Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Andy Murray praises instant impact of new coach Ivan Lendl

 
Andy Murray believes new coach Ivan Lendl has improved his game already.
The British number one appointed Lendl, the winner of eight Grand Slam titles, in December.
Murray reached the semi-finals of the Australian Open before losing a five-set thriller to Novak Djokovic, but says Lendl has made a difference.
"I spent five days with him before the Australian Open and I feel like I improved just in those days," Murray told the BBC.
"I'll go and spend a lot more time with him and work harder, and that's really all that you can do."
World number four Murray has 22 ATP titles to his name but has yet to win a Grand Slam after losing three finals.

Ivan Lendl factfile

  • Born March, 1960 in Ostrava, Czech Republic
  • Won first professional title in 1980 in Houston
  • Reached 19 Grand Slam finals, winning eight
  • Won US Open three years in a row from 1985 to 1987
  • Won £13.7m in prize money, ranking eighth in all-time men's earners
The Scot could benefit from the experience of Lendl, 51, who lost his first four Grand Slam finals.
But Murray, 24, admitted that he is inspired by Djokovic, who dominated 2011, losing just six matches all year.
"The turnaround was incredible and he was struggling at the end of the year before," Murray said.
"That's the thing. It is small margins of one break or one match and it doesn't have to be in a Slam - it could be any time.
"Sometimes things can just click and you can make big improvements, and I feel like I made a big improvement in Australia."
Murray has played in an era dominated by what many regard as three of the greatest players of all time in Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Djokovic.
He added: "Everything that's happened in the past, you would say Federer and Nadal are the greatest players ever and Djokovic, the last year, had probably the greatest year ever.
"This year's a new year; it's irrelevant what's happened in the past.
"I'm not saying I'm going to win 16 Grand Slams, but if I can get a few then you can be remembered in the same breath as those guys - you had those great matches; you won Slams in the same time as them."

Graeme Swann rubbishes Andy Flower's claim England lost to Pakistan due to taking too long a winter break

Graeme Swann refuses to accept England coach Andy Flower's claim that the whitewash defeat to Pakistan was in large part due to the fact the side arrived in the UAE underprepared after taking an extended two month winter break.

Graeme Swann rubbishes Andy Flower's claim England lost to Pakistan after taking too long a winter break
In a spin: Graeme Swann says England's failure against spin rather than complacency or being underprepared cost England against Pakistan  Photo: ACTION IMAGES

Two Indian ministers resign after being caught watching porn in assembly


Bangalore: Two Karnataka ministers, an Indian state, had to resign after being caught watching porn videos during assembly session, India media reported on Wednesday.
According to reports, television cameras caught two BJP ministersLakshman Savadi and CC Patil —watching pornography on their cellphones.
Reports said Savadi holds the cooperation portfolio while Patil is women and child development minister.
The ministers were caught in the act even as the House was in the middle of a heated debate, sparking country-wide furore..

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

PTCL raises DSL usage cap before extra fee is charged


Pakistan Telecommunication Company (PTCL) last week began charging its DSL broadband users PKR 5,000 extra if they cross the 300 GB download limit in a given month, Pro Pakistani reported. Previously, it charged customers PKR 1,000 for overshooting 50 GB per month. PTCL said it is notifying its customers by callin g and e-mailing them. The extra charge and the 300 GB cap apply to the 1 Mbps, 2 Mbps, 4 Mbps, 6 Mbps and 8 Mbps DSL services. The 10 Mbps, 20 Mbps and 50 Mbps services will not incur this extra charge.

Syrians thank Russia and China for opposing U.N. resolution

Assad government supporters in Syria
REPORTING FROM ALEPPO, SYRIA, AND BEIRUT -- As the United States and allied nations continued to criticize Russia and China for vetoing a United Nations resolution on Syria, hundreds of residents of the city of Aleppo came out in cold, windy and rainy weather Tuesday to thank the two countries.
The rally coincided with the visit to Damascus of Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who met with President Bashar Assad and was greeted in the Syrian capital with all the pomp and circumstance of a visiting head of state.
Russia and China on Saturday vetoed a draft U.N. Security Council resolution that would have condemned the Syrian government’s crackdown on dissent and backed an Arab League plan calling on Assad to cede power.  The next day, a rally of thanks occurred outside the Russian Consulate in Aleppo.
In Aleppo’s Sadullah bin Jabri Square, not far from the headquarters of the ruling Baath Party in Syria's second-largest city, some men and women waved Russian, Chinese and Syrian flags Tuesday. Others danced the dabke, a traditional Arab dance, to patriotic music.
One man on stage held up a photo of Assad, whose family has ruled Syria for more than 40 years.
"With our souls, with our blood, we sacrifice for you, Bashar," the crowd chanted.
Schoolchildren dressed in their uniforms and carrying backpacks weaved through the crowd. Residents streamed into the square throughout the morning. But many in the city didn't know about the rally;  drivers leaned out of car windows asking fellow motorists the reason for the traffic jam around the square.
Although Russia and China have been lauded in pro-Assad strongholds such as Aleppo, the reaction has been distinctly different in opposition enclaves, where demonstrators have called for Assad’s ouster.
As people celebrated in Aleppo, residents of the battlefield city of Homs, 100 miles to the south, were huddling in their homes amid heavy government shelling, opposition activists said.
The opposition has labeled the veto by Russia and China “a license to kill” for the Assad government.

Greek debt talks drag on but banks signal progress on bond-swap deal to forgive some debt


Shoppers are seen on Athens' main commercial Ermou Street, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2012. Parties backing Greece's coalition government will hold a second day of emergency talks Monday on a vital austerity deal with rescue creditors, after a weekend of negotiations failed to produce the breakthrough needed to avert bankruptcy in March. (AP Photo/Dimitri Messinis)
Shoppers are seen on Athens' main commercial Ermou Street, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2012. Parties backing Greece's coalition government will hold a second day of emergency talks Monday on a vital austerity deal with rescue creditors, after a weekend of negotiations failed to produce the breakthrough needed to avert bankruptcy in March. (AP Photo/Dimitri Messinis)

ATHENS, Greece - Greece's private creditors signalled progress late Tuesday on a debt-relief deal but crucial talks between Greek coalition leaders about forcing more austerity upon a hostile public were again postponed.
Anger flared on the streets of Athens as more than 20,000 protesters marched through the Greek capital and unions called a general strike Tuesday against the new cuts in jobs and spending. The strike halted trains and ferries, closed down schools and banks and put state hospitals on short staffing.
Several hundred protesters clashed with riot police outside Parliament and set fire to a German flag — upset over Germany's role in demanding more austerity from Athens.
"They are committing a crime against the country. They are driving wage-earners into poverty and wiping out pensioners and the unemployed," said Vangelis Moutafis, a senior member of Greece's largest union, the GSEE. "They are selling off state assets for nothing. This cannot continue."
Greek Premier Lucas Papademos delayed a meeting with his coalition parties till Wednesday, staying in talks until late in the night with top bank negotiators as well as with debt inspectors from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.
Greece is under massive time pressure to secure a new €130 billion ($170 billion) bailout from its partners in the euro and the IMF without which it will default in March on its massive debts.
Representatives of the Institute of International Finance, which has been leading the talks for private bondholders on forgiving Greece part of its debts, had a "constructive meeting" with Papademos, IIF spokesman Frank Vogl said.
Papademos and Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos will soon brief the rest of the 17-nation eurozone on the proposed deal, Vogl said — a sign the bond-swap deal could be close.
The meeting of eurozone finance ministers could happen as soon as Thursday in Brussels, according to officials, although that will depend on finding agreement in Athens on the terms of the second bailout.
Greece has been kept solvent since May 2010 by payments from a €110 billion ($145 billion) international rescue loan package. When it became clear the money would not be enough, a second bailout was decided last October.
As well as passing new austerity measures, the second bailout depends on Greece's separate talks with banks and other private bondholders to forgive €100 billion ($132 billion) in Greek debt. The private investors are expected to swap their current bonds for new bonds worth 50 per cent less than the original face value, with longer repayment terms and a lower interest rate.
Without the new debt deals, Greece would face a disastrous default in late March.
The intense talks in Athens were supposed to be finished last weekend, but have dragged on over EU-IMF demands for a new round of austerity measures that include civil service job cuts and slashing Greece's minimum wage.
The Greek government has already accepted that it must cut 15,000 state jobs in 2012 to get the new bailout, as well cut 2012 spending by a further €3.3 billion ($4.3 billion), reduce wage costs in the private sector and recapitalize banks without nationalizing them.
But disagreement remains between Greek lawmakers on the extent of those cuts.
A government official said Papademos' draft agreement on the austerity deal would be sent to Greek party leaders for scrutiny early Wednesday. "It took much longer than expected," the official told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the talks.
The government's coalition partners — the majority Socialists, main rival conservatives and the small right-wing LAOS party — are also at odds over whether to go ahead with plans for an early election in April.
The Socialists, who handed over power to Papademos in November, want him to stay through parliament's four-year term that ends in late 2013, while conservatives are demanding an April vote.
LAOS leader George Karatazferis also criticized eurozone heavyweights France and Germany on Tuesday, saying they were carrying out an "aggressive humiliation of Greece" with all their demands for new austerity measures.
A disorderly bankruptcy by Greece would likely lead to its exit from the eurozone, a situation that European officials have insisted is impossible because it would hurt other weak countries like Portugal, Ireland and Italy.
But on Tuesday, the Neelie Kroes, one of the EU's 27 commissioners, said Greece's exit wouldn't be a disaster.
"It's always said: if you let one nation go, or ask one to leave, the entire structure will collapse. But that is just not true," Kroes told Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant.
She added that "Greece is not living up to its promises: too few savings, too few reforms ... It's becoming a Greek mantra: 'We cannot. We won't'!"
But EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso quickly stepped in to counter her remarks.
"We are in a very decisive moment regarding the future of Greece and the future of the euro. We want Greece in the euro," he said. "The costs of a default by Greece, the costs of a potential exit of Greece from the euro would be a lot higher than the costs of continuing to support Greece."
While Greece remains cut off from international bond markets — where it would have to pay interest of about 35 per cent to sell 10-year issues — it maintains a market presence through regular short-term debt sales.
On Tuesday, Greek borrowing costs dropped slightly as the country raised €812 million ($1.06 billion) in an auction of 26-week treasury bills. The interest rate was 4.86 per cent, compared to 4.90 per cent in a similar auction last month. The auction was 2.72 times oversubscribed.

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