A Manchester City team-funded synthetic football pitch on the roof of Lexington Academy is the first of its kind in Manhattan and will be for the exclusive use of the students.
A Manchester City team-funded synthetic football pitch on the roof of Lexington Academy is the first of its kind in Manhattan and will be for the exclusive use of the students.

Ambitious Man City shout news from US rooftops



An earnest young American reporter concluded an interview with the multi-nationally famous Manchester City goalkeeper Shay Given by asking: "And could I check the spelling of your name?" A 25-year-old man who grew up playing football in the middle of the United States happened upon a Manchester City exhibition in a park in Chinatown and confessed to no prior knowledge of any "Manchester City" and said: "No, I didn't know that Manchester had two teams."

And as the clamorous drumbeat of baseball marginalised all else in New York's summertime sports coverage, a born-and-raised baseball fan and principal whose Harlem school received a new rooftop pitch from City reckoned that as of several months ago: "I would have known Manchester, England, but not Manchester City." Yet if awareness comes in strained increments, well, there was the cab driver who collected two fans visiting from Manchester and along the way said: "Oh, Manchester City's a very big team now."

As the 130-year-old club moults from its more anonymous past and further into the very big "now" it has inhabited since Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed bought it in 2008, the team have spent the week hopscotching through New York and next-door New Jersey. They played in a half-full stadium - and lost 2-0 - in a friendly against Sporting Lisbon, whose fans decidedly outnumbered City fans because of the large Portuguese population around nearby Newark, the largest city in the state of New Jersey.

They graced a news conference alongside the three other clubs in this New York Challenge tournament - Tottenham Hotspur, Sporting Lisbon and the New York Red Bulls (whom City play tonight) - so that Roberto Mancini, their manager, could answer serial questions about which wildly speculated purchase his club might make next. "We cannot buy all the players that are in the world," he said. "This is impossible."

Mostly, City have gone about leaving a fresh imprint, one American at a time, in a country with a long, dogged streak of resistance to the world's game, a trait that might be melting more than ever after America's heady showing in winning a group that included England and reaching the last 16 at the World Cup in South Africa. "We'll try to let the local people know what we're all about," said Gareth Barry, the England international midfielder.

For now, the vast country remains an oasis of privacy for football players unaccustomed to untroubled strolls in public. "We like coming into the US because this is a country where we can chill out and where we can really be ourselves," said Patrick Vieira, the 34-year-old World Cup-winning France midfielder whose signing last January launched the 2010 haul that this summer has landed Jerome Boateng, Yaya Toure and David Silva - internationals for Germany, Ivory Coast and Spain respectively.

Every so often, Vieira said, Americans will see him, commence guessing and say something akin to: "I saw you somewhere, but I don't remember where." Vincent Kompany, the Belgian centre-back who has been at City for two seasons, added: "People sometimes ask me if I'm a movie star, and it's very easy for me to say that I am not." Vladimir Weiss certainly feels like one nowadays, having helped Slovakia to a stirring victory over Italy and passage to the knockout stage of the World Cup.

His return to his home country marked the departure of all his spare time, his ears filling with plaudits and congratulations and his walks in public happily trammelled with people wishing to appear with him in photographs, obtain his autograph or kindly shake his hand. Yet upon setting foot in New York, he walked through Manhattan as would any lavishly tattooed man in his 20s with sawed-off blond hair. He had himself an awed tourist's day. He saw Times Square. He saw the Empire State Building and refrained from taking the lift to the top only because, he said: "The queues are too big."

While he already sees his shirt upon a smattering of fans around Manchester and feels "really proud", not a soul in the sidewalk masses recognised him on Wednesday. Had he craved such recognition, he would have had to go across the Hudson River to Harrison, New Jersey, to a new 25,000-seat stadium shining from an open field near abandoned warehouses and housing the New York Red Bulls of the US's often-overshadowed Major League Soccer.

There, Mancini and Barry met the wee clot of hard-core American soccer journalists as well as an incoming lot from England, and while representatives from three other clubs lined the dais, the noise centred on Mancini and just whom his club might sign next in the open-market breathlessness. With each inquiry, Mancini got a grin and a twinkle as if bemused by the cacophony. Of the American Landon Donovan, who thrived last year on loan at Everton, Mancini said: "He is a good player."

Of the much-speculated 20-year-old Italian Mario Balotelli, who had a rocky year at Inter Milan, Mancini said: "He is a good player." Of the Brazilian Ramires, who looks likely to sign for Chelsea after a reporter showed Mancini a BlackBerry screen with a report indicating Ramires was bound for Manchester City, the Italian said: "He is a good player." He did elaborate on that refrain to remind everyone that he found urgency unnecessary given the time left with the market, and on Friday night he did field another question about pursuing Donovan with: "Why not?" He also answered queries about his trademark scarf, saying he had left it in Manchester with the air distressingly hot and humid in New York.

Sitting to Mancini's right in the interview session, Barry said of the swirl of expectations: "The players we're signing, it's probably gone up another level. It's exciting but, as players, we need to perform on the pitch." They spoke just around the corner from the Red Bulls' gift shop, by now utterly dominated with the shirts of Thierry Henry, their new signing, a name unrecognizable to most Americans but already ballyhooed among the football-minded of New York, particularly the immigrant communities (save, perhaps, for the Irish). All the clatter had ebbed by Thursday morning when Mancini and six players visited the Lexington Academy between 103rd and 104th streets in East Harlem.

There, nobody asked about potential signings as the school dedicated its new pitch, six floors up, with synthetic grass on the surface and views of the Triborough Bridge in the distance. "What you have done for us, we have been dreaming about for years," said Tony Hernandez, the principal, briefly appearing on the verge of tears. "I don't need a pinch. It's a reality. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts." Addressing students, teachers and visitors from both Manchester and Abu Dhabi, Hernandez described a school in which 89 per cent of students speak other languages - Spanish, for almost all - and many hail from countries in which football is the national pastime.

Amazed by the unlikely confluence of his school, City and the UAE - a cooperation that stemmed from a parent's knowledge of the club's community programmes, Hernandez apologised in advance for possibly mispronouncing the names of the visitors from Abu Dhabi. One, Yousef al Otaiba, the UAE ambassador to the US, followed Hernandez at the lectern and said, "Everybody seems only too happy to walk the six flights up the stairs to the new field rather than the 12 blocks to the nearest usable field."

He presented the school with a replica of a dhow and a plaque commemorating the event, and the entire crowd proceeded up the stairs to the roof where the children participated in drills with the players. Two hours later and more than 100 blocks downtown in Chinatown, a crowd of maybe 150 ringed a fenced-in park even if some had not the faintest clue of the celebrated existence of an Emmanuel Adebayor. Several, however, betrayed their status as visitors from England by chanting: "Come on, City!"

Lawrence Cook, an American who became a City convert via his friend Barry O'Driscoll, said of the American interest: "It's not there yet. Unless you follow the Premier League, your regular American doesn't know the difference between Manchester City and Manchester United. In fact, they just assume you're talking about Manchester United." For it to soar more here, he said, the US needs to produce a luminous star in Europe. "And not a goalkeeper," he added.

City fans, meanwhile, continue to look as if they see stars everywhere. One, canny from the taxi with the knowledgeable driver, said of the UAE: "Please tell them thank you." Standing in the Chinatown park across an ocean from home, he added: "When you see the marketing, the PR, the entourage the club are bringing now," as opposed to previous exhibition trips, "it's things the Chelseas, the Manchester Uniteds, the Arsenals have been doing for years, and so it's going in the right direction."

A trip such as this makes another impression, even if the path to fame here can be humorously long. On Friday night, after a match Mancini called "normal" given his club's rustiness and his squad strewn all over the world, a reporter asked Kolo Toure if he thought Americans recognised him. "I don't think so, but I'm not sure," the former Arsenal mainstay said, shortly before another and very seasoned American reporter approached and wrapped up an interview by asking Toure: "Can I get your name again?" @Email:sports@thenational.ae

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The Perfect Couple

Starring: Nicole Kidman, Liev Schreiber, Jack Reynor

Creator: Jenna Lamia

Rating: 3/5

How to wear a kandura

Dos

  • Wear the right fabric for the right season and occasion 
  • Always ask for the dress code if you don’t know
  • Wear a white kandura, white ghutra / shemagh (headwear) and black shoes for work 
  • Wear 100 per cent cotton under the kandura as most fabrics are polyester

Don’ts 

  • Wear hamdania for work, always wear a ghutra and agal 
  • Buy a kandura only based on how it feels; ask questions about the fabric and understand what you are buying
Abaya trends

The utilitarian robe held dear by Arab women is undergoing a change that reveals it as an elegant and graceful garment available in a range of colours and fabrics, while retaining its traditional appeal.

How to protect yourself when air quality drops

Install an air filter in your home.

Close your windows and turn on the AC.

Shower or bath after being outside.

Wear a face mask.

Stay indoors when conditions are particularly poor.

If driving, turn your engine off when stationary.

The specs

Engine: 1.5-litre 4-cyl turbo

Power: 194hp at 5,600rpm

Torque: 275Nm from 2,000-4,000rpm

Transmission: 6-speed auto

Price: from Dh155,000

On sale: now

Greatest of All Time
Starring: Vijay, Sneha, Prashanth, Prabhu Deva, Mohan
Director: Venkat Prabhu
Rating: 2/5
Hidden killer

Sepsis arises when the body tries to fight an infection but damages its own tissue and organs in the process.

The World Health Organisation estimates it affects about 30 million people each year and that about six million die.

Of those about three million are newborns and 1.2 are young children.

Patients with septic shock must often have limbs amputated if clots in their limbs prevent blood flow, causing the limbs to die.

Campaigners say the condition is often diagnosed far too late by medical professionals and that many patients wait too long to seek treatment, confusing the symptoms with flu. 

Results

United States beat UAE by three wickets

United States beat Scotland by 35 runs

UAE v Scotland – no result

United States beat UAE by 98 runs

Scotland beat United States by four wickets

Fixtures

Sunday, 10am, ICC Academy, Dubai - UAE v Scotland

Admission is free

Multitasking pays off for money goals

Tackling money goals one at a time cost financial literacy expert Barbara O'Neill at least $1 million.

That's how much Ms O'Neill, a distinguished professor at Rutgers University in the US, figures she lost by starting saving for retirement only after she had created an emergency fund, bought a car with cash and purchased a home.

"I tell students that eventually, 30 years later, I hit the million-dollar mark, but I could've had $2 million," Ms O'Neill says.

Too often, financial experts say, people want to attack their money goals one at a time: "As soon as I pay off my credit card debt, then I'll start saving for a home," or, "As soon as I pay off my student loan debt, then I'll start saving for retirement"."

People do not realise how costly the words "as soon as" can be. Paying off debt is a worthy goal, but it should not come at the expense of other goals, particularly saving for retirement. The sooner money is contributed, the longer it can benefit from compounded returns. Compounded returns are when your investment gains earn their own gains, which can dramatically increase your balances over time.

"By putting off saving for the future, you are really inhibiting yourself from benefiting from that wonderful magic," says Kimberly Zimmerman Rand , an accredited financial counsellor and principal at Dragonfly Financial Solutions in Boston. "If you can start saving today ... you are going to have a lot more five years from now than if you decide to pay off debt for three years and start saving in year four."

Teams

Punjabi Legends Owners: Inzamam-ul-Haq and Intizar-ul-Haq; Key player: Misbah-ul-Haq

Pakhtoons Owners: Habib Khan and Tajuddin Khan; Key player: Shahid Afridi

Maratha Arabians Owners: Sohail Khan, Ali Tumbi, Parvez Khan; Key player: Virender Sehwag

Bangla Tigers Owners: Shirajuddin Alam, Yasin Choudhary, Neelesh Bhatnager, Anis and Rizwan Sajan; Key player: TBC

Colombo Lions Owners: Sri Lanka Cricket; Key player: TBC

Kerala Kings Owners: Hussain Adam Ali and Shafi Ul Mulk; Key player: Eoin Morgan

Venue Sharjah Cricket Stadium

Format 10 overs per side, matches last for 90 minutes

Timeline October 25: Around 120 players to be entered into a draft, to be held in Dubai; December 21: Matches start; December 24: Finals

UAE Tour 2020

Stage 1: The Pointe Palm Jumeirah - Dubai Silicon Oasis, 148km
Stage 2: Hatta - Hatta Dam, 168km​​​​​​​
Stage 3: Al Qudra Cycle Track - Jebel Hafeet, 184km​​​​​​​
Stage 4: Zabeel Park - Dubai City Walk, 173km​​​​​​​
Stage 5: Al Ain - Jebel Hafeet, 162km​​​​​​​
Stage 6: Al Ruwais - Al Mirfa, 158km​​​​​​​
Stage 7: Al Maryah Island - Abu Dhabi Breakwater, 127km

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How to help

Send “thenational” to the following numbers or call the hotline on: 0502955999
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Hotel Silence
Auður Ava Ólafsdóttir
Pushkin Press

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The biog

Favourite hobby: I love to sing but I don’t get to sing as much nowadays sadly.

Favourite book: Anything by Sidney Sheldon.

Favourite movie: The Exorcist 2. It is a big thing in our family to sit around together and watch horror movies, I love watching them.

Favourite holiday destination: The favourite place I have been to is Florence, it is a beautiful city. My dream though has always been to visit Cyprus, I really want to go there.


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