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Ken Borland


Archive for 2013


Mt Moreland, La Lucia 0

Posted on January 22, 2013 by Ken

There are many, many Phragmites reedbeds scattered through South Africa and they do sustain an array of life and are an important habitat for birdlife.

But one reedbed in particular has become pretty famous – the Lake Victoria wetland in Mount Moreland, La Lucia, about 25km north of Durban. That’s because since the 1970s it has been a roost for what is reputed to be millions of European Swallows and has become quite the tourist attraction and sundowner event for people on the North Coast.

I was drawn as much by the potentially amazing sight of all those swallows as by an old record of Black Coucal in the area but, as typically happens when one goes birding for something in particular, it fails to turn up!

There were about 50 swallows around as the shortest night of the year fell (December 21), but barely enough to be considered a flock!

It was still a wonderful way to enjoy sunset, sitting on the terraced banks above the reedbed, enjoying some snacks & beverages.

The Mt Moreland swallow viewsite. Courtesy http://www.barnswallow.co.za/

A Purple Heron flew over as a reminder that the reedbeds are valuable for other birds too, while I went walking in search of a Burchell’s Coucal that was calling away, only to return and find it posing on a dead treestump!

There was no sign of its Black cousin, but a half-dozen Hamerkop did fly over as well, shortly before the swallows made their underwhelming arrival.

 

Sightings list

Spottedbacked Weaver

Speckled Mousebird

Blackeyed Bulbul

Yellowbilled Kite

Hadeda Ibis

Burchell’s Coucal

Purple Heron

Hamerkop

European Swallow

 

R20m loss for Cricket SA as SABC cut back 0

Posted on January 21, 2013 by Ken

The SABC announced on Wednesday that they would only be providing live coverage of the limited-overs and T20 internationals between South Africa and New Zealand, and Cricket South Africa (CSA) are set to lose R20 million as a result.

The only coverage SABC are willing to provide of the two Tests against the Black Caps will be two highlights packages per day and, as a result,  CSA will only receive R11 million – R3 million from the SABC and R8 million from advertising time that has already been bought by the sponsors – for the television rights, when their actual value is R30 million.

“We are disappointed that the Tests will receive limited coverage and, although we are committed to the free-to-air broadcaster as part of our development mandate, we took a substantial cut in our broadcast rights fee to ensure we can take cricket to the South African public,” acting CSA chief executive Jacques Faul said in a statement released on Wednesday.

But behind the scenes, the cricket governing body is seething over the SABC’s unwillingness to fulfil their Icasa-stipulated mandate of providing live coverage of sporting events that are in the national interest. South Africa have been the number one ranked team in Test cricket since August, but the matches against New Zealand are their first on home soil since winning the pre-eminent ranking.

CSA sources told Business Day that Faul is so upset over the deal that he had to be talked out of considering whether to step down as CEO.

“The decision to broadcast these matches is a clear indication that we take our mandate seriously and we are cognisant that the public of South Africa deserve to see their cricket team – which is rated number one in the world in Test cricket and also highly in the other formats of the game.

“The SABC will continue to serve the public of South Africa and be true to their mandate of educating, informing and entertaining them,” SABC spokesman Sizwe Nzimande said.

CSA are now determined to handle their television rights differently next summer, with SuperSport likely to be offered exclusive rights and paying considerably more for them.

As one high-ranking CSA official said: “We’ve been falling over backwards to try and get cricket on free-to-air television because we know how vital that is to developing the game, especially amongst the disadvantaged communities. But now we’ve sold the rights to SABC at nearly one-third of their value. Where do they think most of our money to run our development programmes  comes from? It’s from selling the television rights and now we’ve taken a big knock in that department.”

Negotiations with the SABC had been ongoing for the last two months through world leading television rights company IMG, while CSA had also tried to get Sascoc and the sports ministry to intervene on their behalf as Faul acknowledges the importance of cricket being on the majority of TVs in the country.

“To grow our game, we need cricket on free-to-air. We see it as an obligation to all South Africans that they can see their number one team in action,” he said earlier this week.

http://www.bdlive.co.za/sport/cricket/2012/12/20/cricket-south-africa-seethes-over-sabc-test-rights-snub

Els proves he’s not of a bygone time 0

Posted on January 21, 2013 by Ken

 

Ernie Els introduced his own channel on the YouTube website just over a year ago to signal that he is keeping up with the modern age but, even more importantly, the Big Easy showed that he is not a golfing hero of a bygone time when he won the Open Championship in July to provide one of the South African sporting highlights of the year.

Els’s one-shot victory at Royal Lytham was his fourth major title and it came at a time when most observers felt the 43-year-old would not win one of golf’s big four tournaments ever again. Apart from knee injuries and his increasing involvement in charities dealing with autism, which his 10-year-old son Ben suffers from, Els seemed to lack the mental toughness required to clinch victory in the most pressured sporting environment imaginable ever since he triple-bogeyed the 18th hole at Leopard Creek when leading the Alfred Dunhill Championship by two strokes in 2007.

But Els showed wonderful composure on the back nine in the final round at the tight, famous old links course, the same venue where he finished second in 1996 and third in 2001.

When Els finished his round with his fourth birdie on the second nine holes, overnight leader Adam Scott was still three shots ahead, but the Australian suffered a woeful collapse in the next 20 minutes, bogeying the last four holes to give the South African his second Open title.

Shaky putting had been one of the prime reasons why Els had failed to win a major for 10 years and any tournament for two, but this year he turned to a belly putter and Sherylle Calder, the vision specialist who helped both England’s (2003) and South Africa’s (2007) Rugby World Cup-winning teams, for help and it worked.

Back in April, Louis Oosthuizen was chasing his own major title at the Masters in Augusta and, if he had managed to beat Bubba Watson in a playoff, South Africa would have had two major wins in a year for the first time since Gary Player won the Masters and the Open in 1974.

Oosthuizen was actually two ahead with five holes to play, but just failed to weather a tremendous finish by the wacky Watson, who birdied four successive holes from the 13th. That brought him level with the 2010 Open champion and into a playoff.

Watson then had to overcome a wild drive into the trees on the second playoff hole and did it with one of the best shots ever seen at a major, a miraculous snap-hook on to the green that allowed him to save par, while Oosthuizen was short of the green after also finding trouble off the tee.

Oosthuizen would go on to reach the top 10 in the world rankings for the first time as he finished third on the European Tour’s order of merit, winning the Africa and Malaysian opens along the way.

South Africa’s other recent major winner, Charl Schwartzel, would sadly go backwards as he battled a niggling rib muscle injury, before ending the year on a high with overwhelming victories at the Thailand Golf Championship and then the Alfred Dunhill Championship at Leopard Creek.

Hot on their heels was fellow South African Branden Grace, who won four European Tour events in 2012 and also won the Sunshine Tour Order of Merit.

The other major winners were American Webb Simpson in the US Open and Rory McIlroy in the PGA Championship, the young Northern Irishman going on to successfully chase down the world number one ranking as well as winning both the US PGA and European money-lists.

While there is a maze of possibilities when it comes to the winners of golf majors, tennis was once again dominated by Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer on the men’s side, although Andy Murray joined that all-powerful trio when he finally broke his Grand Slam duck by winning the US Open. He also claimed the Olympic gold medal as he ended years of frustration at Wimbledon.

Djokovic beat Nadal to win the Australian Open, which went into the history books as the longest Grand Slam final, the Serbian triumphing 5-7 6-4 6-2 6-7 7-5 in an epic match that lasted five hours, 53 minutes.

Djokovic would go on to end the year as the number one ranked men’s player and win the ITF’s Player of the Year award, but he lost two other Grand Slam finals in 2012 as Nadal claimed a seventh French Open crown and Murray beat him at Flushing Meadow.

Federer, meanwhile, beat Murray in the Wimbledon final to claim his seventh crown at the London grasscourts – nobody has won more.

The women’s tennis circuit was more of a one-horse race as Serena Williams dominated the second half of the year, winning both the Wimbledon and US Open titles and claiming Olympics gold in both the singles and doubles events, with sister Venus.

Victoria Azarenka had begun the year by thrashing Maria Sharapova in the Australian Open final to become the new world number one, but her period of dominance was no more than an illusion as Sharapova completed her career Grand Slam by winning the French Open and regaining the top ranking.

One sportsperson who is clearly most capable of dominating his sport for many years to come is Formula One champion Sebastian Vettel.

The German won five F1 races this year to claim the overall title for the third successive time and, at just 25 years old, he is the youngest racing driver to win three championships.

Vettel did enough in the final race of the season, in the rain in Sao Paulo, to claim the title with a sixth-place finish. But the Red Bull racer had to come from the back of the field to do it and had to wait until Jenson Button beat title challenger Fernando Alonso into second place by two seconds in a thrilling finish to celebrate the overall crown.

But the award for the most exciting sporting event of the year must go to the Ryder Cup golf and Europe’s phenomenal comeback to beat the United States 14 ½ – 13 ½.

But they needed the greatest comeback in Ryder Cup history to do it, winning eight of the 12 singles matches on the final day to rebound from a 4-10 deficit. It all came down to the last two matches, with Martin Kaymer beating Steve Stricker on the final hole and Francesco Molinari halving with Tiger Woods, who bogeyed the 18th.

Victorious European captain José Maria Olazabal said: “To the 12 men of Europe, what you did out there was outstanding. All men die, but not all men live, and you made me feel alive again this week.

“I don’t know how heaven feels, but it must be close to this.”

– http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-12-18-sports-year-in-review-the-best-of-the-rest

SABC set to deny millions 0

Posted on January 21, 2013 by Ken

The SABC looks set to deny millions of South Africans live coverage of international cricket this summer despite Cricket South Africa (CSA) offering them broadcast rights at massively discounted rates.

By late yesterday, the SABC had still not accepted CSA’s latest proposal which involved them broadcasting South Africa’s home internationals this summer for a minimal fee, but with the state broadcaster paying over the money companies have already committed to be broadcast sponsors.

“It would be an absolute disaster if the South African cricket-loving public don’t get to see the number one Test team in the world in action. To grow the game, we need it on free-to-air television. We see it as an obligation to take cricket to all South Africans. It will be very, very sad if cricket is not on SABC,” CSA acting chief executive Jacques Faul told Business Day on Monday.

CSA have been in negotiation with the SABC for two months, through IMG, the global leaders in televised sports productions, but so far the broadcaster has just offered to screen highlights.

While CSA are desperate to ensure free-to-air broadcasts, there is no commercial benefit for them to do so. In fact, it costs them significant amounts of money as SuperSport would pay considerably more than they currently do if they had exclusive rights.

In previous years, the SABC have signed a broadcast agreement as late as on the morning of the first international match, but CSA insiders now believe even this won’t happen. This would be in contravention of the SABC’s mandate as stipulated by Icasa, the South African communications regulator, which compels the national broadcaster to show sporting events that are in the national interest.

The amount of money CSA’s regular sponsors have already paid for advertising time on the SABC would cover about half the rights fee the cricket governing body is seeking from the broadcaster. CSA would then supplement this amount by selling further advertising themselves. But even this proposal has so far failed to win over the SABC.

The home international season begins on Friday in Durban with the first of three T20 internationals against New Zealand.

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