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Luis Suarez appeals biting ban
8/8/2014 12:13:58 PM

Luis Suarez arrives for his appeal at the CAS in Lausanne against his four-month biting ban imposed by FIFA.
Luis Suarez arrives for his appeal at the CAS in Lausanne against his four-month biting ban imposed by FIFA.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Luis Suarez appeals biting ban at sport's highest court
  • FIFA banned Uruguay striker for four months
  • UEFA to sanction use of 'magic spray' used at World Cup
  • Celtic thrown Champions League lifeline

Follow us at @WorldSportCNN and like us on Facebook

(CNN) -- Luis Suarez appealed to the Court of Arbitration (CAS) Friday against his four-month ban imposed by FIFA for biting during the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

Suarez and his legal team spent five hours before a three-man CAS appeal panel in Lausanne in an attempt to reduce the suspension, which covers all football activity.

The Uruguay striker bit Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini on the shoulder during a World Cup group game in Natal last month.

Read: Chiellini: Suarez ban 'excessive'

It was the third time he had committed a similar offense and it drew an immediate response from football's world governing body.

With Suarez banned, Uruguay lost its last 16 match to Colombia and was knocked out of the World Cup.

Despite the punishment, it did not stop Spanish giants Barcelona from signing Suarez from English Premier League Liverpool in a $127 million deal last month.

Ushered away

Suarez did not comment to reporters either before or after the proceedings Friday in the Swiss city, but did take time to sign autographs for waiting children before being ushered away.

His connections are hopeful of cutting his ban by two months, meaning he would be available to make his Barcelona debut by the end of the month.

Read: FIFA rejects Suarez appeal

The CAS said it would issue its decision "as soon as possible, probably before the end of next week."

Suarez, 27, was top scorer in the EPL last season, winning the two major player of the year awards for his outstanding performances in helping Liverpool to runner-up spot in the standings.

He suffered a knee injury at the end of the season which threatened his participation in the World Cup, but he recovered to score two goals in a decisive 2-1 victory over England.

But in the final group game, his bite on Chiellini, captured by television cameras, provided the most notorious moment of the World Cup.

UEFA adopts spray

One of the biggest successes of Brazil 2014 was the use of a "magic spray" which was used by referees to mark the spot from which a free kick was taken and to make sure the defensive wall retreated the requisite distance.

UEFA said Friday that it would be used in all its competitions, including the Champions League, following successful trials in its recent under-17 championship in Malta.

Read: The World Cup's real star?

"As we all saw at the World Cup, this spray was very useful in helping the referee in free-kick situations, and I am sure we will see similar results in our matches this season," said UEFA president Michel Platini.

The spray will be used for the first time in the UEFA Super Cup game between Real Madrid and Sevilla in Cardiff on August 12.

Celtic lifeline

In other football news Friday, Scottish champion Celtic has been handed a Champions League lifeline after UEFA punished Legia Warsaw for fielding an ineligible player.

Legia won the third qualifying round tie 6-1 on aggregate, but brought on Bartosz Bereszynski for the last four minutes of its 2-0 second-leg victory at Murrayfield Wednesday.

Bereszynski was supposed to be serving a three-game ban for violent conduct in last season's Europa League.

UEFA awarded the second leg game 3-0 to Celtic, handing them victory on away goals.

Legia, who say the problem arose because of the failure to fill in appropriate paperwork for Bereszynski, will appeal the decision.

 

Can Bartomeu restore Barca?
8/8/2014 12:51:16 PM

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Barcelona president admits past year has been "very difficult"
  • Josep Maria Bartomeu took over as club as been rocked by controversy
  • Bartomeu believes Pep Guardiola will one day return to the club
  • He says Luis Suarez does not have a "no biting" clause

Follow us at @WorldSportCNN and like us on Facebook

(CNN) -- When Josep Maria Bartomeu became the 40th president of FC Barcelona at the start of this year, he was paraded at the Camp Nou stadium in front of the waiting press, just as his predecessors before him had.

The president of Barcelona, after all, has an exalted status.
Usually they are voted for by the club's socios, or members, the president sets the tone of the club and the scope of its ambition. They are held to account, too, for their behavior off the pitch and results on it.

A picture was taken of the 51-year-old engineer and entrepreneur, with the club's famous motto visible in the stadium seats behind him, to his left.

Mes Que Un Club.

More Than A Club.

It is an invocation that sums up how Barcelona's fans and players believe that their club transcends soccer. How it represents a progressive Catalan political and social identity. The shirt was deemed so sacred that, for over a century, no sponsor was allowed to sully its famous stripes.

But, in the same picture, to his right, the words "Qatar Airways" loom even larger. The same company now graces the front of Barcelona's shirts too.

Crossroads

Bartomeu has taken charge of a club standing on the crossroads, not to mention at the end of one of the darkest periods in Barcelona's recent history.

In little over a year the club has lost its position as Europe's most feared team, changed its manager, seen another beloved former coach die of cancer, seen Lionel Messi embroiled in an embarrassing tax case and been accused of complicity, at least, in tax avoidance surrounding the transfer deal that brought Brazil star Neymar to Spain.

It was that final scandal that saw Bartomeu's predecessor Sandro Rosell resign in disgrace.

Bartomeu was his deputy and took over, leaving many Barca fans unhappy they weren't allowed their traditional vote.

Factor in the recent signing of Luis Suarez, a player still banned from all soccer related activity after biting a player at the World Cup finals, the third time he has bitten a player in a game during his short career, and the phrase "Mes Que Un Club," for many, seems to be describing a time passed.

Now Bartomeu has been charged with steadying the ship and making sure that isn't the case.

"Things have been very difficult for us," admits Bartomeu in an exclusive, wide-ranging CNN interview. "Not only sporting. I mean we also had a lot of things not sporting that has been ... well, developing the club in another way that we were not planning. But everything [that] comes we try to solve."

Season ahead

Given what's on Bartomeu's plate, his immediate focus is the season ahead. After a barren year, and the resignation of former coach Tata Martino, the club has put its faith in former player Luis Enrique, returning to a time when coaches were nurtured and promoted from within.

They have Barca in their heart, they go back to Barcelona and help the club
Bartomeu on Guardiola

"I learned very, very much from Pep Guardiola. He is a genius," Bartomeu said of Barcelona's former coach who, like Enrique, cut his teeth coaching the Barcelona B team.

"Then after Pep, Tito Vilanova, which was the natural continuation of this project but Tito had very bad medical problems. And (then) came Tata Martino. Tata Martino is a ... well, a coach from Argentina with another way of looking at football."

It was agreed that Martino, after a tough transitional season, would stand down. According to Bartomeu, there was only one choice. "(Director of football) Zubizarreta told us: 'Luis Enrique is our man. Luis Enrique is our coach,' " he recalls. "He has been preparing himself in the last few years for this so we took him."

The Messi factor

There has been a changing of the guard on the pitch as much as off it. The biggest loss has been Carles Puyol, who took over as club captain from Enrique almost a decade ago but has now retired after struggling with injuries.

All eyes will be on Lionel Messi, the team's focal point and the embodiment of the club's fortunes.

"It's unlimited," Bartomeu replies when asked how much Messi was worth to Barcelona now.

"Leo Messi came to our club when he was 13 years old. This year he will be 27 ... He has been growing within our club. He is one of us.

"Leo Messi represents something more than his goals or the titles he won. Leo Messi represents, a little bit, this spirit of a young player that comes to our Masia, to our youth academy, and learns."

Bartomeu says he is not worried about the tax case, based on offshore payments for image rights, that has dogged Messi since last year.

"That is something that belongs to his personal life, of course," Bartomeu says. "He has our support, our help and, well, he's managing with his advisers, with his lawyers and of course anything he needs Barca is there to help him."

The Neymar deal

But it is another potential court case that has proved even more damaging to Barcelona's reputation. When details of the Neymar transfer deal was made public, with an alleged $10 million shortfall in what was paid and what was declared to the Spanish authorities, it caused a wave of outrage. Bartomeu, however, believes that the club didn't do anything wrong.

"This transfer is being investigated by a judge in Spain and we have different interpretations," he says. "What we did, of course, being prudent as much as possible, we pay taxes in Brazil and also we pay the same taxes in Spain. So we paid twice just to avoid any misunderstandings for the judge. When the truth comes out then Barca will benefit from this truth."

This season Barcelona will try to accommodate three of the finest attacking talents in the world game: Messi, Neymar and Luis Suarez, even if the club will have to wait for the Uruguayan to serve his four-month ban for biting.

"When we approached Suarez, it was before the World Cup," Bartomeu says.

"We told him that he had the right age. He had the experience. Playing at Liverpool give him incredible performance also. And it was the right time for him to come to our club, to Barcelona.

"We knew from a lot of lot of years ago that Luis Suarez likes our club, likes our city. And we have the advantage. His agent is Pep Guardiola's brother ... He's from Barca in his heart, also, so everything was perfect and created the perfect atmosphere that Luis Suarez accepted. And we know that he had better offers than our offer but he came to Barcelona."

Suarez ban

Suarez's bite on Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini became, for many, one of the defining images of the World Cup. But the incident didn't give Bartomeu any second thoughts.

"No, no. We didn't rethink this decision and we told Luis after the bite. He knows he did wrong," Bartomeu says.

"He apologized. That's very important for us. That means he knows that he did not do things properly -- and of course, coming to our city, coming to our club, there's going to be a way of managing Luis Suarez, because at Liverpool he was a perfect player. Liverpool fans can tell it, supporters can tell it."

On question remains: How would Barcelona react if he bit someone again?

"This is now a question," Bartomeu admits. "This is a question that a lot of people now ask us. We cannot talk about something that could happen or not. We don't know. What we know is that we accept this responsibility and he also wants this responsibility of bringing Luis Suarez to the family of football."

So confident is Barcelona that Suarez will not err again, Bartomeu has not insisted on a "no biting" clause in the contract.

"No, there is no clause," he confirms. "If the clause did exist we wouldn't say it, but it doesn't exist."

Guardiola's return?

As the season approaches -- La Liga kicks off on August 23 -- many question marks remain over where Barcelona is headed and whether it is really "more than a club" or susceptible to the same shenanigans as any other team in the modern game.

Luis Enrique will have to hit the ground running, but Bartomeu believes that the club's special ethos is such that few can resist its gravitational pull, even former coaches like Pep Guardiola.

"Oh I'm sure," Bartomeu says when asked whether Guardiola would ever return to Barcelona.

"I'm sure that all the people that are from Barca, they have Barca in their heart, they go back to Barcelona and help the club. It's something that has happened in the past and will continue in the future.

"I always say to a lot of people that I see a future of Barca. I hope that after 2022 ... with a lot of players that are right now playing or players that are training other teams, coming back to our team as coaches, as a sport director, as members or as presidents of the club.

"Because at the end, we are like a family."

Read: 'Suarez is ours," declares Barca

Read: Has Barcelona lost its soul?

Read Is Barcelona becoming 'Less of a Club'?

 

Wounded find salvation in sport
8/8/2014 12:51:55 PM

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • World's Largest Golf Outing held at 150-plus courses in the United States
  • Event raises money for the Wounded Warriors project
  • Several wounded veterans take part in the competition
  • Golf has helped them to come to terms with their injuries

Follow us at @WorldSportCNN and like us on Facebook

(CNN) -- Jeremiah Pauley remembers all too vividly the moment that shrapnel from a roadside bomb in Iraq tore into his body and left his right arm dangling uselessly.

Despite being seriously wounded, the Staff Sergeant was still yelling orders to alert others to the danger, but it was already too late and one of his men had died.

The shock kicked in.

"There was not a lot of pain, I was drifting in and out of consciousness and someone was tapping me on the forehead to tell me to keep awake," he tells CNN.

Pauley had been leading an 18-strong patrol of the United States First Armored Division in the city of Tal Afar when he was hit by the blast.

"I was taken to a field hospital in Mosul -- laying there in my hospital bed with this contraption on my arm," he recalls.

Pauley was presented with his Purple Heart and then shipped out to Germany and eventually home to the U.S.

As a result of his injuries, Pauley's army career was over and he was given a medical discharge.

'Helplessness'

Coming to terms with that life-changing event was tough enough, but it was the "survivor's guilt" that played tricks with his mind and mental state.

Private First Class Jody Missildine of Plant City, Florida, just 19 years of age, had died that day, April 8, 2006 and Pauley blamed himself.

"I was just racked with guilt, in the sense that I failed as a leader and take responsibility for what happened."

Pauley was in a bad place.

His marriage would eventually break down. "It's a big challenge for returning veterans to learn how to integrate with their families," he admits.

Now 38, he has two children, and his youngest -- his daughter -- was born five months after he was injured.

"I battled three or four years of just helplessness, anxiety and depression, until I was introduced to the Wounded Warriors Project," Pauley says.

Aimed at helping injured service members, and raising awareness in the community, it brought him together with Norbie Lara -- who also joined the army in the mid-1990s and who was also seriously wounded on duty.

"He had such a positive attitude and he really encouraged me to turn my life around," Pauley says.

Lara's arm had been severed when a rocket-propelled grenade pierced the armor plating of his vehicle.

He suffered other life-threatening injuries, and a lacerated liver, spending months in the Walter Read Army Medical Center in Washington where Pauley would be sent two years later.

"I remember I woke up from my coma and essentially thinking this is not really how I want to live," Lara tells CNN.

"I didn't want to live, and for the first time in my life I was scared."

The power of golf

Like Pauley, his army days were over and with discharge came the same sense of helplessness and loss.

Lara also found support and renewed sense of purpose after being introduced to the Wounded Warrior project.

By chance, he was given his first set of golf clubs and the opportunity to have a go at the game, despite his disability.

"I played horribly, but I connected perfectly with just one shot -- just one shot and I was hooked," he recalls.

"I've loved the game ever since and used it as a vital tool to aid my recovery."

Pauley had also dabbled with the game before his life-changing incident and, like Lara, has found some inner peace while walking the 18 holes of his local courses in northern California.

But like a lot of amateur golfers, he suffers from a common problem.

"I had a terrible slice and now with the injury to my right arm, I still have a slice!"

On Monday, slice or no slice, both will be hoping to take their "A game" to a nationwide tournament which has the express purpose of raising money for the Wounded Warriors charity.

The World's Largest Golf Outing (WLGO) is the brain child of legendary golfer Billy Casper's organization and its CEO, Peter Hill.

This year more than 150 courses in the United States will be used for an event with an expected 15,000 entrants, all playing in teams of four.

Unlike conventional tournaments, the prizes are reserved for the participants who raise the most money for the Warriors, not those with the lowest scores.

WLGO has raised over $1 million for veterans since starting four years ago, and is rapidly expanding.

"We've hit a chord within the golfing community," Hill tells CNN. "Americans are passionate about assisting these brave individuals."

Finding closure

Pauley will be playing at Lincoln Hills in California, where he will be pressed into speaking duties before the tournament starts.

A regular on the dais at veterans' days, he eloquently espouses their cause and the benefits of Wounded Warriors.

What happened that fateful day in Iraq changed his life forever, and it was only last year that he was able to exorcise some of the demons and guilt about the death of his colleague PFC Missildine.

Missildine's family invited Pauley to visit and pay his respects, something he had been unable to do in 2006 because he was in hospital recovering from his injuries.

Pauley recalled in his personal blog the moment he first saw Missildine's grave site, writing: "I was cold, nearly shivering. I stood and saluted him while tears rolled down my face.

"My first thought was that I wished I was in the ground instead of him ... But at that instant I was overcome with a hot burning sensation and I realized Jody wouldn't want me to think like that ...

"I promised him that it wouldn't be another seven years before I came back. I stood and saluted him one final time and walked away."

Lara, who works full-time for Wounded Warriors, will perform similar speaking duties at 1757 Golf Club in Dulles, Virginia before showing off his golfing skills.

"I usually break a hundred. I've found my own technique," he says. "The furthest I've ever hit a drive is 280 yards, I normally strike it out about 230."

Breaking down barriers

Lara is thankful for his every moment after his near brush with death, and always thankful to Wounded Warriors from rescuing him from the depths of despair.

The project was formed in 2003 to give support to wounded U.S. service personnel since the events of September 11, 2001.

Nearly 40,000 veterans and their families have benefited from its various programs and fundraising efforts.

The WLGO's association has proved the perfect fit, and Hill believes golf is also benefiting from opening up its courses to people who might not normally be attracted to the sport.

Competitors pay a standard green fee and $10 donation to Wounded Warriors to play prestigious courses and to get a taste for the game.

"It's broken down the some of the barriers to people who want to play golf, particularly women, who are worried about too many rules and too much protocol," Hill says.

He has big ambitions for the concept and is even considering an expansion outside of the United States.

"I see no reason why we could not play on thousands of courses, on a Monday each year in August, with hundreds of thousand of golfers coming to support their heroes and to raise millions of dollars in a day."

Having already presented a check for $735,000 in January, Hill hopes this year's fundraising will break through the $1 million mark.

"It's a great way to raise money and awareness for the Warriors, " Lara says.

He plays most weekends, sometimes with other veterans, enjoying the solitude and the chance to talk, share experiences.

"You can't have a bad day on a golf course," says the 41-year-old.

"Being a Warrior you want to compete whatever the event, still up for the challenge."

Read: Gary Player - 1,300 situps a day, aged 78

Read: Billy Casper - Pioneer for PGA Tour's multimillionaires

Read: Golf star's salute to U.S. soldiers

 

F1: Ecclestone in $100M settlement
8/8/2014 12:52:11 PM

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • German court orders Bernie Ecclestone to pay $100 million
  • Sum is a settlement to end F1 supremo's trial on bribery charges
  • Ecclestone has been given a week to pay the fine
  • The 83-year-old had been facing up to 10 years in jail if found guiltuy

Follow us at @WorldSportCNN and like us on Facebook

(CNN) -- The head of Formula One has avoided possible conviction on bribery charges after agreeing to pay $100 million.

A German court ruled Tuesday that it would accept an offer from Bernie Ecclestone to bring an early end to proceedings, which had already lasted three months.

Presiding judge Peter Noll gave the 83-year-old British businessman a week to make payments of $99 million to the Bavarian state treasury and $1 million to a local charity which looks after terminally ill children.

Ecclestone, who has always denied any wrongdoing, was accused of bribing a German banker eight years go over the sale of a controlling interest in the company that runs the elite division of motorsport.

Under German law there is a provision to halt criminal proceedings to avoid long and costly court cases where a conviction might be difficult to achieve and after a negotiation between prosecutors and the defense.

"While charges could have been pursued against the accused, the court took into consideration the age of the accused, his health and the considerable burden of attending court in a foreign country with all the language difficulties that entails and the public attention," Noll said in his summing up.

Ecclestone, whose fortune is valued by Forbes at over $4 billion, was asked by Noll if he could make the payment. "Yes" came the reply.

Ecclestone's defense lawyer Sven Thomas added: "That's do-able."

It brought down the curtain on proceedings in Munich that could have ended in a jail sentence of up to 10 years and the loss of his position at the helm of F1.

Outside the court, Thomas told reporters: "This is not about a conviction, but a cessation of the trial with no admission of guilt.

"There will be no guilty verdict whatsoever and that clearly changes the situation in terms of the evidence and legal position, otherwise the talks between the prosecution and defense would not have been possible."

The controversy dates back to 2006, when the German regional bank BayernLB sold its 47.2% stake in F1 to the current majority shareholder, CVC Capital Partners -- a private equity firm.

The prosecution claimed Ecclestone paid Gerhard Gribkowsky, formerly the chief risk officer of BayernLB, a sweetener of $44 million to steer the sale to CVC, so he could remain in charge of F1.

Ecclestone admitted the payment to Gribhowsky, but only after the banker threatened to make damaging claims about his tax status to Britain's HM Revenue and Customs.

The case revealed that he had avoided a £1.2 billion ($2 billion) bill through a legal tax avoidance scheme, and had settled with British tax authorities by paying £10 million.

He has been attending court, mostly accompanied by his wife Fabiana Flos, for two days per week while still running F1 -- a job he has held for over 40 years.

Ecclestone had been warned by CVC that a guilty verdict would have resulted him being losing that coveted role, having won a civil case in Britain in February after being accused of undervaluing F1 in the sale.

Read: Ferrari 'has veto over Ecclestone successor'

 

Historic move for San Antonio Spurs
8/8/2014 12:43:51 PM

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Hammon, a six-time WNBA All-Star, announced July 23 she will retire as a player
  • Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich praises her coaching talent
  • Hammon is not the first woman in NBA history on an NBA coaching staff

(CNN) -- In what many sports fans view as a historic move, the reigning NBA champion San Antonio Spurs announced the hiring of Becky Hammon as assistant coach. Terms of Hammon's contract were not disclosed.

"I very much look forward to the addition of Becky Hammon to our staff," Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich said. "Having observed her working with our team this past season, I'm confident her basketball IQ, work ethic and interpersonal skills will be a great benefit to the Spurs."

At her introductory press conference Tuesday afternoon, Hammon called the opportunity humbling.

"I'm just incredibly grateful, obviously, to the Spurs organization and Coach Pop and (Spurs General Manager R.C. Buford)," Hammon said. "The whole staff really just from day one has been so great to me. I'm a little overwhelmed right now, to be perfectly honest."

Hammon, a six-time WNBA All-Star, announced July 23 she will retire as a player at the end of this season. She has played the last eight seasons with the San Antonio Stars.

Hammon is not the first woman in NBA history on an NBA coaching staff. Lisa Boyer, while working for the WNBA's Cleveland Rockers as an assistant coach, also was on the Cleveland Cavaliers coaching staff under John Lucas in 2001-2002. Boyer is now the associate head coach for the South Carolina women's basketball team.

Hammon alluded to the historical impact of her hiring, but she also tied in career fields other than basketball.

"There's women that have trail-blazed much bigger paths and really trail-blazed the path for things like this to happen," Hammon said. "There's a lot more important things going on, in the bigger things, CEOs of companies. Women are really in every area. They're in the surgery rooms. They're doctors. They're lawyers. They're COOs.

"So even me sitting here today to be able to have the playing experience that I had as a professional basketball player, women went before me to pave that trail. So I'm really just reaping benefits of all their hard work and labor."

Popovich found out through San Antonio Stars head coach Dan Hughes that Hammon was interested in coaching. That led to Hammon spending time with Popovich and the rest of the Spurs team at practices, and a feature on "NBA Inside Stuff."

"She's right in the middle and she knows how to do it and her players really respond to her," Popovich said in the "Inside Stuff" feature. "She's just a natural."

Spurs guard/forward Danny Green was complimentary as well.

"Everybody here respects her," Green said. "She's a really good player and also a good person to have around. She understands the game."

In the feature, Popovich also said Hammon "knows when to talk" and "when to shut up," saying that a lot of people don't figure that out.

"She talks the game, she understands the game," Popovich said. "So for all those reasons you really know she's got that same sort of Avery Johnson, Steve Kerr, (Mike) Budenholzer type thing."

Hammon acknowledged she will be in high-pressure situations.

"I'm ready to be treated as just any other assistant coach," she said.

Despite going undrafted in 1999, Hammon was named one of the WNBA's Top 15 Players of All Time in July 2011. She's seventh in league history in points with 5,809, fourth in assists (1,687) and sixth in games (445). Hammon has averaged 13.1 points per game in her career.

Hammon, who grew up in Rapid City, South Dakota, spent her first eight WNBA seasons with the New York Liberty after signing as an undrafted free agent. On a draft-night deal in 2007, she was traded to San Antonio. Hammon also was a three-time All-American at Colorado State.

Hammon, one of many women's players to also play professionally overseas during WNBA offseasons, became a naturalized Russian citizen in 2008. That same year, when she was the runner-up in the WNBA MVP voting, Hammon created a stir when she decided to suit up for the Russian National Team in the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. She said she was feeling overlooked by USA Basketball for a spot on the U.S. national team but still wanted to fulfill her dream of playing in the Olympics. Hammon also played for the Russian team in the 2012 London Games.

Clermont boss says female soccer coaches should be "normal"

 

PGA: Rory roars, Tiger crashes out
8/8/2014 8:12:40 PM

After the secound round, Rory McIlroy sits atop the leaderboard of the PGA Championship. CNN's Shane O'Donoghue reports.

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