Thursday, 13 October 2011

Marathon Runner Catches The Bus To The Finish Line!!!

This is one you have to put in the "Is this for real" category!!

Rob Sloan claimed third place in the Kielder Marathon after completing the 26.2 mile course in an impressive time of 2:51:00.
But suspicions were raised by fellow runners bemused that they had not seen Sloan pass them during Sunday’s race.
After initially denying any wrongdoing, Sloan admitted to hopping onto a bus at the 20-mile mark because he was feeling tired. He then re-emerged from a wooded area of the course and picked up the bronze medal.
Witnesses reported seeing him hide behind a tree until the first and second placed runners went past, then rejoining the race behind them.
The 31-year-old now faces dismissal from his club, Sunderland Harriers, and could be banned from taking part in future marathons.
Steve Cram, the former world record holder and organiser of the race in Kielder Water, Northumberland, said: “He was the only runner in the whole of the race who ran the second half quicker than the first half.”
Sloan, a former Army mechanic from Downhill, Sunderland, was seen boasting to reporters minutes after completing the event. He described the race as “absolutely, unbelievably tough”.
When his placing was brought into doubt, he was indignant.
“I’m upset and angry that someone wants to cast these aspersions. It’s laughable, is what it is,” he insisted.
However, after organisers launched an investigation, he confessed to hitching a ride.
The bus was one of 12 laid on to ferry spectators around the lakeside course, which has been dubbed “Britain’s most beautiful marathon”.
A statement from the organisers said: “The athlete who was disqualified on Sunday after initially placing third has admitted that he failed to complete the whole course of 26.2 miles.
“Rob Sloan of Sunderland Harriers had apparently made the decision to withdraw from the race at approximately 20 miles due to fatigue and after returning to the Leaplish Park area he decided to run the closing section of the course and crossed the finish line in third place.
“This was rightly questioned by several witnesses including the rightful third place finisher, Steven Cairns of Peebles, Scotland, who has been awarded the prize.”
Sloan won a 10k race on Saturday and that result appears to hold firm.
He joined Sunderland Harriers a few months ago. Ann Lillie, club treasurer and vice-president, said: “It’s a bit of a shock. We have a good reputation and obviously this has brought the club into disrepute.
“It’s not the kind of advertising we need. We’ll be discussing Rob’s future when the executive committee meets next week.”
The runner later awarded the bronze medal, Steven Cairns, was one of those who shared their suspicions with organisers.
Writing on Facebook, he said: “I was third the whole way but somehow I crossed the line and was given fourth! He has stolen my glory and my moment on the podium.
“I started to doubt myself as he was adamant he had gone past me. I could understand him taking the goody bag and the t-shirt but to do the press interview claiming he was third…”
In 2009, Anthony Gaskell, 69, became the fastest pensioner to run the London Marathon when he finished in a record three hours and five minutes.
However, it emerged later that he took a short cut that knocked 10 miles off the course and his name was removed from the results.

Who really believes that there's no corruption in FIFA????

Can anyone ever believe this sport is free from corruption when it seems to go right to the halls of power at FIFA itself? If this is how business is done at the highest levels of the so-called "World Game" then the sport is a joke!!!!!!! You want something, then show me the money!!!!


Jack WarnerThe controversial former vice-president of world football's governing body FIFA has been caught on tape telling the organisation's Caribbean delegates they must decide whether to accept 'gifts' of £25,000 from disgraced former Presidential candidate Mohamed Bin Hammam. The Telegraph (UK) has obtained footage of a meeting on 11 May, the day after Jack Warner is alleged to have offered delegates the money in brown envelopes.

Warner is taped opening the meeting by asking "Is the media here?" He then goes on to explain that Bin Hammam had wanted to bring some gifts – Warner refers to a "silver tray and some trinkets" – but that to do so for 30 people would be "too much luggage". So, says Warner, he asked Bin Hammam to bring cash.

"I said to him if you bring cash, I don't want you to give cash to anybody, but when you do you can give it to the CFU (Caribbean Football Union) and the CFU will give it to its members. Because I don't want [it] to even remotely appear that anyone has any obligation to vote for you because of what gifts you have given them."

Business is business
Later in the same meeting, Warner issues a typically robust challenge to anyone tempted to turn down the 'gift'. He says: "I know there are some people here who believe they are more pious than thou. If you are pious go to a church friends, but the fact is that our business is our business."

Bin Hammam was forced to withdraw from the election for the presidency and has been banned from football for life after being found guilty of attempted bribery. Warner also faced charges of paying bribes, but resigned in June before FIFA's ethics committee could complete its procedures.

Warner said at the time that any investigation would see him "fully exonerated" and that "gifts have been around throughout the history of FIFA". He went on "What is happening now for me is hypocrisy." FIFA said the ending of investigations following Warner's resignation meant "the presumption of innocence is maintained".

Ernst & Young

Warner's time at FIFA was dogged by controversy. In 2006, FIFA's auditors Ernst & Young found Warner's family had made a profit of at least $1m from reselling tickets to that year's World Cup. He was fined $1m and asked to sever all ties with the company concerned. But Warner's son and personal assistant remained at the company throughout 2006, and only $250,000 has been repaid.

Scottish FA President John McBeth says that Warner asked for money for a friendly between Trinidad and Tobago and Scotland to be paid into his personal account in 2004. Warner responded by calling McBeth a racist bigot.

In 2011, allegations that Warner asked for personal payments to back England's World Cup bid were aired by former FA chief Lord Triesman, and the BBC published correspondence from Warner to the English FA requesting funds for the purchase of Haiti's World Cup TV rights.

What a Joke!!!!!!