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ique advantage, and there are doubtless individuals the world over who have the same attribute.What the study does do is provide further evidence that tendon elasticity is a crucial factor in determining performance. With respects to the Kenyan question, the next step is to ask whether the prevalence of this characteristic is greater in the Kalenjin population, because that may start to uncover why they are able to produce so many world class athletes, not neglecting the fact that the culture and training environment that has been created in Kenyan "unearths" so many of these exceptional runners.? This is an article from our Guardian Sport Network. To find out more about it click here? This article first appeared on the Science of SportSam Richards The Guardian,Saturday 23 March 2013 Jump to comments (…)Copse killers: The Knife's Olof and Karin Derijer AnderssonThe Knife's Olof Dreijer has just uttered a word that strikes fear into the heart of every right-thinking pop fan. Explaining how he and his bandmate and sister Karin Dreijer Andersson rebooted the Knife after six years of doing other things, he reveals that they started to "just meet up and jam". Buy it from Buy the CDThe KnifeShaking The Habitual [Single CD Version]Brille2013 Te
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after sacrificing a lot for the system and higher profile players at LA, and so far he's hit the ground running in terms of goals and influence. In the past couple of seasons you'd have bet on him continuing that run against the roadshy Portland. As Caleb Porter likes to remind us, however, this is a new Timbers team and their impressive early charge has seen them shed their image as pushovers on the road. That one could be feisty.RSL and Galaxy games have occasionally been feisty themselves, though they've also given us some of the more pleasing technical encounters we've seen in the league. What will we get on Saturday? Well, both teams are hit by key absences, though arguably the loss of Robbie Keane and Omar Gonzalez will be a more difficult loss for the Galaxy than RSL's loss of Saborio (key as his goals might be). The Galaxy certainly lacked a certain Je ne sais quoi against New England last week.Seattle came back from a heavy loss of their own to beat Chivas last week, but with Eddie Johnson, Mario Martinez and Brad Evans absent on international duty, they'll have been very relieved that Obafemi Martins had his red card from that game rescinded. The Sounders face a Cascadia Cup game against a Vancouver team whose whole demeanour seems to h
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n earth conquered by aliens.FictionLife After Life by Kate Atkinson (Transworld). Atkinson gives her rueful detective Jackson Brodie a break for this playful, profound novel about fate, destiny and alternative realities. On a snowy night in 1910, a baby girl is born, and dies. And lives again ��The Childhood of Jesus by JM Coetzee (Harvill Secker). A man, a woman and a boy must make a new life in an unknown country, stripped of old memories and identity. After clashing with the authorities, they go on the run, in the new novel from the Nobel laureate.How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia by Mohsin Hamid (Hamish Hamilton). Hamid's followup to The Reluctant Fundamentalist is a joyously barbed satire on entrepreneurialism and the juggernaut of globalisation. Written as a self-help book in the second person, it traces its unnamed hero's rise from rural poverty to corporate tycoon through exemplary life lessons �C "Move to the city", "Don't fall in love", "Be prepared to use violence". Will be one of the standout novels of the year.Secrecy by Rupert Thomson (Granta). Thomson's books are always distinctive and surprising. Set in 17th-century Florence, this novel explores desire and artistry through the figure of a brilliant sculptor who is commissioned
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emailSign up nowGet the Guardian's daily Australia emailOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox every weekday.Sign up for the daily emailRichard Dowden for African Arguments, part of the Guardian Africa Network ,Thursday 31 January 2013 17.50 GMT Jump to comments (…)Supporters of the Orange Democratic Movement cheer a speech by leader, Raila Odinga, in Nairobi. Photograph: Dai Kurokawa/EPAEveryone is strapped in and the Kenyan election roller coaster has begun. A cacophony of electioneering propaganda is being blasted out through every medium. The political godfathers are flying around the country firing up their supporters, screwing down the vote, constituency by constituency and promising heaven after the 4 March poll. Kenya is poised at the top of a ride that could fling the country violently off the rails and send it to hell �C as it did after the 2007 election. Or it could take the country elegantly into a dynamic new era, a transformation that would make it one of the most democratic countries in the world. John Githongo, a civil society activist, says: "the new world is being born but the old order has not yet died".Since the last disastrous election a new constitution has come into force
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