Daily Archives: August 24, 2015

Malaka Brothers: To ελληνικό γυράδικο στο Λος Άντζελες

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Μalaka Brothers επέλεξαν να ονομάσουν τη νέα ψησταριά που ανοίγουν στη διάσημη παραλία Venice στο Boardwalk του Λος Άντζελες δύο ομογενείς από την Καλιφόρνια, οι οποίοι ίσως σκέφτηκαν οτι η πιο αναγνωρίσιμη ελληνική λέξη μπορεί να αποτελέσει το κλειδί για… καλές δουλειές.

Λίγους μήνες πριν, εικόνες ενός μεγάλου μπάνερ με την επιγραφή Malaka Brothers Gyro, κυκλοφόρησαν στο διαδίκτυο, με πολλούς να θεωρούν ότι επρόκειτο για πλάκα.

Όμως, η ομάδα φίλων με ελληνική καταγωγή επιβεβαιώνουν ότι η επιγραφή θα είναι η ονομασία του νέου εστιατορίου που θα ανοίξουν στην περιοχή, το οποίο υπόσχεται να σερβίρει «το πιο φρέσκο και καλύτερο γύρο στην περιοχή του Λος Άντζελες».

Δείτε στο βίντεο τον μάνατζερ του εστιατορίου, Guy Puglia να εξηγεί γιατί οι ομογενείς επέλεξαν αυτό το όνομα για το εστιατόριο. Όπως παραδέχεται άλλωστε και ο ίδιος, πολλοί περαστικοί βγάζουν φωτογραφίες στο εστιατόριο και γελούν υστερικά στη θέα του ονόματός του. Όμως φαίνεται πως είναι ένα παιχνίδι μάρκετινγκ…

Πηγή:madata.gr

Olympiakos begins Super League title defense with easy win on opening day

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Greek champion Olympiakos began its defense of the Super League title with a convincing 3-0 home victory over Panionios on Sunday.

The Reds were comfortable winners on the first day of the new season, which saw title rivals PAOK, managed by Croatian Igor Tudor, held to a 0-0 home draw against Xanthi.

There were wins for Super League newcomers Iraklis and AEK, who were back in the top flight after 3- and 2-year absences respectively.

The results on Sunday were as follows:

Kalloni 0 v Iraklis 1
Panthrakikos 0 v Asteras Tripolis 2
AEK 3 v Platanias 0
Atromitos 1 v Levadiakos 0
Veria 1 v PAS Giannena 1
PAOK 0 v Xanthi 0
Olympiakos 3 v Panionios 0

The last game of round 1 takes place on Monday evening in Agrinio, where Panaitolikos takes on Panathinaikos.

source: ekathimerini.com

Aυστραλία:Άπιαστο όνειρο το σπίτι για τους νέους

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Tο ποσοστό των Αυστραλών ιδιοκτητών κατοικίας σημείωσε ραγδαία πτώση

Στο νοίκι πάνω απ’ τους μισούς Αυστραλούς νέους.

Όλο και πιο δύσκολη γίνεται η απόκτηση ιδιόκτητης κατοικίας για τους νέους, καθώς η ραγδαία αύξηση στις τιμές των ακινήτων αφήνει εκτός της αγοράς τους Αυστραλούς κάτω των 35 ετών. Αυτό προκύπτει από έκθεση του Αυστραλιανού Ινστιτούτου Υγείας και Πρόνοιας, η οποία διαπιστώνει ότι οι Αυστραλοί ηλικίας 25-34 ζουν στο νοίκι, σε ποσοστό μεγαλύτερο του 50%. Συγκρίνοντας στοιχεία που καλύπτουν χρονικό διάστημα τριών δεκαετιών, το Ινστιτούτο διαπίστωσε ότι το ποσοστό των Αυστραλών ιδιοκτητών κατοικίας σημείωσε ραγδαία πτώση, καθώς το 1981 ήταν 61% ενώ το 2011 έπεσε στο 47%.

Ο λόγος γι’ αυτήν την πτώση εντοπίζεται στην ραγδαία αύξηση της τιμής των ακινήτων, η οποία ξεπέρασε δυσανάλογα τις αντίστοιχες αυξήσεις στις τιμές των καταναλωτικών ειδών και κυρίως αυτές στο μέσο εισόδημα, καθιστώντας απαγορευτική την αγορά πρώτης κατοικίας για ανθρώπους χαμηλών και μεσαίων εισοδημάτων. Αποτέλεσμα αυτής της εξέλιξης είναι η δέσμευση των ανθρώπων με πιεστικά στεγαστικά δάνεια, ενώ ακόμη και εκείνοι που δεν καταφέρνουν να πάρουν δάνειο πρώτης κατοικίας, βρίσκονται αντιμέτωποι με όλο και μεγαλύτερες αυξήσεις ενοικίων.

Η ερμηνεία του φαινομένου διχάζει τους αναλυτές, καθώς πολλοί παρουσιάζουν αυτού του είδους τις αυξήσεις ως σύμπτωμα μίας ισχυρής οικονομίας, από την άλλη όμως αυξάνουν όλο και περισσότερο οι φωνές που ισχυρίζονται ότι, αντιθέτως, είναι αποτέλεσμα της πολιτικής της ομοσπονδιακής κυβέρνησης, η οποία ευνοεί εκείνους που επενδύουν στα ακίνητα, έναντι εκείνων που τα αγοράζουν ως πρώτη κατοικία.

Άλλοι αναλυτές εκτιμούν ότι η συνολική πτώση του αριθμού των ιδιοκτητών πρώτης κατοικίας δεν είναι παρά η ένδειξη ότι το σύστημα έρχεται σταδιακά σε ισορροπία, καθώς η Αυστραλία και η Νέα Ζηλανδία σημείωσαν δυσανάλογη έκρηξη τις πρώτες μεταπολεμικές δεκαετίες, ενώ τις τελευταίες δύο-τρεις δεκαετίες, η στάση των ανθρώπων απέναντι στην ιδιοκτησία ακινήτων μοιάζει να πλησιάζει αυτό που συμβαίνει στις υπόλοιπες ανεπτυγμένες χώρες της Δύσης, της Ευρώπης και της Βόρειας Αμερικής.

Δεν είναι όμως μόνο οικονομικοί οι λόγοι που κρατούν τους νέους μακριά από την αγορά ακινήτων: η πτώση σχετίζεται με ευρύτερες κοινωνικές αλλαγές, καθώς βρίσκεται σε ευθεία αντιστοιχία με την πτώση του ποσοστού των νέων που παντρεύονται και κάνουν οικογένεια πριν την ηλικία των 35 ετών. Η αγορά κατοικίας, καθώς και η σύναψη στεγαστικού δανείου, σχετίζονται με την δημιουργία οικογένειας, κάτι που τώρα οι άνθρωποι επιλέγουν να κάνουν σε μεγαλύτερη ηλικία. Περαιτέρω απόδειξη ότι η ιδιοκτησία ή μη ακινήτου σχετίζεται με ένα ευρύτερο πλαίσιο τρόπου ζωής, αποτελεί η διαπίστωση ότι, η πλειοψηφία των Αυστραλών, οι οποίοι δεν έχουν δικό τους σπίτι, μέχρι την ηλικία των 45, είναι κάτοχοι τουλάχιστον ενός πανεπιστημιακού τίτλου σπουδών, ενώ κατά κανόνα πρόκειται για ανθρώπους που ταξιδεύουν συχνά στο εξωτερικό.

Πηγή:Νέος Κόσμος

Heartbreak and humanity:Doujon Zammit’s tragic death at Mykonos’ Paradise

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The story of Doujon Zammit’s tragic death in 2008 is being updated to reveal a remarkable bond.

Doujon Zammit’s violent death at the hands of nightclub bouncers from Mykonos’ Paradise Beach is a tragedy that has touched many, but it has also evolved to showcase the best of humanity. This weekend, Nine Network’s 60 Minutes program has a must-watch update to its original report of Doujon’s death and the profound events that followed.

Producer Howard Sacre and reporter Liz Hayes have again straddled the sensitivities and shocking realities of a story that keeps on giving.

The original 2008 program covered the heart-rending events following the vicious attack on Doujon, which left him with such serious head injuries that he was airlifted to an Athens hospital.

His father, Oliver, made the mercy dash from Australia and was immediately thrust into the ensuing maelstrom, with intense media coverage and a situation in which there was no other option but to turn off his son’s life support.

Oliver featured in saturated coverage, expressing no ill-will towards Greece and describing Doujon’s death as a freak, one-off event. His insistence that his son’s heart be used to save the life of Athens journalist Kostas Gribilas, and that his other organs be used to keep another three people alive, won admiration the world over.

Kostas was dying from heart failure and had days to live but was ultimately given the kiss of life. He and future wife, Poppy, knew who the donor was, and Mr Zammit and wife Rosemarie knew who the recipient was, and they met in a very emotional encounter.

It was an extraordinary exception to the general rule that donor and recipient identities be kept confidential, largely to protect the emotional and psychological well-being of the recipient and members of both families.

“We’re updating the story because that initial meeting of Kostas and Poppy, and Oliver and Rosemarie, has blossomed into a very unusual friendship,” Sacre told Neos Kosmos.

“Kostas and Poppy have also left Greece and now live in Australia. They see Oliver and Rosemarie very often. Our story details this unique friendship.”

In early 2013, Poppy gave birth to Konstantina, but at eight months of age in September 2013 she was rushed hospital. Poppy and Kosta had noticed signs of dehydration while teething. Within 48-hours, Konstantina had passed away with heart complications. “It was a baby that took three of us to make,” Kostas says on the 60 Minutes promo.

A charitable foundation was established in memory of Konstantina Angelique Gribilas. Details can be found at: http://www.facebook.com/KonstantinaAngelique
Postscript

There is a personal dimension to this story for me. I was in Athens at the time and fielded frantic calls from members of my extended family following the Mykonos attack.

My cousin was, at the time, the girlfriend of Doujon’s travelling companion Cameron Tabone, and I was urged to head to the Athens hospital to assist in any way I could.

Once I was confident I’d done all that I could do to assist, I was faced with the decision of whether or not to cover the story for the Fairfax newspaper – The Sydney Morning Herald – to which I was a contributor.

In doing so, I was faced with the dilemma that following my journalistic instincts would potentially create awkwardness and tension between my immediate and extended family.

I went ahead and reported on a series of events that emotionally, remains as my hardest assignment to date, but at the same time brought the rewards of contact with some exceptional ambassadors for compassion and humanity. I have no regrets.

source:Neos Kosmos

Greece:Illegal excavations on the rise

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Two ancient statues that were allegedly dug up by two Greek farmers to be sold for €10 million. Photo: ap/Thanassis Stavrakis

The economic crisis is seeing those with a clean record turn to crime.

The financial crisis has seen a rise in a rather uncommon form of crime: the looting of Greek antiquities.

“The numbers have increased, and this is related to the economic crisis,” Lieutenant Evgenios Monovasios of the Security Police Division of Attica told National Geographic.

The increase of illegal excavations and theft of archaeological artefacts coincides with a significant rise in applications for metal detector permits.

Although the Greek government tracks these applications, granting the devices to only those without a criminal record, authorities are having a harder time than usual monitoring the situation.

Police detectives with the Greek Department of Antiquities and Cultural Heritage say this is due to the changing profile of looters, from members of criminal networks to regular people looking to make a quick buck.

“It would take an army to catch everything,” said Elena Korka, the director general of antiquities and cultural heritage.

“It’s impossible not to find antiquities in Greece; they are literally everywhere.”

With agencies in charge of protecting the country’s antiquities experiencing severe budget cuts, only 60 odd employees across the country work exclusively on monitoring looting.

But at the end of the day, is it really worth it for the diggers?

According to National Geographic, those excavating only receive a small percentage of the final value price, referring to a group of looters who received €50,000 for a statue whose sale price was €1.1 million.

If caught, taking part in an illegal excavation can lead to a jail sentence of up to 10 years, while artefacts carrying a price tag of €150,000 or more face even greater sentences.

Lieutenant Monovasios says taking preventative measures is the only way forward, suggesting an increase in educational outreach.

He says people need to realise how much a society loses not only financially, but on a cultural level, when sites and artefacts are destroyed and taken away.

“By looting you are depriving future generations of identity,” he said.

“The economic crisis is probably temporary, but the negative effects of looting are permanent.”

Source: National Geographic

Becoming an Australian, staying Greek

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Over a 30-year period, the average migrant achieved a success that was not possible given the same period of time.

I recently attended a lecture at the Greek Orthodox Community of Melbourne and Victoria at their new building, located in the heart of Melbourne. I must say I was impressed with its architecture given the space where it was previously located. I congratulate current president Bill Papastergiadis and his management committee for embarking on a fiscal adventure that will hopefully lay the foundations for future generations of Australians of Hellenic origins.

I entered the lift and up we went to the mezzanine floor where the lecture was being held. I chuckled to myself as I saw posters and other advertising material displayed on the walls, one of which made me smile to myself. It was ITHEA, an organisation that was being managed by my good friend Peter Jasonides (Pontian Lion). I was pleased to see that young Peter had climbed the dizzy heights within the Australian Hellenic community and that finally he achieved the status that he had richly deserved.

I chuckled even further when the posters reminded me when Peter and I worked together for the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese Welfare organisation under the umbrella of Employment Training Connection.

Now, one would wonder what has this to do with the lecture and why the digression? In the first place, I love to take the reader on a ride when reading articles, with a little digression here and there to make it more interesting and intriguing to the palate. Secondly, the short digression enables me to introduce the presenter of the lecture, whom I had never met nor heard of in Hellenic circles and yet I was clearly demonstrating my ignorance of who is who in the Australian Hellenic zoo, so to speak.

The best introduction I can give the lecturer is to paraphrase Wikipedia, which is not always the best place to obtain information, but it’s the best under the circumstances:

“Nicholas Doumanis is an historian of Europe and the Mediterranean world. He is currently an Associate Professor of History at the University of New South Wales. He was awarded the UK Fraenkel Prize for Myth and Memory in the Mediterranean and has since published Italy, Inventing the Nation and more recently, A History of Greece, covering the span of paleolithic to contemporary Greece. His latest book is Before the Nation with Oxford University Press. Nicholas is currently editing The Oxford Handbook of Europe 1914-1945 and writing a history of the Eastern Mediterranean from the Bronze Age to the present for Wiley Blackwell in its History of the World series.

He is a member of the Australian Committee for the restitution of the Parthenon Marbles.”

Upon alighting from the lift I entered a warm, well-lit room which had been reorganised as a lecture room complete with its placement of stage, props, screen microphone and a registration table for newcomers. It was a welcome far cry from the old building, which suffered from the cold and the ravages of the outside elements. The organiser was busying himself running to and fro, ensuring that the lecture environment was set.

Once I noticed that the lecture was about to commence, I took out my mobile and began to record the lecture for future reference and to ensure that any article is based on fact rather than a figment of my imagination. Nicholas Doumanis began his presentation by stating that history of the common man, whose origins began in the village, had not been written and that history had yet to encapsulate their contributions and life stories within the fabric of Australian society. A great opening that captured my imagination and that of a captivated audience.

Many, I may add, were aged fifty plus with a sprinkling of the odd youth here and there. Nicholas went on to speak about a particular migrant who had been born in a village in the north of the Peloponnese and migrated to Australia, where he had worked hard to improve his station in life and that of his family. It was a story familiar to many of us in the audience and we wanted to hear more of what Doumanis had to say.

The life cycle of the migrant who arrived in Australia appeared to follow the same pattern as many others had done from other nations that had shed its poor and underprivileged to Australia. The characteristics were: village, trip to the port of departure (by ship), arrival in Australia, welcomed into a culture that was alien to them, worked at various jobs, saved money for a home, married, children, obtained a trade, became self-employed, educated the children, enhanced the business, relocated to a larger home with a big backyard, emulated his environment to that of the old country such as having a gardens that had vegetables, olive trees, fruit trees and grape vines.

Thus, over a 30-year period, the average migrant achieved a success that was not possible given the same period of time. They had reached the status of a middle-class family with a small business to boot and therefore became a valuable contributor to the Australian society. Those who went onto bigger and better things, such as the entrepreneurs, judges, politicians, authors, sporting greats, businessmen and women, defence force, health and medical industries, community, media, entertainment, unions, welfare, religious, training, and government departments have been recorded and their stories published. All of them having contributed to this home we call Australia.

During this struggle to reach a comfortable life the average migrant family had to take on menial jobs at the start and advance themselves by developing their skills and knowledge and therefore enhancing their status in life. This was easier said than done as it meant huge sacrifices on the part of everyone which in some cases created negative environments that were not conducive to the long term health and well being of an individual. These would manifest themselves later in life, such as mental health, gambling, personal traumas, work place stress, neglect, insecurities and a host of other life dilemmas which entailed prolonged visits to the psychiatrist and psychologist well versed in such matters.

Nicholas Doumanis also pointed out that although it was common knowledge that migrants had transformed Australia, Australian historians did not know much about the Greeks (or about the other migrants) and did not know how to express that transformation into the annals of history. Therefore he felt it was important that a history of the average migrant should be thoroughly researched, catalogued and books written to cover this important era of Australian history before it was too late.

At this point of the lecture I wanted to get up and say that he was generalising as other authors had touched upon the subject, but Doumanis covered this by stating that, yes authors a covered the migrant era but it was only about those individuals who had achieved greatness in their respective fields and nothing about the common migrant. I must say that I had to agree with him except for the author Price, who many years ago had covered this very aspect but had not gone onto write about the common Greek migrant.

It is fair to say at this point that for the past 30 years I had been quietly collecting personal stories of individuals because I too had recognised some years ago that the average Greek migrant stories had gone unwritten and would be gone forever. There were some attempts at schools where children were encouraged to write about their parents’ and grandparents’ migrant journeys but that it had come to a stop and there was no coordinated effort to gather all the stories under one umbrella. I also reminded myself of the Latrobe Dardalis archives under the tutelage of Professor Tamis that housed many thousands of records, as well as those that were compiled by Mimis Sophocleous who was located in an upper story office in Lonsdale Street.

The lecture did not stop there but went on to explain to the audience how the passage to Australia was obtained. Doumanis said there were two forms of passage, one being an assisted passage and the other where a migrant came under his own steam. In both cases however funds were exchanged in one format or another. The assisted migrant passage meant that when they arrived in Australia they had to work their passage off until it was paid.

The migrant who paid his way did so by borrowing the money and paying it back and/or selling his personal assets in Greece. Whatever the case may have been all migrants no matter their circumstances or status in life all went through the migrant camps which were former military camps, such as Watsonia, Northam, Bonegilla to name but a few.

It was a harrowing experience which was fraught with worry and stress and not understood by succeeding generations when their parents told their children “we came out to Australia for a better life in order that you can have a good education and do well in life”. I remember as a child being subjected to this time after time until it became second nature.

I would be told this at a time when I had misbehaved or had done something that was not compatible with my parents’ understanding that the world had changed and that they had to change with it in order to survive in a culture to that one was used to. One must have to take into account that many migrants had brought with them the insecurities of their previous environment, a country racked by civil war, their superstitions such as the evil eye amongst others, the food, cultural and community habits, religion and at the same time find means of sending back money to relatives in order that they too could survive.

Nicholas Doumanis ended the lecture by saying that insufficient research was being undertaken and that it was imperative that more work was done to bring to light the many migrant stories of the common man and woman into the limelight. He did however touch upon the many migrant brides that had come to Australia to marry husbands those they had never seen and that their stories on the ships of which there were a few such as the Kyrenia and the Patris in the early fifties.

At this juncture my mind went to our North American cousins, brethren, friends and families and wondered whether they taken the time or made the effort to record the common migrant stories or did they too succumb to the seductiveness of a whole new way of life and fail to record them. I thought of those in South America, South Africa and in the distant lands of Russia and hoped that someone what the courage, commitment and determination to record the Hellenic diaspora story of the ordinary man and woman.

At the conclusion of the lecture many of the audience wanted to ask questions that needed answers and Nicholas Doumanis was only too happy to answer.

I for one was most impressed and I say that honestly, as I am not one to be influenced by those who profess to be an expert on a subject only to find that they were shallow. Nicholas Doumanis was not one of those lecturers and I feel that we shall hear more of him in the future.

I approached Nicholas at the end of the lecture and gave him my card and hoped to hear from him in the future. My parting remarks were jokingly said that “I had heard that Sydney his home town was an outer suburb of Melbourne”. He smiled as we shook hands and I made my way to the lift for the homeward journey. I must say that the Melbourne-Sydney rivalry is still strong even amongst the generation of Australians.

* Peter Adamis is a journalist/commentator and writer. He is a retired Australian military serviceman and an industry organisational and occupational (OHS) and training consultant whose interests are within the parameters of the domestic and international political spectrum.

source:Neos Kosmos

Henry the Australian polar bear gets new home in Canada

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A polar bear, Henry, born at Sea World Australia is on his way to a new home at the Polar Bear Habitat in Cochrane, Ontario on October 7. He is leaving the Gold Coast to participate in an international polar bear breeding program.

Those in Queensland are sad to see him go but they look forward to him having a nice new home in Canada. The Polar Bear Habitat facility and caretakers are dedicated to the care and survival of polar bears and anxiously await his October 7 arrival.

Trevor Long, Sea World marine sciences director, explains that Henry will be headed back to his roots. The young bear’s father, Nelson, was an orphaned bear from Canada. He feels that it is extremely important that Nelson’s genetics return to Canada and feels Henry will significantly contribute to the “captive breeding of polar bears.” Henry will play a vital role in the international polar bear breeding program.

Henry will have several years to go before he will be in a breeding situation. That will occur around the age of nine.

The young polar bear weighs approximately 700 lbs and is currently viewed as a big and goofy toddler. He will join another male polar bear at the facility that is named Ganuk. Ganuk is a little over five years old and weighs just over 900 lbs.

Polar Bear Habitat manager Karen Cummings says that everyone is extremely excited about Henry coming to the facility. She looks forward to the “playful trouble maker.”

The facility has been under construction and is just finishing an expanded enclosure project that will include a natural lake. Henry’s arrival will be just as the construction is completed. The expansion will make the Canadian facility the largest in the world in terms of space that is dedicated to polar bears.

Caretakers will quarantine Henry for 30 days to assess his health and allow him to become familiar with the surroundings. He will have his own room and enclosure during this 30 day assimilation period.

Sea World Australia will foot the bill for Henry’s travels. Everyone at Sea World will miss him dearly. However, the researchers at Cochrane will provide a warm welcome for him and are excited to have him assist in promoting a larger population of polar bears. Currently, there are only an estimated 25,000 polar bears remaining.

There are approximately 100 different facilities in the world that provide human care to over 300 polar bears.

source:ameripublications.com

NPL Semi-Final: Hamilton Olympic sinks Lambton Jaffas 2-1

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On a waterlogged pitch at Darling St Oval, Hamilton Olympic drew first blood, beating Lambton Jaffas 2-1 in the second semi-final of the 2015 NPL competition.

Jaffas almost opened their account in the first minute when Luke Remington made a darting run into the Olympic box and despite being forced wide by Mason Campbell, fired a shot narrowly wide of the post.

Fifteen minutes later, Simon Mooney sent in a floating ball to the head of Kane Goodchild from a free kick who screwed his header slightly wide of Brad Swancott’s goal.

The opening 20 minutes of play are even but Jobe Wheelhouse, parked in front of Jaffas’ back four, is seeing a lot of the ball and is distributing passes unchallenged!

The first threat from Olympic comes from a long range blast by Ben Koina who forces the outstretched Swanson to fingertip the ball out.

In the 35th minute Simon Mooney curls in a ball to Jacob Bailey from a free kick who sends a powerful glancing header crashing onto the bar and into the Jaffas net! Olympic are up 1-0!

Only seconds before half time another well taken free kick by Simon Mooney forces a great save by Brad Swanson to keep the score at 1-0 by the half time interval!

The game is tough and in keeping with the previous two during the season in which both teams cancelled each other out and which both ended in draws.

Ten minutes into the second half Reece Cooper puts Simon Mooney through wide on the right, who side-steppes past a defender, only to fire over the post.

The warning signs are there and the smell of a second goal is imminent!

On the hour mark, Pat Brown executes a corner from the right and the towering figure of Kane Goodchild sends in another powerful header which ends up into the Jaffas net!

With the score at 0-2, Jaffas push forward in search for a goal which will keep them in the tie. Olympic are pushed back inside their half and behind the ball. It’s a cat and mouse game with Jaffas needing to score and Olympic relishing the prospect of catching them on the counter and scoring a third!

This is exactly what almost happened in the 68th minute when Ben Koina and Matthew Swan counter attacked and with only two defenders in front of them back-peddling, the former unleashed a powerful drive from outside the box which beat the goalkeeper but which cannoned off the bar and back into play instead of ending up at the back of the net!

Jaffas continue to push forward in search of the goal that will keep them in the tie and are unable to create a clear goal scoring chance.

Luke Remington receives the ball on the right but fires wide.

Fifteen minutes from time, a one-two combination between John Majurovski and Peter Macpherson, enables the later to create enough time and space to unleash a shot which ends up at the back of Danny Ireland’s net!

Two further opportunities present themselves through Reece Cooper for Olympic and Luke Remington for Jaffas before the referees final whistle finds Olympic 2-1 victors.

Olympic have drawn first blood but the tie is by no means over for either team. There is plenty of work for both sides next Sunday afternoon at Arthur Eden Oval.

Source: Tom Tsamouras

Arsenal v Liverpool: Rodgers looking to dominate space

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Brendan Rodgers is confident he has found the blueprint for Liverpool to record a rare win at Arsenal on Monday.

Liverpool have won once in their 12 visits to Emirates Stadium, a 2-0 Barclays Premier League victory in August 2011, and were beaten 4-1 in last season’s corresponding fixture four months ago.

But Rodgers believes his side, buoyant after beginning the season with successive 1-0 wins over Stoke City and AFC Bournemouth, have what it takes to turn the tables on Arsene Wenger’s men this time around.

“If you assess the games we’ve had against Arsenal, especially at home, we’ve had dominance of the ball,” Rodgers said. “If you assess the last 10 games they’ve lost at home, the teams that have won have had dangerous possession.

“The winners have averaged four shots on target with 43 per cent possession. You can’t dominate the ball, but you can dominate space. Tactically, we arrive with a good mind of how to win it.”

Rodgers’ plans could be affected by the fitness of Jordan Henderson. The Liverpool captain was substituted early in the second half of Monday’s win over AFC Bournemouth due to a foot problem.

“We’re just assessing Jordan by the day,” Rodgers said. “We’ll see how he goes over the next 48 hours and take it from there.”

Liverpool have no new injury concerns, with Christian Benteke, who scored his first competitive goal for the club against AFC Bournemouth, set to lead the line again.

Wenger is eager for Arsenal to kick-start their campaign at home following a shock 2-0 defeat there by West Ham United on the opening weekend of the season.

“If you want to have a successful season you want to be strong at home,” said the Arsenal manager. “Normally we are strong at home. This is an opportunity to show that.

“We missed our first game and we had to look at ourselves, and we responded very well [with last Sunday’s win at Crystal Palace]. Now we need to come back to our usual strength that we have at home.

“This is a very important game where the result will of course be vital. It’s not a result that will decide [our title chances] but in our heads we know it’s very important.”

Alexis Sanchez made his first start of the campaign in the 2-1 victory at Selhurst Park, and Wenger expects the Chilean to be close to full fitness for Monday following his extended post-Copa America break.

Wenger also has no new injuries to contend with, although Jack Wilshere (ankle), Danny Welbeck and Tomas Rosicky (both knee) remain sidelined.

Arsenal (from): Cech, Ospina, Bellerin, Chambers, Debuchy, Gabriel, Gibbs, Koscielny, Mertesacker, Monreal, Arteta, Cazorla, Coquelin, Flamini, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Ozil, Ramsey, Campbell, Giroud, Sanchez, Walcott.

Liverpool (from): Bogdan, Mignolet, Clyne, Jose Enrique, Gomez, Lovren, Moreno, Sakho, Skrtel, Toure, Can, Coutinho, Henderson, Ibe, Lallana, Lucas, Markovic, Milner, Balotelli, Benteke, Borini, Firmino, Ings, Origi..

source:premierleague.com

Pedro strikes on debut as Chelsea edge thriller

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Pedro played a starring role but John Terry was sent off as Chelsea claimed their first win of the Barclays Premier League season with a thrilling 3-2 victory at West Bromwich Albion on Sunday.

Chelsea signed Pedro from Barcelona on Thursday and the Spain forward made an instant impact at The Hawthorns.

The 28-year-old opened his account for the champions with a deflected 20th-minute strike, but only after the returning Thibaut Courtois had saved James Morrison’s penalty six minutes earlier.

Jose Mourinho’s men made it 2-0 on the half-hour mark when Pedro set up Diego Costa for his first goal of the campaign, before Morrison redeemed himself by pulling one back.

Cesar Azpilicueta’s maiden BPL goal then re-established Chelsea’s command of the match as they went in 3-1 to the good at half-time.

However, Chelsea captain Terry, who was substituted at half-time of last week’s chastening 3-0 loss at Manchester City, saw red early in the second period for impeding Salomon Rondon as he raced towards goal.

West Brom, without striker Saido Berahino in the squad, took advantage soon after through a superb Morrison header, but could not complete the comeback as 10-man Chelsea held on.

Costa dragged an early effort wide but Chelsea looked set to fall behind when Nemanja Matic tripped Callum McManaman just inside the area.

Morrison stepped up, but Courtois was equal to the midfielder’s low spot-kick, which was directed straight down the middle, and turned the ball over the bar with his legs.

And West Brom were punished six minutes later as Eden Hazard flicked the ball into Pedro, whose left-footed shot from the edge of the area took a deflection off Jonas Olsson and into Boaz Myhill’s bottom-left corner.

Chelsea then doubled their advantage with a superb counter-attack rounded off by Costa.

Willian fed the ball to Pedro and his shot across goal was turned in by international team-mate Costa from point-blank range.

A sloppy spell of Chelsea possession presented the hosts with a way back into the game as Rondon acrobatically turned James McClean’s deep cross into the path of Morrison to lash a shot past Courtois.

More good work from Pedro was wasted as Willian passed up a clear chance to make it 3-1, but Chelsea did restore their two-goal advantage through Azpilicueta’s composed 42nd-minute finish after Costa had cushioned a ball over the top to the onrushing full-back.

Any hope of a comfortable second half for Chelsea evaporated with Terry’s dismissal, and Tony Pulis’ men capitalised five minutes later.

Morrison rose highest to head McManaman’s excellent cross from the left in off the crossbar and set up a frantic finish.

Costa and Rondon went close at either end before McManaman spurned the best chance to earn a share of the spoils as Chelsea held firm to collect a hard-earned three points.

West Bromwich Albion head coach Tony Pulis: “The goals we’ve conceded have been disappointing.

“You have to be very resolute when you haven’t got the ball and have that flair when you have got the ball. I thought we got 50 per cent of it right.

“We looked good in possession and we looked like we were going to create opportunities and chances but we’ve got to be more resolute.”

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho: “Fantastic performance. With 10 men, the spirit, the organisation, the fight in defensive areas, and the intelligence to keep the ball, I am very happy.

“We deserved it. It was difficult but we deserved it.

“3-1 was short with 11 against 11, and with the chances we created, the space we found, and the way we attacked their defensive line.

“Then with one player less – we are getting experience of that – we adapted well but they scored to make it 3-2. We had the best chances to score the next goal.

“I’m happy we controlled the game well, and I’m happy with the spirit because the players really wanted to win.”

source:premierleague.com