Sabtu, Januari 31, 2009

Fernando Torres honoured to be Liverpool's player of 2008

FERNANDO Torres says he is deeply honoured to be named Liverpool's player of the year for 2008.

In a poll conducted on Liverpool's official club website the Spanish striker took the honour, which was won last year by Jamie Carragher.

Torres told the ECHO: "I know that last season was a fantastic season for me. It was my first one at Liverpool and I really enjoyed it because of the goals I scored but also because of the support of the fans which helped me so much.

"When you play in a team with players like Stevie, Carra, Reina and Mascherano – in fact, any of my team mates – it is a big honour to be given this kind of award, especially because it was voted for by the fans.

*Fernando Torres won the watch from David M. Robinson for being voted LFC Player of the Year by visitors to www.liverpoolfc.tv for 2007/2008 season.

The watch is the new Breitling Super Avenger with white dial and a red Ocean Racer strap, which retails for £2,695.



Lampard holds Gerrard belief


Frank Lampard believes his much-maligned England midfield partnership with Steven Gerrard would flourish if they played for the same club side.

Chelsea star Lampard and Liverpool skipper Gerrard will go head-to-head at Anfield on Sunday in a crucial Premier League encounter.


Despite being the driving force for their respective teams with regular all-action displays, the duo have rarely replicated that form at international level.

Gerrard came close to moving to Stamford Bridge in the summer of 2005 after a breakdown in contract negotiations at Anfield, before pledging his future to the Merseyside outfit in a dramatic u-turn.And Lampard believes that if the duo had been able to train together on a daily basis, then the benefits to the national side would have been obvious.

He told the Daily Mail: "Steve? What a fantastic player. I watched him against Everton the other week and it was a complete performance, he was the driving force.

Read more


Liverpool v Chelsea Team news


Chelsea will be without defender Ricardo Carvalho for Sunday's trip to Liverpool.

The Portugal international is still troubled by a hamstring strain but winger Salomon Kalou should be fit after sustaining a minor knock against Middlesbrough in midweek.

Midfielder Michael Essien (knee) and Joe Cole (knee) are sidelined.Xabi Alonso, Dirk Kuyt and Albert Riera are expected to return to Liverpool's starting line-up.

All three started on the bench for the midweek 1-1 draw at Wigan - although both Kuyt and Riera came on during the match - as manager Rafael Benitez rested key players ahead of the Chelsea showdown.

Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres were substituted at the JJB Stadium with Benitez claiming they were tired, but both should start against Chelsea.

Teams:

Liverpool (from): Reina, Arbeloa, Skrtel, Agger, Hyypia, Carragher, Dossena, Aurelio, Benayoun, Babel, Alonso, Mascherano, Lucas, Gerrard, Riera, Torres, Kuyt, Keane, Cavalieri.

Chelsea (from): Cech, Hilario, Taylor, Ferreira, Bosingwa, Terry, Alex, Ivanovic, Mancienne, A Cole, Lampard, Ballack, Mikel, Deco, Kalou, Malouda, Drogba, Anelka, Stoch, Belletti.




New iPhone firmware reveals code for next model


What will Apple's next iPhone look like? The only changes might be under the hood.

(Credit: Apple)


As might be expected, it doesn't seem that the iPhone 3G will be Apple's last iPhone.

MacRumors has discovered code inside the OS X 2.2.1 firmware released earlier this week that describes an "IPhone 2,1" model. Previous discoveries have shown that Apple uses this labeling nomenclature for both the iPhone and the iPod Touch.

The original iPhone was labeled "1,1", while the iPhone 3G was model "1,2." The iPod Touch has already advanced to a second-generation design, as the iPod Touch released at September's music event received the "2,1" label inside its firmware.

Little else is known about iPhone "2,1." It's reasonable to assume that since the iPod Touch number changed significantly with the addition of a new processor, that such an upgrade might be coming to the next iPhone. P.A. Semi has been working on iPhone chips since last spring, and other evidence has surfaced indicating that Apple might be planning to upgrade the iPhone's graphics sometime in the near future.

Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller seemed to imply earlier this year that Apple was locked into a June/July upgrade cycle with the iPhone, noting that Macworld's January date conflicted with a number of Apple's regular product cycles. So, perhaps another summer iPhone release is on tap.

Advanced Vista Optimizer 2009 3.5

Advanced Vista Optimizer is a comprehensive set of 25+ tools to boost up your system's performance. Its powerful optimizing features like Disk Defragment and Memory Optimizer make your computer always perform like new. The security tools like Privacy Protector and File Encryptor ensure that your private data is always safe. Advanced Vista Optimizer gives you access to 35+ tweaks and tuning options, in one program, so that you can customize your copy of Windows Vista to be your personal copy. It can be scheduled to automatically maintain your system in perfect health by running the optimizing tools without regular user action.



Porsche museum opens in Stuttgart


Set to open to the public Saturday at the automaker's headquarters in the city's Zuffenhausen district, the museum is a sprawling monument to 60 years of German engineering.

Engines, interactive displays, Porsche memorabilia and 80 cars - including prototypes and icons like the 911, all polished to a mirror-sheen - are parked on two floors of pristine, white galleries.



The collection includes a 550 Spyder - the model James Dean was driving when he died in a collision with a Studebaker in 1955.

Other models, like the 917 type Hollywood star Steve McQueen made famous in "Le Mans" and the 928 version Tom Cruise's character in "Risky Business" used to elude trouble, are parked bumper-to-bumper under dazzling spotlights.

Three dramatic concrete pillars support the museum building, designed by the Viennese architecture firm Delugan Meissl, which seems to float above its industrial surroundings.

A handcrafted aluminum recreation of the very first Porsche, a Type 64 'VW Aerocoupe,' shines in the center of the first floor.



Other cars stand out for their oddity, such as the 1957 "Jagdwagen" or hunting car, an amphibious vehicle ready for road and pond - whose unique design brought back memories for invited guests at this week's official opening of the museum.

"Oh, would you look at that," exclaimed a white-haired visitor to an elderly friend, as he came around the corner face-to-face with the Jagdwagen. "That thing was the best in the Black Forest and in the lake. But it was so expensive."




Each car is described with signs in English and German, and visitors can get up-close-and-personal with the vehicles, with no barriers keeping them at a distance.

Another favorite is the 917/20 race car nicknamed the "Pink Pig." The extra-wide car was painted pink and labeled with the names of different cuts of meat after a designer complained about its shape.



Prototypes on display include a 928 model almost long enough for four doors, a 1989 "Panamericana" with odd, frog-like curves and the darling of the museum staff: the 1992 Boxster prototype that won Best in Show at the 1993 Detroit Auto Show.

"I love it. It's my favorite," said museum guide Liron Koll. "It's so much more beautiful than the production model."





Porsche owns more than 400 classic race and sports cars.

Many of those in display still race in events around the world and almost every car in the museum is road ready - leaving the building perfumed with the smell of fresh grease and motor oil.



When models are taken out of the museum on the road, Porsche plans to rotate in others to take their place.

Behind a glass wall opposite the main entrance, visitors can watch mechanics working on the museum's collection.

Porsche hopes to lure 200,000 visitors a year to the museum - competition for the rival Mercedes museum, located a half-hour away in Untertuerkheim, a Stuttgart suburb.

The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Admission is euro8 ($10.5 dollars) for adults. Children under 14 enter for free when accompanied by an adult.


AP

Getting Back to the Beatles

Creme Tangerine plays to a lunchtime crowd to celebrate the historic 40th anniversary rooftop concert of the Beatles, at Pike Place Market on Friday.






Rare "Prehistoric" Shark Photographed Alive

Flaring the gills that give the species its name, a frilled shark swims at Japan's Awashima Marine Park. Sightings of living frilled sharks are rare, because the fish generally remain thousands of feet beneath the water's surface.

Spotted by a fisher on January 21, this 5.3-foot (160-centimeter) shark was transferred to the marine park, where it was placed in a seawater pool.

"We think it may have come to the surface because it was sick, or else it was weakened because it was in shallow waters," a park official told the Reuters news service.


This serpentine specimen may look like a large eel, but its six slitlike gills help mark it as a cousin of the great white, the hammerhead, and other sharks. But this isn't your average fish.

Believed to have changed little since prehistoric times, the frilled shark is linked to long-extinct species by its slinky shape and by an upper jaw that is part of its skull. Most living sharks have hinged top jaws.


With a mouthful of three-pointed teeth, the frilled shark may be a fearsome hunter, but it's considered harmless to humans. Those needle-like choppers are better suited to fleshier forms found in the deep sea, such as squid and other sharks.


Right now it's known as a "living fossil." But the frilled shark may be on its way to joining its ancestors.

Often accidentally caught and killed in trawlers' nets in Japanese waters, frilled sharks are known to turn up in fertilizer or animal food and occasionally on dinner plates. The World Conservation Union (IUCN) lists the species as near threatened, meaning it "is close to qualifying for or is likely to qualify for a threatened category in the near future."




NG

Real Madrid taking Faubert on loan as Kovac heads to Upton Park


The West Ham United midfielder Julien Faubert is set to join Real Madrid on loan today until the end of the season. He is due in the Spanish capital for a medical after a loan fee of £1.5m was agreed. Real's coach, Juande Ramos, has turned to Faubert after turning down Jermaine Pennant and failing to land Wigan's Antonio Valencia. West Ham added to their squad last night by completing a loan move for Spartak Moscow's Radoslav Kovac, a central defender who can also play in midfield.

West Ham signed Faubert from Bordeaux for £6.1m in the summer of 2007 but the Frenchman tore his achilles tendon in a pre-season match only weeks later, an injury which kept him out of action for over six months. Faubert has made 24 appearances this season and has proved himself versatile, regularly making the switch between right-back and right midfield. Ramos reportedly regarded Faubert as a last option after hopes of a more expensive deal faded.

The new arrival at Upton Park is an experienced Czech international defender who Gianfranco Zola hopes will add a new dynamic to the Hammers midfield. The 29-year-old Kovac joins from Spartak Moscow, where he was captain. "I am pleased to have Radoslav here. He has a lot of experience with the national team and he will give us competition in a midfield which is already very strong. I am sure he will help us with what we are trying to achieve this season," Zola said.

He joins a strong Czech contingent at the club following goalkeepers Marek Stech and Jan Lastuvka, along with Ludek Miklosko. "I am delighted we have managed to secure the services of a proven international like Radoslav ahead of interest from clubs at home and abroad," said West Ham United CEO Scott Duxbury. "He brings considerable quality and will fit right into Gianfranco Zola's talented squad. The deal is such that the manager will be able to sign him permanently in the summer if he so wishes."

Guardian Unlimited




Defoe's metatarsal woe leaves Spurs boss Redknapp in a transfer window panic

Jermain Defoe could miss much of Tottenham’s fight for Premier League survival after suffering a suspected fractured metatarsal in a training ground challenge ahead of Saturday’s clash at Bolton.

The £15.75million England striker, who has played only five times since his return to White Hart Lane from Portsmouth earlier this month, will be a heartbroken absentee from the Carling Cup Final against Manchester United at Wembley on March 1.

Defoe, 26, had scored three goals since teaming up again with manager Harry Redknapp, but he is unlikely to play until late March at the earliest after suffering the dramatic setback on Thursday morning.


The injury will force Redknapp, who is desperately trying to lead his team away from a Barclays Premier League relegation struggle, to sign another striker before the transfer window closes on Monday at 5pm.

But the absence of a player whose pace and finishing power had already brought rewards leaves a huge gap in the Tottenham team.

Lyon striker Fred was due for talks earlier this week with Redknapp but the Brazilian’s prospects of a move were shelved because of potential problems over a work permit and his personal terms.


Robbie Keane (left) Roque Santa Cruz (centre) and Lyon striker Fred could all be targets for Spurs boss Harry Redknapp


'Now we have this situation to deal with. They have to make an official offer and we will say yes or no.

'We have not decided yet whether we’ll take this further — it depends on their response.’

Spurs hoped Defoe’s goals would keep them away from trouble, but with Darren Bent suffering a loss of form, Roman Pavlyuchenko must shoulder the burden.

Defoe missed last year’s Carling Cup Final triumph over Chelsea because he had been sold to Redknapp’s Pompey by former Spurs boss Juande Ramos.

He was also a frustrated bystander when Portsmouth won the FA Cup because he was cup-tied.


Dailymail


Benitez relaxed ahead of Chelsea clash

Rafael Benitez was cool, calm and collected on Friday as he prepared for the showdown with English Premier League title rivals Chelsea.

The Liverpool boss admits that January has been a 'terrible' month, but insists he feels under no extra pressure as his side have drawn seven of its last 11 Premier League games and allowed Manchester United and Chelsea to leapfrog them in the title race.

Benitez went to great lengths to explain the contentious decisions to substitute Fernando Torres and Steven Gerrard late in the disappointing 1-1 draw at Wigan.

And although not wanting to go on the record, it was explained that his 'crazy' remark after the JJB stadium game was a reference to the refereeing standards in the last three league games against more physical sides Stoke, Everton and Wigan.

Far from 'losing the plot' Benitez was all smiles and full of humour.

"We are eight points better off at this stage than last season," he said.

"We are very positive and if we can beat Chelsea everybody will be talking in a different way about us.

"We are in our best position for the last 10-15 years. So we have to enjoy it and try to keep doing our best.

"There is no extra pressure on me. I can guarantee that I have not read a newspaper, listened to radio or watched TV since the Wigan game.

"I spent Thursday enjoying some time off with my family because I knew there would be a lot of people trying to talk about things they do not know about."

But he accepts that Liverpool must beat Chelsea.


Read more


Chelsea boss agrees with Liverpool boss about Man Utd boss

Chelsea boss Luiz Felipe Scolari understands why Liverpool counterpart Rafael Benitez was critical of Manchester United chief Sir Alex Ferguson earlier this month.

Benitez accused Ferguson and his staff of putting referees under pressure, especially at Old Trafford, and of consistently showing them little respect.

Now Scolari, who takes his side to Liverpool on Sunday, says he can understand the reasons behind Benitez's controversial outburst.

"It's one of his ideas and I haven't spoken to him about it," said Scolari.

"Maybe I will at the weekend. I understand. I understand very well.

"I understand that, sometimes, when we play there (at Old Trafford) and at Stamford Bridge, I know what happens."



Clubs queue for Liverpool starlet Flynn

Liverpool youngster Ryan Flynn is being targeted by a host of clubs before the close of the transfer window, skysports.com reports.

Flynn is currently on loan at Wrexham, and has impressed a number of League One and League Two clubs who are believed to be exploring the option of signing the talented winger once his deal at Wrexham comes to an end.

However, Reds boss Rafa Benitez could decide to loan the 20 year old out again.

Vidic banned for San Siro trip


Manchester United defender Nemanja Vidic will miss next month's Champions League first-leg match against Inter Milan after receiving a one-match ban for his red card in December's Club World Cup final.

The suspension was announced by world football's governing body FIFA on Friday, along with a fine of 5,000 Swiss Francs ($4,329).

The Serbian international was sent off four minutes into the second half of United's 1-0 win over Ecuador's LDU in Yokohama on December 21 after elbowing LDU striker Claudio Bieler in the face and could have faced a lengthier ban.

Instead he will be free to play in the return leg at Old Trafford on March 11.

FIFA's disciplinary committee was responsible for issuing the suspension as the Club World Cup is a FIFA competition but it will be applied by European soccer's governing body UEFA who are the organisers of the Champions League.

FIFA also announced a two-match ban from Asian continental competition for Gamba Osaka's Takahiro Futagawa following his last-minute red card in the tournament's third-place play-off match.



Liverpool legend Aldridge: I don't know what Benitez is talking about

Liverpool legend John Aldridge has no idea what Rafa Benitez was talking about in his latest rant after their draw at Wigan.

The former Republic of Ireland striker said: "I honestly don’t know what all that was about on Wednesday but after dominating the first half they lost control completely and I’ve never seen them give the ball away so much.

"You can’t blame the rant he had at Fergie. That’s nothing to do with it. In fact, what Rafa said about Fergie was right but it put him under pressure if things went wrong, and they have.

"After the Newcastle game over Christmas I was really hopeful, although perhaps we all failed to see how bad Newcastle were.

"But since then the problems have become more obvious and it looks as if it’s started to fall away."

He added: "People will draw their own conclusions and look at the team selections and the substitutions. He knew Stoke would be a physical game but went with Yossi Benayoun and Lucas.

"Too many draws all season have cost them, not just the last three games.

"Before Christmas there was Stoke, Fulham, West Ham and Hull. That’s eight points dropped at home, points that would’ve put the side six clear of United even though they’d still have a game in hand.

"What Rafa has to do now is show his character and get things back on track. United have had the sort of run everybody feared and expected and Chelsea on Sunday is a massive, massive game.

"If things don’t improve soon, then it’s really possible to see Villa breaking in and that would make it a real danger for Liverpool to not be in the top four at all and we all know what that would mean on the money side.




Jumaat, Januari 30, 2009

Amazing accidents

A car protrudes through an exterior wall following a crash on the third story of parking garage in Tokyo

A car crashed into a church roof in Limbach-Oberfrohna, Germany. According to the police the driver missed a turn, driving too fast, continued straight ahead on a slightly rising field and then 'took off' to land in the church roof

A 4x4 lies at the bottom of a cliff at Polpeor, in Cornwall, after it plunged 250 feet from the top. The driver jumped out, ran alongside and pulled out her son, just two feet from the edge

Joe Peroceschi, of Wisconsin, is thrown from his boat, Smokin Joe, after losing control on a windy course at the Budweiser Drag Boat Nationals in Southeast Missouri

Mike Robbins from Youngsville, North Carolina crashes his boat, Blown Bull, while racing in the second round of the Top Alcohol Hydro class of the Oak Hollow Boat Drag race


A £100,000 Ferrari literally wrapped itself around a telegraph pole after its driver lost control in Adelaide, Australia. The driver and his passenger walked away from the crash with minor injuries

A car crash on Sunnyside Road in Alloa, Scotland. A pensioner escaped injury when the vehicle smashed through his bedroom wall

A lorry wedged in the doors of the Stena Voyager ferry bound for Belfast, after it returned to the Scottish port of Stranraer

The living room of a house in Newport. The owners were watching television when the lorry crashed through the bay window

A commuter train passes the scene where a lorry came off a road and on to railway tracks in Buckinghamshire on the West Coast Mainline. No one was injured and no collision took place

About 125 vehicles on both directions of the busy interstate piled up along a foggy stretch of road in Ringold, northwest Georgia

Tad Segars rolls his car down the front stretch during the Thunder Car 50 auto race at Lowe's Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. Segars walked away from the accident

A police car's front end sits in the window of a home in Toronto, Canada . The driving Toronto police officers received only minor cuts and scrapes

A California Highway Patrol vehicle rests atop a Datsun pickup after the two collided near Bakersfield, California

A car ends up on the forecourt of a north Tyneside garage after rolling over four cars, following an accident on a nearby road

A speedboat which landed in a sand bunker on the Loch Lomond Golf course. The skipper survived

A red Mazda Miata sits at the bottom of the Campasino family's swimming pool in Stewartstown, Philadelphia. It rolled into the pool after their neighbour left the handbrake off

Daniel Lyons's van careered off a mountain road and balanced perilously on a cliff edge 170 feet from the ground, in Colorado


A car rests on top of a van, after a colliding together in Victoria, London

Monument dedicated to Iraqi shoe-tosser

When an Iraqi journalist hurled his shoes at former U.S. president George W. Bush at a Baghdad press conference last month, the attack spawned a flood of web quips, political satire and street rallies across the Arab world.

Now it’s inspired a work of art.

A sofa-sized shoe statue was unveiled Thursday in Tikrit, the hometown of the former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.

Baghdad-based artist Laith al-Amari described his fibreglass-and-copper work as a homage to the pride of the Iraqi people.

The statue also has inscribed a poem honouring Muntadhar al-Zeidi, the Iraqi journalist. Al-Zeidi was charged with assaulting a foreign leader, but the trial was postponed after his lawyer sought to reduce the charges.



Girls stand next to a sculpture of a shoe that serves as a monument to the shoes thrown at then-US president George W. Bush in Tikrit, 130 kilometers (80 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq.

AP

Innovation in the top gear: Pickup converted to treehouse

Someone was probably drunk when the idea of a pickup stuck in a tree hit, and thus came along a treehouse from a Chevy pickup truck. Awesome and insane in equal proportions, the pickup sits fixed between two trees and somehow looks too good to be true.