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Hayes gives Saints timely boost

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 13 November 2012 | 08.57

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Influence ... Lenny Hayes enjoying being back on the ground at Saints training. Source: Chris Eastman / News Limited

Lenny Hayes' presence at St Kilda training is a welcome boost for the AFL club in the midst of a turbulent off-season.

Remarkably, the 32-year-old star is expected to be ready for round one next season despite needing heart surgery in September for a leaky valve.

Hayes is on a modified program and trained on Tuesday as the team officially started their pre-season.

He will travel to Colorado at the end of the month for the Saints' altitude training camp.

Hayes is still recovering from the major surgery, but coach Scott Watters said he was progressing well.

"He will be 100 per cent come round one, ready to play," Watters said.

"You run out of superlatives to describe the way he goes about his work.

"He's an outstanding guy, the way he's presented himself after the operation.

"He's in terrific condition."

Hayes is often referred to as the heart and soul of the Saints team and his successful recovery from the surgery is welcome news for St Kilda fans.

In the last few weeks free agent Brendon Goddard went to Essendon and fellow veteran Jason Gram was sacked after he failed to honour undertakings about his off-field behaviour.

The club failed to secure a trade for West Coast defender Mitch Brown, but lost Jamie Cripps to the Eagles.

Watters said the club was staying in touch with Gram and was continuing to support him.

"But ... we have a club culture and a set of values and standards that we need to really strongly defend," Watters added.

"At the end of the day, players make a choice on whether they stay and be involved with what we want to try and deliver.

"Unfortunately, some of Grammy's choices probably preclude him from that opportunity."

Watters also brushed off questions about Goddard, with the coach saying he was only concerned about Saints players.

He also would not buy into Goddard's comment on Monday that one of the reasons he went to Essendon was because of the player talent at his new club.

"I have no interest in other people's perceptions ... we deal with what we deal with here internally," Watters said.

"We're excited about what's ahead, we're loving our pre-season."


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Pocock, Douglas out for Wallabies

Anticipation ... David Pocock - in his last Test appearance - will have to wait another week to return. Source: AAP

Australia's European tour nightmare has continued with star flanker David Pocock and second-rower Kane Douglas both ruled out of the Wallabies' clash with England at Twickenham on Saturday (Sunday AEDT).

Pocock had a calf muscle injury which is expected to see him miss one Test while Douglas has a knee injury.

The pair had scans on Monday afternoon with the results confirming that both would have to bypass the game, which kicks off at 1.30am on Sunday morning (AEDT).

Pocock hasn't played for the Wallabies since the opening match of the Rugby Championship against the All Blacks due to a medial ligament injury.

As the pair will be reassessed ahead of Australia's next Test the following weekend against Italy, standby forward Scott Higginbotham will not be sent to the UK at this stage.

Higginbotham still has one match to serve in his suspension for striking All Blacks captain Richie McCaw but he would be available for the third leg of the tour against Italy in Florence on Saturday (Sunday AEDT) week if required.

Australia were hammered 33-6 in the opening game of the European tour by France in Paris last weekend.


Watch the Wallabies take on England Live on Fox Sports 3HD at 1:30am on Sunday.


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Clarke defends no-ball reversals

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Tough luck ... James Pattinson was one bowler who lost a wicket because of a reviewed no-ball. Source:News Limited

Australia captain Michael Clarke has defended umpires protecting themselves with technology after the torment of three wickets being overturned by reviewed no-balls in the first Test.

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Bowlers, commentators and fans were fuming through the Gabba series-opener as Australia (twice) and South Africa were both denied dismissals after the third umpire was called on to detect marginal front-foot no-balls.

The biggest drama came on the final day came when Hamish Amla, on 7, played on a James Pattinson half-volley as the tourists were battling against the new-ball at 1-26.

Pattinson over-strode by a mere centimetre, with his heel landing on the popping crease, but the third umpire made the correct call to let Amla stay.

It prompted South Africa great Barry Richards to say that popping creases needed to be widened to prevent no-ball reviews being a blight on cricket.

Umpires are afraid to call close no-balls and are instead waiting to see if a wicket falls before reviewing - throwing up questions of what other no-balls are being let go.

Richards, a member of the MCC cricket committee, felt part of the problem, which has fans fuming, was the skinny crease line.

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"Why don't you widen the line?" Richards said on ABC Radio after Amla was given not out.

"It would help the umpire and the bowler ... it's so minuscule."

Another Australian, Peter Siddle, was denied in the same manner against Jacques Kallis on day one while Proteas quick Morne Morkel was the victim of a dubious call when Ed Cowan gloved down the leg-side late on day three.

But Clarke said it was better to be safe than sorry with the technology available.

"I think any time you bowl a no-ball front foot it should be picked up, the umpires on the ground are doing their best that is for sure; they are probably just making extra sure when a wicket falls," Clarke said.

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"I would rather see them picked up than guys bowling no balls and still getting away with a wicket."

No-balls were arguably a bigger problem for South Africa at the Gabba as Morkel also had another wicket - that of Michael Clarke on 135 - denied when he edged behind on day four.

In total, the Proteas bowlers over-stepped 23 times in Australia's first innings of 5(dec)-565 while Australia bowled six no-balls as the Proteas made 450.

There was no excuses from South African bowling coach Allan Donald nor captain Graeme Smith who were unhappy with the slip in standards.

"No-balls played a big role in the game," Smith said. "From our side it was not acceptable."


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Socceroos, Korea at crossroads

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Friendly ... Brett Holman and Ki Sung-Yueng tussle but neither will take part on Wednesday. Source: Marwan Naamani / AFP

Australia's Socceroos are looking for change and perhaps it can be found on Wednesday night in Hwaseong's new stadium, 45 minutes or so south of Seoul.

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Maybe the next generation will show, when they step onto the former rice fields converted to a football arena, that there is fertile ground to sustain the nation for years to come. For the Koreans, unsure as what to do with this game in terms of selection, the situation is a little more complex; but then nothing is ever straightforward in the so-called Land of the Morning Calm.

It is Japan, the Land of the Rising Sun, that has provided rivalry to the Socceroos in recent years, but a look a little to the west and this bustling nation of 50 million inhabitants, and Australia may find it has a few things in common.

  • Eli Babalj
  • Aziz Behich
  • Alex Broqsue
  • James Holland
  • Mathew Leckie
  • Ryan McGowan
  • Matt McKay
  • Lucas Neill
  • Tommy Oar
  • Mathew Ryan
  • Adam Sarota
  • Michael Thwaite
  • Tomas Rogic
  • Nikita Rukavystya
  • Mark Schwarzer
  • Matthew Spiranovic
  • Archie Thompson
  • Carl Valeri
  • Luke Wilkshire.

Both leagues are at something of a crossroads, although the situation in Korea is much more dramatic. The K-League is still recovering from a shocking 2011 match-fixing scandal that implicated over 60 players and coaches, past and present and provoked the suicide of three, probably four, participants.

And that's not all. The recent arrest of  one of the ringleaders and former international striker Kim Dong-hyun for an attempted kidnapping and car chase through Seoul was just depressing as were pictures showing the disgraced Choi Sung-kuk, working as a forlorn-looking hospital receptionist, banned from the beautiful game he once played beautifully.

The scandal stung authorities into action. This is the first season that clubs will be relegated, the league has been split into groups of eight, two thirds of the way through the season and clubs are being forced to get their acts together off the pitch.

The long-term plan is that it will help the K-League catch up with its baseball counterpart. While football Down Under plays catch-up with NRL and AFL, over the past four or five years, the K-League has relinquished its position at the top of the domestic tree.

Even baseball can't compete with the national team though perhaps too much emphasis is placed on the World Cup and Olympic Games by the powers-that-be.

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Japan not qualifying for the World Cup would be a massive disappointment but the J-league would dust itself down after a few months and get back on track.

Such an absence would not only be a shock to Seoul, 1982 was the last time the Taeguk Warriors did not make it, it would be a serious blow to the K-League and football in general. Some think it would actually be a good thing and force a real clearout of the well-connected corporate types at KFA House, others are not so sure.

That may be a hypothetical debate at the moment but the growing number of Koreans heading to the Middle East is a genuine issue. Until now, shoulders have been shrugged in the face of 'oil money' but that could change if bigger and younger talents start to make the move. For players, it can be risky with even established internationals losing their places after moving west.

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What has been welcomed is the influx of Australians, most of which have made a positive impact. After the roaring success of Sasa Ognenovski, other clubs wanted Aussie defenders of their own and the likes of Adrian Madaschi and especially Luke De Vere have impressed, and not just in the expected terms of power, leadership and set pieces.

The arrival of Matt McKay marked an important change, the first Aussie not signed because he was big and strong. He has been perhaps the best attacking player with, an admittedly defensive, Busan. His incisiveness, consistency, and versatility have led the local media to start calling him the 'Australian Park Ji-sung' and a move to a bigger club, in Korea or Japan, in the winter is possible.

Park himself is rarely discussed these days in relation to the national team - he retired almost two years ago. The search for his replacement seems less intense after the emergence and/or development and genuinely exciting attacking talent. It is the search for a new defence that is on the mind of Korean coach Choi Kang-hee.

Neither of the full-backs who played in last month's loss in Iran will feature and it could be a new centre-back pairing too with captain Kwak Tae-hwi, fresh from lifting the Asian Champions League trophy, rested rather than dropped.

The English-based trio of Ki Sung-yeung, Kim Bo-kyoung, Lee Chung-young, the Bundesliga's Koo Je-cheol and Son heung-min and Park Chu-young in La Liga have been left with their clubs by coach Choi.

The eternally glum-looking tactician who led Jeonbuk Motors to one Asian title and one final (and who never wanted the Korea job in the first place, refusing the KFA a number of times before they took him out and got a drunken agreement) explained there was little point in having players arriving jetlagged for training on Monday, if they were lucky, for a Wednesday friendly.

Partly because of this and the Australian selection - as well as Ulsan's Asian Champions League win, the upcoming change of president at the Korean FA, various new teams being formed, one team's boycott of the K-League and the first ever relegation battle in the country -the build-up to the friendly has been muted.


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Fans to get club-themed cemetery

Afterlife ... Schalke fans will be able to continue supporting the club from their graves. Source: AAP

Many fans devote their lives to their beloved clubs, but in Germany fans can continue that support in the afterlife.

German side Schalke have opened up a cemetery which overlooks their stadium in which fans can reserve plots for $1525, with an annual upkeep of $152.

The 'Schalke Fan Field' will be a replica of the stadium, complete with full-size goals and substitute benches, all surrounded by blue and white flowers - the club's colours.

However Schalke, who follow in the footsteps of Argentine club Boca Juniors and Bundesliga rivals Hamburg in setting up club cemeteries, say the venture is not a money-spinner for them.

The club has stated that they don't do "business with death" and that their is a desire amongst their fanbase for the scheme to exist.

The club's official graveyard, just outside Schalke's Veltins Arena, will open in December and some supporters have already booked their spots, including fan club vice chairman Rolf Rojek.

"My life is Schalke and at some point I will lay on the fan field, with my friends having a view of the stadium forever," said Rojek.

"What more could you want?"


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Hughes falls short against WA

Just short ... Phil Hughes narrowly misses out on a century against WA. Source: Renee Nowytarger / News Limited

Former Test opener Phil Hughes was run out for 92 before South Australia's middle order wilted in their Sheffield Shield clash with Western Australia at the WACA Ground.

Hughes, who moved from NSW to the Redbacks earlier this year, cracked 17 boundaries and looked in ominous touch as he moved into the 90s.

SHEF - WACA Ground

12 November 2012 - Day 2, Session 3

South Australia 1st Innings

J. Botha 3 27 0 0 11.11
T. Ludeman 6 26 1 0 23.08

But Callum Ferguson's attempt at a quick single brought about the undoing of Hughes, who was short of his ground following a direct hit from ace Warriors fielder Nathan Coulter-Nile.

At stumps on day two, South Australia were 6-209 in reply to WA's 9(dec)-400, with captain Johan Botha unbeaten on three and Tim Ludeman on six.

The Redbacks were cruising at 1-141, but Michael Klinger's dismissal for 37 and the run-out of Hughes sparked a collapse of 5-59, with Ferguson (23) and Dan Christian (8) among the victims.

Although disappointed in his failure to reach three figures, Hughes could take comfort in his sizzling stroke play against a strong WA pace attack featuring former Test star Mitchell Johnson, the ever reliable Michael Hogan and Australia A representative Coulter-Nile.

Hughes, who was dumped from the Test fold last year following a lean trot with the bat, has now posted scores of 114, 95no, 95, 92 and 83 this summer in various forms of the game.

Stand-in WA coach Adam Griffith praised the influence of Coulter-Nile, who scored 52 in the Warriors' first-innings before completing the crucial run-out of Hughes.

"They're the game-changing moments that special players with that athletic ability can do, and he's done that today,'' Griffith said of the run-out.

Meanwhile, Australian Test great Justin Langer is set to be unveiled as WA's new coach on Wednesday.

Langer wanted to complete his duties as Australia's batting coach for the first Test against South Africa before confirming his new deal with the Warriors.

The 41-year-old's arrival comes at a crucial time for WA, who have been rocked by a series of off-field misdemeanours over the past few years, including the Perth Scorchers' boozy night out in South Africa last month.

"No doubt there was a lot happening there and the team did get distracted a little bit,'' Griffith said.

"But now we've made a conscious effort to move on from that, and I think the guys have done that this week.''


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