Looks Like Team Spirit
Major Player
SOCCER Watch Cédric Fauré. Three years ago this Toulouse resident was working for a consumer electronics company, and limiting his footballing to one weekly match with an amateur team. Now employed by the once-moribund Toulouse Football Club (TFC), the 24-year-old striker's 20 goals so far this season top France's second pro division, moving TFC to the cusp of a return to League One. Bringing Fauré's pyrotechnics to bigger audiences next season is risky for the resurrected TFC. Teams from marquee leagues in England, Spain and Italy are already looking to entice Fauré to join France's foreign legion of footballers abroad.
Sick Note
DISEASE The outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) has so far caused 276 deaths, and fear of the disease has forced the cancellation of major sporting events. The ARAFURA games due to be held May 17-24 in Darwin, Australia, are now off, as is the May 17 running of the €1.5 million Singapore cup. The first sumo tournament to be held in South Korea, on June 14-15, is postponed, but the world table tennis championships in Paris from May 19-25 are still on.
Williams Kicks Butts
FORMULA 1 For too long formula one has been in thrall to the dreaded weed. Now BMW-Williams has shown how to kick the habit by signing up GlaxoSmithKline, makers of nicotine patches NiQuitin CQ, as a major sponsor. The pharmaceutical company is putting an estimated €13 million into the team in exchange for having the NiQuitin CQ brand prominently displayed on the cars and drivers' uniforms. Though Williams gave up its association with cigarette companies three years ago, Formula One still attracts €325 million a year from cigarette manufac-turers half the teams on the grid still retain significant tobacco backing. But everyone must go cold turkey by 2005, when a European Union ban on tobacco advertising and sponsorship takes effect. Antismoking campaigners are thrilled that the world's most widely seen motor sport every Grand Prix weekend attracts an estimated 350 million viewers is wresting itself from the clutches of big tobacco. Paul Nurse, joint director general of Cancer Research U.K., hymned, "Formula One is glamorous but this is an opportunity to dispel the myth that, by association, smoking is glamorous too." Tobacco firms are resigned; after nearly 40 years in the sport, they're not crying into their ashtrays.
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