* * *What worked for the prosecution?
1. Kathy Hoskins's believable recollection will help to prove Count Two
Kathy Hoskins, the former personal shopper of Bonds and the sister of Steve Hoskins, carefully explained how she watched Anderson inject Bonds in the navel during the 2002 season. She came across as believable, normal and someone with whom jurors could likely identify. Her memory also appeared strong, especially when she recalled specific comments purportedly made by Bonds. While prosecutors tried to link her with Steve Hoskins, whose business relationship with Bonds soured and who struggled on the stand earlier in the week, Kathy Hoskins emerged from cross examination as credible and without apparent ill-motive.
If the jury believes Kathy Hoskins with absolute certainty, it would be poised to find Bonds guilty on Count Two of the government's indictment. As explained in our previous coverage, Count Two simply requires prosecutors to prove that Bonds was injected by Anderson and that Bonds knowingly lied in 2003 when stating, under oath, that no such injection ever took place.
Then again, prosecutors were unable to corroborate Kathy Hoskins's testimony with other witnesses who could credibly claim they too saw Bonds injected by Anderson. Along those lines, some on the jury may be uncomfortable with finding Bonds guilty based on the testimony of just one witness, albeit a very believable one. They might also reason that Bonds could have simply -- to borrow a favorite word of fellow alleged perjurer Roger Clemens -- "misremembered" everything that Anderson did to him, including injections. Given that perjury requires that the defendant knowingly lied, as opposed to merely being mistaken or confused, any possibility of doubt would work to Bonds's defense.
* * *
New Sports Illustrated Column on Barry Bonds Trial: Has Bonds Already Won?
A First For Football In Australia - Rachel Harrigan Elected President and Chair of Capital Football Board
The Nearpost Local wishes Rachel Harrigan the all best in this very important leadership position in Football in the ACT Region.
Rachel Harrigan is well placed to know what is important to attend to going forward and it is heartening to note that the new President and Chair of the Board has made very specific reference to the most critical issue going forward - "...I see it as a time of engagement with the community and our member clubs. .."
The following is an extract from the Capital Football announcement:
"Capital Football is pleased to announce that Rachel Harrigan has been elected unopposed as the new President of the Federation, and Chair of the Board, after a board meeting held yesterday (Thursday 31st March 2011).
Ms. Harrigan has served on the board at Capital Football for eight years, the last four of which have been as Vice-President. Prior to that Ms. Harrigan also served on the board of Women’s Soccer Canberra.
At the same meeting Peter Maybury was elected unopposed to serve in the position of Deputy Chair. Mr. Maybury will also head up a new Finance Audit and Risk Management committee.
“After serving as vice-president for the past four years I feel I am ready to step up to the challenge with the full support of my colleagues,” Ms. Harrigan said.
“This is an opportunity to move forward. I see it as a time of engagement with the community and our member clubs. We will be having more consultation with our stakeholders and in particular our 43 clubs as we embark on a new era and a new strategic plan for 2012 to 2015......”
A First For Football In Australia - Rachel Harrigan Elected President and Chair of Capital Football Board
The Nearpost Local wishes Rachel Harrigan the all best in this very important leadership position in Football in the ACT Region.
Rachel Harrigan is well placed to know what is important to attend to going forward and it is heartening to note that the new President and Chair of the Board has made very specific reference to the most critical issue going forward - "...I see it as a time of engagement with the community and our member clubs. .."
The following is an extract from the Capital Football announcement:
"Capital Football is pleased to announce that Rachel Harrigan has been elected unopposed as the new President of the Federation, and Chair of the Board, after a board meeting held yesterday (Thursday 31st March 2011).
Ms. Harrigan has served on the board at Capital Football for eight years, the last four of which have been as Vice-President. Prior to that Ms. Harrigan also served on the board of Women’s Soccer Canberra.
At the same meeting Peter Maybury was elected unopposed to serve in the position of Deputy Chair. Mr. Maybury will also head up a new Finance Audit and Risk Management committee.
“After serving as vice-president for the past four years I feel I am ready to step up to the challenge with the full support of my colleagues,” Ms. Harrigan said.
“This is an opportunity to move forward. I see it as a time of engagement with the community and our member clubs. We will be having more consultation with our stakeholders and in particular our 43 clubs as we embark on a new era and a new strategic plan for 2012 to 2015......”
ENGLAND 2 SPAIN 1 | SPAIN MISSES QUALIFICATION FOR U-17 EURO FINALS
Spain U-17 /photo Giovani de Paola
England was superior & Spain managed to keep things equal up until the 55th min mark when REDMOND scored for England,
ESPN Sues Conference USA
Angel Foods
I was joined this week by Stella Dawson, Beryl Dawson, and Beth Vieira. Beth got her usual black coffee and the rest of us had cappuccinos. The coffees were served with Greek orange twists on the side...YUM! I have to make sure, on my next visit to Angel Foods, to ask owner, Yiota Kieck, where I might get my hands on some Urban Espress coffee beans...tremendous flavor!
A good cup of coffee doesn't make itself. Not only did Noxolo, the barista, whip up a mean cappuccino though, she also was patient with me as I practiced pronouncing her Xhosa name (which includes a click). The clicks in the Xhosa language give me a rough time but I'm working at it. Needless to say, after a number of my feeble and unsuccessful attempts, Noxolo told me (with a smile) that I could call her Nox.
Angel Foods has been at its location in the Perridgevale Shopping Centre on Rochelle Rd. for two years. The shop is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 to 5:30. They serve home cooked muffins, preserves, pastries, and lunches to eat in or take out. All these items can be bought frozen for an easy meal later on or for fresh baked goodies when guests come around. The shop also caters events / corporate functions with their specialty Greek foods or from their regular menu.
After the other crawlers left, I stayed and did some shopping...guess what's for dinner, Lou? Actually, everything looked so appetizing but I decided on beef lasagne and roasted vegetables. I also picked up some baklava and Greek shortbreads along with frozen custard triangles that I'll pop in the oven and serve as my own next week for guests (is that cheating? ... the devil made me do it!) Many of you reading this know that I love to bake...well, I have just found a reason to stop. These pastries are to die for... well worth the extra steps on the Stairmaster! Angel Food has just found its newest fan. I plan to make many return visits.
Thank you to Yiota and staff for the wonderful coffee and for being co-conspirators in fooling my guests next week. I'll eventually give you credit but let me bask in the compliments for a bit!
The coffee gods weren't the only ones in town today... the rain gods paid a visit and supplied some much needed precipitation to the PE area. Thanks!
Until next week,
Ellen
Meet the Owner Yiota Kieck |
Meet the Barista Noxolo Zondani |
Thiw Week's Crawlers Beth, Stella, Beryl |
Sports Law Blog on the Rise
FC BARCELONA | THE "SECRET" TO THEIR SUCCESS
Liverpool FC Coach Makes Some Very Interesting Observations About Playing the Barca Way
A lot of analysis of Barcelona is going on at the moment and for good reason. As the "experts" delve into this football organisation, it quickly becomes evident that it is a very elegant and socially responsible football culture. So much more than just a few extravagantly talented players. There are so many lessons to learn from Barcelona, on and off the field. All of it is directly transferable to our football environment here in the ACT.
Lets start by making the Capital Football development regime a loud echo of Barcelona's academy, then it on to Clubs, many of whom have the ordinary, socially responsible attitudes so apparent in the Barcelona Football organisation.
Barcelona's motto is "Move than A Club". So it is. Dalglish makes that point in a very Football fashion.
It's the way Barcelona play that makes Xavi and Messi look so good
by Kenny Dalglish, Manager Liverpool FC
13th March 2011
Robin van Persie's controversial sending-off in Barcelona should not disguise the fact that the right team went through to the Champions League quarter-finals.
Barcelona, not Arsenal, deserved to be there. They had 20 shots on goal at the Nou Camp and Arsenal, unusually, had none.
You can never say for certain that a team from one era could beat another from 30 years ago but the time has come when it’s legitimate to compare Barcelona with all the legends from years gone by.
There are certain teams who will always be remembered by their generation as the best ever, to be revered down the ages — the Real Madrid team of the late Fifties and early Sixties with Puskas and Di Stefano; Brazil in 1970 orchestrated by Pele; the AC Milan of the Eighties and Nineties with the three great Dutchmen Gullit, Van Basten and Rijkaard.
Now you can add Barcelona to that list, and deservedly so. Many years from now, younger fans will listen attentively to tales of Xavi and Iniesta, who worked in tandem and never gave the ball away, or the wizard Lionel Messi, who scored 45 goals in a season before the middle of March.
Van Persie was unjustly sent off because, even if he saw the offside flag before shooting, there wasn’t enough time between the two actions to prove it was intentional. But, despite the fuss being made about it, we mustn’t lose sight of the bigger picture. Barcelona were a class apart.
Their manager, Pep Guardiola, will watch this week’s Champions League games featuring Chelsea, Manchester United, Real Madrid and Inter Milan with interest but not fear. I don’t think he minds who he gets in the quarter-final draw. But I think everyone else will be praying they avoid Barcelona.
Clearly there is a way to knock them out. Inter Milan did it under Jose Mourinho last year with a supremely disciplined performance in defending the 18-yard box. But to do that, and also score three goals in the home leg, is a very tough call.
Mourinho’s Real Madrid showed that without that discipline you can get hammered, as they were 5-0 this season. Arsenal were better than that on Tuesday night but not tight enough and they couldn’t pose a goal threat either. Barcelona’s principles are world renowned. I wouldn’t say other clubs see that and say, ‘We must copy the way they play’ but, of course, we all try to look and learn.
We have two former Barcelona coaches in our academy at Liverpool and that must tell you something.
What is interesting is that, despite the incredible individual talent at the Nou Camp — they had three nominees for World Player of the Year — the team is king.
The first-team players have been educated to play a certain way since they were kids. If you went to see the B team, I bet their style is very similar to the style we saw against Arsenal.
On top of the world: Xavi, Lionel Messi and Andres Iniesta were shortlisted for the Ballon D'Or, with the Argentine scooping the prize
Xavi and Iniesta are rightly lauded but would they look half as good if they went to another club? I think the Barcelona players look great because they play in a system where they trust everyone around them. Maybe if you took them out and stuck them somewhere else, you’d realise that individually they aren’t quite as great as you thought.
Even Messi, one of the most talented players you’ll ever see, wasn’t quite the same when he was taken outside the Barcelona comfort zone and played for Argentina in the World Cup. It is not a criticism of him, just a compliment to the methods that they use at the Nou Camp.
Whatever ability their players have, it is tutored and doctored in the right way. And they make their team-mates look better as well. ........
But irrespective of who Barcelona face, you’d fancy them now. Youngsters today should be glad they are able to watch a team who compare with anything their fathers — or grandfathers — saw in the past.
Liverpool FC Coach Makes Some Very Interesting Observations About Playing the Barca Way
A lot of analysis of Barcelona is going on at the moment and for good reason. As the "experts" delve into this football organisation, it quickly becomes evident that it is a very elegant and socially responsible football culture. So much more than just a few extravagantly talented players. There are so many lessons to learn from Barcelona, on and off the field. All of it is directly transferable to our football environment here in the ACT.
Lets start by making the Capital Football development regime a loud echo of Barcelona's academy, then it on to Clubs, many of whom have the ordinary, socially responsible attitudes so apparent in the Barcelona Football organisation.
Barcelona's motto is "Move than A Club". So it is. Dalglish makes that point in a very Football fashion.
It's the way Barcelona play that makes Xavi and Messi look so good
by Kenny Dalglish, Manager Liverpool FC
13th March 2011
Robin van Persie's controversial sending-off in Barcelona should not disguise the fact that the right team went through to the Champions League quarter-finals.
Barcelona, not Arsenal, deserved to be there. They had 20 shots on goal at the Nou Camp and Arsenal, unusually, had none.
You can never say for certain that a team from one era could beat another from 30 years ago but the time has come when it’s legitimate to compare Barcelona with all the legends from years gone by.
There are certain teams who will always be remembered by their generation as the best ever, to be revered down the ages — the Real Madrid team of the late Fifties and early Sixties with Puskas and Di Stefano; Brazil in 1970 orchestrated by Pele; the AC Milan of the Eighties and Nineties with the three great Dutchmen Gullit, Van Basten and Rijkaard.
Now you can add Barcelona to that list, and deservedly so. Many years from now, younger fans will listen attentively to tales of Xavi and Iniesta, who worked in tandem and never gave the ball away, or the wizard Lionel Messi, who scored 45 goals in a season before the middle of March.
Van Persie was unjustly sent off because, even if he saw the offside flag before shooting, there wasn’t enough time between the two actions to prove it was intentional. But, despite the fuss being made about it, we mustn’t lose sight of the bigger picture. Barcelona were a class apart.
Their manager, Pep Guardiola, will watch this week’s Champions League games featuring Chelsea, Manchester United, Real Madrid and Inter Milan with interest but not fear. I don’t think he minds who he gets in the quarter-final draw. But I think everyone else will be praying they avoid Barcelona.
Clearly there is a way to knock them out. Inter Milan did it under Jose Mourinho last year with a supremely disciplined performance in defending the 18-yard box. But to do that, and also score three goals in the home leg, is a very tough call.
Mourinho’s Real Madrid showed that without that discipline you can get hammered, as they were 5-0 this season. Arsenal were better than that on Tuesday night but not tight enough and they couldn’t pose a goal threat either. Barcelona’s principles are world renowned. I wouldn’t say other clubs see that and say, ‘We must copy the way they play’ but, of course, we all try to look and learn.
We have two former Barcelona coaches in our academy at Liverpool and that must tell you something.
What is interesting is that, despite the incredible individual talent at the Nou Camp — they had three nominees for World Player of the Year — the team is king.
The first-team players have been educated to play a certain way since they were kids. If you went to see the B team, I bet their style is very similar to the style we saw against Arsenal.
On top of the world: Xavi, Lionel Messi and Andres Iniesta were shortlisted for the Ballon D'Or, with the Argentine scooping the prize
Xavi and Iniesta are rightly lauded but would they look half as good if they went to another club? I think the Barcelona players look great because they play in a system where they trust everyone around them. Maybe if you took them out and stuck them somewhere else, you’d realise that individually they aren’t quite as great as you thought.
Even Messi, one of the most talented players you’ll ever see, wasn’t quite the same when he was taken outside the Barcelona comfort zone and played for Argentina in the World Cup. It is not a criticism of him, just a compliment to the methods that they use at the Nou Camp.
Whatever ability their players have, it is tutored and doctored in the right way. And they make their team-mates look better as well. ........
But irrespective of who Barcelona face, you’d fancy them now. Youngsters today should be glad they are able to watch a team who compare with anything their fathers — or grandfathers — saw in the past.
What's Happening In the Big Picture In Football Informs How We Orgainse The Local Game.
Craig Foster interviewed Breandan Schuab (PFA) toward the end of 2010. An excellent article below and proof positive that so many issues in Football are shared at every level of the game.
Craig Foster began his Blog article with these words:
"For me the A-League's trouble's have been brewing for some years. Schwab is correct in pointing back to the Crawford report. However, it should also be noted that Crawford recommended the commitment to quality playing surfaces - which has proved costly."
Craig Foster
September 12, 2010
Dwindling A-League crowds and static FFA dividends have clubs like the Newcastle Jets struggling to survive.
IMPORTANT questions have been raised, or exposed, about Football Federation Australia that mirror long-term concerns in the football community.
These relate to governance, strategy, decision-making, organisational culture, the relationship of the board to events, the exit or dismissal of key executives during the past year, the World Cup bid and its impact on the game locally, and the health and future, in cases such as the Newcastle Jets and of the A-League.
Seeking clarity on the state of the game, I asked Brendan Schwab, chief executive of Professional Footballers Australia, to shed some light on the key areas where the game is vulnerable. He chose to focus on two: the failure to properly implement the Crawford report, and the A-League structure and model.
''Two documents - extensively researched with government and players' money - gave FFA chairman Frank Lowy his blueprint in 2003 - the Crawford and NSL Task Force reports.
''The late Johnny Warren shaped both reports. The emotional power of football ran right through them. They were about building a football nation, knowing that the legacy will be for the children of today's football devotees. Neither report has been implemented, and in that lies the seeds of the game's discontent.
''Crawford's recommendations demanded that FFA be run by an independent yet accountable board. The A-League would be separate, run under licence from FFA by its own independent board accountable to the clubs. The two bodies would co-operate to collectively exploit the game's key commercial assets from the professional game.
''All state and territory federations would be overhauled along the same principles to build the game from the grassroots up.
''The failure of some states, most notably New South Wales, to embrace the Crawford reforms has had a profound impact. Football's community remains alienated and fragmented, especially after being branded as 'old soccer'.''
Schwab on the A-League:
''Falling A-League crowds and financial problems have many worried about the viability of a league that is the cornerstone of the game's development.
''Quality is not the issue. The playing standard has been acknowledged by many former greats as being at its highest point since the inception of the league. Nor are player payments too high. Socceroos and A-League player payments account for less than 30 per cent of the game's revenues, like cricket, ARL, AFL and rugby.
''It is also wrong to assume crowds had to dip. According to [brand analysts] Repucom, 51 per cent of football's massively growing fan base is 'avid'. Football is also a sport of the future, with the youngest fan base of Australia's major sports.
''Football is simply failing to fulfil its primary obligation - to convert football fans into participants, crowds and television audiences.
''The NSL Task Force revealed that about 2.5 million fans would support an eight to 10 team A-League. Regular TV audiences of one million on free-to-air TV were possible. Average crowds of 10,000 to 15,000 were realistic.
''It wouldn't be easy, though. The league had to be properly capitalised and positioned. The strategic location of the teams was essential. New clubs, quality players, community partnerships, effective marketing and football's unique atmosphere would then deliver the commercial revenues through fan support.
''However, rugby's one team per city model prevailed under the protection of a five-year moratorium.
''The game's heartland - western Sydney, with twice as many registered footballers than rugby league - was rejected. Whilst the value of the league's rights required two Melbourne teams (a game every week), only one was installed.
''Despite the predicted crowds and atmosphere being a strategic imperative, key clubs were allowed to commit to big stadia. Gate receipts haven't covered expenses.
''The opportunity to deliver grassroots programs such as small-sided games through the brands of the A-League clubs is being missed.
''Yet, the annual dividend has not increased since 2007, and FFA has added about $1 million to the cost base of the clubs, which were already under financial pressure. The FFA club dividend has fallen to less than 50 per cent of the salary cap, the lowest of any major sport in Australia (the AFL pays 77 per cent, the NRL 71 per cent).
''The same capital-driven approach of the old NSL, in driving expansion into North Queensland and the Gold Coast, sees both clubs possibly lasting no more than two seasons due to a lack of fan support. FFA's bill: $12 million, enough to capitalise western Sydney and increase club dividends.
''These problems have been compounded by FFA's decision to itself run the 2022 World Cup bid. Already a stretched organisation, its four mandates - the bid, the league, fielding our national teams and developing the game - have seen governance and performance suffer.
''More money is not the answer without sound strategy. A successful World Cup will only solve the game's problems if the obligation of hosting football's greatest event brings about world-class standards of governance and decision-making.''
I couldn't have said it better myself. [Craig Foster]
What's Happening In the Big Picture In Football Informs How We Orgainse The Local Game.
Craig Foster interviewed Breandan Schuab (PFA) toward the end of 2010. An excellent article below and proof positive that so many issues in Football are shared at every level of the game.
Craig Foster began his Blog article with these words:
"For me the A-League's trouble's have been brewing for some years. Schwab is correct in pointing back to the Crawford report. However, it should also be noted that Crawford recommended the commitment to quality playing surfaces - which has proved costly."
Craig Foster
September 12, 2010
Dwindling A-League crowds and static FFA dividends have clubs like the Newcastle Jets struggling to survive.
IMPORTANT questions have been raised, or exposed, about Football Federation Australia that mirror long-term concerns in the football community.
These relate to governance, strategy, decision-making, organisational culture, the relationship of the board to events, the exit or dismissal of key executives during the past year, the World Cup bid and its impact on the game locally, and the health and future, in cases such as the Newcastle Jets and of the A-League.
Seeking clarity on the state of the game, I asked Brendan Schwab, chief executive of Professional Footballers Australia, to shed some light on the key areas where the game is vulnerable. He chose to focus on two: the failure to properly implement the Crawford report, and the A-League structure and model.
''Two documents - extensively researched with government and players' money - gave FFA chairman Frank Lowy his blueprint in 2003 - the Crawford and NSL Task Force reports.
''The late Johnny Warren shaped both reports. The emotional power of football ran right through them. They were about building a football nation, knowing that the legacy will be for the children of today's football devotees. Neither report has been implemented, and in that lies the seeds of the game's discontent.
''Crawford's recommendations demanded that FFA be run by an independent yet accountable board. The A-League would be separate, run under licence from FFA by its own independent board accountable to the clubs. The two bodies would co-operate to collectively exploit the game's key commercial assets from the professional game.
''All state and territory federations would be overhauled along the same principles to build the game from the grassroots up.
''The failure of some states, most notably New South Wales, to embrace the Crawford reforms has had a profound impact. Football's community remains alienated and fragmented, especially after being branded as 'old soccer'.''
Schwab on the A-League:
''Falling A-League crowds and financial problems have many worried about the viability of a league that is the cornerstone of the game's development.
''Quality is not the issue. The playing standard has been acknowledged by many former greats as being at its highest point since the inception of the league. Nor are player payments too high. Socceroos and A-League player payments account for less than 30 per cent of the game's revenues, like cricket, ARL, AFL and rugby.
''It is also wrong to assume crowds had to dip. According to [brand analysts] Repucom, 51 per cent of football's massively growing fan base is 'avid'. Football is also a sport of the future, with the youngest fan base of Australia's major sports.
''Football is simply failing to fulfil its primary obligation - to convert football fans into participants, crowds and television audiences.
''The NSL Task Force revealed that about 2.5 million fans would support an eight to 10 team A-League. Regular TV audiences of one million on free-to-air TV were possible. Average crowds of 10,000 to 15,000 were realistic.
''It wouldn't be easy, though. The league had to be properly capitalised and positioned. The strategic location of the teams was essential. New clubs, quality players, community partnerships, effective marketing and football's unique atmosphere would then deliver the commercial revenues through fan support.
''However, rugby's one team per city model prevailed under the protection of a five-year moratorium.
''The game's heartland - western Sydney, with twice as many registered footballers than rugby league - was rejected. Whilst the value of the league's rights required two Melbourne teams (a game every week), only one was installed.
''Despite the predicted crowds and atmosphere being a strategic imperative, key clubs were allowed to commit to big stadia. Gate receipts haven't covered expenses.
''The opportunity to deliver grassroots programs such as small-sided games through the brands of the A-League clubs is being missed.
''Yet, the annual dividend has not increased since 2007, and FFA has added about $1 million to the cost base of the clubs, which were already under financial pressure. The FFA club dividend has fallen to less than 50 per cent of the salary cap, the lowest of any major sport in Australia (the AFL pays 77 per cent, the NRL 71 per cent).
''The same capital-driven approach of the old NSL, in driving expansion into North Queensland and the Gold Coast, sees both clubs possibly lasting no more than two seasons due to a lack of fan support. FFA's bill: $12 million, enough to capitalise western Sydney and increase club dividends.
''These problems have been compounded by FFA's decision to itself run the 2022 World Cup bid. Already a stretched organisation, its four mandates - the bid, the league, fielding our national teams and developing the game - have seen governance and performance suffer.
''More money is not the answer without sound strategy. A successful World Cup will only solve the game's problems if the obligation of hosting football's greatest event brings about world-class standards of governance and decision-making.''
I couldn't have said it better myself. [Craig Foster]
100 Posts Celebration
New Sports Illustrated Video on Eller v. NFL
The 2011 Under 13 Girls FFA National Junior Championships - Don't Miss It!
The FFA National Junior Championships for Under 13 Girls will be held again in Canberra in the period 18-20 April 2011 (dates inclusive). All games will be held at Hawker Enclosed.
If you can, get to some of these games. The best in Australia at age is on display. They will all play the 1-4-3-3 as required by the National Football Curriculum, and National Development Plan. Its an excellent opportunity, particularly for coaches of junior teams int eh CF competitions, to watch how the various coaches have prepared their teams and how this age group is developing within the current national development regime.
The ACT representative squad is as follows:
1. Jillian Scott (gk – Woden Valley)
2. Gabrielle Risteska (Monaro Panthers)
3. Jamie Berkeley (Woden Valley)
4. Leah Carnegie (Belnorth)
5. Amelia Turner (Woden Valley)
6. Olivia Fogarty (Woden Valley)
7. Nickoletta Flannery (Woden Valley)
8. Lorna Arkell (Radford College)
9. Samantha Roff (Radford College)
10. Sandra Hill (Woden Valley)
11. Grace Maher (Majura JSC)
12. Hayley McLachlan (Woden Valley)
13. Lorena Barbaro (Gungahlin United)
14. Georgia Fogarty (Woden Valley)
15. Iesha De Andrade (Woden Valley)
16. Alexandra Cook (gk – Majura JSC)
COACH: Colin Johnstone
MANAGER: Eddie Senatore
PHYSIOTHERAPIST: Tim McNally
The scedule of fixtures is listed below.
NATIONAL JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS
Fixture List
Group A
NSW Metro
Northern NSW
South Australia
Victoria Metro
ACT
Group B
Queensland
Western Australia
NSW Country
Victoria Country
Tasmania
Day 1 – 18th April 2011
8.30am Western Australia v Tasmania
9.30am Northern NSW v VIC Metro
10.30am ACT v South Australia
11.30am NSW Country v VIC Country
12.30pm NSW Metro v Queensland
1.30pm Northern NSW v ACT
2.30pm NSW Country v Western Australia
3.30pm Queensland v Tasmania
4.30pm VIC Metro v NSW Metro
5.30pm VIC Country v South Australia
Day 2 – 19th April 2011
8.30am ACT v VIC Metro
9.30am Tasmania v NSW Country
10.30am South Australia v NSW Metro
11.30am VIC Country v Queensland
12.30pm Northern NSW v Western Australia
1.30pm VIC Metro v Tasmania
2.30pm NSW Metro v ACT
3.30pm Queensland v NSW Country
4.30pm Western Australia v VIC Country
5.30pm South Australia v Northern NSW
Day 3 – 20th April 2011
8.30am NSW Metro v Northern NSW
9.30am ACT v NSW Country
10.30am South Australia v VIC Metro
11.30am Western Australia v Queensland
12.30pm VIC Country v Tasmania
1.30pm All Stars Announcement
2.15pm All Stars v National Champions
3.15pm Presentation
The 2011 Under 13 Girls FFA National Junior Championships - Don't Miss It!
The FFA National Junior Championships for Under 13 Girls will be held again in Canberra in the period 18-20 April 2011 (dates inclusive). All games will be held at Hawker Enclosed.
If you can, get to some of these games. The best in Australia at age is on display. They will all play the 1-4-3-3 as required by the National Football Curriculum, and National Development Plan. Its an excellent opportunity, particularly for coaches of junior teams int eh CF competitions, to watch how the various coaches have prepared their teams and how this age group is developing within the current national development regime.
The ACT representative squad is as follows:
1. Jillian Scott (gk – Woden Valley)
2. Gabrielle Risteska (Monaro Panthers)
3. Jamie Berkeley (Woden Valley)
4. Leah Carnegie (Belnorth)
5. Amelia Turner (Woden Valley)
6. Olivia Fogarty (Woden Valley)
7. Nickoletta Flannery (Woden Valley)
8. Lorna Arkell (Radford College)
9. Samantha Roff (Radford College)
10. Sandra Hill (Woden Valley)
11. Grace Maher (Majura JSC)
12. Hayley McLachlan (Woden Valley)
13. Lorena Barbaro (Gungahlin United)
14. Georgia Fogarty (Woden Valley)
15. Iesha De Andrade (Woden Valley)
16. Alexandra Cook (gk – Majura JSC)
COACH: Colin Johnstone
MANAGER: Eddie Senatore
PHYSIOTHERAPIST: Tim McNally
The scedule of fixtures is listed below.
NATIONAL JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS
Fixture List
Group A
NSW Metro
Northern NSW
South Australia
Victoria Metro
ACT
Group B
Queensland
Western Australia
NSW Country
Victoria Country
Tasmania
Day 1 – 18th April 2011
8.30am Western Australia v Tasmania
9.30am Northern NSW v VIC Metro
10.30am ACT v South Australia
11.30am NSW Country v VIC Country
12.30pm NSW Metro v Queensland
1.30pm Northern NSW v ACT
2.30pm NSW Country v Western Australia
3.30pm Queensland v Tasmania
4.30pm VIC Metro v NSW Metro
5.30pm VIC Country v South Australia
Day 2 – 19th April 2011
8.30am ACT v VIC Metro
9.30am Tasmania v NSW Country
10.30am South Australia v NSW Metro
11.30am VIC Country v Queensland
12.30pm Northern NSW v Western Australia
1.30pm VIC Metro v Tasmania
2.30pm NSW Metro v ACT
3.30pm Queensland v NSW Country
4.30pm Western Australia v VIC Country
5.30pm South Australia v Northern NSW
Day 3 – 20th April 2011
8.30am NSW Metro v Northern NSW
9.30am ACT v NSW Country
10.30am South Australia v VIC Metro
11.30am Western Australia v Queensland
12.30pm VIC Country v Tasmania
1.30pm All Stars Announcement
2.15pm All Stars v National Champions
3.15pm Presentation
REAL MADRID | SERGIO CANALES | THE SHAMAN & THE DESERT
My interview for PBS Frontline on O'Bannon v. NCAA
Here's an excerpt from the transcript:
PBS: How significant is this case?
McCann: It's a very significant case, particularly because it's past the motion-to-dismiss stage. A motion to dismiss is an argument by the defendant that, even if all of the facts are true, there's no viable legal claim. Well, the NCAA lost the motion to dismiss, and it's now going to trial. Normally, cases against the NCAA have not succeeded, either because of motions to dismiss or because they're settled. O'Bannon, though, seems to signal that he isn't going to settle, that he's actually going to go forward with this case, and he's going to try to win it.
And if he wins it, it would mean that retired players, including those who have been retired for a while, should be compensated for their use and image and likeness that the NCAA contracted away.
PBS: Well, you said something called the "right of publicity." What is that?
McCann: The right of publicity is that we have certain proprietary interests in our identity, that if somebody is going to try to make money off our image, our likeness, our name, that we should be compensated for that. Now, there are exceptions to that. There's a newsworthiness exception, for instance. If we're in the public news because of something we did or because we happen to be there, we're not going to be compensated. There's also an exception for parody. In other words, if we went on a television show and somebody parodied our appearance, we wouldn't be compensated for that.
But if somebody is just trying to make money off our image or likeness, we have a legal right, under state laws, to be compensated for that.
PBS: Let me put it a different way. O'Bannon, all the college athletes today, student-athletes, they all sign this form, right? And it's our understanding that this form has a clause in it that says you're signing away all your rights, basically, to the NCAA and to the school that you went to. So what's this litigation all about?
McCann: O'Bannon would argue that the Student-Athlete Statement, which, as you noted, Lowell, is required of students to sign if they want to play college sports -- students who may be 17 or 18 years old know that if they don't sign that statement, they will not be able to play sports. And if they can't play sports, they may not get their scholarship. And if they don't get their scholarship, they may not be able to afford school. So O'Bannon is saying, well, that's not really much of a choice, is it, because you're required to sign this form.
Not only does it seem as if we don't have a choice, but the form itself shouldn't have the meaning that the NCAA seems to perceive. The form means that players give up their proprietary interest while they're in college, so the NCAA can use their likeness and image while they're in college to promote the NCAA and to promote the colleges that the players are associated with.
O'Bannon is saying, even if that's OK, which he doesn't seem to concede, but even if that's OK, it shouldn't continue after I've left school, because the NCAA, as it's argued, is concerned about the exploitation of student-athletes; that if they were to be able to do their own deals while in college, there would be charlatans who exploit players and the like. But O'Bannon is saying: "I'm 39 years old. Why is it that I need to be protected by the NCAA nearly 20 years after I played college basketball? I should have a right to get paid. That form shouldn't take the effect that the NCAA seems to interpret."
* * *
PBS: Yeah. But I mean, the players who make the money, because there's a very small group of players who bring in that revenue, right?
McCann: Sure. I think you could say that the superstar player generates a disproportionate share of the fan's interest of the commercialization of sports. When O.J. Mayo plays one year [of basketball] at the University of Southern California, and he's put on the cover of the brochure, and he's highlighted, he clearly is generating revenue for the University of Southern California. This is somebody who is attracting renewed interest in a program that had not attracted a lot of interest in years prior.
I don't know if the 11th and 12th persons on the bench are generating that same value. They're clearly not. You know, the random offensive linemen on a top college football team, whom we don't know the name of, how much value is that player contributing? Well, in the sense that he's playing on a team that's doing really well, he's contributing value. But independently, how much value is he contributing? I think that's a harder call. And I think that's what is going to make compensating athletes a difficult challenge, certainly not an impossible challenge, but it's figuring out who gets what ... If it were a professional league, then we would know what they get, because there's a market for services.
* * *
PBS: But this is the only country that I know of that has sports teams associated with universities and institutions of higher learning in a billion-dollar industry, and is tied that way. I mean, this is a pretty unusual situation, isn't it?
McCann: It is, and in other countries, for instance in Europe, we don't see the same college sports system. We see a professionalization of youth sports. We see if you're a 13- or 14-year-old star basketball player, you don't have to wait until you're 19 years old and one year removed from high school to play in the NBA. You can sell your services as a teenager and make money at that point, or you can join some other kind of pro league in another part of the world.
Only in the United States do we have this very extensive and popular system of college sports that has had the effect of reducing the compensation and, in some cases, eliminating compensation for those who are playing the sports. When you couple that with age restrictions in order to enter the NFL and the NBA -- and, of course, in college sports, at least 90 percent of the revenue is generated by football and men's basketball -- then you could see a real injustice.
You have players who can't turn pro because of an age restriction. Then they have to go to college, if you will, to play maybe for a school that they have no interest [in] being a student at. Where do they go? Well, they can go to Europe if they're a basketball player, perhaps, but not many have done so. They're in a difficult situation. I think the ones who are generating so much of the wealth, the star players, are the ones who are so clearly disadvantaged by this system.
PBS: So it's an antitrust case.
McCann: It is an antitrust case, because the current system is set up in a way that boycotts players who would otherwise be commercially viable from being able to use their services. And that, arguably, makes the market less competitive.
Now, the question is, who gets sued there? Do you sue the professional sports leagues and the players' associations that have created barriers to entry? Well, that's been done in the past. The difficulty is that courts say, if the owners and the players get together and negotiate a rule, it's largely immune from federal antitrust law. And of course, you could say, well, that doesn't seem fair, because the players' association is looking out for current players. Why should they create a barrier that prevents prospective players from entering the league, because if they could enter, they're going to take jobs away from the 12th guy on the bench. That doesn't seem like a fair system. But that's how federal labor and antitrust laws are set up. Current employees can negotiate on behalf of prospective employees. It may seem fair in some contexts, but I think in professional sports it really isn't.
* * *
Woden Valley FC Dominates the Elaine Watson Cup Final 2011
The Woden Valley Club website (http://www.wvfc.asn.au/category.php?id=1) provides this commentary on the game:
"A successful weekend for both the WVFC U18s and WVFC Pathways women was completed when both teams qualified for the Elaine Watson Cup final. A shock was on the cards into the 2nd half with the U18s holding a 1 - nil lead before the Pathways girls pulled away to win 3 -1 eventually. Both teams contributed to an enjoyable final with some good football on display. "
Woden Valley FC Dominates the Elaine Watson Cup Final 2011
The Woden Valley Club website (http://www.wvfc.asn.au/category.php?id=1) provides this commentary on the game:
"A successful weekend for both the WVFC U18s and WVFC Pathways women was completed when both teams qualified for the Elaine Watson Cup final. A shock was on the cards into the 2nd half with the U18s holding a 1 - nil lead before the Pathways girls pulled away to win 3 -1 eventually. Both teams contributed to an enjoyable final with some good football on display. "
Womens Federation Cup Final Part 1 - Ed Hollis Woden Valley Coach
If you didn't get to the Women's Federation Cup final at Mackellar last Saturday, you have my deepest sympathies.
This was a fantastic game, played by two teams who are well coached, were well prepared for this game and played with skill, discipline, flair, passion and total committment. It was everything you could want a game of football to be.
The two teams were Woden Valley FC (defending Womens PL premiers for 2010) v Belconnen United FC. The game concluded at the end of 90 minutes of ordinary time 0:0, then they played 30 minutes of Extra time, still 0:0. Both teams had played themselves to a standstill. A penalty shoot out followed and Belconnen's experienced players saw them win the game for Belconnen United FC.
The player of the match went to the Belocnnen GK and it was hard to argue with her performance. But I just can't let this opportunity pass without special mention of the two Belconnen centre backs, they were absolutely outstanding among two teams of players who were all giving their best. These two Belco players held it all together at the back and this was clearly a key to the Belco Coaches game plan. Their individual and collective performance was the best I have seen in these two critical positions in the last few years of mens or womens football in the ACT PL. Both players have much to recommend them to ACTAS.
My heartfelt congratulations to all associated with both teams. It was well worth the $5 entry fee that Capital Football cheekly charged spectators. I hope they take the total entry fee contribution and buy every player in both teams new football boots and the two coaches oxygen recovery equipment!
And all this good Football at the end of the Pre-season competition. Amazing! Womens Football is just getting better and better.
There is only one thing I can recommend - rather than me write about this sensational match, listen to the Coaches talk about it. In Part 1 we begin by talking to the Coach of Woden Valley FC, Ed Hollis. In Part 2 we will speak to the Belconnen United FC Coach.
Download Podcast here:
Womens Federation Cup Final Part 1 - Ed Hollis Woden Valley Coach
If you didn't get to the Women's Federation Cup final at Mackellar last Saturday, you have my deepest sympathies.
This was a fantastic game, played by two teams who are well coached, were well prepared for this game and played with skill, discipline, flair, passion and total committment. It was everything you could want a game of football to be.
The two teams were Woden Valley FC (defending Womens PL premiers for 2010) v Belconnen United FC. The game concluded at the end of 90 minutes of ordinary time 0:0, then they played 30 minutes of Extra time, still 0:0. Both teams had played themselves to a standstill. A penalty shoot out followed and Belconnen's experienced players saw them win the game for Belconnen United FC.
The player of the match went to the Belocnnen GK and it was hard to argue with her performance. But I just can't let this opportunity pass without special mention of the two Belconnen centre backs, they were absolutely outstanding among two teams of players who were all giving their best. These two Belco players held it all together at the back and this was clearly a key to the Belco Coaches game plan. Their individual and collective performance was the best I have seen in these two critical positions in the last few years of mens or womens football in the ACT PL. Both players have much to recommend them to ACTAS.
My heartfelt congratulations to all associated with both teams. It was well worth the $5 entry fee that Capital Football cheekly charged spectators. I hope they take the total entry fee contribution and buy every player in both teams new football boots and the two coaches oxygen recovery equipment!
And all this good Football at the end of the Pre-season competition. Amazing! Womens Football is just getting better and better.
There is only one thing I can recommend - rather than me write about this sensational match, listen to the Coaches talk about it. In Part 1 we begin by talking to the Coach of Woden Valley FC, Ed Hollis. In Part 2 we will speak to the Belconnen United FC Coach.
Download Podcast here:
LITHUANIA 1 SPAIN 3 | EURO 2012 GROUP I QUALIFIER RESULT
Two Great Nights of Sports Law Related TV
2) Tomorrow night at 10 p.m. HBO Real Sports will air a 1-hour feature on College Sports in America (Part I can be seen here; Part II here). Here is more info on the HBO feature:
Two long-form segments anchor the program, setting the stage for an extended roundtable panel hosted by Bryant Gumbel and featuring former University of Michigan head football coach Rich Rodriguez, outspoken college basketball commentator Billy Packer and print journalist Jason Whitlock of FoxSports.com. The group will address a host of issues relating to the NCAA and the regulation of its 1,055 member schools.
Segments include:
*The Money Trail. Every year, thousands of talented young student-athletes sign letters of intent and obtain full-ride athletic scholarships (tuition and board) from the biggest, wealthiest programs in America, effectively giving up all rights to revenue generated by their participation, including TV rights fees, merchandising and ticket sales. But with a dramatic increase in revenue from top programs and athletes’ growing awareness of their contribution, many are starting to ask if there should be financial compensation. REAL SPORTS correspondent Bernard Goldberg examines the notion of student-athletes remaining untainted amateurs while generating pro-type revenue for their schools. Are they getting a fair shake?*Pay to Play. Should athletes at Division I programs be financially compensated? And would that curb the headline-grabbing stories of inappropriate payments and benefits? More and more standout athletes in top programs are seemingly putting their education on the back burner to focus on what’s really important – the money. Those destined for the NBA and NFL face the moral dilemma of dealing with “advisors” and “street agents” who can deliver the funds and material items they desire while in school in exchange for a promise of future reciprocation when they reach the pros. REAL SPORTS correspondent Andrea Kremer delves into the controversial and complex subject of premium college-bound athletes receiving benefits that are prohibited by the NCAA.
Vettel Begins Title Defense With a Win
- Sebastian Vettel = 25 points
- Lewis Hamilton = 18 points
- Vitaly Petrov = 15 points
- Fernando Alonso= 12 points
- Mark Webber = 10 points
- Jenson Button = 8 points
New sports law scholarship
Rachel Blumenfeld, Dog baiting abatement: using nuisance abatement to regulate dogfighting, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 1 (2010)
Victor S. Broccoli, Williams v. NFL: the Eighth Circuit flags the NFL for interference with state drug testing laws, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 283 (2010)
Bradley R. Bultman, Comment, Drafted player compensation: incorrectly hidden in the afternoon shadow of the nonstatutory labor exemption, 11 FLORDIA COASTAL LAW REVIEW 687 (2010)
Ashlee A. Cassman, Bring it on! Cheerleading vs. Title IX: could cheerleading ever be considered an athletic opportunity under Title IX, and if so, what implications would that have on university compliance?, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 245 (2010)
Steve E. Cavezza, Can I see some ID? An Antitrust Analysis of NBA and NFL Draft Eligibility Rules, 9 UNIVERSITY OF DENVER SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT LJ 22 (2011)
Sonali Chitre, Technology and copyright law—illuminating the NFL’s ‘blackout’ rule in game broadcasting, 33 HASTINGS COMMUNICATION & ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL 97 (2010)
Reid Coploff, Exploring gender discrimination in coaching, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 195 (2010)
Chris Deubert, What’s a ‘Clean’ Agent to Do? The Case for a Cause of Action Against a Players Association, 18 VILLANOVA SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL 1 (2011)
Marielle Elisabet Dirkx, Comment, Calling an audible: the Equal Protection Clause, cross-over cases, and the need to change Title IX regulations, 80 MISSISSIPPI LAW JOURNAL 411 (2010)
Marc Edelman & David Rosenthal, A sobering conflict: the call for consistency in the message colleges send about alcohol, 20 FORDHAM INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, MEDIA & ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL 1389 (2010)
Adam Epstein, Teaching Torts with Sports, 28 JOURNAL OF LEGAL EDUCATION 117 (2011)
Adam Epstein, Religion and Sports in the Undergraduate Classroom: A Surefire Way to Spark Student Interest, 21 SOUTHERN LAW JOURNAL 133 (2011)
Lauren A. Fields, Comment, Who owns dat?, 13 TULANE JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY & INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 251 (2010)
John A. Fortunato & Shannon E. Martin, American Needle v. NFL: Legal and Sponsorship Implications, 9 UNIVERSITY OF DENVER SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL 73 (2011)
Nathaniel Grow, Defining the “business of baseball”: a proposed framework for determining the scope of professional baseball’s antitrust exemption, 44 UC DAVIS LAW REVIEW 557 (2010)
Benjamin B. Hanson, Comment, Defend the Williams Wall, leave professional sports drug testing policies in shambles: the decision and consequences of Williams v. NFL, 33 HAMLINE LAW REVIEW 327 (2010)
Casinova O. Henderson, How much discretion is too much for the NFL Commissioner to have over the players’ off-the-field conduct?, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 167 (2010)
Robert S. Jeffrey, Note, Beyond the hype: the legal and practical consequences of American Needle, 11 FLORIDA COASTAL LAW REVIEW 667 (2010)
Brandon Johansson, Note, Pause the game: are video game producers punting away the publicity rights of retired athletes?, 10 NEVADA LAW JOURNAL 784 (2010)
Richard G. Johnson, Submarining due process: how the NCAA uses its restitution rule to deprive college athletes of their right of access to the courts...until Oliver v. NCAA, 11 FLORIDA COASTAL LAW REVIEW 459 (2010)
Michael Kim, Mixed martial arts: the evolution of a combat sport and its laws and regulations, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 49 (2010)
Camalla M. Kimbrough, Comment, Upon further review: how the NFL’s exclusive licensing agreement with Reebok survives antitrust scrutiny despite the League’s flawed single-entity defense, 13 TULANE JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY & INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 235 (2010)
Jeffrey F. Levine & Bram A. Maravent, Fumbling away the season: will the expiration of the NFL-NFLPA CBA result in the loss of the 2011 season?, 20 FORDHAM INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY MEDIA & ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL 1419 (2010)
Joseph A. Litman, Note, Tremendous upside potential: how a high-school basketball player might challenge the National Basketball Association’s eligibility requirements, 88 WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW 261 (2010)
Robert A. McCormick & Amy Christian McCormick, A trail of tears: the exploitation of the college athlete, 11 FLORIDA COASTAL LAW REVIEW 639 (2010)
Frank P. McQuillan, Minnesota’s miracle...on ice: the transfer-mation of student-athletes into free agents, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 135 (2010)
Matthew J. Mitten & Hayden Opie, “Sports law”: implications for the development of international, comparative, and national law and global dispute resolution, 85 TULANE LAW REVIEW 269 (2010)
Brandon D. Morgan, Oliver v. NCAA: NCAA’s no agent rule called out, but remains safe, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 303 (2010)
Anna Peterson, Comment, But she doesn’t run like a girl...: the ethic of fair play and the flexibility of the binary conception of sex, 19 TULANE JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE & INTERNATIONAL LAW 315 (2010)
Adam Primm, Salary arbitration induced settlement in Major League Baseball: the new trend, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 73 (2010)
J. Chadwick Schnee, Wrestling with retaliation: pinning down the Burlington “dissuading” standard under Title IX, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 223 (2010)
Aaron Shepard, Note, Football’s stormy future: forecasting the upcoming National Football League labor negotiations, 33 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF LAW & ARTS 527 (2010)
Patrick Donohue Sheridan, An Olympic solution to ambush marketing: how the London Olympics show the way to more effective trademark law, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 27 (2010)
Brett T. Smith, The tax-exempt status of the NCAA: has the IRS fumbled the ball?, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 117 (2010)
Jeffrey J.R. Sundram, Comment, The downside of success: how increased commercialism could cost the NCAA its biggest antitrust defense, 85 TULANE LAW REVIEW 543 (2010)
Seagull Haiyan Song, How should China respond to online piracy of live sports telecasts? A comparative study of Chinese copyright legislation to US and European Legislation, 9 UNIVERSITY OF DENVER SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL 1 (2011)
Robert J. Thorpe, Way out in left field: Crespin v. Albuquerque Baseball Club rejects nearly one hundred years of American jurisprudence by declining to adopt the baseball rule in New Mexico, 17 SPORTS LAWYERS JOURNAL 267 (2010)
Glenn M. Wong, Warren Zola and Chris Deubert, Going Pro in Sports: Improving Guidance to Student-Athletes in a Complicated Legal and Regulatory Environment, 28 CARDOZO ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL 553 (2011)
Glenn M. Wong and Chris Deubert, National Basketball Association General Managers: An Analysis of the Responsibilities, Qualifications and Characteristics, 18 VILLANOVA SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL 213 (2011)