Saturday, 24 September 2011

Talent Scout: Hiroshi Kiyotake

There are few commodities as sought after or as valuable as young talent in the modern game. The resulting scramble for potential and promise has since gone global in recent years, with clubs now pouring increasingly vast amounts of resources into developing regions, hoping to strike gold before their rivals.
Yet while extending their scouting networks and building soccer schools is giving clubs a foot hold in potential hotbeds such as America and Africa, the once maligned Asian market is now catching the eye, as more and more European outfits profit after testing the water.
The hunt is now on for the next Asian star, who could follow in the footsteps of Arsenal's Japanese High school starlet Ryo Miyaichi, Bolton's stylish South Korea winger Lee Chung-Young, and Dortmund's Bundesliga Champion Shinji Kagawa. Interested clubs need look no further than Hiroshi Kiyotake.
Kiyotake is 21-year-old attacking midfielder, and the current star of the J-League season, having replaced Kagawa in the Cerezo Osaka team following his move to Dortmund last summer. Technically excellent and with a consistently good first touch, Hiroshi has superb intelligence, not only in his awareness of space and runs into the box, but vitally, pass selection.
He's already earned three caps for the Japanese national team, and should have earned enough by next year to qualify outright for a United Kingdom work permit. At present, Kiyotake is also part of a strong batch of players at Under-22 level, regarded by many as a group who will finally wipe out the Asian football stereotype of poor technical level and questionable physique.
At 21, Kiyotake has done the majority of his physical development. He's five foot eight inches tall, and while isn't muscular or aggressive, his low centre of gravity, awareness of play, good pace and inspiring heart make him a good match in 50:50 battles and help get him out of difficult situations.
The only question marks come over Kiyotake's adaptability to play on the wing, which shouldn't be an issue, and his ruthlessness in front of goal. The Oita-born prospect has good accuracy in short and long range shooting, but lacks a little killer instinct when in the box.
He needs some some polishing, but this gem looks destined for Europe in the next 12 months.

Europe lose the plot to let Creamer inspire great American fightback

Rarely has a 4 - 3 scoreline to the underdog felt so anti-climactic. Despite holding the lead over the mighty Americans after the first day of the Solheim Cup, Alison Nicholas found herself in the unusual position of having to ensure her European team's spirits remained high last night.
In all truth, the home team should have built a commanding lead at Killeen Castle, Co Meath. The morning foursomes were tied 2-2, when Europe should have edged clear and for most of the afternoon fourballs the scoreboard was covered in blue. But the visitors rallied and showed the composure which has helped them win the last three Solheims.
With an hour of play left Europe were up in all four games; when the final putt dropped the US had only lost two of them. Nobody suffered in this US fightback as much as the great hope of British women's golf. Poor Melissa Reid. In the opening session, the 24-year-old and her countrywoman Karen Stupples were one-up with two to play against Paula Creamer and Brittany Lincicome – and lost. And in the afternoon this grim fate repeated herself as Reid and Laura Davies lost the last two holes to Creamer and Morgan Pressel.
In fairness, there was little the English pair could do in the latter case as Creamer and Pressel both holed long putts on the 17th and 18th respectively. Reid had the chance to gain the half on the final green, but her 12-footer agonisingly lipped out. The anguish on her face said it all. "From blue to oblivion," as Mickey Walker, the former Europe captain, put it.
Christina Kim gave the resurrection its vocal presence. "Come on!" bellowed the ultra-passionate American, punching her fist as she left the 16th green. Kim and the rookie Ryann O'Toole had been two-down with three to play against Sandra Gal and Scotland's Catriona Matthew. But Kim's birdie gave O'Toole the impetus to birdie the 17th and in the event Matthew and Gal were relieved to escape with the half.
As the darkness dropped, there was still one game left out on the course. And important it might prove. Suzann Pettersen, the world No 2, and her Swedish compatriot Anna Nordqvist battled hard to secure their two-hole victory. That ensured Europe would go into this morning's foursomes with the lead. That was crucial. Goodness knows how deflated they would have been if they could only boast parity.
Meanwhile, at the Austrian Open in Tulln, Tom Lewis's second day as a professional was far more enjoyable than his first. The 20-year-old from Welwyn Garden City, who shot to fame in July when his 65 set a new low mark for an amateur at the Open, put a mediocre 74 behind him to post a two-under par 70. At level par, Lewis comfortably made the cut and will set his sights on a big cheque in his quest to win the ?200,000 he needs by the end of the season to earn his Tour card. The lead is held by a group on seven-under, including the Englishman Robert Coles.
At the Tour Championship at East Lake, Atlanta, Australian Adam Scott birdied the last two holes for a second consecutive day to break one stroke clear of a tightly bunched leaderboard. Scott calmly rolled in putts from seven and 10 feet respectively at the 17th and the last to cap a sparkling five-under-par 65.
South Korean K J Choi was alone in second after a 65 while Australian Jason Day (67) and British world No 1 Luke Donald (68) were a further stroke back at six under. First-round leader Keegan Bradley hit a disappointing 71 while Justin Rose produced a 75.

Winter sun

Summer is almost over, but there are plenty of holiday options out there to brighten up the colder months of the year
Look at the leaves. You don't need a meteorologist to tell you that summer is on the way out, and we're in the throes of an early autumn. The probable upshot of a long, cold winter thereafter may excite winter-sports enthusiasts hoping for snow at close quarters, but for most of us the outlook at home is hardly heartening on the weather front. So the prospect of escaping for some winter sun elsewhere becomes all the more alluring. And booking right now will provide more than an emotional lift.
The usual rules apply. If you don't have to travel over Christmas and New Year, then don't. Half-terms (beginning 24 October and 13 February at most schools) are also worth avoiding, particularly for short-haul trips. Even outside the main holiday times, prices are rising above last year's levels.
"After a lousy summer in Britain, bookings into early next year are already looking strong," says Joanna Edmunds, managing director of luxury operator Kuoni. And the top demand at this high end of the market? The Maldives is the perennial favourite, says Ms Edmunds, with an increasing demand (and similarly robust prices) for Thailand and for all-inclusives in the Caribbean. Bookings to Dubai and Oman are also proving strong despite the recent uprisings elsewhere in the Middle East. On the other hand, Egypt is offering exceptional value as it carefully prices its way back from the tourist downturn after events earlier in the year.
Andy Washington, the UK managing director of online agency Expedia, said that currently Sharm el Sheikh is probably at its best: "Prices are low and tourists are receiving a particularly warm welcome."
When and where
Most winter sun destinations offer optimum conditions at different periods. Here's where to be, when.
October
Mauritius: the heat of the southern summer hasn't yet hit hard and this very green Indian Ocean island is at its driest. Expect temperatures of about 25C and about eight hours of sunshine a day.
November
Cape Verde: the main rains in this tropical archipelago in the Atlantic, formerly a Portuguese colony, usually peter out by the end of October, and November sees an average nine hours of sunshine a day, air temperatures of about 28C and sea temperatures of 24C.
December
Miami: December is the coolest month to be in this southern city. Not that temperatures are low – you're almost guaranteed daily highs of around 27C beneath clear, blue skies.
January
Thailand: "midwinter" here should mean clear skies. Januaryis the driest and least humid month of the year. While 28C may be chilly by Thai standards, you'll bask blissfully.
February
Antigua: this is when the sunniest of the Caribbean's Leeward islands is at its driest and calmest. Expect temperatures of about 27C, soothed by gentle westerly breezes.
March
Maldives: while temperatures remain a fairly consistent 28C throughout the year, precipitation varies dramatically: during periods in June, July and August, you may feel marooned on a rain-lashed island. March is the peak of the dry season with clear and calm seas.
Short-haul packages
The well-established winter-sun destinations within easy reach are principally sold by the big package operators, who, thanks to economies of scale, can offer the best prices. The Canary Islands, about a four-hour flight away, remain the UK's most popular winter sun spot even though the weather can be cool and wet in November and December. But the larger islands – Tenerife, Gran Canaria and Lanzarote – offer cultural options as well as a poolside experience.
Egypt's Red Sea coast is five hours away and provides anything from world-class snorkelling and diving to the chance to ride a quad bike through the desert.
The Gambia, six hours distant, is a more nuanced destination, with excellent beaches, a captivating capital – Banjul – and some fascinating wildlife.
Some of the best deals we found this week range from self-catering to affordable luxury and all-inclusive accommodation. One week in Gran Canaria for ?254 per person (based on two sharing, as are all prices listed) for a departure on 24 November is offered by Direct Holidays (0844 879 8173; directholidays.co.uk), which is a brand of Thomas Cook. The price for this trip to the island more or less in the centre of the Canary Islands archipelago includes flights from Manchester and self-catering accommodation in the Babalu holiday apartments close to the beach at Puerto Rico. Monarch (0871 423 8568; monarch.co.uk), meanwhile, was offering one week B&B at the four-star Mexicana Sharm Resort at Sharm El Sheikh for ?328 per person including flights from Gatwick on 27 November.
Gulf gambits
The increase in air links and an ever-expanding range of hotels have put Dubai and the other Emirates as well as Oman and Qatar firmly on the winter-sun tourist map. Given flight times of around seven hours from the UK, the region is increasingly seen as ideal short-break territory, particularly at the top end of the market.
If you've yearned to stay at one of the really ritzy Dubai hotels but have shuddered at the expense, now is a good time to go. Upscale operator Seasons (01244 202 082; seasons.co.uk), for example, is offering some special deals for travel before Christmas: you'll get five nights at the Ritz Carlton for the cost of four, so you pay ?1,250 per person (including flights from Heathrow and accommodation with breakfast). Five nights at super-luxury Atlantis Dubai is only slightly pricier at ?1,350.
In Oman, Kuoni (01306 747002; kuoni.co.uk) offers five very stylish nights at Six Senses Hideaway Zighy Bay for ?1,636 per person for an early December departure (costs, by contrast, rise to ?4,137 per person in late December). The price includes Emirates flights from Gatwick to Dubai, with car transfers to Oman, and accommodation with breakfast in a pool villa.
The 82-villa resort opened in 2008, and is tucked away on the spectacular Musandam Peninsula in the north of the country. This detached fragment of Oman juts into the Gulf and is notable for astonishing fjords, historic forts and sense of calm. Rain is almost unheard-of, and this is an ideal place to be in the depths of early December or late January, when prices are low and the temperature benign.
Asian outlook
There are good deals on offer in Thailand, which is heavily dependent on the British market. Hayes & Jarvis (0844 855 4488; hayesandjarvis.com), for example, is offering a ?710 trip to Pattaya with accommodation at the generously comfortable Green Park Resort, for departures in early October. The price – little more than a plane ticket alone – includes Qatar Airways flights from Heathrow to Bangkok via Doha and transfers as well as 10 nights' room-only accommodation. Bear in mind, though, that Pattaya is unlikely to suit those seeking a calming escape. Lonely Planet's Thailand's Islands and Beaches guide describes it as "a testosterone-fuelled testament to holiday hedonism".
Richly diverse Malaysia, slightly further south, has seen the number of flights reduced, but its long beaches, lush interior landscapes and striking mix of cultures have perennial appeal. Travelbag (0871 703 4240; travelbag.co.uk) has a 10-night, ?899 trip to the island of Penang for departures between October and March (avoiding peak times between the October half-term and 10 December to 7 January, 2012). The cost includes flights from Heathrow via Kuala Lumpur and accommodation at the beachside Golden Sands Resort by Shangri-La, a sleek four-star which is glorying in a recent revamp.
To get somewhat off the beaten track, head to the Philippines, which boasts some of the best beaches in the world and whose 7,000 islands are becoming more accessible thanks to improvements in internal transport.
Until 6 November, Trailfinders (0845 050 5892; trailfinders.com) is offering a one-week, ?949, trip to the Boracay Regency Beach Resort set by powder-white sands at much-lauded Boracay island about 200 miles south of the capital. The cost covers Cathay Pacific flights from Heathrow to Manila via Hong Kong and onward air transport as well as accommodation with breakfast.
American beauties
Expedia reports that the US has been proving an especially strong market this year. "The exchange rate has helped, coupled with some very good deals," said the online travel company's spokesman Andy Washington. Expedia claims to have sold 10 per cent more seats to California for November 2011 than it did for the same month last year.
For American winter sun head to Las Vegas or Phoenix, which claim golden status as two of the sunniest places on the planet. Or follow the "snowbirds" from the northern US states to Miami which, over the next few months, offers dazzingly blue skies and all-day sun at pleasant temperatures of around 27C.
Expedia (0330 123 1235; expedia.co.uk) can arrange a week at the luxury Angler's Boutique Resort near Ocean Drive at South Beach from ?982 per person based on departures in March and including flights from Heathrow.
Beyond the beach scene, March is particularly lively, with the Miami International Film Festival running 2-11 March and Miami Beach Fashion Week 21-24 March.
Meanwhile, take a bow San Diego. Offering surfing, whale-watching, extensive retail therapy and much more, the Californian city has been restored to the BA route network. For sunshine and low humidity the optimum time to visit is between November and March.
Even though the British Airways Holidays (0844 493 0758; ba.com) autumn sale has now ended, prices have nudged up only slightly: a five-night holiday at the lush Mission Valley Resort costs only ?541 per person for a 10 November departure, including flights as well as room-only accommodation; there are other departure dates in November and early December.
Christmas value
Spending Christmas or New Year in the sun is top of most people's wish list – which is why costs to the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean soar at this time. Even so, some options are considerably cheaper than others. At the moment there is still availability, so book soon.
Virgin Holidays (0844 573 0088; virginholidays.co.uk) offers a week's break in Antigua leaving Gatwick on Virgin Atlantic on 21 December and staying at waterside Halcyon Cove for ?1,618 per person, on a room-only basis.
Alternatively, head to Havana on the same day with Virgin Holidays (again on Virgin Atlantic from Gatwick) and you'll pay ?1,583 per person for a week-long stay (with breakfast included) at the iconic Hotel Nacional de Cuba. The price includes premium economy outbound (but the cheap seats home).
Over in the Indian Ocean, Kuoni (01306 747008; kuoni.co.uk) has an attractive offer for Christmas in the Maldives from ?2,042 per person for one week at the five-star Kurumba. This was the first of the archipelago's private island resorts, and is still one of the finest. The price includes accommodation with breakfast, flights from Heathrow and transfers.
Sri Lanka, further east in the Indian Ocean, presents good value at the moment. Christmas here, arranged through Kuoni, costs ?1,708 per person for eight all-inclusive nights at Club Bentota on the south west coast. The price includes SriLankan Airlines flights from Heathrow and is valid for departures before 22 December.
Action and adventure
Should the prospect of days lazing on the beach sound too indolent, East Africa and Central America present sunshine along with some good, if costly, "surf and turf" options – land-based activity combined with time beside the sea.
Journey Latin America (020-8747 8315; journeylatinamerica.co.uk), for instance, suggests a nine-night, tailor-made venture in Belize from ?2,041 per person. Based at the lush Mountain Pine Ridge forest reserve and then on the island of Ambergris Caye, you hike, explore Mayan ruins, take mountain bike rides, dive, and go cave canoeing and snorkelling.
The price is valid from October to March 2012, with higher rates during the peak festive season. It includes Continental Airlines flights from Heathrow via Houston, all transfers, mid-range accommodation, most activities and some meals.
For more natural wonders make for Tanzania, where you can enjoy watching lion, giraffe, zebra, hippo and more in the Selous Game Reserve. Then hop on a propeller plane which will take you directly to the white-sand beaches and turquoise waters of Zanzibar.
Conditions are usually near-perfect between about November and February. Expert Africa (020-8232 9777; expertafrica.com) offers a four-night safari at Lake Manze Camp followed by five nights at castaway-stylish Mchanga Beach Lodge for ?2,502 including non-stop BA flights from Heathrow to Dar es Salaam, transfers, safari trips, accommodation and all meals in the Selous Game Reserve.
This tailor-made package is available for departures between 1 November to 15 December, and again between 10 January and 29 February, excluding the peak Christmas period.

The Business Matrix: Saturday 24 September 2011

LME mulls offers for the company
The London Metal Exchange, the top global market for industrial metals such as copper and zinc, is considering offers for the company. The exchange, one of the last to operate a system of “open outcry” pit trading, is owned by the trading houses and banks that use it. The LME accounts for 80 per cent of metal future contracts traded globally.
KPMG to look into rogue UBS trades
Accountancy firm KPMG is set to conduct an independent regulatory investigation into alleged rogue trades that have cost Swiss bank UBS $2.3bn (?1.5bn). The FSA City watchdog said the remit and timelines for the inquiry – on behalf of the FSA and its Swiss counterpart Finma – and paid for by UBS – have yet to be thrashed out.
Collins Stewart warns on profits
Collins Stewart Hawkpoint has warned that stock market turbulence is likely to hit its profits this year. Shares in the stock broker fell nearly 9 per cent and its house broker cut its profits forecast for the company by a third. But the group said that overall it had performed well and that it had reduced its exposure to turbulent markets.
UK households pay down credit
Britons paid off ?100m more than they borrowed on credit cards, loans and overdrafts last month, suggesting that the desire to borrow is still constrained by the economic outlook. The British Bankers’ Association said the same mood was evident in the mortgage market where net lending was ?700m, below the average for the first half.
Poland tries to support currency
The Polish central bank was forced to intervene in the foreign exchange markets yesterday to drive up the zloty, which had hit 27-month lows against the euro as investors fled riskier assets. Currency traders said South Korea, Russia and India had also been trying to support their currencies amid the market turmoil.
New Arla dairy for Buckinghamshire
Around 700 new jobs are to be created after the Danish dairy co-operative Arla got the go-ahead to build what it calls the world’s largest zero-carbon dairy. Arla Foods wants to create the ?150m project at a site in Buckinghamshire, which it says will be able to package up to 1.3bn litres of fresh milk a year.
BA buys Heathrow slots from BMI
British Airways has bought six take-off and landing slots at Heathrow from British Midland International. The deal, which is for an undisclosed sum, will increase owner International Consolidated Airlines’ share of the slots at the airport to 45 per cent. BA will use the Heathrow slots from late October.
EasyJet’s Stelios changes direction
EasyJet’s founder Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou has dropped his call for an investor meeting to vote on ousting an easyJet board member, just a day after landing a ?72m dividend payout from the no-frills airline. The director Sir Stelios objected to had backed a large order for new aircraft just weeks before a profits warning.
SSE ditches bid for nuclear power
Scottish and Southern (SSE), the UK’s second-biggest energy generator, has abandoned its quest to develop nuclear power in favour of producing more electricity from renewable energy sources such as wind farms and bio-mass plants. The move is a blow to government plans to ramp up nuclear generation.
Centrica in ?175m First Choice buy
British Gas owner Centrica has bought the Texas-based energy retailer First Choice Power for ?175m cash as it looks to expand in the US. The deal is set to strengthen Centrica’s position as the third largest energy retailer in Texas and boost its number of customers in the state to more than 830,000.

Lennon: I wouldn't swap with Rangers

 GETTY IMAGES
Neil Lennon: 'We are in Europe and all the competitions and that's where you want to be at the minute'
Neil Lennon, the Celtic manager, insists he would not swap positions with his Rangers counterpart Ally McCoist despite his side trailing by four points in the Scottish Premier League following last Sunday's 4-2 defeat at Ibrox.
But then Rangers, who were knocked out of the Champions League and Europa League in the qualifiers, were knocked out of the League Cup by Falkirk in midweek.
"We are in Europe and all the competitions and that's where you want to be at the minute," said Lennon.

British Cheese Week: Causing a stink in a town near you

It's British Cheese Week this week from 24 September to 2nd October. To celebrate, Emily Jupp shares some little-known facts about cheese.
* We're hard-wired to like cheese. It contains tryptophan, an amino acid that makes us feel content. In addition, the fat it includes makes our brains produce extra dopamine, which makes us happy. If consumed in small amounts, cheese can be beneficial to your health; it contains important minerals and around seven times the amount of calcium as milk
* 98 per cent of British households buy cheddar as their cheese of choice
* There are over 700 different varieties of British cheese
* Despite old wives’ tales to the contrary, it actually acts as a sleep aid. "It won't give you nightmares. We did a study that de-bunked that story a few years ago,” says Nigel White, secretary of the British Cheese Board. “In fact, if you have some cheese about an hour before going to be bed it will probably help you have a good night's sleep because the tryptophan helps you relax"
* The Cornish Yarg, a tangy cornish cheese got it's name from its maker, whose last name is Gray. He needed a 'Cornish-sounding name' and realised that his last name spelled backwards fitted the bill
* Cheddar is named after the Cheddar Gorge caves in Somerset
* Every spring, locals in the village of Stilton, Peterborough, race down a hill rolling Stilton shaped wheels.
Events are taking place throughout the week. Some participants in Cheese Week include:
Cardiff Castle
Daily Bread Ltd
The National Trust
Neal's Yard
Paxton and Whitfield
The British Cheese Board has released an app to help people discover new cheeses. Find it here: www.britishcheese.com

Jones times his recovery perfectly to lay injury jinx to rest

 GETTY IMAGES
Ryan Jones must have feared the worst when a calf injury threatened to rule him out of another World Cup
Ryan Jones has suffered more than his fare share of injustice with injuries but, for once, his body's sense of timing has worked for the good of Wales. The 30-year-old former captain is fit to make his World Cup debut against Namibia on Monday, breaking a jinx that has blighted an otherwise glittering career.
Jones, a British Lion in 2005 between two Grand Slams, was left emotionally scarred at missing the World Cup two years later following shoulder surgery. He is still reluctant to talk in depth about it.
In 2009 the curse struck again when a head injury, suffered with Wales, was not fully diagnosed and he was duly sent back home by the Lions with his feet barely on South African soil. So the Ospreys back row could be forgiven for feeling an impending sense of doom when a calf strain flared up last month ahead of the World Cup.
But having missed Wales' warm-up schedule as well as their opening two games in New Zealand, Jones makes a timely return in New Plymouth to soften the significant blow of losing the outstanding Dan Lydiate for the immediate future.
Having retained a team in successive games for the first time in his reign, Warren Gatland has made 11 changes against the Pool D whipping boys, having mixed and matched a blend of the vastly experienced and those still wet behind the ears at Stadium Taranaki.
Jones is among six players appearing for the first time at a World Cup, including 21-year-old Tavis Knoyle and the even younger Scott Williams, who was still an amateur with Whitland just two years ago.
Yet Wales also recall 230 caps of experience in Jones, Gethin Jenkins and Stephen Jones, who will become the most decorated Wales player on his 101st appearance, while Jamie Roberts, Shane Williams and Adam Jones are rested. Lee Byrne, another to miss out in 2007, returns for the injured James Hook.
Gatland said: "On the back of two intensely physical matches, we have made changes. We know Namibia will be hurting after their [87-0] loss to South Africa but we need to take that next step towards qualification from this incredibly tough group."
Wales: L Byrne; L Halfpenny, J Davies, S Williams, A Brew; S Jones, T Knoyle; G Jenkins, L Burns, C Mitchell, B Davies, A W Jones, R Jones, T Faletau, S Warburton (capt). Replacements K Owens, R Bevington, L Charteris, A Powell, L Williams, R Preistland, G North.