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England, Striker
Since bombing out in '06 on a red card, England's one-man strike force has had a calmer head. And a better one: he nodded in seven straight goals in one '09 stretch

Stat: Was second highest scorer in England, with 26 goals in '09-10

View the full list for "11 World Cup Players to Watch"


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11 player to watch in world cup


Brazil, Defender
An end-to-end back and the face of a new-look Brazil, he is a menace on offense too; just check out his juggling act and strike for Inter against Juventus on YouTube

Stat: Helmed a defense that ceded 0.6 goals per game in qualifying


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11 World Cup Players to Watch


Argentina, Winger
His stop-and-go moves and brazen attacks make him the most exciting player in Europe — but can he blend in with Argentina's talent and all-new tactics?

Stat: Won European Footballer of the Year by a record margin

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Race for European places hots up


There are top-of-the-table meetings in Greece and Portugal this weekend while the race for UEFA Champions League places is hotting up all over Europe, with some key fixtures in the Spanish Liga and English Premier League. You can follow the scores from all the European leagues live on UEFA.com's

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Fashion of the week in Europe


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100 years of Old Trafford - the Theatre of Dreams


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coast series 2


In its first series, Coast reawakened the nation's love affair with the coastline; this next series goes back to the shore to explore new secrets and stories that add to the unique picture that is being created of the British Isles coastline.

Coast celebrates the unique character of the British Isles, featuring stories about the people, wildlife and events that make up our coastal communities. The team of experts all return for the new series.

After Nicholas Crane's circumnavigation of the United Kingdom in the last series, this year Neil Oliver takes over as the main presenter. In each programme, Neil takes viewers on a journey along a stretch of the British Isles coastline, together with Nick, Alice Roberts, Miranda Krestovnikoff, and Mark Horton.

Through a mixture of expert comment, compelling storytelling and computer-generated images, Coast reveals a wealth of fascinating stories illustrating life as it is today, and as it was in the past.

Wednesdays from 24 February at 20:45 CET

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We once again have a Lambert on “American Idol


The remaining top 24 were revealed on Wednesday night and Alex Lambert (apparently no relation to Adam) made it through along with Lacey Brown, Crystal Bowersox, Janell Wheeler, Katie Stevens, Michelle Delamore, Siobhan Magnus, Lilly Scott, John Park, Joe Munoz, Ashley Rodriguez, Haeley Vaughn, Paige Miles, Tyler Grady, Jermaine Sellers, and Andrew Garcia.

And since “Idol” wouldn’t be “Idol” without some controversy, contestant Chris Golightly, who made it into the Top 24, was replaced at the last minute by contestant Tim Urban (who I’m going to go out on a limb here and say is not related to Keith). According to a press release from Fox, it was determined that Golightly was ineligible to continue in the competition.

Fellow Hollywood week contender Samantha Musa tweeted that she had spoken to Golightly – who touched hearts with his back story of being in foster care – about his disqualification.

“He was disqualified yesterday, after already being told he was in the top 24, over some bogus old contract,” Musa tweeted on Wednesday. “The contract expired, but they disqualified him for not telling them.”

Fox hasn’t given any details as to why Golightly was tossed, and Musa questioned why he was let go instead of “Big Mike” Lynche - whose father reportedly broke the “Idol” confidentiality agreement by blabbing about his making it into the Top 24 - was not.

I question why Jermaine Sellers, who was a finalist on BET’s gospel singing competition “Sunday’s Best,” made it to the final 24 while Angela Martin did not.

It was Martin’s third try at snagging a slot. The first time she made it to Hollywood, her father was murdered. The second time she ended up in jail over traffic tickets. This last time I thought for sure we’d have the chance to vote for her and her amazing voice.

Her cut on Wednesday night was made all the sadder because of recent news that her mother has been missing for months.

Are you happy with the Top 24?

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Indian Premier League set to name new 2011 franchises


The Indian Premier League will announce two new franchises on 8 March, the tournament's chief has announced.

The new teams will join the competition from the 2011 season, increasing the number of franchises to 10.

Lalit Modi said 12 cities were in contention, including four which will host games during the 2010 season.

Modi, the IPL commissioner, earlier revealed that a "very famous" UK football club had expressed interest, although he refused to say which one.

Modi said tenders for the franchises could be collected from the Board of Control for India or IPL from 21 February and that bids would be opened on 8 March in Mumbai.

The cities in the frame are Ahmedabad, Nagpur, Kanpur, Dharamsala, Indore, Cuttack, Gwalior and Visakapatnam.

But Modi also indicated that Rajkot, Pune, Vadodara and Kochi, which are in the process of building stadiums, might bid for teams.

The new team franchises will be granted access to venues hosting matches during the 2010 IPL in order to familiarise themselves.

The 2010 IPL, which is the third edition of the 20-over tournament, begins on 12 March.

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Chelsea hold no secrets for Mourinho

As José Mourinho prepares to meet his former club Chelsea FC, the FC Internazionale Milano coach must feel like he is returning to an old house to find the fixtures and fittings just where he had left them.

That sense of how little has changed at Stamford Bridge since his departure in September 2007 hit home on a recent scouting mission to west London. Soon after his Italian champions had been paired with Chelsea in the UEFA Champions League first knockout round, Mourinho returned to Stamford Bridge for the first time to see the Blues beat Fulham FC 2-1. The 47-year-old was struck by a sense of deja vu.

"The last time I was there I was watching all the details with attention," he told UEFA.com. "Even the warm-up is the warm-up they did in our time. The way they defend set pieces is exactly the same. The position they have on set pieces is exactly the same. Sometimes they play a 4-4-2 diamond, sometimes they play 4-3-3, which are exactly the systems we worked when there."

Avram Grant, Luiz Felipe Scolari, Guus Hiddink and now Carlo Ancelotti have all followed in Mourinho's footsteps at Stamford Bridge. The Portuguese coach means no disrespect when he says he sees similarities with the side he led to two Premier League titles and two UEFA Champions League semi-finals during his three years at the club.

"I think it's a quality of a good coach – and Ancelotti is a good coach – to understand how the players feel most comfortable. And instead of making crazy changes, just fine tune, which is normal to keep a winning structure. I think Ancelotti's a very good coach and the team feels comfortable this way. And the team really is top – one of the best teams in the world."

Chelsea may hold no secrets for Mourinho, but he admits that such familiarity with the opposition could be a double-edged sword. "When I look at that team only Ivanović and Anelka are not players from my time. All the other boys: Petr Čech, Carvalho, Terry, Ashley Cole, Essien, Mikel, Drogba, Malouda, Joe Cole, Kalou; all of them are boys from my time.

"So it's a team without secrets for me. But at the same time I think I'm a coach without secrets for them. It will be easy for me, but I think also easy for them. I know them, but they know me. I know the way they play, the way they think, but at the same time they know the way I coach, the way I prepare my teams."

It was precisely to prevent the negative effects of an emotional return to the place he calls "home" for the second leg on 16 March, that Mourinho visited Stamford Bridge in December to watch that victory against Fulham. "Emotion, yes, when I went there, of course – I was going to my home, it was my home for three-and-a-half years.

"But, you know, I went there on purpose to watch a game, to see people for the first time [since leaving], to be in that stadium for the first time, because when I go there in March I want to go without emotions. So instead of it being the first time I go there, I was there a couple of weeks before. I want to be cool and ready for the game."

Mourinho had a great relationship with the Chelsea fans and is now equally loved by Inter supporters. That is not surprising, given that he led the Nerazzurri to the Scudetto in his first season and has put them on course to retain the crown.

After doing the double over rivals AC Milan this season, his popularity has soared to such an extent that he recently asked supporters to stop singing his name and praise the players instead.

"Yes, fans are important," he explained. "I think I had a good relationship with them at Porto and Chelsea, I have that now with Inter – a good empathy, we love each other, I feel the fans are always behind me and behind the team which is important."

It is one reason why Mourinho, who led FC Porto to the UEFA Champions League title in 2004, enjoys such a stunning home record. Sides he has coached have not lost a home league match for eight years, a sequence stretching back to a 3-2 defeat for Porto by SC Beira-Mar on 23 February 2002.

Another positive result at San Siro in the first leg on 24 February would set Inter up nicely for the return. "It's quite funny and a bit of contradiction because at home I never play for a draw, never," Mourinho said.

"I always play to win, so we do nothing to draw and keep the record, nothing! I feel no pressure about it. I feel the record is so amazing that I must feel very relaxed. One day I will have to lose, and when this day arrives I will be very happy because I will be able to say: 'I didn't lose at home for x years, I didn't lose at home for x matches'."

With a smile Mourinho then stressed that that run applies to domestic leagues only. Chelsea, however, will know just how well they have to perform to return from Mourinho's new home on a high.

You can watch and read the second part of this interview ahead of the second leg when José Mourinho discusses his return to Stamford Bridge and the importance of Wesley Sneijder to his side.

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Entertainment review of the decade


Take a look at the list of the UK's top 10 grossing films of the 2000s below, and there is a striking theme. All of them are adaptations - of a novel, of a musical or a theme park ride.

The story is the same at the global box office, too, save for one notable exception - animated sequel Shrek 2.

But while Hollywood's reliance on franchise fare is nothing new, these charts also reveal how CGI defined popular cinema in the 2000s.

The Lord Of The Rings populated its battle scenes with digital actors, directed by artificial intelligence. Characters like Sonny in I, Robot were entirely computer generated, while motion capture techniques allowed Brad Pitt to age backwards in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.

At times, it seemed that if there wasn't an army of orcs, a jaw-dropping, physically impossible camera swoop, or a bright blue bi-ped with eyes like Bambi, the audience wasn't interested.

But, despite the big studios' reliance on sequels and adaptations, cinemagoers frequently had their heartstrings plucked by smaller, more intimate films.

Little Miss Sunshine, Slumdog Millionaire, Bridget Jones's Diary, Once and Juno made millions with their deceptively casual storytelling and home-spun comedy.

Meanwhile, sparked by Michael Moore's incendiary film-making and sustained by the rise of DVD, documentaries flourished in the noughties - from polemicals like Super Size Me and An Inconvenient Truth, to more thoughtful, romantic pieces like Man On Wire.

Slumdog Millionaire
Slumdog Millionaire won eight Oscars, including best film and best director

True life stories maintained their stranglehold at the Oscars and the Baftas.

There were prizes for biopics of gay rights campaigner Harvey Milk, musician Ray Charles, torch singer Edith Piaf, environmental activist Erin Brockovich, dicatator Idi Amin, journalist Truman Capote and - for Britain's Helen Mirren - The Queen.

But cinema largely failed to tackle current world events, with few dramas succeeding in contextualising or, indeed, railing against the political upheavals of the decade.

Notable exceptions included The Hurt Locker, a brutally realistic action movie following an elite bomb squad around Iraq, and United 93, which reconstructed the hijacking of United Airlines Flight 93 on 11 September, 2001.

Latin America flourished as a centre of cinema, producing gems like Y Tu Mama Tambien, Amores Perros and The Motorcycle Diaries.

Daniel Craig as James Bond
The 2000s also saw the Bond franchise reinvigorated, with Daniel Craig as the latest 007

Visionary Mexican director Guillermo del Toro flitted between Mexico and Hollywood, wrestling comic book movies Blade II and Hellboy into robust shape, while receiving plaudits for macabre fairy tales like Pan's Labyrinth, which he directed, and The Orphanage, which he produced.

The heartthrob of the decade was undoubtedly George Clooney, who managed to use his profile to rejuvenate the thought-provoking "talkies" of the 1970s, funding them through glossy, commercial affairs like the Ocean's triology.

Angelina Jolie ended the decade as Hollywood's best-paid actress, earning $27m (£16.7m) from 2008 - 2009, but her output vacillated wildly between award-baiting dramas and throwaway fluff.

At the Oscars, Kate Winslet, Cate Blanchett and Dame Judi Dench each received four nominations during the 2000s - but only Winslet took home the coveted best actress award, for Nazi-era drama The Reader.

GLOBAL BOX OFFICE


FILM TAKINGS
1. The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King $1.12bn (£691m)
2. Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest $1.06bn (£655m)
3. The Dark Knight $1bn (£618m)
4. Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone $975m (£602m)
5. Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End $961m (£593m)
6. Harry Potter and the Order Of The Phoenix $938m (£579m)
7. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince $929m (£574m)
8. The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers $925m (£571m)
9. Shrek 2 $920m (£568m)
10. Harry Potter and the Goblet Of Fire $896m (553m)
Source: Box Office Mojo

BEST-SELLING DVDS OF THE DECADE

1. Mamma Mia! The Movie
2. Gladiator
3. The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring
4. Pirates Of The Caribbean: Curse Of The Black Pearl
5. Harry Potter And The Philosopher's Stone
6. Shrek
7. Bridget Jones's Diary
8. The Shawshank Redemption
9. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
10. Harry Potter And The Chamber of Secrets
Source: Official UK Charts Company

BEST FILM AWARDS

YEAR OSCARS BAFTAS
2009 Slumdog Millionaire Slumdog Millionaire
2008 No Country For Old Men Atonement
2007 The Departed The Queen
2006 Crash Brokeback Mountain
2005 Million Dollar Baby The Aviator
2004 The Lord Of The Rings:
The Return Of The King
The Lord Of The Rings:
The Return Of The King
2003 Chicago The Pianist
2002 A Beautiful Mind The Lord of the Rings:
The Fellowship of the Ring
2001 Gladiator Gladiator
2000 American Beauty American Beauty

BEST ACTOR AWARDS

YEAR OSCARS BAFTAS
2009 Sean Penn
Milk
Mickey Rourke
The Wrestler
2008 Daniel Day-Lewis
There Will Be Blood
Daniel Day-Lewis
There Will Be Blood
2007 Forest Whitaker
Last King Of Scotland
Forest Whitaker
Last King Of Scotland
2006 Philip Seymour Hoffman
Capote
Philip Seymour Hoffman
Capote
2005 Jamie Foxx
Ray
Jamie Foxx
Ray
2004 Sean Penn
Mystic River
Bill Murray
Lost In Translation
2003 Adrian Brody
The Pianist
Daniel Day-Lewis
Gangs Of New York
2002 Denzel Washington
Training Day
Russell Crowe
A Beautiful Mind
2001 Russell Crowe
Gladiator
Jamie Bell
Billy Elliot
2000 Kevin Spacey
American Beauty
Kevin Spacey
American Beauty

BEST ACTRESS AWARDS

YEAR OSCARS BAFTAS
2009 Kate Winslet
The Reader
Kate Winslet
The Reader
2008 Marion Cotillard
La Vie En Rose
Marion Cotillard
La Vie En Rose
2007 Dame Helen Mirren
The Queen
Dame Helen Mirren
The Queen
2006 Reese Witherspoon
Walk The Line
Reese Witherspoon
Walk The Line
2005 Hilary Swank
Million Dollar Baby
Imelda Staunton
Vera Drake
2004 Charlize Theron
Monster
Scarlett Johansson
Lost In Translation
2003 Nicole Kidman
The Hours
Nicole Kidman
The Hours
2002 Halle Berry
Monster's Ball
Dame Judi Dench
Iris
2001 Julia Roberts
Erin Brockovich
Julia Roberts
Erin Brockovich
2000 Hilary Swank
Boys Don't Cry
Annette Benning
American Beauty

RAZZIE AWARDS FOR WORST PICTURE

YEAR FILM
2009 The Love Guru
2008 I Know Who Killed Me
2007 Basic Instinct 2
2006 Dirty Love
2005 Catwoman
2004 Gigli
2003 Swept Away
2002 Freddy Got Fingered
2001 Battlefield Earth
2000 Wild Wild West

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Pope Benedict XVI appeals for peace in 2010


The pope has called for peace and the protection of children as he celebrated a Mass to mark the start of 2010.

Pope Benedict XVI said peace began with mutual respect between people, regardless of their ethnicity or faith.

He said the shared characteristics of children such as laughter and tears made it clear all men were brothers.

Marking the Roman Catholic Church's World Day of Peace, the pope appealed to armed groups to "stop, reflect and abandon the way of violence".

"Respect others, regardless of their skin colour, nationality, language, religion," he said.

The leader of the world's 1.1 billion Roman Catholics added that the value of respect for all should be taught from an early age.

He remarked that it was increasingly common for children from different countries and backgrounds to share the same classroom.

"Their faces are a prophecy of the kind of humanity we are called upon to create: a family of families and peoples," said Pope Benedict.

Pictures of young people caught up in conflicts with faces "disfigured by pain and desperation" were a silent appeal for peace, said the 82-year-old pontiff.

He also called for people to take more care of the environment, saying that the degradation of man led to the degradation of the planet.

Pope Benedict was speaking in St Peter's Basilica a week after he was knocked down in the Rome cathedral by a woman during a Christmas Eve liturgy.

The pontiff was unhurt in the melee, but an elderly French cardinal broke his hip.

The Vatican said the 25-year-old woman involved was mentally unstable.