Friday, March 31, 2017

Neymar celebrates with on-off girlfriend Bruna Marquezine



Brazil became the first nation to book their spot at the 2018 World Cup this week, and Neymar decided it was time to enjoy himself.
Having scored in the 3-0 win over Paraguay, the Barcelona forward continued to be instrumental in getting the Selecao to Russia next year as they now sit top of the qualifying standings with 33 points from their 14 games.
That’s now 10 wins, three draws and just the solitary defeat, with a nine-point gap between them and second-placed Colombia while bitter rivals Argentina slipped into fifth place for the time being which is only good enough for a playoff spot.
Nevertheless, all eyes were on Neymar and Bruna Marquezine in Sao Paulo as they partied in a crowded club until the early hours and given their standing in the country, it’s no surprise that it has made plenty of headlines.

The pair have reportedly been on and off prior to his move to Europe, while Bruna is a well-known actress and celebrity in her own right. Put them both together and you have yourself a power couple.
They looked pretty cosy in each other’s company on Wednesday night, and they certainly got the media talking…

Bundesliga: Important win for Hoffenheim



Hoffenheim have come from behind to win 3-1 at 10-man Hertha Berlin in the Bundesliga on Friday to further boost their chances of playing Champions League football next season.
Peter Pekarik opened the scoring for Hertha by drilling home next to the near right post in the 32nd minute but the joy was short-lived as Hertha youngster Maximilian Mittelstaedt became the game's central figure.
The 20-year-old first handled the ball in the area, which allowed Andrej Kramaric to score a 39th-minute equaliser from the ensuing penalty, and - after being booked for that mishap - was then sent off in the 59th for a second yellow card for an awkward tackle.
Hoffenheim then dominated with Bayern Munich-bound Niklas Suele putting them ahead with a long range strike into the top left corner of the goal in the 76th minute.
Kramaric wrapped up matters 10 minutes later with his second goal of the game.
Unbeaten in now six games and with only two defeats this season, Hoffenheim climbed up to third place, two points ahead of Borussia Dortmund and eight points clear of number five Hertha.

Panathinaikos edges CSKA, climbs into fourth place

Panathinaikos Superfoods Athens hung on in an overtime thriller to defeat CSKA Moscow 85-80 on Friday at Olympic Sports Center Athens. That victory was the fourth in a row overall and the 11thstraight at home for the Greens, who raised their record to 18-11. The win, coupled with Fenerbahce Istanbul’s loss at Real Madrid, put Panathinaikos alone in fourth place and Coach Xavi Pascual’s men can clinch home-court advantage for the playoffs with a win in their regular season finale next week at Maccabi FOX Tel Aviv. CSKA fell to 21-8 and will finish the regular season in second place regardless of the Round 30 results. K.C. Rivers led the winners with 17 points, including a three-pointer with two minutes left in overtime from which CSKA never recovered. Mike James and Chris Singleton added 13 points apiece and Nick Calathes tallied 12 points and 6 assists and made a pair of critical free throws and forced a turnover in the final minute of regulation. Nando De Colo and Milos Teodosic led the CSKA attack with 15 points each and James Augustine and Andrey Vorontsevich both scored 14. CSKA outrebounded Panathinaikos 37-44, but also committed 17 turnovers.

The game was exciting from the start with plenty of steals and daring passes. Calathes connected from downtown to give Panathinaikos a 7-5 lead. The visitors found a matchup they liked with De Colo inside and fed the MVP three times for as many baskets to make it 9-11. A three by Nikos Pappas over Augustine pushed the Greens in front 16-15. Mike James drilled a jumper in the closing seconds of the first quarter to make it 20-17 after 10 minutes. Singleton added to the Panathinaikos advantage with a three-pointer, but Cory Higgins heated up to close the gap and Aaron Jackson ran the pic-and-pop with Vorontsevich, who connected from behind the arc to put CSKA on top 28-29. James shined with a three-point play and Rivers heated up too, but Vorontsevich and Augustine the teams even. A Rivers three and Calathes steal and layup at the buzzer left the Panathinaikos crowd in a frenzy with a 45-40 halftime lead. Higgins and Kyle Hines drew the visitors within 1 at the start of the second half, but Demetrius Nichols’s steal and three-point play kept the Greens in control. Nevertheless, CSKA kept it close and tied the game at 55-55 on a three by DeColo. Free throws by Pappas made it 58-55 through three quarters. CSKA tied it twice through Augustine and De Colo before Vitaly Fridzon gave the visitors a 63-64 edge from the line. De Colo added a triple, however Rivers’s layup got the hosts back within 1 and James dropped in a finger roll for a 71-70 lead with 2:16 remaining. CSKA came up empty on its next two possessions, but also kept Panathinaikos scoreless. And then Teodosic struck with a pull-up three with 37 seconds left to put the visitors on top once again. Calathes tied the game with free throws with 25.8 second left and after 3 turnovers in the final 20 seconds, the regulation buzzer sounded with the game tied at 73-73. Neither team led by more than 2 points in the extra session until a three by Rivers with two minutes left made it 82-78. And the momentum remained with the hosts the rest of the way.

Adelaide United, Perth Glory share points after controversial penalty


DIVING is the scourge of soccer.
But what’s worse is a referee that gets sucked in by a melodramatic fall or is it the fault of players trying to con match officials for a favour?
Diego Castro, Perth Glory’s Johnny Warren medallist, had his name smeared in a game changing incident against Adelaide United at Hindmarsh on Friday night.
One of the fairest and most talented men in the Australian game was the centre of a huge talking point after Dylan McGowan gave Adelaide the lead in the first half before the clash ended 1-1.
It was a dubious penalty won and converted by Castro on the stroke of half time that put the visitors back in the clash perhaps unfairly when Adelaide was well on top.
The incident infuriated Reds stopper Taylor Regan who couldn’t contain his anger any longer exchanging words with Castro as players headed for half time refreshments.
Regan was furious that his teammate McGowan was back in the spotlight unjustifiably when Castro won the spot kick just before the break.
McGowan was already having a huge night before that penalty fuelled the bad blood.
McGowan must have been cursing himself for at least two minutes before scoring the opening goal when the game was 23 minutes old.
The stopper missed an absolute sitter to score in the 21st minute from a Sergio Cirio corner when he ghosted past Glory’s last line but got his angles all wrong when trying to side foot the ball home.
A corner at the opposite western end of Hindmarsh taken by Marcelo Carrusca allowed McGowan to bury his earlier miss deep inside his memory bank.
It came from Regan’s header which ricocheted off the post before the South Australian reacted from point blank range to nod the ball home.
But his third goal of the season was erased by a decision from a referee who wasn’t meant to be in charge.
The game faced a kick off delay when originally named referee Alan Milliner suffered a hamstring injury during the warm up.
He was replaced by fourth official, SA’s Daniel Elder for just his seventh A-League match.
He made the controversial call on the stroke of half time which had echoes of simulation.
Experienced referee Chris Beath who was conducting a video assistant referee trial before it’s famously launched worldwide when Adelaide faces Melbourne City away next weekend was promoted to fourth official.
But the controversy all started when Castro first slalomed his way past Nikola Mileusnic and Regan inside the box before he had to dance around McGowan to get closer to goal.
Castro theatrically hit the deck before the Spaniard was awarded a penalty.
He easily converted to square the ledger but fans and Regan let Castro know that wCastro was booed every time he touched the ball in the second half with some unforgiving fans even going as far as calling him “cheat” and cheering every mistake from the gifted forward.
But after all the attention was on Castro it was Socceroo Riley McGree’s superb vision which split Glory apart in the 70th minute only to see Baba Diawara’s on-target effort smack against the legs of Perth keeper Liam Reddy and out for a corner.
Tarek Elrich then had Reddy at full stretch in the 74th minute after a sharp ball from substitute Ben Garuccio before Chris Harold won a free kick 25m from goal which was easily blocked by the Reds wall.
Baba had a case for a spot kick when Dino Djulbic appeared to grab the Senegalese striker’s arm inside the box but Elder didn’t flinch in the 78th minute.
But Elder got the yellow card out for Baba in the 81st minute when Romanian stopper Lucian Goian went down clutching his face after a heading duel just outside the six yard box.
Adelaide United 1 (Dylan McGowan 23) Perth Glory (Diego Castro 45m) 1 at Coopers Stadium – Referee: Daniel Elder – Crowd: 7307hat had just transpired probably wasn’t in the spirit of the game.

Miami Open: Nick Kyrgios defeats Alexander Zverev to book spot in semi-final against Roger Federer

Nick Kyrgios's excellent tournament form has continued with a straight-sets win over Alexander Zverev at the Miami Open, setting up a semi-finals clash with Roger Federer.
The Australian world number 16 had a few typically tempestuous moments, but ultimately had enough in the locker to beat the German 6-4, 6-7 (11/9), 6-2.
Kyrgios was due to play Federer in the last eight at Indian Wells, but had to pull out of that match due to sickness, saying he got food poisoning.
Kyrgios was due to play Federer in the last eight at Indian Wells, but had to pull out of that match due to sickness, saying he got food poisoning.
"I definitely got very lucky at the end but I think I showed great heart today and I fought. Tomas really stepped it up and it was a great match at the end but one guy had to win."
Australian Open champion Federer, who also won at Indian Wells two weeks ago, is playing some of the best tennis of his storied career, neither his age nor a knee injury that kept him out for the second half of last year slowing him down.

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Italian news presenter Barbara Francesca Ovieni accidentally flashes her underwear on live TV


THERE are a lot of things to remember when you’re on live TV, so it stands to reason there will be the odd mishap.
That’s what happened to Italian presenter Barbara Francesca Ovieni, who hosts the football show Rabona.
Appearing on live TV in a low-cut white dress, Barbara had already set viewers’ pulses racing.
While casually sitting on a desk as she read her lines, the star’s dress apparently became uncomfortable.

When her skirt became uncomfortable, Barbara decided to rearrange it
She decided to flick the voluminous skirt to make it sit a little better, which is when disaster struck.
Unfortunately for Barbara, the casual movement exposed her underwear for all to see.
Luckily it was only a swift glimpse, but it was enough to go down a storm with Reddit users.
Many posted comments about how attractive the presenter is, with one suggesting “more Barbara Ovieni’s” are needed in the UK.
The star is known for dressing up when she’s on TV, and she often shares shots of herself on set on her Instagram feed.

Earlier this month one showed her in a bright red mini skirt and matching heels, seemingly in the same studio where the unfortunately incident occurred.
Barbara has posed for Playboy in the past, but it seems her svelte figure doesn’t come easily.
In fact it’s all down to hard work at the gym, with the star often sharing her workouts online.
The presenter is hardly the first to show more than she meant to on TV either.
One QVC model’s nude-toned undies caused her a spot of bother, while another showed how professional she is after flashing more than she meant to but carrying on regardless.

Grandmother Of 2, 47 Year Old Zakina Is Viral Now Because Of Her Stunning Looks...!!!


Zaklina, is a 47-year-old grandmother of two from Serbia and she is a star on Instagram because of her stunning looks.
She looks very youthful, nothing like her real age and her gorgeous pictures till now have got her 158,000 followers. She is a fashion blogger whose Instagram pictures are a mix of street and elegance and style looks. Zaklina has the body of a supermodel and the style sense of a fashionista. According to her she has picked up a lot of details about fashion from her stay in Switzerland, France, and Poland.

Missing Indonesian Man Found Dead Inside a 23-Foot Python


The body of a missing Indonesian man was found inside a giant python on the island of Sulawesi on Sunday, local police said.
Twenty-five-year-old Akbar Salubiro had been missing for 24 hours after leaving to harvest palm oil on his family's plantation, the BBC reports.
A search conducted by police found a 23-foot-long python motionless in a ditch nearby. After cutting the snake open, the man's body was reportedly found inside.
"When the snake was captured, the boots Akbar was wearing were clearly visible in the stomach of the snake," village secretary Salubiro Junaidi told the Jakarta Post. "Resident[s] cut open the belly of the snake and Akbar was lifeless 
Capable of reaching lengths of over 32 feet, reticulated pythons are the longest snakes in the world. They are nonvenomous constrictors that suffocate their prey before swallowing them whole. Cases of people killed and eaten by pythons are rare, and they are generally not considered a danger to human settlements, which they tend to avoid, an expert told the BBC.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Video referee stars as Spain beat France 2-0

Spain's Gerard Deulofeu scored one and created another but had to share the limelight with the video assistant referee in a 2-0 friendly win over France in Paris on Tuesday.

David Silva put the visitors ahead from the penalty spot on 68 minutes after Deulofeu was fouled in the box by France defender Laurent Koscielny.
The on-loan AC Milan winger then converted a Silva cross nine minutes later, but was flagged offside. The goal, however, was awarded after German referee Felix Zwayer asked the video assistant to check the decision.
France striker Antoine Griezmann, who plays in Spain with Atletico Madrid, had hit the back of the net with a header early in the second half, but his effort was disallowed after the video referee correctly said defender Layvin Kurzawa, who was involved in the move, was offside.

Nick Kyrgios cruises into Miami Open quarter-finals



Nick Kyrgios has continued his hot run with a straight-sets fourth-round defeat of eighth seed David Goffin at the Miami Open.
Kyrgios's 7-6 (7-5) 6-3 victory on Wednesday (AEDT) propelled the in-form Australian into his fourth quarter-final in as many events.
The 21-year-old will face fellow young gun Alexander Zverev, who earlier upset top-seeded birthday boy Stan Wawrinka 4-6 6-2 6-1 to blow open the top half of the draw.
For Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, meanwhile, it was many happy returns.
Playing back to back on stadium court on the 13th anniversary of their very first match, Federer and Nadal both survived stern tests to advance to the last eight.
The fourth-seeded Federer outlasted No.14 Roberto Bautista Agut 7-6 (7-5) 7-6 (7-4), the fifth-seeded Nadal got past Nicolas Mahut 6-4 7-6 (7-4).
"A tough match overall," Federer said of his encounter with Spaniard Bautista Agut.
"Every match is going to be tough from now on," said second-seeded Kei Nishikori, who also survived a three-setter to reach the quarters.
Nishikori - a finalist at Key Biscayne a year ago - rallied from a break down in the final set to beat Federico Delbonis 6-3 4-6 6-3.
Wawrinka wasn't so fortunate on his 32nd birthday.
Zverev, who turns 20 next month, showed no ill effects by playing just 24 hours after winning a three-setter over John Isner that went entirely to tiebreakers.
"A disappointing match," said Wawrinka, who smiled when a surprise birthday cake - replete with 'Stan The Man' lettering - was brought in to his post-match news conference.
"We were both fighting."
Nadal won the only break point played in his match against Mahut, and it was enough.
"It's a positive for both of us that we can still (be) around here and be very competitive almost every week that we are playing," Nadal said, referring to himself and Federer.
Swiss 35-year-old Federer had a battle with Bautista Agut, and seemed to enjoy himself.
Federer gets a day off and will meet 10th-seeded Tomas Berdych - who defeated Adrian Mannarino of France 6-3 7-5 - in the quarters.
Nishikori next face unseeded Fabio Fognini, who beat Donald Young 6-0 6-4.
Young's loss meant only one American would reach the last eight - that being Jack Sock, who beat Jared Donaldson 6-2 6-1.

Bolivia beat Lionel Messi-less Argentina 2-0 in World Cup qualifier



Argentina, weakened by the last-minute suspension of Lionel Messi, suffered a fourth defeat in their World Cup qualifying campaign as a spirited Bolivia won 2-0 in La Paz on Tuesday.
Bolivia scored either side of half-time through Juan Arce and Marcelo Martins and were deserved winners against an Argentina side who defended poorly throughout an exciting end-to-end encounter.
The defeat left twice World Cup winners Argentina provisionally third on 22 points in the 10-team South American qualifying group, but with Chile, Ecuador and Colombia all within two points and with a game in hand.
Argentina were already without suspended regulars Javier Mascherano, Lucas Biglia and Gonzalo Higuain and their task was made even tougher when captain Messi was handed a four-match ban for swearing at a match official hours before the game started 
Bolivia appeared fired up by the decision and got the goal their early pressing deserved through Arce after 31 minutes.
The skinny winger outmuscled Facundo Roncaglia on the penalty spot to head home a deep cross from Pablo Escobar on the right.
Roncaglia was at fault again for the second goal seven minutes into the second half.
The Celta Vigo defender failed to prevent Jorge Flores from escaping to the byline to cross for an unmarked Marcelo Martins.
The big striker had all the time in the world to steady himself and hammer the ball past helpless Argentina goalkeeper Sergio Romero.
Argentina came into the game more when Sergio Aguero replaced Angel Correa 10 minutes into the second half but they could not get a goal and they are now likely to slip down the South American qualifying table.
The top four teams qualify automatically for Russia 2018 and the fifth-placed side goes into a playoff with a team from Oceania.
Fourth-placed Colombia and Ecuador, in fifth, play later on Tuesday, while Chile, in sixth, face bottom side Venezuela.

Nine months after Iceland’s biggest soccer victory, a baby boom




On June 27, Iceland recorded one of the biggest soccer victories in its history, defeating England 2-1 in Euro 2016 and advancing to the quarterfinals.
Nine months later, the country is apparently experiencing a baby boom.
“Set a record for the number of epidurals in the maternity duty this weekend — nine months after the 2-1 win over England,” tweeted Asgeir Petur Thorvaldsson, who multiple outlets reported is a doctor in the anaesthesiology department at Landspitali University Hospital in Reykjavik.
Iceland — a country of 330,000 people — drew with Portugal and Hungary before defeating Austria in pool play. Then in the knockout round, Iceland scored its momentous upset of England. England’s manager resigned immediately after the game.
Iceland’s fans made “The Thunderclap” famous during its run at the tournament. Iceland lost to host France 5-2 in the quarterfinals of the tournament, which was won by Portugal.
It is not the first time athletic success has led to more births. Spain’s birth rate rose 16 percent after Barcelona won the 2009 Champions League, researchers found. The Boston Globe reported signs of a “Red Sox phenomenon” in 2005, nine months after the Boston Red Sox won their first World Series title since 1918. The New Zealand Herald reported on a baby boom in 2012 after the country’s rugby team won the World Cup in 2011.
We could be soon hearing about a baby boom in Chicago after the Cubs won their first World Series title since 1908 in October.
The NFL produced a commercial highlighting what it called “Super Bowl Babies,” though no hard data exists that Super Bowl titles lead to a baby boom in the winning city.
Big events, however, do not always lead to the expected outcomes. A 1965 blackout in New York City did not lead to a baby boom even though The New York Times reported that it did, according to OutsideOnline.com. Birth rates in Manhattan actually came down, according to a 1970 study.

Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/news/nation-world/national/article141346903.html#storylink=cpy



Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/news/nation-world/national/article141346903.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/news/nation-world/national/article141346903.html#storylink=cpy

Australia edge UAE in vital win


Australia defeated UAE 2-0 to pick up three precious points in Group B of World Cup qualification on Tuesday night in Sydney.
After four consecutive draws, three points was a must for Australia. And the Socceroos' danger at set pieces proved the difference with both goals coming via headers from corners to push Australia to 13 points in the group. 
SUMMARY    
Australia got off to a perfect start with Jackson Irvine’s bullet header – his first for his nation – giving the hosts a vital edge.
But with Omar Abdulrahman becoming increasingly influential, UAE worked their way back into the contest for the remainder of the first half.
It remained a tight contest with UAE pressing hard early in the second stanza but the home side was lifted with 20 minutes to go when Tim Cahill came on for Tomi Juric.
Immediately chances came Australia’s way as UAE continued to exploit Australia’s right side of defence.
The game opened up in the final stages with both sides creating good chances – Irvine going closest to doubling his and Australia’s tally with a neat header.
And Mat Leckie doubled the lead with 11 minutes left with a power header to confirm the points. Some heavy tackles crept into the final stages of the game as UAE sensed the jig was up. 
GOALS
1-0    Jackson Irvine, Australia 7’
Australia’s first effort on goal and the Burton Albion man powered home a corner which was deflected past Ali Khaseif and rolled into the net.
2-0    Mat Leckie, Australia 78’
James Troisi’s curling corner was met by Leckie and in a replica of his goal in Tehran last week, the German-based striker smashed his header home.

With art and sport, young refugees build new lives in Greece



Jawad Ahmadi, an 18-year-old Afghan, reached the island of Lesbos a year ago with his older brother and cousin, believing Greece would be just a temporary stop on his way to Germany.
But just as he arrived, Europe's borders were shut, leaving him stuck in Greece and curtailing his European dream.
"For eight months, every day, I woke up without knowing what I was going to do that day," Ahmadi says. "I was going crazy."
But four months ago, Ahmadi made his way to the Athens offices of the Greek Forum of Migrants and began Greek language lessons.
Now, in addition to the language classes, he is preparing for a football tournament, part of an effort by aid groups to help young refugees find a place in their new home.
"I decided to take charge and start building my future. I want to study computers and keep playing football, my passion," says Ahmadi.
"In the end, it's probably a good thing that I stayed in Greece. Here, the government doesn't give any help to refugees: You have to work harder than in Germany, where refugees are pampered."
With the support of Mercy Corps, the US-based humanitarian group, Ahmadi has formed his own football team. It competes in a tournament launched by the group in January for teams composed of refugees as well as volunteers from Greece, Spain and other European countries.


"We've noticed that a lot of activities were being offered for children, but there were few for teenagers and young adults," says Mercy Corps' Monica Rabii.
"But they are very nervous because they don't know what their future holds."
"That's why, thanks to donations from large international companies, we decided to finance projects for young refugees, in partnership with local players."
- 'Like a normal citizen' -
For Ahmadi, the tournament is the best way for migrants to mix with Greeks and other Europeans, "and to show that refugees are just like any other youths".
Each morning he leaves a camp in Oinofita, an industrial zone about an hour north of Athens, to attend his language classes and football practice.
"I only come back to the camp to sleep," he says. "I feel more and more like a normal citizen, and less like a migrant stuck in Greece," he said.
Iman al-Bohtori, a 22-year-old Syrian who also arrived last March, is also looking forward to recovering "a normal life".
She is hoping to be allowed to join family members in Sweden, where her sister recently went to be with her husband and their brother.
"When my sister left, I was very depressed, I felt paralysed," says Bohtori, who has an economics degree from the University of Damascus.
But after meeting a worker at Mercy Corps, she began attending activities organised by Melissa, an association that helps migrant women by putting them in touch with former refugees.
There, she plays the guitar and makes origami, activities that help her to "stay positive, and not think about the past or the uncertainties of the future."
Melissa recently held a sculpture class where participants began by carving dolls out of potatoes -- eliciting peals of laughter around the room.


It is meant for every single one of them to feel some worth, to create, to have creativity, to not just sit and wait," said Brumilda Mustafa Guda, an Albanian artist who led the class.
For Zozen Daoud, a 26-year-old Syrian mother of two, the class offers a chance to "relax, and forget that I'm stuck in Greece with no job and far from the ones I love".
"I spent eight months at Idomeni," a migrant camp on the closed border with Macedonia, "where I only thought about my survival," she said.
"Now, even if Greece wasn't my first choice, I have to think about settling here, learning the language and finding a job."



Monday, March 27, 2017

Kyrgios keeps cool in Miami heat before Brisbane clash



A smile from Nick Kyrgios during a tense deciding-set tiebreak today was the best news of all for an Australian Davis Cup team heading to Brisbane for next week’s tie against the United States.
Kyrgios kept his composure in a three-set win over Ivo Karlovic at the ATP Miami tournament when the often volatile Australian was frustrated by the big-hitting style of his opponent.
The Australian No. 1 even raised a smile to a remark from a spectator after winning the first point of the third-set tiebreak before closing out his tense third-round match against Karlovic 6-4, 6-7 (4-7), 7-6 (7-2).
After throwing his racquet at his chair in frustration at losing the second set, the in-form Kyrgios kept a rein on his concentration against Karlovic, who kept saving service games under pressure.
Kyrgios will travel to Brisbane with a team again missing Bernard Tomic, knowing Australia’s most likely route to victory is for him to win both singles matches as the Cup tie’s highest-ranked player.
The 21-year-old last week credited the Australian Davis Cup team for helping him out of a “dark place’’ following his Australian Open exit in January.
“Mentally I think I’m in a really good spot — you can tell by the way I’m competing,’’ Kyrgios told reporters in Miami after booking a fourth-round match against world No. 12 David Goffin, to be played on Wednesday morning (Australian time).
“I’ve got Davis Cup next week and then I have a week off. I’m not trying to get too far ahead of myself.
“I’ve been playing really well the last couple of weeks and I’m backing myself under pressure.’’
Hewitt felt Kyrgios was in the right place to “get the job done” for Australia.
“Nick’s obviously our No. 1 player, and we’ll be relying on him heavily to get us through the tie,” Hewitt said.
Tomic was unavailable for Australia’s first-round win in February and he has not won a match since in a five-tournament run in which he has also been troubled by a back injury.
In Tomic’s extended absence, Australia’s No. 2 Jordan Thompson, ranked No. 79, would do well to win either of his matches against an American team likely to bring four top-30 singles players to the April 7-9 quarter-final at Pat Rafter Arena.
Australia will need John Peers and Sam Groth to win the doubles.
The US is also expected to name an unchanged team, with world No. 17 Jack Sock their top-ranked player, sitting just one place behind Kyrgios.
John Isner, Sam Querry and Steve Johnson are expected to be the other three US players.
Australian players will start to arrive in Brisbane late this week.
Thompson won both his singles matches in his Cup debut against the Czech Republic last month in Melbourne.
“He did everything that was asked of him at the last tie in Kooyong,” Hewitt said of Thompson.
“He was the underdog in the first match on court against the Czech Republic’s No. 1 player, but he handled it amazingly well. A quarter-final against the States will be another step up, but I’ve got full confidence in him.”