Category: Sport

  • David Beckham offered Turkey adventure for winter

    David Beckham offered Turkey adventure for winter

    Rob Shepherd

    Last Updated: Dec 4, 2010

    David Beckham is to be offered the chance of one last great adventure, in Turkey.

    david beckham victoria beckham

    Besiktas of Istanbul want to take Beckham on loan from LA Galaxy of Major League Soccer over the winter, when the US league is inactive.

    A source in Turkey said that if Beckham is willing to be loaned again, Besiktas “have big ambitions” to have him play for them.

    Over the past two winters Beckham has played in Serie A for AC Milan, but the Italian club no longer want him.

    Earlier in the week, David Moyes, the Everton manager, confirmed he wanted to bring Beckham to Goodison Park until March, when the US season resumes. Beckham, who had flown to Zurich during the week as part of his role in what proved to be England’s failed 2018 World Cup bid, made it clear he was not interested in the Toffees.

    At 35, Beckham has come to terms with the fact he could not put up with the rigours of the Premier League, which he left in 2003 when Manchester United sold him to Real Madrid.

    But an offer to play in Turkey may attract. And Beckham’s business advisors would see another big commercial market they could exploit.

    Besiktas have demonstrated a willingness to bolster their squad by luring top stars in the autumn of their careers.

    Guti, the Spaniard, and Ricardo Quaresma, the Portuguese, are both in a squad that has reached the knockout stages of the Europa League.

    The club would see Beckham’s involvement, even for three months, helping re-establish them as a leading power in the Turkish league. And it has obvious commercial advantages for themselves, too.

    The club’s basketball arm showed their ambition earlier in the year when they lured Allen Iverson, former MVP of the NBA, to play for them. Beckham, if he came, would be their franchise name for the football side of the club.

  • The European Capital of Sports in 2012

    The European Capital of Sports in 2012

    topbas 2012 spor bsk hbr ft2President of The European Capital of Sport Association (ACES) announced that İstanbul was selected the European Capital of Sport in 2012.

    ACES President Gian Francesco Lupatelli declared the decision in a press conference at İstanbul’s Atatürk Airport yesterday, accompanied by Turkey’s chief EU Negotiator Egemen Bağış and Mayor of Istanbul Metropolitan Municiaplity Kadir Topbaş.

    Stating that officials from the association had carried out a number of inspections in İstanbul, Lupatelli said he was happy to announce that İstanbul was selected as the European Capital of Sport for 2012. He added that the association has invited Bağış and Topbaş to receive the certificate of the title in a meeting in European Parliament in Brussels on November 30th.

    Speaking after the ACES president, Bağış said Turkey is one of the most dynamic countries in Europe, adding: “I think it means a lot that İstanbul was announced the European Capital of Sport after having been named European Capital of Culture 2010. European Capital of Sport aims to make everybody, young and old, interested in sports and increase communication between European cities.”

  • Disabled Turkish swimmer seeks to compete in London Paralympics

    Disabled Turkish swimmer seeks to compete in London Paralympics

    DELIZIA FLACCAVENTO

    ISTANBUL – Hürriyet Daily News

    Uğur Yumuk has two gold medals.
    Uğur Yumuk has two gold medals.

    Born with a condition preventing the development of his lower limbs, Uğur Yumuk, 22, has become one of Turkey’s best disabled swimmers since he started competing in 2004.

    When he was a child, Yumuk’s father used to take him to the public swimming pool in their hometown in the southeastern province of Siirt. It was there that a professional coach approached the pair and offered to train the young swimmer.

    Today, after winning two gold medals at the Turkish Swimming Championships for the Disabled, Yumuk lives and trains in Istanbul, where he is sponsored by Işık Okulları (Light Schools) and PricewaterhouseCoopers.

    “I have good sponsors at the moment, but I don’t know what the future holds, especially if I don’t manage to qualify for the London Paralympics [in 2012],” Yumuk said. “Life in Turkey is difficult for people with disabilities – everything is left to the efforts of a few committed individuals.”

    More on people with disabilities

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    Turkish lender introduces ATMs for the visually impaired

    In 2006, Yumuk won the gold medal in the 100-meter backstroke competition at the Turkish Swimming Championships for the Disabled held in the Central Anatolian province of Konya, attracting the attention of Osman Çullu, coach of the Turkish National Disabled Swimming Team.

    With Çullu’s help, Yumuk obtained sponsorship from the Turkish Handicapped Sports, Education and Assistance Foundation, or TESYEV, which paid for him to have his legs amputated and replaced with prosthetic limbs that increased his mobility. Following the surgery, Yumuk can swim more easily and walk around without assistance.

    In 2008, Yumuk again won a gold medal in the 100-meter backstroke event at the Turkish Swimming Championships for the Disabled, held that year in the Black Sea province of Trabzon. He was forced to quit swimming the following year, however, when the public pool where he trained in Siirt was closed.

    But Yumuk’s athletic career was not over. When he came to Istanbul to shoot a promotional video for the Turkish National Paralympics Committee, he met Akif Sözeri, a swimming coach and physical education teacher at Işık Okulları in Erenköy, who helped him secure his current sponsors and move to Istanbul in early 2010.

    Işık Okülları supports Yumuk by employing him full-time at the swimming pool at its Erenköy campus, where he trains every day with Sözeri. PricewaterhouseCoopers pays his rent and helps him buy training equipment and keep his prosthetic legs in good condition.

    Both sponsorships will end in summer 2012.

    Winning a medal at the 2012 Paralympic Games in London would secure his future, Yumuk said. Disabled swimmers are categorized in the games according to the type and severity of their disability. In Yumuk’s category, the minimum qualifying time for the 100-meter backstroke event is one minute and 23 seconds. So far, his best time is one minute and 30 seconds.

    Improving his time by seven seconds over the next 18 months will be difficult, but not impossible, Yumuk said.

    At the 2010 Turkish Swimming Championships for the Disabled, held in Kahramanmaraş in September, Yumuk won the silver medal with a time of 1:38. But whatever happens with his bid to join the London games, swimming has already given Yumuk the mobility to live and work independently and away from home – something he knows makes him lucky.

    Disability directly affects 8 million people in Turkey, most of whom are relegated to their homes. Despite his own success, Yumuk has not forgotten the plight of other handicapped people in the country.

    “I don’t think about myself, I think about those who will come after me,” he said. “Joining the 2012 Paralympic Games would be a great victory for the disabled sports movement here in Turkey. It would be a chance to bring disabilities in Turkey to light and create more opportunities for people like me, who can give so much to society and yet are too often left behind.”

  • One Night in Istanbul signed by Jamie Carragher

    One Night in Istanbul signed by Jamie Carragher

    Carra might be out injured however before he dislocated his shoulder he was able to sign 100 DVDs.

    Now this will make a great Christmas gift and it is for a good cause.

    One night in Istanbul is the fastest selling Liverpool play of all time and has been immortalised for the silver screen. Filmed on the fifth anniversary of Liverpool FC’s historic win at the Liverpool Empire in front of a sell-out crowd and featuring the last public appearance as Liverpool manager by Rafa Benitez. The play features an all-star encore which has now reached legendary status with Liverpool fans worldwide.

    Jamie Carragher has signed 100 copies in aid of his charity. They are available to purchase for £29.95 which includes free delivery anywhere in the world. The DVD is region free and should play on all DVD players in all regions. All proceeds go to the 23 Foundation.

    via One Night in Istanbul signed by Jamie Carragher :: The Empire of The Kop – Liverpool F.C..

  • Turkish hooligans finally jailed for Leeds killings

    Turkish hooligans finally jailed for Leeds killings

    Turkish football hooligans who stabbed two Leeds United supporters to death more than a decade ago in Istanbul have finally been jailed, reports the Yorkshire Post.

    Four Turkish men have lost their final appeal against their convictions for the murder of Leeds fans Christopher Loftus and Kevin Speight in April 2000.

    Mr Loftus and Mr Speight were amongst a group of around 25 Leeds fans who were attacked by hundreds of Galatasaray supporters outside a bar in the Turkish capital on the eve of a cup tie between the two sides. They died after sustaining multiple knife wounds in the onslaught.

    With the help of CCTV evidence, four men were indicted for murder within a week of the attack, including Ali Umit Demir, at whose flat police found a knife stained with the blood of both men. But even though Demir admitted the offence, the convictions of all four were later quashed.

    Following a re-trial the men were re-convicted, but subsequently released on appeal.

    Ali Baydar and Demir had both received prison sentences of six years and eight months, Suleyman Gokhan Guven of 10 years, and Yilmaz Tutus of five.

    Now, more than a decade after the murders took place, the Turkish courts have finally refused the appeals and jailed the men.

    via Turkish hooligans finally jailed for Leeds killings | Premiership News | tribalfootball.com.

  • Iverson: Turkish curiosity

    Iverson: Turkish curiosity

    ISTANBUL, Turkey – In Turkey, Allen Iverson has brought basketball to the masses.

    iversonpic27 t210He has been welcomed by millions, embraced by a star-starved Istanbul as the star-crossed superstar that he once was – and hopes to one day become again.

    Visions of AI billboards (sipping a Turkish soda, perhaps?) dance in one’s imagination.

    He is the fresh prince of this ancient city.

    This is reality … is it not?

    Not really.

    That depiction is distorted. On game night inside BJK Akatlar Arena – home court of Iverson’s new team, the Besiktas Cola Turka Black Eagles – the image of Iverson hysteria is pure and true, but the arena seats 3,200 in a city of about 13 million.

    Iverson is not a sensation here, but rather an exciting curiosity for small pockets of basketball fans, playing for a club that doesn’t even compete in Euroleague, Europe’s most prestigious.

    The 76ers’ former all-everything guard is broke – by all accounts except his own – and playing in Istanbul for a number of reasons, none of which is to become an ambassador for Turkey’s solid, but often overlooked, pro league.

    In early November, Iverson signed a two-year, $4 million contract with Besiktas, then missed his original flight to Istanbul, got on a plane two days later, and scored 15 points in his Besiktas debut on Tuesday.

    On Sunday, Besiktas lost 74-67 to crosstown rival Fenerbahce Ulker, whose point guard is former Temple star Lynn Greer.

    The Blue Mosque, Spice Market, and Grand Bazaar are all about a half-court heave in any direction. The streets are cobblestone, the newspapers filled with soccer, the restaurants packed.

    It’s Istanbul’s tourist district, where the waiters know English and the cabbies know every switchback in every road.

    No one knows Iverson. Not one.

    A waiter, flipping through pictures on his touchscreen phone and singing Usher, tilts his head when asked about Iverson.

    “Where’s that?” he finally asks, more curious than confused, as if “Allen Iverson” is a new nightclub he’d like to check out.

    Never mind.

    “In that area, they may not know,” said Ismail Senol, an announcer for NTV Spor, which broadcasts Turkish Basketball League games. “It’s a financial thing. In rich areas, they know Allen Iverson because NBA TV, they have to pay for it and then are interested in it. In some places they’ll know him, in some places they don’t know him.”

    Maybe Greer can explain.

    On Saturday, his Fenerbahce team practiced just ahead of Besiktas inside BJK Akatlar Arena. Greer, pausing to say hello to Iverson as he walked onto the court, did just that.

    “Soccer is way up here.” Greer raised his hand as if talking about someone quite tall. “And basketball – some people like basketball.

    “It’s unbelievable,” Greer said. “Last season, our soccer team used to have 55,000 at their games and then at the basketball games, we’d get like 2,000.”

    So using Greer’s example, thousands care that Iverson is here – maybe one in every few thousand.

    Iverson has been selective in granting interviews. At first, he talked only to HBO.

    After Friday evening’s practice, Iverson neither declined nor confirmed an interview request and merely walked toward the locker room after saying, “I need to shower.” A few minutes later, he left a handful or reporters interview-less, which was not unexpected.

    A similar source explained that Iverson is broke, plain and simple.

    Over his NBA career, including his lucrative deal with Reebok, Iverson made over $100 million.

    “It’s very surprising,” Besiktas teammate Mire Chatman said of Iverson’s signing. “I was a big fan of his. He paved the way for a lot of scoring point guards. Now that he’s here, I just want to help him adjust to the European basketball.”

    Whether he’s here for money or for a second chance – and the likelihood is it’s a combination of the two – Iverson appears genuinely happy during practices.

    Greer has seen Iverson’s influence on Turkish basketball.

    Now, Greer said, instead of the 10-page Turkish sports section filled with 10 pages of soccer, there is often one page reserved for Iverson, which is one more than usual.

    via Iverson: Turkish curiosity – Spokesman.com – Nov. 27, 2010.