Barcelona and Bayern prolong perfect starts

Perfection is growing rare in Europe's top leagues after Olympique de Marseille fell back to earth, but FC Bayern München and FC Barcelona both kept their faultless records intact. 
Perfection is becoming a rare commodity in Europe's most illustrious championships, but FC Barcelona and FC Bayern München still boast unblemished records after both clubs extended their winning starts to six games. Previously faultless Olympique de Marseille found their seventh outing a bridge too far, in contrast, while Chelsea FC and Tottenham Hotspur FC caught the eye in England and Serie A duo Juventus and SSC Napoli posted impressive wins. UEFA.com recaps the best of the weekend's action.

'We must be top at the end' - Shaqiri urges Bayern Munich to keep their focus


The Switzerland starlet played a crucial role as the Bavarians continued their winning run against Werder Bremen but warns his side not to lose their concentration

Xherdan Shaqiri has urged his Bayern Munich team-mates to keep focused after their superb start to the season.

The Bavarian giants maintained their 100 per cent record in the Bundesliga with a hard-fought 2-0 win over Werder Bremen, while they saw off Valencia 2-1 in their opening Champions League encounter.

Ronaldo scores 3, Real Madrid routs Deportivo 5-1

 Cristiano Ronaldo scored a hat trick to power Real Madrid to a 5-1 home win over Deportivo La Coruna on Sunday, as the defending champions strung back-to-back Spanish league victories together for the first time this season.
Madrid will head into next weekend's "clasico" match at Camp Nou eight points behind leader Barcelona, but at least Jose Mourinho's side is showing strong signs it has recovered its dominating form from the last campaign.
Deportivo opened through Ivan "Riki" Sanchez-Rico 16 minutes in, but Ronaldo equalized from the penalty spot in the 23rd and netted again just before halftime after Angel Di Maria had extended the lead.
Pepe added a headed goal in the 66th before Ronaldo capped the victory with a spot kick in the 83rd for his sixth goal in league play

Serbia, Kosovo Talks Seen Soon

A relaunch of the Brussels-brokered high-level talks between Belgrade and Pristina could be imminent, European officials say, following meetings on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly between European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and the leaders of Serbia and Kosovo.
Technical discussions aside, there have been no high-level political negotiations between the two sides since February.
Since then, relations have grown tenser: Serbia voted in a nationalist-leaning President Tomislav Nikolic and Ivica Dacic, once a spokesman for Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic, has taken over as premier. The new Serbian authorities have said time and again they were prepared for talks. But there was skepticism about their commitment to what Brussels calls the process of normalization between Belgrade and Pristina.
It’s not just that observers weren’t sure of the new Serbian government’s intent. Some Brussels officials also thought that economic troubles at home might dissuade Belgrade from the political risks inherent in restarting the talks.
Yet it seems the prospect of renewed talks is now very much on. Asked if a new round of talks has now been agreed, one senior European diplomat said “Yes, we are practically there.” Asked when the talks could take place, the person said no date has been decided “but soon.”
A second official said there was no firm agreement yet on new talks but that the conditions seemed very much in place. Mr. Dacic and Mr. Nikolic have also been sending positive signals. The president told the UN General Assembly this week he is seeking “lasting peace” with Kosovo and that he “strongly” desired the talks to continue though he reiterated Belgrade’s longstanding vow never to recognize Kosovo’s independence.
Mr Dacic was quoted telling a domestic paper he has “no problem” sitting down with Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci. The momentum seems to have picked up in New York where Baroness Ashton met with both Mr. Thaci and Mr. Nikolic on the sidelines of the annual UN gathering.
Baroness Ashton had already told Mr. Dacic at a Brussels meeting on Sept. 4 she was ready to step in more directly to help resolve the toughest political issues.
At Thursday’s meeting with the president, she “stressed the need for Serbia to boldly engage in these talks and encouraged President Nikolic to be ready to take some tough decisions,” according to her office.
Her message to Mr. Thaci was similar: “both sides needed to be ready to engage, including at political level.”
For Serbia, a relaunch of talks could bring rewards in its accession bid to join the EU. The 27-nation bloc agreed in March to give Belgrade candidate status – clearing the way for negotiations. But the EU said talks would only actually begin if ties improved with Pristina.
There’s an incentive for Kosovo too. The EU will release a feasibility study on an association accord with Kosovo on Oct. 10 – the first formal step in the often lengthy process of seeking EU membership. Stalled relations with Belgrade would make that process even lengthier.

Barca claim thrilling victory

Barcelona maintained their 100 per cent start to the new Primera Division campaign with a thrilling 3-2 victory at 10-man Sevilla.
Tito Vilanova's men appeared to be heading for defeat when Piotr Trochowski and Alvaro Negredo fired Sevilla into a deserved 2-0 lead, but Cesc Fabregas' brace pulled Barca level before substitute David Villa secured the win in stoppage time.
Sevilla were not helped by the 72nd-minute dismissal of Gary Medel following a clash with Fabregas, with Barca's final two goals coming while the hosts were attempting to hold on with 10 men.
Barca's sixth win in as many games leaves them four points clear of Malaga at the summit, while Sevilla stay in fifth after their first defeat of the campaign.
Malaga moved into second place for 24 hours at least as they cruised to a 4-0 win over 10-man Real Betis at La Rosaleda.
The visitors got off to the worst possible start as keeper Casto was sent off after just 11 minutes for bringing down Eliseu inside the area and Joaquin confidently stroked home the penalty.
Javier Saviola then continued his great form with the second just before the half-hour and the hosts' fine afternoon was rounded off in the final 20 minutes when Antonio Amaya could only direct Nacho Monreal's cross into his own net before Isco dinked in the fourth moments later.
Valencia recorded only their second victory of the new Primera Division season after easing past Real Zaragoza 2-0 at the Mestalla.
Sofiane Feghouli opened the scoring for Los Che in the 12th minute and Jonathan Viera doubled the advantage just before the hour mark.
The dismissal of Feghouli moments later meant Valencia were left facing a nervy final half-hour, but Mauricio Pellegrino's men held on for a much-needed victory following their disappointing start to the campaign.

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Albania, Greece, Italy Sign TAP MoU


The Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) project has got a boost of support this week with a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed between Albania, Italy and Greece for the project.
The MoU, signed yesterday evening, the TAP consortium said today, was signed at the United Nations General Assembly in New York. The signing of the deal forms the basis for the construction of the pipeline through the signing countries and will form the basis of the legal framework for the project.
Managing Director of TAP, Kjetil Tungland, says that the agreement furthers the project and is an important step for all involved.
"Today’s signing follows a number of major milestones that TAP has achieved this year, including being the first pipeline to be selected by the Shah Deniz Consortium in February, a Cooperation Agreement with the consortium in June and the Funding Agreement with BP, SOCAR and Total that was signed in August," he said. "We are working to further progress the project in the coming months."
Today, EU Commissioner for Energy Günther Oettinger also welcomed the signing today, saying the pipeline, which will transport 20 billion cubic metres of gas a year, would be important in achieving the EU's plans for energy security.
"This is another important step towards our aim to get gas directly from the Caspian Region," he said.

Clashes in Syria Start Blaze in Medieval Marketplace


BEIRUT—Fires sparked by clashes between government troops and rebels raged through the medieval marketplace of Aleppo on Saturday, destroying hundreds of shops lining the vaulted passageways where foods, fabrics, perfumes and spices have been sold for centuries, activists said.

Amateur footage posted online by activists showed flames raging through the stone passageways, the wooden doors of shops crackling in the heat as rebels struggled to put out the blaze with a garden hose. Other videos showed a pall of smoke hanging over the city's skyline.
The souk, a labyrinth of narrow alleys lined with shops, was once a major tourist attraction, but has been the scene of near-daily firefights and shelling in recent weeks after rebels who fought their way into the city two months ago pushed toward its center. Activists say regime troops and snipers have taken up positions in the citadel that dominates the city.
The fire started late Friday amid heavy government shelling, and was still burning Saturday morning, activists said. One, who is based in the city, estimated that the majority of the neighborhood's hundreds of shops were destroyed.
"It's a disaster," said Ahmad al-Halabi, speaking from the site by telephone. "The fire is threatening to spread to remaining shops." Syrian authorities had cut the city's water supply, he added, making it more difficult to put out the flames. He said rebels and civilians were working together to control the blaze with a limited number of fire extinguishers.
"It is a very difficult and tragic situation there," he said. "There are narrow, hard to reach streets where the fire is still burning."

Since the rebel offensive began in August, each side has controlled about half of the city and has repeatedly tried—but failed—to capture the rest.
Once considered a bastion of support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, Aleppo has in the past two months become the focus of the insurgency. Its fall would give the opposition a major strategic victory, with a stronghold in the north near the Turkish border.
Rebels launched Thursday what they said would be a "decisive battle" to drive Mr. Assad's forces out of Aleppo and fighting has since spread to wide swaths of the city.
The Aleppo souks aren't the only Syrian cultural treasures to have fallen victim to the chaos of the country's uprising and the crackdown by the Assad regime.
Some of the country's most significant sites, including centuries-old fortresses, have been caught in the crossfire between regime forces and rebels. Others have been turned into military bases, raising archaeologists' fears of damage.
Regime shelling of neighborhoods where the opposition is holed up has smashed historic mosques, churches and souks in central Homs province and elsewhere the country. Looters have stolen artifacts from excavations and museums.
Rodrigo Martin, an expert in ancient Syrian historical sites, said all six of Syria's Unesco world heritage sites have suffered varying degrees of damage since the start of the uprising.
Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory opposition group, said it wasn't clear how the fire at the Aleppo market was started, that at least 200 shops had burned. The group relies on a wide network of activists on the ground.
The claims could not be independently verified because of limitations on the work of journalists in Syria.
Fighting continued in many parts of Aleppo Saturday and activists said at least three people were killed, including two rebel fighters. Syria's state-run news agency SANA said soldiers were pursuing military operations against armed groups in Aleppo and its outskirts, inflicting heavy losses on the "terrorists," the term used by authorities to refer to rebels.
In the Damascus suburb of Qudsaya, activists said the bodies of at least eight men were found who appeared to have been summarily executed, but the circumstances weren't immediately clear.

Ukraine's Former Prime Minister Makes Video Appeal


KIEV, Ukraine—Ukraine's jailed former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko urged her country Saturday to defeat President Viktor Yanukovych's party in October's parliamentary election.
In an emotional video appeal, Ms. Tymoshenko accused Mr. Yanukovych of turning Ukraine into a "police state."
Her lawyer says the video, filmed Friday, was recorded by him on a cellphone in a hospital where she is receiving treatment for back pain. It was the first such video since the former prime minister was jailed over a year ago on charges of abusing her office during natural gas import negotiations with Russia in 2009.
The West has condemned her imprisonment as politically motivated and the European Union has put on hold a key cooperation deal with Kiev over Ms. Tymoshenko's jailing.
Ms. Tymoshenko, 51, the country's top opposition leader, denies all the charges against her, and accuses Mr. Yanukovych of throwing her in jail to bar her from contesting the Oct. 28 election.
In the video, Ms. Tymoshenko urges Ukrainians to support her party in the vote and end what she called Mr. Yanukovych's "criminal" rule.
"Today, unfortunately, the whole country lives under a criminal authority," said a pale-looking Ms. Tymoshenko, wearing a white shirt, her hair combed into a long blond braid.
Mr. Yanukovych's office declined to comment on the video.
Mr. Yanukovych's Party of Regions hopes to maintain its parliamentary majority, but will struggle to do so in the face of an opposition re-energized by Ms. Tymoshenko's jailing. The next presidential election is in 2015.

UEFA uphold Rapid ban



Austrian club Rapid Vienna have lost their appeal against the punishment imposed by UEFA following incidents at the Europa League play-off first leg against Greek opponents PAOK in Salonika last month.
The €75,000 fine handed down by the UEFA Control and Disciplinary Body has been upheld by European football’s governing body and Rapid must play their next UEFA competition home game behind closed doors.
This sanction did not apply to the play-off second leg between Rapid and PAOK in Vienna on August 30 which Rapid won 3-0 to advance to the Europa League group stage 4-2 on aggregate.
Rapid are also disqualified from a UEFA competition for which they would normally qualify within the next five years, but this ban is suspended for a probationary period of three years.

Motor Racing : Wolff casts doubt on Senna future at Williams



LONDON: Williams want penalty-prone Pastor Maldonado to stay with them next season but Bruno Senna's future with the Formula One team is less certain, influential shareholder and executive director Toto Wolff indicated on Tuesday. The Austrian, increasingly cast as the eventual successor to team principal and founder Frank Williams, told the official Formula One website (www.formula1.com) ahead of Sunday's Singapore Grand Prix that a decision on drivers for 2013 was still some way off. "We are taking different looks at the issue, but the minute we discuss it we are going to mess up Pastor and Bruno - and maybe others that we try talking to," Wolff said when asked whether Williams would stick with the same lineup.

"I would give it another month before we are going to have the first idea of what we want." Williams have highly rated Finnish youngster Valtteri Bottas as their test and reserve driver, who also has management links to Wolff and would be a well-placed internal candidate to step up to a race seat. Bottas has taken part in several Friday morning practice sessions this season. Venezuelan Maldonado brings substantial sponsorship with him from his country's state oil company PDVSA and is also a race winner after his pole-to-flag victory in Spain this year, former champions Williams' first triumph since 2004. However, he has also been involved in a spate of incidents that have led to numerous starting grid penalties and cost the team precious points.

Huge talent: Wolff, who works closely with Frank Williams and took on the executive director role in July, made it clear that he expected Maldonado to stay and lead the team further up the grid. "In 2013 we will have a carry-over of the car so I'd like to see us in the points more regularly. Pastor hopefully stays with us and has learned his lessons – so the next logical step would be the top six in the constructors' – or even top five," he said. Wolff said Maldonado had a "huge raw talent", was extremely fast and also an intelligent driver who realised he needed to take a different approach. "Maybe Pastor has to change the way he is driving and he has accepted that. So we take it from there. I am sure we will see many more successful races from him in the future," added the Austrian. His comments on Brazilian Senna, nephew of the late triple champion Ayrton who died in a Williams in 1994, were less effusive.

"Bruno is very intelligent and very sensitive and that means he is putting a lot of pressure on himself. Whether it is the name or not, I don't know," he declared. "Every racing driver in F1 is very competitive and Bruno is trying to fight the fact that he hasn't had a huge racing education, as the family didn't want him to go racing. But he has made his way into F1, which means that he is good. "He has an extremely fast team mate and he needs to follow his path. He is pushing very hard and we are trying to support him as best we can." Williams are currently eighth in the 12 team championship, nine points behind Force India. Maldonado has scored 29 points to Senna's 25. reuters

Sharapova reaches quarterfinals of Pan Pacific


 — Two-time champion Maria Sharapova overpowered Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic 6-2, 7-6 (5) Wednesday to advance to the Pan Pacific Open quarterfinals.
The second-seeded Russian was coming off a tough, three-hour win over British qualifier Heather Watson on Tuesday, while Safarova advanced to the third round on a walkover.
Sharapova coasted through the first set and led 3-0 before Safarova mounted a comeback, breaking Sharapova three times to take a 6-5 lead.
Sharapova broke Safarova in the final game to force a tiebreaker, which she won with an ace after 1 hour, 43 minutes.
"After a long match yesterday I was really happy to win in two sets," Sharapova said. "I had a bit of a letdown in the second set but was really happy that I could close it out in the tiebreaker."
Sharapova will face Sam Stosur in the quarterfinals. The eighth-seeded Australian beat Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia 6-4, 7-5.
In other matches, Sara Errani of Italy beat Marion Bartoli 3-6, 6-2, 6-2, while Nadia Petrova of Russia beat Petra Martic of Croatia 7-6 (2), 6-7 (1), 6-4.
After struggling in the first set, the sixth-seeded Errani broke Bartoli in the second game of the second set and never looked back.
"It was a tough match on this fast court," said Errani, who has won three titles this year. "I didn't start off well but neither did she. She got a little tired in the second set and that's when I started to play better."
Top-ranked Victoria Azarenka was scheduled to face Roberta Vinci of Italy later Wednesday.

Read more here: http://www.heraldonline.com/2012/09/25/4288895/azarenka-sharapova-advance-at.html?#storylink=cpy

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Wayne Rooney believes the competition up front at Manchester United is good for the club


Manchester United frontman Wayne Rooney feels the multiple striking options at manager Sir Alex Ferguson's disposal can only be a good thing for the club.
With Rooney now recovered from the gashed thigh he suffered against Fulham last month, Ferguson has five international forwards to select from ahead of Saturday evening's Premier League encounter with Tottenham.
It says something that perceived first-choice pairing Rooney and Robin van Persie have yet to start a game together this season, yet still United have managed to move their way into second spot, just behind early pace-setters Chelsea.However, with a tricky Capital One Cup tie against Newcastle already negotiated, a UEFA Champions League encounter with CFR Cluj to come on Tuesday before a Premier League rematch with the Magpies next Sunday, the England striker realises there is plenty of work for everyone.
"There is a lot of competition up front, but that is great for the squad," said Rooney. "The manager will rotate when he feels it is necessary.
"There are a lot of games throughout the season. It means we can get a rest here and there to make sure we are ready for the big games towards the end."

Effective

Rooney occupied a deep-lying role against Newcastle, which allowed him to exploit gaps behind Danny Welbeck and Javier Hernandez.
Very effective the 26-year-old was too, although whether it is a policy Ferguson would be prepared to persevere with in the Premier League is open to debate.
Rooney is not complaining though.
After being dropped against Fulham, then getting trodden on by Hugo Rodallega when he was finally introduced, it feels like the season is starting again.
"It does feel like the start of my season," he said.
"It was a freak injury and whilst it wasn't too bad, I had to be careful when I came back training and in games because it could open up again.
"There is only so much you can do in the gym. You need that training and game time to get you to your full sharpness.
"I am glad to be over it and back playing."