1 March 2013

EPL: Ryan Giggs signs new contract at Manchester

Manchester, Mar 1: Ryan Giggs has signed a one-year contract extension to stay at Manchester United until the summer of 2014. The deal will take Giggs, 39, into his 23rd season as a first-team player at Old Trafford. Sir Alex Ferguson said that Giggs will be offered a coaching role after his playing career ends and that no other footballer will emulate his success. Giggs made his United debut in March 1991 and is on course to make his 100th senior appearance against Norwich City on Saturday. The veteran midfielder said he is 'delighted' to have extended his stay at the club. 

 "I am delighted to have signed a new contract. I would like to thank Sir Alex and the coaching staff and I would also like to thank David Gill who has been a tremendous support over my many years here," Giggs told the club's official website. "This is an exciting team to be part of, with great team spirit, and we are again pushing for trophies as we head towards the business end of the season." "I am feeling good, enjoying my football more than ever and, most importantly, I feel I am making a contribution to the team," he said. Giggs has struck in all 23 seasons in the top flight for United. The Welshman has won 12 Premier League titles, four FA Cups, three League Cups, two UEFA Champions Leagues, one Super Cup, an Intercontinental Cup and a Club World Club. Ferguson hailed Giggs' recent form in the league and said the midfielder deserves the contract extension.
 "He is a marvellous player and an exceptional human being. Ryan is an example to us all, the way in which he has, and continues to, look after himself," Ferguson said. "He could be playing his 1,000th game tomorrow and I don't think that will ever be achieved again, the way players contracts seem to work these days." "He deserves this contract as his form has never changed. He still has great balance and touch on the ball and great fitness," he said. United host Norwich City on Saturday before playing Real Madrid in the last-16 second-leg match at Old Trafford on Tuesday.

1st Test: Records galore for double-centurion MS Dhoni

With a magnificent maiden double-hundred on a dusty Chennai track, Indian skipper MS Dhoni achieved many unprecedented heights. Not only did he break Sachin Tendulkar's record of highest Test score by an Indian skipper, Dhoni also became the first Indian wicketkeeper to achieve this feat in the history of Test cricket. 

In the 144th over, Dhoni smashed a huge six off offspinner Nathan Lyon to reach 217 and then stole a single to surpass Tendulkar's score of 217 which he scored against New Zealand on October 29, 1999 at Ahmedabad. 

Here is a look at the various records that Dhoni broke during his brilliant knock against Australia. 

# Dhoni registered the highest Test score by an Indian wicketkeeper. In 1964, Budhi Kunderan set this landmark after scoring 192 against England in Chennai. 

# Dhoni registered the highest Test score in history by a wicketkeeper-captain, surpassing Alec Stewart's 164 of England against South Africa in 1998. The Indian captain also became the first Indian wicketkeeper to register a double-hundred. Dhoni is the seventh wicketkeeper in the world to register 200. 

# During his innings, Dhoni also became the first Indian wicketkeeper to complete 4,000 Test runs. 

# 224 is Dhoni's career best Test score. His previous best was 148 against Pakistan in 2006. 

# This was also the highest score by an Indian captain against Australia. Previously, Mohammad Azharuddin scored 163 not out against Australia in 1998 at Eden Gardens. 

# Dhoni also became the first wicketkeeper to score a double-century in a single day as well as the first Indian batsman to score a double-century against Australia in a single day. The previous best was 195 by Virender Sehwag against Australia in Melbourne in 2003. 

# Dhoni is the fourth Indian captain in Test history to score a ouble-century after MAK Pataudi (203) against England, Sunil Gavaskar (205) against West Indies and Tendulkar (217) against New Zealand. 

# Dhoni's 224 is the third highest score by any wicketkeeper in Test cricket history, behind Andy Flower's 232 against India in 2000 at Nagpur and Kumar Sangakkara's 230 against Pakistan in 2002 at Lahore. 

# This is the third highest individual Test score in Chennai after Virender Sehwag's 319 against Pakistan and Gavaskar's 236 not out against West Indies in 1983. 

# Dhoni is the third captain in Test cricket history to slam a double-century at No. 6 after Don Bradman (236) and Hanif Mohammad (203).

Ashwin refuses to speculate on bowling

"It is a different game and a different occasion. What happened is past. We need to continue to be positive," said Indian off-spinner R. Ashwin. 

Responding to a query on competition for the spinners' slots in the Indian team, Ashwin said it was not new. "I don't think about it. It is up to people like you to draw a comparison and judge who is better," he added.. 

Ashwin, when reminded that India won the first Test against England and then lost the series recently at home, said the team was not thinking about that. "We had a clinical start in the first Test match at Chennai against the Aussies. We want to take the positives from that victory into the remaining Tests." . 

Ashwin refused to entertain any debate on possible spin combination saying a decision would be taken later in the evening. 

On the impact of captain Dhoni's double century on the team in general, Ashwin emphasised that Dhoni himself had said he was not sure whether he could replicate the effort. "It is that you set the tempo as a captain and it boils down to your field settings, bowling changes...everything," the star off-spinner said. "Honestly, I have not seen such a knock. I mean it can be demoralising to any side in the world," Ashwin said.

9 February 2013

Lincoln: Spielberg does it again

Politics is such a soiled playground, we’ve forgotten it was once peppered by great statesman with honour and ethics. It comes as a jolt of pleasurable surprise when confronted with the dramatically engaging and morally uplifting Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, as skilfully recreated by Steven Spielberg and Daniel Day-Lewis. 

The time is January 1865, America is still bleeding with the ongoing Civil War, but Lincoln (Day-Lewis) is poised on the cusp of writing history — seeing the North win and slavery abolished, if he can somehow push through the unpopular 13th Amendment in the House of Representatives. 

But here is the crux of the matter — if the war is won before the Amendment is passed, it will not go through and will be resisted by the Southern States. Yet, even as Lincoln’s lobbyists (that include James Spader) are trying to drum up support for the unpopular bill among Democrats and Republicans, three commissioners from the Confederacy head up to Washington City wanting to negotiate peace. 

It becomes a nail-biting race against time, a chessboard battle of wits, nerve and legalese with Lincoln poised, no stooped, over the game board, nudging, moving, cajoling, calculating — with no guarantee of an assured win. 

To create such absorbing drama is no small feat when you are dealing with history and known outcomes. Kudos to Tony Kushner’s screenplay — based partly on Doris Kearns Goodwin book Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln – which is astonishingly effective. Unusually, it is a wordy screenplay that never loses the magic of the moment to verbiage — even as it allows politicians the privilege of exchanging linguistically complex insults or Lincoln, his quirky penchant for telling stories. 

Spielberg’s strength has always been storytelling — and he excels in that here, aided by long-time collaborator, cinematographer Janusz Kaminski. The sombre mood and look of the time are painstakingly recreated, even as Spielberg keeps the focus taut; we are allowed entry into the agile mind of the President and his humanist heart as he negotiates on several battlefields.

Lincoln has to contend not only with the Democrats who hate the proposed amendment — but also negotiate with people on his side such as Secretary of State William Seward (David Strathairn) or difficult mavericks such as the fiery Thaddeus Stevens (Tommy Lee Jones). If his highly-strung wife Mary Todd Lincoln (Sally Field) still blames him for the death of their son Willie, there’s also a living son, Robert (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), who wants to defy his parents and enlist. 

Day-Lewis nails his Lincoln — physically with the beard, stoop and springy hair he effortlessly morphs into the President. With delicacy, rather than any ponderous sense of history, he assumes Lincoln’s many mantles: the man who is haunted by the death of his son, the ongoing war and the injustice of slavery; the lawyer and statesman who plots his way to pushing through the 13th Amendment; the amusing raconteur; the president who knows his power.

Vishwaroopam REVIEW

The surprise about Vishwaroopam is how straightforward it is, given Kamal Haasan’s track record. (It’s basically a big, dumb action movie, but with smarts.) What hasn’t changed, though, is the actor’s ongoing attempt to carve out for himself, within the commercial film mould, some space where he can be the hero as well as be more than just a hero. So we have, on the one hand, the kind of boosterism that no Tamil film hero can do without, as when an awestruck FBI agent asks Wisam Ahmad Kashmiri (Kamal Haasan), “Who the hell are you?” 

Then there’s the godliness of the name Vishwanath (also Kamal Haasan, this time an effeminate Kathak dancer), which points to the divine manifestation suggested by the title. And, of course, there’s all the express heroism, a Tamil who doesn’t just operate within his home state or the nation but whose heroics play out on a global stage — in a New York City that the jihadi villain Omar (Rahul Bose, in fine scenery-chewing form) threatens to contaminate with radioactivity. 

For a while now, Kamal Haasan’s films have acknowledged the interconnectedness of the nation — the Telugu-speaking love interest of Nammavar, the Oriya native of Anbe Sivam, the Bengali wife of Hey Ram, the cocktail of pan-Indian characters in Dasavatharam. But of late, we have seen an increasing interest in the world beyond India. In Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu, Kamal Haasan’s character got himself an American colleague, and in the Europe-set Manmadhan Ambu, he was married to a Frenchwoman. Vishwaroopam is very much of a piece with the actor-director’s recent work — the characters hail from Kashmir, Mayavaram, Afghanistan, America; there’s even someone from Nigeria. 

And this means, for one thing, that we have to deal with Tamil spoken with a glut of accents. It’s clear why this is necessary — because the film is in Tamil, and so that we register, at the same time, a semblance of foreignness, that this film is taking place outside Tamil Nadu, and with non-Tamils. But the ultimate effect is distracting. The film, for obvious commercial reasons, cannot feature extensive subtitles under characters speaking their own language — but how can we not giggle? 

Other Kamal Haasan staples are amply evident, like the writer’s unflagging determination to interpolate into his screenplays segues to pet philosophies (about God, Hitler), technology (nuclear oncology, Faraday shields) sexual hints (a wife walks in on her husband being unzipped by another woman), outrĂ© props (a Mughal-era dagger, nitroglycerin pills, pigeons that are decidedly not agents of peace, and even unceasingly dripping water), and a wicked sense of humour. 

The film’s finest visual gag is also its grisliest — a cell phone vibrating through congealed blood. Speaking of blood, is there another Indian actor who so loves being smashed to a bloody pulp on screen? In other words, fans will cheer him on; non-fans, as always, will find it all unbearably pretentious. 

But this cannot be denied. Vishwaroopam is further proof that Kamal Haasan is much more interesting, these days, as a writer-director than as an actor (he gives a typically solid performance; it’s just that, given the span of his career, we’ve seen it all before) — and the film’s finest stretch takes place in a jihadi settlement in Afghanistan, with the portions in Pashto subtitled in Tamil. Where Tamil cinema villains are usually demonised, these militants are humanised. 

Amongst the suicide bombers and opium traders, we see an asthmatic wife, a young boy who dreams of being a doctor, a father fluent in English but who doesn’t want his son to grow up speaking the language of the infidels, families and friends who smile and pose for photographs, teams of volleyball players, a mission-ready lad who sits on a swing and enjoys what are surely his last days of life. We also see the other side — bullets on weighing scales, being sold by the kilo, and a father’s pride when his blindfolded son can feel an automatic and identify it as an AK-47. 

And this is where the other aspect of Kamal Haasan’s character comes in, where he’s more than just a hero. In this section, he recedes to the background, playing a supporting actor’s part, while Omar occupies centre stage. A regular masala movie would never stand for this, especially one featuring such huge action set pieces. Even towards the end, it isn’t exactly the hero who saves the day (which also plays into the fact that few people in this “double role”-heavy film are who they seem to be; if only they’d been better actors as well — the cast includes Andrea Jeremiah and Pooja Kumar). 

The story doesn’t offer anything new, but these small subversions make the leisurely paced Vishwaroopam more than just another entry in the ticking-clock genre, where we wait breathlessly for the villain to be vanquished before everything goes boom. And the end isn’t so much about closure as a cessation. Our feeling at the end of these movies, usually, is that of relief, that the world is safe. Here, our emotions are a little less cheery: the world is safe... for now.

8.0 quake strikes Solomons, sparks Pacific tsunami earthquake-strikes-solomons-sparks-pacific-tsunami

Honiara, Feb 6: A major 8.0 magnitude earthquake was feared to have flattened villages in the Solomon Islands today, and triggered a tsunami with destructive potential for Pacific nations' coasts, monitors said.
 A small tsunami wave reached part of the Solomons and watches were in effect as far afield as Hawaii, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said. New Zealand was also on guard, but monitors said there was no threat to Australia. 
The US Geological Survey said the quake struck at 0112 GMT near the Santa Cruz Islands in the Solomons, which have been hit by a series of strong tremors over the past week, at a depth of 5.8 kilometres. 
 Two powerful aftershocks of 6.4 and 6.6 magnitude were also recorded. "Sea level readings indicate a tsunami was generated," the Hawaii-based Pacific centre said. 
"It may have been destructive along coasts near the earthquake epicentre and could also be a threat to more distant coasts." Australia's earthquake monitoring agency and the Pacific centre said a wave measuring three feet had been recorded at Lata, on the main Santa Cruz island of Ndende.
 "We know that a tsunami has been created," Geoscience Australia seismologist David Jepsen told AFP. He said depending on the location of the quake, bigger waves could hit elsewhere.
 "It's a big earthquake anyway in terms of just the shaking," he said. Locals in the Solomons capital Honiara, 580 kilometres from the epicentre, said the quake was not felt there, but some villages on the Santa Cruz islands were destroyed, according to a hospital director.
 "The information we are getting is that some villages west and south of Lata along the coast have been destroyed, although we cannot confirm this yet," the director of nursing at Lata Hospital told AFP. "There was continuous shaking in Lata but no damaged buildings here," he added.

iPhone 6 packs 4.8" screen

The iPhone 6 is preparing to enter production ahead of its mooted launch date in June, reports indicate, as the start of a new year brings a slew of new rumours around Apple’s plans for 2013.

In a note to investors, Jefferies analyst Peter Misek claims that Apple is already undertaking trials of the next iteration of the iPhone and the fabled iPhone Mini, presumably in the environs of its Cupertino campus, before they enter production in March. 

Misek also corroborated persistent rumours that the iPhone 6, also informally dubbed the iPhone 5S, will be home to a 4.8-inch screen, up from the four-inch display that debuted on the iPhone 5.

That tallies with a separate report from the China Times, also claiming that Apple will enter the fast-growing phablet market this year with a device that teams smartphone functionality with dimensions that verge on tablet territory.

The industry expert also backs conjecture that the handset will be equipped with a super HD camera, Near Field Communications technology to up the handset’s credentials as a digital wallet, improved battery life and 128GB of storage.

Apple is also thought likely to make its seventh-generation handset available in a host of new colour options, including pink, yellow, blue, green, purple, silver, red and slate.