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/ 20 January 2006
”Those of us who feel that the 20-over game creates more problems than it solves are invariably called ‘critics’, as if Twenty20 cricket has presented us with a complex tradition of theory and history, to which we apply equally complex rebuttals, dismantling this sporting canon point by point,” writes Tom Eaton.
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/ 20 January 2006
”My days of racing are done,” stressed seven-times Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong during a press conference in Johannesburg on Wednesday. ”However, I would love to do the Argus Cycle Tour once. Is Cape Town flat?” It was Armstrong’s first visit to South Africa.
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/ 20 January 2006
Iraqi authorities on Friday said they were sealing off three provinces to prevent possible rebel attacks when final general election results are announced later in the day, Iraqiya state television reported. The three provinces concerned — Diyala, Salaheddin and Anbar — are heavily populated by the country’s Sunni Arab minority whose leaders have complained of fraud in the December 15 elections.
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/ 20 January 2006
African leaders should not elect Sudan’s president as head of the African Union, Human Rights Watch said on Friday. Omar al-Bashir is a candidate for the rotating presidency, expected to be finalised by the 53 member states at their sixth summit in Khartoum on Monday and Tuesday.
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/ 20 January 2006
Nigel Clough’s dad, Brian, won almost everything in football as manager of Nottingham Forest. If there is a football heaven, Brian will have been looking down at his son’s Burton Albion at Old Trafford on Wednesday, hopeful of a shock in the great tradition of the FA Cup.
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/ 20 January 2006
Which job would you rather do? Save Portsmouth from relegation in the middle of a particularly bleak winter at Fratton Park? Or take on Senegal, Nigeria and Ghana in the African Cup of Nations? My answer? Neither. But Benjamin Mwaruwari appears ready to take on two of the toughest assignments in football.
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/ 20 January 2006
By the time the last matches in the World Cup and African Cup of Nations qualifiers were played, it was clear the winds of changes were sweeping all over the continent. Nigeria, Cameroon, South Africa and Senegal all missed out on Germany 2006. In their place, Angola, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana and Togo are to parade their talents.
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/ 20 January 2006
Leftists within the tripartite alliance are complaining bitterly that the Congress of South African Trade Unions and the South African Communist Party have been sidelined from the African National Congress’s final candidate list for the local government elections.
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/ 20 January 2006
When Brian Hauff came to visit Thailand, he decided against a resort hotel and joined the increasing number of foreigners who are staying in the homes of local villagers instead. "I came directly to Thailand to learn more intimate Thai in terms of culture," says the 58-year-old.
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/ 20 January 2006
The Sundance Film Festival kicked off in the Utah mountains with a volley of parties and premieres that herald a 10-day orgy of independent cinema and Hollywood wheeling and dealing. About 120 feature and documentary films from 32 countries will be presented in the packed Park City ski resort during the 25th edition of the world’s top independent movie showcase.