Saturday, December 28, 2013

M11 driver has 'incredible escape'

M11 Christmas Eve crash driver has 'incredible escape'

Scene of car crash on M11 The vehicle was effectively "sliced" in half by the collision said the Essex fire service

A driver had an "incredible escape" from serious injury after a car was "sliced" in two when it hit a sign on the M11, Essex Fire Service has said.

The vehicle left the road and collided with a large motorway sign at junction 9a near Great Chesterford at about 14:00 GMT on Tuesday.

No-one was trapped in the vehicle when fire crews from Cambridge, Newport and Saffron Walden arrived.

Firefighters gave first aid to two people at the scene.

Nigel Webb, Saffron Walden incident commander, said the impact had "effectively sliced the vehicle in half sending the front of the vehicle into the nearside bushes and the rear half onto the hard shoulder".

He added that it was "simply an incredible escape for the driver".

Scene of M11 car crash Five fire crews attended the crash on the M11 on Christmas Eve

FA asks Rodgers to explain comments

27 December 2013 Last updated at 18:32

Brendan Rodgers: FA contacts Liverpool boss over ref comments

The Football Association has contacted Liverpool boss Brendan Rodgers to ask him to explain comments concerning his criticism of referee Lee Mason.

Rodgers said the officials' performance in Liverpool's 2-1 Boxing Day defeat by Manchester City was "horrendous".

He also queried the decision to give the game to the Bolton referee.

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"I was surprised that we are playing in Manchester and we had a referee from Greater Manchester"

Brendan Rodgers Speaking straight after Boxing Day's game

The FA will seek Rodgers' observations before deciding whether to act, and the Liverpool manager must respond by 2 January.

He defended his comments at his press conference on Friday ahead of Liverpool's Premier League match away to Chelsea.

"I certainly wasn't questioning the integrity of referees," Rodgers said. "It was more than logical [to question] having a referee from that part of the world [get] a game in Manchester."

After the match at the Etihad Stadium, Rodgers was angry that Raheem Sterling had a goal wrongly ruled out for offside and felt Luis Suarez was denied a late penalty.

Rodgers said: "Hopefully we won't have a Greater Manchester referee with Liverpool-Manchester games in future.

"We had nothing that went our way at all."

Bolton is only 16 miles away from the Etihad Stadium, and Rodgers said: "I was surprised that we are playing in Manchester and we had a referee from Greater Manchester.

"I was surprised when I saw it but that's by the by.

"For Liverpool against Manchester City, I don't think we'd get an official from Wirral."

The FA must decide whether Rodgers is in breach of rule E3 (1), which deals with comments made about a match official which could be argued imply bias, attack the officials' integrity or are personally offensive in nature.

Liverpool were top of the Premier League at the start of Boxing Day, but dropped to fourth after City's comeback victory.

Manuel Pellegrini's side fought back from Philippe Coutinho's opener to move within a point of leaders Arsenal after goals from Vincent Kompany and Alvaro Negredo.

The defeat for Liverpool leaves them three points adrift of Arsenal, who beat West Ham, with City second and Chelsea third.

Rodgers was particularly infuriated by the decision against Sterling, who put the ball in the net after being incorrectly flagged offside when the game was still goalless.

He also claimed Suarez had his shirt pulled by Manchester City defender Joleon Lescott inside the home penalty area in the late stages.

"I never go on about officials but I thought they were horrendous," he said.

"The linesman gave Raheem offside in the first half but they were not even on the same cut of grass. If you are working at this level, you have got to get those right.

"I'm asking young players to make those runs, he does it perfectly, and is given offside.

"There was another incident in the second half when Luis should have had a free-kick on the edge of the box and arguably there was a penalty late on.

"Luis can't jump because (Lescott's) tugging at his shirt."

Mason has officiated at the Etihad before - a Carling Cup semi-final in January 2012 which Liverpool won 1-0, courtesy of a Steven Gerrard penalty.

On that occasion, City's then-manager Roberto Mancini was furious with Mason for failing to punish a two-footed tackle by Glen Johnson on Lescott.

City boss Pellegrini said he was happy with his team's response to Coutinho's opener and their handling of in-form Suarez.

The Uruguay striker, who again captained Liverpool in the absence of injured skipper Steven Gerrard, had scored 10 goals in his previous four games heading into the match.

"It is not easy when you face such a difficult team, especially on the counter-attack when you are losing 1-0," Pellegrini said.

"I think today we defended very well especially against Suarez."

A very sorry state of affairs at Cardiff

27 December 2013 Last updated at 17:54

Cardiff City: Malky Mackay sacking is a very sorry state of affairs

 

So Malky Mackay's "foreseeable future" at Cardiff City lasted the grand total of five days before the uneasiest truce in football was broken by owner Vincent Tan.

The Scot's sacking as manager - despite only guiding Cardiff into domestic football's top tier for the first time since 1962 in April - was inevitable once he declined Tan's emailed invitation to resign earlier this month rather than be fired.

Chairman Mehmet Dalman spoke publicly about his attempts to broker peace in the fractured relationship but his declaration that Mackay would remain manager "until something else happens" did not exactly carry the ring of certainty.

That "something else" was presumably the 3-0 home defeat by Southampton on Boxing Day, played out against a backdrop of protests aimed at Tan, who has alienated a large body of Cardiff's support.

The appeals of passionate fans for their popular boss to be given more time have gone unheeded.

It is a sad state of affairs for a club and its supporters who should instead be enjoying life in the Premier League.

Mackay is unlikely to be on the managerial margins for long and he has left much for Cardiff's followers to remember him by since his appointment from Watford in June 2011.

He guided Cardiff to the Carling Cup final at Wembley within a year, when they were desperately unlucky to lose 3-2 on penalties to Liverpool after a thrilling 2-2 draw.

Mackay then took Cardiff into the promised land and perhaps the sweetest victory of all, a 1-0 win against Swansea City in the first top-flight derby between the clubs in November.

His side also beat Manchester City and held Manchester United to a draw.

The cracks, however, had already started to appear and were apparent to those of us who attended that victory against Swansea when Mackay dedicated the win to almost everyone at Cardiff, with the exception of Tan.

Mackay was already feeling undermined by the unceremonious removal of his trusted head of recruitment Iain Moody, who was instrumental in bringing in key summer signings such as Steven Caulker and Gary Medel, and his subsequent replacement by 23-year-old Alisher Apsalyamov, who had been on work experience at Cardiff last summer and was a friend of Tan's son.

The Kazakh eventually left the club following issues surrounding a work visa - all adding to what appeared to be a toxic atmosphere between the club's owner and a manager who was increasingly isolated and under threat.

BBC reporter Pat Murphy revealed that Tan had tried to intercede and influence tactics during matches, only to be ignored by Mackay.

But once details of the infamous "resign or be sacked" email emerged it was clear Mackay was on borrowed time, with the manager himself admitting he expected to be fired after the loss at Liverpool before Christmas.

Now Tan must find a replacement willing to work under his terms and in an atmosphere filled with hostility and discontent against the owner.

Mackay's success meant Tan managed to pull off a change of Cardiff's famous "Bluebirds" colours to red last year - many protested but the club was heading in the right direction so it went ahead.

Tan has had no such luck convincing supporters of the wisdom of sacking Mackay and it is difficult to see what sort of appointment he can pull off to turn things back in his favour.

Sven-Goran Eriksson, inevitably, has been mentioned, along with former Manchester United striker Ole Gunnar Solskjaer - currently managing in Norway - and Basel coach Murat Yakin - but the man the fans wanted in charge has now departed.

Mackay is a popular figure within football and his reputation is unstained as he is seen as the victim of the piece. It is unlikely he will be out of work for long.

There should also be regret for Tan too. He provided the finances to bankroll Cardiff's march into the Premier League but it seems he was unable to resist what those followers regarded as seismic change: first off the pitch; now on it.

Tan deserves credit for his financial backing. It is unlikely Cardiff would be where they are without that support but this will now be overshadowed, probably permanently, by what so many supporters regard as Mackay's shoddy treatment.

Those seeking logic in Tan's move draw parallells between Southampton's sacking of Nigel Adkins in January after he had taken the club from League One to the Premier League with successive promotions.

The replacement of Adkins by Argentine Mauricio Pochettino has seen results improve on the pitch and led to executive chairman Nicola Cortese being hailed by some as a visionary for making that ruthless change.

The problem for Tan is that sort of lightning may not strike twice and if Cardiff drop back into the Championship on his watch there is no doubt where their fans will point the finger of blame.

Many Cardiff supporters feel there is a basic human element to this story.

Mackay has taken Cardiff to Wembley, the Premier League and has given them some of their happiest times in his relative short spell in charge. They simply do not understand how he deserves to be dismissed.

More may emerge in the coming days but for now Cardiff City - when everyone connected with the club should be enjoying the Premier League ride - is in very public turmoil.

And that is a very sorry state of affairs.

 

Comments

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  • rate this
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    Comment number 20.

    Cardiff might well have been close to the relegation zone, but its all relative. Cardiff have 10 other clubs who are in and around the same boat as them, and there are heaps of games left to play, what else do you expect from a newly promoted club?
    Cardiff's only goal was to stay above the 3 clubs at the bottom, or stay in contention, they were WELL on their way to doing that.
    Cardiff =new QPR!

  • rate this
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    Comment number 19.

    Tan has a lot of money. Therefore, he, like all other wealthy owners, will always do exactly what he wants to do. No one in football administration, such as FA, would ever dream of deterring wealth from coming into english football. There have been many such situations already, of course, and there will be many more. These men care nothing at all what fans think.

  • rate this
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    Comment number 18.

    Nothing against Solskjaer, he has done well in the Norwegian league, but....Steve Clarke's free, WBA played well and Cardiff could do with some flair in their play. To that end I'm not surprised MM has gone though I thought the handling of it abysmal. I wish him well.

  • rate this
    +1

    Comment number 17.

    This is modern football. Owners come into a club with lofty ideas and think they can do whatever they want. Guess what? They pretty much can.
    Tan is typical of the no idea what i'm doing brigade who probably thinks he can run it in the same way as his other businesses. Well he will be in for a shock because football has a habit of taking money (Iots of it) from people who haven't a clue.

  • rate this
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    Comment number 16.

    @8, exactly. Cardiff first, now Hull. These new owners are megalomaniacs of the first order and treat clubs as just another marketing wing of their empires. The naysayers who claim they are no different from old style chairman, forget that they could be got rid of by concerted action, and their crackpot schemes were defeated nine times out of ten. As we have seen, owners cannot be stopped.

 

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