Radamel Falcao, Chelsea target, to stay at Atletico Madrid until end of season

I'm going nowhere: Chelsea target Falcao to remain in Spain until end of season

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UPDATED:

15:41 GMT, 27 December 2012

Chelsea have been dealt a blow in their pursuit of Atletico Madrid striker Radamel Falcao as he has indicated he wants to remain in Spain until the end of the season.

The 26-year-old Colombian striker is grateful to club president Enrique Cerezo for making him feel valued at the club by showing his determination to keep him.

Roman Abramovich was willing to pay the 48million needed to procure the striker from the Spanish capital but he is enjoying his time at the Estadio Vicente Calderon.

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Staying put: Falcao wants to remain in Madrid until the summer

Staying put: Falcao wants to remain in Madrid until the summer

Award: Falcao spent Boxing Day in his native Columbia as he received an Excellent Citizen Award from Colombian Police General Director Jose Leon in Bogota

Award: Falcao spent Boxing Day in his native Columbia as he received an Excellent Citizen Award from Colombian Police General Director Jose Leon in Bogota

Colombian Chief General Jose Leon Riano applauds

Colombia's soccer player Radamel Falcao speaks after being awarded the Excellent Citizen Award

Colombia's soccer player Radamel Falcao smiles after receiving the Excellent Citizen Award

Falcao told reporters: ‘I recognise the great effort Enrique Cerezo has made for me to stay at the club.

‘And thank goodness our sporting results have been positive. We expect that to remain so until the end of the season.’

Difficulties in pursuing Falcao means Chelsea have been considering other options, including Barcelona striker David Villa.

The Blues will try to bring him on loan to Stamford Bridge as manager Rafael Benitez believes he will complement Fernando Torres.

Torres is the only striker Chelsea have left, given that Daniel Sturridge is leaving for 12m to Liverpool.

Going it alone: Torres will be Chelsea's only recognised striker when Sturridge leaves for Liverpool

Going it alone: Torres will be Chelsea's only recognised striker when Sturridge leaves for Liverpool

Kevin Pietersen is a genius and he is worth a bit of hassle: Nasser Hussain

'Public enemy No 1' Pietersen is a genius and he is worth a bit of hassle

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UPDATED:

23:51 GMT, 25 November 2012

How close England came to messing up the whole Kevin Pietersen affair by leaving him out of this tour. It would have been like handing the series to India on a plate.

Yes, Pietersen did some stupid things last summer and, yes, he deserved to be disciplined. But somehow he was turned into public enemy No 1.

He did the crime but had served enough time by the end of the summer and Duncan Fletcher and India would have been rubbing their hands with glee when he was initially left out of England’s tour party.

Double act: Kevin Pietersen and Alastair Cook were in sensational form in Mumbai (FILE IMAGE)

Double act: Kevin Pietersen and Alastair Cook were in sensational form in Mumbai (FILE IMAGE)

Equally, India would have had their heads in their hands when he was eventually added to that squad because they knew what a difference he could make. Pietersen showed just that with a truly amazing innings.

Whoever sorted this situation out and got Pietersen on a plane to Mumbai deserves a massive pat on the back. It was always going too far to say he should not play at all this winter or, as some had it, should never play for England again.

I feel strongly about this because management has to be about dealing with different characters for the sake of the team. A lot of rubbish has been spoken about reintegration and team spirit but the bottom line is that different people need to be treated differently.

Handle with care: Pietersen is back to his best, and thank goodness for that (FILE IMAGE)

Handle with care: Pietersen is back to his best, and thank goodness for that (FILE IMAGE)

Pietersen can be a cricketing genius and geniuses are worth a bit of hassle and awkwardness. It would be lovely if everyone was as easy to handle as Alastair Cook but life isn’t like that. Now everyone has to work to make sure that the situation which dogged last summer can never happen again.

Someone else who made a massive mistake is MS Dhoni for insisting that this pitch should turn from the first ball. It is when England are confronted with flat surfaces that they sometimes scratch their heads and struggle to take 20 wickets.

All this did was bring their spinners into the game and England stand on the verge of what would surely be one of their greatest wins. It has been that good.

Robin Van Persie sings You"ll Never Walk Alone

Don't let the manager hear! Man United star Van Persie sings Liverpool anthem 'You'll Never Walk Alone'

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UPDATED:

15:46 GMT, 6 September 2012

For goodness sake, don't show Fergie!

An old video has surfaced on YouTube showing Manchester United's new star striker Robin Van Persie belting out Liverpool anthem You'll Never Walk Alone in a Rotterdam karaoke bar.

And if his manager stumbles upon it, Van Persie could have much more to regret than his horrendously off-key performance.

Scroll down to watch the video

Walking into a storm Robin Van Persie warbles out You'll Never Walk Alone

Walking into a storm Robin Van Persie warbles out You'll Never Walk Alone

Red Van Man: Van Persie has made an excellent start to his career at Manchester United

Red Van Man: Van Persie has made an excellent start to his career at Manchester United

The frontman, who has scored four goals in three appearances for Man United since his 24m move from Arsenal, grabs the mic to 'sing' the final couple of lines of the classic from the musical Carousel as delighted fans look on.

As well as being the stirring pre-match music at United's bitter rivals Liverpool, the song is also the anthem of Rotterdam side Excelsior, where Van Persie started his career.

The clip was uploaded in July 2011, so Van Persie might be forgiven for his choice from the karaoke catalogue, but he'd be well advised to choose something else if invited back home anytime soon.

Van Persie performs 'You'll Never Walk Alone'

London 2102 Paralympics: Sarah Storey claims second gold of Games after husband Barney"s heroics

Anything you can do: Storey claims second gold of Games after husband's heroics

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UPDATED:

15:08 GMT, 1 September 2012

Great Britain's Sarah Storey claimed her second Paralympic gold medal of London 2012 on day three of competition at the Velodrome.

The 34-year-old from Manchester successfully defended her C5 three-kilometres individual pursuit title on Thursday's opening day and today claimed the ninth Paralympic gold medal of her distinguished career.

The swimmer-turned-cyclist clocked 36.997 seconds to triumph in the women's C4/5 500metres time-trial, arguably the weakest of her four events, in front of an ecstatic partisan crowd.

Popular support: The Velodrome crowd cheer Sarah Storey's second gold of the Paralympic Games

Popular support: The Velodrome crowd cheer Sarah Storey's second gold of the Paralympic Games

C5 rider Jennifer Schuble of the United States clocked 37.941secs to place second, with China's Ruan Jianping third in a C4 world record of 38.425, factored to 38.194.

Storey is now set to turn her attention to the road race and road time-trial at Brands Hatch next week, where double gold would see her equal Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson's British female record of 11 Paralympic gold medals.

It was the second gold of the day for the Storeys, after her husband Barney piloted Neil Fachie to win gold in the men's blind and visually impaired tandem one-kilometre time-trial.

Asked about the husband and wife success, Storey said: 'It's amazing. I'm so proud of him and all he has achieved. I just loved it.'

Success: Storey celebrates her gold medal-winning time trial

Success: Storey celebrates her gold medal-winning time trial

She added on Channel 4: 'I've just gone 36.9. Oh my goodness.

'[The factoring] just creates a little bit more unknown. You can only perform your way anyway, whether it's factored or not.

'It's still a race, you've just go to get out there, anything can happen. You've just got to get the job done as fast as possible, regardless of the factor.'

On the support, she added: 'It's just incredible. If you move everyone cheers, if you wave they all shout “hello”.

On track: Storey claimed her 9th Paralympic title

On track: Storey claimed her 9th Paralympic title

'It's amazing. You feel like your own family has grown by 6.000 people. It's just the most incredible venue. I feel proud and privileged to have had the chance to win in front of them.'

Jody Cundy bounced back from disappointment in his favoured event to claim bronze in the men's C4 4km individual pursuit.

Cundy clocked 1:05.317 after 1km – a time good enough to win one-kilometre time-trial gold on day two, when officials ruled he could not restart – before catching Colombia's Diego Duenas little more than a lap later.

London 2012 Olympics: Sailing – Ben Ainslie wins gold

'Sir Ben' is king of the waves: Ainslie wins fourth gold to become best ever Olympic sailor

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UPDATED:

21:33 GMT, 5 August 2012

Olympics 2012

Sir Ben Ainslie, as we shall surely come to know him, is now the greatest Olympic sailor in history. But, more than that, he is as bloody-minded a competitor as British sport has ever produced.

We know that because if he was anything less, he would not have won his fourth consecutive gold medal in the light breeze off Weymouth on Sunday. The story of his success at these Games is of a man who found the right answer to the most difficult question of his life.

It was asked of him in the middle of last week when he had lost the first six of the 11-race Finn regatta to the Dane Jonas Hogh-Christensen. At that point, Ainslie turned his eyes upon himself and discovered the heart to fight back.

Flare player: Ainslie celebrates his fourth Olympic gold

Flare player: Ainslie celebrates his fourth Olympic gold

On Thursday, on the fourth day of racing, he finally won his first race. He then vented his anger at Hogh-Christensen and Holland’s Pieter-Jan Postma for calling a foul on him for allegedly touching a buoy. He accused them of ‘ganging up’.

He was in a corner and baring his teeth. Making him angry is a mistake, he said. So it inevitably proved, that indefatigable spirit to the fore until he was standing up in his boat on Sunday, holding two orange flares and soaking up the acclaim of more than 5,000 on the crowded Nothe peninsula.

But, my goodness, it took a tense final race to settle it. The situation was this: he had to beat Hogh-Christensen for gold. Would he concentrate on his one rival, handcuffing him by sailing in his way That was the tactic he employed with such ruthless brilliance in Sydney in 2000 in another epic duel, against the Brazilian Robert Scheidt. But there was a complicating factor here: Postma also had a mathematical chance of winning gold.

Neck and neck: Ainslie and Hogh-Christensen battle for position

Neck and neck: Ainslie and Hogh-Christensen battle for position

Neck and neck: Ainslie and Hogh-Christensen battle for position

So how to cover both bases Before the start, Ainslie circled Hogh-Christensen like a bird of prey. The Dane hid behind the committee boat, frustrating Ainslie’s tactic, and then made the better start. Ainslie, though, reached the first turn ahead. He never let the advantage slip.

All was well, then No, suddenly, Postma was closing in on second place and that meant Ainslie would be pipped to gold. We held our breath, the Nothe crowd sighed.

But dramatically, thankfully, Postma lost out on the final turn as he tangled with the New Zealander Dan Slater and was forced to do a penalty turn. Postman finished fifth, Ainslie was ninth and the Dane 10th. Ainslie had triumphed.

On the water, he celebrated with his coach David Howlett, the Arsenal-mad guru whose sage technical advice and unflappable manner Ainslie paid generous tribute.

Golden moment: Ainslie punches the air as he realises he has won

Golden moment: Ainslie punches the air as he realises he has won

Golden moment: Ainslie punches the air as he realises he has won

This was a gold medal Ainslie had no right to win. He had to pile on the weight to meet the physical demands of a fleet dominated by bigger men.

He also had to nurse his 35-year-old body through pain. I have interviewed him on the physio’s bench and seen his weary, heavy-limbed walk.

Yes, he needed a physio and recent back surgery but not a sports psychologist. His view was that he knew more about how to prepare than some jumped-up shrink. How refreshing. If, as he admitted, the expectation of a home Games had caused him sleepless nights, he would deal with it.

His mindset for the demands of high-delivery sport is perfect: his fear of failure matches his desire to win. When asked, he could never be sure which was the greater motivation. I suspect the former marginally, but who knows Whatever the mix, his Olympic story is remarkable.

Silver lining: Ainslie won silver in the Laser class at Atlanta 1996 as a 19-year-old

Silver lining: Ainslie won silver in the Laser class at Atlanta 1996 as a 19-year-old

Golden moment: Ainslie with Iain Percy at Sydney 2000

Golden moment: Ainslie with Iain Percy at Sydney 2000

Winning habit: Ainslie celebrates another gold medal in Athens

Winning habit: Ainslie celebrates another gold medal in Athens

Three and easy: Ainslie with his Beijing 2008 medal

Three and easy: Ainslie with his Beijing 2008 medal

His sport, unlike some others, did not permit him to win more than one medal at any single Games. His longevity of success is unmatched by any British Olympian other than the rowing knights Sir Steve Redgrave and Sir Matt Pinsent.

Ainslie’s odyssey started in Atlanta with silver in 1996 and continued with the four golds in two different classes. His extra silver now gives him the edge over Dane Paul Elvstrom as the most decorated Olympic sailor of all time.

Ainslie said ‘Never say never’, as Redgrave famously had before returning to compete for a fifth gold, but intimated that this was the end of his Olympic participation. ‘It’s killing my body,’ he added. ‘I want to go out at the top at my home Olympics. You can’t beat that.’ It had been a long journey from his Swallows and Amazons upbringing in Cornwall.

He will now pursue his America’s Cup ambitions with BMW Oracle next year, and hopefully with his own newly formed team in 2015. We wish this most English of Englishmen luck with those endeavours.

We salute you Ben for your manners off the water and your over-my-dead-f****** – body approach on it.

Flying the flag: Ainslie was jubilant after his success

Flying the flag: Ainslie was jubilant after his success

Flying the flag: Ainslie was jubilant after his success
BEN AINSLIE FACTFILE

1977: Born on February 5 in Macclesfield, Lancashire. His father, Roddy, sailed in the first Whitbread Round the World Race.
1996: Having won the European Championships and finished third in the Laser World Championships, he goes on to win silver at the Olympic Games in Atlanta aged 19.
1997: Finishes third in the Laser World Championships and takes bronze at the European Championships.
1998: Wins both the Laser European and World Championships.
1999: Ainslie is named British Yachtsmen of the Year and World Sailor of the Year, having won the Europeans and World Championships yet again.
2000: Sees off competition from Brazil's Robert Scheidt to win Laser gold at the Sydney Olympics. Also wins Laser Europeans and finishes third in the Laser World Championships. Named British Yachtsmen of the Year and made MBE in New Year Honours list.
2002: After spending 14 months with the 'One World Challenge' America's Cup campaign, Ainslie moves to the Finn class. He wins the first of what prove to be many World Championships in the division and takes the Finn Europeans. Becomes British Yachtsmen of the Year and World Sailor of the Year.
2003: Takes another Finn Gold Cup and another Finn European crown.
2004: Ainslie's dominance of the Finn class continues as he wins a second Olympic gold medal in Athens, Greece. Also takes the World and European crowns as he is named British Yachtsmen of the Year for a fourth time. Inducted into the Finn Hall of Fame.
2005: Ainslie racks up a fourth successive Finn Gold Cup and receives OBE. He also wins the Finn Europeans.
2008: After re-entering the America's Cup arena with Emirates Team New Zealand, he returns to the Olympic circuit to win an unprecedented fifth world title, European title and Olympic gold in Qingdao, China. He is named British Yachtsmen of the Year for a fifth time, World Sailor of the Year yet again and made CBE.
2011: Fights off tough competition to be selected for the British sailing squad in the Finn class. Year ends in controversy at the ISAF World Championships in Perth, Australia, where he is involved in an altercation with a media boat.
2012: In January launches Ben Ainslie Racing, a new team that will initially compete in the next edition of the America's Cup World Series along with plans to join ORACLE Racing for the defence of the 34th America's Cup. Having recovered from back surgery, he wins the Finn Gold Cup for a record sixth time in Falmouth, Cornwall.
August 5 – Wins fourth Olympic gold medal, triumphing in the Finn class on home waters off Weymouth at the London 2012 Games. With four golds and a silver, Ainslie becomes the most successful sailor in Olympic history.

Six Nations 2012: Stephen Ferris escapes citing charge

Ferris in the clear with Ireland flanker free to face France after let-off

Stephen Ferris will be available for Ireland's RBS 6 Nations clash with France on Saturday after being cleared of tip-tackling Wales lock Ian Evans.

Ferris faced a hearing in London on Wednesday afternoon after being cited for the challenge on Evans in the final minute of last weekend's 23-21 defeat at Lansdowne Road.

Off the hook: Stephen Ferris is free to face France this weekend

Off the hook: Stephen Ferris is free to face France this weekend

Following analysis of the video evidence and consideration of the explanation for the tackle, the three-man independent Six Nations disciplinary committee chose not to uphold the citing.

Luke Benedict Six Nations blog

Ferris reacted to the decision on Twitter, saying: 'Thank goodness that is all over. Happy man.'

The tackle resulted in referee Wayne Barnes issuing a yellow card and penalty, which Leigh Halfpenny landed to snatch victory for Wales.

It was widely felt that the tackle, in which Ferris picked up Evans by his right leg and dumped him on his side, warranted a penalty at worst.

Ireland were hopeful their destructive blindside flanker would escape any punishment and have been vindicated by the verdict of the hearing.

Sir Alex Ferguson hits out at Blackburn fans over Steve Kean

Ferguson stunned by worst fan abuse he”s ever seen aimed at Blackburn boss Kean

Sir Alex Ferguson has never previously witnessed the level of abuse heaped on Blackburn boss Steve Kean at Ewood Park on Tuesday night.

The Rovers faithful have never taken to Kean but their relationship reached a new low in midweek as Rovers suffered a 2-1 defeat to Bolton that sent them plummeting to the foot of the Barclays Premier League.

With demonstrations taking place after the game, it was widely expected Kean would have been sacked by now.

Constant battle: Steve Kean faces weekly protests about his tenure at Ewood Park

Constant battle: Steve Kean faces weekly protests about his tenure at Ewood Park

The League Managers” Association have already criticised the club”s owners, Venky”s, for their handling of Blackburn and it is known former manager Mark Hughes is not keen on the idea of returning to a club in such turmoil.

Kean has survived to take charge of Rovers for their Boxing Day trip to Liverpool, with Ferguson praising his fellow Scot for the dignity he has retained in the face of such unremitting criticism.

Crying out for help: Kean

Crying out for help: Kean”s side are bottom of the Premier League

“I have not seen anything as bad as that,” said Ferguson. “I feel for the lad. He seems to be in complete control of himself at press conferences and has not let events get to him.

“It is remarkable that under that kind of pressure he can retain his dignity the way he has done. I tried to phone him the other day but he is probably right to keep it off.”

Ferguson has spoken often about the confrontational nature of today”s society and how fans are quick to vent their frustrations these days. And this, he believes, is just another extreme example.

“It is terrible to watch that,” he said. “It doesn”t say a lot for our society nowadays when you see that kind of behaviour from fans.

“We are all emotional. We all like to see our team win. But for goodness sake, give the lad a break.”