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Jazira beats Malikieh in AFC Cup

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

AMMAN — Jazira beat Bahrain’s Malikieh 1-0 on Monday in stage 2 of the 15th Asian Football Confederation Cup. Faisali play Lebanon’s Ansar Tuesday in Beirut.

Russia outlast Germany in overtime in ice hockey

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

The Olympic Athletes from Russia celebrate winning the men’s gold medal ice hockey match against Germany during the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Gangneung on Sunday (AFP photo by Kirill Kudryavtsev)

GANGNEUNG, South Korea — Kirill Kaprizov scored in overtime to lead the Olympic Athletes from Russia (OAR) past a feisty Germany 4-3 on Sunday to win the men’s ice hockey gold before joining his team mates to defy a ban by singing the Russian national anthem during the medal ceremony.

The Russians, competing as neutral athletes at Pyeongchang as punishment for a years-long Russian doping scandal, came back from one-goal down on a goal by Nikita Gusev with less than a minute left in regulation time to force overtime in one of the most pulsating finals in the history of Olympic hockey.

At their medal ceremony, the players team sang the Russian anthem over the sound of the Olympic anthem at the Gangneung Hockey Centre despite being barred from having their flag raised or anthem played. 

The game was played hours after the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided not to restore their delegation’s Olympic status, which would have enabled them to march under their flag at the closing ceremony later on Sunday.

The team’s assistant captain Ilya Kovalchuk said the players had discussed beforehand whether to sing the anthem if they were to win, and they agreed they would.

“We knew that we will do it if we win,” said Kovalchuk, the all-time leading Russian goal-scorer in Olympic play.

Singing the Russian anthem on the field of play is a violation of the IOC’s rules on neutrality, which were imposed on Russia as part of sanctions punishing the nation over systematic doping across many sports.

The victory marked the first time a team from Russia have won the gold medal in hockey since 1992, when the so-called Unified Team representing Russia and five other former Soviet republics beat Canada for the Olympic championship.

“It means a lot. We didn’t win Olympics since ‘92,” Kovalchuk said. “It was a while ago. That was our dream. That was my dream for when I was five years old, when I started playing. It’s great and it feels good.”

 

Wild game

 

The game was a thriller from the start and ended with flair, a perfect one-time slap shot from Kaprizov that ripped past German goaltender Danny aus den Birken with Germany’s Patrick Reimer off for high sticking. 

Kaprizov had been fed the puck by the other Russian hero of the game, Gusev, who netted two third period goals, including the one that tied it, sending the game to overtime with less than a minute to go and the Germans looking like they were about to pull off a huge upset. Gusev finished as the Olympic tournament’s points leader with four goals and eight assists.

The Russians found themselves evenly matched by a German team who surprised the hockey world by making it to their first Olympic final. With the loss, the Germans won silver, their best finish ever in Olympic ice hockey and their first medal since a bronze at the Innsbruck games in 1976.

On paper the final shouldn’t have been a fair fight, but the Germans, playing hockey for a country primarily obsessed with football, skated evenly with the OAR, a team loaded with top home-grown talent from Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League, seen as the world’s second-best league after the NHL, and led by ex-NHL all stars Pavel Datsyuk, their captain, and Kovalchuk.

“It’s a little tough right now because we all felt we could have won that game, but that’s hockey, that’s just the way it is,” German coach Marco Sturm said. “The boys are going to bring silver home and they should be proud.”

Jordan hosts Syria in FIBA Asian qualifiers

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

AMMAN — Jordan hosts Syria on Monday as India hosts Lebanon in their fourth Asian Group C qualifiers for the FIBA Basketball 2019 World Cup.

Jordan tops Group C after they beat India 102-88, as Lebanon beat Syria 87-63. Earlier, Jordan beat Lebanon 87-83 and Syria 109-72. Lebanon is second after they beat India 107-72 and Syria beat India 74-57.

Currently, New Zealand top Group A, Australia Group B and Qatar top Group C. Out of 16 competing teams 12 teams (the top three teams from each group) will move to the second round following which seven teams (the top three teams from each group and the best 4th ) in addition to host China will move to the World Cup set for August 31, 2019 which will include 32 teams.

Fans are elated at the team’s current results especially that the Jordanian squad is striving to get into competitive form after discord among the governing body of the game ended with the resignation of the Jordan Basketball Federation Board. A transitional care-taking body of former players and marketing experts has taken over until a new board is elected within the coming year.

Support for Jordan’s second most popular game is seen as below par by most observers, leading to a decline in the game locally and less competitive advantage on the regional scene although Jordan was the only Jordanian team to actually reach a World Championship in a team sport in 2010 alongside the Junior team in 1995.

Fans pin their hopes that the qualifying group will provide Jordan the chance to move to the FIBA Basketball World Cup finals. Last year, Jordan took third place in the West Asian Basketball Association (WABA) as Lebanon were crowned champs. The top four qualifiers then played at the 29th FIBA Asia Cup in Lebanon where Jordan finished at a disappointing 8th place as Australia won the title, Iran came second and South Korea third.

Apart from the 2010 milestone, Jordan’s basketball team won the West Asia title in 2002 and repeated it in 2014, when Jordan managed to win the WABA title for the second time in the absence of both the Lebanese and senior Iranian teams.

In WABA 2010, Jordan finished second behind Iran and qualified to the 26th FIBA Asia Championship where, for the first time in the country’s history, Jordan reached the final but lost the chance qualify to the 2012 Olympic Games after losing the final 70-69 to China. Jordan then played at the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament for Men but lost to Puerto Rico and Greece and was eliminated.

As of 2017, the Asia Championships and the FIBA Oceania Championship merged into a one tournament to be known as the FIBA Asia Cup. It will now be held every four-years like the EuroBasket, AfroBasket and Americas Championship. The tournament will determine the composition of the joint FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania qualifiers for the 2019 FIBA World Cup.

Jordan’s Sharabati gets gold medal in Taekwondo at Egypt tourney

By - Feb 26,2018 - Last updated at Feb 26,2018

AMMAN  — Saleh Al Sharabati has clinched gold for Jordan in the G2 International Taekwondo Championships in Cairo, according to the Jordan Olympic Committee News Service.

Sharabati beat Kazakhstan’s Rakhim Adelkhaove in the final of the -80kg, 15-14, to launch Jordan participation at the tournament with a gold medal.

Earlier he beat Egypt’s Mohammad Mursi, 35-2, and then he beat Austria’s Alexander Radjovek, 15-2, before beating Italy’s to seed Roberto Buta. Meanwhile, his teammate Ruslan Libzo lost early to the fourth seed in the -58kg, Sergi Oksove, of Moldova. Juliana Al Sadeq also lost early, by just one point in the women’s 67kg category, to Italy’s Dalila Diambra.

Records broken at Jordan swimming nationals

By - Feb 25,2018 - Last updated at Feb 25,2018

AMMAN — Two-time Olympian Talita Baqlah and up and coming sensation Amro Al Wer have set new records at the National Winter Swimming Championships, according to the Jordan Olympic Committee News Service.

Baqlah, one of Jordan’s most successful female swimmers, set a new Jordan best in the 100m Medley with a time of 1 minute 8.20 seconds, beating the former record set by Sara Al Haiajneh.

Wer broke his own record in the 200m breaststroke after clocking 2 minutes 22.26 seconds.

Jazira, Faisali play tough matches in AFC Cup

By - Feb 25,2018 - Last updated at Feb 25,2018

AMMAN — Jazira host Bahrain’s Malikieh on Monday while Faisali play Lebanon’s Ansar on Tuesday in Beirut in stage 2 of the 15th Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup.

Both Jordanian teams will be facing the group leaders after the second-tier Asian club competition kicked off around the continent with both Jazira and Faisali held to draws. Jazira held Iraqi Air Force Club 2-2 in Group A in which Malikieh beat Oman’s Suweiq 4-1. 

On the other hand, Faisali held Syria’s Wihdeh by the same score in Group C in which Ansar beat Oman’s Dhofar 2-0. The top teams from each group in addition to the best second placed team will move to the second round of the competition.

Earlier this season, Faisali lost their 2018 AFC Champions League play-off match to Uzbekistan’s Nasaf Qarshi 5-1 and failed to reach the group stages of Asia’s elite club competition. They have now settled to play the AFC Cup alongside their compatriots Jazira. Jordanian teams have never before made it past the ACL preliminary round. Wihdat were knocked out in 2017, 2016 and 2015, while Shabab Urdun were eliminated in 2014.

Reigning Jordanian Professional Football League and Cup champs Faisali finished runner-up to Tunisia’s Tarajji in the last edition of the Arab Clubs Championships after an impressive performance which included two wins over Egyptian veterans Ahli.  This year, they are so far fourth in the league and hope to make up on the regional scene.

Last season, Ahli played the AFC Cup for the first time and Wihdat reached the West Asia zone semifinals the winner of which faced the winner from the rest of the Asian zones to decide the AFC Cup champion, won by Iraqi Air Force Club for the second year running. The AFC Cup was previously won three times by Jordanian teams: Faisali won titles in 2005 and 2006, and Shabab Urdun won in 2007. Other Jordanian teams that competed are Wihdat, Jazira, Ramtha, Hussein and That Ras.

Locally, so far this season, reigning league and Jordan Cup champs Faisali beat Jazira to win the 35th Jordan Super Cup. Wihdat beat Jazira to win the Jordan Football Association Shield. In the Jordan Cup, Jazira ousted Faisali while Shabab Urdun eliminated Wihdat to reach the final.

Russia takes on Germany for Ice Hockey gold, really?

By - Feb 24,2018 - Last updated at Feb 24,2018

Canada’s Kevin Poulin stops Germany’s Dominik Kahun from scoring in their men’s semifinal ice hockey match during the 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Gangneung, South Korea, on Friday (AFP Jung Yeon-je)

GANGNEUNG, South Korea — In a matchup few oddsmaker would have predicted, a powerhouse Russian squad will face off on Sunday against an upstart German team in a battle for one of the ice hockey world’s most precious prizes: an Olympic gold medal.

The Russians last won a gold medal in hockey in 1992 in Albertville, France, in the first Winter Olympics of the post-Soviet Union era. As the Soviets, they won seven gold medals in nine games from 1956 to 1988.

For the Germans, a win would mark their first gold medal ever in ice hockey.

The Russian men, playing as the Olympic Athletes from Russia because of a doping ban, have long been seen as a favourite in a tournament being played without NHL players for the first time in 24 years. 

Nicknamed the Big Red Machine, it is stacked with top home-grown talent built around a core of ex-NHL all stars Pavel Datsyuk and Ilya Kovalchuk — both household names in a country in love with the sport. 

It has been on a tear since dropping their first game of the Olympics to Slovakia, outscoring its next four opponents 21-3.

“We’re here just for one reason and I think we deserve to be in the final so we’ll see, the best team will win,” said Kovalchuk, who has scored five goals to become the top-scoring Russian Olympian of all time.

“That’s an elite team,” US coach Tony Granato said of the Russians, who beat his team 4-0 in the preliminary round. “They could give 20 NHL teams a run for their money.”

But Germany? A team which players and coaches concede playing a game that suffers as a distant second or third fiddle to the country’s sporting passion, football, they snuck up on everybody.

They dropped their first two games of the tournament and could have gone away quietly. Instead they started winning when it mattered and found themselves in the play-off. 

First it took down Sweden, whom it had never beaten on Olympic ice, to make the semifinals and then it edged Canada, another team it was yet to conquer in the Olympics. They will now play in their first-ever gold medal game. 

“Sounds crazy right?” German coach Marco Sturm said after his team’s win on Friday night. “I think it really helped us to play the top teams early on, Finland and Sweden.”

“You know we learned from it. We lost some games but we learned from it. Everyone felt it. We grew as a team and that’s just the result. I’m very proud of my guys.”

Meanwhile, Ester Ledecka became the first person in Winter Olympics history to capture gold medals in both Alpine skiing and snowboarding, when she won the snowboard parallel giant slalom on Saturday to go with her stunning Alpine super-G gold.

The 22-year-old Czech was superb throughout and defeated Germany’s Selina Joerg in the final by 0.46 seconds to become the fifth person to win gold in two different sports.

Three of the four athletes to have won in different sports in the past did so in the closely related fields of Nordic combined and cross-country skiing, while Russian Anfissa Reszova did so in biathlon and cross country.

Never before has the seemingly unbreachable divide between the old classic of the Olympic Games, Alpine skiing, and the popular modern sport of snowboarding been breached by an athlete winning gold in both.

“The best satisfaction is really that I could be here on both and win both,” said Ledecka.

“It was a great feeling, every run was a great feeling, it was something very special. I will think about this moment until the end of my life.”

Jordan beat India in FIBA Asian qualifiers for 2019 World Cup

By - Feb 24,2018 - Last updated at Feb 24,2018

AMMAN — Jordan beat India 102-88 on Friday in its third Asian Group C qualifiers for the FIBA Basketball 2019 World Cup.

Jordan tops Group C after also having beaten Lebanon 87-83 and Syria 109-72 in ealier matches. The national team next host Syria on February 26.

Gutsy Gasser goes for glory, bags big air gold

By - Feb 22,2018 - Last updated at Feb 22,2018

Austria’s Anna Gasser competes during the final of the women’s snowboard big air event at the Alpensia Ski Jumping Centre during the 2018 Winter Olympic Games 2018 in Pyeongchang, South Korea, on Thursday (AFP photo by Jonathan Nackstrand)

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea — Anna Gasser stood at the top of the big air ramp on Thursday, caught in two minds ahead of her crucial final run. In the end, the Austrian snowboarder changed her planned trick and was rewarded with the first Olympic gold medal in the event.

Gasser, who finished 15th in the slopestyle event last week, put down a 96.00 with the final run of the day to snatch gold away from American Jamie Anderson.

The Austrian’s combined score of 185.00 from her two best runs relegated slopestyle champion Anderson into silver with a 177.25 total, while New Zealand’s Zoi Sadowski-Synnott took the bronze with a combined 157.50. 

Gasser said deciding to go with something different for her third run had been key.

“I was standing up there and I knew I had the silver and I only could win and I was like, ‘No, I’m going to go full risk and if it works out then I deserve this medal,’” she said.

“Thankfully it worked out.”

The gold will go some way to making up for the Austrian’s disappointment in the slopestyle, where high winds prevented any of the riders from laying down two clean runs.

Gasser said the slopestyle should have been postponed and that Anderson was the only one who wanted it to go ahead.

The big air event is making its Olympic debut in Pyeongchang and sees snowboarders hurtle down a ramp standing at 49 metres with a maximum slope angle of 40 degrees and perform spins and tricks to impress the judges.

The women’s final was brought forward to Thursday as high winds are forecast for Friday, with the men’s final scheduled for Saturday.

Anderson, who became the first woman to win two snowboarding medals at a single Olympics, said she was happier to win the big air silver medal than she was defending the slopestyle title she had won in Sochi four years ago.

“It feels better because we have great conditions and everyone was able to ride their best, so it feels rewarding,” she said. 

Sadowski-Synnott was another who took a risk with her final jump and, while she could not pull it off perfectly, she was satisfied that she had given it a go.

“I’ve never done that trick before, but it’s the Olympics, so I wanted to do something crazy,” said the 16-year-old, who won New Zealand’s second ever Winter Olympics medal. 

Barely two hours later, another 16-year-old New Zealander, Nico Porteous, won his country’s third when he took bronze in the ski halfpipe.

Meanwhile, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is edging closer to allowing Russia to march behind their national flag at the Winter Games closing ceremony, sources said, in a move Moscow hopes will mark the end of its ostracism from world sport.

Sources familiar with the matter at the Pyeongchang games, where Russians are competing as neutral athletes under the Olympic flag, said only a minority of IOC officials did not want to restore Russia’s national status for the ceremony on Sunday.

A decision to reinstate Russia would likely face criticism from international athletes and anti-doping officials, given Russia was hit by a fresh doping scandal only this week at Pyeongchang, involving a medal-winning curler.

But in Russia, it would be perceived as a powerful symbol of its rehabilitation as an Olympic nation and as a vindication of its stance that it was unfairly targeted by doping accusations.

“There is a group within the IOC who do not want them to come back for the closing ceremony and obviously the doping case in curling is not good for Russia,” one source said.

“But I think this group is a minority and it is relatively small.”

Some IOC members have privately argued the curling case is a minor infringement that alone does not warrant excluding Russia from flying the Russian flag in the ceremony, sources said.

The IOC declined to comment.

Jordan plays India in FIBA Asian qualifiers for 2019 World Cup

By - Feb 22,2018 - Last updated at Feb 22,2018

AMMAN — Jordan plays India on Friday in their third Asian Group C qualifiers for the FIBA Basketball 2019 World Cup.

Jordan tops Group C after they beat Lebanon 87-83 and Syria 109-72. Lebanon beat India 107-72 and Syria beat India 74-57 in earlier matches.

The national team will face Syria on February 26 in Amman. Out of 16 competing teams 12 teams (the top three teams from each group) will move to the second round following which seven teams (the top three teams from each group and the best 4th), in addition to host China, will move to the World Cup set for August 31, 2019 which will include 32 teams.

The Jordanian squad is striving to get into competitive form after a rough year that saw internal strife among the governing body of the game, ending with the resignation of the Jordan Basketball Federation Board, and a transitional care-taking body of former players and marketing experts taking over until a new board is elected in the coming year.

Fans pin their hopes that the qualifying group will provide Jordan the chance to move to the FIBA Basketball World Cup finals. Last year, Jordan took third place in the West Asian Basketball Association (WABA) as Lebanon was crowned champs. The top four qualifiers then played at the 29th FIBA Asia Cup in Lebanon where Jordan finished at a disappointing 8th place as Australia won the title, Iran came second and South Korea third.

As of 2017, the Asia Championships and the FIBA Oceania Championship merged into a one tournament to be known as the FIBA Asia Cup. It will now be held every 4-years.The tournament will determine the composition of the joint FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania qualifiers for the 2019 FIBA World Cup. 

Support for Jordan’s second most popular sport is seen as below par by most observers, leading to a decline in the game locally and less competitive on the regional scene although Jordan reached the World Championship in 2010 — and was the only Jordanian team to actually reach a world championship in a team sport alongside the Junior team in 1995.

A look back at Jordan’s basketball record in the past decade saw Jordan first winning the West Asia title in 2002. That was only repeated in 2014, when Jordan managed to win the WABA title for the second time in the absence of both the Lebanese and senior Iranian teams and represented the West Asia zone at the 5th FIBA Asia Cup (previously known as the FIBA Asia Stankovic Cup between 2004 and 2010 and FIBA Asia Cup from 2012 to 2014). 

China, as well defending FIBA Asia Championship titleholders Iran had automatically qualified. The champion was given an automatic berth to the following year’s FIBA Asia Championship. Qatar was Stankovic Cup/Asia Cup champ in 2004, Jordan in 2008, Lebanon in 2010 and Iran in 2012, 2014 and 2016.

In WABA 2010, Jordan finished second behind Iran and qualified to the 26th FIBA Asia Championship where, for the first time in the country’s history, Jordan reached the final, but lost the chance qualify to the 2012 Olympic Games after losing the final 70-69 to China. Jordan then played at the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) for men but was eliminated. The OQT gave Asia’s second and third teams a chance to qualify to the London Games basketball event. 

In 2016, Jordan beat Lebanon to clinch second place at the WABA to advance to the FIBA Asia Challenge where they finished third.

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