paralympics by a weird twist of fate is not simply a matter of coincidence – she says it is a reflection that things were meant to be this way.

And somehow, competing is already real. She can envision the opening ceremony. She wants her husband there, her parents and her son, Oscar, who she hopes will hold a sign reading 'Mummy'.

'There is good that comes out of bad,' she said.