Co-hosts Poland face must-win Euro 2012 game - Football
Published: 16 Jun 2012 - 05:47:21
It is win or bust for co-hosts Poland as they take on the Czech Republic on Saturday knowing that any other result would see them exit the European Championship.
Poland may have played well in their opening two Group A matches but they failed to win either and currently sit third with just two points.
The Czech Republic have three points and failure to win would mean that the Poles could overtake neither the Czechs nor group leaders Russia, who have four points.
It means the co-hosts find themselves in a situation that looked highly unlikely after 45 minutes of their opening game against Greece.
A goal and a man to the good and playing vibrant attacking football, Franciszek Smuda's team looked to be fulfilling the pre-tournament promise that a 2-2 friendly draw with Germany in September had started to foment.
That all looked to be disintegrating as Greece stormed back to snatch a 1-1 draw and could even have won after Polish goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny was sent off, giving away a penalty to boot.
Substitute goalkeeper Przemyslaw Tyton was the hero as he saved Giorgos Karagounis's spot-kick and kept the Poles from defeat.
Szczesny has served his one-match suspenson and Smuda must now decide whether to recall the Arsenal stopper or stick with PSV Eindhoven's Tyton.
Smuda said he will decide only 24 hours before the game but Szczesny believes the competition is good for them both.
"Whether I play in the last game or not, that's up to the manager. I'm available, I feel confident, I'm ready to play, so I'm hoping I'll be in the starting lineup," he said.
"This is what football's about. You want to fight for your spot. That can only help the team, people fighting for their places."
Things could have been worse for Poland as they trailed 1-0 to Alan Dzagoev's goal for Russia in the next group game but captain Jakub Blaszczykowski's superb equaliser maintained their unbeaten run and kept them in with a shot at qualification.
The hosts have some injury worries, though, with defender Damien Perquis and midfielders Eugen Polanski and Dariusz Dudka all doubts having suffered injuries against Russia on Tuesday.
An abdominal strain has made Dudka the most doubtful of the three while Perquis is recovering from a gashed shin and Polanski is suffering from a bruised knee.
While Poland have injury concerns and need to win, the Czechs are in almost exactly the same boat.
They could qualify with a draw but only if Greece don't beat Russia, otherwise they will be out.
It means they too need to win to be sure of progressing but they have concerns over two crucial players, captain Tomas Rosicky and goalkeeper Petr Cech.
Arsenal midfielder Rosicky is the bigger doubt after what he believes is a recurrence of a calf injury he suffered in the final Premier League game of the season forced him to miss the second half of their 2-1 win over Greece.
Chelsea goalkeeper Cech has a sore shoulder and is desperate to play to make up for his gaffe that allowed the Greeks a route back into a match in which the Czechs had established an early two-goal lead.
"Saturday I'll surely be 100 percent. (Friday) I will be able to train normally without any limitations," said Cech, who insisted the Greek blunder was well and truly behind him.
"I don't look back - the main thing is we won the match," he added.
Both Rosicky and Cech were due to face a fitness test on Friday to determine whether they will be fit or not.
Since the Czech Republic split from Slovakia to form an independent country, they have lost every time they have played away to Poland.
However, the last meeting between the sides was a Czech victory in Prague in a World Cup qualifier three years ago.
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Colorado 12, Detroit Tigers 4 (10 inn.): Jose Valverde falls apart in extra inning - Detroit Free Press
Jose Valverde gave up six runs in the 10th inning as the Tigers fell to the Rockies, 12-4, tonight at Comerica Park.
Colorado sent 11 men to the plate in the extra inning and scored eight times on five hits, two walks (one intentional) and one error by Valverde.
The Tigers closer gave up a leadoff single to Michael Cuddyer. Then, Eric Young Jr. hit a sac bunt to Valverde, who overthrew Prince Fielder at first. Young was safe and Cuddyer went to third. Todd Helton was then intentionally walked to load the bases. Valverde (3-2) got Jordan Pacheco to hit a grounder to short and Jhonny Peralta threw home for the force, setting the stage for Wilin Rosario, who hit a chopper just in front of the plate and over Peralta's glove.
Chris Nelson then walked to reload the bases and Dexter Fowler hit a foul fly to left, allowing pinch runner D.J. LaMahieu (Birmingham Brother Rice) to tag up and score. Then Marco Scutaro hit an RBI single to right-center to chase Valverde from the game.
Luis Marte came in, but Carlos Gonzalez greeted him with a long, three-run home run to right-center. Then Cuddyer, who led off the inning, followed with a solo shot to the seats in left.
The Tigers went out quietly, 1-2-3, in the bottom of the inning. For the game, Prince Fielder and Bryan Holoday each had two hits and Fielder also had an RBI. But the Tigers left 11 men on base.
Matt Belisle got the win on the mound for Colorado after pitching a scoreless eighth and ninth, giving up just one hit.
Detroit tied the game in the sixth on a rally started by Holoday, who singled off starter Jeff Francis with one out. Colorado then brought in reliever Adam Ottavino, who walked Austin Jackson. The then threw a wild pitch to Brennan Boesch, putting runners on second and third. Boesch then hit a grounder to first, allowing Holoday to make it 4-4.
The Rockies took the lead in the fourth when, with two outs and Pacheco on first base after a single, Nelson hit a two-run home run to rightfield.
Colorado struck first with a pair of runs in the third. After a Rosario single, Nelson tripled to right. Leadoff man Dexter Fowler followed with an RBI double to left. Things could have been worse after the Rockies loaded the bases on a couple of walks, but Michael Cuddyer hit a grounder to the pitcher for a force at home, and Jason Giambi hit into a 3-2-3 double play, the first of three double plays for the former AL MVP would hit into.
The Tigers bounced back to take the lead in the third after catcher Bryan Holoday opened things up with a double to left-center. Austin Jackson chased him home with a double of his own and, with one out, Miguel Cabrera doubled to drive in Jackson. Fielder followed with an RBI single to center, scoring Cabrera after a nifty slide to avoid the tag at the plate.
Casey Crosby lasted just 3 2/3 innings and gave up four earned runs on six hits and four walks while striking out four on 75 pitches. Duane Below came in and pitched 1 2/3 innings and allowed two hits. Brayan Villarreal went 1 1/3 innings and struck out two. Phil Coke gave up three hits while recording two outs, one by strikeout. Joaquin Benoit allowed just one walk in 1 1/3 innings.
Colorado starter Jeff Francis went 5 1/3 innings and gave up three earned runs on eight hits, six doubles, and three walks while striking out two.
Join Free Press special writer Sean Merriman for a live blog of the Tigers-Cardinals game Thursday afternoon at freep.com/sports.
Free Press columnist Drew Sharp will answer questions about all things Detroit sports in a live chat at 11 a.m. Monday at freep.com/sports. Submit questions now!
Walcott thrilled with impact off bench - Football
Published: 15 Jun 2012 - 23:17:05
Arsenal winger Theo Walcott was delighted with the impact he had in England's 3-2 victory over Sweden.
Walcott entered as a second-half subsitute for the ineffective James Milner and was instrumental in helping England overcome a 2-1 deficit as Roy Hodgson's side fought back to beat the Swedes in a thrilling Group D encounter.
The pacy winger lashed in a 64th-minute equaliser to make it 2-2 and then provided the run and pass which set up Danny Welbeck's winner.
"It's always nice to come off the bench and show what you can do," said Walcott.
"We felt from first game (1-1 draw with France) we wanted to pick things up and to get three goals is terrific."
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Stark choice for Egypt in presidential poll - Reuters
CAIRO |
CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptians queued to choose a new leader on Saturday in the first free presidential election in their history, facing a stark choice between a conservative Islamist and a former military officer who served ousted autocrat Hosni Mubarak.
Reeling from a court order two days ago to dissolve a new parliament dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood, many question whether the wealthy generals who pushed aside their fellow officer Mubarak last year to appease the pro-democracy protests of the Arab Spring will honor a pledge to let civilians rule.
With neither a parliament nor a new constitution in place to define the president's powers, voting on Saturday and Sunday will not settle the matter, leaving 82 million Egyptians, foreign investors and allies in the United States and Europe unsure what kind of state the most populous Arab nation will be.
For those who preferred the secular centrists, leftists and moderate Islamists who lost in the first round, the two-man run-off leaves an unpalatable choice from the extremes.
Some of Egypt's 50 million eligible voters say they will despoil their ballots rather than back Ahmed Shafik, 70, a former air force commander who was Mubarak's last prime minister, or Mohammed Morsy, 60, of the Brotherhood, the clandestine enemy of army rule for six decades.
But many were determined to make their voice heard. Queues formed early at some polling stations as they opened at 8 a.m. (02.00 a.m. EDT) for the first of two days of voting. A result could be known as early Sunday night, after the second day's vote.
"I am going to vote for Shafik. He is a military man, ex-pilot and war commander. He has exactly what need in a leader. A strong military man to have a strong grip on the state and bring back security," said Hamdy Saif, 22, a student who like many Egyptians are desperate for order after Mubarak's overthrow.
There are signs of exasperation with the Brotherhood's push for power on the back of a revolt driven in its early stages by the secular, urban middle class may limit Morsy's ability to widen his appeal beyond the Brotherhood's disciplined ranks.
The Brotherhood had secure the biggest bloc in parliament that was elected in a vote that ended in January, and initially said they would not field a presidential candidate but then changed tack at the last minute.
The court ruling to dissolve parliament reverses those gain, and could help win some more sympathizers for the group.
"I was going to vote for Shafik but after parliament was dissolved, I changed my mind and will vote Morsy. There is no more fear of the Islamists dominating everything," said Ahmed Attiya, 35, a IT technician in Cairo's Zamalek district.
"Shafik represents a counter-revolution," he added.
EUPHORIA THEN FRUSTRATION
Critics denounced the parliament ruling as a coup and compared it to the start of the Algerian civil war, when the military cancelled an election won by Islamists 20 years ago.
But the Brotherhood renounced violence as a means to achieve political change in Egypt decades ago and an Islamist uprising in the 1990s was put down by Mubarak and his security forces, which have survived last year's revolt intact.
Although ordinary Egyptians are choosing their leader for the first time in a history that stretches back to pharaonic times, the euphoria that accompanied Mubarak's overthrow on February 11, 2011 has given way to exhaustion and frustration after a messy and often violent transition overseen by army generals.
Hardline Islamist violence this month in Tunis, where the first Arab Spring uprising inspired Egyptians to emulate their North African neighbors, has also hardened fears of political Islam, notably among those dependent on tourism for a living, secular activists, women and the Egypt's Christians, who make up a tenth of the nation.
Both candidates have sought the center ground, promising to rule in the spirit of the revolution: "It is not correct that the military council wants to rule through me," Shafik said.
Morsy, a last-minute choice for the Brotherhood after their preferred candidate was barred, has played down talk of a crackdown on beachwear and alcohol that would hurt tourism and steered away from confrontation with Israel after three decades of cool peace maintained during Mubarak's military-backed rule.
But both candidates are also defined by those who promoted them. The Brotherhood candidate says he is running because God expects him to offer his sacrifice for the nation. Shafik's air force career shadowed that of Mubarak, his elder by 13 years.
"We are back to the political dynamic of secular versus Islamist, of a civil state versus an Islamist state," said Mona Makram Ebeid, a political scientist and member of a body that advises SCAF, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.
"That is what we as political forces are confronted with today, causing almost a gridlock," she said, referring to months of wrangling between the army, Islamists, liberals and other parties seeking to carve a new course for the nation.
During Mubarak's era, his presidency was mainly endorsed in single-candidate referendums but in 2005, under pressure from his U.S. ally, he held a multi-candidate presidential race. No one was surprised when Mubarak cruised to an easy win because of rules that made it impossible to put up a realistic challenge.
(Additional reporting by Samia Nakhoul; Writing by Edmund Blair and Alastair MacDonald; Editing by Angus MacSwan)








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