Saturday, 9 November 2013

Stuart Lancaster's England have points to prove against pacy Argentina

Dylan Hartley
Dylan Hartley, back at hooker for England, says he would prefer to beat Argentina than to play well and lose. Photograph: David Rogers/Getty Images
Amid all last week's sepia-tinted 10th anniversary celebrations of England's 2003 Rugby World Cup victory it was Martin Johnson, their erstwhile captain, who came up with the best definition of top-class sporting excellence. "Talent is the ability to produce it when you have to," suggested England's former manager, neatly summing up the twin challenge awaiting Stuart Lancaster's players over the next eight days.
The double whammy of Argentina and New Zealand on consecutive Saturdays should certainly offer a clue as to whether England's young side can deliver successfully in the face of rising public expectation. No one disputes this squad's potential but attacking consistency still eludes them. Now would be a good time to demonstrate they really are a group who thrive on pressure rather than shrink from it.
That ambition will apply both collectively and individually against a physical Pumas pack, with the likes of Dylan Hartley, Ben Foden, Billy Twelvetrees, Chris Ashton, David Wilson and Lee Dickson all desperate to improve their chances of starting against the All Blacks and beyond. In such circumstances it can be easy to try too hard but that is precisely the kind of scenario England will have to overcome at the 2015 tournament on home soil.
A surefire way of measuring their progress will be to listen to the Twickenham crowd, quieter than a Remembrance Day service at times during last weekend's victory over Australia. With the price of tickets increasingly steep, there is an awkward gap between the spectators' desire to be entertained and the team's natural reluctance to risk defeat. If England can satisfy both those requirements against the Pumas, it will make the forthcoming All Black fixture all the more attractive.
Injury has, admittedly, complicated Lancaster's plans, with Ben Youngs the latest to be ruled out, because of a bruised hip. Danny Care will deputise on the bench but there is a lingering sense of regret that the exciting Wasps winger Christian Wade has been sidelined with a sore hamstring at the very moment he was preparing to illuminate the dark November gloom.
With Marland Yarde also missing and Ben Foden deputising on the wing, it will be even more vital for the forwards to supply momentum against a team who, for the first 50 minutes at least, will take some knocking over. Hartley, back at hooker ahead of Tom Youngs, whose wife gave birth this week, is up for the challenge.
"It sounds like it'll be a really forward-dominated game, which is perfect. I'm looking forward to it. Let's not get away from the fact that winning is the most important thing. I think the Twickenham crowd would rather go home with a win than us playing lovely rugby, scoring four tries but losing," he said.
Even so there will be an inevitable focus on what England manage when they do have the ball. "All of us were a little bit disappointed with the attacking performance against Australia," conceded their attack coach, Mike Catt. "But when you don't get the ability to gain momentum from your set piece it doesn't work. It's about having patience and when the opportunities come we need to make sure we take them. We'd like it to be nice and dry so we can really move Argentina around."
If, on the other hand, the Pumas scrum gains the upper hand in the opening half-hour – the new engagement laws appear to suit them and England are relatively unfamiliar with the French referee Pascal Gaüzère – it could be another frustrating first half, although the strength of England's bench will surely see them home eventually by a margin of 10-12 points.
That would represent their ninth win in 10 Tests, a statistic to add further spice to New Zealand's impending arrival.
Captain Chris Robshaw, of course, will remind his players of the need to take it one victory at a time. But England, currently third in the IRB world rankings, have now reached the point where the occasional big result is not enough. "If we want to make a statement and move on we need to beat another top side in Argentina," warned Hartley. Anything less and the All Blacks will be licking their lips.

Matt Prior injury casts a shadow over England Ashes warm-up

Matt Prior: injury concern.
Matt Prior: injury concern. Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images
Joe Root hit a timely half century then found himself keeping wicket on the last day of England's rain-ruined trip to Tasmania, after Matt Prior suffered a calf injury when batting.
Prior seemed to do the damage when running a quick single during a sixth-wicket partnership of 51 with Root, and although the problem was not serious enough for him to retire hurt, he stayed in the dressing room area for treatment after Alastair Cook had declared England's first innings on 430-7 shortly before 3pm.
England said Prior had “a tight left calf”, with no comment on whether he would be in doubt for the first Test in Brisbane, which starts in 12 days.
There was also some uncertainty over why Root took the wicketkeeping gloves rather than Jonny Bairstow, who is Prior's deputy in the squad. Bairstow was not in the XI for this match – he has yet to play on the tour – but Australia A said they had told England they would have been happy for him to fill in.
But Bairstow could be seen making his way to the nets for batting practice, leaving Root to cut an unfamiliar figure in pads, gloves and a white sun hat. The Yorkshireman offered further evidence of his all-round ability with a competent performance including a straightforward catch to dismiss Usman Khawaja during a high-quality opening spell from Jimmy Anderson.
But Bairstow may now receive an unexpected opportunity in England's last warm-up fixture against an Invitational XI in Sydney starting on Wednesday.
The day had started with more frustration for both teams as a series of showers prevented any play until 11.15am. When England were finally able to resume their innings, which had been marooned on 318 without loss since the close of play on Wednesday, Cook and Carberry were retired on 154 and 153 respectively, to allow the middle order to spend some precious time at the crease.
But Kevin Pietersen's first innings of the tour lasted only 10 balls, in which he struck two confident boundaries, before he was trapped lbw by Trent Copeland playing around a ball that kept very low.
Three overs later Jonathan Trott, who made a century in the opening tour fixture in Perth but never looked convincing here, edged a good one from Ben Cutting.
That brought in Gary Ballance to join Root in a partnership between the two young Yorkshire batsmen who are thought to be battling for the problem No 6 position in Brisbane. The honours went unequivocally to Root on this occasion, as he had already rattled on to 29 when Ballance was pinned lbw by Cutting after making four singles in 17 balls – not much of an improvement on the golden duck he suffered in Perth. He may now have to wait a while before batting again.
Root, who was under a little extra pressure after Carberry seized the chance presented by Root's surprise move down the order, moved smoothly on to 58 from 97 balls before Cook declared at the end of a short and eventful innings from Stuart Broad which reinforced the suspicion that he will have a lively tour.
Broad got off the mark by hitting his sixth ball, from the left arm spinner Jon Holland, over long-on for six, but picked out Khawaja on the boundary trying to repeat the shot in Holland's next over. Khawaja made hard work of the catch and ended up taking it inches from the ground. Broad had a brief exchange with some of the Australia A players as he left the field, perhaps wondering whether the ball had carried. There will surely be plenty more where that came from over the next couple of months.
Broad was understandably rusty when he bowled, conceding 29 in an opening four-over spell that included two no-balls and one set of five wides in an over in which Alex Doolan hit him for three boundaries. But he improved when he switched ends to take over from Anderson, who ended with 2-20 from seven overs to confirm that at least one of England's bowlers is in good order for Brisbane.
Anderson may now prefer to rest next week rather than play in Sydney. But the main question for England will surround the fitness of Prior

BT Sport seal £1bn deal for exclusive Champions League broadcasting rights

Anchor Humphrey poses for a photograph before the BT Sport channel launch in east London
BT Sport's fooball presenter Jake Humphrey looks set to anchor the coverage. Photograph: Suzanne Plunkett/Reuters
BT Sport has finalised a deal with Uefa to exclusively broadcastChampions League matches from 2015. The company will also show Europa League fixtures in the three-year agreement that will run from the 2015-16 season.
BT Sport's coup is a significant blow to Sky and ITV, the existing rights holders. It also takes the tournament off free-to-air television for the first time, unless BT Sport follows its Premier League lead and makes some matches available to non-subscribers.
BT Sport, who paid £738m to enter the football market this season bypurchasing the rights to Premier League games, concluded the deal on Saturday morning with European football's governing body and has agreed to pay around £299m a season for the rights to all 350 matches in the two Uefa competitions each season.
Gavin Patterson, the BT chief executive, said: "I am thrilled that BT Sport will be the only place where fans can enjoy all the live action from the Uefa Champions League and Uefa Europa League. Both tournaments are world class and firm favourites with many.
"BT Sport has got off to a strong start with customers enjoying what we have to offer. We have attracted millions of customers by giving sport back to the fans, and we can assure people who want to catch all the action, that European football will be far more accessible and affordable with BT."
Sky feels BT paid "far in excess" of its own valuation for the rights to the European matches. A statement from Sky read: "We bid with a clear view of what the rights are worth to us. It seems BT chose to pay far in excess of our valuation.
"There are many ways in which we can invest in our service for customers. We take a disciplined approach and there is always a level at which we will choose to focus on something else. If we thought it was worth more, we'd have paid more.
"Nothing changes until 2015 and we look forward to 18 more months of live Champions League on Sky Sports. We will now re-deploy resources and continue to bring customers the best choice of TV across our offering."
The BT channels are also showing live FA Cup games and live football from the top leagues in Germany, Italy, France and Scotland plus the FA Women's Super League.

Dozens arrested in Walmart protest as anger against retail chain escalates

Walmart protest in LA
More than 50 protesters sit in the middle of the road before being arrested during a protest for better wages. Photograph: Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
Dozens of people demanding better pay and conditions for Walmart workers were arrested at a protest in Los Angeles which organisers called the single biggest act of disobedience against the retail chain.
Police detained 54 people on Thursday night, including Walmart workers, union representatives and clergy members who sat in the street outside a Walmart store in Chinatown and refused to move, prompting officers to declare an unlawful assembly and move in.
“Walmart has proven its willingness to break the law by illegally firing workers and trying to silence them,” said Maria Elena Durazo, executive secretary-treasurer of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, one of the organisers. “We are sitting down today to demonstrate that we won't allow these dirty tactics in Los Angeles.”
The demonstration was the latest in a year-long series of mostly small, vocal protests at Walmart stores around the US.
Walmart protest arrest
A woman is arrested during a protest for better wages outside Walmart in Los Angeles. Photograph: Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
OurWalmart, a union-backed members group, says as many as 825,000 Walmart workers – out of a workforce of 1.3 million – are paid less than $25,000 a year.
It accused the US's biggest employer, which recorded profits of $17bn over the past year, of keeping workers in poverty and punishing and firing those who spoke out. The group says it has filed more than 100 unfair labour practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board, including 20 illegal terminations and 80 disciplinary actions.
Organisers said a fifth of the 500 people who attended Thursday's protest were Walmart workers.
Walmart protest
Los Angeles police move in to arrest people during a protest for better wages outside Walmart in Los Angeles. Photograph: Lu
Richard Reynoso, an overnight stock worker at the chain's store in Duarte, was one of those detained. “I got arrested today because I believe that taking this step will encourage others to be brave and step forward and stand up to the world’s largest retailer,” he said. “Walmart can’t silence me.”
Kory Lundbeg, a Walmart spokesman, said the company estimated there were only 15 to 20 employees in the crowd and that none worked at the Chinatown store. External agitators were driving the protests, he said. “The reason is our associates understand the benefits of working for Walmart.”
The chain promoted on average 430 employees daily and recruited three-quarters of its management teams from the shopfloor. A store manager earns $170,000. Stores in Los Angeles county operated as normal on Thursday, and the company expected to work without disruption through the holiday season, Lundberg added.
Denise Barlage, 54, a clothing room operator at Walmart's Pico Rivera store in LA, disputed the company's depiction of contented workers and said many were overworked, stressed and intimidated.
“A lot of the people I know are fearful. It's like walking on rice paper. They feel at any moment they may be fired.” Fear of retaliation deterred complaints about pay and conditions, she said. “Everyone is just so nervous all the time a lot don't speak up for themselves.”

SAC Capital pleads guilty to fraud in $1.2bn settlement deal

Steven A Cohen, head of SAC Capital
Embattled SAC founder Steve Cohen. Photograph: Scott Eells/Getty Images
Steve Cohen's SAC Capital Advisors hedge fund pleaded guilty to fraud charges Friday as part of a $1.2bn deal to resolve a long-running insider trading investigation.
At a court hearing in Manhattan, SAC general counsel Peter Nussbaum entered the guilty plea to four counts of securities and one count of wire fraud charges, a crucial step toward ratification of the fund's record insider trading accord.
US district judge Laura Taylor Swain said she would wait to decide whether to accept SAC's guilty plea until after a pre-sentencing report was filed.
Under the plea agreement SAC reached with prosecutors, the hedge fund has agreed to pay $900 million in penalties to resolve the criminal case unveiled against it in July.
A federal judge on Wednesday signed off on a separate $900m judgment in a civil forfeiture action filed at the same time against SAC.
Under the civil deal, the hedge fund will only have to pay $284m, after getting credit for $616 million in settlements in related insider trading cases by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
SAC has reserved its right to withdraw its plea if Swain does not impose the penalties negotiated with prosecutors.
Swain scheduled the sentencing hearing for March 14.

Samsung to launch 64-bit phones in 2014, says report

Samsung Galaxy S4: Is there an S series phone in the works with a 64-bit processor?
Samsung Galaxy S4: Is there an S series phone in the works with a 64-bit processor?
(Credit: CNET)
A day after Samsung waxed eloquent about its 64-bit chip plans, a report out of Asia claims that high-end 64-bit smartphones are due from the company next year.
The electronics giant will launch flagship smartphones with 64-bit CPUs (central processing units) in 2014, Taipei-based Digitimes reported Thursday, citing sources.
The phones will also sport WQHD (2,560x1,440 resolution) displays and 16-megapixel cameras, according to the report. Both Samsung Display and Japan Display will "begin volume production of WQHD displays soon," the Digitimes claimed.
CNET has contacted Samsung and will update the report when we have more information.
On Wednesday, Stephen Woo, president of System LSI at Samsung Electronics, said Samsung was taking a "2-step approach," to developing 64-bit mobile chips.
Samsung will work first on a 64-bit processor based on a design from ARM, Woo said, then develop its own "optimized" 64-bit design.
The company did not provide a timetable for release of the chips on Wednesday, but if the report is accurate, development of at least one of the above chips would have to be fairly far along at this point.
"We are marching on schedule," Woo said Wednesday. "We will offer the first 64-bit [processor] based on ARM's own core. After that, we will offer an even more optimized 64-bit [processor] based on our own optimizations."
Apple revealed the first 64-bit chip for smartphones in September. That Apple A7 processor is also an ARM-based design that has been optimized and tweaked by Apple. It is now in shipping in the iPhone 5S and iPad Air.
Currently, with the exception of Apple, smartphones use 32-bit processors. A 64-bit processor can address memory above 4GB and can deliver higher performance on certain operations -- such as those related to games -- than 32-bit chips.
Samsung discussed smartphones with WQHD displays at its Analyst Day on Wednesday.
Samsung discussed smartphones with WQHD displays at its Analyst Day on Wednesday.
(Credit: Samsung)

Moyes: Manchester United weren’t close to buying Ozil, we didn’t need him

Moyes: Manchester United weren’t close to buying Ozil, we didn’t need him
The Scot says that the Red Devils were not interested in signing the Germany international as they already had similar players in the squad such as Shinji Kagawa and Wayne Rooney
David Moyes says Manchester United did not try to sign Mesut Ozil in the summer because he was a player they "didn’t need”.

The Germany international moved from Real Madrid to Arsenal in August and has proved to be an instant success at the Emirates, helping the Gunners to the top of the Premier League table.

Ozil had also been linked with a move to the Red Devils prior to the deal going through, but Moyes insisted the club were never close to bringing him to Old Trafford.


“We weren’t close to buying him but something was mooted a little bit before that,” Moyes told reporters.

“We didn’t need that position at the time. I didn’t even say it was an interest, it was put to us and it was just something at the time we didn’t need.

“We had Shinji Kagawa and Wayne Rooney and people of a similar ilk so it wasn’t quite what we required at that time. We were looking at different positions.”

Moyes will face Ozil and Arsenal at Old Trafford on Sunday and the Scot is confident his side are facing the in-form Gunners at the right time, after an inconsistent start to the season.

“Arsenal are coming to play the champions, but I think their form is very good and they will come in good spirit,” he added.

“But we have some good momentum. Our performances are improving, there are signs we are coming into a bit of form, so hopefully it will make for a good game.