As Indonesian Football Team Goes on Break, ‘Slight Improvement’ Seen

Jakarta - Alfred Riedl wants his squad to get all the rest it can. Once the national training camp reopens in October, it will be all work for the Indonesia football team.

National coach Riedl will break camp today for the Idul Fitri holiday and won’t meet his players again until training resumes on Oct. 3.

Heading to the recess, Riedl is relieved to have wrapped up a pair of local friendlies with what he calls “a slightly improved performance” by his team.

He also voiced his opinion on the series of international friendlies the National Team Body (BTN) set up for next month, calling the Ivory Coast match on Oct. 13 “a test of fitness” for his squad.

Not surprisingly, the national team won both its tune-up matches against Premier Division clubs, the Austrian coach’s first games at the helm of the Merah Putih.

Riedl found the way his squad played in a 3-0 defeat of Pro Titan in Jakarta on Sunday more pleasing than the team’s first effort on Thursday in which it struggled to a 4-1 victory over Persita Tangerang.

As in the first match, Riedl divided his squad into two sides, each of which played one extended half of 60 minutes. While he observed that his team lacked aggressiveness, Riedl did say his team “played a little better.”

“The first team looked fresh compared to the second team, which missed some chances in the second half. But I think we played a little better than in the first match,” Riedl said.

Defender Ricardo Salampessy and forward Yongki Aribowo missed Sunday’s friendly because of injury. In their absence, Riedl tinkered with his game plan as he resorted to a 4-2-3-1 formation in the second half and found that the adjustment worked.

“We missed Yongki, so the second team had to play under a new system. I think [the team] played quite well, but it’s still not what I wanted to see. I want the boys to fight for every position,” Riedl said.

For the second straight game, it was forward Bambang Pamungkas who stood out.

Playing for the first-half side, Bambang asserted himself from the start. He set up a pinpoint cross to defender Nova Arianto, but Nova’s shot sailed over the bar. After midfielder Arif Suyono broke the deadlock, Bambang’s free kick made it 2-0.

The national team’s second-half squad broke through Pro Titan’s defense and had several scoring chances. However, lapses in midfield left Riedl’s players vulnerable in defense. Forward M Isnaini scored the third and final goal.

Riedl said he wanted to play “a weaker opponent” before his squad faces Ivory Coast. BTN said Indonesia was due to play Uruguay in a friendly on Oct. 9, but Riedl said the Ivory Coast match was the only one confirmed.

“According to my information the match against Ivory Coast is already set up, but before that we want to look for a relatively weak opponent that we can play,” the coach said.

“But we have to look at the players’ conditioning when they return to camp. I know Ivory Coast is much stronger than us, but I hope the boys will be much fitter than they are now so we can play better.”

Between the holiday break and the resumption of the national training camp, the players will report to their respective clubs, which are gearing up for the opening of the Indonesian Super League on Sept. 26.

Around that time, Riedl will also be busy. He will fly to Hanoi to watch the friendly between Vietnam and North Korea on Sept. 24.

Riedl and BTN head Iman Arif will then proceed to Amsterdam to meet with Netherlands football officials regarding BTN’s plans to hold a training camp for Dutch football players of Indonesian descent.

Capirossi undergoes successful finger surgery

Rizla Suzuki MotoGP star Loris Capirossi has undergone a successful operation to repair the damage caused to his right hand in his opening lap coming-together with Ducati Corse rival Nicky Hayden in the San Marino Grand Prix at Misano on Sunday, his 200th premier class outing.

The Italian veteran had a 90-minute procedure to reconstruct the bone in his little finger and further work to re-attach the severed tendon in the same digit. The operation was performed by Dr. Oliviero Soragni at the San Marino Hospital on Monday afternoon, and Capirossi is now back home in Monte Carlo where he will begin his recuperation and healing period.

The 37-year-old 'record-man' – who made his 300th GP start in the 2010 Qatar curtain-raiser back in April – is expected to make a full recovery from the injury and should be able to regain complete use of his damaged finger. It is not yet confirmed whether or not he will be able to compete in the next round of the MotoGP World Championship at Aragon in Spain on 19 September.

“The operation went very well and I am very pleased with what Dr. Soragni told me after I came out of surgery,” Capirossi confirmed. “Dr. Costa was also present, and he knows how the injury will heal and he will help me to make the right decision about when I can ride again.

“The bone has been reconstructed and I have been told I will get full movement back – which is great news – but at the moment the finger is immobilised so I don't cause any damage to the excellent work the surgeon has done. Although I am in a bit of pain, this is still nothing compared to what happened at Misano on Sunday, and once again I want to send my wishes and prayers to Tomizawa-san's family in their time of great sadness.”

Shoya Tomizawa dies of Misano injuries

Shoya Tomizawa has died as a result of injuries sustained in the Moto2 race on Sunday at Misano.

The Japanese - who made history by winning the first ever Moto2 Grand Prix at Qatar this year, then took pole and a podium at round two - fell from fourth place on lap 12 and was then hit at high speed by Alex de Angelis and Scott Redding.

The official statement from Dorna announcing the death was as follows:

"On Sunday 5th September during the Moto2 race at the Misano World Circuit, rider Shoya Tomizawa aged 19 suffered a serious crash and subsequent cranial, thoracic and abdominal trauma.

"Given the seriousness of his condition - especially for the thoracic and abdominal trauma - Tomizawa was immediately treated at the Misano World Circuit medical centre and put under artificial respiration.

"The rider was taken by ambulance to the Riccione hospital accompanied by two doctors - helicopter was not used in order to allow for the proper respiratory support to be administered. Despite various attempts to resuscitate him Shoya sadly succumbed to his injuries at 14.20.

"Everybody involved in MotoGP extends its deepest condolences to Shoya's family and friends at this tragic loss."

de Angelis walked away from the huge accident, while Redding received ten stitches for a back laceration. Neither rider had any chance to avoid Tomizawa, who was sixth in the world championship heading into the race.

2010 was Tomizawa's second season in grand prix racing, after finishing 17th in the 2009 250cc class.

Prior to last year, Tomizawa had been a wild-card rider at his home Motegi event in 2006 (125cc), 2007 (125cc) and 2008 (250cc).

Tomizawa was runner-up in the 125cc Japanese Championship in 2006 and the 250cc Japanese Championship in 2008.

The last time a rider was killed during a motorcycle grand prix was Daijiro Kato, in the MotoGP class, at Suzuka 2003.

Our thoughts are with Tomizawa's family and friends.

Honda pays tribute to Tomizawa

Honda Motor Co. Ltd and Honda Racing Corporation would like to express their great sadness at the passing away of Shoya Tomizawa following an accident in today’s San Marino Grand Prix.

Tomizawa crashed on the 12th lap of the Moto2 race. The Japanese rider was immediately treated at trackside, then at the circuit medical centre and then at Riccione hospital. Numerous attempts were made to resuscitate him but at 14.20hrs he succumbed to cranial, thoracic and abdominal trauma.

Both Honda Motor Co. Ltd and Honda Racing Corporation would like to extend their deepest condolences to Tomizawa’s family and friends.

Nineteen-year-old Tomizawa, from Chiba, was a very popular rider in the MotoGP paddock, known for his sunny smile and determination on the racetrack. He made his Grand Prix debut at Motegi in the 125 class in 2006. In 2008 he took the runner-up spot in the 250 All-Japan Championship. He became a full-time GP rider last season, taking 17th place in the 250 World Championship. This year he moved into the new Moto2 series and made history by winning the opening round.

Shuhei Nakamoto, Vice-President, Honda Racing Corporation
“We are very saddened by this news and our thoughts of course are now with Shoya’s family and friends. He was at the start of his Grand Prix career and today we have lost fine young rider and a talent for the future. Shoya had fighting spirit, we will all miss him very much…”

With Tiger’s Game in Shambles, Players Scramble for PGA Tour Glory

Paramus, New Jersey - The dominance of Tiger Woods becomes even more defined when he can’t beat anyone at all.

In the years when he wasn’t winning a major or three, Woods compensated by winning at least five times on the US PGA Tour against some of the strongest fields on some of the toughest courses.

He won 31 times and six majors in the previous five years.

The only time during that span that Woods did not win USPGA Tour player of the year was in 2008, when he made it through only half the year until his knee gave out.

Padraig Harrington captured the last two majors to win the award. He won four times in six starts, including a US Open.

The FedEx Cup playoffs get under way this week at The Barclays, and Woods is at No. 112 in the standings, right between Bob Estes and Cameron Beckman.

Dominance has given way to parity.

Five players have multiple victories this year — Ernie Els, Jim Furyk, Steve Stricker, Justin Rose and Hunter Mahan — yet none of them has more than two wins, and none of them won a major.

Why has no one filled the void?

“That’s how good Tiger Wood is — that’s what I make of it,” Adam Scott said on Tuesday.

Golf is bunched up at the moment, at least on the US PGA Tour.

“No one has separated themselves,” Mahan said. “Tiger hasn’t won five times. You’ve got a bunch of guys who have won twice.”

In its first three years, the FedEx Cup has provided four great tournaments after the majors were over, and the list of winners backs that up — three wins for Woods; two apiece for Mickelson, Stricker, Vijay Singh and Camilo Villegas; and Heath Slocum as the outsider, but only after beating Woods, Stricker, Harrington and Els on the last hole.

This year — thanks to Woods — it’s a little different.

The four playoff events over the next five weeks will likely decide who is the best player on the US PGA Tour this year. Not only is there no clear-cut favorite for player of the year, it’s hard to determine the front-runner.

Winning the FedEx Cup might be all it takes for Els to be voted player of the year. Then again, it’s mathematically possible for him to do that without winning another tournament. Can a guy get voted best player with only two wins and no majors?

The defining shot of this goofy season was the 6-iron Mickelson hit through the pines on the 13th at Augusta National when he won the Masters.

He is the only major champion in the FedEx Cup because the other three — Graeme McDowell, Louis Oosthuizen and Martin Kaymer — were not US Tour members.

For the eighth time over the last three months, Mickelson will have yet another chance to replace Woods atop the world ranking. It should have happened by now, as poorly as Woods has performed. Trouble is, Mickelson hasn’t been much better.

He has not finished in the top 10 in the four tournaments he has played since the US Open.

Mahan won in Phoenix, got engaged to a former Dallas Cowboys cheerleader, then won his first World Golf Championship title at Firestone. He would get consideration with a victory or two in the next month, plus the $10 million prize for the FedEx Cup.

The same holds true for Stricker, Furyk and Rose. Someone needs to separate themselves from the pack.

“I guess there’s a lot of people in the mix,” said Dustin Johnson, who recently lost the PGA Championship for grounding his club harmlessly in a bunker. “But whoever has a good playoffs will probably be the top candidate.” (Doug Ferguson)

Associated Press

Asia’s Grand Slam Renaissance Put on Hold, Again

Asia’s wait for its first Grand Slam singles winner goes on.

As Taiwan’s Chan Yung-Jan walked off court after being hammered 6-1, 6-0 by top seed Caroline Wozniacki on Saturday, the continent’s interest in the final Grand Slam of the year dwindled.

Asia’s failure to get a single player into the fourth round of either the men’s or women’s draw at Flushing Meadows is a disappointing outlay bearing in mind the promise shown of late by a growing hotbed of tennis talent.

Asia looked set to break its Grand Slam record at January’s Australian Open when Chinese duo Li Na and Zheng Jie reached the semifinals.

But the rest of 2010 proved disappointing with just three more quarterfinalists in the subsequent Grand Slams, Li and Lu Yen-Hsun of Taiwan at Wimbledon and Kazakhstan’s Yaroslava Shvedova at the French Open.

Asia’s longest-lasting player at the current US Open, Chan Yung-Jan, is not overly concerned about the continent’s poor showing in New York.

“For our country it’s better for us — it’s the best result we’ve ever had,” said the world No. 77. “I know everyone’s out of the tournament from Asia but we are growing all the time and Asian tennis is getting better,” she said.

In all, there are six men in the world’s top 100 but the continent’s male contingent boasts just one Grand Slam quarterfinal spot in the last 15 years courtesy of Lu in London in July.

A first Asian Grand Slam winner looks far likelier to come from the current crop of women, who boast nine players in the top 100, including the 21-year-old Chan .

“You never know who’s going to make the breakthrough and when,” she said. “For the moment, everybody is working hard and you never know what’s going to happen next.” 

Reuters

Nyaoga Community Dispensary Clinical Officer

Principal Responsibilities:
Providing clinical services in accordance with national treatment guidelines including outpatient care, diagnostics and treatment, HIV care services, TB treatment, and health education;
management duties in the health facilities including ensuring availability of equipment and consumable commodities, safety and security of premises, property, staff and patients, and the keeping of up-to-date and confidential clinical records, and preparation and
conveyance of required reports to the District Medical Office, Project Health facilitators and other partners.
Maintaining compliance with all operations of the dispensary.
Qualifications Required:
Diploma in Clinical Medicine;
Current registration with the Kenya Clinical Officers’ Council;
3 plus years experience preferred;
Able to speak and understand Dholuo, Kiswahili, and English;
Housing and uniform allowance provided;
One year plus commitment required;
References produced upon request; and submit salary requirements with application letter and CV by 15th September, 2010.

Call: 0715786897

or email: nyaogaclinic@gmail.com

Nyaoga Community Dispensary
Along Pala- Aros Roa
Near Kendu Bay (1.5 Hours from Kisumu)

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