Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Melo wins 'Golden Bin' award


The worst signing at the halfway stage of the Serie A season belongs to Juventus midfielder Felipe Melo.

According to Rai “Castersport”, Melo received 22.87 per cent of the vote and finished just ahead of Inter's Ricardo Quaresma.

Another Juventus layer, Tiago, came in third.

Since the prize was inaugurated in 2003, Inter have seen two of their players receive the Bidone d'Oro, the first being Adriano in 2006 and 2007, the second being Quaresma last year.

Juventus have only collected the award once before way back in 2004. Nicola Legrottaglie was judged to have been a flop following his move from Chievo.

West Brom 2-2 QPR


West Brom striker Simon Cox denied QPR a memorable victory with a 94th-minute equaliser which saved the Coca-Cola Championship high-flyers from a second successive home defeat.

Manager Jim Magilton was absent for the first time following his suspension pending an internal investigation into an incident at Vicarage Road last week involving Akos Buzsaky.

The Hungary international was not in Rangers' matchday 18 at The Hawthorns due to injury, but temporary managers Steve Gallen and Marc Bircham looked to have enjoyed a debut to remember.

For all Albion's dominance they failed to punish the visitors and a Jonas Olsson own goal was quickly followed up on the hour mark by Kaspars Gorkss' header.

But West Brom never gave up and Jerome Thomas reduced the deficit before Cox's late, late leveller.

The result leaves Rangers without a win in eight games while second-placed Albion have stretched their advantage over the chasing pack to four points.

QPR keeper Radek Cerny endured a nightmare start as he made a complete hash of three attempted clearances. But he was not alone in looking unsettled as the majority of his team-mates looked at sixes and sevens during the opening stages.

The first chance of the encounter fell to Cox after 15 minutes but he could only head Joe Mattock's left-wing cross straight at Cerny from close range when he really should have done better.

Impressive on-loan midfielder Adel Taarabt forced a solid parry from Dean Kiely at the other end, who was taking his place between the sticks due to Scott Carson's suspension.

Despite his nervy start, Cerny proved his worth for the visitors after 26 minutes when he got half a hand on Thomas's shot after he found himself one on one.

And then with the ball trickling to the line, the Rangers stopper recovered to his feet to push it to safety.

Gianni Zuiverloon fired well over when played into a great position by some neat approach play and an incisive throughball from Chris Brunt - summing up the first half in a single move.

The visitors barely managed to get out of their own half in the early stages of the second half but, in similar fashion to the opening 45 minutes, some stout defending and a lack of quality in the final third ensured it remained goalless.

And the Baggies were made to pay for their wastefulness in front of goal in the 56th minute.

Ben Watson whipped in a corner and Olsson, under pressure from Gorkss, diverted an unfortunate header over Graham Dorrans on the line and into the top corner.

Tottenham man Taarabt almost made it 2-0 just minutes later as Kiely produced a superb fingertip save to divert his 25-yard strike on to the angle of bar and post.

But the visitors did double their advantage just after the hour mark.

Watson floated a free-kick goalwards from a central position which evaded everyone.

Yet Kiely could only palm the ball into the onrushing Mattock and it subsequently fell for Gorkss to head into an empty net.

Out of nowhere the game had exploded to life and West Brom reduced the arrears just five minutes later when the Rangers defence failed to clear Brunt's knock down and Thomas pounced to smash home his sixth league goal of the season.

Albion applied a host of pressure in the closing 15 minutes with Zuiverloon's header clipping the outside of a post and Cox forcing a great stop from Cerny.

And it was the latter who rescued a dramatic point for West Brom when he pounced from close range deep into injury time.

Portuguese Liga Review


A second-half goal by substitute Roberto saw Guimaraes edge out Belenenses in the Portuguese Liga.

The Brazilian struck just a minute after replacing Melo Rui Miguel to score the only goal of the game as the visitors claimed their fourth win of the season and condemned their hosts to their fifth defeat.

Belenenses' night deteriorated further when Andre Almeida was sent off 10 minutes from time.

The result sees Guimaraes climb to ninth in the table but Belenenses are deep in trouble, just two points off the bottom.

Yanina Wickmayer and Xavier Malisse have doping ban suspended by Belgian court


A Belgian court on Monday suspended the one-year bans imposed on Yanina Wickmayer and Xavier Malisse for violating anti-doping rules.

Wickmayer's lawyers hope the injunction will make 16th-ranked player eligible to resume her career as soon as possible. The US Open semi-finalist hopes to receive a wild card for the Australian Open.

Wickmayer and Malisse were suspended by a Belgian court on Nov 5 for breaking World Anti-Doping Agency rules by failing to report their whereabouts for drug testing three times. The International Tennis Federation imposed the bans worldwide.

Wickmayer's lawyer, Kristof De Saedeleer, said it was "logical" to scrap the ban if the original ruling was suspect.

It was unclear when a full ruling would be announced.

The ITF said it based its ban on the local anti-doping tribunal's decision. De Saedeleer said that by suspending the original ruling, the Brussels court made it clear that tennis authorities no longer had a legal basis to justify their penalty.

"The ITF took its decision based on a ruling that now cannot be enforced," he said. "It would be a logical consequence" if both players were reinstated.

"This was a first step to make sure our players can be on court as soon as possible again," he said.

Even though the entries for next month's Australian Open have been closed, a wild-card berth is still a possibility for Wickmayer if quick action is taken. "This is why the coming hours are very important," said her spokesman, Rudi Kuyl.

Wickmayer and Malisse have already asked the Court of Arbitration for Sport to overturn the bans. A ruling is expected in the next three months.

The 20-year-old Wickmayer claims she was not properly informed of the online reporting requirements for drug-testing that led to her ban.

Beyond the Belgian legal system and CAS, Wickmayer's lawyers are launching appeals with European authorities questioning the legality of WADA's rules.

Victory at the European Commission in Brussels and the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights could force WADA to drastically change its rules on when and where athletes can be tested out of competition.

The "whereabouts" rule is a cornerstone of WADA's policies. It requires elite athletes to make themselves available for out-of-competition testing for one hour a day, 365 days a year.

Under the rules, athletes must give three months' notice of where and when they can be located for testing. The information is registered online and can be updated by email or text message.

Satria Muda 67 – 58 Slingers


Satria Muda BritAma met the Singapore Slingers for the third time at The BritAma Arena, Jakarta, Indonesia.

The closely fought match saw Satria Muda BritAma win 67 – 58.

Satria Muda BritAma, coming from their win against Garuda Flexi in the Indonesian Basketball League last night, showed no signs of fatigue in today's match against the Singapore Slingers.

Satria Muda BritAma sent in Nakiea Miller, Christian Sitepu, Youbel Sondakh, Alexander Hartman and Rensy Bajar as their starting lineup against Singapore Slingers Kyle Jeffers, Michael LeBlanc, Marcus Ng, Al Vergara and Hong Wei Jian.

Slingers' Kyle Jeffers won the jumpball against Satria Muda BritAma's Nakiea Miller and the Slingers took an early lead in the first quarter which ended 17 - 15 against Satria Muda BritAma.

Satria Muda BritAma, trailing in the first quarter, fired up in the second quarter and took back the lead, ending it 35 - 31. After the half time break, Satria Muda BritAma continued to widen the gap and at the end of the third quarter, they were leading 50 - 41 against Singapore Slingers. At the final buzzer, Satria Muda BritAma emerged as winners, ending the match 67 - 58.

Satria Muda BritAma Coach Fictor Roring was very pleased with the team, "Today I'm pleased with the players. They played with spirit and team play and can beat the Slingers. And they can perform the instructions I gave well and they can minimize mistakes in the field. With this victory does not make us complacent, we will continue to practice to deal with the next game. We also continue to evaluateour performance to continue to improve our game.

Satria Muda BritAma's Nakiea Miller was the teams top scorer with 19 points and 11 rebounds, followed by Alexander Hartman with 13 points. Singapore Slingers Kyle Jeffers ended the match with 21 points and 16 rebounds followed by Hong Wei Jian with a distant 7 points.

This win puts Satria Muda BritAma in second place in the League Standings and relegates the Singapore Slingers to third place.

KL Dragons 79 - 78 Thailand Tigers


The third match between the KL Dragons and Thailand Tigers took place at the MABA Stadium, Malaysia.

The KL Dragons and Thailand Tigers have both won one game each from their previous two meetings. The 31 October match at MABA Stadium, Malaysia, saw the KL Dragons take a slim 1-point win over Thailand Tigers, winning the match 79 - 78.

At their second match on 9 November at the Nimibutr National Stadium, Thailand, the KL Dragons fell to the home team and the Tigers had their revenge with a 88 - 71 win against the Dragons.

Today the KL Dragons were looking for looking to make use of their home-crowd advantage to gain their second win against the Thailand Tigers. The Dragons sent in Jamal Brown, Chris Kuete, Koh Way Tek, Chai Chze Hian and Guganeswaran to go up against Thailand Tigers' Attaporn Lertmalaiporn, Ikenna Nwankwo, Piyapong Piroon, Axel Doruelo and Chaz Briggs.

KL Dragons Jamal Brown won the jumpball, but it was Thailand Tigers Piyapong Piroon who opened the scoring after being fouled by KL Dragons Chai Chze Hian. The KL Dragons did not let that stop them, and continued to push forward to take the first quarter 14 - 12 against the Thailand Tigers.

The KL Dragons extended their lead to 10 points in the second quarter which ended 33 - 23 at half time. The Thailand Tigers did not manage a comeback, and in the third quarter the KL Dragons already had a comfortable 17 point lead against the Tigers. The Dragons pushed hard in the final quarter, further extending their lead to 19 points, and ultimately winning the match 88 - 69 against the Thailand Tigers.

KL Dragons' Chris Kuete was the team's top scorer with 24 points and 11 rebounds, followed by Guganeswaran with 17 points. Thailand Tigers Attaporn Lertmalaiporn lead the team with 21 points, followed by Chaz Briggs with 14 points and 12 rebounds.

This win puts the KL Dragons one spot up in fifth place in the League Standings, with the Thailand Tigers in sixth place. Both teams will have to work hard and improve their game if they wish to be in the top four teams that make it to playoffs.

Barracudas 95-70 Patriots


The Brunei Barracudas went up against the Philippine Patriots for the first time at the Brunei Indoor Stadium, Bandar Seri Begawan.

Their first scheduled meet on 31st October which was postponed due to Typhoon Santi has been rescheduled to 21 December, 6.00pm at Ynares Sports Arena, Manila, Philippines.

Brunei Barracudas started the match with their usual lineup of imports Michael Pilgrim, Reggie Larry, Francis Adriano, Leonidaz Avenido, and local player Esmond Tan to go up against Philippine Patriots' Jerwin Gaco, Warren Ybanez, Brandon Powell, John Alcaraz and Jason Dixon.

Brunei Barracudas Michael Pilgrim won the jumpball against Philippine Patriots Jason Dixon, and Pilgrim also opened the scoring for the Barracudas, who took a lead early in the first quarter. The Patriots fought hard, and took a 1-point lead at the end of the first quarter which ended 21 - 20 against the Barracudas.

The teams were once against head-to-head in the second quarter, but the Philippine Patriots pulled away at the end of the second quarter, extending their lead to 4 points, ending 47 - 43 against the Barracudas at half time.

With 5 minutes left in the third quarter, the Brunei Barracudas picked up the pace, and improved their game to take a 9-point lead against the Patriots. The Barracudas ended the third quarter with an 8-point lead, ending 67 - 59 against the Patriots.

The breath-taking fourth quarter had both teams pushing hard, with the Barracudas delivering a shocking loss to the Patriots, winning the match with a huge 25-point lead, ending 95 - 70 against the Patriots.

Brunei Barracudas Team Owner Ms Nadzaty Azma Azeez was ecstatic over her team's win against the top seeded Philippine Patriots, "I am really proud of our players and coaching staff, with one week of preparation and training we have overcome injuries and adversity. I am very happy with the outcome of this match, considering this is Brunei Barracudas' first win over the Philippine team and this also keeps the Barracudas in the race to the playoffs".

The Patriots, weakened by the absence of Nonoy Baclao who is honoring a previous commitment to play for Ateneo Blue Eagles in the Philippine Collegiate Champions League (PCCL) finals against FEU Tamaraws today, as well as the injured Elmer Espiritu who is nursing a broken cheek bone, were unable to keep up with the Barracudas.

Barracudas' Reggie Larry and Michael Pilgrim lead the team with 20 points each followed by Celedon Camaso and Leonidaz Avenido with 18 points each. Larry and Avenido also topped with 8 rebounds each. The Patriots Jason Dixon lead the team with 14 points and 10 rebounds, followed by Dino Daa with 10 points.

Top ten stars of 2009


Manny Pacquiao, Ryan Giggs and Jenson Button. Here are the top ten stars of 2009.

JENSON BUTTON

Jenson Button did not do badly considering he faced being left without a drive for the start of the 2009 season due to the demise of his Honda team. Instead Button took a pay-cut to be part of the Brawn team formed from the ashes of Honda and the result was spectacular. Button, with just a solitary Grand Prix win to show from nine previous Formula One seasons, triumphed in six of the first seven races, giving him a championship lead which would prove unassailable. Ended the year by agreeing a lucrative move to McLaren, where he will link up with 2008 world champion Lewis Hamilton.

ANDREW STRAUSS

Strauss might have made an ignominious start to his career as England's new cricket captain as his team were bowled out for 51 by the West Indies. But by the end of a year which began with the controversy of Kevin Pietersen's resignation, Strauss had emphatically underlined his captaincy qualities with a number of tough tactical choices and a series average of over 50 which wrested the Ashes back from Australia's grasp.

MANNY PACQUIAO

The Filipino fought twice in 2009 and in the process underlined his status as the number one fighter in the sport today - Floyd Mayweather included. First Pacquiao stepped up to light-welterweight to hammer Ricky Hatton to a violent second-round defeat. Then he went up again to master the ferocious welterweight Miguel Cotto. A one-sided 12th-round stoppage win under his belt, Pacquiao now goes in search of a showdown with Mayweather.

JOHN SMIT

Having sat out much of the 2008 Tri Nations through injury, 2009 proved to be Smit's triumphant return. Smit led the Springboks to a series win over the British and Irish Lions before excelling in his return to Tri Nations competition as South Africa won five of their six matches, including three big wins against New Zealand. In doing so Smit set a new record as the most-capped captain in international rugby history - a mark now standing at 67.

YE YANG

South Korean golfer YE Yang is considered to have blazed a trail which plenty of others will follow in 2009, when he became the first Asian golfer to win one of the sport's four major titles. Earlier in the year, Yang had matched KJ Choi as Asia's only two regular PGA Tour winners. In August, he went one better, recovering from a two-stroke final round deficit to see off the considerable challenge of Tiger Woods and win the PGA Championship.

ANITA WLODARCYZK

Hers is not a name to roll off the tongue at the best of times. But the Polish hammer-thrower was indisputably the best female athlete of 2009. Stepping up from a bronze medal in the 2008 World final, Wlodarczyk started the year with a world team title. Then two personal bests in Biala Podlaska and Ostrava sent her to the World Championships in Berlin in top form. Wlodarczyk went on to hurl a new world record of 77.96metres. In doing so she became the first and only female athlete to set a new world record in Berlin.

RYAN GIGGS

Manchester United veteran Ryan Giggs has been written off many times in his career only to confound the critics. And never has he done so as emphatically as he did in 2009, when for the first time in his illustrious career he was awarded the prestigious PFA Footballer of the Year award. Giggs, who has now surpassed 700 appearances for United, remains as integral to the club's immediate future as ever.

KIM CLIJSTERS

Even mighty mother Kim Clijsters could have had no idea just how dramatic her return to the 2009 WTA Tour would prove to be. The Belgian returned from a two-year hiatus with promising performances in three tournaments before entering the US Open as a wild-card. Stunning wins over Venus Williams and her sister Serena in a controversial semi-final set Clijsters up to fulfil her dream comeback with a final win over Caroline Wozniacki.

USAIN BOLT

The extraordinary Jamaican sprinter did the almost-impossible in 2009, eclipsing his performances at the previous summer's Beijing Olympics and emphatically underlining how there is currently no other sprinter who can touch him. At the World Championships in Berlin, Bolt lowered his own 100m world record to 9.58 seconds. Then he left his rivals trailing as he repeated the feat in the 200m, shaving off 0.11seconds for a winning time of 19.19.

BETH TWEDDLE

Having suffered the agony of a fourth place finish at the Beijing Olympics, 2009 was the year in which British gymnast Beth Tweddle finally proved she deserved her place among the world's best. Two golds in the European Championships set her up for her home World Championships in London. After failing to qualify for the final of her favoured uneven bars, Tweddle responded brilliantly by going out and claiming unexpected gold for her floor routine.

Ten moments to forget in 2009


Was it Newcastle's relegation or Tiger Woods' problems? Here are the ten moments to forget in 2009.

1 NEWCASTLE RELEGATED: Newcastle's thoroughly dismal season on and off the pitch petered out in the most pathetic fashion possible, as a Damien Duff own goal saw them lose a final-day decider 1-0 at Aston Villa and go down.

2 CRASH-GATE: Flavio Briatore's Renault Formula One team were found guilty of ordering driver Nelson Piquet Jr to deliberately crash in order to help a team-mate. Briatore was banned for life while his team got a suspended sentence.

3 SAFINA SLUMP: The pitiful strength in depth of women's tennis was best encapsulated on Wimbledon semi-final day when world number one Dinara Safina managed to win a solitary game against Venus Williams in a 6-1 6-0 rout.

4 TIGER CRASH: After a year spent battling back from injury, Tiger Woods made headlines for the wrong reasons after crashing his car outside his home. The subsequent media storm forced the world's best player to ground.

5 ENGLAND BOWLED OUT: Retaining the Ashes seemed a pipe dream in February when England were bowled out for just 51 - their third all-time lowest Test score - by the West Indies in the first Test in Kingston.

6 VALUEV FIGHT OFF: Boxing's ailing heavyweight division suffered another setback when Ruslan Chagaev failed a blood test on the eve of his projected WBA title fight with Nikolai Valuev in Helsinki, forcing the fight off.

7 YELENA ISINBAYEVA: The Russian pole-vault legend was expected to set the Berlin World Championships alight. Instead she failed to register a single successful vault and exited without a medal in last place.

8 BLOOD-GATE: Harlequins were found guilty of deliberately contriving an injury to Tom Williams in order to get a recognised penalty kicker back on the field. Both Williams and Harlequins director of rugby Dean Richards were banned.

9 ANDRE AGASSI: Instead of settling into comfortable retirement, Andre Agassi chose to publish a salacious book in which he tarnished his legacy by claiming to "hate" the game, and admitting to the use of crystal meth.

10 RAMZI STRIPPED: Rashid Ramzi, who won the men's 1500m at the Beijing Olympics under the flag of Bahrain, became the highest profile athlete to be stripped of his gold medal after testing positive for blood-boosting drug Cera.

Ten moments to remember in 2009


From Jenson Button's amazing Brawn GP journey to Roger Federer's marathon Wimbledon match against Andy Roddick. Here are the top 10 moments of 2009.

1 JENSON BUTTON: Button took a pay cut to join the new Brawn team for the start of the 2009 Formula One season and his impact was spectacular: he won six of the first seven races which proved enough to sweep him to the world drivers' title.

2 THE ASHES: In the aftermath of the Kevin Pietersen captaincy controversy, Andrew Strauss cajoled his England squad into wresting the Ashes back from Australia via a narrow 2-1 series victory.

3 BETH TWEDDLE: Britain's favourite gymnast looked to have blown her chance of a world medal on home soil when she failed to reach the final of the uneven bars. She responded by clinching historic gold with a perfect floor routine.

4 TOM DALEY: Daley proved the profile afforded him since he appeared at the Beijing Olympics at the age of 14 was justified as he claimed an unexpected gold medal in the 10m platform competition at the World Championships in Rome.

5 USAIN BOLT: The Jamaican sprinter achieved the seemingly impossible at the World Championships in Berlin when he lowered his 100m world record to 9.58 seconds. Days later he also set a new mark of 19.19 for the 200m.

6 DAVID HAYE: The British puncher breathed new life into boxing's heavyweight division by cleverly outpointing Russian giant Nikolai Valuev to earn the WBA title in Nuremberg, Germany.

7 KIM CLIJSTERS: The Belgian returned from an extended absence from the sport to revive a flagging women's game by making her Grand Slam return at the US Open in New York - and promptly sailed to the title, defeating both Williams sisters along the way.

8 FA CUP FINAL: Fears the 2009 FA Cup final between Chelsea and Everton could be too one-sided were shattered after just 25 seconds when Louis Saha swept home the fastest ever final goal, although the Londoners fought back to win the match.

9 WIMBLEDON FINAL: One year after his epic defeat to Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer got the better of another awesome Wimbledon final against Andy Roddick, winning a marathon match 16-14 in the final set.

10 GRAND SLAM: The 2009 Six Nations boiled down to a last-second penalty which Welshman Stephen Jones kicked short, enabling Ireland to celebrate their first Grand Slam in 61 years in dramatic scenes in Cardiff.

Men's Golf Latest Rankings


Rory McIlroy has reached a higher position on the world rankings than any other 20-year-old before him.

Even though he did not play last week - and pulled out of the Nedbank Challenge a fortnight ago because of a virus - the Northern Ireland youngster moves up from 11th to ninth.

Tiger Woods holds a 6.66 points lead over Phil Mickelson three days after he announced he was taking an indefinite break from golf to tackle his personal problems.

When he started his eight-month lay-off after knee surgery last year the American's lead was over 11 points. He was never caught then, but it could be different is his new hiatus proves another lengthy one.

Latest world rankings:

1 Tiger Woods 15.20pts, 2 Phil Mickelson 8.54, 3 Steve Stricker 6.89, 4 Lee Westwood 6.76, 5 Padraig Harrington 5.75, 6 Jim Furyk 5.70, 7 Paul Casey 5.55, 8 Henrik Stenson 5.54, 9 Rory McIlroy 4.97, 10 Kenny Perry 4.91

11 Sergio Garcia 4.88, 12 Ian Poulter 4.75, 13 Martin Kaymer 4.64, 14 Geoff Ogilvy 4.63, 15 Stewart Cink 4.38, 16 Sean O'Hair 4.36, 17 Ernie Els 4.27, 18 Ross Fisher 4.14, 19 Retief Goosen 4.06, 20 Lucas Glover 3.95

Other leading Europeans:

27 Robert Karlsson, 28 Luke Donald, 35 Soren Kjeldsen, 38 Graeme McDowell, 39 Oliver Wilson, 40 Francesco Molinari, 43 Simon Dyson, 46 Anders Hansen, 47 Miguel Angel Jimenez, 48 Soren Hansen, 50 Alvaro Quiros, 53 Peter Hanson, 54 Alexander Noren, 55 Edoardo Molinari, 63 Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, 67 Ross McGowan, 70 Justin Rose, 72 Chris Wood, 82 Anthony Wall, 88 Gregory Bourdy

Kiwis book CT berth after beating Pak


New Zealand qualified for elite Champions Trophy after scoring a 4-2 win over Pakistan in the final of the Champions Challenge Hockey tournament.

The summit clash between the two top ranked teams began on an aggressive note, with penalty-corner specialist Sohail Abbas scoring in seventh minute to put Pakistan ahead 1-0.

Black sticks replied with a penalty-corner conversion 10 minutes later with Ryan Archibald deflecting on the post.

In the 20th minute, New Zealand scored a sumptuous goal with Phillip Burrows, diving full length to deflect a cross from the left, giving his team a 2-1 lead.

Pakistan could not penetrate the compact rival's defense and tried to use long passes but in vain.

In the last minute of first-half Rehan Butt pounced on a ball in the crowded circle and acrobatically managed to shoot it out of reach of Pontifex, levelling the scores.

In the second half, Kiwis' went in the offensive with Simon Child, Phillip Burrows and Ryan Archibald, circulating the ball with speed and accuracy.

Their best chance was made by Nicholas Wilson, who deflected the ball from close range on the crossbar, but the score did not evolve.

Pakistan had chances to shot into lead but wasted three more penalty-corners.

New Zealand scored two goals in quick succession in the last five minutes, first by Steven Edwards and then with Phillip Burrows, both at the conclusion of fast offensive moves that swept away the Pakistani defense.

Sohail Abbas missed another penalty-corner and New Zealand were celebrating their first Champions Challenge victory with their traditional haka, traditional Kiwi dance.

India beat Argentina to win a bronze


India overcame a two-goal deficit to eke out a 3-2 win over Argentina and finish with the bronze medal in the Champions Challenge hockey tournament.

Their hopes to qualify for Champions Trophy dashed after the semifinal defeat against arch-rivals Pakistan, the Indian team was trailing 0-2 inside the first half an hour before V Raghunath (35th minute), Gurbaz Singh (54th) and Dhananjay Mahadik (69th) sounded the board to complete the win.

The bronze medal game started with both the teams taking their time and gauging each other before going on the offensive.

Argentina had lion's share of ball control and the hosts managed a series of penalty-corner but Indian custodian P Sreejesh was reassuring under the bar.

On the second one, Pedro Ibarra collected the rebound but sent his shot in the clouds and finally Facundo Callioni opened the account in the 22nd minute with a shot from a difficult angle.

India tried to shift play into the Argentinean half but Callioni hit the target again soon with a spectacular diving deflection.

Stung by the quick goals, the Indians pulled up their socks and started to dominate but they could not get close enough to generate a decent chance.

In the final second of play, they earned a penalty-corner and Raghunath converted it, reducing their deficit going into the break and winning the momentum back.

The Indians maintained the tempo and put pressure for the first 10 minutes of second-half on their rival but Ibarra, Fernando Zylberberg and Ignacio Bergner, backed by Juan Tomas Espinosa in the goal, looked rock solid.

Argentina had an opportunity to stretch the lead but Thomas Argento's spectacular reverse missed the mark by a whisker.

Meanwhile, India found the equaliser in the 54th minute through Gurbaj after some excellent work along the backline by Tushar Khandker.

Having erased the deficit, the Indians were on a role and monopolised the ball for long sequence of skillful plays.

Shivendra Singh had a good chance after collecting a long pass but it was finally a penalty-corner by Dhananjay that earned them the lead.

Argentina had a last chance on a penalty-corner, but Ibarra could not cash in on and India won the bronze, much higher than their sixth entry ranking in this competition.

Nick Matthew and James Willstrop to resume England rivalry in Saudi


England's top two players, Nick Matthew and James Willstrop, will resume their national rivalry on Monday in the Saudi Squash International after being pitted together for the first time since a bitterly-contested British Open final in September.

In the first all-English final for 70 years, Willstrop called world No 4 Matthew "disrespectful" after complaining to the referees that Willstrop was "so slow" in getting out of his reach to the ball.

Matthew eventually won a classic two-hour encounter in Manchester while the pair had to put their differences aside during the World Team Championships a month later.

Willstrop, who lost on match ball for the second year in succession, will now be aiming to halt Matthew's rise to the top of the world rankings after both players enjoyed first round wins in Al-Khobar on Sunday.

Willstrop beat Finland's Olli Tuominen 3-0 in 26 minutes while Matthew survived a minor dip during his 3-1 win over Omar Mosaad, of Egypt.

Despite losing to Egypt's Ramy Ashour in the PSA Masters final last week in Mumbai, Matthew, 29, still has every chance of becoming the first Briton since fellow Yorkshireman Lee Beachill in 2004 to top the world rankings.

He is vying with Ashour and Amr Shabana and whoever favours best in Saudi is set to start 2010 as world No 1.

Yousuf helps Pakistan claim lead


Pakistan 223 and 347 for 4 (Yousuf 89, Faisal 67, Butt 66, Farhat 61) lead New Zealand 471 by 99 runs.

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

This chameleon game changed character yet again late on the fourth day. Mohammad Yousuf was serenely moving towards what seemed an inevitable hundred when he fell to crack open the game to several thrilling possibilities. New Zealand hold the advantage and are the frontrunners to pull off something special in Napier, but with its frail batting line-up pitted against the mercurial Pakistan bowling, who knows what can happen if the target is around 200.

On a stop-start day, interrupted constantly by rain, Pakistan had threatened to shoot themselves in the foot by gifting wickets to Martin Guptill, before they rallied through a 128-run stand between Yousuf and Faisal Iqbal. The sun kept peeping in and out of the clouds, Faisal alternated between nervous edginess and flamboyance, but Yousuf draped an elegantly solid hue on proceedings. His innings appeared to have seemingly pushed Pakistan towards safety when he fell to make matters more interesting.

Though the morning's play was filled with drama it was freakish in nature, and it was in the afternoon that the real contest between bat and ball began. Iain O'Brien and Daniel Vettori bowled as well as they could on a flat pitch but Yousuf stood firm. The caressed square-drives on a stretched front foot, the stylish flicks and the authoritative punches off the back foot were all showcased against the seamers but it was his battle with Vettori that stood out.

There was one piece of action which perfectly caught the spirit of the contest between the two: Yousuf came down the track but Vettori cleverly slowed the pace and shortened the length. However, Yousuf waited to adjust to the lack of pace, and though he couldn't reach the pitch of the ball, he didn't panic or lunge out; instead he almost nonchalantly wafted through the line and found enough power and timing to lift it over long-on. Vettori used the crease well, varied his pace and utilised the arm-ball intelligently but Yousuf handled him with aplomb. He moved forward or back as the length demanded and picked the arm ball on most occasions.

Faisal was nowhere near as solid as Yousuf but he fought on to score a valuable fifty. His iffy footwork meant he was caught on the crease a few times and was forward when he should have been back, but he soldiered on. He was even dropped on 48 when he edged O'Brien straight to Ross Taylor, but he punctuated his nervy shots with a few extravagant cover drives. It was an innings in which he delighted and frustrated equally before he fell, guiding Martin to Taylor, who held on this time.

Umar Akmal walked in and played a breezy innings filled with cuts, pulls and a few plays and misses.It also contained the most audacious shot of the day - a delightfully flamboyant and whippy bottom-hand-powered six over long-on off Darryl Tuffey. The afternoon, though, was a calm affair when compared with the events that preceded it.

If the English fast bowler Fred Trueman were alive and commentating on the game this morning, we would surely have heard his legendary phrase: "I just don't know what's going off out there". Nothing Pakistan do shocks anyone any more but even their die-hard followers would have raised their eyebrows when Guptill, who had not bowled a ball before this game in Test cricket and has just a solitary first-class wicket, removed the openers in quick succession to leave Pakistan wobbling.

It was a bizarre and fascinating little first session of play. What made Vettori open the bowling with Guptill? More importantly, what were Pakistan's openers thinking? Not much, if you go on the available evidence. When Guptill tossed the third delivery of the day outside off stump, there wasn't anything deceptive in its trajectory. It was a gentle, perhaps a bit loopy, delivery that floated harmlessly outside off but Salman Butt scooped it back to the bowler. The bottom-hand had kicked in too much and he couldn't keep the off drive down.

Batsmen do make mistakes and irregular bowlers do pick up lucky wickets, but surely Guptill couldn't do it again? Wrong. He flighted, nay floated, a full toss in the seventh over of the day. Farhat, who seemed muddled after Butt's dismissal, moved down the track to try to snap out of the nightmarish start to the day but ended up patting the full toss straight back to Guptill. Surprisingly, there was no visible reaction from Guptill when he took the catch. Perhaps he was too shocked to be merely surprised.

It was a day that had everything: a comically manic start from the most unlikely source, a calm hand from a veteran, an edgy attempt to save a career, a cocky kid, and a lingering suspense about what tomorrow might bring.