Stoke, Norwich and Newcastle must hold their nerve to stay in the Premier League – Martin Keown

The bootroom: Survival It's all about nerve now… and Stoke, Norwich and Newcastle must keep theirs

By
Martin Keown

PUBLISHED:

21:30 GMT, 5 April 2013

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UPDATED:

22:57 GMT, 5 April 2013

Taking it easy: Jocky Wilson relaxes away from the pressures of the oche

Taking it easy: Jocky Wilson relaxes away from the pressures of the oche

The late, great darts legend Jocky Wilson used to recount how pressure could reach out and grab him by the throat. Once that happened, he could do nothing.

Stoke, Norwich and Newcastle must make sure that the same thing doesn’t happen to them this weekend.

They are the teams in 13th, 14th and 15th places in the Barclays Premier League, just a few points above the drop zone and all with very winnable home games this weekend.

Stoke, with one win in 12, are at home to Aston Villa. Norwich have won one in 14 and face out-of-sorts Swansea. Newcastle, after returning from Lisbon, hope a fourth successive home win — against Fulham — can pull them clear of danger.

It’s easy to look at those sides and say they’ll be fine but why should they be The bottom of the table is as close as I can remember and if you are one of those teams, you will be nervous.

All these teams are probably a win away from safety. If you can put daylight between you and the bottom three quickly, it’s fine. If you don’t, that win you need becomes harder to come by.

This weekend, Stoke manager Tony Pulis, Chris Hughton at Norwich and Alan Pardew at Newcastle will have pencilled in must-win matches. Of their respective opponents, Villa are deep in trouble, Swansea have lost three in a row while Fulham are safe and have little to play for.

Where it went wrong

Such is Villa’s and Wigan’s fighting spirit that they are pulling the teams above them into the relegation battle. They worried Sunderland so much that they sacked Martin O’Neill. But all the teams up to and including Southampton will be a bit nervous.

Stoke, more than anyone, might have the outcome of the relegation battle in their hands. After Villa, they play Norwich, QPR, Sunderland and Southampton before the end of the season. Last week against Everton they were poor, Peter Crouch and Cameron Jerome especially.

Out of sorts: Stoke lost at Everton last weekend (above), while Newcastle were thumped by Manchester City (below left) and Norwich were beaten by Wigan (below right)

Out of sorts: Stoke lost at Everton last weekend (above), while Newcastle were thumped by Manchester City (below left) and Norwich were beaten by Wigan (below right)

Out of sorts: Stoke lost at Everton last weekend (above), while Newcastle were thumped by Manchester City (below left) and Norwich were beaten by Wigan (below right)

Out of sorts: Stoke lost at Everton last weekend (above), while Newcastle were thumped by Manchester City (below left) and Norwich were beaten by Wigan (below right)

It doesn’t look like Stoke’s players are responding to Pulis as much as they used to and they have failed to evolve as a team. Their passing and style should be better after so many years in the Premier League. And there is the added uncertainty over Pulis’s future, which cannot be helping the players. I didn’t like hearing him talk this week about how many points will be needed to stay up. The focus should be on improving the team, not counting the points and fixtures.

We did that when I was relegated with Aston Villa and it cost us. You must not become obsessed with each and every scenario.

But Pulis is a fighter and has done remarkably well at that club overall. I’m confident he’ll keep them up, even if they have regressed this season.

Score

Norwich hardly concede but they hardly score either. And after losing at Wigan last weekend, the pressure is on a little bit. When you lose to a team below you, it can give you the impression that they are better than you. It will not have inspired confidence. Three wins on the trot against Swansea will give them some belief that they can claim three vital points.

For Stoke and Norwich, staying up is their main aim. Anything after that is a bonus. For Newcastle it is slightly different, although people are realising now just how much they overachieved last season.
The Europa League has not helped them but they haven’t won a trophy for 44 years so they need to take it seriously. It’s just vital that their league form doesn’t dip any more or the situation will snowball.

Table

Boot room

Boot room

Matthew Stevens beats Neil Robertson in Kaikou Open semi-final

Stevens nicks final two frames to squeeze past Robertson into first final for five years

By
Steven Donaldson

PUBLISHED:

14:08 GMT, 2 March 2013

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UPDATED:

14:08 GMT, 2 March 2013

Matthew Stevens reached his first ranking final in five years after winning the last two frames to secure a 6-5 win over Neil Robertson in the Haikou Open in China.

The Carmarthen 35-year-old finished with breaks of 60 and 51 respectively to overhaul his Australian opponent and book his place in his first final since the 2008 Bahrain Championship.

The match was not without controversy after referee Eirian Williams incorrectly replaced the balls following a Stevens foul in frame four, with Robertson winning the frame and levelling at 2-2.

Held his nerve: Matthew Stevens beat Neil Robertson in a final-frame shootout

Held his nerve: Matthew Stevens beat Neil Robertson in a final-frame shootout

Laura Robson loses to Yulia Putintseva

Robson crashes out in Dubai after defeat to Kazakh teen Putintseva

By
Steven Donaldson

PUBLISHED:

20:55 GMT, 18 February 2013

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UPDATED:

20:55 GMT, 18 February 2013

Laura Robson was beaten by Kazakhstan's Yulia Putintseva in the first round of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships on Monday.

Robson, the world No 45, lost 6-4, 2-6, 7-6 (8/6) in two hours 21 minutes to her 18-year-old opponent.

Out: Robson was beaten in three sets by Putintseva (below)

Out: Robson was beaten in three sets by Putintseva (below)

Out: Robson was beaten in three sets by Putintseva (below)

The British No 2 started well by racing into a 2-0 lead in the first set, but was immediately pegged back as Putintseva took the opener.

Robson responded well in the second set, but Putintseva held her nerve in the tie-break to book her place in the next round.

Peter Charles and Nick Skelton defeated in FEI World Cup qualifier

Charles and Skelton still riding high despite defeat

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UPDATED:

21:55 GMT, 22 December 2012

British Olympic heroes Peter Charles and Nick Skelton just missed out on the perfect climax to an unforgettable year when they were pipped for glory in the FEI World Cup qualifier at Olympia.

The Netherlands' Marc Houtzager thwarted home hopes by claiming the 30,000 first prize and gaining some revenge for his Olympic heartache.

Top form: Marc Houtzager rides Sterrehof's Tamino

Top form: Marc Houtzager rides Sterrehof's Tamino

Houtzager was a member of the Dutch team beaten to the Olympic gold after a nerve-shredding jump-off by the British quartet of Charles, Skelton, Ben Maher and Scott Brash at Greenwich Park less than five months ago.

Malin Baryard-Johnsson of Sweden finished second yesterday with Charles, riding a recent addition to his string, Murka's Odie de Frevent, third and Skelton fourth aboard his Olympic mount Big Star.

Charles flew the British flag with one of only three double clear rounds despite his performance coming just three months after he underwent surgery on his groin.

'I have been off for a long time and this was the horse's first proper grand prix,' Charles said.

Best of British: Peter Charles on Odie de Frevent

Best of British: Peter Charles on Odie de Frevent

'The course was plenty big enough today and you certainly needed a very quick horse towards the end of the course.'

Charles, though, admitted that his partnership with Odie de Frevent remains in its infancy.

He added: 'I am still trying out new bits with the horse. I don't know how fully I can go with her, but I think I will run her in the grand prix tomorrow.'

Then, reflecting on an unforgettable season, Charles, who will be 53 on New Year's Day, added: 'This year has been what dreams are made of.

'I didn't think I was going to be fit enough to ride at this show. To do that today was really nice.'

Treviso 13 Leicester 14: Tigers" Heineken Cup hopes back on track after last gasp penalty try

Treviso 13 Leicester 14: Tigers' Heineken Cup hopes back on track after last gasp penalty try

PUBLISHED:

16:49 GMT, 15 December 2012

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UPDATED:

21:35 GMT, 15 December 2012

Richard Cockerill was left seething after a controversial penalty try almost derailed his team's Heineken Cup hopes.

But it was a second penalty try two minutes from time – this time for Leicester – that got the Tigers out of jail and took them top of Pool Two.

Victory salute: Leicester Tigers players salute their fans after winning in Italy

Touching down: Thompstone of Leicester tucked away a try after 14 minutes

That was only after Irish referee
Alain Rolland frustrated Leicester with his award of a first-half
penalty try, even though Treviso's pack were still 20 yards from the
line.

Leicester coach Cockerill said: 'I
have never seen anything like it in the 30 years that I have been
involved with rugby. If that had been awarded for us I would have sat in
my chair in embarrassment.'

Trailing 13-7 with the final whistle
looming and Treviso eyeing a famous win, Cockerill's men ground out the
winning score as their power in the scrum finally told.

George Ford held his nerve to convert and send Leicester ahead of Toulouse in the standings.

Cockerill said: 'We're obviously
very relieved. Treviso made us work exceptionally hard but you have to
congratulate our players for sticking in there.'

Ben Youngs set up Adam Johnstone on 14 minutes but Alberto Di Bernardo kicked Treviso ahead before the drama.

Richard Cockerill, Leicester Tigers Head Coach

Back on track: Richard Cockerill's men have lived to fight another day

Pool Two now looks like a three-way
fight, with Ospreys beating Toulouse in the other fixture. The Tigers'
final day fixture against the French side is likely to decide their
destiny.

For Treviso,
progression from the group has never really been a realistic goal, but
there was much pride to play for having perfumed so well in the reverse
fixture, only to come away with nothing.

Once again they deserved so much better after an heroic effort.

Alberto Di Bernardo kicked everything that came his way for Franco Smith's men.

Arsene Wenger should have substituted Jack Wilshere – Graham Poll

Wenger should have followed Ferguson's lead and taken Wilshere off

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UPDATED:

06:18 GMT, 5 November 2012

Sir Alex Ferguson again proved he is a more savvy manager than Arsene Wenger on Saturday when he replaced Tom Cleverley with Anderson soon after his final warning from referee Mike Dean.

The game was not an overly physical contest but was littered with strong fouls which required cautions – eight of them – and felt like a game which would not finish with 22 players on the field.

The misconduct started with Jack Wilshere unnecessarily making a very heavy challenge in just the 13th minute and Dean had no option but to show the yellow card despite it being the Arsenal man’s first foul.

Dismissed: Jack Wilshere was sent off for Arsenal against Manchester United

Dismissed: Jack Wilshere was sent off for Arsenal against Manchester United

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Players often look incredulous at being cautioned so early, stating that it is only their first offence, but if the tackle is reckless it must be cautioned.

Ashley Young and Michael Carrick soon followed the Arsenal midfielder into Dean's notebook before Cleverley became the fourth player in the book in the first half for a poor challenge on Santi Cazorla.

Dean was clearly in control but with United only one goal to the good and Arsenal in the ascendancy the game had an edge to it which needed watching.

Dean issued what was clearly a final warning to Wilshere in the 54th minute after another poor challenge on Robin Van Persie. Then, showing consistency and common sense, did the same to Cleverley in the 56th minute after Cleverley brought Wilshere down. Both fouls could have been cautioned and probably would have been had they not already seen yellow.

Within four minutes Cleverley was substituted by Ferguson but Wenger failed to react despite a clearly tiring Wilshere being in danger of a red card. Before another ten minutes had elapsed, Wilshere flew into Patrice Evra and left Dean with no choice but to dismiss him.

Wise move: Tom Cleverley was subbed after receiving a yellow card

Wise move: Tom Cleverley was subbed after receiving a yellow card

I have spoken to Wenger regarding interaction between players and referees and he has always preferred to allow players to act as they feel and accept the consequences of their actions.

Maybe that’s why he left Wilshere on when it appeared to me fairly obvious that he was heading for an early bath.

GOOD WEEK
BAD WEEK

Referee Michael Oliver
Michael Oliver (above) and Anthony Taylor who refereed the live Sunday games at Loftus Road and Anfield respectively. Both are establishing themselves after being promoted to the select list in 2010. It takes a few years to be accepted by all parties but these two are showing that new referees can prosper on the elite list and there is hope for the future.

Kevin Nolan of West Ham United
Assistant referees are instructed to give the benefit of any doubt, where one exists, to the attacker when judging offside. Given how close the call was when Kevin Nolan (above) finished so expertly for West Ham, Peter Bankes cannot have been certain and so should have kept his flag down, especially when Nolan was onside.

Fabricio Coloccini red card was fair – Graham Poll

Referee Taylor held his nerve throughout and made right call on Coloccini

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UPDATED:

00:00 GMT, 5 November 2012

Anthony Taylor is a highly regarded referee who justified his rating at Anfield on Sunday.

He stayed calm when the home crowd demanded free-kicks but when the big decision came he rightly dismissed Fabricio Coloccini in the 84th minute for a late, dangerous tackle on Luis Suarez.

Poor challenge: Fabricio Coloccini made little attempt to get the ball

Poor challenge: Fabricio Coloccini made little attempt to get the ball

The Uruguayan was blameless and certainly did nothing to exaggerate the effect of Coloccini’s challenge as Taylor reacted very quickly to prevent any retaliatory reaction from Liverpool players.

The tackle was almost a stamp and a very late one. The contact might have been minimal but what was clear was that the tackle was made with studs up and looked intended to harm. Of course intent is not highlighted in law but experience tells you when such a challenge needs the ultimate punishment.

Get off: Coloccini is ordered from the field by referee Anthony Taylor

Get off: Coloccini is ordered from the field by referee Anthony Taylor

Alan Pardew may well have felt aggrieved but Taylor was right.

Anfield saw an excellent referee perform well but the home fans will no doubt cite the early challenge on Suarez — replays showed it was a foul which should have resulted in a penalty — as reason not to admire Taylor’s performance completely.

Michael Laudrup relieved at Swansea"s win over Wigan

Laudrup relief as Swansea end winless run by taking all three points against Wigan

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UPDATED:

20:16 GMT, 20 October 2012

Michael Laudrup felt his Swansea side had been made to 'suffer' before eventually ending a run of five Premier League games without a win with a nerve-jangling 2-1 victory over Wigan at the Liberty Stadium.

Swansea, stung by recent reports of dressing room unrest, got just the tonic they needed ahead of upcoming fixtures against Manchester City, Liverpool and Chelsea thanks to two goals in three second-half minutes from Pablo Hernandez – the Spaniard's first for the club – and Michu.

Emmerson Boyce pulled one back for Wigan and Arouna Kone had a header ruled out for a tight offside decision as Swansea retreated ever deeper defensively, but they held on for a vital three points.

Back to winning ways: Michael Laudrup saw his Swansea side beat Wigan

Back to winning ways: Michael Laudrup saw his Swansea side beat Wigan

Laudrup said: 'You can say there is a mixture of joy and relief, we knew today was very important for us and I think if you see the game the players played with a lot of confidence and patience.

'But you know when you really want something, in this case a win, you cannot think you can do it in 10 minutes. At this level it takes 90 or 94 minutes and that is what happened.

'We knew both teams would want the ball as they are both good in possession and I think in the first half we had a little more possession and felt comfortable.

'But from the first minute of the second half we dominated completely, we did not create loads of chances but we got closer and closer and suddenly it was there.

Doing the job: Swansea celebrate Michu's goal

Doing the job: Swansea celebrate Michu's goal

'There was one goal and then we got the second and at that point everyone was thinking when would the third come to seal the win.

'But it sometimes happens in football; they got a goal back and the game changed completely and we had to suffer for the last 20 minutes.

'They had a goal disallowed which was very, very tight but to come back after some games without winning it would be too easy to win without suffering.'

Wigan boss Roberto Martinez, meanwhile, felt his side deserved to secure at least a point from the game, as their own winless run extended to six matches.

The former Swansea boss said: “I think we deserved something, it was the game we all expected in terms of the manner of both teams and the concepts we share.

Winning the battle: Leon Britton wins the ball for Swansea

Winning the battle: Leon Britton wins the ball for Swansea

'We saw a real fight for possession and who would control the game and I thought we did that better than Swansea in the first half. We created better chances and restricted Swansea really well.

'But in these games you need that sharpness in the final third and probably we missed that today.'

Neither side wore the anti-racism campaign Kick It Out t-shirts prior to today's game. It was understood this was down to players looking to provide solidarity with their colleagues who did not want to wear them.

Laudrup admitted he had left the decision up to his players.

He said: 'It's an individual thing because the issue is not only a football issue, it is social too. I don't think with a thing like that you can say you have to do it.

'It is better to ask each one of them (the players), I didn't want to have any influence on things, you have to ask each person as it goes much further than football.'

Martinez said his side had opted not to wear them in support of Swansea.

He said: 'We wanted to show a sign of respect to the home team, the home team for whatever reason decided not to wear them and I did not think it made sense for us to wear the t-shirts.

'We wanted to support the home team and I would expect the same thing if Swansea come to our ground and there is a gesture from the home team.'

Martin Kaymer: Ryder Cup putt was the ultimate thrill

Kaymer: THAT putt was the ultimate thrill… but I could have been the biggest idiot!

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UPDATED:

16:09 GMT, 3 October 2012

Martin Kaymer has arrived in Scotland a Ryder Cup hero – and fully aware of how close he was to being 'the biggest idiot'.

The 27-year-old, who now tries to follow European success with Dunhill Links Championship victory just as he did two years ago, said of his crucial last hole at Medinah: 'It was such a fine line and fortunately it went the right way.

Kaymer also gave a possible explanation for sending his 25-foot first putt on the final green against Steve Stricker six feet past.

Plenty to smile about: Martin Kaymer chats next to the Ryder Cup at the Old Course in St Andrews

Plenty to smile about: Martin Kaymer chats next to the Ryder Cup at the Old Course in St Andrews

It was the moment when the magnificent comeback by Jose Maria Olazabal's side looked as if it might suffer a shocking late twist, but the German held his nerve to make the par needed for Europe to retain the trophy.

Kaymer told caddie Craig Connolly before his birdie attempt: 'I want to make that putt – I want the ultimate thrill.

'I think that was a good attitude at that stage. You don't want to just hit close to the hole and then knock it in.

'Even though it was more difficult in the end, it was an even better feeling.

'Of course it was a lot of pressure, but I see it more like a gift what happened.

'It's very, very rare that you are in a position as a golf player to make such an important putt.

Medinah miracle: Kaymer holes the putt that won the Ryder Cup and celebrates (below)

Medinah miracle: Kaymer holes the putt that won the Ryder Cup and celebrates (below)

Medinah miracle: Kaymer holes the putt that won the Ryder Cup and celebrates (below)

'There will never, ever, be a more important putt in my life. Even if I have a chance in two years' time again I've done it before already.

'I'm just very thankful that I got the possibility to go through those moments and to experience all of the things that I did.

'It's very difficult to describe. You're just so much in that moment. Fortunately it worked out.'

Kaymer hugged his brother afterwards and had one big concern – how had he looked on television after sinking the cup-winning putt.

'You can see my emotions. It was on a completely different level to the PGA (his major victory in 2010). I asked my brother “Did I look ridiculous” because I was in a complete new zone.

'I have never seen myself like this. I have never reacted like this.

'He said “No, you're fine and even if you looked ridiculous it's a good thing because it comes natural. It's how you felt, it's a true feeling, it doesn't matter”.

Back to the day job: Kaymer hits a shot on the range ahead of the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship

Back to the day job: Kaymer hits a shot on the range ahead of the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship

'I've watched it a few times on tv and YouTube and stuff. Yeah, it didn't look that bad!'

What was bad in Kaymer's view was the German television commentary of their most dramatic golfing moment since Bernhard Langer missed the six-foot putt that decided the 1991 match at Kiawah Island.

'I'm very thankful where I'm from and very happy that I got so much support in Germany, but I was very disappointed the way the commentators were talking about it when I watched the last two or three holes on the German tv channel.

'There was no excitement. On the 18th green it was like 'it drops in, it's very nice, great celebration'. They are just so flat.

'For me it is very difficult to understand. There is something so big happening and some don't get it. That is very sad.'

Home of golf: Kaymer is in action this week at the Alfred Dunhill Links alongside Bill Murray and Michael Phelps

Home of golf: Kaymer is in action this week alongside the likes of Bill Murray and Michael Phelps

Paul Lawrie and Peter Hanson are the other members of the side competing this week, plus American Dustin Johnson.

All four vice-captains Darren Clarke, Paul McGinley, Thomas Bjorn and Miguel Angel Jimenez are playing as well.

'We were such a team on Sunday,' Kaymer added. 'To be part of such an historical day is very, very special and in that little circle – the players and the captains – I hope that we can keep it like this and don't talk about it that much. It's our thing. That is very special for us.'

Most of the big names start at Carnoustie, then switch to Kingsbarns on Friday before playing St Andrews on Saturday and also Sunday assuming they survive the cut.

World Twenty20 2012: England must not get into a spin against Afghanistan – Nasser Hussain

England must not get into a spin against Afghanistan

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UPDATED:

22:32 GMT, 20 September 2012

England begin the defence of their World T20 title against Afghanistan on Friday – Sportsmail's Nasser Hussain analyses the key battles for Stuart Broad's side.

Dealing with spin

This is crucial for England throughout this tournament and it applies just as much against Afghanistan as when facing Saeed Ajmal and Ajantha Mendis. Every team will hit England with spin because history tells you they don’t play it particularly well.

That makes the key batsman Eoin Morgan. I spoke to Australia’s Brad Hogg here and he said by the end of the warm-up game he couldn’t set a field to Morgan because he hits the ball in so many different areas.

England expects: Broad's side begin the tournament against Afghanistan

England expects: Broad's side begin the tournament against Afghanistan

Bowling short

The old-fashioned method of just getting yorkers has disappeared to an extent now because of heavy bats and modern strokeplay. We saw it with Yuvraj Singh in the India-Afghanistan game on Wednesday.

When the ball was just short of a yorker, he just plonked it over the bowler’s head for six. Low-full tosses invariably get put away as well.
The short balls don’t have to be quick either. We see it with Jade Dernbach when his slow bouncers stick in the pitch and are hard to hit.

Element of surprise

England cannot afford to be taken unawares by Afghanistan. One of their lads could play the innings of his life. England can’t just rock up and expect to win.

If Afghanistan had taken their chances against India that would have been a very tight match. There's only one side under pressure and that’s England. Afghanistan have got nothing to lose.

They are living the dream and all the locals will be supporting them. England have to hold their nerve if their opponents have a crazy 30 minutes.

On your guard: England will progress to the next stage if they beat the minnows

On your guard: England will progress to the next stage if they beat the minnows