Sunday, June 15, 2008

CoD5, GH4 and Tony Hawks in pipeline

resh off the back of the announcement of its creation, Activision Blizzard has outlined the key titles in its star-studded lineup.

While it must be said the lineup itself contains few surprises, it’s undoubtedly strong. According to a statement released today, the new company’s line up includes James Bond, Guitar Hero IV, Call of Duty 5, a new Tony Hawk title, new DreamWorks and Marvel titles and a new racing game from Bizarre Creations.

As stated, none of those games featured on the list are exactly surprising, but it is a promising lineup all the same. As our review showed, despite being forced to change developer for the third game, the Guitar Hero franchise is still going strong.

Likewise, after the epic Call of Duty 4, it should be interesting to see whether CoD5 (whether it be developed by Infinity Ward or as seems more likely, CoD3 developers Treyarch) can build on this.

In addition to this, Bizarre Creations’ pedigree in the racing genre should all but guarantee that AB’s as yet unknown racer will be nothing short of brilliant.

If Activision Blizzard can round this off with a return to form for Tony Hawk, then things could well be looking good for the new publisher heading into 2008 and beyond.

Call of Duty 5 back to World War II

Those of you who enjoyed the latest Call of Duty’s modern-day approach may be saddened to learn that Treyarch (the dev team responsible for three, and, who will quite possibly end up doing seven) is taking the series back to World War II for the fifth game in the series.

Well, that’s if a job ad on the Treyarch website is anything to go by.

The ad, which is for a level builder, in case you’re interested, doesn’t give away any concrete info as such, but after asking for applicants with “working experience with First-Person Shooter or Third-Person Shooter genres”, does go on to add, “if you’re a fan of World War 2 shooters, then even better!”.

Which if you ask us is a bit of a giveaway. Why would the ad say that if the person lucky enough to bag the job ends up on designing levels for a modern-day or futuristic shooter anyway?

What do you reckon? Are we reading too much into it? Also, what do you make of the step back to WWII? After the success of COD4, is this what you really want? As ever, let us know in the comments section below.

Oh, and cheers to forum user ‘farquad92’ for the heads up. Your stock is rising number 92…

A NEW "PLAYSTATION®EYE" CAMERA PACK

Tokyo, June 3, 2008 – Sony Computer Entertainment Japan (SCEJ), a division of Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. responsible for business operations in Japan, today announced that it would release “PLAYSTATION®Eye” pack for PLAYSTATION®3 (PS3®) in Japan, on July 24, 2008, at a recommended retail price of 5,000 yen (including tax) (*1). This pack comprises PLAYSTATION Eye camera and Memoushon, a software title containing 6 casual interactive content that can be enjoyed in combination with PLAYSTATION Eye camera.

Equipped with a multi-directional microphone, PLAYSTATION Eye camera expands the fun and joy of interactive entertainment that is possible only on PS3. PLAYSTATION Eye camera can be easily connected to PS3 through a USB connector, and can be placed on top of TV sets or below the screen. Users are able to change the camera angle (standard view/ wide angle view) or tilt the camera in order to adjust to its optimum position.

Through PLAYSTATION Eye camera, users are able to enjoy video chat features with up to six members simultaneously (*2) of their families and friends registered in the “Friends” list on PLAYSTATION®Network. By using PLAYSTATION Eye camera and Memoushon together, users are also able to enjoy a variety of casual interactive entertainment in different theme, “Make, Look, Solve, Play, Fly, and Move.” Memoushon contains the following 6 content;

・ “Make”: Software for editing images and sounds recorded through PLAYSTATION Eye camera.


・ “Look”: Interactive virtual aquarium brought to life by the motion sensitive camera, where users can feed fish and watch them glide majestically across the tank.


・ “Solve”: Puzzle game. Users have to change the floor surface of the labyrinth by the movements of their hands and roll the ball to the goal.


・ “Play”: Puzzle action game. Users have to save the “sticky” creatures in the game with the movement of their hands.


・ “Fly”: Interactive art experience that let users travel over ancient Japanese paintings by sending bird flock soaring over the painting, using hands and body movement.


・ “Move”: Interactive art experience that creates visual effects from body movement and sound.

SCEJ will continue to further expand the PS3 platform and create a new world of computer entertainment with enhanced line-up of PS3 platform and accessories, along with upcoming exciting new titles.

Top 10 Tips for Playing in a Band


1. Be on a Winning Team

A band is about working and playing together, so being a good player is fine, but unless you're so phenomenally brilliant that you're in constant demand (sorry, but most of us are not), then it's actually more important to know how to work in a team of people.

Some artists think its cool to be temperamental (half temper and half mental!), but you're making your own life harder than it needs to be if you put up with these people in your band, or even worse, if you're one yourself. Working in a good team can be fantastic (you know: the power of the team is greater than the sum of its individuals). You can get a real buzz when you pull off a successful gig together. In the band, it benefits you, as a band member, to leave space for others to grow, learn and make mistakes.


2. Know the People

Working with people outside the band is also important - know your agents, promoters, employers (the ones who pay you) and your customers (the ones you're playing to). Find out what they want, and treat them as people.

Understand that your average (non-musician) audience will notice more than your music alone.

  • In this order, people will notice:
  • 1st - Your presentation - how you do what you do
  • 2nd - You're appearance - what you look like
  • 3rd - Your music - what you sound like

This is a very uncomfortable concept for many musos. The only way to make your music more noticeable is to be exceptionally brilliant, or exceptionally bad.

Don't despair; performing music live is just a package deal. Don't kid yourself either, that when you play people somehow switch onto a principle that your music is everything, and everything else is nothing.

More importantly music, like all art forms, is about giving. I think the way to enhance the perception of your music is to combine the above three elements into your performance. If you really like the music you play, you'll find it easy to get into the feel of the songs, and that affects the way you look on stage, and allows you to present your music by giving something of yourself by expressing your feelings in a musical form, and making it real and credible experience for yourself and your audience.

This becomes a controversial topic when we stray into less credible musical territory. For example, if your entire audience pleads with you to play The Chicken Dance, would you play it? If not, why not? Would you be concerned about what other band members might think of you and how it might affect your credibility or reputation? Or is it your own pride telling you not to play anything musically trite? Are you above this sort of thing? Even if you never play The Chicken Dance it might be interesting for you to honestly answer some of these questions for yourself.

Then there's the show-band field, where presentation and appearance is intentionally the main focus of the performance. Whether its a Grease revival or your own concept, it usually requires some theatrics and dressing up. This can be a genuine additional artistic outlet for those with acting and dramatic skills, although I think it can be a minefield for musicians who do not have this flair. It again raises questions of credibility and musical integrity.

For what its worth, I recently played 2 shows in a row with the same lineup of musos. The first night was a birthday party, all aged around mid forties. They wanted 70's classics; rock, soul and a dash of blues, which we played. Next night we played at a wedding with ages from teenagers through to 60 year olds. It took us about set to figure it out, but they loved the old corny sing-along hits (like "Singin' the Blues", "Runaway", "Personality" and so on).

Now in my view, what we played the first night had a fair amount of musical credibility, while the second night did not. Nevertheless, our audiences loved the band on both nights, and we will get repeat work out of both shows. I choose to have a great night every night, and enjoy whatever I play, and these 2 nights were no exception.

3. Practice, practice, practice!

Tedious, yes. Rewarding, yes. When I was a boy (get the violins ready!) learning was a challenge. My music teachers taught Beethoven and Mozart, because they believed this was the only real music. Even the cheapo guitars I practiced with were almost unplayable.

Today, every music magazine is packed with playing tips and ideas for every music style you could want. There are instructional videos, and cheap guitars are excellent value and very playable.

So practice, look, learn, listen, read, question, experiment. If you haven't made ten mistakes today, you're not trying hard enough!

4. Know the Songs

There's more to learning a song than working out the chords, solos and lyrics. Know what the songs you play are about, and play something to enhance or create the right mood and tell the story.

You already have the tools at your disposal to create the mood, and make each song unique. Use your effects and techniques to advantage. Obvious effects are good for short periods, subtle effects are good for long periods.

Some examples of obvious effects and techniques are: using a loud echo repeat, a wah pedal, playing with lots of dive-bomb harmonics, or playing a continuous stream of notes without a pause. These can be very effective when used occasionally and briefly, otherwise they can become tiring to listen to. If you set your effects so you can only just tell they're on, you can use them for a long time to add subtle textures to your music.

5. Don't Blame

Don't blame
  • your audience if they don't dance
  • your audience if they don't applaud
  • your employer if you don't get booked again
  • your agent if he can't find the work you want
  • other band members when things go wrong
  • your engineer when you can't hear yourself
  • your equipment when it fails
  • your partner when you've had a rough gig
  • the world when ..................... (fill in the blank)

All of these and more will happen over and over again in your career, and guess what? Blaming makes every one of them worse for you. Every one of these situations is solveable with a positive and philosophical attitude. So use every disappointment as an opportunity to learn to relax (relax I said!, now!), and think calmly about how you can do things differently next song or show.

6. Choose the Right Songs

If your thing is originals, you can skip this one. If you're playing listening music (piano bars, restaurants, etc) then some of this might apply. If you're a dance band playing covers then every song you play should be:
  • well known by your intended audience
  • danceable (without too many tempo changes, avoid fast songs with slow passages)
  • playable (with your current instrument line up and individual abilities)

As much as you might like that track 3 instrumental on the latest Gordon and the Groovers CD, if it doesn't meet all three criteria, then you could learn and play it for your own enjoyment in the privacy of your own rehearsal room. Perform it publicly, and it will just seem irrelevant and self-indulgent, and maybe you'll start to resent that others don't share your own excellent taste in music.

When deciding what material to do, and what key to play it in, the front person has the final say - they are the ones who have the main role of selling the song, and if they're uncomfortable, it will show.

If any player has a rational strong objection to a song, then find another song. If any player has an irrational strong objection to a song, then find another player.

7. Have Fun

If you don't enjoy playing, then don't. Chances are that you do, and you can benefit from one of the best kept secrets in the industry - it's OK to smile! Start practicing this with the corners of your mouth, and when you finally get the nerve, flash a bit of tooth! If you have fun, so will the people you're playing to, then you feed off their energy, they feed off yours, ... and a good time was had by all.

You might also like to think about why you like to play. It is because:
(a) You just like having fun with the band
(b) For artistic expression
(c) For your self-esteem (pride in your own ability to learn and play)

And the correct answer is ... all of the above and more.

I think that if you play for many reasons, it means you are giving more, and in return you'll get more enjoyment back from your music. If you are playing primarily for only one reason, or for the wrong reasons (money?) there's a chance you could benefit by considering some of these ideas.

8. Mix While You Play

When you sing & play, listen to how what you're doing fits into the total band sound. If you have the idea that you just play your own way, and it's the sound engineer's job to mix it into the overall song and make you sound good, then you're short-changing yourself. No sound engineer can mix over-played keyboards with over-played guitar.

Think about these things:

  • Am I leaving enough space in my playing for the others? That notes-per-second meter on Nigel Tufnel's (Spinal Tap) guitar is a joke - trust me on this!
  • Is my stage volume making it hard for other players to hear themselves?
  • Are my stage tones clashing with anyone else?
  • Does what I'm playing contribute to the mood and meaning of the song?

Certainly, thinking about these things at first is distracting, and likely to make it harder for you to get into your own part. Just like practicing scales, though, it gets easier, until you can do it without even consciously thinking about it. That's when you really start playing as a band! You will start to bounce off each other's cues. Individuals can lead the band into places you've never been before, communicating with music alone!

9. Take Care of Your Body

I've heard 'em all:
  • "I play best when I'm wasted"
  • "I'm always in the right mood after 3 scotches"
  • "I need to smoke to get the high notes"
Yeah, maybe, ... and maybe not.

I'm not a wowser (Australian term for one who expresses personal disapproval of others' actions); I reckon just about anything in moderation is a good thing. My point here is that (recent science experiments aside) we have only one body in our lifetime, so its worth looking after.

If you're serious about a music career, then you'll need to be physically fit and have your head together. This is the only way I know to give an energetic and focused performance, and (I've said it before) the more you give ...

10. Love and Trust Yourself

You don't have to prove this to anyone except yourself. Just like being physically fit, this is about being mentally and emotionally fit. Know what you want to do now and in the future, and work towards your goals. Trust your own intuition and your own judgement.

Some people tell me I'm lucky because I get lots of opportunities. I tell them I make my own opportunities and I make my own luck. Think and talk about good things, and good things happen.

You can easily spot a pessimist; when things go wrong, they say "That's typical for me!", but when things go well they say it was just a fluke. This is just plain unhealthy. Be optimistic; treat every setback as temporary. Treat every success as typical.

You may have heard of the story of two guys at a bar with half a glass of beer. One sees a glass half full, the other sees a glass half empty. Remind yourself often of your skills and achievements - that's your half a glass. The rest of the glass is for the new skills you're going to learn, and the new things you'll do. It looks different already, doesn't it?

Wounded Tiger rallies to lead U.S. Open


SAN DIEGO, California (AP) -- With unbearable pain and three unforgettable shots, Woods turned in one of his most memorable performances in a major and somehow took a one-shot lead over Lee Westwood at the U.S. Open on Saturday.

Right when some 50,000 fans at Torrey Pines thought they had seen it all, Woods knocked in a 30-foot eagle on the 18th hole for a 1-under 70 and his first 54-hole lead in the U.S. Open since he won at Bethpage Black in 2002.

That he made it to the finish line was nearly as impressive as a magical array of shots.

His tender left knee first buckled on the 15th hole, and Woods used his club as a cane to get down the fairway, limping along while trying to stay in the hunt. He played the final six holes in 4 under -- and that included a bogey -- and will play in the final group for the sixth time in the last eight majors.

This time he has the lead, and he has never lost a major from the front.

But he has never won a major with a limp, either.

"Is it getting worse? Yes, it is," said Woods, playing for the first time since surgery April 15 to clean out cartilage in his left knee. "Certain shots, I'll feel it. I can't say it's a drive, can't say it's a wedge. I'm not sure what shot it's going to happen on."

Woods was at 3-under 210, one of only three players still under par.

As spectacular as Woods played, Westwood got it done with steady golf so often required at this major. He holed a short birdie putt on the par-5 13th and finished with six straight pars, missing a 4-foot birdie on the last hole for a 70. The 35-year-old from England has never had this good an opportunity in a major.

"It will be nice going out last tomorrow and having a chance," Westwood said.

Rocco Mediate, trying to become the oldest U.S. Open champion at age 45, looked as though he would leave everyone behind when he made an 8-foot birdie putt on No. 10 to reach 4-under and kept putting his shots in the fairway and on the green.

But a three-putt bogey on the 13th was the start of a four-hole stretch that he played 4-over par. That included a chip he bladed over the green and into a bunker for double bogey on the 15th. He had to settle for a 72 and was at 1-under 212.

Woods, grimacing with every step over the final hour in sunshine, lightly pumped his fist and smiled when his 30-foot eagle on the final hole broke sharply to the right down the hill and straightened in time to fall into the cup for his third eagle of the tournament.

advertisement

There were other reasons to look so content.

"I'm done," Woods said. "It was nice that I could finish this round."(CNN)

A year under Hamas: Gaza safer, but life is desperate


Editor's note: Saturday marks one year since Hamas' defeat of Fatah in the fierce struggle for control of Gaza. CNN correspondent Ben Wedeman has been covering the region for over 15 years. He reports from Gaza on daily life and reality over the past year in this fractious land.

GAZA CITY, Gaza (CNN) -- "If you take pictures, I'll kill you! I'll kill you!" screamed a masked Fatah gunman, pointing his AK-47 assault rifle at my cameraman, Joe Duran.

"Calm down! Calm down!" I shouted back at him, turning to Joe to tell him to put the camera down.

Joe and I had ducked into a fruit and vegetable shop in Gaza City. We had been covering the funeral of a Fatah gunman killed in a clash with Hamas rivals when our third gunbattle of the day had broken out.

The gunman left, much to everyone's relief, and I put my small video camera on the floor and pressed the button to record the constant roar of machine gun fire, which went on for more than half an hour.

Earlier in the day, Joe and I were on a street corner videotaping Hamas militiamen when a jeep full of Fatah irregulars opened fire, just down the street from an elementary school.

As guns blazed, schoolchildren ran for cover.

I watched as shopkeeper Khadar Aliyan slammed shut the doors of his grocery store, the expression on his face one of fear and utter exasperation.

"I'm going home," he told me. "I'm afraid. We're done for. It's never been this bad."

It was violence like this, which we witnessed on December 2006, that reached a climax in the second week of June 2007.

When it ended on June 14, 2007, with Hamas roundly defeating Fatah, Gaza went quiet.

And quiet -- relative quiet, that is -- has been Hamas' biggest accomplishment since. No longer do you worry about being kidnapped. Gunbattles, though they can happen, are much less common.

After last June's takeover (or coup d'etat, as Fatah supporters call it), Hamas quickly imposed law and order, tried to reacquaint Gaza's drivers with long-forgotten traffic regulations, launched a municipal cleanup campaign, and forced the release of kidnapped BBC journalist Alan Johnston, who had been held in captivity for almost six months.

Chaos-weary Gazans applauded all of these initiatives. But the honeymoon ended quickly as reality sank in.

Since Hamas won parliamentary elections in January 2006, and even more so since last year's takeover, Israel has tightened its siege of Gaza.

Israel has restricted supplies of gasoline, diesel and electricity to Gaza, limited the amount of food and other goods entering the strip, and made it virtually impossible for manufacturers and farmers in Gaza to export anything to the outside world.

Israeli officials say these measures are intended to pressure Hamas, which is on the U.S. government list of terrorist groups, to stop its members and other factions from firing mortars and rockets into Israel. Israel Defense Forces reports that 1,500 Qassam rockets were fired into Israel from Gaza in 2007, and 2,383 in the past six years.

As a result, almost all of Gaza's factories have shut down and thousands of workers have lost their jobs.

Between 70 and 80 percent of the population is dependent on food supplied by the United Nations Refugee Works Agency, set up after more than 700,000 Palestinians became refugees after the war that resulted in Israel's creation in 1948.

Life in Gaza, never easy, in the last year has become a grinding daily struggle to make ends meet.

For the vast majority of Gazans, it means they must spend much of their time trying to secure basic commodities. Such as cooking gas, which comes from Israel.

In the past, when supplies were plentiful, it was sold from the back of trucks and donkey carts. Not anymore.

When there are supplies, people flock to a few distribution centers. One is a hot, crowded compound north of Gaza City, where the stench of gas is so strong you shudder with fear that someone will light a cigarette and the whole place will go up in flames.

People have to wait for their cooking gas for hours some claim days, in the hot sun.

There I met a woman who identified herself as Um Wadi'a (the mother of Wadi'a), who at 2 p.m. told me she had been waiting since 5 a.m. She said she had run out of cooking gas three days before.

Typical of so many people here, she blamed both main Palestinian factions for her woes.

"Hamas hasn't done anything for us, nor has Fatah," she said. "All those people want is to sit comfortably on their thrones."

In Gaza City, long lines of immobile cars and trucks wind around the block from gas stations, their owners waiting, surprisingly patiently, for supplies to arrive.

The only other option is to go in search of black market gasoline, much of it smuggled through tunnels from Egypt. It goes for more than $10 a liter, which comes close to almost $50 a gallon.

It is now common for families to divide up responsibilities for the day. One family member will go in search of cooking gas, another will join the line for gasoline or diesel, another for whatever else is in short supply.

To get around the shortages, some motorists mix their fuel with cooking oil, a practice that isn't particularly good for the motor. Many people complain that it's unhealthy -- but it works.

Others, like electrical engineer Wasim Khazandar, are thinking completely outside the box. Wasim has invented an electric car, which he is more than happy to show off. He's already received dozens of orders from motorists weary of the search for fuel.

Beyond material concerns, there are worries here that Hamas has a barely concealed hardline Islamist agenda, and one often hears complaints that the group is intolerant of any form of dissent or criticism.

One man who can testify to that is Ibrahim Abu Al-Naja, the most senior Fatah leader to remain in Gaza after most fled to safety in Ramallah.

Abu Al-Naja is from the Fatah old school, a grizzled veteran of the group's wars in Lebanon.

He told me earlier this year Hamas security officials showed up at his home late at night, bound his hands, put a blindfold on him and dragged him to their headquarters, where they shaved his head and cut off his moustache, then released him without apology or explanation.

He makes no excuses for Fatah's dismal track record of corruption and mismanagement when it ran Gaza, but says the crisis that began with Hamas' rise to power is nothing short of a catastrophe.

"Our people has been transformed," he said, "into a desperate people, who must search for food, for the minimum of survival. It's as if we returned to 1948, dependent on gifts and assistance and relief."

Despite all the difficulties of life under Hamas, despite all the grumbling, the men who run Gaza are as confident today as they were a year ago that they will weather the crisis and emerge stronger.

Last Wednesday I went to see Ahmed Yusif, a senior adviser to Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniya.

"Whatever the Israelis think," said the U.S.-educated Yusif, "whatever pressure they put on us, it's not going to make us buckle or give concessions.

"This is part of the Palestinian struggle for more than 60 years living in the refugee camps," he said. "We don't always enjoy a good life. It's the toughness and the suffering [that] are part of the struggle."

Others here don't quite see it that way, like a man I met in Gaza's old market who would only identify himself as Abu Khalid.

I asked him if he was better off today than a year ago. He laughed, cursed Israel, Hamas, Fatah, the United States, the European Union and the rest of the world, then made the following suggestion: "Let them open a market in Gaza so we can sell some of our children [in order to] feed the rest."(CNN)

ICAI to design global curriculum

Fri, 13 Jun, 2008,12:19 PM
.

The Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICAI) in partnership with State governments is in the process of setting up centres of excellence to produce accounting professionals of global standards.

Proactive initiatives to align the CA profession with the emerging global order and business environment were being taken by the ICAI.

.

In this regard, a three-month residential course for those who had recently passed the Final exams or nearing their completion has been started from 28 April. This short-term programme focused on personality, professional skills, inter-personal skills, team work and problem solving ability among CA students.

Campus recruitment has also been planned for students joining the programme which was being administered by the National Institute of Financial Management (NIFM). The participation of the three-month course would be treated as equivalent to articled training.

In view of the growing popularity of the CA course in foreign countries, the persons of Indian origin who have settled abroad were keen to pursue CA curriculum designed by the ICAI.

The Council at its meeting has approved guidelines for permitting students to do their articleship outside India.

However, in order to ensure the quality of training, certain requirements have to be fulfilled by CA members who were into training students for articleship.

Chartered accountants were eligible to train articled students provided their main occupation was the practice of accountancy at the time of engaging the students and also during each year of the qualifying years on the basis of which they could claim eligibility to train the budding professionals. On the idea of setting up centres of excellence in India,

ICAI president Ved Jain said Rajasthan and Karnataka had allotted land for establishing the facility. Rajasthan had given 25 acres of land and Karnataka 10 acres of its land, he said.

The Council has approved the setting up of a chapter of the institute in New York.

The chapter would act as a bridge between the ICAI and the accountancy bodies in host countries to open up professional opportunities for its members.

At present, the apex body has chapters in Saudi Arabia, Botswana, Nigeria, Riyadh, Botswana, London, Sydney and Muscat.

Ved Jain said that the institute was working on an international course in CA by incorporating country-specific company and taxation laws starting with West Asia.

He said the curriculum had been revised to keep the students abreast of latest developments in the accountancy.

Jain said the decision to allow CAs to advertise their services would benefit small and medium practitioners to raise their brand visibility in the competitive market.

To address various issues relating to public finance, the Council has formed committees at both Central and State levels which would analyse the budgetary expenditure, welfare schemes and end use of such funds.

As part of its social responsibility, the institute would be joining hands with State governments to implement economic policies with financial disclosures and assist them in ensuring accountability in the deployment of public money, Jain said

Rehhagel realistic after Greece KO


Guus Hiddink praised his team's reaction in their 1-0 Group D victory over European champions Greece but felt that missed chances could have cost Russia three points. For Otto Rehhagel, the disappointment of watching the holders relinquish their European crown was made slightly less painful by seeing the effort his players put in.

Otto Rehhagel, Greece coach
It was a very intense match. Our team played better today than against Sweden. Unfortunately it's not new that we struggle to score goals and that's why we wanted to start with a tight defence too so we could go the distance and try to score. We're not the type of team that can score three in a game. What I did like was the passion of my team and the fact that they fought hard in spite of the strength of the Russians. I myself played against Russian teams many times and I know that they are all sprinters and outstanding players. We obviously wanted to do better but we were also in the same group as Spain and Sweden and I knew we would not be able to just waltz through this. The most important thing is to have seen the dedication from the players; they fought until the last moment. I told the guys they have to invest themselves and give their all and they did that but we lost. I can't criticise anyone, we lost to a very good team with great forwards. Anyone else who has to face Russia will have a rude awakening. Back in 2004 a miracle happened and that only happens once every 30 years or so. If it happened all the time we wouldn't call it a miracle would we? Now we have to focus on the match against Spain, it's our duty and our obligation to play as well as we can.

Guus Hiddink, Russia coach
I am very proud of them. We had some good, tense sessions to see how the players would react [after the 4-1 loss to Spain]. I'm happy with the reaction because this result is a consequence of good football but defensively everyone did their job as well. There were some mistakes that could have caused some problems but maybe I'm being a bit too critical. It's a normal law in the game that when you miss chances things might end up going wrong for you. We should have killed the game with our speedy attacks and at international level when you create five or six chances you have to take them. We are outsiders in the group because we don't have as much experience as the other teams but outsiders can also do a job. We have problems with [Yuri] Zhirkov and [Diniyar] Bilyaletdinov and I don't know if they will be resolved in the next few days, so in relation to [Andrei] Arshavin coming back, it's always great to have good players in the squad. We can be better, we still have to learn that we must fight and demand things from each other. It's a huge experience for the players. Russian football is developing and it's important that the team plays well.

Sneijder and Co earn right to party


Wesley Sneijder said the Netherlands were planning "a small party" after claiming top spot in Group C with a 4-1 triumph against France in Berne.

'Pure pleasure'
Sneijder collected his second Carlsberg Man of the Match award of the finals at the full-time whistle after Marco van Basten's side undid the 2006 FIFA World Cup finalists – with the 24-year-old applying the coup de grâce of a tremendous late strike. "This is great, this is pure pleasure," the midfielder said. "The [3-0 win] against Italy was a fantastic game, and today we did exactly the same [in winning by three goals]. We must enjoy this win."

Pressure off
The Real Madrid CF player was pleased that the Oranje could go into Wednesday's final group match against Romania with the pressure off. "If we had lost today, and also against Romania, then we would have had nothing. But we are through now so we can have a small party, but not too much because we have to play the quarter-finals soon." Asked if there would be singing on the team bus tonight, he added: "I don't know yet, we'll just wait and see."

'Just superb'
The result confirmed the Netherlands as the tournament's form team, following up their scalp of world champions Italy. "This is just superb – six points after two games. Italy and France are not the smallest teams. This gives us a lot of confidence. I believe we have a lot of individual class, but the most important thing is that we are a real team – everyone works very hard. That is a great compliment to the team. Also, the players that were brought in adapted to the play perfectly."

Balance tipped
Jerzy Engel, representing the UEFA Technical Team who decided on the Man of the Match after noting the outcome of the online vote on euro2008.com, admitted that Sneijder had been one of a number of star players on show. "It was very difficult to make a decision," said the former Poland coach. "At the end, we were looking at three players – at Franck Ribéry, at Arjen Robben and at Sneijder, who was the architect of the game. When he scored the goal at the end, it tipped the balance in his favour."

'Festival of football'
Nonetheless, Engel felt credit deserved to be widely shared for what was a tremendous tie. "It was a festival of football – not only because of the game, but because of the supporters of both sides. The France team played their part and made some fantastic moves, so there were fantastic actions from both teams. We had fantastic effort from the players and fantastic work from the coaches, because the changes they made really changed the picture of the game. Everything beautiful that you have in football you had in this game today."

Villa proud to be Spain's saviour





David Villa said his added-time winner against Sweden made him feel "prouder" than his opening hat-trick against Russia as Spain progressed to the quarter-finals of UEFA EURO
2008™ as the winners of Group D.

Pride
The Carlsberg Man of the Match not only handed his country a dramatic 2-1 victory in Innsbruck but also reclaimed his place as the tournament's outright top goalscorer. The 26-year-old said of his strike: "To tell you the truth I am prouder of this goal than the three I got the other day. Today, the adrenalin was exploding. I'm so happy to score, even if I get just one I'm very happy." The Valencia CF striker was a threat throughout, but his most important contribution came in the second minute of injury time when he latched on to a Joan Capdevila through ball, skipped past Petter Hansson and finished expertly past Andreas Isaksson.

Dreams realised
"I won't be able to forget this day, nor any of the last few days," added Villa. "I always dreamed about it, but we have to be realistic, it's tough playing two games like this. The main thing is that the team has won both games; the three points, and the fact that Spain are in the next phase please me most of all." Villa has now scored 18 goals in 33 appearances for La Furia Roja but knows Sweden had given his side a sterling test: "We found it tough but deserved to win even if was in the last minute."

'Outstanding players'
Both Roy Hodgson and Jean-Paul Brigger of the UEFA Technical Team – who selected the Man of the Match award after viewing the online vote on euro2008.com – agreed that Villa made the telling difference. "He was the match-winner," said Brigger. "He scored a fantastic goal at the end of the game when it was not an easy time to score. He played really well together with [Fernando] Torres – they are both outstanding players and he is always dangerous. He fought for the team and battled to find a way through."


Mellberg in contention
The FIFA technical director went on to explain there were other candidates, but Villa's late effort tipped the balance. "We had [Olof] Mellberg as a contender too – he organised Sweden's defence with his experience against Torres and Villa which could not have been easy. Marcos Senna put in an outstanding performance too, but in the end David made the difference so we had to go with him."

Spain's chance
Spain were also imperious in the group stage of the FIFA World Cup before falling to France once the tournament reached the knockout stage, and Villa is eager to avoid a repeat in Austria and Switzerland. "We have to go on as this doesn't give us any right to anything," he said, adding of potential future opponents: "You can't compare one team with another – everyone has strengths and weaknesses. We'll see what happens."(euro2008.com)

see more

World Today Announcement


A powerful earthquake in the north of Japan Saturday has killed two people, officials say.

The 7.0 magnitude quake had its epicentre in Akita prefecture at a depth of 10 kilometers, the US Geological Survey said.

.

The tremor shook entire towns in the area and caused building to sway in the capital Tokyo.

Media reports say all high speed Bullet Trains shut down automatically and nuclear power plants were not affected.

Televison pictures showed images from surveillance cameras that shuttered for more than 30 seconds.

The quake came just seconds after a warning from seismologists.

Japan is one of the world's most earthquake-prone countries and experiences thousands of minor tremors each year.(News Today)

Search something???

Custom Search

Clock & Date

Translater