Wednesday, March 10, 2010

A seven-point plan to rescue British tennis

After the debacle of Great Britain’s Davis Cup defeat in Lithuania at the weekend, which is almost certain to cost John Lloyd, the captain, his job, the LTA promised a review of the tie and where it could have done better.

Here, The Times becomes the governing body’s chief executive for a day and says what it would do in seven steps to turn the sport around.

1, Scrap the National Tennis Centre

The Roehampton renaissance building in southwest London is a £40 million cradle of elitism, too opulent and cosy and not fit for purpose. It is everything that the sport has no right to think that it is. There are six indoor courts and more than 60 people staring into computers. There are not enough players of sufficient quality to make the figures stack upAndy Murray was asked if he would vacate a court last week to make way for a mini-tennis tournament, so he went to practise in nearby Chiswick. One young player who used the NTC for the first time wrote to his parents saying that “everyone in there thinks they are God”.

Use it as a reference point for sports science and competitions, but abandon the pretence that it should be a high-performance centre.

2, Disband national training and support independent centres

When Judy Murray said that, rather than building one £40 million centre, the LTA should have funded forty £1 million centres across the country, she was spot on. Independence is the way forward, with competitive squads across Britain that are funded centrally but run on strict licensing guidelines. We must free the regions to do their own thing, invest in young British coaches, give them the freedom to flourish from under the iron hand of national interference. Make sure that all the courts in these centres have free access to children under the age of 16 from 6.30 to 8.30am every day.

3, End the love affair with foreigners

What do Belgians know about British tennis that British people do not? Do we really need a Belgian as player director, a 26-year-old Belgian as head of coach education and a Belgian as head of research (what is that?), as well as Belgian coaches? Yes, Belgium struck gold in Justine Henin and Kim Clijsters, but what has it achieved since? How much does this insistence on bringing foreign people into key positions in the sport motivate the young coaches in Britain?

4, Breathe new life into a moribund club system

The whole environment of British clubs, the way they are run, staffed and organised, needs to be changed if ever we are going to inspire young people to play there. We have to invest more in places to play, but also youngsters need to be able to play at the same time as their parents or grandparents, not fobbed off as outcasts A ten-year-old can learn more about strategy by facing a 70-year-old who slices and dices the ball than he ever could with a soft red ball on a half-sized red court with a cut-down racket. This absorption with mini-tennis is a scourge on the game.

Do they play mini-tennis at the Bollettieri or Casal-Sánchez academies, two of the best in the world? Of course they don’t.

5, Hand over the responsibility of wild cards into Wimbledon

Rather than have to spend countless days explaining why the performances of British players who cannot get into the Championships by right are so poor, let the All England Club decide who should fill their eight wild-card places. If it wants to give them to British players, so be it, but the LTA should leave the reckoning up to them and not be involved in the process at all.

6, Make tennis live and make it relevant

Give the coach the stature in a tennis club that a golf professional has in his. Rather than crush him with daft targets and box-ticking, let him live the dream and pass it on to his protégés. Offer free tennis equipment to every primary school in the country.

7, Be inspirational, be honest and, most important, be realistic

There is an inherent weakness at the top and tennis requires a leader of courage, wisdom and experience who stands up for his sport with concise words and strong character.

I would stop making outrageous claims, stop raising expectation to levels that cannot be realised and be prepared to take responsibility when things did not work out, not just say that I would. So if I made mistakes I would own up to them and if I made too many and the game was going down the plughole, I would resign.

Source:The Times

Paul Cooke set to be reunited with John Kear at Wakefield Wildcats

Paul Cooke is set to leave Hull Kingston Rovers, three years after his controversial cross-city move from Hull, and join Wakefield Wildcats on loan for the rest of the season.

Whether the deal will be completed in time for Cooke to play against his parent club in Friday’s Engage Super League fixture at Craven Park is unclear.

Cooke, who has been dropped for Rovers’ past two matches, confirmed to team-mates yesterday that he was moving to link up with John Kear, for whom Cooke, 28, played at Hull.

The stand-off will also be reunited at Belle Vue with Danny Brough, his former half-back partner at Hull, where the pair were instrumental in the 2005 Challenge Cup final defeat of Leeds Rhinos under Kear. The Wakefield head coach retained his admiration for Cooke, who scored a late try from loose forward against Leeds at the Millennium Stadium five years ago before Brough kicked the winning conversionCooke’s switch from Hull to their fierce rivals, which earned him a four-month suspension for an illegal approach to Rovers while still a contracted Hull player, caused uproar in the city. At Craven Park, he never scaled the heights he did playing for the “Black and Whites” and Hull KR had told him that he would not receive a new contract beyond this season.

While negotiations continue, Wakefield, still smarting from Saturday’s 52-0 loss at home to Huddersfield Giants, did confirm the signing of Ben Gledhill, 20, a former England Under-18 prop, who joined the Wildcats part-time over the winter.

Richard Silverwood is to referee Leeds’s league fixture away to Huddersfield on Sunday, two weeks after he was labelled “arrogant” by Keith Senior, the Rhinos centre, whose criticism of Silverwood after the World Club Challenge defeat by Melbourne Storm at Elland Road ten days ago has resulted in his appearance before an RFL tribunal tonight.

Senior, who later issued an apology for his outburst over what he saw as a failure by the referee to clamp down on Melbourne’s spoiling tactics, is charged with breaching operational rules. If found guilty, he could be suspended, but he is more likely to be fined.

Gareth Thomas, the former Wales rugby union captain, trained with Crusaders’ first-team squad for the first time yesterday. The 35-year-old remains pencilled in to make his debut against Catalans Dragons in Wrexham on Friday week. “Obviously, I’m going to start out wide because that’s where I can learn but also be involved in the game,” he said. “We’re taking things one step at a time, but I realise I have got to earn my position here.

“I’ve got to get into how the team play and that’s what I’ve got to learn first. I’m probably working harder than I have at any other stage of my career, learning something new in such a short space of time.”

Source:The Times

Robin Dickin rejuvenated by exploits of Festival fancy Restless Harry

Trainer indebted to a horse that has saved his training career and his health inside the space of a year.

Robin Dickin says he will try not to cry if Restless Harry wins at Cheltenham on Friday week, but we should not hold him to it. This, after all, is the horse that has saved his training career and his health inside a year. A few tears of joy would be fitting.

Last spring, Dickin was at a low ebb. Down to a dozen horses, he had trained three winners all season and the strain was evident, even before he collapsed in his Warwickshire yard. “My doctor thought it must be heart-related but it was just stress,” he recalled.

“I'd begun using savings to support a business that wasn't working. Syndicates were losing members who just couldn't afford it any more in the recession. Because I didn't want to let the others down, I would finance them. The overdraft was getting bigger and I couldn't fix it.

“Normally, I sleep for England but I was waking up in a muck sweat, then pacing the house worrying. I'd already given up ten boxes and a cottage and I didn't know what to do next. I was depressed at the very idea of not being able to carry on training.Richard Whitehead, friend and long-standing owner, did not waste words on sympathy. “He said, come on, let's get going and buy a horse.” So they went to the Cheltenham sale and acquired ‘Harry', a West Country point-to-point winner, with their first bid of £12,000.

Dickin, 56, spent the next 24 hours regretting it so vividly he might easily have ended up back in hospital. “He went mad in the lorry taking him home and, next morning, he'd wrecked his stable and was galloping round it like a motor bike on the wall of death. An agent then rang to tell me the horse was known to be nuts.”

He considered sending him back. Life may have taken a bleaker course had he done so. Instead, Dickin surveyed his purchase across the quaint yard he shares with a vintage car garage and a Victorian bathroom builder, then rode him over the fields himself and changed his mind. “He was so wonderfully athletic,” he said.

Yesterday, placidly munching his food, you would not have known ‘Harry' had been restless, let alone nuts. A mirror in his stable helped - “an idea I borrowed from Martin Pipe” - but natural ability conquered temperament. He is a strong second favourite for the Albert Bartlett Novices Hurdle, immediately before the Gold Cup.

One good horse really can transform a stable. “We've had 13 winners this season. Having such an athlete in the yard raises everybody's game. I haven't been through the books with an accountant, and I know we've got a way to go, but I'm feeling very positive.”

If Dickin gets his Festival winner, it will not be out of turn. He has been trying for 40 years, as jockey and trainer, since leaving the Shropshire of his childhood to join the fledgeling training regime of the late David Nicholson.

“I spent 11 happy years there. David was a verbal bully but under that bark, there was no bite. I was just a farmer's son without much education but I got an honours degree in life from the Nicholsons.”

Dickin recalls how Nicholson would arrange for his staff to attend Cheltenham each Gold Cup day. He will be there in his own right this year, still reminiscing. “I miss him still. I always thought he felt I'd be no good at training. I wish he could be there next week.

“I'm hoping, if 'Harry' wins, I'll have the composure not to bawl my eyes out. But I wear my heart on my sleeve. I promise I'll do a lot of laughing, too.”

Source:The Times

Tiger Woods working with Hank Haney as comeback looms

Tiger Woods's long-awaited comeback appears to have moved a step close after it emerged the world No1 is back working with his swing coach, Hank Haney.

Reports in the United States suggest that Haney, who has coached Woods for seven years, arrived in Florida on Sunday and has spent the past few days working with the disgraced golfer at Isleworth, the private country club near Orlando.

Mark O'Meara, one of Woods's closest friends during his 14 years on Tour, added further weight to the reports today when he said he “would not be surprised” if the world No1 decides to play on his team at the Tavistock Cup in 12 days time.

O'Meara is captain of the Isleworth side in the two-day exhibition match which takes place on the same gated-community complex as Woods' Florida home. “I would not be surprised if Tiger plays,” O'Meara said. “Hank [Haney, his coach] has come to town and they're working on stuff they normally work on. I know it's been a rough road these last three months for him and his family, but golf is what Tiger does. The Tavistock Cup might be a right fit to come back. Play that event and then, maybe, Bay Hill straight afterwards.”

Charles Howell and J.B. Holmes backed up O'Meara's claims after admitting they had seen Woods practicing at Isleworth. And O'Meara, who introduced Haney to Woods, believes his friend has ample time to find his best form before the Tavistock Cup and then later that week the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill.“It wouldn't take them too long,” said O'Meara. “I would imagine a few weeks Tiger would be good to go.”

Woods, 34, has won 14 major titles, four shy of the all-time record set by Jack Nicklaus, and this year's first three majors will be played on courses where Woods has taken record-setting triumphs. Woods could play at Augusta National, where he has won the Masters four times, and then the US Open at Pebble Beach, where he captured the 2000 US Open by 15 strokes, followed by a British Open at St. Andrews, where he won the event in 2000 and 2005.

Source:The Times

Ross Brawn plays down Mercedes GP's title chances

Ross Brawn, the Mercedes GP team principal, has play down their chances of defending their Formula One world title on the eve of the season-opening grand prix in Bahrain.

Mercedes are returning to F1 55 years after they last graced the sport, but the returning Michael Schumacher has blown hot and cold in recent weeks as to whether they can compete this year.

"Everyone at the team is proud to be representing the rich motorsport pedigree of Mercedes-Benz as we start the season as the first Mercedes works team for over half a century," Brawn, who captured both titles with his own team last year prior to Mercedes' takeover, said.

"In addition, knowing we go into the new season as the reigning world champions gives the team confidence and a fierce pride to defend our position"However, this is a new season and a new challenge. We had a strong pre-season testing programme with the car, but we have not quite reached the level of preparation we would have liked prior to Bahrain.

"The car shows promise and we have a strong development programme planned for the season, but there is a lot of hard work ahead to ensure we will be in the fight for the title."

Brawn's words are echoed by Norbert Haug, Mercedes motorsport boss. "Judging our competitiveness for the first couple of races, my impression is we are not quite where we want to be and I would not see our team in the role of favourites," Haug said.

"Having said that, I am fully convinced the whole team and our drivers Nico (Rosberg) and Michael are fully prepared to get on top of our job and fulfil our targets which are winning races and fighting for world championships."

Source:The Times

Graham Onions ruled out of the first Test against Bangladesh with a back injury

Graham Onions has been ruled out of the first Test against Bangladesh with a back injury.

The England seamer missed the three-day warm-up match against Bangladesh A after suffering a series of back spasms, although an MRI scan later revealed no structural damage.

Onions had bowled in the nets during that game as he attempted to prove his fitness, however Andy Flower, the England coach, later revealed he had struggled to overcome his injury.

Stuart Broad remains a doubt and will undergo a rigorous examination with Huw Bevan, England's fitness trainer, today. If he comes through that without a recurrence of the spasms that he has suffered, he will be passed fit for the first Test, which gets underway on FridayBroad's presence is essential for the balance of the England side, with Jonathan Trott expected to open the batting ahead of Michael Carberry in a side containing five, rather than six, specialist batsmen.

Should Broad fail to prove his fitness, Flower may hand Steven Finn his Test debut. The 20-year-old seamer only arrived in the country on Saturday as cover but he caught the eye against Bangladesh A and may have leapfrogged the likes of Liam Plunkett and Ajmal Shahzad.

"I wouldn't rule Finn out," Flower said. "He's been added to the party and he's a contender for selection.He's bowled with pace on a slow pitch and bowled with accuracy; he's quite a good prospect."

James Tredwell is also in contention after taking eight wickets against Bangladesh. "He's [Tredwell] got a bit of confidence now and, if we decided to play two spinners in the Test, he's feeling good about himself," Flower added.

Two thirds of Manchester United supporters may not renew season tickets

Manchester United could be facing a fresh backlash from their supporters as it was revealed that two thirds of fans are considering not renewing their season tickets next season.

The figures, which have been published in a study conducted by Virgin Money, suggest that supporters are stepping up their revolt against Malcolm Glazer's ownership, which has gained fresh momentum over the past few weeks following interest from a group calling themselves the Red Knights.

There has been widespread discontent among the supporters ever since the American and his sons bought the club in a highly-leveraged takeover in the summer of 2005.

Many United supporters have already been driven away by huge ticket price increases, with the average season ticket price going up from £487 pre-takeover to £722 this year. The effect has been that while there has traditionally been a long waiting list for season tickets as demand far outstripped supply, for the first time in living memory a limited number of season tickets were available on general sale last summerThe survey suggests that 15 per cent of season-ticket holders will give up their tickets completely, while another 44 per cent will only buy tickets for matches occasionally. Wolverhampton Wanderers also rate highly in the survey, with 54 per cent of supporters considering giving up their season tickets.

“The drop in costs is welcome but season tickets are still priced astronomically compared with other major European leagues such as Spain, Italy and Germany," Malcolm Clarke, Chairman of the Football Supporters’ Federation, said. "Shamefully, Manchester United was the only Premier League club that put up their prices for the current season. Every other club froze or reduced them.

"They also sold Cristiano Ronaldo to Real Madrid. Huge numbers of United fans are in open revolt against the Glazer family’s huge cash drain on the club. They’re paying the price for the leveraged buy-out in 2005 that has loaded a massive £700 million debt on to United’s books. The Glazer regime has put up ticket prices by half in less than five years. No wonder almost six out of ten Old Trafford season-ticket holders are thinking of not renewing.”

According to reports yesterday, thousands of fans are preparing to boycott the opening ten minutes of tonight's Champions League match against AC Milan, leaving the television cameras to pan empty seats in a visual demonstration of anti-Glazer feeling. The prime mover behind the green and gold movement, the Manchester United Supporters Trust (MUST) sought yesterday to play down talk of a mass boycott tonight - although the ploy may be used at other matches.

The backlash against season tickets comes despite figures showing that the cost of attending games has fallen by 6 per cent in the past year. According to the study, fans of Liverpool and Stoke City are the least likely to give up season tickets next year with just 9 per cent of supporters considering cut backs.

Percentage of fans considering cancelling season tickets

Manchester United 59
Wolves 54
Burnley 31
Fulham 29
Everton 28
Blackburn 28
Portsmouth 28
West Ham 27
Aston Villa 24
Sunderland 23
Wigan 21
Tottenham 19
Manchester City 18
Birmingham 17
Chelsea 17
Hull 17
Arsenal 14
Bolton 13
Liverpool 9
Stoke City 9

Source:The Times

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