AUSTRALIA’s domination of England in the one-day series is providing some small consolation for their defeat in the Tests but shows the wrong team won the Ashes, former spin bowler Shane Warne said The Australians have rebounded spectacularly from their 2-1 Ashes defeat by winning the first five of their seven one-day matches against the English. “It’s great to see them (Australia) playing well,” Warne said. “They (England) have a pretty poor side and Australia are starting to hit their straps. “They were hurting after the Ashes – it’s good to see them bounce back and play well.” Warne said the one-day results added weight to his argument that the Australians were the better side in the Ashes and should not have lost the series. “You don’t mind being beaten in any sport if a side outplays you on the day or over a series, then so be it,” he said. “I suppose the hardest thing for all us Australians was to watch them play and lose to England, who I didn’t think was a better side. “You look at all the numbers, the runs and wickets, we dominated all that sort of stuff, but through a few different things here and there… it probably cost us.” Warne was part of the Australian side that thumped England 5-0 at home in 2006-07, helping regain the Ashes and avenge a 2-1 loss away in 2005. Warne was among a handful of senior players who retired during or after that series, triggering the present rebuilding of the national side, but predicted the Australians would again regain the Ashes when the series returns to Australia in 2010-11. “I don’t think England were a better side than us, no way, but you have to say ‘well played’ to England because they won,” he said. “I’m looking forward to them coming out here in 18 months. (Eurosport) South Africa athletics officials `humiliate’ Semenya: report South African athletics officials have accused the IAAF, athletics’ world governing body, of creating controversy by ordering gender tests on Semenya, who crushed opponents in the women’s 800 meters at the world championships in Berlin. “The tests took almost two hours and Semenya became frustrated and even angry over the humiliating nature of the tests,” Afrikaans daily Beeld quoted Athletics South Africa’s (ASA) former head coach Wilfred Daniels as saying of the tests carried out in South Africa. Beeld said Semenya was “bitterly upset” when photographs of her private parts were taken during the examination, where a team doctor was present. “Her feet were in stirrups when the photographs were taken,” Daniels said. ASA President Leonard Chuene told Reuters he could not comment on the Beeld report because he had not seen it. He declined to say whether ASA officials had conducted a gender test on Semenya before the Berlin championships. No decision is expected until late November but the IAAF has declined to confirm a report last week in Australia’s Daily Telegraph newspaper which said she had both male and female sexual characteristics. Semenya was led to believe she would undergo drug tests in South Africa, Beeld said. Semenya called and sent text messages to friends from the hospital to tell them about her ordeal, the newspaper said. Some South Africans have accused the IAAF of racism for ordering the gender tests on Semenya, saying her broad shoulders and imposing musculature were common in women’s athletics. FOCUS ON TRAINING “To put it out in front of the world like that, I am very disappointed in them because I feel that it is unfair to her,” he said during a visit to Tel Aviv this week. “Now, for the rest of her life she’ll be marked as ‘the one’.” Semenya has said she is focusing on training, a local radio station reported yesterday. “She wants to avoid public scrutiny and instead focus on her training,” said Talk Radio 70 “She refused to be recorded, saying her deep voice has been used by the media to fuel the gender controversy.” South African President Jacob Zuma has decried the invasion of Semenya’s privacy and what he called the violation of her rights. Daniels resigned last month over the way the Semenya matter has been handled by ASA. “Do you think anybody can recover from the emotional hurt and humiliation she has undergone? What do you think will go through her head when she walks out on an athletics track after all her intimate details have been sent out to the world?”
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – Runner Caster Semenya was subjected to humiliating tests in South Africa even before a gender row erupted over her world championship victory last month, a South African newspaper reported.
Retired American track and field star Carl Lewis blamed ASA officials for Semenya’s predicament, saying they had failed to protect her and deal with the issue.
Warne says wrong team won Ashes
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