Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Tyson Fury's world title war with Wladimir Klitschko set to be re-scheduled before the weekend

 The heavyweight pair were meant to square off in October but an injury to the Ukrainian meant it had to be postponed

Tyson Fury's world title clash with Wladimir Klitschko should this week be rescheduled for the end of November.
Klitschko is having his calf injury, which caused the fight's postponement, assessed by the world-renowned Dr Hans Muller-Wohlfahrt.
It is understood the WBA Super, WBO and IBF heavyweight champ has suffered just a minor tear to his muscle and hopes to be given the all-clear in the next 48 hours to fight Fury.
All sides are keen for the world heavyweight title clash at Dusseldorf's Esprit Arena to happen this year and Saturday November 21 or Saturday November 28 are the favourite dates.
Fury's promoter Mick Hennessey said: "Wladimir Klitschko is seeing his doctor this week and the signs so far have been pretty optimistic. We are hoping to reschedule by the end of November.

Ourselves and the Klitschko camp are definitely looking to try and make the fight happen this year, especially after the press conference we've just had and this is the fight worldwide.
"We're waiting to hear from Klitschko's camp by close of play on Friday and both camps want to get the fight on as quickly as possible to cause the least disruption to the fans."
The unbeaten Fury is continuing to train at Morecambe, even inviting fans on twitter to join him Rocky-style on his early-morning runs on the front, and Hennessey says he is coping with the delay.
"Tyson's not new to this sort of situation," he said. "Him and Peter will be working around this situation to make sure it does not disrupt the camp too much."

Floyd: I am not coming back


Mayweather extended his unblemished record to 49 straight wins with a one-sided points win over Andre Berto on September 12.
The American had always maintained he would retire following the fight and after the victory insisted that he had "nothing left to prove" after matching Rocky Marciano's 60-year-old undefeated record and would not be lured back for a 50th fight.
Fans and pundits alike have remained sceptical and Amir Khan recently said he hoped he could lure Mayweather out of retirement for a history-making bout with many in the boxing world believing it will only be a matter of time before he pulls on his gloves again.
Mayweather previously announced he had "permanently" retired in 2008 only to return to the ring, but back at ringside on Tuesday night in the role of promoter for the latest installment of Premier Boxing Champions in Las Vegas, he maintained his stance.
The welterweight king was quizzed by the show's commentating team about his retirement and whether he had changed his mind about making a comeback.
"I'm not coming back, but…" teased the 38-year-old before insisting: "I'm just happy to be on the other side."

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Wayne Rooney: Man Utd forward denies transfer request in 2013

Manchester United's Wayne Rooney has admitted falling out with Sir Alex Ferguson during his final season but denies putting in a transfer request.
Rooney says he went to see Ferguson, who was United manager for 26 years, after being dropped in 2013.
"It's not just me who's had a fall-out with him," added the forward, 29, in Rooney - The Man Behind The Goals, to be shown on BBC One on 5 October.
"I don't know what happened or why that came out that way."
The England captain added: "I went in to see him and just said if you're not going to play me it might be better if I moved on - then all of a sudden it's all over the press I put in a transfer request, which I never did."
Rooney did ask to leave United in October 2010 when the former Everton player pulled out of contract talks, saying he had not received "any of the assurances I was seeking about the future squad".
Ferguson said at the time he was "dumbfounded" by Rooney's desire to leave but, 48 hours later, Rooney signed a new five-year deal.
United went on to win the title that season, and Rooney later said staying at the club was the best decision of his career.

Monday, September 28, 2015

Deontay Wilder wants Wladimir Klitschko fight in 2016




DEONTAY WILDER has hit back at Wladimir Klitschko after the Ukrainian criticised Wilder’s WBC world heavyweight title defence against Johann Duhaupas on Saturday night [September 26].
After retaining his title against the unheralded Eric Molina in June –putting in a lackluster performance – many have criticised Wilder’s decision to face Duhaupas, who has suffered losses to Francesco Pianeta and Erkan Teper.
WBO, IBF and WBA Super world champion Klitschko recently urged Wilder to face better opposition, but the unbeaten American claims he laughed off Wladimir’s comments.
“[When I heard his comments] I laughed, I almost laughed all day about it, because for him to make that statement, basically is for him to really criticize himself because if he’s talking about opponents, he’s been doing the same thing for over a decade,” he said.
“He’s been fighting guys we don’t know names of or how to pronounce or where they came from. they came out of a rabbit box.
“For him, being a champion for so many years and having done that, then trying to go back on maybe talking about opponents, he already knows what it’s going to be when he faces me. Of course, if I fight everybody at the top, then that lessens the chance of him having to face me because of course I feel he wants me to lose somewhere around there so he can have a easier match for him when it’s time for me and him to fight.”
The 29-year-old then turned his attention to Duhaupas.
“I couldn’t have a better opponent to be defending my title against,” he said.
“I think he’s the best type of opponent for me. He’s tough, he comes to fight, he’s got a great record, he’s never been stopped, he got the height and the weight. This is a great fight despite of what maybe critics may say about it.
“This is an exciting fight, this is going to definitely be a tough fight and I’m looking forward to it. This type of boxing in the heavyweight division is back and I’m happy that I’m leading the pack.”
The Alabama native, who will be fighting in his home state at the Legacy Arena in Birmingham, also revealed he does not plan on fighting for long, having only taken up the sport at the age of 21.
“I don’t see myself being in this sport a very long period of time so I want to fight as much as possible,” he mused.
“I want to defend and put my title on the line as much as possible. If the top fighters in the division are ready, they’re coming to try to come and take my belt – and the key word is try. I’m ready to give them the opportunity and I’m looking forward to it.”

Jose Mourinho: No untouchables at Chelsea, says manager

Chelsea's players have been told that no-one's place is safe if the club's poor start to the season continues.
Manager Jose Mourinho has left John Terry out for the past two Premier League games, while Branislav Ivanovic and Cesc Fabregas have been criticised.
"Untouchables in football - only consistency can give you that status," said Mourinho, whose side are 14th in the table after seven games.
"Football is about today. At this moment I don't have untouchables."
Terry, 34, has started only the League Cup win at Walsall since a 3-1 defeat at Everton on 12 September.
Champions Chelsea, eight points behind leaders Manchester United in the league, travel to Mourinho's former club Porto in the Champions League on Tuesday.
In 2006, during his first spell in charge, Mourinho described eight of his first-team players - including Terry, Ashley Cole, Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba - "untouchable" because of their form.
"In this moment we have fantastic players, the players that gave us the title last season," Mourinho said.
"But football is not about yesterday. In football you have to be consistent in your performance, in your emotion.
"To be a winner you don't need to win all the time, but to be a winner you must have a strong mentality every game, every day."
Mourinho will have striker Diego Costa available in Porto as his three-match ban does not apply to European games.
Asked if he needed 11 Costas on the pitch, Mourinho said: "We would lose every game, because the desire to suspend him is so big that we wouldn't have players to start the game.
"I'm happy to have only one and let him play until they decide to suspend him again."
Goalkeeper Iker Casillas, an "untouchable" player who Mourinho dropped while in charge of Real Madrid, is part of the Porto side.
Mourinho interrupted the first question on the subject in the pre-match news conference.
"If you're going to ask me about Casillas, I'm going to greet him at the beginning and the end. No more questions about it," he said.

Sepp Blatter to stay as Fifa president despite investigation

Sepp Blatter says he will not stand down as Fifa president because of the criminal proceedings opened against him by Swiss investigators.
The Swiss, 79, is suspected of signing a contract that was "unfavourable to Fifa" and making a "disloyal payment" to Uefa president Michel Platini.
Blatter, who had already said he will stand down in February 2016, claimed he "had done nothing illegal or improper".
Platini, 60, has written a letter to Uefa members denying any wrongdoing.
In a statement released through his lawyers, Blatter said a £1.5m payment made to Platini, the head of European football's governing body, in 2011 was "valid compensation and nothing more".
Both men are also facing investigation by Fifa's independent ethics committee over the payment, which Platini said was for work as Blatter's technical advisor between 1999 and 2002.
Platini, who was interviewed as a witness by officers from the Swiss attorney general's office, stressed that the payment had been "fully declared" to the authorities.
The Frenchman said he was "aware that these events may harm my image and reputation" and released a statement for "reasons of transparency".
The 2011 payment came nine years after Platini's work for Blatter - and two months before Uefa gave its backing to the Swiss before a presidential election.
That is something that now must be explained, according to Scottish FA chief executive Stewart Regan.
"It is an essential piece of information that still needs to be provided," Regan said.
The contract - described by Swiss prosecutors as "unfavourable to Fifa" - is thought to refer to a 2005 TV rights deal between Fifa and Jack Warner,the former president of Concacaf, the governing body of football in North and Central America and the Caribbean.
According to an investigation by Swiss broadcaster SRF in September, the deal allegedly resulted in a multi-million pound profit for Warner's company.
World governing body Fifa, which has been hit by several corruption allegations in recent years, has said it is co-operating with the investigation into Blatter.
Earlier this year the United States indicted 14 current and former Fifa officials and associates on charges of "rampant, systemic, and deep-rooted" corruption following a major inquiry by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Meanwhile, a separate Swiss investigation is looking into the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, which will be held in Russia and Qatar respectively.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Amir Khan and Manny Pacquaio in talks for Las Vegas showdown


Amir Khan's team is in talks with Manny Pacquaio's promoter Bob Arum about a possible fight in Las Vegas next year.
Arum revealed that talks are ongoing between the two camps, with dates in February and April being touted.
"We were planning for Manny Pacquiao to fight at the end of February, or at the latest, the first two weeks in April," Arum told theSunday Telegraph.
"March is out of the question because of a big college basketball tournament in the United States. That gets all the ink at the time. I'm in the process of having negotiations with Amir Khan's uncle and his lawyer, Robert Davis, and those negotiations are ongoing.
"I know there was a report that Khan was coming here to make a deal with Ruslan Provodnikov, but he ensured me that was not the case."
Arum revealed that he considers it unethical to negotiate with more than one opponent at the same time and has identified Khan as Pacquaio's No.1 target.
"I'm not saying necessarily that the negotiations will be successful, although I believe that everybody is negotiating in good faith. While those negotiations are going on, I'm not going to discuss any other opponent for Manny Pacquiao.
"There is a possibility that it could happen in Dubai, but I think it's more likely it will happen in Las Vegas."
Khan's trainer Virgil Hunter, however, has warned the Bolton fighter that he needs to spend more time in the gym if he is to fulfil his talent.
"If you're serious about your craft and serious about making a mark on the sport and being great then it's just a matter of time before [lots of travelling] backfires on you and there's only so much I can do for you," Hunter said.
Khan has recently become involved in aid work revolving around Syrian refugees in Greece but Hunter is encouraging his man to focus on "striving to be the best that ever did it".
He added: "My job is to be honest with him and I am. And simply put, like I tell him, when you have the talent that he has, I'm not going to bite my tongue."
Both boxers last fought in May this year, when Pacquiao lost to Floyd Mayweather in their blockbuster bout at the MGM Grand, while Khan extended his unbeaten run to five with victory over Chris Algieri in New York.

Exclusive: Peter Fury says Sky weighing up PPV options for November 28 Klitschko v Fury date


Fury was due to challenge the Ukrainian on October 24 until a calf injury scuppered the event at the ESPRIT Arena in Dusseldorf and forced both sides to look at an alternative date at the same venue.
Due to Sky’s commitment to have both Kell Brook and Klitschko v Fury on their pay-per-view format, there had been question marks on whether the top division clash could take place this year, although Peter says Sky are currently weighing up their options.
“Sky are trying to rearrange things so we will see,” Peter exclusively told World Boxing News.
“At the moment, they are saying Anthony Joshua v Dillian Whyte are December 12 and November clashes with that date, but you would expect a world heavyweight title fight would be above two guys with not even a British title to their name, but there we are.
“Right now, November 28 looks like the date we are looking at, but nothing is official yet,” he added.
Klitschko v Fury was due to be a double-header on Sky Sports Box Office alongside Brook v Diego Chaves before the delay, although the IBF welterweight title bout looks set to remain a pay event without the heavyweight contest.
Whether Sky would sanction a fourth pay-per-view date in one year is the major talking point and would see Klitschko v Fury heading to 2016 if the details can’t be ironed out in time to green light the November date.

Lewis Hamilton overtakes Nico Rosberg to win in Japan


Mercedes returned to the front of Formula 1 as Lewis Hamilton dominated the Japanese Grand Prix to put a stranglehold on the title race.
Uncompetitive in Singapore last weekend, Mercedes were imperious as Hamilton stroked to victory and Nico Rosberg fought back to finish second.
The German fell back after being forced wide by Hamilton as the team-mates battled in the first two corners.
The manner with which Hamilton took the lead may create tension in the team.
But Rosberg fought back to pass Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel after his second pit stop.
Vettel's team-mate Kimi Raikkonen took fourth, by leapfrogging Williams's Valtteri Bottas in the same phase of the race.
Hamilton's eighth victory in 14 races extends his championship lead to 48 points with 125 still available in the remaining five grands prix.

Decisive start

Hamilton started from second behind Rosberg after making two mistakes on the single qualifying lap. The huge accident suffered by Red Bull's Daniil Kvyat ended the qualifiying session prematurely.
The Briton felt the lap he had to abort for that crash would have put him on pole, and was determined to win somehow.
But he said how he would do so was the "million-dollar question" on a track where overtaking is notoriously difficult and strategy was unlikely to give him a decisive advantage over Rosberg.
So when he made a better start than his team-mate, Hamilton grabbed his chance.
He dived for the inside line through the fast Turn One, and held it as they braked down into Turn Two.
Rosberg, perhaps ill-advisedly, tried to hang on around the outside and Hamilton - inevitably and perfectly legitimately - ran him out of road on the exit.
Rosberg said after the race: "It got really close on the exit of Turn Two and I had to back out of it there and that lost me the race.
"I haven't seen it on TV. For sure it was close - I had to avoid a collision - but it is difficult to comment now."
The loss of momentum dropped Rosberg down to fourth behind Vettel and Bottas as Hamilton streaked off into the distance and, with a string of fastest laps, took control of a race he never looked likely to lose.
The victory was the 41st of his career, putting him level in the all-time list with his childhood hero Ayrton Senna.

Rosberg's fight-back

Rosberg and his Mercedes engineers were left to plot how to pass the two cars in front.
He initially tried to pass Bottas on track, but was told that his engine temperatures were getting dangerously high.
So he dropped back and waited for the first pit stops. Bottas stopped early on lap 11, while Rosberg waited for a further four laps, choosing to use his car's extra pace in the clear air.
The German was still behind the Williams when he returned to the track, but he then dived decisively down the inside into the chicane, leaving the Finn no option but to give way.
Rosberg's next target was to do the same to Vettel. This time, Mercedes used the ploy of stopping first and using the extra grip of fresh tyres to gain the necessary time.
Rosberg, who had fitted the slower 'hard' tyres for his middle stint while Vettel was on the faster 'mediums', pitted on lap 29.
Fitting the mediums for his final stint, he did two quick laps, one of them the fastest of the race to that point.
Vettel, who stopped on the next lap to fit the 'hard' tyres, was defenceless and the Mercedes swept by as the Ferrari returned to the track.
The four-time champion kept the pressure on Rosberg for the rest of the race but was unable to seriously threaten.
It was a crucial boost for Rosberg in their battle for second in the championship, extending the Mercedes driver's advantage over Vettel to 11 points.

"Embarrassing" home race for Honda

Behind Bottas, the remaining points positions were taken by Force India's Nico Hulkenberg in sixth, ahead of the Lotus cars of Romain Grosjean and Pastor Maldonado and the Toro Rosso drivers Max Verstappen and Carlos Sainz.
McLaren's Fernando Alonso finished 11th, fighting valiantly throughout against cars whose engines have considerably more power than his Honda.
But the frustration of being repeatedly passed on the straight as a result of a power deficit of at least 100bhp - and sometimes more than 200bhp, depending on whether the Honda's hybrid boost had run out, its biggest weakness - was too much for the double champion.
"I'm being passed down the straights like a GP2," he said over the radio in reference to the F1 feeder category, after a Sauber had passed him. "This is embarrassing, very embarrassing."
Later, after being overtaken by Verstappen, Alonso said, his frustration boiling over: "GP2 engine, GP2. Rarh."
It will do little to quell speculation that Alonso may not drive for McLaren next season, despite only being in the first year of a three-year contract worth $40m a year.