Παρασκευή 31 Ιουλίου 2015

Manchester United 2015-16 Home Away Third Kit

New Manchester United 2015-16 Adidas home kit released on Saturday 1st August 2015 with a lavish kit launch ceremony at Old Trafford .

The new  kit teaser have the official Manchester United home and away kits designed by Adidas unveiled in front of thousands of United fans at Old Trafford. Although all three kits have already been leaked online and we have the leaked images below.
The new Manchester United adidas 2015-16 home kit has been released which comes in classic design in red/white and a bit of black on the v-shapped collar. Three white adidas stripes at the shoulder of kit makes it a classic adidas kit.

While the collar also featured red and black pinstripe design in the collar, shirt also has alot of white coloured design on the end of sleeve duffs and on the side of the shirt. Regardless of this kit is the final version or not, the Chevrolet logo will be placed on the front of the kit.

Manchester United Away Kit 2015-16 – Leaked

This is the new white away kit for Manchseter United to be used in 2015-16 season.

New Man Utd away kit features white as the main colour with red application on shoulders, sleeves and collar while the “Chevrolet” text will in black colour.

The collar of the away kit is small Vshaped which features two very thin lines of red and black. The shorts for the away kit will be red and while and the socks will feature mainly white colour.

Manchester United Third Kit 2015-16 (Leaked)

This is the new Manchester United third (alternative) Kit which will be used in the Champions League away matches for 2015-16 season.

The third kit comes in black colour with striking orange colour application on shoulders, sleeves and both Adidas and Manchester United logo are also in orange colour.

Manchester United 2015-16 Home Away Goalkeeper Kits:

These are the two Manchester United goalkeeper kits for upcoming 2015-16 season. It will be interesting to see whether De Gea will be wearing them next season ?

What new United shirt will be released for 2015-16 season ?

The home kit is suppose to be released somewhere in the summer of 2015, possibly before the first Pre-season game taking place. While there will be two more shirts, Away and Third kit which will come out before the start of the next season

Sacramento Kings name Nancy Lieberman assistant coach

The Sacramento Kings have become the latest NBA team to hire a woman as an assistant coach, appointing Hall of Famer Nancy Lieberman to work alongside head coach George Karl, it was confirmed Friday.

Lieberman will be only the second female assistant coach with an NBA team following the appointment of Becky Hammon at the San Antonio Spurs last year.
The 57-year-old said on Twitter late Thursday she was "honored to be a Sacramento King" ahead of a formal announcement expected next week.
"Definitely I'm going to offer her a job," Kings vice president Vlade Divac was quoted as saying by the Sacramento Bee.
"George (Karl) and I talked about bringing her back after she helped us at summer league (in Las Vegas). She was terrific. She brings a different dimension. I think is a nice opportunity for her."
Lieberman's appointment comes after the success of Hammon, who became part of Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich's staff last year.
Hammon recently became the first woman to coach an NBA summer league team, steering the Spurs to the Las Vegas league title.
On Monday, meanwhile, Jen Welter, a former collegiate rugby player who played 14 seasons of professional gridiron, was named as the first woman coach in the NFL after being appointed to an intern position with the Arizona Cardinals.
Speaking to USA Today on Friday, Lieberman said she was delighted to have been handed the opportunity, praising the "open-minded" thinking which led to her appointment.
"I'm proud to see people are open-minded," Lieberman said.
"But a lot of these guys have daughters and nieces, and it didn't start with us. We have a woman running for president. Hillary Clinton is running for president.
"Change is hard for people, and our job is to make it normal. I know I'm a woman coaching in a man's world. It's normal to me. It's maybe not normal to other people. This is who I've been my whole life.
"Everybody else puts the labels on. I'm just trying to be a coach."

Croatia, Greece, Hungary, Serbia Clinch Quarterfinal Berths in Men’s Water Polo Tournament at 2015 FINA World Championships


Serbia came from two down in the final quarter to defeat Australia 10-9 and earn a quarterfinal berth in men’s water polo day-three action at 2015 FINA World Championships.
The Aussie Sharks controversially had two goals disallowed at the death and had to be satisfied with second in the group. Australia and Montenegro finished tied on points after a 5-5 draw between them two days earlier, but had the better goal differential. In the final Group D match, Montenegro squeezed out Japan 15-10.
Earlier, Hungary claimed the first quarterfinal spot with a 21-4 rout of Argentina, playing its first FINA World Championships. It was a third big win for the defending champion in Group C. Kazakhstan took second spot with a 14-3 win over hapless South Africa.
In Group A, Croatia smashed China 17-1 for group victory and Canada turned a 4-0 opening lead against Brazil into a 10-6 margin for the group’s second spot.
In Group B, Greece produced some top-shelf water polo against Russia, winning 15-11 to take out the group and United States of America settled for second with an 11-9 victory over Italy.
Final points:
Group A: Croatia 6, Canada 4, Brazil 1, China 1.
Group B: Greece 6, USA 4, Italy 2, Russia 0.
Group C: Hungary 6, Kazakhstan 4, South Africa 2, Argentina 0.
Group D: Serbia 6, Australia 3, Montenegro 3, Japan 0.
August 2
Preliminary Round Programme
10:50, CHN v RUS
12:10 ARG v JPN
13:30 CAN v ITA
17:30 BRA v USA
18:50 KAZ v MNE
20:10 RSA v AUS
Match 24: 21:30, Group B, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 11 ITALY 9
Quarters: 4-4, 3-2, 2-1, 2-2
Referees: Boris Margeta (SLO), Nenad Peris (CRO).
Extra Man: USA: 3/9. ITA: 1/10.
Pens: ITA: 2/2.
Teams:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: Merrill Moses, Nikola Vavic (3), Alex Obert (1), Jackson Kimbell (1), Alex Roelse (1), Luca Cupido, Josh Samuels (1), Tony Azevedo (2), Alex Bowen, Bret Bonanni (2), Jesse Smith, John Mann, McQuin Baron. Head coach: Dejan Udovicic.
ITALY: Stefano Tempesti, Francesco di Fulvio (4), Alessandro Velotto, Pietro Figlioli (1), Alex Giorgetti (2), Andrea Fondelli, Massimo Giacoppo, Nicholas Presciutti, Niccolo Gitto, Stefano Luongo (1), Matteo Aicardi (1), Fabio Baraldi, Marco Del Lungo. Head coach: Alessandro Campagna.
Match report:
USA took second spot in the group, coming from 1-3 down to going three ahead in the third period and onwards to victory. For the last match of the day, it was another wonderful match. Italy look set for a great match with a 3-1 start, thanks to two Alex Giorgetti scores, one on extra and the other a penalty goal. USA then had the better of the second half of the period, levelling the match through Josh Samuels 19 seconds from the break. Jackson Kimbell then gave USA the lead with a pass down the post line on extra. Pietro Figlioli received a gift pass close in from his centre forward to level. Nikola Vavic and Alex Obert took the USA to 7-5 and Italian centre forward Matteo Aicardi pulled one back, giving USA a 7-6 halftime lead. The margin stretched to three through captain Tony Azevedo and Bret Bonanni, the highest goal-scorer at last year’s FINA World Cup in Almaty, Kazakhstan. Francesco di Fulvio, who scored the first and fourth goals for Italy, claimed his third from outside five metres to close the third-period scoring. Stefano Luongo made it 8-9 from deep left after the exclusion period a minute into the final quarter. Then Vavic scored his third goal on counter down the right side at 3:20 for 10-8. The match was put beyond doubt by Alex Roelse at 1:24 with a missile from downtown Kazan. Italy responded with a di Fulvio penalty conversion at 1:06, improving chances for a draw and second spot on goal differential. However, it was not to be and di Fulvio’s last shot was taken in by goalkeeper McQuin Baron.
FLASH QUOTES:
Tony Azevedo (USA) — Captain
“We played very well and Italy is a great team. It proved that we should have beaten Greece (lost 10-11) and finished first in the bracket. Every game is like an Olympic game. We would dream of winning a medal here, but our focus is the Olympic Games (in Rio). We now meet Brazil on Sunday. We did what we needed to do and finish the job (beating Brazil in the final at the Pan Americans in Toronto recently) to qualify for the Olympic Games. Brazil is a lot more hungry this time.”
Match 23: 20:10, Group A, BRAZIL 6 CANADA 10
Quarters: 0-3, 3-3, 2-3, 1-1
Referees: Mark Koganov (AZE), Gyorgy Kun (HUN).
Extra Man: BRA: 3/8. CAN: 3/11.
Pens: BRA: 0/1.
Teams:
BRAZIL: Vicinius Antonelli, Jonas Crivella, Guilherme Gomes (1), Ives Gonzalez, Paulo Salemi, Bernardo Gomes (1), Adrian Delgado, Felipe Silva (2), Bernardo Rocha, Felipe Perrone (1), Gustavo Guimaraes, Josip Vrlic (1). Head coach: Ratko Rudic
CANADA: Robin Randall, Con Kudaba (1), Oliver Vikalo (1), Nicolas Constantin-Bicari (1), Justin Boyd (2), David Lapins (1), Alec Taschereau (1), Kevin Graham, Matt Halajian, John Conway (1), George Torakis, Jerry McElroy (2), Dusan Aleksic. Head coach: Alexander Beslin.
Match Report:
Brazil was still smarting from a two-goal loss to the USA in the recent Pan American Games when it took on the team from the other half of America. That two-goal deficit was returned in spades, making it a six-goal turnaround and head coach Alek Beslin wants more from his team. The victory was built on a 4-0 opening stanza that didn’t see Brazil enter the match until three minutes into the second period. From then on the teams matched each other. The best differential for Brazil was when Felipe Silva converted consecutive shots for 2-4. From then on when Brazil grabbed one back, Canada went out to four until late in the fourth period when David Lapins became Canada’s eighth scorer for 10-5. Centre forward Josep Vrlic closed the match at 2:18.
FLASH QUOTES:
Aleksandar Beslin (CAN) — Head Coach
“It’s still not the result we want to be. We had a really good buildup. Three weeks ago we lost to Brazil (by two goals). In Toronto there was so much pressure at the Pan American Games. There was some hesitation in Toronto but it was a big relief this evening. It is the step up we would like. Our man up was not so good and our man down was oscillating. However, the structures flowed very well. Defence was the key to the victory.”
Ratko Rudic (CRO) — Brazil Head Coach
“We prepared well for this game. I was really close to the referee. I saw different from what the referee saw. I was really close to the game. Everything started a little wrong for us. Probably we came here after two strong competitions — the World League and the Pan Americans. We prepared as well as possible. I was preparing the game plan, but we didn’t apply the game plan. A lack of concentration; our shooting was not good; so many mistakes on defence; players were not mentally ready for the game. You cannot keep a high level all the time. It will be useful for us to analyse and make corrections. Brazil has potential. We must play more and more and with confidence.”
Match 22: 18:50, Group B, GREECE 15 RUSSIA 11
Quarters: 5-2, 3-2, 5-3, 2-4
Referees: Adrian Alexandrescu (ROU), Francesc Buch (ESP).
Extra Man: GRE: 6/9. RUS: 5/14.
Pens: GRE: 1/1. RUS: 1/1.
Teams:
GREECE: Konstantinos Flegkas, Emmanouil Mylonakis (1), Georgios Dervisis, Konstantinos Genidounias, Ioannis Fountoulis (4), Kyriakos Pontiekas, Christos Afroudakis (1), Evangelos Delakas (1), Konstantinos Mourikis (3), Christodoulos Kolomvos (1), Alexandros Gounas (2), Angelos Vlacholopoulos (2), Stefanos Galanpoulos. Head coach: Theodoros Vlachos.
RUSSIA: Anton Antonov, Alexey Bugaychuk (2), Artem Odintsov (1), Igor Bychkov (1), Albert Zinnatullin, Artem Ashaev, Vladislav Timakov, Ivan Nagaev (3), Konstantin Stepaniuk (1), Dmitrii Kholod, Sergey Lisunov (2), Lev Magomalev, Victor Ivanov. Head coach: Erkin Shagaev.
Match report:
Greece announced its return to the top echelon of world water polo with a dominant outing against Russia. Russia may have started the scoring, but Greece slammed in the next four goals and the die was cast. Russia’s Sergey Lisunov and Greek counterpart Konstantinos Mourikis closed the quarter with centre-forward goals. When Konstantin Stepaniuk scored from the right to open the second-quarter scoring, the crowd went crazy. Greece slipped the match out to 7-3 and 8-4 by the long break. Russia must have heeded head coach Erkin Shagaev’s words at halftime as Ivan Nagaev converted a penalty and then dragged in a rebound to score for 9-6 at 5:35. Greece was unhappy with the situation and sent in three straight in three minutes, including a penalty strike by Ioannis Fountoulis, his third goal of the match. He scored his 10th of the week after Igor Bychkov gave Russians heart a flutter with his valuable score from out the top. Greece led 13-7 at the final break. Angelos Vlachopoulos scored his second two minutes into the final period. Spurred on by an adoring packed house, Russia then blitzed the Greek goal, first through Lisunov on extra off an angled pass, then from Alexey Bugaychuk from eight metres and finally by captain Artem Odintsov on extra from close in, for 14-10. Mourikis arrested the slide on extra, dragging down a high pass and Nagaev increased the intensity with a reply on extra for 15-11 at 2:10. It was his third of the match and fifth for the week. For Russia to score 11 goals and lose, was heroic and augers well for what is a young and relatively inexperienced team.
FLASH QUOTES:
Theodoros Vlachos (GRE) — Head Coach
“I believe we did a very good job in our group. There were strong games and good refereeing. We want to go as far as possible in this tournament. Both teams do not know each other and the match was strong and difficult.” On Greece not being at this level for some years: “Not since the bronze medal in Montreal (2005). This year or next year we hope to make something happen. The situation in Greece is very difficult and if we can make something here it would be fantastic and make people at home proud of us.”
Ioannis Fountoulis (GRE) – four goals
”We’re satisfied to top this group despite a tough draw. After a great win over Italy, we didn’t do well in the game against USA, but we took the victory, which we needed. And today playing Russia we showed great offensive potential. But in defence we should be very unhappy with our performance. We received maybe the most goals not only in the group, but in the tournament. And that is something that makes us think a lot because in the latter stages every goal will be important. It’s not so much that we don’t do well in man-down but we are too passive in defence. We need to move more and help each other better, especially during set plays.”
Erkin Shagaev (RUS) — Head Coach
“The Greek team is a higher level to us; that was noticeable today. The start was not good and we must score (early). We need to play more games of this level. The best thing was that they didn’t give up and kept fighting like previous games. We need to improve and skills, physical condition and experience.”
Match 21: 17:30, Group A, CROATIA 17 CHINA 1
Quarters: 4-1, 5-0, 7-0, 1-0
Referees: Daniel Flahive (AUS), Masoud Rezvani (IRI).
Extra Man: CRO: 3/11. CHN: 0/5.
Pens: CHN: 0/1.
Teams:
CROATIA: Josip Pavic, Damir Buric (2), Antonio Petkovic (2), Luka Loncar (2), Maro Jokovic (3), Luka Bukic, Petar Muslim (3), Andro Buslje, Sandro Sukno (2), Fran Paskvalin, Andelo Setka, Paulo Obradovic (3), Marko Bijac. Head coach: Ivica Tucak.
CHINA: Honghui Wu, Feihu Tan, Zhangxin Hu, Tao Dong, Wenhui Lu, Li Li, Zhongxian Chen, Lun Li, Zekai Xie, Jinghao Chen, Chufeng Zhang (1), Nianxiang Liang, Zhiwei Liang. Head coach: Paolo Malara.
Match Report:
Croatia made a statement when it thrashed China with a display of speed and efficiency that produced the biggest goal streak of the tournament. It started with a burst of three goals, was punctuated by a fantastic Chinese angled pass to the far post for captain Chufeng Zhang to bat in and that was it. Croatia just went on the rampage, shutting China out for the rest of the match. The only respite for China was the final quarter. Croatia went for the throat at every occasion and showed why many people have said that it’s the team to beat in Kazan.
FLASH QUOTES:
Maro Jokovic (CRO)
”We’re satisfied with the first place in the group being directly qualified for the quarterfinals. But we’re still finding ourselves and have a lot to improve on. Looking back we had a tricky game against Brazil and are yet to play a big game. But now we will have three days off to prepare for the quarterfinals. And as we have left all injuries behind us, I’m sure things this second part of the championships will only go uphill.”
Paolo Malara (ITA) — China Head Coach
“After losing to Canada (2-8) it was important for us to lift for the future. We need to work hard mentally. Croatia is one of the best teams in the world. It is not possible that we play this way. No good for me, for China or my players.”
Match 20: 13:30, Group D, JAPAN 10 MONTENEGRO 15
Quarters: 2-3, 2-5, 2-5, 4-2
Referees: Dion Willis (RSA), Massimiliano Caputi (ITA).
Extra Man:
Pens: JPN: 2/3. MNE: 3/3.
Teams:
JAPAN: Katsuyuki Tanamura, Seiya Adachi, Atsushi Arai, Mitsuaki Shiga (1), Akira Yanase (3), Atsuto Iida, Yusuke Shimizu (1), Yuki Kadono (1), Koji Takei (4), Kenya Yasuda, Keigo Okawa, Shota Hazui, Tomoyoshi Fukushima. Head coach: Yoji Omoto.
MONTENEGRO: Dejan Lazovic, Drasko Brguljan (1), Vjekoslav Paskovic (3), Uros Cuckovic, Darko Brguljan, Aleksandar Radovic (4), Mladan Janovic, Aleksa Ukropina, Aleksandar Ivovic (4), Nikola Murisic (2), Filip Klikovac (1), Predrag Jokic (1), Milos Scepanovic. Head coach: Ranko Perovic.
Match report:
Both teams entertained in a match that Montenegro dominated and Japan kept firing back with goals from time to time, exploding in the final quarter when all was lost. The close start expanded to a 7-2 margin in favour of Montenegro before closing the half at 8-4. A three-goal burst at the top of the third left the crowd in no doubt about the eventual winner. There were three penalty goals early in the match and three others in the later part with Montenegro scoring three and Japan claiming two from three. All players relished turning at centre and the referees accommodated them. Japan’s extra burst in the final quarter lifted the match and its scoring to double figures. Japan’s first two goals were scored by dynamo Koji Takei and the last two as well. In fact, Montenegro was shut out of the final four minutes while Japan scored three goals.
Match 19: 12:10, Group D, SERBIA 10 AUSTRALIA 9
Quarters: 3-2, 2-2, 1-4, 4-1
Referees: Radoslaw Koryzna (POL), Georgios Stavridis (GRE).
Extra Man: SRB: 2/7. AUS: 2/5
Pens:
Teams:
SERBIA: Gojko Pijetlovic, Dusan Mandic, Zivko Gocic (1), Sava Randelovic, Milos Cuk (1), Dusko Pijetlovic (1), Slobodan Nikic (1), Milan Aleksic (2), Nikola Jaksic, Filip Filipovic (2), Andrija Prlainovic, Stefan Mitrovic (2), Branislav Mitrovic. Head coach: Dejan Savic.
AUSTRALIA: James Stanton-French, Richard Campbell, George Ford, John Cotterill (1), Nathan Power (1), Jarrod Gilchrist, Aiden Roach, Aaron Younger (3), Joel Swift (2), Emery Mitchell, Rhys Howden (1), Tyler Martin (1), Joel Dennerley. Head coach: Elvis Fatovic
Match Report:
Serbia won a topsy-turvy encounter, leading 3-1 early and then blowing a 6-4 advantage to go behind by two goals. Serbian experienced floated to the top at the start of the fourth period and the game — a real thriller — ended in the “natural order”. The Aussie Sharks opened proceedings through captain Rhys Howden, then Serbia struck back with three goals in the next four minutes through Slobodan Nikic, Milos Cuk and Dusko Pijetlovic. Nathan Power fumbled with the ball at centre forward, but still managed to score for 3-2.
Aaron Younger levelled the match on the first attack of the second quarter from five metres and then goals were traded until Milan Aleksic gave Serbia the 5-4 lead going into the halftime break. Stefan Mitrovic gave Serbia a two-goal advantage to start the third, but then the unthinkable happen as the multi-champion team had to watch as Australia fired in four unanswered goals by the aggressive Sharks, coming from centre forward on extra (Joel Swift), a five-metre lob (John Cotterill), a drive deep left (Younger) and then a nine-metre shot (Younger, for his third). To cap it, Serbia blew a four on none counter with superb Australian defence. Serbia nearly grabbed one back after a timeout with an Aleksic shot channelled to goalkeeper Joel Dennerley. Australia was two clear against the multiple World League champion that dominated with World League, European and World Cup success last year. It did not take Serbia too long to catch up — less than three minutes — through Aleksic on extra and then Mitrovic on a pinpoint pass to the far post. Serbian captain Zivko Gocic regained the lead with strike from the top on action at 4:18. The imbalance had been redressed. Australia had some poor luck when a shot that seemingly crossed the line was not awarded and then a Younger shot off a free throw from well outside was disallowed so the referee could eject the Serbian, much to the despair of the Australian bench. Swift made no mistake with his extra-man attempt from point blank at 1:36 for 9-10 and something head coach Elvis Fatovic said to the referee earned a yellow card. Cotterill hit the crossbar with a long lob and Serbia nearly lost the ball in the rebound. Serbia’s shot at the other end was astray and Australia had the last 13 seconds, gained an exclusion at 0:01, but the shot was blocked. What an excellent encounter!
FLASH QUOTES:
Elvis Fatovic (AUS) — Head Coach
“I’m proud of my team, the way they played They are a much more experienced team. It’s hard playing Montenegro and Serbia (in the group). They should be stronger. I think we proved in one game that anything is possible. That’s our plan.”
Joel Dennerley (AUS) — Goalkeeper
“It was a good effort definitely by the boys. Serbia is very good but on their attack we channeled the ball and they played pressure zone. Our counter defence was strong and our defence between players on man down was quite solid.”
Joel Swift (AUS) — Centre Forward
“It’s disappointing to lose but it’s still a good result. We’ve been building together for a few years now and everyone’s on the same page. A lot of us played younger age groups together and I think most of the team has played together for four or five years now, so there’s a lot of spirit and everyone knows the nuances of the things we can do and we know we’re always in a match.”
Match 18: 10:50, Group C, HUNGARY 21 ARGENTINA 4
Quarters: 6-2, 3-1, 6-1, 6-0
Referees: Sergey Naumov (RUS), Peter De Jong (NED).
Extra Man: HUN: 7/11. ARG: 0/5.
Pens: Nil
Teams:
HUNGARY: Viktor Nagy, Miklos Gor-Nagy, Norbert Madaras (1), Balazs Erdelyi (2), Marton Vamos (4), Norbert Hosnyanszky (2), Daniel Angyal (1), Marton Szivos (3), Daniel Varga (1), Denes Varga (5), Krisztian Bedo, Balazs Harai (2), Attila Decker. Head coach: Tibor Benedek.
ARGENTINA: Diego Malnero, Ramiro Veich, Tomas Galimberti, Andreas Monutti, Emanuel Lopez (2), Tomas Bulgheroni, Juan Pablo Montane, Esteban Corsi, Ivan Carabantes, Julian Daszczyk, Franco Demarchi (1), German Yanez (1), Franco Testa. Head coach: Nahuel Alfonso.
Match report:
Hungary breezed through to the quarterfinals with a third big victory of the week. Sharpening skills for the later rounds with little serious pressure may not be the best preparation for the critical part of the tournament, but the world champions made the most of their time in the water. Argentina actually opened the scoring in the first minute through a sweeping backhand by big centre forward Emanuel Lopez. Hungary took it to 5-1 and 6-2 at the break before advancing to a comfortable 9-3 at halftime. Hungary closed the gate for Argentina in the second half — not before allowing one goal to slip through from Lopez on a cross pass at centre forward — as Denes Varga collected the last three goals in a wonderful display of accurate passing, inter-personal communication and finishing prowess. The champion is ready to tangle with the best in the coming week.
FLASH QUOTES:
Tibor Benedek (HUN) — Head Coach
On playing three “easy” matches in the group stage: “I’m happy with the way we’re playing but the start of the championships for us will be in three days. We will play some friendly half-hour matches with Croatia and Serbia in the coming days and these will be more similar to the three group games.”
Ivan Carabantes (ARG) — Captain
“First of all it was an honour to play with them. It must have been fun for Hungarian water polo. It was a very emotional game for us. We prepared the best we could — 100 percent body and mind. They are really talented players like the Varga brothers. We played well for the first two quarters, but in the second half the difference in levels appeared and the match opened for them.” On the best part of the match for Argentina: “Our soul. We have to learn a lot, as this is our first time at World Championships. It was a pleasure to train and play this type of game.”
Match 17: 09:30, Group C, SOUTH AFRICA 3 KAZAKHSTAN 14
Quarters: 0-4, 1-3, 1-5, 1-2
Referees: Fabio Toffoli (BRA), Hatem Gaber (EGY).
Extra Man: RSA: 2/9. RSA: 4/9
Pens: Nil
Teams:
SOUTH AFRICA: Dwayne Flatscher, Etienne Le Roux, Devon Card, Ignardus Badenhorst, Nicholas Hock, Joao De Carvalho (1), Dayne Jagga (1), Jared Wingate-Pearse, Dean Whyte, Pierre Le Roux, Nicholas Molyneux (1), Wesley Bohata, Julian Lewis. Head coach: Paul Martin.
KAZAKHSTAN: Aleksandr Fedorov, Sergey Gubarev (3), Aleksandr Axenov (5), Roman Pilipenko, Vladimir Ushakov (1), Alexey Shmider (1), Murat Shakenov, Anton Koliadenko, Rustam Ukumanov (1), Yevgeniy Medvedev, Ravil Manafov (1), Branko Pekovich (2), Valeriy Shlemov. Head Coach: Sergey Drozdov.
Match report:
Kazakhstan leapfrogged South Africa into second place in the group with a dominant performance that showed no mercy to a lackluster South Africa. South African head coach Paul Martin was stunned about his team’s inability to rise to the occasion and it looked it. South Africa won the EU Nations Cup in Odense, Denmark earlier this year, but by the coach’s admission, it was a terrible performance. Kazakhstan, inspired by the brilliant play of Alexandr Axenov, who scored five goals, was never in doubt and the first three goals from three attacks set the seal on the match. It rose to 6-0 in the second period before Nicholas Molyneux fired in from six metres, but by then halftime loomed and Axenov converted extra for his third and a comfortable lead at the long break. Axenov delivered twice more in the third and South African youngster Dayne Jagga (18) scored his second goal of the tournament from centre forward, justifying his USA college scholarship, which he starts in September. Kazakhstan Sergey Gubarev scored a pair in the final quarter, one on extra and the other with the biggest counter attack of the week. For South Africa it was a day to forget and for Kazakhstan, second spot will be celebrated.
FLASH QUOTES:
Paul Martin (RSA) — Head Coach
“We played like amateurs in a professional environment. We’ve worked hard to get rid of that stigma. They (Kazakhstan) dominated how we had to play the game. When we got our structures right we forced them into long shots. The fact they got the ball into centre was unacceptable. We created six-on-five opportunities but our finishing was unacceptable. We were our own worst enemies; we showed no fight. One bad game and that was it. It was not through lack of opportunities (that we lost).”

TOUGH AS NAILS GREECE SEE OFF FRANCE, ENTER MEDAL ROUND


Greece proved tough as nails in reaching the Semi-Finals for the second straight summer by knocking off France 67-59 at the 2015 U18 European Championship. Vasileios Charalampopoulos collected a triple-double of 13 points, 10 rebounds and 11 assists while Georgios Papagiannis had 21 points, 13 rebounds and four blocks. The Greeks, who finished fourth last year, will face off against Lithuania in the Semi-Finals. France are still waiting for their first Quarter-Finals victory since losing in the 2009 final despite 19 points, 15 rebounds, two assists, one steal and one block from Jonathan Jeanne.
Turning Point: Greece used an 11-0 run to start the third quarter and the lead grew to 14 points at 52-38 midway through the third quarter. The hosts never let France get closer than five points the rest of the way, always getting a big score when they needed it.
Stats Don't Lie: Greece held the number one offense to just 59 points and 33 percent shooting while the hosts shot 43 percent for the game. Greece also got 20 points off the bench compared to 12 for France.
Game Hero: Two games after being two rebounds shy of a triple-double, Charalampopoulos accomplished the feat while also adding two steals.
The Bottom Line: Greece will be shooting for their first final since winning the title in 2008 in their showdown against Lithuania. France will face Germany in the Classification Games 5-8.

Charis Mavrias...Awaits Sunderland Exit

Charis Mavrias’ Wearside nightmare looks set to continue right up until the end of the transfer window with Panathinaikos still mulling over making a bid for their former winger, according to the Sunderland Echo.
The 21-year-old has found chances hard to come by at Sunderland after signing during the Paolo Di Canio ‘revolution’, and a return to Greece has long been a possibility.
However,  Panathinaikos are focusing on defensive improvements during this window, pushing a potential deal for Mavrias onto the back-burner until August, with the Black Cats desperate to chip away any deadwood in the squad.
Mavrias clearly hasn’t been favoured by Gus Poyet or Dick Advocaat and hasn’t been involved in first team preparations at all this time around, instead mainly featuring for the Sunderland under-21 side.
With quick feet and a burst of pace, Mavrias looked like he may have something to offer the Black Cats, but in the end he only made 6 appearances (3 starts) and scored one goal, a winner against Kidderminster in the FA Cup.
Sunderland will only receive a fraction of their £2 million investment back, but hopefully it ends Mavrias’ purgatory soon.

Olympiakos owner Evangelos Marinakis won’t face match-fixing trial


Olympiakos owner Evangelos Marinakis was cleared for lack of evidence on Thursday by the Council of Appeals of facing trial in the Greek match-fixing scandal of 2010-2011.
The court decided to bring to justice 85 of the 158 defendants in the case before a three-member court of appeals for felonies with charges ranging from felonies to misdemeanors.

Among those to face trial are Super League president Giorgos Borovilos, former Olympiakos Volos president and now mayor of Volos Achilleas Beos, Levadiakos president Giannis Kombotis, Asteras Tripolis owner Dimitris Bakos, Panthrakikos owner Thodoris Savvakis and president Dimitris Tzelepis, former Greece international defender Avraam Papadopoulos as well as other players, referees, betting brokers, managers and a former employee of the country’s football federation.

Thulani Serero has been linked with a move to PAOK

Bafana Bafana midfielder, Thulani Serero has been linked with a move to PAOK Saloniki and here is why ‘Crème’ could in fact end up in Greece.
The 25-year-old central midfielder seems to have fallen down the pecking order at Ajax and he wouldn’t be the first player to leave the club for PAOK.
Danny Hoesen, who was coincidently the other goal-scorer when Serero’s goal helped Ajax to beat FC Barcelona back in 2013, joined PAOK on loan for six months between January and July 2014.
Another current PAOK player, Hedwiges Maduro came through Ajax’s youth system and played for the club until 2008 before joining Valencia. From there he found his way via Sevilla to Greece.
In addition, PAOK’s new sporting director, Frank Arnesen used to play for Ajax between 1975 and 1981. 
Despite the strong links between the two clubs, it remains to be seen whether Serero would be willing to give up the chance of playing Champions League football – Ajax still has to qualify after drawing 2-2 away to Austria Vienna in the first leg of the second qualification round this week.
Serero missed the game due to his ongoing ankle injury, but the fact that his side gave a two-goal lead away in the second half might play in his favour.
It’s also not sure why Serero has really fallen down Frank de Boer’s pecking order after starting 30 games for the Dutch side last season, but perhaps he could shine during a one-year loan in Greece to show the Ajax coach his worth.
He was earlier linked Italian giants AC Milan, but these rumours have quickly cooled off. The Siya crew will keep you updated on all latest developments around one of Mzansi’s finest.

2016 Summer Olympics: Filthy Rio de Janeiro Water a Threat at 2016 Olympics



RIO DE JANEIRO — The waters where Olympians will compete in swimming and boating events next summer in South America’s first Games are rife with human sewage and present a serious health risk for athletes, as well as for visitors to this city’s famous beaches.
An investigation by The Associated Press found dangerously high levels of viruses and bacteria from sewage at the sites for the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic water sports.
The A.P. conducted four rounds of tests starting in March. The results have alarmed international experts and dismayed competitors training in Rio de Janeiro, some of whom have become ill with fevers, vomiting and diarrhea.
The ailments could prevent an athlete from competing for days.
“This is by far the worst water quality we’ve ever seen in our sailing careers,” said Ivan Bulaja, a coach for the Austrian team, which has spent months training in Guanabara Bay.
David Hussl, a sailor, fell ill.
“I’ve had high temperatures and problems with my stomach,” he said. “It’s always one day completely in bed and then usually not sailing for two or three days.”
Water pollution has long plagued Brazil’s urban areas, where most sewage is not collected, let alone treated. In Rio, much of the waste runs through open-air ditches to fetid streams and rivers that feed the Olympic water sites and blight the city’s beaches.
Dr. Richard Budgett, the medical director for the International Olympic Committee, said after seeing the A.P. findings that the I.O.C. and Brazilian authorities should continue their program of testing only for bacteria to determine whether the water is safe for athletes. That policy is the accepted standard globally, he said.
“We’ve had reassurances from the World Health Organization and others that there is no significant risk to athlete health,” Budgett said.
Many water and health experts in the United States and Europe are pushing regulatory agencies to include viral testing in determining water quality because most illnesses from recreational water activities are related to viruses, not bacteria.
Brazilian authorities pledged that an overhaul of the city’s waterways would be among the most significant legacies of the Olympics. But the stench of raw sewage still greets travelers at Rio’s international airport. Prime beaches remain deserted because the surf is thick with sludge, and periodic die-offs leave the Olympic lake littered with rotting fish.
More than 10,000 athletes from more than 200 countries are expected to compete from Aug. 5 to 21 in the 2016 Games. Nearly 1,400 of them will come into contact with water contaminated by sewage as they sail in Guanabara Bay, swim off Copacabana Beach, and canoe and row on the brackish waters of Rodrigo de Freitas Lake. Starting next week, hundreds of athletes will take to the waters in Olympic trial events.

Brazilian officials say the water will be safe, but the A.P. testing over five months did not find one venue suitable for swimming or boating, according to international experts, who said it was too late for a cleanup.
“What you have there is basically raw sewage,” said John Griffith, a marine biologist at the independent Southern California Coastal Water Research Project. Griffith examined the protocols, methodology and results of theA.P. tests. “It’s all the water from the toilets and the showers and whatever people put down their sinks, all mixed up, and it’s going out into the beach waters,” he said.
In the United States, Griffith said, areas with such levels of contamination “would be shut down immediately.

Beijing to host Winter Olympic Games i2022


Beijing has won the battle to host the 2022 Winter Olympics after Chinese president Xi Jinping made a last-minute vow to lay on a “fantastic, extraordinary and excellent” event.
International Olympic Committee (IOC) delegates handed the 2022 Olympic and Paralympic events to Beijing on Friday afternoon following a secret ballot in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Earlier, president Xi Jinping threw his weight behind China’s bid, promising the “strongest support” for the Beijing Games in a one-minute video address to the IOC delegates.
A Beijing Olympics would “boost exchanges and mutual understanding between the Chinese and other civilisations of the world,” Xi said.
“The Chinese people are looking forward to this opportunity. Let me assure you that if you choose Beijing the Chinese people will present to the world a fantastic, extraordinary and excellent Olympic Winter Games in Beijing,” Xi added.
Beijing’s mayor Wang Anshun vowed to deliver “Games that are joyful and harmonious, Games that are safe and reliable”.
“This is a breathtaking moment,” said Zhang Haidi, the vice president of Beijing’s Bid Committee.
The 2022 Beijing Winter Games will in fact be split between three Olympic sites: one in the city of Zhangjiakou, 125 miles from Beijing in Hebei province, another in Yanqing, a mountainous region to Beijing’s northwest, and a third in China’s sprawling capital itself.
A key component of Beijing’s winning bid was its pledge to tackle the toxic air pollution that often enshrouds the capital.
Beijing’s mayor told IOC delegates huge steps had been taken since his city hosted the 2008 Summer Olympics, with one million high-emissions vehicles forced from its roads. “All our efforts are moving Beijing towards a clean energy future,” Wang Anshun said.
Chinese officials have also dismissed concerns over a dearth of natural snowfall in the region around Beijing. Almaty’s campaign slogan – “Keeping it real” – was a not-so-subtle swipe at China’s promise to compensate with artificial snow. “Real snow, real winter ambience, real winter games,” boasted a promotional video for Almaty 2022.
But Liu Peng, the president of the Chinese Olympic Committee, batted away Kazakhstan’s provocations.
“Ski resorts have been operating in Zhangjiakou for decades,” he said on Friday. “Beijing 2022 will build on its existing snow-making capability to supplement natural snow fall.”
Nor was the lack of a winter sports culture in China an issue. Chinese officials have said they hope the Beijing Winter Olympics will ignite “a winter sports passion” that will help create a £535 million industry in China by 2025.
“Winter sports fever is sweeping our nation,” claimed Liu, adding that more than one million Chinese teenagers were now ice skating regularly. “Twenty years ago China had less than 10 ski resorts. We now have more than 500.”
In 2001, Beijing’s selection as the host city for the 2008 Summer Olympics sparked an international outcry amid criticism of China’s human rights record. In the runup to Friday’s vote activists had again called on the IOC to reject Beijing’s bid in response to a “human rights crisis” they believe is underway in China.
Amnesty International says that at least 231 people have been detained or questioned in recent weeks as part of what campaigners, diplomats and observers describe as an unprecedented crackdown on human rights lawyers.
But Jin Shan, a sports commentator, said the victory would give “a huge boost” to China’s attempts to build a 5 trillion yuan (£516bn) sports industry and would create millions of jobs. Beijing’s triumph would also prove a tonic for ambitious plans to create “Jing-jin-ji”, a 130 million-population megacity around the Chinese capital, Jin added. There was no risk Olympic facilities would be become “white elephants” after the event was over. “I live close to the Birds’ Nest stadium and the Water Cube [National Aquatics Center] and see many people visiting both venues everyday,” he said. “We have a huge population and there will be great demand for these sports venues after the Games.”
Beijing’s mayor Wang Anshun claimed 92% of the country supported the 2022 Olympic campaign. Yet many Chinese have reacted with indifference. “Don’t waste tax-payers money,” one user of Weibo, China’s Twitter, wrote on Friday. “Is the country’s reputation more important than improving people’s lives?”