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1:44am Saturday 6th September 2008
Joey Barton will be a footballing free man by the end of next month, providing he stays out of trouble, after the Football Association handed the Newcastle midfielder a six-match ban - with another six suspended - for his assault on Ousmane Dabo.
The attack, which happened in May last year at City's Carrington training ground, left the France midfielder in such a state that he felt he "looked like the Elephant Man".
Barton pleaded guilty to the FA's charge of violent conduct in August, but the 26-year-old had requested a personal hearing to plead leniency.
Former boss Kevin Keegan, who resigned from his position yesterday, was scheduled to attend the hearing as Barton's character witness but is thought to have submitted a character statement by fax instead.
In July, Barton was given a four-month suspended prison sentence for the assault and entered Tony Adams' Sporting Chance Clinic in an attempt to rid himself of his behavioural problems that have blighted his career.
As part of his punishment for the attack, Barton was also ordered to pay £3,000 compensation and carry out 200 hours of community service.
A four-man FA disciplinary panel decided this afternoon after a hearing at Soho Square that Barton should be banned for 12 matches, six of which will be suspended until the end of the 2009-2010 season.
A statement issued on the FA's website read: "Much has been written about Mr Barton over recent months.
"The regulatory commission had the benefit of taking all appropriate information into consideration. The commission members considered principally the serious attack by Mr Barton that clearly cannot be accepted.
"The members also had to take into consideration the sanctions imposed by the courts and the pro-active support Mr Barton has received from Newcastle United FC and other professional bodies.
All the top tip columns make being green sound so easy: just change your light bulbs, walk to the shops and do your recycling, but it never really works out like that. SARAH LEWIS turns agony aunt and answers some of your pressing eco-questions.
When the new NHS dental contract was introduced, large numbers of dentists left the NHS and focused on private patients.
Woolworths, one of the best-known names on the British high street, has been put into administration with £385 million of debt. As company bosses and administrators Deloitte wrestle with the task of rescuing the business, RICHARD GURNER takes a look back at the company’s history in Sussex and asks business leaders what needs to be done to revive its fortunes.
From the village of Horsted Keynes, this walk heads eastwards to encircle the nearby settlement of Danehill, crossing and recrossing two well-wooded valleys before returning along part of the Sussex Border Path, a longdistance walking route which sticks fairly closely to the boundary between East and West Sussex.
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