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Sunday, 22 March 2015

Three Thoughts: Luis Suarez's strike lifts Barcelona over Real Madrid


Three Thoughts: Luis Suarez's strike lifts Barcelona over Real Madrid


Every sport is based on a set of established truths – the running game eats up the clock, getting men on base opens the door to a big inning, spells of pressure lead to goals – but when the talent pool is as deep as it was at the Nou Camp tonight, the sporting world’s axis tilts a little. Barcelona and Real Madrid do things differently. Barcelona survived with a tight 2-1 win over its bitter rivals to push them four points ahead in the La Liga standings. Here are three thoughts on the match.
1) El Clásico redefining the rhythms of soccer.
In October’s El Clásico in Madrid,Barça were quickest out of the blocks, dominating the early going and opening the scoring through Neymar after only four minutes. According to traditional sporting logic, a team as gifted as Barcelona, with its big stars on their game, should surely romp to victory.
Not a bit of it. Madrid flexed its muscles, the power and speed of Ronaldo, Benzema, James Rodriguez and the rest proved too much for the visitors, and Carlo Ancelotti’s side romped to a 3-1 win.
There was a similar story of the old teachings being turned upside down tonight. Barcelona’s front three of Messi, Neymar and Suarez came into this game on fire after a sparkling run of recent form, notably the midweek demolition of Man City, perhaps the most dominant 1-0 victory in history. Meanwhile Madrid’s BBC (Gareth Bale, Karim Benzema and Cristiano Ronaldo) strike-force had been struggling. Yet amid the hostile environs of the Camp Nou, Madrid settled more quickly, with Ronaldo smacking a shot against the bar from a Benzema cross, then Isco sliding a drive low past Bravo’s left post.
That was until Messi, against the run of play, floated a free-kick onto Jeremy Mathieu’s shiny forehead and the French Don Draper, sneaking ahead of Sergio Ramos, headed Barça in front. Real’s profligacy had been punished, and the power balance of soccer’s Athens v Sparta had shifted once more.
It would soon shift again. For the second time this season Barcelona were ahead, and on top, against the old enemy. Until Neymar spurned a chance to land the knockout blow, gently lobbing the ball towards Iker Casillas with the goal gaping. It was a fatal miss, as once again one team’s dominance helped spur its opponents on to even greater feats. Madrid scampered down the other end, Luka Modric, Benzema and Ronaldo combined with balletic grace, and Ronaldo’s toe-prod made it 1-1.
That was the signal for the visitors to dominate the rest of the first half and the beginning of the second – which in turn was the signal for another reversal of fortune. Barcelona had hardly had a touch before Dani Alves swung a long pass downfield, and Luis Suarez, who had previously spent most of his time kicking and/or being kicked by Pepe, controlled the ball sublimely and rolled it past Casillas for the winning goal.
All three goals had come against the run of play, and with Neymar and Messi performing fitfully throughout, it could even be argued that Barcelona had not really played that well at any stage of the evening. But El Clásico, with its endless galaxies of galáticos, often pays scant regard to the drudgeries of possession or the tedious toil of building up pressure.
2) Defending and dark arts as important as skill
On the other hand, while it is easy to be blinded by all the attacking luster on display, some of the less glamorous aspects of the game often play as key a role in defining the winners of this fixture.
While it is hard to think of players such as Gerard Piqué and Sergio Ramos as makeweights, the spotlight in Barcelona v Real Madrid games is usually trained firmly on the attacking players. Yet amid the hysteria, it may be that whichever team has defended the best (or the least badly) over the course of the season will win the league this year. While it is hard to separate the two teams in terms of attacking production (Barcelona has scored 80 goals in this La Liga season compared to Madrid’s 78) the Catalan side has now conceded nine goals fewer than the visitors. In an arms race of this intensity, such a slim difference can be crucial.
Here, the game was marked by some initially generous, if not entirely chaotic, defending by both sides. A few minutes in the life of Jeremy Mathieu provided a useful snapshot of proceedings—after scoring Barcelona’s opener, he superbly dispossessed Benzema in a dangerous position, before sending a header alarmingly close to his own goal without a Madrid attacker in sight. It was that sort of game for the defenders, with adrenaline, rather than composure, the dominant characteristic.  
Indeed of the defensive players it was perhaps Barcelona goalkeeper Claudio Bravo who made the most significant contribution. The Chilean made at least two decisive saves – tipping over a Ronaldo rocket with the game locked at 1-1 just before halftime, and then stopping Benzema’s low 78th minute shot. While it is hard to make predictions in a fixture where goals often seem to come at will, had Madrid scored either chance then the final result here may have been different.
Finally, it’s important to mention the card count, which totaled 11. In games as tight as these the slightest advantage can be crucial, and no one should be fooled by the lyrical waxing that surrounds them. El Clásico features as much gamesmanship and as many niggling fouls as any snapping, snarling English league match up from the 1970s, even if things aren’t quite as violent these days.  
3) The La Liga race isn't over yet
With Madrid wobbling and Barcelona in the middle of a spectacular run of form, four points may seem like an insurmountable lead. Barça has won seven games in a row since losing to Malaga at the end of last month, while Carlo Ancelotti’s team has won just one of its last five. The Champions League draw has hardly helped matters – while Barcelona will need to be in top form against PSG, the two ties against the French side are unlikely to be anywhere near as physically and emotionally draining as Madrid’s double header against neighbors Atlético. And with Los Merengues fans appearing to have lost faith in Ancelotti, and rumors circulating that all is not well in the Madrid camp, it may seem that the title is Barcelona’s to lose.
Not necessarily. Barcelona still has to play Sevilla and Atlético away, with Valencia also visiting Camp Nou. And just as during these matches themselves, the balance of power in this Game of a Spanish Throne can switch with bewildering speed. Just a few short months ago, after all, Real Madrid were in the middle of a mammoth unbeaten run, led Barcelona in the standings, and had just lifted the Club World Cup. Ronaldo, not Messi, was the toast of Europe, and Luis Enrique, not Ancelotti, was rumored to be close to the exit door. When the stakes are this high, the climate this hyperbolic, things can change very quickly. Madrid and Ancelotti will be hoping they will.

Friday, 20 March 2015

Opening day of the NCAA tournament again exceeds all expectations

Opening day of the NCAA tournament again exceeds all expectations


The first day of this NCAA tournament was so entertaining, it even stole a storyline from a previous NCAA tournament, just for the hell of it. There was Kevin Ware, who suffered a gruesome leg injury during Louisville’s 2013 title run, playing 29 minutes in 14th-seeded Georgia State’s 57-56 win over third-seeded Baylor.
It was a good thing, too. Without Ware on the floor, we would be stuck talking about the winning coach’s son finishing a 13-0 closing run with a three-pointer that caused his dad, who tore his Achilles tendon in a celebration last week, literally to fall off his chair, and how boring would that be?
This is the beauty of the tournament. You can rail against NCAA hypocrisy and wince at the scandals, but the tournament still seduces you. You can know college basketball so well that you call Robert Morris “Bob,” and the tournament still surprises you.
It would probably be hyperbole to call Thursday the best day in the history of the tournament, but this day certainly wouldn’t have to blush in the presence of any other. There were five one-point games. Five! Out of 15 games! (I don’t countKentucky’s scrimmage with Hampton as a game.) There have never been five one-point games on a single tourney day, and it’s more than the entire tournaments in 2013 and 2014.
Near the end of the night, Wofford missed a three-pointer that would have forced overtime against Arkansas, and I thought, “Well, that would have been exciting 12 hours ago.” The day had spoiled us.
We had two No. 14 seeds beating No. 3s by a single point—along with Georgia State’s win over Baylor, UAB beat Iowa State 60-59. And we almost had a third No. 14 win, when Northeastern pushed Notre Dame down to the final seconds. Of course, Notre Dame losing in basketball is never as satisfying for people as Notre Dame losing in football. It’s like Alabama losing in basketball or the opposing political party losing a race for drain commissioner.

Photo: 
N.C. State beat LSU on a last-second jump hook by BeeJay Anya. Purdue blew a late seven-point lead and lost in overtime to Cincinnati by a point. Harvardalmost beat North Carolina, which would have been one of the great stories in NCAA tournament history just a few years ago, but wasn’t even surprising this time. It would have been interesting, though, to see Harvard coach Tommy Amaker, a Dukie, beat UNC in March.
And we had UCLA and SMU bringing us a dose of insanity, starting with the matchup itself. UCLA’s place in this tournament is a mystery. Even some UCLA fans don’t seem to understand it. But you know what they say about a gift horse: If you walk behind it, watch your step. Also, don’t look it in the mouth. Anyway, after earning a bid by not really earning it, UCLA won its first game by missing a shot at the end, which is sort of perfect, I guess.
Officials called goaltending on SMU’s Yanick Moreira, giving UCLA’s Bryce Alford three points for taking an awful, ill-advised shot. From the overhead angle, it looked like they might have gotten it right, but from the side, it looked awful.
And yet, it is at least possible the officials made the right call. It was one of those refereeing moments when what you see seems grossly unjust, but it may have followed the letter of the rulebook, like when Dez Bryant’s catch was ruled incomplete in Green Bay in January.
Alford’s three-point non-play ended the season for SMU, and also for tortured genius coach Larry Brown, who is 74 and had a heck of a run. I don’t mean he had a heck of a run in his career, or even this season. I mean this week. He only coached one game, but Larry still gave us some classic Larry Brownishness. First he said he is “proud” of former assistant John Calipari, and "I don't want to put pressure on John," then added of Cal’s Kentucky team: “I think they'd honestly make the playoffs in the Eastern Conference if they were in the NBA.”
Why would that put any pressure on John? The only way Larry could have gone more Larry on us is if he added: “And if he loses, I’ll be heartbroken for the game and our profession but also interested in his job.” And speaking of the coaching profession, how about that Jim Boeheim? His team is done but he keeps holding press conferences. That’s media-friendly!
Boeheim began the day with a press conference to let everybody know that the NCAA sanctions against Syracuse are wrong and he is right and why do you guys hate foreigners so much? It was a vintage Boeheim. He doesn’t like practice and doesn’t really watch film, but he goes fist-first into an argument when somebody criticizes him. So many talk-radio callers wish they were coaches. Boeheim is a coach who really wants to call talk radio.
Boeheim also announced this week that he will retire in three years. He hopes likeable longtime assistant Mike Hopkins replaces him, but I wouldn’t count out Larry Brown.
Boeheim probably watches more games than any coach in the country; it is quite possible that, at age 70, he has watched more basketball games for his own enjoyment than any person in history. He just loves it. So I hope that he calmed down from his press conference, sat on his couch and soaked all this in. I hope he saw all of his favorite sport on one of its best days, including R.J. Hunter hitting that shot for Georgia State, and his dad Ron falling down. It was a reminder of the essential truth about college sports: From a distance, they seem so wrong, but up close, who can resist?
Your turn, Friday. Good luck matching what we just saw.

Thursday, 19 March 2015

Tunis museum attack: One Briton killed in shootings


Sooraj_Dooba_Hain_Yaaron_(Roy)_Full_HD. by mohammadkamranrao

Tunis museum attack: One Briton killed in shootings




A British woman was among at least 19 people killed in shootings at a museum in Tunis on Wednesday, UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond has said.
He said Sally Jane Adey had died in the "cowardly terrorist attack".
Two Tunisians and tourists from Japan, Italy, Colombia, Australia, France, Poland and Spain were also among those killed in the attack at the Bardo Museum, Tunisian officials said.
Security forces killed two gunmen but are still searching for accomplices.
Mr Hammond, who is in Nairobi, told the BBC British consular staff were helping Ms Adey's family. "My thoughts are with them at this very difficult time," he added.
"The Tunisian people are rightly proud of their democratic transition. Cowardly attacks, such as the one we saw yesterday, must not be allowed to undermine what they have achieved.
"I spoke to prime minister Habib Essid yesterday to offer my condolences to all those affected by this despicable act and to assure him we stand together against terrorism."
Officials in Tunisia say that more than 40 people, including tourists and Tunisians, were injured.

Empire Showrunner: We Always Planned That Would Happen to Lucious.


Ranjha_-_Deep_Money_Ft._Hard_Kaur_Full_HD. by mohammadkamranrao


Empire Showrunner: We Always Planned That Would Happen to Lucious

Writer Ilene Chaiken says Terrence Howard improvised the final line of the season




Contains spoilers for the finale of Empire that aired on March 18, 2015.



Empire, the most-watched new series in a decade with 15 million viewers, aired its final two episodes of the first season Wednesday night on Fox. TIME spoke with showrunner Ilene Chaiken about the final episodes’ three big twists, the show’sBillboard-topping soundtrack, and Lucious’ final line (which Terrence Howard improvised).



TIME: Let’s start with the fact that Lucious was misdiagnosed with ALS. In a way, you’re changing the whole premise of the show.
I would say we’re not changing the premise, but we are changing the whole dynamic. We’re changing every character’s drive.
When we started, the big thing everyone was talking about was that Terrence Howard was the star, but Terrence’s character had ALS. What’s going to happen? Is he going to die? Are you going to be able to keep him alive for five years? In my first meeting with [creators] Lee Daniels and Danny Strong, Danny was Skyping in from New York. He was on this huge screen in front of the room, so he was very God-like. And he said, “Well I think he was misdiagnosed.” And I said, “Really? You’re going to do that?” And he said, “I’m open to other ideas, but that’s what I think.” And that’s what we did.
Danny was right. And I think we did it in a cool way. We researched it thoroughly and made sure that it was credible. And it’s great because now everything changes. Everybody was operating on this premise that he’s not going to be around much longer, and then here he is and he’s not going away.
Well, except to jail.
Right. He’s arrested. He doesn’t know who set him up. Any number of his family members and associates might have betrayed him. That obviously is another—I’d guess I’d have to call it a cliffhanger.
The other major twist was Lucious choosing Jamal to inherit Empire. Are you happy with his choice?
Well, the writers and Lee and Danny always knew it was going to be Jamal. We wanted to honor the mythology of the King Lear story, and I hope we did.
But what we discovered was that in order to become his father’s heir, Jamal has to actually become a gangster. We talked about Michael Corleone. He starts out as the most moral of the three sons, and in order to be his father’s successor, he has to gangster up a bit. Lee Daniels was especially excited to see a gay character behave in that way and fulfill all of those tropes and show that kind of strength—almost criminal strength.
But it’s not definitive. Even though Jamal stepped up, we’re not sure that he’s ready. He might still be a little tender. That wasn’t our intention necessarily in the beginning, but I’m excited that it happened because it leaves us with a lot of unanswered questions.
More: Empire’s Prime Timing
A lot of people have drawn comparisons between some of the characters on the show and real-life artists, like Tiana and Rihanna or Jamal and Frank Ocean. Is that intentional?
Not explicitly intentional. People suggest Lucious might be Jay Z. There’s no once celebrity he’s based on. But there are definitely reference points for us, and there were references for Lee and Danny when they started the show. We look at people in the real world, and while we don’t replicate them in any way, they give us affirmation about the story we are telling.
It can feel very real—the music especially. Empire’s soundtrack debuted at #1 on Billboard Wednesday, and songs like “Drip Drop” are real hits. How do the writers work together with the music producers to create hits to incorporate into the story?
It’s a whole other layer of storytelling, every bit as meticulously conceived and executed as script, production and post. Sometimes they just bring us a song, and we drop it in. But most of the music starts in the writers’ room with a concept. We give them as much information as we can about the story we’re telling, and then they go to work. They write a song, demo it and bring it back to us. A great number people listen to it and respond based on all the considerations—story, sound, so on.
So for “Drip Drop” we knew we needed a song for Hakeem’s video. It was going to be a big, featured song, so we just said, “Give us a hit.” Timbaland and his team, led by producer and songwriter Jim Beanz, gave us “Drip Drop,” and we loved it.
Sometimes they’re more plot-specific, like “You’re So Beautiful,” Jamal’s coming out song. Jesse Smollett, who plays Jamal, had done a lot of ballads. And he said, “I want to do something more upbeat.” So we co-wrote that song with Jim Beanz, I think. And we loved it, but we hadn’t placed it yet. We knew we were going to tell a story where Jamal comes out by singing a song publicly and changing the gender pronoun, and we decided it would be one of his father’s old hit songs. So then we went back to the songwriters and said, “We need another version that Lucious cut 20 years ago and that he sings to Cookie.”
Daniels and Strong have said the show is, in part, inspired by the high drama of Dallas. Do you ever put something on paper in the writers’ room that then becomes even more outsized when you see it onscreen?
Absolutely. It happens a lot, and I attribute it to the incredible cast. We do a lot of improvisation on our show, and sometimes the best lines are written by the actors.
Any that would surprise the audience?
The very last words of the finale, spoken by Lucious, that was Terrence Howard improvising.
You created The L Word, and when you saw Lee Daniels and Danny Strong’s pilot for Empire, you obviously knew Lucious’ homophobia was going to be a major plot line on the show. Were you ever worried that it would be difficult to make a homophobic character sympathetic?
No. This is Lee and Danny’s story, and one of the first things that they told me when I met with them was: “This is the most important storyline. It’s central. We want to continue to play it, and play it with authenticity and roughness. We don’t want to soften it in any way.”
We all believe we’re in a world and a time where we can put forward characters that are deeply flawed, not always likable, and sometimes even despicable and still relatable and human. And Lucious is such a perfect example of that.