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text-decoration:none; } img {border:none;} The Sport Review: “Luke
Young fears summer exodus at Aston Villa” plus 2 more

- Luke Young fears summer exodus at Aston Villa
- Fulham 2 Liverpool 5: Maxi treble fires Reds into fifth
- Rome Masters: Can Federer or Nadal catch inspired Djokovic?
Luke Young fears summer exodus at Aston Villa

Posted: 09 May 2011 03:42 PM PDT


Luke Young is worried Aston Villa could lose some of their biggest
names this summer in the wake of a disappointing campaign.
The 31-year-old Villa defender believes Ashley Young and Stewart
Downing will be prime targets for other Premier League clubs after the
pair impressed in an otherwise difficult season at Villa Park.

Manchester United are believed to be chasing the signature of winger
Young, while Liverpool have been linked with a swoop for Downing.

And the former Middlesbrough full-back believes Downing has been
Villa's star performer this term and is desperate for his colleague
stay on at Villa Park.

“Stewart has been brilliant,” said Young. “I played with him at
Middlesbrough so I knew the potential that he’s got. I feel he would
have done a bit more if he had got out a couple of years earlier.

“Now he is showing the form and you’ve got bigger clubs sniffing at him
and it is obviously going to be difficult for us to keep him.

“We haven’t had a great season so I think some of the bigger clubs are
having a look at him, and rightly so with the form he has shown. He is
one that we hope stays because he is a big player for us.”

And the defender admits it will be difficult to hold on to both
players. “The bigger clubs are circling for Ashley as well so it is
going to be a difficult summer for us and hopefully we can keep hold of
both of them,” said Young. “But we certainly wouldn’t want to lose both
of them.”

Fulham 2 Liverpool 5: Maxi treble fires Reds into fifth

Posted: 09 May 2011 03:21 PM PDT
A hat-trick from Maxi Rodríguez and goals from Dirk Kuyt and Luis
Suárez helped Liverpool brush Fulham aside and boost their hopes of
reaching the Europa League.
It was a game for Reds record breakers at Craven Cottage. Liverpool
defender Jamie Carragher was set to make his 666th appearance for the
club, while Pepe Reina, the Reds’ ever-present goalkeeper, made his
150th consecutive start for the club.

However, it will have been the opposition’s formidable home record that
played on Kenny Dalglish's mind before the game – only Tottenham
Hotspur, Manchester City and West Ham United had walked away with all
three points from Craven Cottage this term.

After Javier Hernández's early effort in Manchester United’s clash with
Chelsea the day before, it was Liverpool's turn to get a goal in the
opening moments.

Both Carlos Salcido and Mark Schwarzer failed to clear Suárez's
dangerous low ball into the box, allowing Rodríguez to score his fifth
goal in three games.

Rodríguez then doubled his and Liverpool's tally just five minutes
later when he latched on to a well-placed ball from Glen Johnson after
getting the better of the returning Brede Hangeland to calmly place the
ball past Schwarzer.

Ten minutes later Liverpool felt they deserved a penalty when Hangeland
appeared to have brought down Suárez in the box after a quick breakaway
by the Reds.

However, Liverpool's protests were short-lived as Kuyt picked up the
ball on the right and easily beat Schwarzer from an ambitious distance
to put the visitors three up.

For the rest of the first half Fulham looked considerably stronger at
the back, however Suárez continued to be a menace, breaking down the
wing before cutting inside and firing over the bar as he tried to beat
Schwarzer from a tight angle.

Fulham's only real chance of the opening period came from a corner.
Danny Murphy lofted a ball into the box which Clint Dempsey nodded
towards goal, forcing full-back Johnson to make a last-ditch clearance
to preserve the Reds’ three-goal advantage.

Fulham brought on Bobby Zamora for Simon Davies just before the second
half, while Liverpool were forced to make a change just three minutes
after the restart, with promising youngster Jonjo Shelvey coming on to
replace the injured Raul Meireles.

The hosts improved after the break, with substitute Zamora and former
Chelsea forward Eidur Gudjohnsen coming close within 10 minutes.

And after 56 minutes the hosts’ pressure paid off as Zamora latched on
to Chris Baird’s pass before playing it towards Moussa Dembele, whose
well-placed shot got the better of Reina.

With 20 minutes left Gudjohnsen, who had been largely ineffectual, was
replaced by Andy Johnson.

Minutes later Rodríguez completed his second hat-trick in three games,
picking up on his own deflected pass and breaking forward towards the
box before firing a shot into the top left corner to restore
Liverpool's three-goal lead.

It was Suárez, who Fulham had struggled to keep under wraps all night,
who scored Liverpool's fifth. The Uruguayan latched onto Shelvey’s
long-distance effort from before confidently placing the ball past
Schwarzer.

With five minutes left Steve Sidwell fired in magnificent volley from
the edge of the box shortly after hat-trick hero Rodríguez had been
substituted to a standing ovation from the travelling supporters.
Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish said:
“That was a fantastic performance. We started reallty brightly but the
football we played, and our movement and work-rate was great.

“Fulham stepped things up in the second half but we stood up to them.
We have done fantastically well since January and that is tremendous
credit to the players and Steve Clarke, Sammy Lee and the backroom
staff.”
Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher said:
“We’ve been playing well of late, confidence is good and we’ve been
looking forward to games. It was just one of those days for us. We
played very well, with the start and the early goals.

“When you’re winning everything’s enjoyable. We just want to keep this
run going. The fans will be happy, it’s a late night for a lot of us
but we’ve got to look forward to keeping it going against Tottenham [at
home on Sunday].”
Barclays Premier League table snapshot


Rome Masters: Can Federer or Nadal catch inspired Djokovic?

Posted: 09 May 2011 02:54 AM PDT


Rome is the last clay Masters in the calendar, having switched places
with Madrid this year.
It has a certain Italian vibe—friendly, relaxed and easy-going, yet
passionate and absorbed. Everyone is out to have fun with friends and
family, take in the sun, and wear their hearts on their sleeves.

There are some big changes at the beautiful Foro Italico this year,
however, as the event has returned to a combined men's and women's
tournament for the first time in 33 years.

The new 10,500-seater Centre Court was opened last year and is a near
perfect arena that echoes the shape of Rome's most famous site, the
Colosseum.

It manages to combine great sight lines while retaining an intimacy
that few other Masters showpieces can match.

The second show court, Stadio Pietrangeli, has changed from a small,
open-access arena to a modern, ticket-only court, while a third
3,000-seater has been added, along with two new practice courts.

With bigger crowds, more courts and double the number of players, Rome
will have to work hard to keep its special ambience.

What hasn't changed is the favourite for the men's title: Rafael Nadal.

He has won the Rome event five times already so he could break yet more
new territory by becoming the first man in the Open era to win at least
six titles at three tournaments: He won his seventh Monte Carlo Masters
and his sixth Barcelona titles just a few weeks back.

Meanwhile, world No2 Novak Djokovic continues his unbeaten run in 2011
after defeating Nadal in straight sets in the Madrid final.

The Serb has now won 32 consecutive matches this year and he won the
Rome title in 2008 and reached the final in 2009.

Currently trailing in their wake is Roger Federer who is, at the
moment, always the bridesmaid and never the bride.

He has lost to one or other of Nadal or Djokovic in all but one of his
tournaments since winning in Doha in the first week of the year.

He nevertheless has the third best record of the year, failing only
once to fall short of the semi-finals. Rome is one of the few Masters
he has never won but he reached the finals in 2003 and 2006 and the
semis in 2009.

But who will be their main contenders as they make their final push for
the French Open?
Quarter one: Rafael Nadal
The top seed faces stern competition in his quarter, though the biggest
name from his Madrid quarter, Juan Martin del Potro, is missing from
Rome with hip injury. The most interesting prospect arises in his first
match, where the surprise Madrid semi-finalist, Tomaz Bellucci, lurks.

The Brazilian is full of confidence and in superlative form, taking out
Andy Murray and Tomas Berdych and pushing Djokovic to the limits in
Madrid. He could make life difficult at this early stage in the
competition if he recovers from his exertions in time to beat a first
round qualifier.

This quarter also contains Feliciano López, who played superb tennis
against Federer in Madrid, and Michael Llodra, who played Nadal in the
Madrid quarters. Neither man will find the slower conditions in Rome
beneficial to their serve-and-volley games, however.

In the same segment are two more single-handed backhands in the shape
of Philipp Kohlschreiber and Mikhail Youzhny. Both have the talent to
cause an upset and the Russian in particular will want to compensate
for meeting Del Potro in his opening round in Spain.

Nadal's most likely quarter-final opponent is David Ferrer, who put up
a great fight against Djokovic in this week's quarters and played Nadal
in the two previous clay finals. He seems to be getting better with
every tournament but has only one win on clay over his compatriot in
their 17 meetings, and that was back in 2004.

Matches to watch out for: López v Llodra, first round, and
Kohlschreiber v Youzhny, first round.

Semi-finalist: Nadal
Quarter two: Roger Federer
Federer finds himself in the same half of the draw as Nadal for the
second consecutive week.

This time, his possible quarter-final opponent is Tomas Berdych, who
beat the Swiss twice in big events last year: Wimbledon and Miami. Clay
is not the Czech's favourite surface, however, and it is just possible
that he will fall to one of the dangerous unseeded players in his
section.

Juan Monaco lost to Berdych this week, but the Rome surface is more
likely to favour the Argentine. Also a threat is Sergiy Stakhovsky, who
played some good attacking tennis in Madrid, though he is carrying some
long matches in his long legs.

As for Federer's section, he has a tricky first match against either
Marcos Baghdatis or, more likely, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, who got the
better of the in-form No9 Nicolas Almagro in the first round in Madrid.
When on song, Tsonga has the beating of anyone, though he has struggled
with form since reaching the finals in Rotterdam.

Federer's potential third round opponent is Richard Gasquet, who has
also struggled with consistency and confidence this season. He seems
unlikely to get through Federer for the first time since 2005.

Match to watch out for: Baghdatis v Tsonga, first round

Semi-finalist: Federer
Quarter three: Andy Murray
After a shocker of a hard-court run, losing his opening matches in
Rotterdam, Indian Wells and Miami, Andy Murray made a strong return in
his opening clay event in Monte Carlo, losing to eventual champion
Nadal.

Back in Madrid after recuperation of an injured elbow, Murray found
himself in a rough draw, facing first Gilles Simon in a three-setter,
then falling to this week's semi-finalist, Bellucci.

He has a difficult road in Rome, too, with Guillermo Garcia-Lopez or
Xavier Malisse first—they both played well to reach the third round in
Madrid—followed by either Nikolay Davydenko, Alexandr Dolgopolov or
Victor Troicki.

Though none of them shone in Madrid, all three have the potential to
reach a third-round encounter with Murray, and will worry him if he
retreats behind the baseline as he did against Bellucci.

The top segment also carries some threats. Jurgen Melzer was a surprise
early faller in Madrid but played well on the slower clay of Monte
Carlo and Barcelona.

Florian Mayer, too, has had a good clay run, and then there is the
dangerous Simon again who is likely to upset the struggling Andy
Roddick in the first round.

Match to watch out for: Melzer v Mayer, second round

Semi-finalist: Melzer
Quarter four: Novak Djokovic
The still-unbeaten Serb has been nothing short of brilliant so far this
year. He is, however, also showing signs of physical wear and tear: He
still carries strapping on his knee and has had some shoulder and ankle
concerns this week.

But his will to win and his confidence are undiminished, and his
draw—possibly the easiest of the quarters—will give him some respite.

He will first face a qualifier, then either Stan Wawrinka—who has lost
in the first round of the last three tournaments, including Madrid—or
the declining Thiemo de Bakker, though there are a couple of wild cards
who could take those two out.

In the top segment, the biggest seed is Robin Soderling, a finalist at
Roland Garros twice, but not enjoying a very consistent period while
his coaching set-up changes.

It's hard to see Fernando Verdasco, in his present wayward form,
advancing past Milos Raonic, though it could be a big hitting affair.

The other possible third-rounder is Almagro who will like the Rome
surface more than Madrid's. He has two clay titles this year, and
reached the semis in Barcelona.

Match to watch out for: Verdasco v Raonic, first round.

Semi-finalist: Djokovic

Final: Djokovic v Nadal

Winner: Nadal
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