Wednesday, August 1, 2012

An excess of drinks, drugs... and death: Magaluf is notorious for bingeing by British teenagers, but now the results are proving fatal

As dawn breaks on another sizzling summer’s day in Majorca, thousands of British teenagers stumble out of a huge dance club at 4am and spill into a seedy street full of neon-lit bars, lap-dancing joints and cheap kebab takeaways.
A 17-year-old girl in white shorts crashes drunkenly to the ground, legs askew, surrounded by her swaying friends. A group of boys lurch past, clutching Red Bull and vodka cocktails that they’ve bought for the equivalent of 25p. Their eyes are glazed and they burble incoherently in Manchester accents.
It has been a long night in the holiday resort of Magaluf and the main strip, called Punta Ballena, still pulsates to the deafening boom-de-boom music that started well before midnight.
Young British boys and girls are putting themselves at risk in Magaluf by bingeing on alcohol and drugs
Young British boys and girls are putting themselves at risk in Magaluf by bingeing on alcohol and drugs

One young reveller holds another up on the Punta Ballena strip, a notorious bar and club area of Magaluf on the Spanish island of Mallorca
One young reveller holds another up on the Punta Ballena strip, a notorious bar and club area of Magaluf on the Spanish island of Mallorca
The pavement is sticky with vomit and littered with cigarette butts as the young British revellers queue up for yet more cheap cocktails until the Punta Ballena bars finally close at 6am.
Lying at their feet is the tell-tale paraphernalia of so-called ‘hippy crack’ — countless red and blue balloons that have been used to suck in lungfuls of laughing gas (nitrous oxide).


Costing £3.90 a shot, they give the holidaymakers a burst of euphoria that is similar to the effects of a snort of cocaine.
Welcome to Magaluf — party central for young Britons every summer. However, there is a new and chilling danger for those who view a holiday of hot sun, dirt cheap booze and night after night on the Punta Ballena as a ‘rite of passage’ between youth and adulthood.
Visitor accidents and deaths in Magaluf have risen sharply, and many locals put this down to increased binge drinking by increasingly younger visitors
Visitor accidents and deaths in Magaluf have risen sharply, and many locals put this down to increased binge drinking by increasingly younger visitors

Too much, too young: The age of British drinkers in Magaluf is falling from 20 to 16, islanders have reported
Too much, too young: The age of British drinkers in Magaluf is falling from early 20s to some as young as 16, islanders have reported
According to new figures from the Foreign Office, ten Britons a week in Majorca and neighbouring Ibiza end up in hospital after having accidents following a drinking session.
Majorca has seen a 132 per cent rise in such hospital cases and this spring three British youngsters were killed after falling off balconies or down steep stairwells in Magaluf.
At this time of year the resort is a magnet for 12,000 youngsters from all over the UK as they celebrate the end of exams or their school days.
It has become the place to be because, they say, Ibiza is ‘too expensive’ and the once popular haunt of Newquay in Cornwall is ‘too cold’. One senior police officer on Majorca told me last week: ‘The British kids coming here are getting younger each year. They used to be in their early 20s, now they are as young as 16.
‘They come here without their parents and without any kind of supervision.
Adam Atkinson fell to death in Magaluf this summer, aged just 20 years old
Charlotte Faris, 23, who also fell to her death from a hotel in Magaluf, this summer
Three young Britons have died this summer in Magaluf by falling in their hotels, including Adam Atkinson, 20, left, and Charlotte Faris, 23
‘They all seem desperate to drink to excess, which is bewildering to us Spanish. There are plenty taking cannabis and ecstasy tablets, too. We have police patrolling the Punta Ballena, but there is nothing we can do to stop them partying.’
‘Yes, Magaluf is where we all want to be,’ confirmed dark-haired Mollie Last, 18, who finished her A-levels last term. She was sitting with two friends from Swansea, Alex  and Rachel, at a busy bar on the Punta Ballena at four in the morning.
She told me: ‘My mum didn’t want me to come to Magaluf. She thought it would be dangerous.’
Indeed, Mollie says there was a stabbing here on the Punta Ballena a few days ago and, in another terrifying incident, three holidaymakers were injured when they were mowed down by a car hurtling into a crowd on Sunday night.
But it’s the balcony deaths that have been the most frightening. They have involved British youngsters falling from high up in their hotels or apartment blocks, invariably in the early hours of the morning after leaving the Punta Ballena strip and often while high on drugs or after all-night drinking binges.
The holiday company Thomson specifically warns of the dangers on its website. It says: ‘Never sit or lean over the balcony rail and do not try to pass items to someone on another balcony. Never attempt to climb from one balcony to another . . . after drinking alcohol as your judgment might be affected.’
With so much drinking being done by so many young people in Magaluf, it's inevitable the Spanish police are kept busy
With so much drinking being done by so many young people in Magaluf, it's inevitable the Spanish police are kept busy

The bars of Magaluf contain a lethal mix of young people wanting to have a good time and very cheap and available alcohol
The bars of Magaluf contain a lethal mix of young people wanting to have a good time and very cheap and available alcohol
According to the recent Foreign Office report, many British youngsters are ‘likely to indulge in risky behaviour’ and a spokesman added: ‘A lot go wild. The sunshine, coupled with drinking cheap beer and cocktails, can land them in serious trouble.
‘At worst, they risk being brought home in a coffin.’
The balconies that are built onto almost every holiday room or apartment in Magaluf are considered particularly dangerous because of the low height of the railings.
Under local building regulations, they have to be a minimum of 1.3  metres (4ft 3in) high. But many say they should be much higher.
The Majorcan authorities are reluctant to talk about the problem, but ‘Leapy’ Lee Graham, the former British pop singer (his 1968 single Little Arrows reached No 2 in the UK singles chart) who lives in Majorca, is outspoken on the subject.
According to new figures from the Foreign Office, 10 Britons a week in Majorca and neighbouring Ibiza end up in hospital after having accidents following a drinking session
According to new figures from the Foreign Office, 10 Britons a week in Majorca and neighbouring Ibiza end up in hospital after having accidents following a drinking session

An ambulance is called for one holidaymaker, with a female friend clearly seen in distress behind him
An ambulance is called for one holidaymaker, with a female friend clearly seen in distress behind him
Leapy, 73, lost a young friend, Mark, 19, in a tragic balcony incident in 2004. After having a drink or two, the British teenager swung between balconies at his holiday apartment block and dropped to the ground.
‘Since Mark’s death, I have campaigned for higher balconies. These kids don’t deserve to die just because they have had a drink on holiday. Majorca should be protecting them, as holidaymakers bringing money to the island,’ said Leapy last week
‘But my campaign has not made a shred of difference. It has fallen on deaf ears and still they are dying and being injured here.’
He spoke out just after 19-year-old Peter Southwaite, from Potters Bar, Hertfordshire, became the latest balcony casualty. He was, said the Majorcan authorities, ‘lucky to be alive’, after he fell nearly 30ft from the second-floor balcony of the Magaluf Park Hotel in the early hours of last Wednesday.
Hotel staff who watched what happened said: ‘He started running along the hotel corridors, then climbed out of his balcony before falling downwards feet first ‘like a cat’.
Peter, who works for a building company, suffered serious leg injuries and was treated in hospital in Majorca’s capital, Palma.
Police say that when they tried to interview him he was too drunk to speak.
The rise of balcony deaths in Magaluf is the most worrying statistic of the lot. And 21 year old Sophie Waldron from North Yorkshire was one of many who found her 5th floor balcony unsafe
The rise of balcony deaths in Magaluf is the most worrying statistic of the lot. And 21 year old Sophie Waldron from North Yorkshire was one of many who found her 5th floor balcony unsafe

Peter Southwaite from Potters Bar, (seen here with girlfriend Jody Barlow) was one of the lucky ones. He escaped with only torn ligaments when he fell from the second floor of his hotel, late one night, while attempting to climb between balconies
Peter Southwaite from Potters Bar, (seen here with girlfriend Jody Barlow) was one of the lucky ones. He escaped with only torn ligaments when he fell from the second floor of his hotel, late one night, while attempting to climb between balconies
Sitting with his leg in a plaster-cast the next day, he explained to me how the accident happened on his first day in Majorca.
Peter had travelled to the island with a group of 11 boys and girls. They had booked four rooms, two on the second floor and two on the ninth.
‘We had a great night out but I had a row with my girlfriend,’ he said. ‘I went to try to find her room to say sorry but went to the wrong one, so I decided to climb over the balconies to get into her room, which was next door.
‘After climbing over the railings of the first balcony I jumped the gap of a few feet to the next. I managed to grab hold of the rail at the top, but I couldn’t pull myself up. I hung there for a few moments, but I knew I was about to fall.
‘At that moment, I thought I was about to die. I knew that climbing over balconies was dangerous. I had heard about the deaths of other kids here in Magaluf this year. I was stupid.’
Peter escaped more serious injury because he landed on a flat roof. But his accident was similar to the tragedies earlier this year when three young Britons, Adam Atkinson, 20, Benjamin Harper, 28, and Charlotte Faris, 23, plunged to their deaths in Magaluf.
Charlotte, whose ambition was to be a police officer, fell 30ft head first over the balcony of her hotel room in the early hours on the first night of her holiday
This week, Charlotte’s mother, Amy, from Stevenage, Hertfordshire, refuted Spanish authorities’ claims that her daughter had been drinking heavily. She insisted: ‘She wasn’t a crazy wild-child or the type to be balcony-hopping.’
(left to right) Emily Jakemen (19), John Turner (23) from Southampton, Emily Donaghy (19), and Sophie Walsron (21). All three girls are from Bedale in North Yorkshire were surprised at how cheap drinks were in the resort
(left to right) Emily Jakemen (19), John Turner (23) from Bath, Emily Donaghy (19), and Sophie Waldron (21). All three girls are from Bedale in North Yorkshire were surprised at how cheap drinks were in the resort

The end of the night in Magaluf sees the streets full of vomit and cigarette butts
The end of the night in Magaluf sees the streets full of vomit and cigarette butts
She said that her daughter’s body arrived back in Britain without a post-mortem report so she fears she will never know exactly what happened.
‘We feel Charlotte has been written off as just another Brit abroad and we want to warn other families that this could happen to anyone.’
Sadly, Charlotte did not to take out travel insurance because she was only on a short break, so the family were left to find the £5,000 to bring her body back to Britain.
A luckier victim was Jake Evans, 19, who plunged 90ft down seven storeys from a balcony at the Torrenova Hotel. He landed on a sun-lounger, which saved his life by cushioning his fall.
The Liverpudlian said afterwards: ‘It’s a miracle. The balcony was only waist-high. That’s the legal height in Majorca. I believe they should be much higher or replaced by windows.’
He admitted: ‘Drink is to blame for most balcony accidents. In Magaluf, you go from bar to bar having loads of cheap bevvies. That is what we come for.
‘Later, back at the hotel, I just leant over the balcony to try and catch a cigarette lighter that someone had thrown up to me from below and I toppled over.
‘I hit several other balcony railings on the way down. I woke up at the bottom, and there was blood everywhere and my mates were screaming. I fractured my skull, mangled by right wrist, broke some fingers, cut my eyelids, broke my front tooth, had a hole in my lip and was covered with cuts and bruises.’
The clubs and bars of Punta Ballena go on till 6am, which is in turn fueling a rise in crime and injuries
The clubs and bars of Punta Ballena go on till 6am, which is in turn fueling a rise in crime and injuries
Apart from the dangers of balconies, the Foreign Office now says there is a growing number of rapes of holidaymakers being reported to UK consular staff and, in the past year, these rose internationally from 115 to 127.
A survey earlier this year of 700 British youngsters in Majorca found 15 per cent had suffered sexual harassment while on holiday there, and 2.2 per cent had been raped, many while drunk.
Certainly in Magaluf last week there were persistent rumours of girl holidaymakers being raped. Many, I was told by the young revellers themselves, do not report the attacks because they are so drunk or drugged they cannot remember the next morning who has accosted them or where the incident happened.
None of this surprised me as I watched five girls from Hull, aged between 18 and 22, drunkenly walk up and down the Magaluf strip at 2am pulling up their T-shirts to bare their breasts.
Short of money, they were offering boys the chance to suck their nipples in exchange for a couple of euros.
The young Brits in Magaluf are drinking to dangerous levels, and are doing harm to themselves as a consequence
The young Brits in Magaluf are drinking to dangerous levels, and are doing harm to themselves as a consequence
The young Brits in Magaluf are drinking to dangerous levels, and are doing harm to themselves (and others) as a consequence of these actions
One of them, a well-spoken teenager called Jessica, who has just left school after taking her A-levels, told me: ‘It seemed a good way to get a bit of extra money for the holiday. We had all had a bit to drink. I realise you could call what we did “minor prostitution”. If our parents found out, they’d go mad.’ 
A few minutes later, on the Ballena strip as the sun rose, I found another group of British girls standing beside a wall, swaying and giggling.
On holiday from Bedale (the gateway to the Yorkshire Dales), they had been drinking for the best part of six hours and were about to go back to their hotel to sleep the day away.
When I asked them about the balcony accidents, Sophie Waldron, 21, said: ‘The one outside my hotel room seems very flimsy. I am 5ft 10in tall and if I am in high heels the railing only reaches to the top of my leg. I think it’s very dangerous, considering the amount of alcohol people are drinking here.
‘You can buy an entire round of vodka shots and cocktails on the Punta Ballena for less than £3. The bars even give away free T-shirts to entice you to buy the drink. At home, in our local club, the same round would cost £17.’
Magaluf may be the favourite place for young Brits, but it is serving up a dangerous holiday cocktail that will surely lead to more disasters in the future.

Veteran Briton Gordon dumped out of judo after narrow defeat to Russian Denisov

Veteran Winston Gordon has been dumped out of the 2012 Games after a narrow defeat to accomplished Russian Kirill Denisov at the ExCel arena.
Gordon lit up North Arena 2 with an ippon win over Alexandre Emond of Canada in the first round of the under-90kgs, but succumbed to defeat in the following round.
The 36-year-old Londoner, who just missed out on bronze from the Athens Games in 2004, delivered a much-needed boost for Team GB's judokas when he executed a perfect Tai-otoshi body drop to dispatch the world number 14.
Winston Gordon looks dejected after he crashed out of the under-90kg judo to Kirill Denisov
Winston Gordon looks dejected after he crashed out of the under-90kg judo to Kirill Denisov
Down you go: Gordon (left) bowed out of the under-90kg Judo on Wednesday to Denisov (right)
Down you go: Gordon (left) bowed out of the under-90kg Judo on Wednesday to Denisov (right)
Edinburgh's Sally Conway competes at under-70kgs, in the first round against Carine Ngarlemdana of Chad.
However, she is in the same pool as second seeded Dutchwoman Edith Bosch, the double Olympic silver medallist.
Conway, 25, was also looking to reach the last 16, which would put her within one victory of a shot at the medal fights this afternoon.
Good start: Gordon (right) mad e apromising start with a win against Alexandre Edmond of Canada
Good start: Gordon (right) mad e apromising start with a win against Alexandre Edmond of Canada

Tough break: Gordon (right) was spurred on by the home support but could not overcome the Russian
Tough break: Gordon (right) was spurred on by the home support but could not overcome the Russian
There was again plenty of support for the home judoka, whose attacking forced the Chad fighter into conceding a passivity penalty.
Conway moved further ahead midway through the contest with scoring throws of her own to take command and closed out victory with a holdown.
Team GB are looking to end a 12-year wait for a judo Olympic medal, since Kate Howey won silver in Sydney.
Gordon - who is sensei at the EB Phoenix Judo Club in Tooting - was next up against Russian Kirill Denisov, coming out to another standing ovation from the British crowd.
Game over: Gordon's hopes of getting on the podium in 2012 turned to dust when Denisov defeated him
Game over: Gordon's hopes of getting on the podium in 2012 turned to dust when Denisov defeated him
The three-time Olympian had to be on his guard against the shorter number seven seed, and was caught by a Yuko score after one minute and 15 seconds.
Lifted by chants of 'Winston' from around the arena, Gordon went back on the offensive.
However, he still trailed 1-0 heading into the final 30 seconds and went out by the narrowest of margins to end another British judoka's Olympic dreams.

Captain Sakho tracked by Premier League trio after being shown PSG exit door

Arsenal, Newcastle and Liverpool have all been put on high alert at Paris St Germain captain Mamadou Sakho was told he could leave the club.
The powerful defender has a bleak future in the French capital despite his standing as a fans favourite having been born in the city and come through the ranks at the club since the age of six.
End of the red road: PSG captain Mamadou Sakho looks set to leave the club
End of the red road: PSG captain Mamadou Sakho looks set to leave the club

 
However, now 22 years old, Sakho's form has dropped and he was left out of the team for large parts of Carlo Ancelotti's first six months in charge.
The centre-half has seen competition for places increase since a massive injection of Arab cash last year, and he featured just twice after the middle of March.
The arrival of Thiago Silva - widely regarded as the planet's best defender - from AC Milan has further hampered Sakho's chances of proving himself.
According to the Mirror, the France international's agents are offering him around Europe having already received interest from England, Italian giants AC Milan and French outfit Lille.
Arsenal have long admired Sakho but need to off-load fringe defenders Sebastien Squillaci and Johan Djourou before they can make a move.
Liverpool, meanwhile, are bracing themselves for a battle over Dan Agger and could move for Sakho as a like-for-like replacement with the Dane being targetted by Manchester City and Barcelona.

Wenger hits out at reckless spending of rivals as he warns of financial doom

 Arsene Wenger has once again warned against the inevitable financial ruin faced by football and taken a swipe at rivals Manchester City and Chelsea.
The Frenchman, who has long fought against cash inequality in the game, believes the vast wealth foreign investors have poured into their respective clubs has damaged football and the transfer market.
Wenger is continuing to strengthen his own squad at a level below the likes of Chelsea, who have already lavished £32million on Eden Hazard and £25million on teenager Oscar. The Gunners, meanwhile, have added Lukas Podolski and Olivier Giroud for a combined £23m.
But while pointing to the vast income generated by Emirates Stadium, compared with Stamford Bridge and Etihad Stadium, Wenger claimed the unlimited resources of others have had a negative impact on the game.
Swimming up stream: Arsene Wenger continues to battle against cash inequality
Swimming up stream: Arsene Wenger continues to battle against cash inequality
 
Contract rebel: Robin van Persie
Contract rebel: Robin van Persie
The Frenchman, in The Sun, said: 'We consider ourselves in a privileged position because we have a massive income. But overall we are not mega-rich because we do not have unlimited resources.
'A club can buy players like PSG has done or Manchester City or Chelsea, with unlimited resources, but overall football suffers. Look at the activity on the transfer market since the start of the summer.
'Europe at the moment is like the Titanic but we live in football like nothing matters. More than ever we have to run our club in a strict way because it looks like everybody suffers in Europe.
'I would be surprised if football is not touched by it at some stage. If you look at debt in football across Europe at the moment it is quite massive and we have to be responsible.
'We have to be ambitious but also make sure we are not getting in trouble financially.
Arsenal are currently negotiating.the terms of new contracts for Theo Walcott and Alex Song, while they were keen to tie Robin van Persie to a new contract before the Dutchman openly questioned the ambitions of the club last month.
'It is difficult for us because the wages in some other clubs are very high. But of course our players quite rightly compare themselves to the players of the other clubs.'

Chicharito will be better than ever next season, warns Ferguson

 Sir Alex Ferguson has fired a warning shot to Manchester United's title rivals, by saying that striker Javier Hernandez will be better than ever this season.
Hernandez had an outstanding debut campaign at Old Trafford, but struggled to reach the same heights last year after Danny Welbeck was favoured over the Mexican.
Firing on all cylinders: Javier Hernandez is hoping to reach a similar tally to his 20 goals in 2010-11 season
Firing on all cylinders: Javier Hernandez is hoping to reach a similar tally to his 20 goals in 2010-11 season
 
Ferguson said: 'I think this season we’ll see a better Chicharito.
'For the last four or five years he’s played all through the summer. This year, with the co-operation of Mexico, he’s had a proper rest.
'We wanted to give him as much rest as possible. He had a couple of weeks off and then joined the Mexico side for a couple of qualifying games before getting another few weeks’ rest.
'That was important for him and I’m sure he’ll reap the benefits.
'We’ve already seen the fruits of that in the early training sessions and I think he’ll have a top season.'
The 24-year-old hitman scored 20 goals in the 2010-11 season at United, but only managed 12 in United red last term.

New York Red Bulls 1 Tottenham 2: Bale hits target to complete miracle recovery

 
Gareth Bale played and scored for Tottenham - just three days after branding Charlie Adam a 'coward' for the tackle that left him in a protective boot.
The Wales international played 74 minutes and hit a second-half equaliser as Spurs secured a 2-1 win against New York Red Bulls in the final match of their US pre-season tour.
Bale and manager Andre Villas-Boas were fuming after Adam's hefty challenge in the 0-0 draw against Liverpool on Saturday left the Spurs winger with an ankle injury.
Fighting fit: Gareth Bale made a swift return to action for Spurs after Charlie Adam's tackle last week
Fighting fit: Gareth Bale made a swift return to action for Spurs after Charlie Adam's tackle last week
Initially Bale feared he could miss the start of the season, but the forward made a miraculous recovery to play a key role in Tottenham's win in the Big Apple.
 
Bale was the obvious shock name on the Spurs team-sheet, but even more surprisingly he started in an unfamiliar central striker role as Villas-Boas tinkered with his side given the lack of striking options after Jermain Defoe flew home due to a family bereavement.
Meanwhile, Tim Cahill made his Red Bulls debut after completing his move from Everton - while Thierry Henry did not even make the bench.
And the Australia international made an immediate impact, winning his new club a seventh minute penalty when Jan Vertonghen bundled him down in the box after Dax McCarty's pass.
Kenny Cooper was handed the task of giving the home side the lead, and he duly obliged sending Heurelho Gomes the wrong way.
Remember me? Jake Livermore clears the ball ahead of Teemu Tainio at Red Bull Arena
Remember me? Jake Livermore clears the ball ahead of Teemu Tainio at Red Bull Arena

In the wars again, Gareth? The injury-prone Bale is sent tumbling by Wilman Conde
In the wars again, Gareth? The injury-prone Bale is sent tumbling by Wilman Conde

Match facts

Spurs: Gomes; Walker (Naughton), Dawson, Vertonghen (Gallas), Assou-Ekotto (Bassong); Lennon (Smith), Huddlestone (Jenas), Sigurdsson (Kaboul), Livermore (Carroll), Bentley (Kane); Bale (Townsend)
New York: Gaudette; Lade, Holgersson, Conde (Keel), Miller (Ruthven); McCarty, Taino (Solli), Cahill (Palsson), Lindpere (Borrajo); Le Toux (Arteaga), Cooper (Angulo)
Bale nearly equalised in the 12th minute, forcing Red Bulls keeper Bill Gaudette into tipping over his fierce left-footed 20-yard free kick.
The Welshman continued to be a thorn in the MLS club's side, this time playing a neat one-two with Tom Huddlestone who saw his 25 yard drive turned round the post by Gaudette in the 17th minute. And Bale threatened again from the resultant corner, glancing David Bentley's near post corner over the bar.
Eyes on the prize: Jan Vertonghen and Tainio battle for the ball in the Big Apple
Eyes on the prize: Jan Vertonghen and Tainio battle for the ball in the Big Apple
New boy: Tim Cahill (right) made his debut
New boy: Tim Cahill (right) made his debut
Unusually for a pre-season encounter, the clash at the Red Bulls Arena started at a rapid pace.
But the intensity of the game slowly deteriorated with both sides failing to create a single opportunity after Bale's 17th minute header as half-time approached.
Villas-Boas made three changes at the break, Harry Kane, William Gallas and Jermaine Jenas replacing Vertonghen, Huddlestone and David Bentley.
And Lennon forced Gaudette into a brilliant reflex stop nine minutes into the second period when the keeper expertly tipped over the winger's half-volley from Bale's cross from the left.
However, Spurs dragged themselves level on the hour - and inevitably it was Bale who notched the equaliser, jumping highest in the box to head home Gylfi Sigurdsson's corner.
Four minutes later, Sigurdsson conjured up a moment of magic to put Tottenham in front.
Receiving a pass from substitute Tom Carroll, the Iceland midfielder jinxed his way into the box before unleashing a delightful curled effort with his right foot that floated beyond Gaudette to put Spurs ahead.
Penalty: New Spurs signing Vertonghen (right) trips Cahill (floored) to concede a spot-kick
Penalty: New Spurs signing Vertonghen (right) trips Cahill (floored) to concede a spot-kick
Dawson then came agonisingly to scoring the tourists' third, hitting the cross bar with a stabbed half-volley after Sigurdsson's corner.
Bale was replaced by Andros Townsend in the 74th minute; happily for Villas-Boas, showing no ill-effect from Adam's controversial challenge on Saturday as Spurs comfortably held on to win the Barclays New York City Cup. 

Berbatov still in limbo at United as QPR deny £5m move for wantaway Bulgarian


QPR boss Mark Hughes has cooled talks that he has made a bid for Manchester United striker Dimitar Berbatov.
The wantaway Bulgarian is caught in limbo, as Sir Alex Ferguson is ready to offload him, but they are struggling to find a buyer willing to match United's £5million valuation.
And it goes on... Dimitar Berbatov is looking for a move away from Manchester United
And it goes on... Dimitar Berbatov is looking for a move away from Manchester United
 
The former Tottenham striker has been linked with a move to Turkey, but Istanbul club Galatassaray withdrew from the race for the 31-year-old.
QPR werer believed to be in the hunt for the former Tottenham marksman, who signed for United four years ago for a staggering £31million.
Hughes has since played down the link.
When asked about the potential bid, Hughes said: 'That is a new one on me, in fairness.
'At this time of year, there are a lot of names flying around. But we prefer to get the job done, get the business done, and then we announce it.'

Mourinho patience running thin as Real told to up bid for Modric after Spurs reject £38m bid

Tottenham have rejected Real Madrid's latest £38million offer for Luka Modric as the transfer saga threatens to drag into the new season.
And the Bernabeu club are now threatening to completely pull their interest in the wantaway midfielder as frustration grows at Spurs' hardline negotiation tactics.
Modric is one of Jose Mourinho's primary transfer targets this summer and the Spanish giant's have already seen several bids turned down by the White Hart Lane club.
Waiting game: Mourinho's patience is waning thin in his battle to sign Modric
Waiting game: Mourinho's patience is waning thin in his battle to sign Modric
 
The latest to be refused is a £30million offer plus an additional £8m in add-ons spread across the length of the Croatian's contract.
Spurs chairman Daniel Levy has set a £40million asking price for Modric and will not accept a penny under the asking price.
Levy is also said to be unhappy with the structure of Madrid's latest offer, wanting more money up front and less in add-ons.
The rebuffed offer is yet another blow for the Spanish club in their summer-long chase to sign Modric - who has agreed personal terms on a five year deal with Madrid.
And it is understood Real chiefs have told their Tottenham counterparts they will now look at alternative midfield targets - with a move to re-sign Wesley Sneijder from Inter Milan a possibility.
Real deal? Modric is yet to secure a move away from White Hart Lane
Real deal? Modric is yet to secure a move away from White Hart Lane
Whether Madrid's threat to pull the plug on their interest in Modric is serious or merely a bargaining ploy remains to be seen, but nevertheless the long-running saga is showing no signs of coming to a conclusion.
Tottenham are adamant Modric - who still has four years to run on his current deal - will stay in north London if Madrid do not meet the asking price.
The 26-year-old remains desperate to quit White Hart Lane for Real ahead of the new season.
Modric has embarked on a mini-revolt by boycotting pre-season training sessions and the club's tour of the US.
Andre Villas-Boas' side will return to London today with the Portuguese manager seeking a quick resolution to the Modric affair in one way or another.

Pictured: £77,000 in cash former semi-pro footballer with Premier League lifestyle made as leader of £1m drugs ring

  • Robert Hartshorne, a former non-league striker, owned six houses worth over £600,000
  • Police who raided his house found designer clothes, jewellery and cash
  • He was prime mover in criminal gang who were jailed for total of 54 years

Playing dirty: Robert Hartshorne, former top scorer for non-league Glossop North End, controlled a gang who moved cocaine and other drugs around the north-west
Playing dirty: Robert Hartshorne, former top scorer for non-league Glossop North End, controlled a gang who moved cocaine and other drugs around the north-west
A semi-professional footballer who lived a Premier League lifestyle while leading a £1m drugs ring has been jailed.
Robert Hartshorne, former top scorer for non-league Glossop North End, was also the leader of a seven-strong criminal gang who moved cocaine and other drugs around the north-west.
The 28-year-old, who plied his trade at several non-league teams, owned six houses worth over £600,000, while organising the gang in Hyde, Greater Manchester.
When police stormed Hartshorne’s home in Hyde, they found wardrobes brimming with expensive designer clothing, over £30,000 worth of designer jewellery and photographs of his many luxury holidays.
The footballer was then arrested, and has since been jailed for 11 years.
Officers tried to arrest Hartshorne earlier as he met with someone at a takeaway in Hyde, but he ran away by jumping over nearby gardens and fencing.
His car was searched, where £5,000 in cash was found along with a passport.
In a separate search, police stopped a car driven by another gang member on the A556 in Cheshire, and found £77,000 in cash stashed in a specially-modified boot compartment.
Hartshorne was sentenced along with eight other gang members for supplying cocaine.
Alan Page, 35, was the last member of the gang to be jailed after a long police investigation.
 

The gang were sentenced to more than 54 years in prison, after police seized over £900,000 worth of drugs and £110,000 in cash in a long investigation.
All members of the gang pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply cocaine.
Haul: Police recovered cash, including this stash of £77,000, during a long-term investigation into Hartshorne and his gang
Haul: Police recovered cash, including this stash of £77,000, during a long-term investigation into Hartshorne and his gang
Alan Page, Michael Gaskell, Sean Cannon, Michael Tingey, Douglas Merron and Stephanie Merron were sentenced at Minshull Street Crown Court.
Ill-gotten gains: Police who raided the home of Robert Hartshorne found cash, designer clothes and jewellery
Ill-gotten gains: Police who raided the home of Robert Hartshorne found cash, designer clothes and jewellery
The investigation was launched in November 2010 when police stopped a car in Stockport and recovered a large bag of cocaine, which had a street value of more than £95,000.
The fingerprints of Michael Gaskell were discovered on the bag, and the investigation uncovered the dealings of the gang led by Hartshorne.
Officers swooped on houses and cars during the investigation, uncovering huge amounts of money and cocaine - up to £345,000 worth at one time.
Senior Investigating Officer, Detective Inspector Rick Williams from Greater Manchester Police’s Force Drugs Unit said: 'This case clearly illustrates that GMP will go to great lengths in order to bring to justice criminals such as these, who seem to think they are beyond the reach of the law.
'Over many months, this group were evidenced running a highly organised drugs supply business, whereby high quality cocaine was diluted with cheaper adulterants in order to maximise profits and fund the lavish lifestyles of the ringleaders.
'It was the actions of Hartshorne and his criminal associates that caused misery to the lives of the law-abiding members of the local community, and it is for that reason that I take great satisfaction in the sentences handed down to them.'
Star: Hartshorne played for several non-league teams and was Glossop North End's top scorer. Pictured, their Derbyshire ground, Surrey Street
Star: Hartshorne played for several non-league teams and was Glossop North End's top scorer. Pictured, their Derbyshire ground, Surrey Street
Superintendent Neil Evans from GMP’s Tameside division said: 'Drugs are a major driving force behind many other crimes such as burglary, robbery and vehicle crime and so by targeting dealers, we are making our streets safer.
'These sentences just go to show that crime really does not pay and work will continue in Tameside through hard-hitting drugs operations to tackle those involved in this industry.
'We will also take back from them the money and assets they have made from their criminal dealings.
'If you have information on anyone who may be committing crime in your area, please call police in Tameside on 101.'

Deserted London 2012: Shops, theatres and businesses all empty as visitor levels fall by a THIRD over fears of Games travel chaos

  • Games have pulled 100,000 foreign tourists into the capital, much lower than the 300,000 expected in a typical summer
  • Leading London attractions see visitor numbers fall by 35 per cent
  • Hotel bookings in London 'very substantially down'
  • Businesses near sailing venues in Weymouth and Portland say this year's summer tourist season is the worst in half a century


Overblown warnings of Olympics travel chaos are turning key sites into ‘ghost towns’ and threatening Britain’s economic recovery, say business leaders.
Messages to stay away from London and other key venues have worked too well, with visitor numbers suffering catastrophic falls.
Incredibly, almost a third of the five million people employed in the capital are expected to heed official advice to work from home at some point over the fortnight to avoid disruption which has failed to materialise.
Bare: Overblown warnings of Olympics travel chaos are turning key sites into ¿ghost towns¿ and threatening Britain¿s economic recovery, say business leaders. This image shows an empty Westfield shopping centre at Shepherds Bush at lunchtime yesterday
Bare: Overblown warnings of Olympics travel chaos are turning key sites into 'ghost towns' and threatening Britain's economic recovery, say business leaders. This image shows an empty Westfield shopping centre at Shepherds Bush at lunchtime yesterday

Empty: Messages to stay away from London and other key venues have worked too well, with visitor numbers suffering catastrophic falls. A usually heavily congested Blackwall Approach is virtually deserted
Empty: Messages to stay away from London and other key venues have worked too well, with visitor numbers suffering catastrophic falls. A usually heavily congested Blackwall Approach is virtually deserted
Leading attractions, meanwhile, are reporting visitor numbers down by a third on the same period  last year.
Experts insist that even if the short-term economic benefits of hosting the Games do not materialise, Britain will enjoy ‘incalculable’ longer-term benefits in terms of increased trade and tourism.


But pressure is growing for transport bosses to alter their advice to travellers and make it clear Britain is open for business.
Ministers are also facing calls  to rethink their decision to allow hundreds of thousands of civil servants to work from home while the Games are on.
Pleas: Pressure is growing for transport bosses to alter their advice to travellers and make it clear Britain is open for business. Oxford Street in London appears to be empty yesterday afternoon
Pleas: Pressure is growing for transport bosses to alter their advice to travellers and make it clear Britain is open for business. Oxford Street in London appears to be empty yesterday afternoon

Worrying: Restaurants in Covent Garden are suffering a down turn in trade as customers stay away from the area
Worrying: Restaurants in Covent Garden are suffering a down turn in trade as customers stay away from the area

No custom: Ministers are also facing calls to rethink their decision to allow hundreds of thousands of civil servants to work from home while the Games are on. This picture shows an empty Spitalfields Market during lunchtime
No custom: Ministers are also facing calls to rethink their decision to allow hundreds of thousands of civil servants to work from home while the Games are on. This picture shows an empty Spitalfields Market during lunchtime
Boris warning
Bernard Donoghue, of the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions, which represents venues ranging from London Zoo to St Paul’s Cathedral, said: ‘There are  two groups of people missing.
'The first are general visitors to London, who are staying clear because  of the perception that it will  be busy.
‘The second are Londoners and Brits who have been warned there will be a transport nightmare. Our message to them is that while it may be sensible to avoid certain peak times and locations, transport is running very smoothly.
‘Ironically there has never been a better time to visit our attractions because the queues are shorter and opening times have been extended.’
Mr Donoghue said advice to travellers should be amended, adding: ‘As long as you avoid peak times and stations, London is surprisingly accessible and open for business.’
According to the world’s largest hotel survey, details of which were published yesterday, a promised influx of visitors is not having the bumper effect on UK businesses for which many were hoping.
One disillusioned hotelier told TripAdvisor that ‘the negative impact of the Olympic Games’ was a nasty surprise for business.
Open: Westminster Bridge appears almost empty of pedestrians and vehicles during morning rush hour in central London
Open: Westminster Bridge appears almost empty of pedestrians and vehicles during morning rush hour in central London
Where is everyone? An unusually quiet Regent Street in London. Businesses say the centre of the city has become a 'ghost town' during the Olympics
Where is everyone? An unusually quiet Regent Street in London. Businesses say the centre of the city has become a 'ghost town' during the Olympics
Shunned: The Games has attracted 100,000 foreign visitors to London, but this is well below the estimated 300,000 who come during a typical summer
Shunned: The Games has attracted 100,000 foreign visitors to London, but this is well below the estimated 300,000 who come during a typical summer
Down the Tube: Olympic stewards wait to give tourists assistance at an unusually quiet Piccadilly Circus
Down the Tube: Olympic stewards wait to give tourists assistance at an unusually quiet Piccadilly Circus
Quiet: Streets in the central shopping area of Greenwich looked almost deserted as the final stages of the team equestrian event got under way
Quiet: Streets in the central shopping area of Greenwich looked almost deserted as the final stages of the team equestrian event got under way
Steve McNamara, of the Licensed Taxi Drivers’ Association, said  cab drivers had also been hit  hard. He said: ‘Normally about 90 per cent of our customers are Londoners but they’ve all left the city and haven’t been replaced by tourists.
'I don’t know where all these tourists are or how they’re getting about, but London is like a ghost town.’
London Mayor Boris Johnson insisted: ‘Things are going really well. Many, many thousands of  people are flowing into London,  the hotels are busy, the Olympic venues are attracting huge numbers and people are enjoying the brilliant live sites, a raft of free events for all the family and the free sport as well, with hundreds of thousands out over the weekend for the cycling.’
Central reservations: Foreign visitors in Trafalgar Square, with the National Gallery in the background. Major attractions have reported a fall in attendance around the Olympic period
Central reservations: Foreign visitors in Trafalgar Square, with the National Gallery in the background. Major attractions have reported a fall in attendance around the Olympic period
Subdued: The normally bustling Carnaby Street in London's Soho has looked very different since the Olympics began at the weekend
Subdued: The normally bustling Carnaby Street in London's Soho has looked very different since the Olympics began at the weekend
The Prime Minister, meanwhile, has predicted £13billion of economic investment should flow from the Games over four years, some of it from tourism.
Analysis by the Bank of England suggests that the Olympics could add up to 0.25 per cent to gross domestic product in the third quarter, following a slide into a double-dip recession.
But independent economists warned the Games could in fact damage the economy – denting hopes of a short-term Olympic boost.
George Buckley, economist at Deutsche Bank, said: ‘Yes,  there are more people here so there might be more spending, but Oxford Street is quite quiet and there are plenty of people who  are at work but have their feet  on desks watching the Olympics  on TV.
Running smoothly: Traffic moves freely alongside Olympic lanes on Park Lane, during the morning rush hour in central London
Running smoothly: Traffic moves freely alongside Olympic lanes on Park Lane, during the morning rush hour in central London
Empty: The scene on Millbank, outside Westminster Palace, at 6pm, when the roads are normally congested
Empty: The scene on Millbank, outside Westminster Palace, at 6pm, when the roads are normally congested
Roomy: Pedestrians walk on the pavement but there was a surprising lack of cars on London Bridge at 2pm Roomy: Pedestrians walk on the pavement but there was a surprising lack of cars on London Bridge at 2pm
Incredible: London Bridge Underground station was also totally clear during the supposed rush hour
Incredible: London Bridge Underground station was also totally clear during the supposed rush hour
Clear run: Despite a packed Games schedule coinciding with the start of the working week, London¿s usually packed roads were at times as empty as they are on Christmas Day
Clear run: Despite a packed Games schedule coinciding with the start of the working week, London's usually packed roads were at times as empty as they are on Christmas Day
'That will hit productivity.’  Andrew Goodwin, economic adviser to the Ernst & Young Item Club, predicted a ‘small positive’ from the Olympics. ‘But it is not going to be the silver bullet that people were hoping for.’
■ The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has warned that the UK economy will shrink this year – making it the first major international watchdog to forecast a year of contraction.
The economy crashed 0.7 per cent in the second quarter, leaving Britain trapped in the longest downturn for 100 years and the worst double-dip for more than half a century.
Easy rider: This biker practically has the road to himself. The surprising turn of events was partly credited to staff being allowed to work from home
Easy rider: This biker practically has the road to himself. The surprising turn of events was partly credited to staff being allowed to work from home

Spot the car: Drivers heeded official advice to stay out of the centre of the capital during the Games fortnight
Spot the car: Drivers heeded official advice to stay out of the centre of the capital during the Games fortnight

Happy: In a further attempt to show the world how well the Tube is coping, David Cameron tweeted a picture of himself in a carriage on the way to watch the synchronised diving
Happy: In a further attempt to show the world how well the Tube is coping, David Cameron tweeted a picture of himself in a carriage on the way to watch the synchronised diving
Bare: The surprisingly empty roads was credited to staff being allowed to work from home and the decision to open some of the Olympic carriageways to other drivers. This shows the A4 close to Earl's Court
Bare: The surprisingly empty roads was credited to staff being allowed to work from home and the decision to open some of the Olympic carriageways to other drivers. This shows the A4 close to Earl's Court
Change of plan: Officials have turned off some Games Lanes after Olympic VIPs opted to use public transport
Change of plan: Officials turned off some Games Lanes after Olympic VIPs opted to use public transport