Sunday, December 27, 2015

Secret world of doping

The dark side: The secret world of sports doping

Al Jazeera Staff
Al Jazeera
27 December 2015

The dark side: The secret world of sports doping
Inside a hotel room in Austin, Texas, a pharmacist advises a professional athlete on taking performance-enhancing drugs.

"One anabolic, and I can give you something to use right now is this Delta 2 stuff.

It's a steroid. There's a bunch of football players who take this,” he tells Liam Collins, a British hurdler reporting undercover.

In another conversation, a Vancouver pharmacist poses a question to the same athlete.

"Have I doped people? Oh yeah. And no one's got caught because the system is so easy to beat. That's the sad fact."

Later, a naturopath doctor explains how he would destroy medical records if investigators came looking for them.

"I can just document everything not in this chart but on my own chart. And if somebody ever comes sniffing for it, it's very easy to just delete and say no, this is the real chart. If say, WADA (World Anti-Doping Agency) comes sniffing around."

Normally these conversations take place behind closed doors, but a new investigation by Al Jazeera is bringing them to light.

Liam Collins, working on behalf of Al Jazeera's Investigative Unit, spent six months undercover investigating the murky world of performance enhancing drugs - what athletes refer to as "the dark side".

"For me, it was an opportunity to be the guy, to go undercover, and make a change," said Collins.

At 37, he competes as a hurdler at an international level. For the investigation he claimed that he was making one last push for the Rio Olympics and was willing to do "whatever it takes" to get there.

The investigation has exposed the crucial role of pharmacists and doctors in creating and prescribing programs of performance enhancing drugs designed to cheat the testing system.

It also raises questions about some well-known athletes in American football and baseball who the medical professionals claim to work with.

The athletes and medical professionals who responded to requests for comment denied any wrongdoing.

This includes Payton Manning, a football player for the Denver Broncos, whose wife, one pharmacist alleged, was supplied with human growth hormone. in 2011 while he was recovering from surgery.

That pharmacist, Charlie Sly, has disavowed his statements to Collins that were caught on hidden camera.

Manning has emphatically denied the allegation, telling ESPN it is "complete garbage" and "totally made up".

In a statement, the Broncos said: "Knowing Peyton Manning and everything he stands for, the Denver Broncos support him 100 percent. These are false claims made to Al Jazeera, and we don't believe the report."

Sly also named baseball players Ryan Zimmerman of the Washington Nationals and Ryan Howard of the Philadelphia Phillies as athletes he supplied with human growth hormone. Both have denied the allegations.

But the investigation raises questions about whether medical professionals are helping athletes cross to the dark side, and whether doping in sport is reaching new levels.

By Deborah Davies, Jeremy Young, Kevin Hirten and Craig Pennington

Al Jazeera Investigates: The Dark Side: Secrets of the Sports Dopers

Production team:

Peter Charley - Executive Producer

Deborah Davies - Reporter

Jeremy Young - Senior Producer/Director

Kevin Hirten - Producer

Craig Pennington - Director of Photography

Nicholas Dove - Editor

Business environment, rule of law key to economic growth

By Paul Burrowes

For an economy to grow, a country must have well-run legal and judicial institutions.
In short, the rule of law impacts the quality of regulations for operating an efficient business.
According to the World Justice Project, the rule of law reigns in Denmark while Singapore tops regulatory quality and efficiency for businesses.
More specifically, the rules by which market functions provide the means to resolve disputes, protect economic and social rights and hold governments accountable for their actions.
When a country promotes investment, a good justice system can contribute to economic growth and development.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says that “the centrality of a strong justice mechanism lies in its essential contribution to fostering economic stability and growth, and to enabling all manner of disputes to be resolved within a structured and orderly framework” [UNODC, 2011*]. 
Legal framework apart, government attitudes toward markets and freedoms and the efficiency of their operations are also very important: excessive bureaucracy and red tape, overregulation, corruption, dishonesty in dealing with public contracts, lack of transparency and trustworthiness, inability to provide appropriate services for the business sector and political dependence of the judicial system impose significant economic costs to businesses and slow the process of economic development.
Data compiled by two independent international agencies clearly show that the overall quality of the legal system as well as the quality of justice (both civil and criminal) are directly correlated with the business environment and economic performance.
Where, therefore, does Jamaica rank in the quality of the its legal system and the efficiency of its business environment.
Those independent international agencies, the World Justice Project and World Bank's Doing Business 2016 as it relates to regulatory quality and efficiency, put Jamaica at 42 in the 2015 rule of law overall score and 79 in the regulatory efficiency of the business environment.
If Jamaica does well in dealing with construction permits, enforcing contracts, getting credit and electricity, paying taxes, protecting minority investors, registering property, and starting a business under a competent and effective legal framework, the sky's the limit for the land of wood and precious water.
Legislators have to work on limiting government powers, rooting out corruption, maintaining order and security with crime under control, protecting fundamental rights, enforcing regulations for businesses, and improving civil and criminal justice.
Denmark and Singapore are showing the way, but so too have Norway, Sweden, Finland, Netherlands, New Zealand, Austria, Germany and Australia especially in the rule of law.
While on the regulatory enivronment front, add South Korea, United Kingdom, Canada, and the cities of New York City, Hong Kong, Los Angleles, and Taiwan to those already mentioned.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Ganja good for epilepsy

Purified marijuana compound may reduce stubborn epileptic seizures

(Reuters Health) - A purified compound derived from marijuana may help reduce seizures in children and young adults with severe forms of epilepsy that resist other treatments, a new study suggests.

Patients who added a 99 percent-cannabidiol (CBD) oil to their current treatments went from an average of 30 seizures a month to fewer than 16 - representing a 37 percent reduction over 12 weeks, researchers report in Lancet Neurology.

"In this group that has been extremely treatment resistant, this was an incredibly positive finding with the caveat that we didn’t have a comparison group," said lead author Dr. Orrin Devinsky, of NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City.

CBD is a compound found naturally in marijuana and known to affect the brain. But it's important to note that CBD does not produce a high, Devinsky said, and the new findings have no bearing on use of medical marijuana or other compounds from the plant.

The form of CBD used in the new study was a solution of the extract in oil called Epidiolex from GW Pharmaceuticals, which partly funded the new study. The drug is currently being evaluated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Previous research into the effects of CBD and medical marijuana on various types of epilepsy has been limited and produced mixed results with some people having fewer seizures and others having more.

For the new study, the researchers enrolled 214 patients between 2014 and 2015 from 11 U.S. epilepsy treatment centers. They included people with different forms of epilepsy like Dravet and Lennox-Gastaut syndromes. The participants were typically among the centers' most resistant to existing epilepsy treatments.

The goal of the study was to inform future research by tracking doses, side effects and whether or not the patients improved.

Participants were started on 2 milligrams (mg) to 5 mg of the solution, broken into two daily doses. The dosage slowly increased to 25 mg or 50 mg daily over the 12 weeks. Patients continued taking their existing medications.

Of those who started the study, 52 patients were lost to follow up and 11 stopped taking CBD before the study ended. Others were excluded from part of the analysis due to age, other health conditions or not experiencing seizures.

About 37 percent of patients had their seizures reduced by at least half. The researchers point out that 22 percent of patients had seizures reduced by at least 70 percent and 8 percent had their seizures reduced by at least 90 percent.

Overall, 20 patients had severe side effects possibly related to CBD. The most common was a severe bout of seizures known as status epilepticus. Only five participants stopped taking the solution due to side effects, however.

Less severe side effects included drowsiness, diarrhea, loss of appetite, fatigue and convulsions.

Devinsky said ongoing double-blind randomized controlled trials, which are considered the gold standard of medical research, will be able to shine more light on CBD's effectiveness and which side effects are caused by the drug.

Dr. Kevin Chapman, of Children's Hospital Colorado in Aurora, said he'll be interested to see the results of those trials.

"From my standpoint, I don’t think it’s going to quite be the panacea we’re hoping it to be," said Chapman, who studies CBD for epilepsy but wasn't involved in the new study.

For example, he said, the side effects found in the new study suggest CBD's safety is similar to that of current drugs. Also, the study suggests there may be better outcomes among people taking CBD and another popular epilepsy drug known as clobazam.

"I think it raises some questions about the utility for CBD, but it lays the groundwork for future studies," Chapman said.

Devinsky said his team's ongoing clinical trials of CBD should be completed around February.

Friday, November 20, 2015

Liverpool @ Manchester

Liverpool @ Manchester City, Etihad Stadium, Saturday, November 21 - 12:30 pm


Preview Stats
• Man City have won four and lost none of their last six Premier League games against Liverpool at the Etihad Stadium.
• The Reds have lost just one of their last six Premier League away games (W2 D3 L1), but that came in Manchester at Old Trafford v Man Utd.
• Liverpool have scored just 13 Premier League goals, the joint-lowest tally of any Premier League season for the Reds after 12 matches.
• This is Manchester City's third best start to a Premier League season after 2011-12 (34 points) and 2012-13 (28).
• Manchester City have fired in the most shots on target of any team in the Premier League (83).
• Liverpool have the worst chance conversion rate of any team in the Premier League (10.5%).
• Philippe Coutinho has scored three goals in four Premier League appearances against Man City.
• Only opposing goalkeeper Joe Hart (14) has kept more Premier League clean sheets in 2015 than Simon Mignolet (13).
• Man City have allowed their opponents just 28 shots on target this season, fewer than any other team in the Premier League.
• Philippe Coutinho has scored as many goals in his last two Premier League appearances under Jurgen Klopp as his final 18 under Brendan Rodgers.

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

“If the rich could hire someone else to die for them, the poor would make a wonderful living.” (Jewish Proverb)

The Blues still in hunt

A bad beginning, a good end for Chelsea?

Eden_Hazard
By Paul Burrowes

For the first time in the history of the English Premier League, Chelsea FC are in 16th place after match day eight.
The only other season that Chelsea started so badly was in the 1993-94 season when they were in 14th place after eight matches. They finished that season in 14th place.

English top-flight football, however, has not been at its best this 2015-16 season, as leaders Manchester City (18 points) secured the 34th best leaders tally in English top-tier football.
The 2011-12 season was better for the Citizens; in fact it was their best, as they sped to 22 points that season from eight matches, a season they won after edging Manchester United on goal difference — both finishing with 89 points.
Those 22 points after eight matches remained as the second best in EPL history, topped only by Chelsea in in 2005-06 when The Blues grabbed 24 points from the eight matches. Of course Chelsea won that season, their third of five titles.
Despite the Blues poor start, they are expected to finish in fourth place with 72 points, after Manchester City (80 points), Arsenal (78 points), and Manchester United (76 points).
Not surprisingly Chelsea are 13 points below the expected money league ranking, which measures teams' transfer expenditure in signing squad members.
Eden Hazard stands as Chelsea's best player so for the season, but he is outside the top 50 led by Leicester City's Riyad Mahrez, who has scored five goals and added three assists.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

Man U 3–0 Sunderland

Man City slip allows Man Utd to claim summit

memphis-depay-manchester-united-2015

LONDON: Manchester United exploited Manchester City's 4-1 defeat at Tottenham Hotspur by beating Sunderland 3-0 on Saturday (Sep 26) to replace their rivals at the top of the Premier League table.

City's unexpected capitulation opened the door for Louis van Gaal's side and they strolled through it courtesy of goals from Memphis Depay, Wayne Rooney, who ended a 1,000-minute league scoring drought, and Juan Mata. Depay made the breakthrough in first-half stoppage time, tapping home after Daley Blind's fine pass was volleyed across goal by Mata, with Rooney and Mata finishing the job in the second half.

"It's a nice feeling to be top of the table. It's the first time in my period, so I'm happy," said Van Gaal, who has led United to the summit for the first time since legendary manager Alex Ferguson's retirement in 2013. "I was very happy with the goal in extra time (by Mata) because they punished themselves. They were always wasting time and the referee was not reacting to that."

Rooney's goal, set up by Anthony Martial, was his first in the league since April and saw him draw level with Old Trafford great Denis Law on 171 league goals.

Victory took United a point above City, who slipped to a second consecutive league defeat - and a third loss in four games in all competitions - at White Hart Lane. City went ahead in the 25th minute through Kevin De Bruyne, but Eric Dier, Toby Alderweireld, Harry Kane, with his first goal of the season, and Erik Lamela scored as Spurs roared back for a win that sent them fifth.

WILLIAN RESCUES CHELSEA

"The Premier League is always very difficult," City manager Manuel Pellegrini told BT Sport. "That's why when we won the first five (league) games, we didn't say we were going to win the league. We have to keep working. In future we must play every game as a final."

Defending champions Chelsea remain a long way from the title picture, but a late fight back saw them come from 2-0 down to salvage a 2-2 draw at Newcastle United and avoid a fourth defeat of the campaign.

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho again left John Terry on the bench and Ayoze Perez capitalised on hesitancy between Kurt Zouma and Branislav Ivanovic to slam Newcastle ahead in the 42nd minute. Georginio Wijnaldum glanced home a Perez corner to double Newcastle's lead on the hour, but substitute Ramires gave Chelsea a foothold with a 25-yard scorcher before crossing for Willian to equalise in the 86th minute.

"It is a point," said Mourinho, whose side are eight points below United in 15th place. "That's what we got. Better than to lose, but I'm never happy when I don't win matches.

"I have to try to understand why they can play so bad in one half and so well in the other."

West Ham United could have gone level on points with Manchester City, but despite drawing 2-2 at home to Norwich City, they remain in third place.

SANCHEZ HAT-TRICK

Nathan Redmond's 83rd-minute strike looked poised to earn Norwich victory, after Diafra Sakho had cancelled out Robbie Brady's opener, only for West Ham midfielder Cheikhou Kouyate to bundle in a stoppage-time equaliser.

Arsenal climbed to fourth, below West Ham on goal difference, after separating Leicester City from their status as the top flight's last unbeaten side with a 5-2 success at the King Power Stadium. Jamie Vardy curled home in the 13th minute to put Leicester ahead, but Theo Walcott equalised five minutes later before Alexis Sanchez claimed a hat-trick - his first goals this season - to secure victory. Vardy netted a second goal late on before Olivier Giroud swept home Arsenal's fifth in added time.

Meanwhile, Daniel Sturridge scored his first goals since returning from a lengthy lay-off with a hip injury as Liverpool edged Aston Villa 3-2 at Anfield to end a winless four-game run and move up to seventh place. James Milner fired Liverpool ahead in the second minute before Sturridge marked his return to fitness with a fine outside-of-the-foot volley from Milner's lofted return pass in the 59th minute. Sturridge added a second goal in the 67th minute, sandwiched by a brace by Rudy Gestede, and it proved enough to secure a win that will take some of the pressure off Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers.

"We wanted to win for the manager," said Liverpool midfielder Lucas Leiva. "We know what has been said about him and I think we showed we are a group of players behind him and trying to make everything right."

Goals from Virgil van Dijk, Dusan Tadic and Sadio Mane saw Southampton to a 3-1 win over Swansea City, while Mame Biram Diouf gave Stoke City a 2-1 success over Bournemouth, who had striker Callum Wilson stretchered off.

Newcastle 2-2 Chelsea

Willian salvages point for Chelsea

After Magpies take two-goal lead in thrilling encounter

Willian

Ayoze Perez gave the Magpies a first-half lead in what was a gritty affair, before Georginio Wijnaldum doubled their advantage before the hour mark.

It looked as though the Magpies would be claiming their first three points of the season until substitutes Ramires and Willian both scored to earn a share of the spoils.

The result will leave more questions surrounding Steve McClaren and Jose Mourinho as the pressure grows on both.

It was a scrappy start from both sides with Chelsea coming the closest as the ball was fired in to Loic Remy, who instinctively stuck out a foot but sent his shot just wide of the near post.

Aleksandar Mitrovic had the best chance for the hosts as he linked with fellow summer signing Wijnaldum, but his looping header dropped wide of the goal.

Newcastle continued to force the issue and Asmir Begovic was forced into action twice in a matter of seconds as first Perez and then Daryl Janmaat were denied.

Attacking-wise, Chelsea looked completely devoid of ideas as Cesc Fabregas reverted to taking aim from range, and he almost beat Tim Krul with a drive after 38 minutes.

Then just before half time, Perez broke the deadlock with a fantastic volley as he made the most of a lack of communication between Branislav Ivanovic and Kurt Zouma.

The Spaniard produced a fantastic bit of skill to bring down the long, lofted punt before firing in off the post to give the Magpies a well-deserved half-time lead.

Chelsea came out after the break with a look of intent and within five minutes they almost found the equaliser through former Newcastle-man Remy, if not for a wonderful reaction save from Krul to push it to safety.

The Blues continued to probe until, on 59 minutes, Newcastle doubled their lead as Perez turned provider for Wijnaldum from a corner.

The Dutchman wrestled some space in the area before glancing the ball past a helpless Begovic into the bottom corner.

Again Chelsea did not give up and kept pressing forward and eventually they got their goal through the substitute Ramires.

The Brazilian picked the ball up 25 yards out, following a lovely bit of skill from Eden Hazard, and lashed an unstoppable shot into the top corner.

And remarkably, Chelsea were level after 86 minutes as Willian curled in a dangerous free kick towards Ramires which found its way straight into the back of the net.

Replays showed Ramires didn’t get a touch on the ball but his presence was enough to put off Krul.

It was a poor performance from the champions but the Newcastle faithful will be distraught to see the manner in which their team relinquished their two goal lead.

Friday, September 25, 2015

Will the Fox be Gunned?

Tough battle for Arsenal at the Foxes

By Paul Burrowes

Riyad-Mahrez

As the best home team and lethal attacking unit so far in the 2015-16 English Premier League, Leicester City are hoping to record only their second victory against Arsenal in the Premier League.
In fact, the Foxes only win against the Gunners was in their debut season in the Premier League in 1994-95. On November 22, 1994, at Filbert Street, Leicester, Ian Ormondryod and David Lowe netted in the 2-1 win. Ian Wright converted a penalty in the Gunners' consolation goal.
After 18 games in the Premier League facing Arsenal, Leicester have one win, six draws, and 11 losses with 15 goals for and 41 goals against.
In their last head-to-head at the King Power Stadium on August 31, 2014, the match ended 1-1 when Argentine Leonardo Ulloa responded three minutes after Alexis Sanchez opened the scoring for Arsenal in the 19th minute.
And given the Foxes good form as the only unbeaten team so far in the league, a draw seems the likely result.
The Foxes are fourth in the standings, led by the league's top scorer Riyad Mahrez (five goals) and supported by teammate James Vardy (four goals).
Mahrez has actually figured in eight goals, including three assists, more than any other player. He will need all the help he can get as Arsenal have failed to score only once in their 18 meetings.
Ulloa, used only twice this season and only as substitute, has yet to score. Will Claudio Ranieri start him on Saturday? In three appearances against the Gunners, the Algerian has yet to win. Despite one draw and two losses, Mahrez scored twice. A start is welcomed.
Arsenal will have to fight to scrape for a point on Saturday as Leicester City have been unbeaten in their last 12 games in all competitions.
The Foxes have also come from behind to salvage at least a point in four successive Premier League games.
Vardy has scored in three successive Premier League games for the first time.

NFL top quarterbacks

Mariota leading quarterback after two weeks

By Paul Burrowes

Marcus Mariota

After two weeks in the regular season of the National Football  League, Marcus Mariota of the Tennessee Titans leads as the top quarterback with a passer rating of 129.1.

The Titans lost to Cleveland Browns 28-14 last Sunday, after winning their opening game 42-14 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday, September 13.
In that win the 21-year-old, 6-4 quarterback threw for 209 yards and had four  touchdowns to secure the award as the American Football  Conference offensive player of the second week.
Big Ben Roethlisberger of Pittsburgh Steelers was the AFC  offensive player in the second week, his passer rating of 155.8 in the 43-18 win over San Francisco 49ers getting the nod over New  England Patriots' Tom Brady.
Brady was the passing leader in the second week, throwing  466 yards which was adorned with three touchdowns.
Brady's quarterback rating was 105.6, having completed 38 of  59 passing attempts.  The 38-year-old Tom Terrific, who was the 2014 NFL Super Bowl MVP, also had one sack and two  fumbles.
Mariota, using the criterion of at least 50 pass attempts, barely got the edge over Green Bay Packers' Aaron Rodgers whose passer rating stands at 128.42, with Carson Palmer of the Arizona Cardinals in third with 124.42.
Darrelle Revis was AFC defensive player of the week, the 30-year-old New York Jets' defensive back posting three tackles, one tackle assist, and a defensive pass interception.
Larry Fitzgerald of Arizona Cardinals was the NFC offensive player of the second week. The 6-3 wide receiver, 32, grabbed nine targets, eight receptions for 112 yards and including three touchdowns.

Top five quarterbacks

1 Marcus Mariota, TEN, 129.9
2 Aaron Rodgers, GNB, 128.4
3 Carson Palmer, ARI, 124.4
4 Ben Roethlisberger, PIT, 122.6
5 Andy Dalton, CIN, 120.3
6 Tom Brady, NWE, 119.9

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

NFL Thursday

Giants favoured but Redskins to surprise

By Paul Burrowes

Washington Redskins @ New York Giants
Thursday, September 24, 2015

Alfred Morris

The New York Giants won their last four games against the Washington Redskins, who will travel to MeLife Stadium Thursday to take on Eli Manning and running backs Rashad Jennings and Andre Williams.
Manning is tipped to take the Giants to victory, a winning probability of 62 per cent.
New York lost their two opening matches this season and Washington running back Alfred Morris looks set to upset the odds and hand the Giants their third loss when they meet at East Rutherford at 7:00 pm.
The Redskins have the better defence, marshalled by safety Trenton Robinson, cornerback DeAngelo Hall, and linebacker Keenan Robinson.
Quarterback Kirk Cousins is steadily rising up the rankings and is hoping for a performance of last year September against Philadelphia Eagles when he had three touchdowns and threw for 427 yards.
The Redskins lost that match at the Lincoln Financial Field.
Cousins, however, has not performed well in two matches against the Giants, but he has thrown six interceptions.
Washington should have the edge in yards gained, yards allowed, time of possession and the red zone, while the Giants will be big in kicking and penalties.

Friday, August 28, 2015

Arsenal @ Newcastle United

Newcastle United v Arsenal at St James Park


Pre-match analysis
Match time: 6:45 am

The Magpies have won just two of their 11 Premier League matches at St James Park in 2015 (W2 D4 L5).

Olivier Giroud has scored eight goals in six Premier League apps against Newcastle United; more than versus any other team.

The Frenchman has netted five headed goals against the Magpies from just five headers on target attempted.

The Gunners are unbeaten in the last nine Premier League games against Newcastle (W7 D2), winning the last seven in a row.

Newcastle have won none of their last eight Premier League home games against the Gunners (D4 L4).

Newcastle have won just three of the last 28 Premier League meetings with Arsenal, though the Gunners had a player sent off on each of these three occasions.

Arsenal have taken 19 points from the last 21 available on the road in the Premier League.

Arsene Wenger and Steve McClaren have met 10 times as opposition coaches in the Premier League with the Englishman winning one to the Frenchman's nine victories.

The Gunners have failed to score in five of their last nine PL games - this after only firing a blank in one of their previous 25 games in the competition.

Arsenal have scored the joint fewest goals (2) despite having the joint most shots (40, excl. blocked), meaning that they have a league-low shot conversion rate of 5%.

Arsenal won 72, drew 38 and lost 66.
The Gunners biggest away win was 4-0 in the 2010-11 Carling Cup
Most common result 1-1 (11 matches)
Oliver Giroud has scored eight goals from six matches against Newcastle United. Three times he scored a double.


Friday, August 21, 2015

Day 1 of IAAF World Champs

FIVE EXPECTED HIGHLIGHTS ON DAY 1 - IAAF WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS, BEIJING 2015

With a full slate of preliminary rounds on Saturday (22), there will be a lot going on in the Bird’s Nest for the first day of action at the IAAF World Championships, Beijing 2015. Here are five highlights to look out for.

1. Men’s marathon
With the world record-holder, his immediate predecessor, and the defending world and Olympic champion all in the field, the pieces are all in place for a hotly-contested men’s marathon to decide the first medals of the championships.
Dennis Kimetto of Kenya, the world record-holder, has stellar results from paced big-city marathons but little experience at the championship level; in contrast, defending champion Stephen Kiprotich of Uganda has won the past two global titles but has underperformed in his appearances in London and New York.
Former world record-holder Wilson Kipsang, also of Kenya, has predicted a winning time in the 2:06-2:07 range, around the championship record, but only if the conditions are good. And while the Kenyan team of Kipsang, Kimetto and Mark Korir will be looking for a sweep of the medals, they will also be watching Kiprotich closely, along with two-time Boston Marathon champion and 2013 world silver medallist Lelisa Desisa and his Ethiopian teammates.

2. First day of the heptathlon
The first four events of the heptathlon will happen throughout Saturday’s schedule, starting with the 100m hurdles at 9:00am local time, shortly before the marathon runners arrive at the stadium. Action will continue with the high jump shortly thereafter, then the shot put and the 200m in the evening session.
The first day won’t end with medals but will reveal the shape of the competition and show what favourites such as Brianne Theisen Eaton of Canada and Britain’s Jessica Ennis-Hill will need to do on Sunday to win.

3. Men’s 10,000m
The only track final of the day, closing the schedule at 8:50pm local time, will be the 10,000m, the first leg of Mo Farah’s double defence. As the commanding favourite, Farah stands to extend his streak of global victories should his rivals fail once again to find a strategy which can shake him.
Talk of team tactics, surges, and thinning the pack will give way to the actual moves of the 25-lap multi-player chess match where Farah has been the most successful athlete of the past five years.

4. Women’s shot put final
The first field final of the championships, starting at 8:05pm local time, will be the first women’s shot put world title since 2005 to be won by a woman other than Valerie Adams of New Zealand.
With Gong Lijiao of China one of the favourites to contend for that title, the eyes of the home crowd will be pinned to the shot ring for the duration of the final. Gong will need to beat current world leader Christina Schwanitz of Germany, who has seven of the top 10 marks so far in 2015 and tossed the best of those right here in the Bird’s Nest in May.

5. Men’s 100m heats
Of all the preliminary rounds, the most interesting is almost certainly the qualification and heats of the men’s 100m, due in no small part to the presence of Usain Bolt, the best-known athlete in athletics.
Bolt’s competition so far in 2015 has been thin and uneven, but the Bird’s Nest is the track that made Bolt and so far, the Jamaican has never failed to show up for a global title. Bolt - like all the athletes who achieved the qualifying mark for the championships - won’t be required to run the preliminary round in the morning, but will be on the track for the evening heats which start at 7:20pm local time.
Parker Morse for the IAAF

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Powell gets ready

Asafa Powell keeps his world championship medal hopes alive



When the moment came for the the start of the men’s 100-metre dash at last month’s Diamond League meet in Lausanne, Switzerland, Donovan Powell was nowhere to be found in the stands at Stade de la Pontaise. None of the other members of former 100-meter world record holder Asafa Powell’s entourage had seen Donovan — Asafa's brother and a former sprinter himself — since warm-ups. Instead of watching from the grandstands among fans, Donovan had opted to cover his ears and listen to the race from behind the stands, closer to kebab and beer stands than the action on the track.

“I disappear,” Donovan says. “I get nervous before the gun goes off. As soon as it goes off, I’m all good. When I was running, I would never be like that. It’s just with Asafa.”

Donovan, 43, was once a rising star for Jamaica in the sprints, winning several medals at Caribbean championships in the late 1980s and early ’90s before donning the national kit for the indoor worlds and at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney. Donovan Powell was good, but nothing like his brother.

The tension in Lausanne was nowhere near as overwhelming as it had been at the Jamaican National Trials in June. Before the start of the 100 there, Donovan had run some 800 meters away from Kingston's National Stadium at Independence Park. He'd put his hands over his ears until the crowd roared. The sound signaled to him that his brother had won his first national title since 2011.

That victory also marked the 32-year-old Asafa’s return to the national championship stage following a positive test for the banned stimulant oxilofrine in 2013 that had wiped away his hopes of competing at the world championships in Moscow later that summer. The six-month suspension brought the Powell brothers together, though, as Asafa left the M.V.P. Track Club, a prominent Jamaican training group, shortly after he resumed training.

“When things like [the suspension] happen, you learn who your true friends are, who are the people that support you and who has your back,” Asafa says. “I didn’t really get much of that after what happened. The best thing to turn to was family.”

The man with 90 sub-10-second performances, the most in history, had other options.

Donovan suggested calling Glenn Mills, the coach to world record holder Usain Bolt and other Olympic medalists. Asafa said no. Donovan suggested calling Michael Clarke, long-time coach at Jamaican sprint powerhouse Calabar High School. Asafa said no. 

Instead Asafa packed his bags and moved to Austin, where Donovan runs a youth sprints program. The move has paid off and has Powell eyeing a spot on next week's world championship podium. It's a spot he has been expected to occupy for more than 10 years—even as Usain Bolt has dominated the sprint world since 2008.

It has also been more than a decade since Asafa Powell has been able to walk around the streets of Kingston without being recognized or having someone stop for a hug or selfie. He set the 100-meter world record of 9.77 in 2005, which stood until May 2008, when Bolt ran 9.72. While Bolt, who has since lowered the mark to 9.58, may be the fastest man in history, Powell is respected as the godfather who took sprinting to the next level in Jamaica. 

“Even though he is the world record holder and can run very fast, people still have me ahead,” Powell says. “People believe in me.”

The Jamaican sprinting community finds itself in an unaccustomed state heading into the world championships.

Earlier this season, it appeared that Bolt was nowhere near his top form and that defending his two gold medals from the 2013 worlds in Moscow would be a tall order. Olympic silver medalist Yohan Blake failed make the national team heading to Beijing. Much as it was in 2004, Powell is the man on top of the performers’ list for Jamaica.

And the trend does not stop in the Caribbean. The 2004 Olympic gold medalist Justin Gatlin of the U.S., who served two doping sentences (testing positive for amphetamines after taking Adderall for 10 years to treat attention deficit disorder in 2001 and testing positive for testosterone in ’06), is now the year's fastest man, having run personal bests of 9.74 in the 100 and 19.57 in the 200—at the age of 33. Fellow American Tyson Gay, the 2007 world champion in both the 100 and 200, turned 33 on August 9 and will represent the U.S. in Beijing as well. Gay served a one-year doping ban from 2013 to 2014. 

Sprinting's old guard is hanging on.

• LAYDEN: Veterans lead the way at U.S. Track and Field national championships 

“The world needs me, Asafa Powell, to be on top,” Powell says. “I was there for many years and I think people would like to see me on top of the podium for a change. I should’ve been on top of the podium five or six times by now, but unfortunately I haven’t been able to catch that gold medal. I think for a change, I’m going to be on top of the podium.”

Gold has indeed eluded Powell, and many have been quick to suggest that he has a tendency to fold under pressure on the sport's biggest stages. The unfortunate timing of injuries—usually three to four weeks ahead of a championship—has been a factor in Powell's failures.

He underwent shoulder surgery before the 2008 Olympics in Beijing and tore his groin at the Jamaican national championship before the 2012 Olympics in London.

“People only realize what they see on TV. I think you’ll see a different me in Beijing. It’s not a mental thing,” Powell says. “If [Bolt] was to come and compete at the world championships, he’s going to get beaten. I just go into these races whether I’m healthy or not. People have beat me when I’m unhealthy. When I’m healthy it’s hard to beat me.”

Powell has backed up his talk this year, opening the season with a 10.08 performance at a low-key meet in Guadeloupe while facing a 2.4 head-wind and running on an old track surface. He came away from the blocks a little slower than his competitors but found another gear by the 30-meter mark and powered through for the win. 

“At that moment, I knew I was back,” Powell says. “In training you can kind of tell where you’re at, but you definitely need that first competition to seal the deal.”

Seven days later, Powell roared again. This time in front of a packed house at the National Stadium in Kingston with a 9.84 victory at the Jamaica Invitational. That mark was his fastest in nearly four years. Time was rolling backwards for the veteran.

“I’ve been on top of the game for many years,” Powell says. “Since 2012, I’ve been the second or third-fastest Jamaican. I’ve always been in it. I didn’t go anywhere. I am the fastest Jamaican right now and I’m trying to maintain that.”

When Powell finishes a race, many times he barely appears to have broken a sweat after an effortless sub-10 second 100-meter dash. In 2008, he accomplished the feat 15 times in a single season.

"Maurice Greene used to wake up out of bed and run 9.9," Gatlin says. "If that's the case then Asafa Powell runs 9.9 in his sleep and sleepwalks it. The guy is a great athlete and when he is in the zone, he is on. He's a tough opponent to beat."

Powell's dream is to finish his career with a tally of 130 legal sub-10 races. At least that’s what he told reporters at a press conference in Lausanne.

“That was all in the moment,” Powell says. “I’m definitely trying to go well beyond 100. I don’t think 130 is impossible but I don’t know if I have much time left to do it.”

Gay raised his eyebrows and let out a laugh when Powell proposed the number at the press conference. 

“He’s a unique individual. When it’s all said and done, I don’t think there will be too many Asafa Powells.” Gay says. “Before Usain Bolt, he was the big Jamaican. He changed the game.”

Aside from his plans for a new modeling calendar and for celebrating the 100th sub-10 when it comes, Powell struggles to envision a future timeline for his career. Bolt, who turns 29 on Aug. 21, has already said that 2017 will be his final year of competition. Retirement is a word not in Powell's vocabulary just yet. 

“I don’t think I’ve accomplished what I’ve set forth for myself within the sport,” Powell says. “If I don’t I’ve still had a great time within the sport and done a ton of incredible things. I’ll still be happy when I retire. Maybe in... ah! I don’t know. It’s hard to tell.”

Gold is one of those unaccomplished goals for both Asafa and Donovan. 

Donovan was a CARIFTA Games silver medalist in 1989 and went on to represent Jamaica at the ’97 World Championships and 2000 Olympics. He was also supposed to race at the 1995 World Championship, but was banned for three months after a positive test for the stimulant ephedrine. He retired from the sport in 2002, before his brother's rise.

From Asafa's reception at track meets from fans to his inclusion on the IAAF Diamond League circuit, there has little negative reaction from the track and field community upon his return from the 2013 suspension. 

“People understand and know the true Asafa Powell,” he says. “They know I’m real and there is nothing fake about me. I think that’s why it was a lot easier for me to come back. I was devastated and it was something that I wasn’t used to. It was like killing someone in my family.”

Personal tragedy has also strengthened the bond between Asafa and Donovan, as one of their four other brothers, Michael, was shot dead in a New York City taxi in 2002. Just one year later, another brother, Vaughn, died of a heart attack. While Asafa's spikes from his 2005 world record are encased in an office, a gold medal from Beijing would find a different home within the family. 

“Donovan was never able to get an individual medal,” Asafa says. “This would have the same feeling as if he was the one on top of the podium. It would mean a lot to us.”

At the moment, Powell appears to be the most likely sprinter to contest Gatlin for gold in Beijing. Gay was visibly impressed at Gatlin’s fitness in their race in Lausanne and said it would take “a lot” to close the gap on the current world leader.

Bolt had an encouraging showing at the London Diamond League meet in late July, winning in 9.87 victory. Some reports say he may be in top form in Beijing to restore order and keep a vilified Gatlin from the top of the podium.

Says Powell, “We all have great seasons, but Gatlin is not untouchable; 9.74 seconds is something that I’ve surpassed.”

Powell has only run faster than 9.74 once—a 9.72 in September 2008. He said the goal for 2015 was to surprise himself. When later asked to clarify what he meant, Powell laughed.

“I never thought about that. Just doing something I’ve never done before in my life. If I do that then there’s no doubt then I’ll be at the top of the podium. For me, I think it’s running faster than I ever have and if I can do that there’s no one to beat me.”

Gold would not astonish him, as it's hard for something more than 10 years in the making to come as a surprise.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

2015-16 La Liga Preview

Spanish teams are once again the ones to beat in the 2015-16 campaign after emphasising their superiority on the European stage over the past few years. La Liga sides have won seven Champions League and seven Europa League titles since the turn of the century, while providing four of the semi-finalists in both competitions last season.

La Liga
This year the number of Primera sides competing in the Champions League has swelled to five with Sevilla’s automatic qualification for the group stages, courtesy of their 3-2 Europa League final success against Dnipro in Warsaw last May.
Holders Barcelona will again be the favourites but they must negotiate their group without the added bonus of fresh faces in Luis Enrique’ squad due to the transfer embargo imposed on the club until next January.

Even so, the Catalans are a sure-fire bet to reach the knockout stages beginning in February and will presumably have added to the signings of Arda Turan from Atletico Madrid and Aleix Vidal from Sevilla by that time.
Eternal rivals Real Madrid and cross-city neighbours Atletico Madrid will be looking to dethrone Barca and it is sure to be a long road to next year’s showpiece at the San Siro in Milan.
Los Blancos have long considered the competition their Holy Grail and new boss Rafa Benitez will find things no different from his predecessors in that the pressure to win it is intense, although much could depend on the way he handles Cristiano Ronaldo and the host of other stars at Santiago Bernabeu.
Atleti, meanwhile, would love to emulate their final appearance of two years ago even though the nucleus of that squad has departed. Diego Simeone is notorious for constructing a team in his own image and Los Rojiblancos, as usual, will be hard to beat, which will ensure they will be there or thereabouts. Nonetheless, actually winning the trophy may be a bridge too far and in all probability a semi-final spot might be the limit of their ambitions.
Sevilla, on the other hand, return to the Champions League after an absence of five years and boss Unai Emery will be looking to at least qualify from the group stages. The Andalusians will be relying on their strong home form to take them as far as possible and could spring a few surprises along the way, despite the loss of the prolific Carlos Bacca to Milan.
Valencia make up the Spanish contingent in Europe’s premier competition but first need to overcome a tricky play-off tie with Monaco in order to reach the group stages. Nuno Espirito Santo’s men have had a difficult pre-season and have to quickly rediscover the form shown last term, or it could be a short-lived experience.
In the Europa League, Athletic Bilbao disposed of Azerbaijan outfit Inter Baku in the first qualifying round and should be too strong for Slovakian side Zilina in the play-off round for a place in the competition proper. Ernesto Valverde has put together a mixture of youth and experience and the Basques will be regarded as one of the favourites to win it.
Spain’s other representatives are Villarreal, who have finished sixth in their domestic League for the last two seasons and are desperate to add a major trophy to their roll of honour. Luciano Vietto’s departure to Atletico Madrid is a big loss but if replacement Roberto Soldado can rediscover the scoring form he showed at Valencia then the Yellow Submarine have a good chance of reaching next year’s final at St. Jacob-Park in Basel.

Week 1 Fixtures
Athletic Bilbao - Barcelona
Atletico Madrid - Las Palmas
Deportivo - Real Sociedad
Espanyol - Getafe
Granada - Eibar
Levante - Celta Vigo
Malaga - Sevilla
Rayo Vallecano - Valencia
Real Betis - Villarreal
Sporting Gijon - Real Madrid