Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Adam Scott blows world No1 chance as Matt Every seals first Tour title

Matt Every secured his first PGA Tour title by coming out on top in the Arnold Palmer Invitational
Matt Every secured his first PGA Tour title by coming out on top in a dramatic climax to the Arnold Palmer Invitational. Photograph: Willie J Allen Jr/AP
Adam Scott blew his chance to defend the US Masters as world No1 as Matt Every clinched his first PGA Tour title in a dramatic climax to the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
Scott was seven shots clear of the field after 36 holes at Bay Hill and took a three-shot lead into the final round – but that advantage was wiped out by the time he reached the turn. The world No2 collapsed to a closing 76 to finish 11 under par – he was 10 under after a course record-equalling 62 on Thursday – two shots behind Every, who shot a final round of 70.
Scott's playing partner, Keegan Bradley, had looked out of contention after dropping three shots in the first three holes and carding further bogeys on the 10th and 11th but he birdied the 12th, 16th and 17th and narrowly missed from 30ft for another on the last to force a play-off.
A tearful Every, who grew up nearby and used to attend the tournament as a spectator, said: "It's really cool. I have had a lot of looks [at wins] and I kept telling myself maybe it's going to come somewhere special. I still can't believe I won. It's hard, it's tough, man. You just never know if it's going to happen. You get there [in contention] so many times and it's nice to get it done."
Scott had bogeyed the 1st after twice finding sand and a hooked drive into the water on the 3rd cost him another bogey.
The 33-year-old steadied the ship with a chip to four feet to set up a birdie on the par-five 4th but then bogeyed the 7th after his tee shot plugged in a greenside bunker.
Scott had held the outright lead since the early stages of his opening round on Thursday but that was no longer the case when Every recovered from a bogey on the 8th with birdies at the 9th, 10th and 12th to take the lead.
Another birdie on the 13th moved Every two ahead and the 30-year-old soon found himself three clear of the pack when Scott bogeyed the 14th. Scott's tee shot came up well short of the green but he elected to putt through the fringe, running his birdie attempt seven feet past the hole and missing the return.
A massive swing looked on the cards on the 16th when Every pushed his tee shot into the trees and failed to find the fairway with his escape shot, eventually making a bogey six. In the group behind Scott found the green in two with a towering iron shot as Every looked on, only to three-putt for par and remain two behind.
Every then found a greenside bunker on the 17th but saved par after his recovery shot slammed into the pin and somehow stayed out. Scott's challenge ended when he failed to save par from the same bunker but Bradley fired a superb approach to 10ft and holed for birdie.
A bogey from Every on the 18th then left the former US PGA champion Bradley needing a birdie there for the second day running to force extra holes but his long-range attempt slid just past the hole.

Malaysian Grand Prix: F1 circus arrives in shadow of missing flight MH370

Lewis Hamilton
Lewis Hamilton's car will read 'Come Home MH370' on its side panel in Sunday's Malaysian Grand Prix. Photograph: Hon Keong Soo/Demotix/Corbis
The Formula One circus arrived in Kuala Lumpur for Sunday's Malaysian Grand Prix to find a nation in sombre mood following the disappearance of flight MH370. The atmosphere at the normally humid and febrile Sepang circuit this weekend will be subdued.
As drivers, mechanics and engineers prepared for the second race of the season, they were met with the news that a concert to mark the Formula One weekend, which was to feature the US singer Christina Aguilera, had been cancelled as "a sign of respect to the families and next of kin of the crew and passengers of flight MH370", according to Petronas, the state oil company which sponsors both the annual show and the Mercedes Formula One team.
"It is truly a tragedy and we are deeply saddened about the crew and the passengers," said a statement by the company on the concert's Facebook page. The concert was due to be held at the Kuala Lumper Twin Towers and Saturday. The Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg said on Twitter that "all my prayers go to friends & families of the passengers on MH370".
The cars driven by Rosberg and his team-mate Lewis Hamilton will carry "Come Home MH370" messages on their side panels.
The Laureus World Sports Academy, which is also in town, scaled down its celebration of last year's leading sports personalities and the chairman, Ed Moses, announced that a football friendly between past greats would be dedicated to those hit by the disaster.
Meanwhile, Ahmad Shah, the sultan of Pahang – the third largest state in Malaysia – said that flags should be flown at half-mast for three days as a mark of respect.
The first 10 pages of 's Star newspaper were devoted to the tragedy, with more space for comment and letters deeper inside the issue. Earlier in the week the paper had printed a wrap, with "RIP" on the front and the back carrying the comment: "No farewell words were spoken, no time to say goodbye, you were gone before we knew it, and only God knows why." The New Straits Times featured a Boeing 777 on its front page, with the headline "Goodnight, MH370".
But in Formula One, a sport which has never suffered unduly because of the thinness of its skin, the show will go on. The circuit's chief executive officer Datuk Razlan Razali said: "The atmosphere is subdued and I understand everyone is talking about it [the flight] everywhere and asking why we are hosting a Formula One race under the circumstances, but it is something that was decided a long time ago. The teams have arrived and the race will go on, including the post-race concert ... but we must be sensitive and not go overboard."
In the bustling shopping area around KL Sentral train station, feelings about the race were mixed. Shirah Hussin, a wellness coach, said: "Everyone is very sad because they have still not found the bodies, or the proof of what really happened. We are still in a sad mood so the race should be called off on Sunday. It is not the right time for a celebration."
Robbie Chan, a financial adviser, said: "The impact here has been very big. The reputation of the whole country is at stake. The plane and the crew was from Malaysia, from our government. They are all very concerned about this. We talk about it all day every day. We want the truth, an explanation. But I don't object to the Formula One going ahead. It is people's hobby."
Stockbroker KW Chan said: "Different people are expressing their grief in different ways. Some people put on a smiling face, some put on a sour face, others keep quiet. But generally everybody feels sad about this great loss.
"But it is not just a Malaysian tragedy. The whole world feels the same. I don't follow Formula One. I don't think there should be a big celebration but I have no problem with the race going ahead. A lot of work has gone into the weekend and a lot of people have come here to see the race."
Perhaps the tragedy will put into perspective the complaints from fansabout the reduced noise from the new 1.6-litre V6 turbo engines. This might be the time for a little decorum, even in the brash and rowdy world of Formula One.

Bernie Ecclestone must find a way to silence F1's great noise debate

Formula One Motor Racing - Australian Grand Prix - Albert Park - Melbourne
Some fans in Melbourne were critical of the new quieter cars, which are a greater test of drivers' abilities than previous seasons. Photograph: Jon Buckle/PA
"These go to 11," explains Spinal Tap's guitarist Nigel Tufnel indicating the controls on his amplifier. "One louder" is the hapless Tufnel's aim, and so, it seems in the wake of fans' disappointment at the volume of the new Formula One powertrains, it is for Bernie Ecclestone. His concerns are shared by leading figures in motor sport but solutions remain far from clearcut.
Ecclestone, who said he was "horrified" by the lack of noise in Australia, has been vocal in his condemnation, adding "these cars don't sound like racing cars", and that changes would have to be made, saying of the engine manufacturers: "they made them quiet, now they can make them loud again". For a long time, Ecclestone has expressed disquiet at the introduction of turbocharged V6 engines with energy recovery (ERS) units instead of V8s. Understandably perhaps, since he has a good historical perspective on how they would sound, running Brabham in 1983 when Nelson Piquet took F1's first world championship powered by a turbocharged engine.
Equally, the Australian Grand Prix promoter, Ron Walker, has also been critical, warning before this weekend's race in Malaysia of promoters dropping out of F1 and the lack of noise threatening to "kill the golden goose". His closeness to Ecclestone, however, suggests there is an element of hyperbole and politics to his protestations.
This is a charge that cannot be levelled at the only man to have won the world championship on two and four wheels, John Surtees. "The sound was what I feared from previous knowledge of turbos," he said. "From the entertainment point of view, something is missing."
Surtees, who was speaking at the launch for the Goodwood Festival of Speed, where he will take to the track in the original Ferrari 158 in which he won the F1 title 50 years ago when cars of four, six, eight and 12 cylinders all competed at once, was concerned the sport would now fail to connect with fans. "With the eight cylinders, when you heard them all go off the line there was an emotional factor created, emotion in the crowd. With a rather flat-sounding car you remove some of that emotion and motorsport, as with most sports, is all about creating emotion."
His opinions were echoed by fellow veteran Sir Stirling Moss. "I would have thought fans will be put off, Formula One is supposed to be the No1 formula but it's not the same now," he said. "You need the noise to get the excitement. There should be colour and noise and the smell of oil – all those things that go into making a race a good one."
Concerns not lost on Derek Warwick, the president of the British Racing Drivers' Club that owns Silverstone and hosts the British Grand Prix. A large part of his career was during F1's first period of turbocharged cars; indeed he drove Arrows to their best championship position of fifth in 1988 with the same rebadged BMW turbo engine that had powered Ecclestone's Brabhams.
"They have a problem and it's called noise," he said. "Part of the spectacle has to be the noise. You lose that sense of speed when you don't get the sound."
"The sound is so important to the spectator, it's what brings them year after year, it's what makes us turn up the volume on the TV, it's what makes us feel that these guys are gladiators because the sound is such an important part of the feeling of excitement and speed."
The show is suffering is the argument but the fastest cars at the Le Mans 24 Hours of recent years have also been the quietest – the diesel-hybrids of Audi – and that race's popularity is only growing. Equally, the powertrain change has not been a zero-sum game. The new units have (alongside the lack of volume and the reduction in aerodynamic downforce) also delivered cars that are much harder to drive and more entertaining to watch. The much steeper torque curve and relative lack of grip tests drivers' abilities far more so than in recent years – something F1 fans have long-demanded – and the visual spectacle is all the better for it. "I can totally understand why some people felt shocked by the lack of noise and in many ways disappointed," said the former F1 driver Anthony Davidson, "but a lion is no less impressive when it's not roaring. This is still an F1 car travelling at high speed and arguably harder to drive than it has been in the last 15 to 20 years, that's the thing I appreciate."
A return to really testing the drivers that Warwick also acknowledges will be key, despite his reservations over the volume. "These cars are more difficult to drive and we're going to see a massive difference between the good drivers and the average drivers," he said. A difference that also gave him cause for optimism.
"The cars are interesting, exciting, I thought they looked fantastic on the circuit," he added. "We haven't got the boring Scalextric cars from the last three or four years, these are mighty cars that need racing drivers to master them. That's good for F1, ultimately it will be good for spectators and viewers."
And it is the latter categories, if to their chagrin only indirectly, who are at the heart of this debate. For the sport's owners, CVC, the entertainment value of F1 translates directly into earnings through TV rights sales and circuits bidding to hold races. Any potential diminishment of that value must thus be addressed – hence Ecclestone as the vanguard of the potential counter-revolution against quieter cars. But, what, as Vladimir Ilyich had it, is to be done?
Tellingly, the teams have generally not wanted to engage with the question of whether changes can actually be made, either reluctant to discuss the issue or pointing out the positive aspects of the new powertrains and their relevance to the engine manufacturing industry (the shift to a "greener" engine was key for Renault and a factor in Honda returning next year), while emphasising that, only one race into the season, their focus has to be on getting the most from the units as they are. Put simply, they are not keen on entering a debate over something they believe will not happen.
And it seems almost certain it will not. The lower volume is largely a factor of the turbocharger and ERS absorbing the noise, and the engine units for 2014 are homologated and cannot be changed. Even adjustments to the exhausts would make little difference – most of those sought-after decibels have already long gone.
"It's not going to happen this year for sure," said Sam Collins, the deputy editor of Racecar Engineering magazine. "And I'm almost certain it's not going to happen at all."
Even a redevelopment for the near future is unlikely. "For 2015 all of the engines will be heavily redeveloped anyway, so arguably you could do something within that rule structure. But even then, the concept of these engines means it's quite difficult to redesign them to make them louder because you have the turbo sucking all the noise out," he argued. "So you would have to go for a complete rulebook change and that would take two or three years to introduce and would be hugely expensive and basically teams would stamp their feet and say 'no'".
No solutions then? Well maybe not in the garage but for the majority of the audience watching on TV, Collins, who loves the sound of the new cars, suggests "putting the microphones closer to the track, that would make a huge difference".
Which means we had best learn to enjoy F1 2014 as it is (and it really should be better to watch, at least, than it has been for years) because, despite the sound and fury of Ecclestone's pronouncements, the only option appears to be the motor racing equivalent of an amp that goes up to 11.

Bayern Munich: 'too dominant, regal, relaxed, elegant and cool for the rest'

Bayern Munich's players celebrate winning the Bundesliga title
Bayern Munich's players celebrate winning the Bundesliga title. Photograph: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images
The word itself had become joke, a brutal eight-letter punchline that knocked down all of Bayern Munich's notorious pomposity, their sense of entitlement and delusions of grandeur. But on Tuesday night, it ceased to be funny. Borussia Dortmund manager Jürgen Klopp reached for it in his impromptu eulogy for the new Bundesliga champions, because there was really no other way to describe their superiority. "They are incredible," said Klopp. "We truly need binoculars to see them. And I can even enjoy watching them at times because they're playing fantastically well."
Binoculars. Fernglas in German. Uli Hoeness, the soon-to-be incarcerated president and architect of this Bayern team, had coined the phrase in May 2007. "We have to make sure that there will be wailing when the others are looking at us in the table with binoculars," Hoeness had announced at the time. The grandiose mission statement had come back to haunt him many times over the next couple of years as Bayern stumbled from one managerial crisis to the next without making any real lasting progress.
Louis van Gaal's arrival in 2009 laid the foundation of the upswing but it needed Jupp Heynckes to take the team to an unprecedented treble and the fastest Bundesliga title, 25 points ahead of the opposition in 2012-13. In Pep Guardiola's first season in charge, they've opened up the same gap with seven games to go.
The 3-1 win at Hertha Berlin sealed a 24th championship that was never in doubt. All the incomprehensible numbers – 77 points from 27 matches, 52 games unbeaten, 20 wins in a row – don't quite do justice to the difference in class between them and a competition that wasn't quite worthy of the name. Bayern won the championship in March, earlier than last year and earlier than anyone else in any major European league, but, in truth, they have been out of sight from the first kick-off in August. "They were too dominant, too regal, too relaxed, too elegant, too cool for the rest of the league," wrote Spiegel Online.
The ease with which the Reds have dismantled allcomers – their only two draws, 1-1s at Freiburg and Leverkusen in the autumn, appear to be freak results, retrospectively – has been unsettling at times. Extensive fears about the competitive imbalance in the top flight put Bayern on the defensive. "We felt as if he had to apologise for our good work," press officer Markus Hörwick told Handelszeitung. But they didn't, of course. Sporting director Matthias Sammer instead accused the opposition of "not working as if there's no tomorrow in training". His intervention wasn't well-received.
It's one thing to win but did they have to beat everyone so convincingly in the process? There was much talk of the Bundesliga turning into the Scottish Premiership, of Bayern "trying to destroy" (Dortmund CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke) all opponents and many pointed to a desolate future in which the combination of Bayern's financial might, their squad quality and Guardiola's knowhow would render the whole idea of a title race absurd for years to come.
Over the last few days, however, the lament about their invincibility has given way to admiration for their achievement. Germany manager Joachim Löw praised the team's insatiability and uncompromising attitude. "They have the mentality of unconditional success," he said, "and they have a clear idea of a playing style that they stick to consistently from the first to the last minute."
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung thought that the wide-felt "weariness of the Guardiola football" was unfounded: "It's a football that the Bundesliga has never experienced in 50 years; so delicate and precise, so playful and determined, so sophisticated and improved, so inspiring and exciting. No one has come this close to art with football in this land as Pep Guardiola."
"One has to love the magic of their passing game, their technical perfection," agreed Die Zeit. Swiss broadsheet Tages-Anzeiger gushed that "this FC Bayern has gone up another level, they have made football, German football that used to rely on very different virtues, into art; into a game full of beauty, with players who are constantly on the move and who only want one thing: the ball, always the ball, and never to give it away again."
The game at the Olympic stadium, while unspectacular and entirely predictable in its outcome, offered an instructive snapshot of the way Bayern have improved on what appeared an unimprovable last season: 82.4% of possession again marked a new best since records began 10 years ago. And there's no point in wondering whether other teams might have kept the ball better in the more distant past: no one has played that way before. Bayern passed the ball 1,078 times on Tuesday night to become the first Bundesliga team to notch up four figures. Captain Philipp Lahm, who was once again moved into midfield by Guardiola, epitomised Bayern's abnormal perfection on the ball. He played 134 passes and completed all of them.
At the final whistle, the team danced and sung in front of the away team section but the cold temperatures put paid to the traditionalWeißbierdusche (beer shower). Even in jubilation, there was discipline and Guardiola spoke quietly of his "satisfaction" with winning the title, which he dedicated to Hoeness. He refused to wear the specially manufactured "24" baseball caps and watched proceedings from a distance. It was also interesting to hear the 43-year-old talk about "the four or five first months in which we had to solve many problems"; few people had noticed any.
Guardiola also warned that the next seven league games would be needed to improve on "our pace, our rhythm in every single game". This might have been the most impressive league campaign that the Bundesliga has witnessed but for Guardiola and his players, it was just the minimum target.
They have outgrown the league and must therefore find true validation abroad. It is the European history books they want – no: have – to get into, with a first successful defence of a Champions League trophy.

Sir Alex Ferguson verbally abused by United fans for appointing David Moyes

Sir Alex Ferguson
Sir Alex Ferguson and David Moyes both received furious abuse from United fans after the 3-0 local derby defeat. Photograph: Peter Powell/EPA
Manchester United supporters vented their anger at the former managerSir Alex Ferguson at the end of the shambolic 3-0 derby defeat to Manchester City at Old Trafford. In the first signs of open revolt at David Moyes, fans furiously questioned Ferguson's decision to appoint the Scot as his replacement.
With Moyes also receiving verbal abuse from supporters and stewards being asked to guard "The Chosen One" banner that hangs at the stadium's Stretford End after the 167th Manchester derby, the ire shown towards Ferguson, who is a club director, will cause serious questions at boardroom level.
Moyes has consistently spoken of how the support has stood by him throughout his overseeing of a dismal title defence. This defeat guarantees United will end with their poorest ever points tally in the Premier League era, with their previous lowest being 75.
City took only 43 seconds to take the lead through Edin Dzeko, who also scored again in the 56th minute, before Yaya Touré sealed United's humiliation with a third for City at the end. That provoked fans to target Ferguson as he sat in the directors' box at the final whistle.
Link to video: Manchester United's David Moyes defends players after Manchester City defThe 72-year-old was the driving force in Moyes being appointed as his successor at the end of last season, with the former Everton manager being summoned to Ferguson's house to be offered his job.
While the loss made it six home defeats in the league for the first time since the 2001-2 season to leave United 18 points behind the leaders, Chelsea, and 12 from a Champions League berth, Moyes refused to blame his players. Asked to explain how a squad minus only the retired Paul Scholes has gone so far backwards this year after winning the title by 11 points, the manager said: "I take responsibility. I have to be the one who plays them, picks them and that is what it is. I think there are a lot of really good players there, some can play better, but there are a lot of really good players in the squad, a lot of international players and players who I think on their day can be a match for most players."
United Moyes dejection compSir Alex Ferguson watches Edin Dzeko help Manchester City to a 3-0 win, which heaped more pressure on David Moyes. Afterwards, stewards were on hand to protect a banner. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images, Peter Powell/EPA, Carl Recine/Action Images
Of the defeat to City, which means they have now been defeated by their city rivals three consecutive times at Old Trafford in the league for the first time in more than 40 years, Moyes said: "We never gave ourselves a great opportunity to get into the game. Manchester City started really fast and conceding a goal after 30-40 seconds made it difficult. We had to try and make sure we got through that 10-15 minute period. After that we weathered it and got ourselves back into the game and finished the half quite strong. The key to it was not to concede a second goal so we could always give ourselves a chance [to get] back in there.
"I didn't think we started the second half well. We brought pressure on us by our play and in the end we conceded a corner just before that and there was another one and then that led to the second goal. It was obviously poor marking and we should have done much better.
"I just think we never came out of the blocks. You prepare the players, you warm them up, you do all the things to have them ready but we just never started. It gave them a real big lift to get a goal so early on."
In a comment that may further anger fans, Moyes stated that City are the side he wants his United team to emulate. "I think we've played a very good side and it's the sort of standard and level we need to try and aspire to get ourselves to at this moment in time," he said.
City are now only three points behind Chelsea with two games in hand. Yet Manuel Pellegrini refused to concede that it is his team's title to lose. "No I don't think so," said the manager. "The title race continues, we continue fighting with all the other three – Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool. We have two games postponed but we have to win those two games. Tomorrow I start thinking about Arsenal [wh

Miami Masters: Nadal ‘pleased’ with performance

Rampaging rafa: World number one Rafael Nadal demolishes Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin 6-1, 6-0 to reach the fourth round of the Miami Masters, on Monday. PHOTO: AFP
MIAMI: World number one Rafael Nadal said he was satisfied with his performance as he continued rioting through the Sony Open on Monday, crushing Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin 6-1, 6-0 to reach the fourth round at Crandon Park.
“I played a very complete match,” said Nadal, who was given a warning for slow play. “No match is perfect but this one went well — no mistakes, serving with good percentage, and playing a lot of winners.”
Nadal has shown no signs of losing focus. He broke Istomin twice to open the match and grab a 4-0 lead. The 57th ranked Istomin finally held serve at 4-1, but that would be the only time as Nadal thundered through the next eight games to complete the rout.
Nadal, who has reached the final three times but never lifted the Miami title, blew past Lleyton Hewitt in the second round before overwhelming Istomin in less than an hour in a centre court master class.
‘I’m happy with the way I was fighting’
Reigning Australian Open champ Stanislas Wawrinka said he was ‘happy’ with his show against Edouard Roger-Vasselin as he posted a straight-set victory in the third round.
“I’m happy with the way I was fighting,” said the 28-year-old Wawrinka.
“The way I stayed positive in the game. Even if I wasn’t moving or playing so as well at the beginning, I stayed with him. I was fighting with myself to get control of the point.”
Wawrinka cruised into the fourth round with a 7-5, 6-4 dismantling of the French Edouard, at Crandon Park.
He will now square off against Alexandr Dolgopolov after the 22nd-seeded Ukrainian rallied for a 3-6, 6-0, 7-6 (7/5) win over Dusan Lajovic.
Nothing was working out: Sharapova
Russian fourth seed Maria Sharapova felt relieved after battling through three sets to defeat Belgium’s Kirsten Flipkens 3-6, 6-4, 6-1, to reach the quarter-finals.
“I didn’t start off the way I wanted to,” said Sharapova. “Nothing was working. Just the way it went in the beginning.”
But the Russian tackled the difficulty posed by Flipkens to reach the last-eight — she is still seeking her first title at the hardcourt event.
“Of course it would be meaningful for me to win this tournament after being so close.
“It’s not like I didn’t have my opportunities in earlier finals. I just didn’t take them. That’s why you come back and hope for another chance

Bus raid: Hashish worth over Rs40 million seized in Karachi

Express News screen grab of the seized hashish.
KARACHI: Customs officials tracked down a bus en route from Balochistan to Karachi after being tipped that it was transporting hashish, Express News reported. 
They seized the bus, which in addition to livestock was also carrying 477 kilograms of hashish — estimated to be worth around Rs 40 million.
During the bus raid, there was a cross-fire between Customs and the culprits.
Earlier in February, the Anti Narcotics Force (ANF) seized heroin worth Rs593 million at the Pakistan International Container Terminal (PICT) in Karachi.
According to a press release, the ANF Karachi seaport team confiscated a container at PICT and recovered 85 kilogramme of fine quality heroin.
Similarly in January, the Sahiwal district police seized narcotics estimated to fetch Rs650 million from a truck in Cheechawatni.