Category: Sports
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Cristiano Ronaldo rape allegation: Nike expresses deep concern
Image copyright Reuters Image caption Cristiano Ronaldo has a lucrative contract with Nike
Nike has said it is “deeply concerned” by rape allegations against footballer Cristiano Ronaldo.
The US sportswear giant – which has a contract worth a reported $1bn (£768m) with Ronaldo – said it would “continue to closely monitor the situation”, the Associated Press reports.
EA Sports, which also has a contract with Ronaldo, made similar comments.
Ronaldo, 33, earlier “firmly” denied assaulting Kathryn Mayorga at a Las Vegas hotel in 2009.
Ms Mayorga, a 34-year-old US former teacher, was inspired to speak out by the #MeToo movement, her lawyer said.
“The MeToo movement and the women who have stood up and disclosed sexual assaults has given Kathryn a lot of courage,” Leslie Stovall said.
Accuser ‘got courage from #MeToo’ Ronaldo not in Portugal squad to face Scotland & Poland
What did Nike and EA Sports say?
In a statement, Nike said: “We are deeply concerned by the disturbing allegations and will continue to closely monitor the situation.”
Meanwhile, EA Sports told the AP: “We have seen the concerning report that details allegations against Cristiano Ronaldo.
“We are closely monitoring the situation, as we expect cover athletes and ambassadors to conduct themselves in a manner that is consistent with EA’s values.”
In a separate development, Juventus – the Italian club Ronaldo joined from Real Madrid for £99.2m in July – came out in defence of its player.
In a tweet, Juventus said: “Cristiano Ronaldo has shown in recent months his great professionalism and dedication, which is appreciated by everyone at Juventus.”
Skip Twitter post by @juventusfcen.@Cristiano Ronaldo has shown in recent months his great professionalism and dedication, which is appreciated by everyone at Juventus. 1/1
— JuventusFC (@juventusfcen) October 4, 2018
ReportEnd of Twitter post by @juventusfcen
How has Ronaldo responded?
The Portugal international had previously said the allegation, first reported in German magazine Der Spiegel, was “fake news”.
On Wednesday, he issued a statement through his Twitter account:
Skip Twitter post by @CristianoI firmly deny the accusations being issued against me. Rape is an abominable crime that goes against everything that I am and believe in. Keen as I may be to clear my name, I refuse to feed the media spectacle created by people seeking to promote themselves at my expense.
— Cristiano Ronaldo (@Cristiano) October 3, 2018
ReportEnd of Twitter post by @Cristiano
Skip Twitter post 2 by @CristianoMy clear conscious will thereby allow me to await with tranquillity the results of any and all investigations.
— Cristiano Ronaldo (@Cristiano) October 3, 2018
ReportEnd of Twitter post 2 by @Cristiano
Der Spiegel said Ms Mayorga had filed a report with Las Vegas police shortly after the alleged incident.
But the next year, she reportedly reached an out-of-court settlement with Ronaldo involving a $375,000 (£288,000) payment for agreeing never to go public with the allegations.
Her lawyers are now seeking to declare the non-disclosure agreement void.
In a lawsuit, Ms Mayorga says she met Ronaldo at the Rain Nightclub in the Palms Hotel and Casino, and that he raped her in his penthouse suite.
Mr Stovall said his client had suffered from major depression and considered suicide since the alleged assault almost a decade ago.
He said a psychiatrist had diagnosed Ms Mayorga with post-traumatic stress disorder.
Las Vegas police confirmed on Tuesday they had initially investigated a complaint in June 2009, but added they had no suspect in the case.
“At the time the report was taken, the victim did not provide detectives with the location of the incident or suspect description,” a statement said.
“As of September 2018, the case has been reopened and our detectives are following up on information being provided,” it added.
Ronaldo’s lawyers have previously said they will sue Der Spiegel magazine over its reporting.
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Manchester City break £500m revenue barrier in Premier League-winning season
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How did Coca-Cola put fizz into its World Cup sales?
Image copyright Lukas Schulze/FIFA Image caption Coca-Cola was an official partner of the 2018 Fifa World Cup in Russia
Have you ever wondered why the products you see on supermarket shelves occupy the positions they do, and how retailers manage their stock levels? This is the science of shelf management and technology is playing an increasingly important part in it.
Following this year’s Fifa World Cup in Russia, Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling Company (CCH), a major bottling partner for the global drinks brand, reported a 6.4% jump in revenues for the first half of 2018.
The football competition, warm weather and new product launches helped boost sales, the company said, but new technology also helped, in the form of sophisticated image recognition and data analytics.
CCH implemented a new system operated by tech firm Trax which digitised the previously manual stock-taking process.
When you have 200,000 retail customers across a geographically vast country like Russia, relying on pen and paper stock records that then had to be inputted into a computer was hardly ideal. It led to delays in replenishing empty shelves, which is not good for business.
Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling Company owns 10 bottling plants in Russia Running out of stock costs retailers more than $634bn (£494bn) a year in lost sales, according to a report by retail analysts IHL Group.
And with the summer’s World Cup attracting 4.5 million visitors, “it was highly important for us to get the right stocks in place,” says Aleksandr Makarov, project manager for CCH Russia.
Implementing the Trax system resulted in a 63% reduction in “out-of-stock” occurrences and audit times that fell from 20 minutes to two minutes, says Mr Makarov.
“We achieved 99.5% product availability in stores three hours before the games started.”
So how exactly did CCH achieve this?
Image copyright Trax Image caption Trax uses on-shelf and smartphone cameras to analyse the position and availability of products Using shelf-mounted cameras and augmented reality on smartphones and tablets, Trax’s image recognition system monitors all the products on open shelves and in coolers, understanding how they differ in size, shape and colour.
A “panoramic stitching engine” pieces together the in-store images to recreate the full shelf, while analytic software recognises each product. The supermarket is instantly alerted if brands are out of place or missing from the shelves.
But, as Trax chief executive Joel Bar-El explains, “many products look the same but are in different sizes, like fizzy drinks, for example. So we’ve created an extra layer, understanding the physical layout of the store and looking at the price to help us work out the likely size of the product.”
Image copyright Trax Image caption Shelf-mounted cameras monitor product position and stock levels in real time The firm is identifying 250 million products a month and providing real-time data to 170 retailers and brand manufacturers around the world, says Mr Bar-El.
As bricks-and-mortar retailers face the growing challenge of online, a number of tech companies are springing up offering digital stock management and data analytics services to retailers – Planorama, TransVoyant and MetaMind to name but a few.
Shelf science
Supermarkets devise planograms – organisational charts – of where their tens of thousands of brands should go on shelves or in fridges and freezers. This helps store workers put things in the right place, because when it comes to grocery retailing, position matters.
Broadly speaking, premium products go on the top shelves, cheaper items on the bottom shelves, leaving the middle shelves for the best-selling mid-range products.
According to consumer organisation Which?, it’s this “sandwich effect” that makes the profitable mid-shelf items seem more appealing. Clever packaging can subtly suggest that cheaper brands, placed near premium brands, are just as good.
Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Image recognition must differentiate between products that look similar but are different sizes Brands pay handsomely for the right to occupy the best shelf positions, so they want to make sure retailers are doing what they promised to do. Sometimes they don’t, whether through human error or poor planning. So real-time monitoring helps address this.
And they also want to make sure there’s enough of their product in stock so there isn’t a yawning gap on the shelf for very long.
“Retailers are out of stock about 8% to 12% of the time at the moment,” says Mr Bar-El, “but systems like ours can reduce that to 3% or 4%.
“We alert them immediately. It normally takes three to four hours to replenish shelves today, but we’ve reduced that to 20 minutes in many cases,” he claims.
Toby Pickard, head of insight for innovation and futures at retail analysts IGD, says using technology to ensure real-time stock management is becoming crucial for companies.
“As retailers increasingly match each other on price and range, excellent in-store service and product availability will become more important in terms of enabling retailers to stand out from the crowd and drive footfall to their stores,” he says.
But, as Patrick O’Brien, UK retail research director at GlobalData, points out, “this is not exactly rocket science”.
“Existing technology and shop floor staff should be able to maintain shelf stock, so it comes down to whether or not these providers can actually prove a return on investment,” he says.
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Data analytics is also revealing what’s actually happening. And some of the findings are surprising.
For example, one pet food maker assumed that having its product positioned next to its main competitor wouldn’t be good for sales. But it was. Why?
“We are not bothered by explaining why, we’re just following the data,” says Mr Bar-El. “It could be about colour, brain psychology, but we don’t know. Our conclusions are evidence-based.”
Online grocery shopping is growing quickly, with IGD forecasting 48% sales growth in the UK by 2022, 286% growth in China, and 129% growth in the US over the same period.
Won’t this be a threat to in-store tech providers?
Image copyright Alibaba Image caption Chinese online retail giant Alibaba is integrating tech into supermarkets “There is no question that online grocery will continue to grow and will undoubtedly become a main focus of both retailers and brands,” says Mr Bar-El.
“But this increase in online sales is far from being the end of bricks-and-mortar stores. Online presents us with a far greater understanding of customer behaviour… the amount of data and insight that can be generated will help improve customer experiences, sales and overall understanding of every aspect of the business.”
He envisages a hybrid world – a blend of online and physical, as evidenced by Amazon’s bricks-and-mortar Amazon Go stores and Alibaba’s “new retail” concept, which aims to combine the convenience of online ordering and home delivery with the fun of in-store shopping and eating.
“The future of retail is all about data, and the companies of the future are the ones who are learning to use it across all platforms – both digital and physical,” he concludes.
So the next time you casually pluck that fizzy drink from the supermarket shelf, consider the science behind your decision.
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Coca-Cola to buy Costa coffee for £3.9bn
Describing the sale as a “win-win” for everyone, she said the price paid by Coca-Cola was far higher than if Costa had been demerged into a stand-alone company on the stock market.
She said she thought the beverage giant would use Costa to create “ready to drink, cold brew coffees”.
“You could see Costa absolutely everywhere, in vending machines, hotels, restaurants, pubs, cafes – in all the places you see Coke today,” she added.
Coca-Cola chief executive James Quincey told investors on a conference call that Costa was “a winning company that can go global”.
He acknowledged that retail sales were a new area for Coca-Cola, but said Costa already had “a strong management team” and that Coca-Cola intended to “make it attractive for them to stay”.
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Image copyright Heritage Images From beer to beans to beds: Whitbread’s long history
1742 – Samuel Whitbread forms partnership with Godfrey and Thomas Shewell
1750 – Whitbread creates UK’s first mass-production brewery in London
1868 – Begins producing beer in bottles
1968 – Starts brewing Heineken under licence
1974 – Opens first Beefeater steakhouse
1990s – Buys David Lloyd Leisure, Marriott Hotels, TGI Fridays, Pizza Hut, Premier Lodge
1995 – Buys Costa Coffee from Sergio and Bruno Costa for £19m when it had 39 outlets
2000 – Sells brewing business to focus on Premier Inn and Costa
Whitbread also owns restaurants Beefeater and Brewers Fayre. Over the years, it has owned well-known brands such as TGI Fridays, Pizza Hut and Marriott Hotels.
The deal is subject to the agreement of Whitbread’s shareholders and various other approvals, including from anti-trust regulators.
It is expected to complete in the first half of next year.
Analysis: Dominic O’Connell, Today business presenter
For years, demerger was a dirty word at Whitbread. When asked, as they often were, about the logic of having a hotel chain and a coffee chain in the same company, executives would extol the benefits of having two leisure brands under one roof.
Shareholders were always less convinced, but were happy to go along with the idea while Whitbread grew its revenue, profits and share price at a steady clip over the last decade.
All that changed with the arrival of Alison Brittain as chief executive – and the appearance on the shareholder register of Elliott Management, an aggressive, deep-pocketed US hedge fund with a track record of shaking up big companies. It pushed hard for a demerger, and Ms Brittain, who judged that Costa and Premier had reached sufficient scale to stand on their own feet, opened the door.
The plan was that Costa would be spun off at some time in the next two years, but Coca-Cola pre-empted that with a knockout offer.
While this is a landmark deal for Whitbread, it is also a significant move for Coca-Cola, taking it into hot beverages for the first time and, it hopes, providing the growth for which its investors have been crying out.
Nicholas Hyett, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, described the deal as “a bitter-sweet moment for Whitbread investors”.
“On the one hand, £3.9bn is an undeniably rich valuation and likely far better than Costa could achieve as an independently listed company, valuing its earnings higher than those of the mighty Starbucks,” he said.
“On the other, Costa has long been the jewel in Whitbread’s crown and some will be sad to see it go at any price, especially given the growth potential in China and elsewhere.”
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Premier League signs Coca-Cola as sponsor
Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Coca-Cola is a sponsor of the World Cup
Drinks giant Coca-Cola has agreed its biggest UK sponsorship deal by becoming Premier League football’s seventh and final commercial partner.
It will become the official soft drink partner of the league, joining other sponsors Barclays, Carling, Cadbury, Nike, Tag Heuer and EA Sports.
The three-and-a-half-year agreement starts in January 2019. The financial details have not been revealed.
Coca-Cola also sponsors the football World Cup and the Olympic Games.
It also sponsored the EFL Championship for six years until 2010.
Image copyright Coca-Cola Image caption Coca-Cola will use the deal to promote a number of its brands “They tailor different brands according to the different countries. The Premier League has a very similar reach in terms of popularity around the world, and Coca-Cola will be thinking they can do the same as Pepsi has done.
“Coca-Cola will have invested a significant outlay for this deal, and will want to use it to promote more than one brand.”
As well as digital initiatives, the drinks firm will also back a nationwide Premier League trophy tour.
Richard Masters, managing director of the Premier League, said: “We know from their previous campaigns in sport they are excellent at communicating to fans across the globe and they have some exciting ideas… that will see the league benefit from their huge reach in the UK and across the world.”
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