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2010 World Cup game park lodgings nearly sold out within two hours PDF Print E-mail
Written by Sheetal Mehta   
Wednesday, 01 July 2009 16:01
Johannesburg - Within two hours of opening to bookings for next year's football World Cup, beds in South Africa's national parks are nearly all sold out Wednesday, the parks authority said.

"All the main camps in the popular parks were fully booked 2 hours after opening," SANParks marketing boss, Glenn Phillips said in a statement.

In a twist on the usual event accommodation fare, visitors to the first World Cup on the African continent have the choice of staying in game parks, in the habitat of the elephant, lion, leopard and rhinoceros.

Anticipating huge demand from an expected 450,000 visiting football fans, SAN Parks began taking booking for June and July 2010 already on Wednesday "to facilitate a smooth booking process."

The World Cup takes place in nine cities across South Africa from June 11 to July 11, 2010.

World Cup visitors can book rooms in one of 21 national parks across the country for up to two months at a time.

Kruger National Park, the country's biggest game park, on the border with Mozambique and Zimbabwe, is the biggest attraction. Kruger's main rest camps were all sold out. Some space in bush camps in the far north of the park was still available.

Kruger Park is situated on about 40 kilometres east of the city of Nelspruit, one of the host cities in the World Cup. (dpa)
 
Yao's future left in doubt due to ‘Foot injury’ PDF Print E-mail
Written by Harpreet Verma   
Tuesday, 30 June 2009 16:07

Tom Clanton on Monday described the extent of the center’s foot injury. And with the league’s free-agent shopping season set to begin at 11 p.m.

The fracture in Yao’s left foot has worsened and could be severe enough to threaten his entire next season or even his career, depending on the success of potential treatments he could choose, Clanton said.

Casting a degree of doubt on Yao Ming’s immediate and long-term NBA future, Rockets team physician today, the Rockets will quickly discover how far the shock waves reach.

‘Some days back, Rockets general manager Daryl Morey said the team is committed to building around Yao.

Yao, who was hurt during this year’s NBA Western Conference semifinals against the Los Angeles Lakers, is scheduled to visit specialists around the country to choose a course of treatment. He could try a more conservative approach by immobilizing the foot in hopes the hairline fracture in his left tarsal navicular bone will heal on its own, as doctors predicted it would when Yao’s season ended May 8. Because Yao has no pain or other symptoms, Clanton said there is reason to be optimistic that approach could work.

“Yao,” Morey said before the latest test results, “is the cornerstone of our franchise now and in the future.”

Now Morey might have to start rebuilding without him.

But Clanton also revealed Monday that a CT scan showed Yao’s injury not only failed to heal as expected but has gotten worse, potentially requiring a surgical remedy.

The injury has the potential for him missing this next season and could be career-threatening,” Clanton said. “One of the things we are trying to get is a consensus opinion on that, to make certain there is no option we are overlooking that would provide an earlier return or would be an option for treatment that he would prefer rather than doing additional surgery.”

Yao, Rockets owner Leslie Alexander and Yao’s agent, John Huizinga, were unavailable for comment. Morey said he would not discuss Yao’s injury or its ramifications until Yao chooses a treatment option and doctors offer a prognosis.

“We are not going to comment,” Morey said, “until we have all the facts.”

Free agent communication

The NBA won’t wait, however. Teams can begin negotiations with free agents, including Rockets forward Ron Artest, tonight.

Artest considered the Rockets a championship contender when he indicated last month that he hoped to remain with the team. The Rockets could find out quickly if he and other free agents still feel that way. Artest’s agent, David Bauman, declined to comment on the impact Yao’s injury might have on Artest’s decision.

The Rockets could be in a position to seek a replacement for Yao. If he is ruled out for all of next season, the team could request a disabled player exception to the salary cap, allowing it to sign a player for the value of the mid-level exception, which is 108 percent of the average NBA player’s salary (which last season was $5.6 million).

But that would be an extreme commitment for the Rockets, since it would force them to pay large penalties under the NBA’s luxury tax and to offer an expensive deal to a player who would theoretically be a backup when Yao returns.

That scenario also presents few attractive options. Forward Carlos Boozer and center Mehmet Okur of the Utah Jazz are considering opting out of their contracts. The Rockets could try to sign Orlando backup center Marcin Gortat, a restricted free agent, to an offer sheet for all or part of the mid-level exception and then hope the Magic don’t match the offer to retain him.

Tough decision ahead, “Rockets could face a tough decision even if Yao does return”

After that, the top options might be power forwards able to play in the middle such as Brandon Bass, Antonio McDyess, Chris Andersen and perhaps former All-Star Rasheed Wallace.

The Rockets could face a tough decision even if Yao does return in the 2009-10 campaign. He has two years left on his contract and could opt out after next season. He had been considered a certain maximum-contract player, but the difficulty getting over his latest injury could impact the team’s thinking.

The Rockets are helped by the fact their other marquee player, guard Tracy McGrady, is attempting a comeback from microfracture knee surgery. McGrady is scheduled to begin on-court workouts in the coming weeks. Until then, the Rockets can’t estimate when he might return to competition.

For now, the emphasis is on getting Yao back on the court. The surgical treatment options could include placing a pin inside the foot; a bone graft; or even realigning the foot to operate differently. Cleveland Cavaliers center Zydrunas Ilgauskas underwent similar procedures, reducing his high arch to a flatter foot position. That option could be considered for Yao, Clanton said, though his arch is not as high as Ilgauskas’ was.

“That’s what we’re hoping to avoid, but that is certainly a realistic situation given his injury and the way the bone looked on the CT scan,” Clanton said. “The fact he is having no symptoms gives us reason for optimism.”

What are the possibilities?

Yao had a pin inserted in the foot in February 2008 and in less than six months was ready to play in the Olympics and in 77 regular-season games last season. But Clanton said there is concern that a more extreme procedure might be warranted, even though Yao’s current injury is considered less severe.

“At this stage, he is having no symptoms or physical signs,” Clanton said. “He has no tenderness, no swelling, no redness. When he came back in, he was feeling like everything was perfect, and he would start rehabilitation and get ready to play. The findings on the CT were shocking for him and for us.

“You don’t treat a CT scan; you treat a patient. We are looking for every reason to treat this on clinical findings but don’t want to put him at risk for a greater fracture.”

Last Updated on Tuesday, 30 June 2009 16:32
 
South African robbers caught red-handed by visiting Brazilian cops PDF Print E-mail
Written by Sheetal Mehta   
Wednesday, 24 June 2009 16:39
Johannesburg - Two Brazilian policemen who are in South Africa to observe preparations for the 2010 football World Cup caught two robbers stealing from their hotel room, radio reports said Wednesday.

The thieves broke into the policemen's hotel room in Pretoria on Tuesday by climbing through the third-floor window but were nabbed as one was passing a sneaker out the window to his accomplice, Johannesburg-based 702 private radio reported.

The two men were arrested and brought to court on Wednesday, where they pleaded guilty to stealing goods valued at around 3,000 rand (around 366 dollars), 702 reported.

The incident is the latest in a string of thefts targeting hotels hosting visitors at the ongoing FIFA Confederations Cup.

The Egyptian and the Brazilian teams also reported thefts of players' possessions at their hotels last week.

The Egyptian case became shrouded in controversy following reports the players had been relieved of around 2,400 dollars in cash by prostitutes.

The eight-nation Confederations Cup is a warm-up for the World Cup next year.

Brazil is the next country to host the World Cup, in 2014. (dpa)
Last Updated on Wednesday, 24 June 2009 16:50
 
Sharapova loses her lucky touch in three-set Wimbledon defeat PDF Print E-mail
Written by Reetu Sharma   
Wednesday, 24 June 2009 16:36
London- Maria Sharapova's charmed life over three sets was ended as Argentine underdog Gisela Dulko held off a fightback to eliminate the 2004 champion 6-2,
3-6, 6-4 for a place in the third round at the Wimbledon Championships Wednesday.

The number 45 needed five match points in the final game before a Sharapova forehand went long to end the contest after two hour, 13 minutes.

Sharapova had come back for victories over three sets four times at the French Open, but Dulko made sure the past was not repeated on grass.

The win was her first from three attempts against Sharapova, who only resumed playing a month ago after eight months out with a shoulder injury and surgery.

Sharapova, her ranking down to 60th as she slowly regains top form, began to lift, her screech increasing with the fervour of her fight, while trailing a set and 0-3. She won the second set and gave Dulko a huge scare in the third before the Argentine squeezed home a winner.

Russian tenth seed Nadia Petrova advanced over Shahar Peer 6-3, 6-2 while number 14 Slovak Dominika Cibulkova booked her place against Urszula Radwanska 6-2,
6-4.

Daniela Hantuchova upset China's 16th seed Zheng Jie 6-3, 7-5.

In men's play on the second straight day of sunshine and warm summer temperatures, fourth seed Novak Djokovic dispatched German qualifier Simon Greul 7-5, 6-1, 6-4.

Ninth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga didn't have to strike as ball as Italian Simone Bolelli withdrew injured before their match to give the Frenchman a walkover.

Elsewhere in the second round as five-time champion Roger Federer took the court, Mardy Fish beat Serb Janko Tipsarevic 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 and Israeli Dudi Sela knocked out 2008 semi-finalist Rainer Schuettler 7-6 (7-3), 6 (dpa)
Last Updated on Wednesday, 24 June 2009 16:52
 
Billboards made of Zimbabwe dollars bag top advertising prize PDF Print E-mail
Written by Ajay Gupta   
Wednesday, 24 June 2009 16:20
Harare - An advertising campaign of billboards made of worthless Zimbabwean banknotes has won an international advertising award, reports in the country said Wednesday.

The Zimbabwean, a bi-weekly newspaper published in London but sold in Zimbabwe, pasted together hundreds of banknotes with denominations of up to trillions of the now defunct Zimbabwe dollar to make up the billboards, the newspaper said.

Over the bills were pasted messages that said, "Thanks to (President Robert) Mugabe this money is wallpaper," "It's cheaper to print on this money than on paper," and "Fight the regime that has crippled a country."

The ad campaign, designed by South African agency TWBA/Hunt/Lascaris/Johannesburg and appearing in the city of Johannesburg, was the winner in the category for outdoor advertising in the Cannes Lions advertising festival this week in the French resort town this week.

The agency said the Zimbabwean currency was "an eloquent symbol" of the spectacular collapse of the country's economy.

The wanton printing of money by President Robert Mugabe's central banker Gideon Gono was blamed as the main cause of Zimbabwe's record inflation, which was estimated to have reached 5 septillion (21 zeroes) per cent last year.

Knocking 25 zeroes off the currency in 18 months failed to stem the slide. The highest-denomination banknote issued in February of 100 trillion Zimbabwe dollars was just enough for a few loaves of bread.

Shoppers had to carry bags full of cash for groceries and signs in public toilets at the border control post with neighbouring South Africa instructed users not to flush Zimbabwe dollars down the toilet.

Last year a businessman was arrested and fined for using banknotes as business cards with his name and telephone numbers printed on them.

The corner on hyperinflation was turned after Mugabe and pro-democracy leader Morgan Tsvangirai formed a coalition government in February. The new government introduced the US dollar and the South African rand as legal tender and withdrew the Zimbabwe dollar from circulation for at least a year.

The Zimbabwean, which backs Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change, is the country's most popular newspaper.

Last year a delivery truck carrying a load of the newspapers was hijacked and burnt out by suspected agents of Mugabe's government.(dpa)
Last Updated on Wednesday, 24 June 2009 16:26
 
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