Football: Injured Ardiles 'fine' after Falklands accident - son

Former Argentina midfielder Ossie Ardiles was "fine" after suffering a head wound following a car accident on the Falkland Islands, his son told the BBC on Tuesday.
Ardiles, 61, was believed to have been driving with fellow former Argentina star Ricky Villa a passenger in the car when Ardiles reportedly swerved to avoid a sheep.
"My understanding is he is fine," Ardiles's son Pablo, speaking from his home in England, told the BBC.
"He has 20 odd stitches in his head and my understanding is he has been hospitalised overnight. But he's fine."
Ardiles and Villa were in the Falklands for a TV documentary about how the 1982 war over the islands between Britain and Argentina affected their lives when the pair were playing for English club Tottenham Hotspur.
"Ricky Villa and my brother were out there but they are OK and are back in the hotel," added Pablo Ardiles.
"I don't know the exact details but I understand my dad was driving and that he lost control somehow. I've heard reports he swerved to avoid a sheep but I can't confirm that.
"The main thing is he is fine, they are all OK."
Meanwhile a Tottenham statement said: "All at the club wish Ossie Ardiles and Ricky Villa speedy recoveries after they were involved in a car accident in the Falklands on Monday evening."
The BBC reported that local emergency services and the British military attended the scene of the accident. Ardiles was flown to King Edward Memorial hospital in Stanley.
Ardiles and Villa both joined Tottenham in 1978, shortly after they had been members of Argentina's World Cup-winning squad.
The pair quickly became firm favourites at the north London club, helping Spurs win the FA Cup in 1981 when Villa scored a superb solo goal against Manchester City in a replayed final at Wembley Stadium.
Ardiles spent 10 years at White Hart Lane, making 311 appearances for the club, and also won the UEFA Cup during his time with Spurs.
As the Falklands conflict ended, Ardiles was briefly loaned to Paris St Germain before returning to Tottenham.
He later went on to manage several clubs in England, notably Newcastle United, West Bromwich Albion and Spurs.
Britain has held the Falklands, situated in the South Atlantic, since 1833 but Buenos Aires maintains that the islands are occupied Argentinian territory.
An Argentina invasion in 1982 led to then British prime minister Margaret Thatcher dispatching a naval task force to regain control of the islands. Some 649 Argentinian troops and 255 British military personnel lost their lives in the brief conflict.