Thursday, 10 May 2012

Saya bersedia hilang dara pada umur 70 I’m ready to lose my virginity at 70

club singer Pam


A VIRGIN aged 70 yesterday declared she is ready to have sex.

 Cabaret singer Pam Shaw said she has always been too busy working to find a man.
And even though she sings under the saucy name The Sexational Pam — and has rubbed shoulders over the years with sex symbols of the time like Tom Jones and Roger Moore — she has never hopped between the sheets.
Pam explained she does not believe in sex before marriage. And as she has stayed single there was no question of losing her virginity.






Stage act ... Pam as Tina Turner
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But she said: “Now’s the time. I’m ready to take the plunge for the right bloke.
“My standards are still very high, though. I’m hoping to bag a tall, dark and handsome millionaire.
“I feel I am ready to give marriage a go and maybe go to bed with a man. You are never too old for anything. Just look at Joan Collins.”
Pam, who dresses in revealing costumes when she performs on Britain’s club circuit, added: “I like to think I’d be a real catch.


Racy ... in flimsy costume
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“I may be 70 but I’m young at heart. People can’t believe it when I tell them my age.

“I think I look great, maybe because I’ve never been married or had kids. I’m fun and have bundles of energy.”
Pam, of Wigan, Greater Manchester, lived with mum Lilian until she died aged 97 in 1995.
The singer’s career blossomed after she won TV talent show Opportunity Knocks in the 1960s.


Pose ... with motor
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She opened shows for comic Ken Dodd and crooner Englebert Humperdinck, performed on stage in Las Vegas and shared a dressing room with The Voice judge Tom Jones, now 71, during a week-long stint at Bolton Casino.
Pam said: “I was never short of offers in my heyday.
“Men saw the outfits I wore on stage and thought I would be easy.
“But I’ve never really been intimate with a man, just a bit of kissing. I had a sexy stage name and dressed sexy but that was all for my career.


Beehive babe ... in 60s
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“There has never been time for me to get a man. I worked so much that sometimes I’d only have an hour’s sleep each night. I wouldn’t entertain the idea of sex outside marriage — and marriage meant giving up on my dreams.”
Even when surrounded by some of the world’s hottest hunks, Pam held out.
She said: “Tom Jones was very good looking and we used to chat occasionally before I went on stage as the opening act. In the late 60s we performed together. There was only a curtain separating our dressing areas.”
Pam told how Eurovision hopeful Humperdinck, now 75, did think about trying it on.



Hunk ... Tom Jones in heyday
She said: “Engelbert and I stayed in the same lodging house in Leeds in the late 60s.

“He always had an eye for the ladies and was eventually banned from bringing back girls to the place. Although he was very flirtatious with me, my mum was my chaperone and wouldn’t allow any funny business.”
Pam, who has also appeared in TV ads, hit show Shameless and Alien Autopsy with Ant and Dec, admitted a couple of guys did catch her eye. She said: “In 1976 I was proposed to by an oil rig worker in Blackpool. I said yes but later broke it off when I realised I didn’t fancy him.
“The only man I thought I could go to bed with was a guy who came to watch me every night when I sang in Malta. But I wasn’t prepared to settle down — so it wasn’t to be.”

Chelsea 2 Liverpool 1


CHELSEA racked up the records as they turned Wembley into wonderland. 

John Terry, Didier Drogba, Ashley Cole and Blues boss Roberto Di Matteo set personal milestones and broke Liverpool hearts.

- Skipper Terry is the first player to lift the FA Cup on four separate occasions for one club.
- Drogba is the first to score in four different FA Cup finals.
- Cole is the first to win seven winner’s medals.
- And Di Matteo is the first to score for and manage a winning FA Cup team.
Terry gave a rousing speech to his troops prior to Chelsea leaving for Wembley, calling on them to take the first step to glory in a two-week period that will define their season.


 Silverware has eluded them in the league.
Andre Villas-Boas lost the hotseat before he had a chance to get comfortable.
But victory in the FA Cup and Champions League final would leave the Blues to reflect on success rather than disappointment in a campaign that threatened to implode. For Liverpool, who have under-performed atrociously in the league, knockout competitions have been their salvation following victory in the Carling Cup in February.  



And Kop boss Kenny Dalglish was taking no gambles as he started semi-final hero Andy Carroll on the bench and played Craig Bellamy off Luis Suarez.

Fernando Torres paved the way for Carroll’s £35million switch to Anfield.
But despite being in the best form of his Chelsea career, the Spaniard also missed out on a first XI place. Drogba got the nod — and with his finals record you can hardly blame Di Matteo.
The Blues started the brighter, dictating the pace and showing early signs it could be a torrid afternoon for Liverpool.
It took them 11 minutes to break the deadlock.
And it was Ramires — the man whose goal inspired the Blues’ miraculous Champions League comeback at Barcelona — who came up with the opener.

Ramires enjoys his early goal  
SUCKS APPEAL ... Ramires enjoys his early goal
The Brazilian is fast becoming a Stamford Bridge legend with these important strikes.

Ramires, suspended for the Champions League final after his booking at the Nou Camp, raced through on goal from Juan Mata’s pass to fire home.
In truth, Pepe Reina was at fault as he had been for the two opening West Ham goals in the final staged at Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium in 2006.
You suspected, with the momentum, Chelsea would look to press home their advantage.
But for some reason they seemed content to allow Liverpool back into the game, although they did not threaten Petr Cech’s goal.

The Reds closed the half on top as they continued to show signs of improvement.

Didier Drogba sees his firm shot double Chelsea's lead 

FIERCE DROG ... Didier Drogba sees his firm shot double Chelsea's lead
RDM’s men looked the better side again following the interval.

And in a two-minute period, controversy erupted at both ends of the pitch.
Martin Skrtel appeared to commit GBH on Terry and then Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard was blocked by Branislav Ivanovic in the box.
But seven minutes into the half Chelsea took a commanding grip on the game as Drogba kept up his impressive record of scoring in every Chelsea domestic cup final he has played.
Frank Lampard made a complete mug of Jay Spearing as he turned and left him for dead before threading a pass through to the Ivory Coast striker who finished clinically.
That is eight goals in seven FA Cup and Carling Cup finals, including those staged in Cardiff.


Didier Drogba celebrates 

LEAP CHEER ... Chelsea hail second scorer Drogba
It was no coincidence Dalglish dragged Spearing off and replaced him with Carroll moments later.

Liverpool grabbed a lifeline as Carroll marked his appearance with an impressive goal. Stewart Downing dispossessed Jose Bosingwa before playing the ball into the towering striker.
But just as Lampard had embarrassed Spearing, Carroll did the same to Terry as he turned one way then another before firing the ball into the roof of the net.
For the first time in the game Chelsea came under enormous pressure.
Liverpool, stifled for so long, were suddenly finding the wind in their sails and they were intent on firing crosses into the Chelsea box to utilise Carroll’s aerial strength.


Andy Carroll scores 

ANDY FINISH ... sub Carroll lashes Liverpool back into it
Then came the controversy as Suarez crossed from the right and Carroll rose to seemingly head Liverpool level.

But as the former Newcastle striker wheeled away in celebration the game continued as Cech was ruled to have clawed the ball from underneath his bar.
The Liverpool players, particularly Suarez and Carroll, erupted in fury but TV replays appeared to prove inconclusive.
Carroll should have buried it — then there would be no need for debate.


Andy Carroll's 'goal' 

CECH THIS OUT ... Andy Carroll heads the 'goal' that would have been an equaliser
Liverpool came again and when Gerrard was put through he attempted to play it back into the path of Suarez when it seemed easier to shoot.

It did not detract from the fact Chelsea were hanging on for their lives in five minutes of injury time — although the Blues had chances to finish the final off as the Reds threw numbers forward.
p.smith@the-sun.co.uk


Andy Carroll celebrates his non-goal 

FALSE HOPE ... Andy Carroll celebrates his non-goal

DREAM TEAM
STAR MAN — DIDIER DROGBA (CHELSEA)
CHELSEA: Cech 8, Bosingwa 5, Ivanovic 6, Terry 6, Cole 7, Ramires 7 (Meireles 5), Mikel 6, Lampard 7, Kalou 6, Drogba 9, Mata 7 (Malouda 4). Subs not used: Turnbull, Essien, Torres, Ferreira, Sturridge. Booked: Mikel.
LIVERPOOL: Reina 5, Johnson 6, Skrtel 6, Agger 5, Jose Enrique 4, Spearing 4 (Carroll 7), Henderson 6, Downing 6, Gerrard 7, Bellamy 6 (Kuyt 5), Suarez 6. Subs not used: Doni, Maxi, Carragher, Shelvey, Kelly. Booked: Agger, Suarez. REF: P Dowd 7 

Wednesday, 9 May 2012

Liverpool 4 Chelsea 1

TOO little, too late? Well, try telling that to Kenny Dalglish this morning. 


It may have been three days after the main event but at least it made for a happy farewell to the season at Anfield for Liverpool.

And, who knows, when it comes to that end-of-term debrief with the American owners in the next week or so, it could still prove to be pivotal for Kop boss Dalglish.

For with the heat rising on whether King Kenny should still be the man with his hand on the tiller next season, it has not done his chances any harm.

However, the same cannot be said of John Terry’s claims to be England’s defensive linchpin after a first-half display as bad as any the Chelsea skipper has produced in heaven knows how long.

In fact, if Roy Hodgson used last night’s display as a benchmark, the new England chief would not be facing that most awkward of dilemmas over whether Terry and Rio Ferdinand could play together.

For if this was anything like the norm, the Blues stopper would be nowhere near the squad.
Captain, leader, legend he may be at Stamford Bridge. Captain, leader, liability he most definitely was here.
If only Luis Suarez and Co had produced something like this on Saturday, there would be no debates over Dalglish’s future and the FA Cup would be sitting alongside the Carling one in the Anfield trophy cabinet. 

Nutmegged almost at will, left on his backside so often it is a wonder he did not end up with piles and looking petrified every time Andy Carroll went near him. That was Terry’s evening on Merseyside... and all that before we had reached the interval.
OK, it might only have scratched the surface of revenge for Saturday’s Wembley defeat but for Kop fans it will do very nicely for starters, thank you.
Chelsea’s plastic-flag wavers will obviously be quick to point out that only three of their cup heroes — the Champions League final banned trio of Terry, Branislav Ivanovic and Ramires — lined up last night.
Yet when the replacements include the likes of Michael Essien, Daniel Sturridge and a certain Fernando Torres, it is hardly the Dog and Duck side they are sending out.
Last night they delivered the goods at last. Just a pity that it was all about saving face, rather than points meaning prizes.
And not even a cricket score was ever going to mask the fact that six home wins is their lowest return since Liverpool were relegated in 1954.
Mind you, the inquest into that can wait.
Ironically, Chelsea should actually have gone in front when Ivanovic thumped a header against the post from eight yards on 17 minutes.
Little more than 60 seconds later they were trailing. 

There was no danger when Suarez collected the ball right on the touchline with blue shirts everywhere.
Yet he somehow danced past four challenges, before the cutest of pull-backs was turned into his own net by Essien. Six minutes later that lead was doubled, with Terry’s face left as red as his opponents’ shirts.
Maxi Rodriguez’s pass to Jordan Henderson was actually way off beam.
Yet when Terry lost his footing, the England midfielder hared off and slid a cool finish past Ross Turnbull.

Then Carroll’s presence so distracted the Chelsea defence that when he knocked Jonjo Shelvey’s corner back across goal, Daniel Agger was left free to head home in the 28th minute.
It should have been four when Ivanovic elbowed Carroll in the throat — somehow he escaped with only a booking — yet Stewart Downing drilled the spot-kick against the post.
That meant the Reds had missed a club-record SEVEN penalties in one season.
After Ramires pulled one back in the 50th minute there was a slight flicker of ‘Here we go again’.

But as Shelvey half-volleyed a shocking clearance from Turnbull back into the net from 35 yards after 61 minutes, Terry and Co’s misery was complete.
It also kept up Dalglish’s astonishing record of never having lost to Chelsea in a dozen games as manager.
The Kop boss will be a lot more confident this morning of being given the chance to make it a lucky 13.


VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS AVAILABLE TOMORROW
DREAM TEAM RATINGS
STAR MAN - LUIS SUAREZ
 
LIVERPOOL: Reina 7, Johnson 7, Carragher 7, Skrtel 7, Agger 7, Maxi 7, Shelvey 7, Henderson 7, Carroll 8, Suarez 9, Downing 7. Subs: Kuyt (Maxi 83) 6, Sterling (Downing 83) 6. Not used: Doni, Coates, Spearing, Kelly, Bellamy. Booked: Henderson, Agger.
CHELSEA: Turnbull 4, Ferreira 5, Ivanovic 4, Terry 4, Bertrand 4, Essien 5, Romeu 5, Ramires 6, Sturridge 5, Torres 4, Malouda 6. Subs: Lukaku (Sturridge 68) 5. Not used: Hilario, Cole, Lampard, Mata, Kalou, Hutchinson. Booked: Ferreira, Terry, Essien, Ivanovic.





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Blue murder as Cardiff turn red

THE Far Eastern tycoon who owns soccer’s Cardiff City stunned fans yesterday by declaring the team have to DUMP their historic blue strip. 

 

Malaysian magnate Vincent Tan wants the side — nicknamed the BLUEBIRDS — to switch to RED.

He is convinced it is a more “lucky” colour after the Championship side came within an ace of promotion to the Premier League — only to lose in the play-offs to West Ham.

Fans of the club, which has sported blue for more than a century, were outraged last night as it emerged the change will be rubber-stamped within a fortnight.

At first, many thought it was a joke.

A lucky DRAGON may also replace the bluebird on the club’s crest, which is likely to mean the team gets a new nickname.

In return, Mr Tan’s Malaysian consortium will agree to wipe out Cardiff’s £20million debt and build a new training ground.

A source said of Cardiff stars such as Ben Turner donning the new kit next season: “This is crazy and incredibly bizarre. The owner believes red is a more positive colour than blue.

“A third of the fans are against it and another third still think it is a wind-up.

“But a third would not care if Cardiff played in pink — providing they got promotion to the Premier League.”

Mr Tan, 59 — who is worth £800million — is convinced the idea will lead to a change of fortunes for his side.

Cardiff came within a whisker of winning the Carling Cup this season but lost on penalties to Liverpool in the final.

The side also made the promotion play-offs. But over two legs against West Ham they failed to score — as their opponents netted a total of five.

Cardiff’s owners say they will give boss Malky Mackay more money next season to take the club into the top flight. 

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