Galaxy

21 Oct 2014

Ancelotti warned Liverpool fans not to boo Cristiano Ronaldo

Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti has warned Liverpool fans that it will not help their team's cause to boo Cristiano Ronaldo when the European champions visit Anfield for their Champions League clash on Wednesday.
Ronaldo, 29, spent six years at Liverpool's arch-rivals Manchester United earlier in his career, meaning the current holder of the Ballon d'Or is set for a barracking from the home fans when he faces them in their Group B encounter.
However, Ancelotti does not believe that his star forward's return to the home of his old foe -- a ground where he has never scored in five previous appearances -- will affect him.
When asked about it, Ancelotti told The Sun: "No, ha, ha, he won't be more motivated because it's Liverpool.
"Cristiano is always super-motivated. But if the atmosphere is hostile it motivates him more."

Oscar Pistorius sentenced to 5 years in prison in South African jail for killing his lover Reeva Steenkamp

Oscar Pistorius was dramatically jailed for five years today for killing his model girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp - but could spend as little as ten months behind bars.
The disgraced Paralympian wiped his eyes as he was handed a five-year prison term after the judge ruled that a non-custodial sentence would send the 'wrong message to the community'.
As he was led down to the cells, Miss Steenkamp's mother, June, smiled as she told of a sense of 'closure' after a seventh-month trial, but said it 'would not magic Reeva back.'
The model's ailing father, who suffered a stroke after his daughter's death, said he was 'very glad' the trial was over. A lawyer for the family said the sentence was 'welcome'.
The runner's sister Aimee briefly covered her head with a jacket and looked distressed. His family said he would not appeal the sentence.
The athlete was found guilty of culpable homicide, but was acquitted of murder after shooting Miss Steenkamp four times through a toilet cubicle door at his home last year. 
According to legal observers, Pistorius could spend only ten months in jail and, provided he poses no trouble to the prison authorities, could spend the remainder of his sentence under correctional supervision at home.
He is expected to be sent to a high-security wing at the gang-ridden Pretoria Central Prison, where one criminal kingpin has already threatened to 'take him out'.
According to the Act under which Pistorius was sentenced, he must spend at least one-sixth of his sentence before he can apply for leave to serve the rest under 'correctional supervision'.
The athlete appeared to have prepared himself to spend some time behind bars, while his uncle Arnold Pistorius, the head of the large family, said there would be no appeal against the sentence. 
National Prosecuting Authority, who have two weeks to decide whether to appeal against verdict or sentence, suggested they would be content to draw a line under the matter.
'We have stated that we were disappointed with the judgment but we take solace in fact that Pistorius will serve time in jail.' 
Judge Masipa began her summing up today by saying the decision on sentencing 'is mine - and mine alone'.
She told the court: 'Sentencing is about achieving the right balance. Sentencing is not a perfect exercise.'
She also said that prison would have 'no problems' catering for his disability if he was jailed, adding that a pregnant woman may be classified as vulnerable but would not necessarily avoid prison.
She also said it would be a 'sad day' for South Africa if there was a perception that it had one law for the rich and another for the poor.
She added: 'Nothing I do or say can reverse what happened to the deceased or her family.' 
Judge Masipa also sentenced Pistorius to three years in prison for unlawfully firing a gun in a restaurant in a separate incident weeks before Miss Steenkamp's death. 
She ordered that sentence to be wholly suspended.

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