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/ 17 September 2004
Not surprisingly for a competition forced by its pool structure to go through the motions for a week, relevant cricket has been thin on the ground at the International Cricket Council Champions Trophy. The predicted poor turnouts and disconsolate weather have materialised, but where there’s a deadline there’s a headline, and frostbitten captains have been herded into press conferences to shrug and grumble about this and that.
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/ 17 September 2004
A high-fashion range of South African-produced gold jewellery is to hit the United States market this month, amid hopes that demand will rapidly outstrip the initial 160kg order. The venture is in line with the government’s call for more local beneficiation of precious metals, and should give an off-season fillip to South Africa’s gold jewellery industry.
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/ 17 September 2004
With precious little to crow about since the last time England looked to a cocky young Tottenham player for inspiration, those who have spent the post-Gazza years traipsing to White Hart Lane will this season be excused for skipping all the way. Maybe the years of miserable mediocrity are coming to an end.
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/ 17 September 2004
The Pan African Parliament came home to South Africa this week — toothless but full of hope in a ceremony rich with the continent’s culture and talent. ”We meet in South Africa today because the peoples of Africa dared to make the necessary sacrifices to end the criminal system of apartheid in our country and thus bring to a close the long period of colonial and white minority rule in our country,” said President Thabo Mbeki.
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/ 17 September 2004
Schalke’s Ebbe Sand scored a hat-trick and Newcastle’s Patrick Kluivert hit two on Thursday as the favoured teams in the Uefa Cup took big strides toward the second round. Lazio scored a 3-0 victory in Ukraine, Germany’s Schalke won 5-1 and VfB Stuttgart won 3-1 on the road.
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/ 17 September 2004
The romance of football is wonderful just so long as you don’t have to watch it too often. While respecting a runty, underfunded and frankly unentertaining team that knocks out an illustrious club, many people have to suppress a sense of regret. It’s bad form to say out loud that you’re going to miss the star players who have just been eliminated.
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/ 17 September 2004
Unbelievable as it may seem, the last time that Moroka Swallows met Kaizer Chiefs in a major cup competition was 17 years ago, when Chiefs won 3-1 on aggregate in the two-legged final of the Ohlssons Cup. The first leg (won 2-1 by Chiefs) was at Kings Park in Durban. Those who were there in 1987 say that game was the most memorable match played between the two sides, and the two legs are said to have recorded the biggest aggregate crowd in South African football history — 130 000 people.
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/ 17 September 2004
The decision by the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) to suspend its participation in further elections pending Zimbabwe’s compliance with the new Southern African Development Community guidelines and principles for democratic elections seems to have taken many by surprise. It was assumed that the MDC would continue to place blind faith in Zanu-PF eventually opening up the democratic space.
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/ 17 September 2004
Italian driver Jarno Trulli got behind the wheel of a Toyota for the first time on Thursday just hours after being confirmed as one of the team’s new drivers for the 2005 formula-one season. Trulli wasted no time in getting to know his new teammates by taking part in testing at Silverstone.
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/ 17 September 2004
South Africa A romped to an inevitable 10-wicket victory over New Zealand A on the third day of their four-day Castle Lager/MTN ”Test” at Willowmoore Park on Thursday, after getting the visitors out for 127 in their second innings, on a day that saw 14 wickets fall.