Saturday, April 2, 2016

Martin Olsson snatches breathless victory for Norwich over Newcastle


The expression on Martin Olsson’s face was almost incredulous. And no wonder. The Swedish defender had just lashed a first-time shot into the bottom corner of the net to give Norwich a precious last-minute victory in an incredibly dramatic match. In doing so he gave Norwich’s Premier survival hopes a mighty boost, and deflated those of Rafael Benítez and Newcastle.

Olsson’s goal came right at the end of a taut, action-packed game with ramifications for both teams. The first half was relatively sedate in view of the drama that unfolded in the second, with the only goal in the first period coming from Timm Klose just before the break. Newcastle were transformed at half-time and drew level through Aleksandar Mitrovic, who was introduced in the second-half to do just that. Dieumerci Mbokani fired the hosts back in front before Mitrovic equalised again near the end, this time from a contentiously-awarded penalty.

Newcastle stormed forward for a the winning goal that they felt they needed and deserved, but when Olsson joined in a Norwich attack by running on to a pass at the corner of the Newcastle box, he hammered a low shot into the net to trigger wild celebrations at Carrow Road. Except in the away end, where fans were again confronted by their worst fears.

Both managers had been forced to start with altered lineups, partly by injuries, partly by unacceptable form. Benítez made five changes to the Newcastle side that laboured to a draw against Sunderland two weeks ago. Karl Darlow, as expected, started in goal in place of the stricken Rob Elliot, while Vernon Anita, contrary to expectations, began at left-back. Papiss Cissé replaced Mitrovic up front, thereby making his first Premier League start since suffering a groin injury the week before Christmas.

Andre Wisdom’s last league appearance dated back even farther than that, but the right-back was drafted in to the Norwich side instead of the injured Russell Martin. That was one of three adjustments made by Alex Neil, with Ryan Bennett replacing Sébastien Bassong in central defence and Steven Naismith returning to perform the second striker role instead of Wes Hoolahan.

Norwich knew that Newcastle needed the win more urgently than them and practically dared the visitors to come at them full-tilt. But Benítez, aware of how scatty this team can be, had apparently been preaching composure and Newcastle seemed more intent on respecting their team shape than unhinging their opponents. It is one thing being patient, but when everyone is waiting for someone else to do something nothing gets done. The only Newcastle player that regularly took initiatives in the first-half was Andros Townsend, but he lacked the accuracy to make good on bold intentions. The Norwich goalkeeper, John Ruddy, did not have to dirty his gloves in the first period.

Once Norwich realised that the threat from Newcastle was not what it should have been, they began to put down their shields and brandish their weapons. Naismith’s first shot, in the 11th minute, presented Darlow with a gentle reintroduction to the Premier League. The home crowd tried to spook Newcastle’s inexperienced goalkeeper with regular taunts, but Darlow rose to their challenge in the 33rd minute by making a superb save with his left foot, stabbing away a close-range shot by Mbokani.

As half-time approached Norwich must have been regretting their failure to convert pressure into a lead, but that concern turned to joy just before the break. After Cheick Tioté committed his umpteenth needless foul, Brady delivered a marvellous inswinging free-kick from the right and Klose, having shaken off a negligent marker, nodded the ball into the bottom corner from eight yards.

Benítez had spent most of the first half gesticulating to his players from the sidelines. It was not obvious that they knew what the manager’s signals meant. At half-time he had a chance to deliver his message more clearly, and also to replace Tioté, a red-card-waiting-to-happen, with Ayoze Pérez. And five minutes after the resumption, the manager’s feelings were plain for everyone to see: he, like Newcastle’s players and fans, was incredulous when Cissé missed a wonderful chance to equalise, shanking the ball wide from five yards after John Ruddy spilled a long shot by Townsend. It had been a big call by the manager to start with the Senegalese, and that wild shot meant it backfired.

At least Newcastle, in general, were looking more dangerous. Townsend, in particular, raised his performance and began tearing holes in the home defence with jagged runs. But Norwich knew the prize for keeping a third clean sheet in a row was breathing room in the fight for survival, and they defended accordingly. On the hour, Benítez withdrew Anita and threw on another striker, Mitrovic.

Norwich City v Newcastle United - Premier League
The striker quickly made his presence, especially in the air. And in the 71st minute he headed an equaliser, directing a cross by Townsend into the net. Now the momentum seemed to be well and truly with the visitors. But, as so often, Newcastle had flattered to deceive: within three minutes they were behind again.

Panicky defending prevented Newcastle from making a proper clearance after a renewed Norwich attack, and Mbokani collected the ball wide on the left before barging into the box and walloping a shot past Darlow and high into the net.

The game hurtled from one end to the other for the remaining quarter of an hour. Mitrovic’s aerial power was Newcastle’s most obvious weapon and they catapulted crosses towards him. But Norwich appeared set to hold on – until four minutes from time, when the ball hit O’Neil’s arm as Pérez tried to flip it past him, and the referee Mike Dean awarded a penalty. Mitrovic kept his cool and converted.

Norwich ended the game clinging on for just a point as Newcastle stormed forward for the win. Cissé almost atoned for his earlier miss by redirecting a Mitrovic header towards goal, but Ruddy foiled him with a full-length save.

Theo Walcott seals Arsenal win over Watford to exact revenge for Cup exit


Fifty-three minutes in, and the Arsenal support were shouting the ‘Olés’ as their team hogged the ball and, frankly, strayed close to the territory of the show-boat. It certainly made a change from ‘Wenger Out’ and veins bulging in foreheads, which has been the vibe at this stadium over recent matches.

Arsenal have not been this comfortable at home for quite some time, probably not since the 2-0 win over Bournemouth on 28 December and Arsène Wenger, the relentlessly under-fire manager, could take reassurance from an absolute stroll.

It was impossible to believe that this was the same Watford who had won here in the FA Cup quarter-final just three weeks previously. They barely contributed this time and it was left to Alex Iwobi, Arsenal’s 19-year-old attacking midfielder, to steal the show.

It felt fitting that as Arsenal remembered David Rocastle, who died 15 years ago this week, another academy product should step forward to impress. Iwobi created the opening goal for Alexis Sánchez while he scored the second himself and his overall performance was marked by willingness, intelligence and cutting edge. When he was substituted towards the end, he departed to a standing ovation.

Wenger had said that it was “now or never” for Arsenal’s Premier League title hopes – in other words, they could not afford any more dropped points. They still have to visit West Ham United and Manchester City, and their designs on the trophy still feel wishful but, as at Everton before the international break, they have demonstrated their intention to fight until the last.

There had been no sense of angst about the home crowd at the outset; rather the feeling that Watford ought merely to be swatted aside – which, it should be said, did not happen the last time that these teams met. Then again, Watford had brought with them a dreadful run of league form. Since their magnificent home win over Liverpool on 20 December, they have won only twice in the competition.

Everybody connected to Arsenal, nonetheless, wanted the soothing tonic of an early goal and it duly arrived. Watford had barely escaped their own half when Francis Coquelin cushioned a header from a clearance back for Iwobi, who was allowed to saunter forward and pick a cross towards Sánchez at the far post.

Sánchez had drifted in behind Nathan Aké and the ball was made to measure for him. He needed two bites to score, his initial header being pawed out by Heurelho Gomes, but he was quicker than Aké to the rebound and he tucked away his 12th goal of the club season. Reassuringly for Arsenal, Sánchez was in the mood.

Arsenal’s control of the first-half was total and so the thought, obviously, occurred that they would allow Watford back to 1-1 at the interval. Not this time. They got the second goal when Coquelin released Sánchez with an incisive pass and the Chilean returned Iwobi’s earlier assist with a cut-back for him. Iwobi arrived to slam low past Gomes. Sánchez’s first touch and burst of pace were noteworthy featured of the goal.

The Emirates crowd saluted the late, great Rocastle with applause in the seventh minute and there were other uplifting moments, not least Hector Bellerin’s Zidane-style 360 spin which got him away from two Watford players in the 42nd minute.

The Arsenal fans also loved it when Mesut Özil jogged over to take a corner on 25 minutes in front of the away enclosure, who booed him – they were unhappy at what they perceived to have been an earlier soft tumble from him. Özil responded by applauding them.

The Watford support contended themselves with the knowledge that they were going to Wembley for the FA Cup semi-final and whatever else would be, including this defeat, which had felt inevitable from the early running.

Arsenal might have been further in front by half-time. Danny Welbeck scuffed one chance and was narrowly off-target with another, while Iwobi worked Gomes with a wonderful curling effort from a tight angle and Sánchez did likewise with a free-kick.

Arsenal v Watford - Premier League
Quique Sánchez Flores gestured at his substitute’s bench as soon as Sánchez had burst up the right to lay on the second and he hooked Étienne Capoue shortly afterwards. The Frenchman, who had played at left midfield, jogged straight off down the tunnel; it is never anything but a humiliation to be withdrawn in the first-half. It spoke volumes, too, that Flores took off Odion Ighalo at half-time. He could have removed practically anyone.

Bellerin got the third straight after the interval with a shot that deflected off Ben Watson – it was his first goal since the corresponding weekend of last season – and, thereafter, Arsenal pressed cruise control.

Iwobi rattled the crossbar in the 50th minute and perhaps the stand-out memory of the second-half was that of Allan Nyom scything through Özil, having been rattled by the Arsenal’s playmaker’s flicks and general messing about. Nyom indicated, with an imaginary drag-back, that he did not appreciate how Özil was going about the game. Nyom was booked.

For Watford, Sebastian Prödl had a header cleared off the line by Nacho Monreal and Troy Deeney was denied by an acrobatic save by David Ospina but Arsenal had the last word when one substitute, Joel Campbell, beat Nyom and crossed for another, Theo Walcott, to tap home.

New goal: U.S. women's soccer eyes equal pay

womans soccer better pay bacon allen intv_00022619.jpg
Key members of the U.S. Women's National Team (USWNT) have filed a lawsuit demanding pay parity from U.S. soccer's governing body.
The five players who filed the suit against the U.S. Soccer Federation, Carli Lloyd, Alex Morgan, Hope Solo, Megan Rapinoe and Becky Sauerbrunn, did so through the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, a federal body that tackles workplace discrimination.
They say that they filed the complaint on behalf on the entire team, which sometimes earns as little as between a half and a quarter of their male counterparts, depending on bonuses.
The case should be the legal equivalent of an open goal, some analysts say. Not only are the U.S. women much more successful than the men, they also generate much more revenue for U.S. Soccer.
"It's been noted... that the women's team itself has generated more money by far -- by $20 million in 2015 than the men's team did," sportscaster, journalist and author John Bacon tells CNN's Natalie Allen.
    "Their case is based on how much they're getting paid, how much they're winning, but also how much they're generating for the U.S. Soccer Federation."
    He says that "pretty clearly" they should at least close the pay gap on their male colleagues, and says, "you might argue they should be getting more than the men.
    "Winning does help, doesn't it?"
    In a statement released March 31, U.S. Soccer said that its "efforts to be advocates for women's soccer are unwavering," adding that it is committed to negotiating a new collective bargaining
    agreement for the women's team at the end of 2016.
    Throngs gather for the rally at City Hall. De Blasio announced the hastily prepared parade this week.
     
     

    Martin Demichelis: Manchester City star charged over betting

    Martin Demichelis joined Manchester City in 2013.
    Martin Demichelis has endured a chastening few weeks on the field -- now the Manchester City defender is in trouble off it too after being charged with misconduct in relation to alleged betting by the English Football Association.
    Demichelis, 35, is accused of having broken worldwide rules which came into existence on August 1 2014 to prevent players from betting on any football activity whether inside or outside of their domestic league.
    "It is alleged the player committed 12 breaches of FA Rule E8 concerning football matches between 22 January 2016 and 28 January 2016. He has until 5pm on 5 April 2016 to respond to the charge," said an FA statement:
    Rule E8 states: "A Participant shall not bet, either directly or indirectly, or instruct, permit, cause or enable any person to bet on - (i) the result, progress, conduct or any other aspect of, or occurrence in, a football match or competition; or (ii) any other matter concerning or related to football anywhere in the world, including, for example and without limitation, the transfer of players, employment of managers, team selection or disciplinary matters."
    There is no suggestion that Demichelis was involved in match fixing nor that he bet on games in which he was involved.
      Demichelis is not the first professional football player to have been charged by the FA over betting offenses.
      Newcastle and England winger Andros Townsend was fined £18,000 ($26,000) and banned for four months in 2013 -- a punishment which prevented him from playing at the European Under-21 Championship.
      Dan Gosling, the Bournemouth midfielder, was fined £30,000 ($43,000) after breaching the rules in March 2014 while at former club Newcastle.
      The misconduct charge is the latest blow for Demichelis, whose performances and that of his fellow teammates have dipped in recent weeks, with City falling out of contention in the Premier League title race after losing a number of crucial fixtures over the past couple of months.
      City manager Manuel Pellegrini, who announced he will leave the club at the end of the season last month, has presided over defeats to rivals Tottenham, Leicester and Manchester United with his team 15 points off the pace and now fighting to qualify for next season's Champions League.
      City did beat Liverpool to win the League Cup final and face Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League quarterfinals next week.
      Manchester City declined to comment when contacted by CNN. Demichelis was not immediately available for comment.

      Friday, April 1, 2016

      Klopp lifts spirits but yet to revive Liverpool fortunes



      LONDON (Reuters) - As Liverpool prepare to face Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday, a glance at the table might suggest that not much has changed at Anfield in nearly six months since Juergen Klopp took charge of his first Premier League game against the north London club.
      Before Klopp's arrival in October, Liverpool, under the increasingly forlorn stewardship of Brendan Rodgers, were 10th in the table averaging 1.5 points a game.
      Fast forward and the Liverpool fans are still enthused by the near-boundless optimism of their German coach, but results have stubbornly remained mixed.
      If you created a Premier League table for the 22 games since Klopp made his bow at White Hart Lane on Oct. 17, then Liverpool would be ninth, averaging 1.5 points a match.
      As the German pointed out on his arrival, he has no magic wand to revive Liverpool's flagging fortunes and so it has proved.
      Their home form is just as inconsistent as it always was -- they still have not recorded back-to-back league wins at Anfield this season -- while an error-prone defence that dogged Rodgers's time in charge, remains an issue.
      Liverpool have kept just two clean sheets in their last 10 league matches dating back to the beginning of 2016 and one of those came against rock-bottom Aston Villa.
      Their home form in general remains a problem as they have taken just 20 points from 13 league matches at Anfield, which ranks 12th in the top flight.
      Liverpool fans may point to facets that are more inscrutable to statisticians, such as playing style and attitude, but ultimately it seems the optimism at Anfield stems solely from the coach and his potential to get the most out of his players.
      Certain individuals such as playmaker Adam Lallana and centre back Dejan Lovren, who had both become symbols of a supposedly failed transfer policy under Rodgers, seem to have been revived.
      Perhaps more than any other player, Lallana has shone under Klopp and was handed the PFA Fans’ Player of the Month for March on Friday, an award his manager said was richly deserved.
      "I’m really, really happy that a few more people recognise what a great player he is," Klopp told reporters on Friday as he previewed the game against Tottenham.
      When the two sides played out a 0-0 draw in October, Tottenham were one point ahead of Liverpool in the table, but are now battling for the title and hoping to reel in leaders Leicester City at the summit.
      Being an unfancied team fighting for the title is a familiar story for Klopp, who twice beat Bayern Munich to the Bundesliga with Borussia Dortmund -- a tale he hopes to repeat with Liverpool.
      “I like stories like Spurs... if I wasn't manager of Liverpool then maybe I could enjoy it more," Klopp said.
      "Hopefully, in future we can be more a part of it."

      Di Maria: Nothing has changed at Man Utd - I left them to win things

      Di Maria: Nothing has changed at Man Utd - I left them to win things
      Angel Di Maria says he left Manchester United for Paris Saint-Germain to win trophies and has not seen anything this season to make him think he made an incorrect decision.
      The Argentina international, 28, also felt Louis van Gaal's decision to move him into different positions hampered his chances of settling in the side following his 2014 move from Real Madrid in a £59.7 million deal.
      After starting only 20 Premier League matches, he joined PSG for a reported fee of £44.3m last July and has already won Ligue 1 as Laurent Blanc's men chase an historic quadruple.
      "It's more that they didn't let me settle properly than I couldn't settle," Di Maria told BBC Football Focus.
      "I decided to leave, not only to be happy but to win things. I left and that team are still playing the same way - out of European competitions, far from being champions of the Premier League.
      "I don't think it was my fault or the fault of my team-mates. I did all I could every time I was given the opportunity, but it didn't work out as I hoped."
      Di Maria claimed Van Gaal had not deployed him properly and hailed the methods of current boss Blanc, who he credits for an impressive campaign which has seen him score nine league goals and produce 11 assists from 24 games.
      "I started a game in one position, then the next game in another," he continued on his year at United. "I scored goals playing in one position, then suddenly the next game I was picked to play in a different position. 
      "I think this also didn't help me settle. It's up to the manager to decide where and how every player should play, but I think that the player should be comfortable in that position and adapt to it.
      "That is what I am doing here and I'm very thankful to the manager for it. From the beginning he was clear where he wanted to play me and has never changed his mind.
      "He gave me total freedom to move where I need to move. I'm very happy here and it wasn't the case over there."

      Mesut Ozil says Arsenal have 'screwed up' their Premier League title bid

      Mesut Ozil says Arsenal are now relying on other results in their bid for the title
      Mesut Ozil says Arsenal are now relying on other results in their bid for the title

      Mesut Ozil believes Arsenal have "screwed up" their title bid as they trail league leaders Leicester by 11 points in the Premier League.

      Arsene Wenger's side are six points off second-placed Tottenham - albeit with a game in hand over the top two - after securing just one league victory in March.
      Arsenal had been significant challengers earlier in the season and were touted as favourites to claim a first title since 2004.
      A
      rsenal play Watford this Saturday and while Ozil believes they are still in contention, he concedes they may already have blown their opportunity and are relying on results other than their own.
      "Looking at our season so far, we have to be honest and admit that we screwed up ourselves," said Ozil.
      "We did not play to our potential in the games against the so-called smaller teams. You immediately get punished for that in the Premier League.
      Arsenal dropped eight points in a three-game sequence a month ago and that included a 2-1 home loss to Swansea
      Arsenal dropped eight points in a three-game sequence a month ago and that included a 2-1 home loss to Swansea
      "But we still have a chance of winning the title. We have to hope Leicester and Tottenham slip up and then make the most of it."
      The Gunners' form has intensified the pressure on manager Wenger, with supporters growing frustrated following the club's exit from the Champions League and FA Cup in recent weeks.
      The former Real Madrid player, however, is keen to win the silverware for his manager.
      "I would be delighted for Wenger if we win the title," he added. "He played a major role in my decision to join Arsenal. He was desperate to sign me. Everybody knows he is an extraordinary manager.

      Ozil says he's determined to win the Premier League title for Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger
      Ozil says he's determined to win the Premier League title for Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger
      "He is always hungry for success, has a lot of experience and always takes his time for the players. He helps players develop."

      Netball World Cup: Australia beat New Zealand to retain title

      Australia held off arch-rivals New Zealand to claim their third consecutive Netball World Cup crown with a thrilling 58-55 win in front of a packed Allphones Arena in Sydney.

      After their shock loss to the Silver Ferns on day three of the tournament, the Diamonds exacted revenge when it mattered most to claim Australia's 11th world title.
      The Diamonds' victory, which follows their World Cup title wins in 2007 and 2011, delivered Goal Defence Julie Corletto the perfect send-off in the final game of her netball career.

      The Australian Diamonds celebrate victory in the 2015 Netball World Cup Gold Medal match
      The Australian Diamonds celebrate victory in the 2015 Netball World Cup Gold Medal match
      In the fifth straight World Cup final between netball's fiercest rivals, Australia made a statement in a 16-7 opening quarter, but were forced to fend off a last-quarter fightback from the Silver Ferns to reclaim their world crown.
      The Diamonds were again spearheaded by an impressive shooting performance from Goal Shooter Caitlin Bassett, who finished with 47 goals from 51 attempts for the match, alongside Nat Medhurst (11/13).


      Natalie Medhurst, Paige Hadley and Kim Ravaillion (left to right) of the Diamonds celebrate their victory
      Natalie Medhurst, Paige Hadley and Kim Ravaillion (left to right) of the Diamonds celebrate their victory
      There were no surprises in either starting line-up for the final, with both coaches opting for their favoured starting line-ups.
      The only change to the Diamonds line-up that opened in the preliminary round match against New Zealand last Sunday was Corletto starting at Goal Defence instead of Sharni Layton.
      After a tight opening few minutes, it was the Diamonds that got the crucial break through some brilliant defensive work from captain Laura Geitz.
      By the halfway mark of the first quarter, the Diamonds had opened up a 9-4 lead, prompting an early-time-out from the Silver Ferns to regroup.

      Maria Tutaia of New Zealand is blocked by Diamonds captain Laura Geitz
      Maria Tutaia of New Zealand is blocked by Diamonds captain Laura Geitz
      But it was the Diamonds who emerged from the break in play to build on their lead to take a 16-7 advantage into the quarter-time break.
      Coming off a brilliant performance against Jamaica in the semi-final, Bassett carried her form into the final, not missing a goal in the opening quarter.
      Maria Tutaia (38/53) starred in New Zealand's preliminary round win against Australia and shaped as a danger in attack, but Corletto wore her like a glove early in the battle as the Ferns' ace shot at a shaky 4/8 in the first quarter.

      Fast, secure netball tickets

      See England vs Australia live in the UK
      Powerful midcourter Kim Green gave Australia plenty of drive into attack as the Diamonds extended their lead to 12 goals in the second quarter before the Ferns closed the margin to eight goals at the half-time break.
      As they have done throughout the tournament, the Silver Ferns made a change in defence for the start of the second half, bringing on veteran Leana de Bruin at Goal Defence in place of Katrina Grant, while the Diamonds made no change to their line-up.
      With New Zealand's midcourt general Laura Langman starting to assert her dominance in the Centre and Tutaia lifting her influence, the Ferns cut the margin to five goals in the third quarter, with the Diamonds taking a 43-37 lead into the last quarter.
      The Silver Ferns again got as close as three goals in the final quarter, but the Diamonds, with a big final quarter from Medhurst, were able to hang on to defend their crown.
      The result gave Australia Commonwealth Games and World Cup victories in consecutive years for the first time since 1998-99.

      Scot Catriona Matthew makes strong start in women's major

      Catriona Matthew is just one shot off the pace in California
      Catriona Matthew is just one shot off the pace in California

      Scotland's Catriona Matthew is one stroke off the pace, after the opening round of the women's first major championship of the season in California.

      The 46-year-old posted a four-under-par 68 in the ANA Inspiration at Rancho Mirage where Ai Miyazato and Azahara Munoz share the early lead.


      The former British Open champion, who teed off on the 10th, played the opening nine holes in 32 before posting a brace of bogeys on the back nine which she covered in level par.

      The Edinburgh-born Matthew hit 15 greens in regulation, as she chases a first LPGA Tour title in five years.

      Spaniard Munoz is tied for the lead following a 67 which was spoilt only by a bogey at the final hole where she found a fairway bunker at the par-five 18th.

      She admitted: "I've been really working on my attitude but the results haven't really showed, even though I've been doing so much better.

      "I know I need to keep believing in myself and eventually it's going to happen. It obviously hasn't been the easiest of years for me since the thumb surgery, and all of that, but I know I'm a good player."

      Japan's Miyazato, who posted a bogey-free round, birdied four of her first six holes, while American Lexi Thompson is just two strokes back.

      Among those on 70 are Korean Inbee Park and young British star Charley Hull.

      Thursday, March 31, 2016

      Pablo Sandoval loses Red Sox's third baseman job to Travis Shaw

      Carli Lloyd, Hope Solo among five female soccer players to file wage complaint against U.S. Soccer

      The Women's World Cup champions are calling out their own federation.

      Five leading stars of the United States women's national team announced Thursday on NBC's "Today" show that they have filed a complaint with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission against U.S. Soccer, claiming wage discrimination relative to the men's national team.


      View photo
      .
      Becky Sauerbrunn, Hope Solo and Carli Lloyd. (AP)
      Becky Sauerbrunn, Hope Solo and Carli Lloyd. (AP)
      "I think the timing is right," co-captain and reigning world player of the year Carli Lloyd told Matt Lauer on the show. "I think that we've proven our worth over the years. Just coming off of a [2015 Women's] World Cup win, the pay disparity between the men and women is just too large. And we want to continue to fight."


      The four other players in the filing, which requests an investigation into U.S. Soccer, are goalkeeper Hope Solo, striker Alex Morgan, playmaker Megan Rapinoe and central defender and co-captain Becky Sauerbrunn.

      They believe that the women's national team, which enjoys a national popularity that often exceeds the men's in the mainstream, drives far more revenue to the U.S. Soccer Federation than they are compensated for. The trouble is, as laid out in a recent investigation by the New York Daily News, the financial constructions that channel those incomes are so tousled that there's no telling what money is brought in by the women and how much of it by the men. The women say they have been stonewalled by the federation in their attempts to see the financial statements for themselves.

      The players point to the vast disparity in performance bonuses. Indeed, the men's team received more – a shared $2.5 million just for reaching the World Cup – than the women did for winning the entire thing ($1.8 million). A similar gap exists in all other bonuses as well – the men sometimes collect 10 times more for winning a friendly than the women do. The matter, however, is more complex than that. The women, unlike the men, also draw a full-time salary from the federation of up to $72,000, not including up to hundreds of thousands in bonuses they typically collect, a baseline guarantee the men don't enjoy. They are also compensated by the federation for participating in the National Women's Soccer League.

      But the men's top earners tend to exceed the women's most years. And while U.S. Soccer deserves credit for investing heavily in the women's program for many years when it was a loss leader, the women argue that they are now being short-changed.

      "We have been quite patient over the years with the belief that the Federation would do the right thing and compensate us fairly," Lloyd said in a statement released to The New York Times.

      "The numbers speak for themselves," Solo added. "We are the best in the world, have three World Cup championships, four Olympic championships, and the USMNT get paid more to just show up than we get paid to win major championships."




      The action comes just months before the women will attempt to win a fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal in Rio de Janeiro. And it further escalates the standoff with U.S. Soccer over their working conditions. In December, the women refused to play in one of the friendlies scheduled in a nationwide tour to celebrate the World Cup victory. They argued that the field in Hawaii was subpar, the day after Rapinoe tore her ACL on a poor practice field. U.S. Soccer acknowledged its mistake and apologized.

      But within a few months, the two sides had filed a suit and counter-suit against each other over the players' right to strike. The players and the federation are hashing out a new collective bargaining agreement after the last one expired in 2012. While the federation argues that the memorandum of understanding both parties have been working under since then conserves the no-strike clause from the original CBA, the players counter that it does not, because it isn't specified. When the players, through their representative, wouldn't rule out a strike, U.S. Soccer sued to pre-empt one and the players counter-sued.

      This entire debate rests on a larger question over women's sports: if women generate less money than men, are they entitled to the same pay for the same work? FIFA pays out a good deal more prize money for the men's World Cup than it does for the women's, arguing that the disparity in revenue is vast. Again, the Daily News pointed out that this was presently impossible to verify, and the Women's World Cup drew enormous television ratings stateside, yet FIFA awards a Women's World Cup-winning team $2 million. When Germany won the men's World Cup in 2014, it collected $35 million.

      The women’s national team posits that this entire argument is moot.

      "The women have without dispute vastly outperformed the men," their attorney Jeffrey Kessler told the Times, "not just on the playing field but economically for the USSF. The women have generated all the money in comparison with the men."

      They just want their fair share. If their complaint is successful, they could be awarded millions in back pay. Meanwhile, U.S. Soccer points to its history of funding the women's game and said through a spokesman that it was "disappointed."

      "These women are very disappointed in U.S. soccer,'' Kessler countered to Lauer. "When they asked for the same treatment as the men, they were told it was irrational. Now, that might be a good answer in 1816. It's not acceptable answer in 2016."
      source : yahoonews

      Height of hypocrisy: Michigan limiting Spike Albrecht's transfer options

      HOUSTON – Just like every big-event gathering of college administrators and coaches, there will be a lot of posturing and pontificating here at this Final Four about student-athlete welfare. And putting players first. And empowering them. And so forth.

      That is the formulaic rhetoric. But here is what’s happening right now in the real world, on a real college campus to a real student-athlete: He’s being held hostage by conference rules and a coach’s controlling instincts.

      At Michigan, guard Spike Albrecht is completing his undergraduate degree this semester. On Monday he announced his intention to transfer elsewhere and play immediately as a graduate transfer. Part of the reason for this is the fact that Albrecht has been recruited over – there would be no room for him at Michigan as a fifth-year player, something coach John Beilein made clear months ago, before Albrecht redshirted this season to have double hip surgery.
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      Spike Albrecht (2) reacts to a call during a Michigan loss in 2014. (AP)
      Spike Albrecht (2) reacts to a call during a Michigan loss in 2014. (AP)


      "I talked to John Beilein last year about a redshirt and they told us, 'We’re one over for scholarships next year, and we’re recruiting a top point guard,' " Chuck Albrecht, Spike’s father, said. "That was with the anticipation of Spike graduating."

      Yet even though Albrecht will have a degree, and even though he has been told there is no scholarship for him at Michigan, the school still has restricted his future choices. He has not been released to attend another Big Ten school. And the conference is backing this with its legislation.

      “There are 334 other schools he can go to,” Beilein told Yahoo Sports on Wednesday, almost getting the math right on 351 minus the other 13 Big Ten members. “He has a lot of choices.”

      But he does not have unlimited choice. Not without sitting out a year. That’s a Big Ten rule, and Michigan will enforce it with Albrecht – just as it did last year with grad transfer Max Bielfeldt.

      Bielfeldt filed an appeal with the school, had a hearing in front of a committee unaffiliated with the athletic department and won the right to transfer to Indiana and play immediately. He played a significant role on the Hoosiers’ Sweet 16 team.

      If I were a betting man, I’d wager that Albrecht will do the same thing, and probably get the same result. He will be free to transfer to whatever school he wants, and there likely will be several Big Ten suitors for a guy who has played in 114 career games – and who scored 17 points in a half in his biggest game, the national championship matchup with Louisville in 2013.

      But it should never have to come to this. There should be no hearing. It is fundamentally unfair for any school to tell a transfer with a degree where he cannot go – especially if that school has made it clear that he can’t stay there, at least on scholarship.

      On top of unfair, it is massively hypocritical of Michigan. Because guess who started at quarterback for the Wolverines last year? Graduate transfer Jake Rudock. From Iowa. That’s Big Ten member institution Iowa.

      If Michigan is going to take a grad transfer within the league, how on Earth can it attempt to block one? Or two?

      And then there is this eternal double standard: If, say, Beilein chose to retire tomorrow, and Tom Izzo wanted to move from East Lansing to Ann Arbor, he would be welcomed with open arms in about 30 seconds.

      Chuck Albrecht is not surprised by this situation, nor is he overly angry. But that doesn’t mean he thinks it’s right.

      “To be honest, this is kind of what we expected,” he said. “It’s not totally a surprise. I don’t think it’s real fair, but it seems like the norm.

      "There’s certain schools in the Big Ten he’d never consider and others he might, I don’t know. If they’re worried about Spike – I think they’ve got bigger problems. But we do respect Michigan and the program, so Spike doesn’t want to cause problems.”


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      Spike Albrecht (2) reacts to a shot during Michigan's 2013 national championship loss to Louisville. (AP)
      Spike Albrecht (2) reacts to a shot during Michigan's 2013 national championship loss to Louisville. (AP)
      But neither does Chuck Albrecht want to take this lying down.


      Spike is the second of three college basketball players in the family, and the Albrechts have spent a ton of time and money traveling to watch them play. Chuck is on his third car in the past four years, and estimates he’s been driving 50,000 miles a year during that span.

      “We try to never miss,” he said. “Usually I go one way and my wife goes another. But we’re Midwesterners; if Spike goes to California or something, we’re not going to see him play.”

      Beilein ordinarily is a reasonable man, and he acknowledged that there is a hearing process for Albrecht to go through. He said the school will assist him. “I love the kid,” he said.

      But he does not love the grad-transfer reality that seems to be an increasingly bigger phenomenon. Belein doesn’t think any players should have immediate eligibility as transfers.

      “Having a kid sit out a year is not like going to jail,” he said. “It’s a slippery slope. I want what’s best for Spike but also what’s best for our program. You train a guy and develop him for four years and suddenly he’s the starting point guard at Michigan State?”

      It’s a galling possibility for a coach, to be sure. And Beilein does raise one salient point, which has been discussed quite a bit as schools try to wrap their arms around the grad-transfer phenomenon: If the players have absolutely no interest in actually attaining a graduate degree, and simply are majoring in staying eligible, then it’s an academic sham on par with the one-and-done situation.

      But again, at least the done-and-one guys have a degree. Which is supposed to be the goal for all student-athletes, right? At least that’s what all the posturing and pontificating tells us.

      Yet here in the real world, a player who will have a degree – and who has already been told he’s not going to have a scholarship in 2016-17 – is still having his future controlled and curtailed by the college. It’s wrong. And at Michigan, where the 2015 starting quarterback was a Hawkeye in 2014, it’s also hypocritical.
      source:yahoonews