Gunners to appeal ban
Arsenal are to appeal against the two-match ban imposed by UEFA on striker Eduardo da Silva for diving in a Champions League match last week. “We strongly believe that the decision taken is deeply flawed and not based on any forensic view of the video evidence available,” the Premier League club said in a statement on Thursday. “There are obvious errors and inconsistencies in UEFA’s judgment and we intend to appeal.” The Brazilian-born Croatia international was given the ban after UEFA’s disciplinary and control panel ruled he had tried to deceive the referee to win a penalty in the second leg of Arsenal’s Champions League playoff tie against Celtic. Eduardo converted the penalty awarded by referee Manuel Enrique Mejuto Gonzalez after he tumbled to the ground despite there appearing to be no contact with Celtic keeper Artur Boruc.
■SOCCER
Reds stadium still on hold
Liverpool’s new stadium will not be built until the global recession is over and credit becomes available to finance the US$800 million project. The 60,000-seat replacement for Liverpool’s historic but crumbling Anfield was due to have opened next year, but the economic downturn forced co-owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett Jr to halt building work in August last year. “Construction on the stadium will begin when the current contraction in the banking industry ends and the global financial markets re-establish their equilibrium,” Liverpool managing director Christian Purslow said.
■SOCCER
Argentina attend Mass
Diego Maradona and his Argentina team went to Mass on Thursday, praying for help in today’s critical World Cup qualifier against No. 1-ranked Brazil. The religious service was held on the training ground where Argentina are preparing for the game in Rosario, about 300km northwest of Buenos Aires. The mass was organized by Nelida Pariani, the wife of Julio Grondona, who is the president of the Argentine Football Association. Argentina are struggling to qualify for next year’s World Cup in South Africa and need a victory.
■YACHTING
Oracle goes back to court
US syndicate Oracle on Thursday launched new legal moves against America’s Cup defenders Alinghi over the rules for the next edition of yachting’s premier event. It said it had asked the New York Supreme Court to ensure that Alinghi does not try to impose regulations, notably concerning the measurements of boats and their equipment, that do not exist under the Deed of Gift, the 19th century rules that govern the oldest trophy in international sport. Alinghi, owned by Swiss biotech billionaire Ernesto Bertarelli, announced last month it would face Oracle in a multi-hull duel for the 33rd America’s Cup in the United Arab Emirates at Ras al-Khaimah from Feb. 8.
■SWIMMING
Miller avoids jail term
Former world champion swimmer Scott Miller avoided a jail term yesterday for supplying the party drug ecstasy to a friend as a birthday gift. District Court Judge Greg Woods ordered Miller to complete 100 hours of community work. He also imposed a two-year good behavior bond. Miller, 34, pleaded guilty to five charges including supplying a prohibited drug, after he gave 12 ecstasy pills to Mark Catchpole, the son of an Australian rugby great, as a gift.



