Friday, May 15, 2009

Phelps cruises to 2 finals in return to pool


CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)—Michael Phelps is back.
The Olympic champion easily qualified for the finals of two events Friday morning at the Charlotte Ultraswim, his first meet since winning eight gold medals in Beijing.
Phelps touched second in the last heat of the 200-meter freestyle at 1 minute, 50.46 seconds, and came back about an hour later to win the final heat of the 100 butterfly in 53.41. In both events, he had the third-fastest time overall, advancing to the evening “A” finals.
This is the first meet for which Phelps was eligible since completing a three-month suspension. He was disciplined by USA Swimming after he was photographed using a marijuana pipe.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

West finals give Nuggets reason to shout


DENVER – David Stern’s worst nightmare let the love wash over it on Wednesday night, arms raised, noise crashing down, the raucous and rolling Denver Nuggets rushing into the Western Conference finals. Carmelo Anthony(notes) and Kenyon Martin(notes) and J.R. Smith(notes) traded knowing nods and I-told-you-so laughs. Suddenly, those bad tatts and bad reputations are serious and sobering threats to the commissioner’s television-driven desire of a Kobe-LeBron NBA Finals.
The Los Angeles Lakers are increasingly wobbly, and those chants of “Beat L.A. … Beat L.A.” in the final moments of Game 5 aren’t such a far-fetched idea. It is improbable, yes, but the days and nights of waiting for the Nuggets to implode are over. They’re explosive and hardened and dangerous. They’re the hot NCAA tournament team on a March roll, flexing and preening, feeling like it can do anything.
“They’re a legitimate championship-caliber team,” Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said. “They’ve got a great shot, a real opportunity.”
Mostly, they’ve grown up. Chauncey Billups(notes) walked into the gymnasium and changed everything here. He had a genius 28 points and 12 assists in the 124-110 victory to eliminate the Dallas Mavericks, and now, remarkably, takes his seventh straight team to a conference final.
“Storybook,” Billups said. He has come home to Denver, and restored character and credibility to this uneven franchise.

As much as anything, Denver has Dallas owner Mark Cuban to thank for much of the prism with which the public will judge these Nuggets now. He had to go and use that tired code word that comes with rugged, black basketball players in America: thug.
Martin is a nightmare on the floor, but he’s no thug. Smith can be a clown, but he’s no thug. Anthony has a history, too, but he’s grown up a lot.
Thugs? Listen, they seldom make it to the NBA. When they do, they don’t have staying power. Cuban has long railed against the stereotypes and labels thrust onto NBA players, and he went a long way toward perpetuating them with that sophomoric snap at K-Mart’s mother, Lydia Moore. It’s strange: In hockey, they don’t use that word with physical players. When they have tattoos, it seems, everything changes.
In the end, it fed the public’s worst sensibilities about judging these Nuggets. Stern should be ashamed of himself. He can’t have an owner talking that way. He created a climate in Game 4 in Dallas that was needless and despicable, a free-for-all on the Nuggets and their families on Monday.
Cuban did everyone a favor running off to Vegas to pick up an award for Game 5 because his presence at the Pepsi Center would’ve brought out the worst in everyone. This way, the Nuggets could spend this night celebrating a return to the conference finals for the first time since 1985 without cursing out Cuban.
Nevertheless, Cuban’s apology on his blog was a half-assed embarrassment, self-indulgent and patronizing. It was rightfully unacceptable to the Nuggets, and it should’ve been to the league office, too.
The NBA insisted that it was a closed matter on Wednesday, and a spokesman said, “We are confident that this will be brought to an intelligent close with an adult conversation.” Yes, that’s how this will be resolved with Cuban and Martin. Adult conversion. K-Mart was berating him when they parted ways in Dallas this week. Fines mean nothing to Cuban, but the league office owed everyone a strongly worded reprimand, if not a quantifiable punishment. Owners should be held to a different standard and almost never are in the NBA.
“They called us every name in the book,” Anthony said.
If nothing else, this episode turned out to be a valuable test for Denver. Once, the Nuggets would’ve become consumed with exacting immature revenge. No sucker punches, no brawls, no suspensions. Anthony has come a long way, and now gets a chance to become a genuine superstar in the NBA. He fell far behind classmates LeBron James(notes) and Dwyane Wade(notes) because he couldn’t stay out of trouble and because the Nuggets never won in the playoffs. Last summer, Denver dumped Marcus Camby’s(notes) contract for nothing and Anthony’s Team USA teammates relentlessly teased him.
“I was kind of the joke of the USA team,” he said. “They said that we got rid of all of our guys.”
The NBA’s executive of the year, Mark Warkentien, reshaped these Nuggets and they came of age. As they ran down the corridor to the locker room after the beat-down on the Mavericks, Martin yelled, “Eight more. …We need eight more.”
The Denver Nuggets are thinking about the West finals and beyond now. These bad tatts and bad reputations are the commissioner’s worst nightmare. The Nuggets have reached the conference finals thinking it feels like March and they’re on some kind of a roll.
“I have a feeling we are not going to be messed up by the next round,” Denver coach George Karl said. “People are waiting for us to crack, but there is a smart toughness to this team.”
Beat L.A., they screamed in the Mile High City. Beat L.A.
No one was laughing. Not anymore.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Back in the Pool, Phelps Is Mapping a New Course


BALTIMORE — Delivering multiple golds was going to be like labor: an all-out push for the Beijing Olympics, followed by a breather, then another hard push for the 2012 Games in London.


That was the master plan drawn up several years ago by Michael Phelps’s coach, Bob Bowman, and approved by his mother, Debbie, and it worked like a dream. For nine days last summer in China, Phelps could do no wrong as he surpassed the swimmer Mark Spitz’s record with eight gold medals.
With the high-degree-of-difficulty phase of the plan completed to perfection, there seemed like less need for a safety net. Bowman broke ground on his horse farm in northern Maryland and resumed coaching. Debbie Phelps worked on a memoir and welcomed new students as the principal of Windsor Middle School.
For the first time in his life, Phelps, 23, was allowed time and space to broaden his circle of influence and interests.
The idea was to give Phelps room to breathe, not inhale.
In February, a photograph of Phelps holding a marijuana pipe surfaced. Bowman had miscalculated. Swimming would not be the hard part for Phelps. Negotiating his way on land with only his wits to guide him would be more difficult.
For nearly 12 years, Phelps had been hermetically protected from the outside world. From his heart rate to his social activities, nothing went unmonitored.
“I had this monster goal and I achieved it,” Phelps said last week. “To be able to do what I did, my life growing up had to be how it was.”
The blueprint for becoming the most well-rounded swimmer in history turned out to have a built-in flaw. It made Phelps one-dimensional, someone who by his own admission is lost without the structure of his sport.
“The trade-off is he missed some experiences that other people had,” Bowman said. “I guess the question is, what do we do after that? And I think that’s what he’s working on now, expanding his horizons beyond swimming.”
The scope of that task is enormous. Imagine being not yet 25, and pondering how to make the next 50 years meaningful.
“I think there are a lot of things that will still happen to me in life that will excite me,” Phelps said. “The past year was something I wanted my whole life, and I finally got it. I think down the road, there will be other interests and goals that will take over my life.”
Phelps is exploring a couple of avenues. Last year, he and Bowman bought the Meadowbrook Aquatics complex, the base for the North Baltimore Aquatic Club. Their goal is to build a world-class swimming academy like the nearby baseball academy of another Baltimore icon, Cal Ripken. “I can foresee as I sit here the businessman that Michael is becoming and will become the next four, eight years,” Debbie Phelps said.
Then there is golf. Phelps played his first 18 holes a few weeks ago. It was great, he said. He was invisible in plain view, with not a fan or a cellphone camera in sight.
With three high school friends, all avid golfers, as his witnesses, Phelps shot a 115. “I told them, Once I pick it up, it’s going to be on,” he said, laughing.
Phelps was weight training at Loyola College last Thursday when he peered out the window and noticed the rain had stopped and the sun was peeking through clouds. “I’m going to run home and get my clubs and go to the range,” he told Todd Patrick, a training partner.
Bowman and Debbie Phelps see golf as a way for Phelps to expand his network and polish his social skills.
“He can play golf with the C.E.O. of every company in America, probably,” Bowman said. “He can interact with people. I think it’s great.”
After the marijuana photograph surfaced, Phelps could have stopped swimming for good, and he nearly did. But then it would have felt less like a retirement than an exile, and he has never been a quitter.
Besides, “I still love to swim,” said Phelps, who has entered this weekend’s United States Grand Prix event in Charlotte, N.C., his first competition since Beijing. Phelps plans to retire after the 2012 Olympics, never to return. He was stretching when a television tuned to ESPN reported that quarterback Brett Favre was considering coming out of retirement a second time. Phelps summoned Bowman, pointed to the screen and said, “That will never be me.”
When it was Phelps’s turn do pull-ups, he strapped on a 44-pound weighted vest and asked his teammates how many they had done. Then, gripping the bar and grimacing as his arms trembled from the effort, he pushed to do more.
In the pool, Phelps is not weighed down by introspection. Asked if swimming has been more of an expression of his life or a refuge from it, his face went blank and he said, “I’ve never even thought about it.”
It has crossed his mind that he may be remembered by some people more for one marijuana pipe than for all of his Olympic gold.


“It was a stupid mistake, and I’ll live with that for the rest of my life,” Phelps said, adding, “If people look down on some of the things I’ve done or they think less of me, I can’t control that.”


So much is out of his hands now. Between swims at a recent practice, Phelps asked Bowman if he had ever eaten at the Sullivan’s steakhouse here. “No,” Bowman replied, “but I know you have.”
Phelps pushed off the wall for another swim. “How did you know that?” he asked upon finishing. “Well,” Bowman said, “you went there with 14 friends, you had the New York strip, you shared your seafood platter with all your friends, and everyone seemed to be having a good time.”
Phelps’s jaw dropped. Bowman told him the visit to Sullivan’s had popped up on his Google alert, which he uses to keep track of what is written about Phelps. “Wherever you go,” Bowman reminded him, “it’s news.”
When Bowman found out about the incriminating photograph, taken at a private party at the University of South Carolina in November, he was furious. “That’s about as bad a judgment as you can use,” he said.
Bowman said he was not swayed by Phelps’s explanation that he believed he was among friends. He reminded Phelps that he could no longer be certain who had his back.
“Michael wants to know people and open up to them a little bit, but it just doesn’t work,” Bowman said. “You just have to approach everybody with skepticism, which I think is sad.”
Bowman scoffed at the idea that Phelps got off relatively easy. United States Swimming, the sport’s national governing body, suspended him for three months, based on circumstantial evidence, not a failed drug test.
“Why don’t you try to have everybody in the world know about one of your private moments that you’re embarrassed about,” Bowman said. “Can you imagine that anywhere you go in the world, everybody has talked about it and has an opinion on it? I think that’s a pretty high price to pay.”
Should it matter that Phelps earned tens of millions of dollars as a pitchman? With every contract he signed, he was essentially agreeing to embody America’s best image of itself — the can-do spirit, the purity of purpose, the noblesse oblige.
“Just because you make a lot of money, that doesn’t require you to be perfect 24 hours a day,” Bowman said. “That doesn’t automatically make you a superhero.”
Many times over the past few months, Debbie Phelps has wanted to scream, “Will you let my kid be human?” But that’s just it. The original master plan, while brilliant, made no provision for Michael’s being mortal.

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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Boeheim the Coach Outdone by Boeheim the Fund-Raiser


Tears were in Jim Boeheim’s eyes that night. “How can we ever top this?” he asked his wife, Juli.


It was not the night in April 2003 when Boeheim coached Syracuse to a national championship. Of that occasion, Juli recalled this week: “I couldn’t wait to get my hands on him and hug him. I asked him, ‘How do you feel?’ He said, ‘Relieved. Let’s go home.’ “
The night Boeheim broke down was in April 2000, after Syracuse held its first “Basket Ball” gala to raise money for Coaches vs. Cancer. Juli had organized the event, Jim had put his name behind it, and they both had recruited nearly everyone they knew to buy seats and get involved. The Boeheims, novice party planners, were nervous about the turnout until about 650 people arrived and moved Jim to tears.
As No. 3 Syracuse faces No. 2 Oklahoma in the N.C.A.A. tournament on Friday night, Boeheim is on the verge of another major accomplishment: 800 career wins, a milestone that only seven Division I men’s basketball coaches have reached.
For all that he has achieved as a coach, Boeheim has earned as much respect for his work on behalf of cancer charities.
Syracuse, the first program to hold a Coaches vs. Cancer gala, will host its 10th “Basket Ball” this spring and has raised $2.8 million from the previous nine. In all, the Boeheims have helped raise $4.5 million for the central New York chapter of the American Cancer Society since the mid-1990s.
“It just tells you his heart and what kind of man he is,” Missouri Coach Mike Anderson said. “He makes a coach like me look up to him and try to do some things in the same capacity.”
Boeheim routinely responds to requests to talk with cancer patients, especially those with prostate cancer, which he had in 2001. He visits patients, speaks on behalf of the American Cancer Society and regularly invites children with cancer to his practices.
“We’ve all been involved with losing people with cancer, so it’s been something we’ve become dedicated to,” he said.
Jim Satalin, the national director of Coaches vs. Cancer for the American Cancer Society, said the contributions go beyond money.
“Not only have they been great with the gala here and raising millions of dollars,” he said. “But they’ve been instrumental in recruiting other coaches and coaches’ wives.”
The former Missouri coach Norm Stewart founded Coaches vs. Cancer, but Boeheim is credited with driving the organization to a new level, Satalin said. St. Joseph’s Coach Phil Martelli described Boeheim as a pioneer.
“He acknowledges the fact that we are very lucky,” Martelli said. “He would say to coaches, ‘With this job comes responsibilities of coaching and recruiting, but you also have a responsibility to give back.’ “
Martelli and five other college basketball programs in Philadelphia have combined to form an arm of Coaches vs. Cancer and to hold their own gala. Succumbing to their competitive natures, Boeheim and Martelli often trade barbs over who is raising the most money. And Boeheim cannot help but gripe that Martelli’s group now usually trumps Syracuse’s.
“He’s always whining about that, not that he doesn’t whine about everything,” Martelli said. “He’ll say it’s not fair because I have six schools.”
Boeheim’s 9-year-old daughter, Jamie, has been quietly tracking her father’s course to 800 wins this season, constantly asking her mother if they can throw a party when he reaches the milestone. “I’m thinking, oh my goodness, I don’t know if he’d like that,” Juli Boeheim said. “He doesn’t want to talk about it at all.”
But if you talk to him about the American Cancer Society, Boeheim will give his heartfelt advice. He reminds everyone to have regular cancer screenings. That, he said, is what helped him survive.

Howard gives Magic shot of confidence


ORLANDO, Fla. – The Orlando Magic didn’t just send a late-season message to the defending champion Boston Celtics on Wednesday night. They left them with a not-so-subtle reminder for their almost-inevitable second-round playoff matchup.
Dwight Howard has grown big enough and strong enough to force his will on even the best teams, and the Celtics are the latest contender to realize as much. With Howard delivering another of his Superman performances, the Magic led from start to finish before fighting off a late Celtics charge, pushing them into a virtual tie for the second best record in the Eastern Conference.
The only question now for the final three weeks of the regular season is whether the Celtics (54-19) or the Magic (53-18) get the home-court advantage when they meet again in a seven-game series.
After the 84-82 loss to the Magic, the Celtics insisted that they don’t really care about the court because they can win anywhere. The Magic carried a decidedly different tune.
“It would be great to have home court because I’m sure we’ll see them [Celtics] again,” Howard said. “And I’m confident that we can beat them. I’m confident we can beat any team in the league if we play like we can.”


Howard had 24 points, 21 rebounds and four blocked shots, including the final one when Paul Pierce drove the lane and tried to steal the game with 4.9 seconds remaining. For good measure, Howard forced Pierce into an altered 3-pointer at the buzzer that didn’t come close.
“Dwight was just incredible, unbelievable,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said. “He was tremendous. When we look at the film, we’ll learn some things. When you have to gut out a win like that, it only gives you more confidence and resolve that you can do it again.”
Howard has been unbelievably good all season, even though he won’t finish even among the top three in the MVP balloting. Like the Magic, his acclaim has been slow to come. This was his eighth game this season with at least 20 points and 20 rebounds. The rest of the league combined has totaled only six 20-20 games. No other player has done it more than once.
Howard also has 10 games in which he had at least 15 rebounds and five blocked shots, which explains why he’s close to becoming just the fifth player ever to lead the league in both categories in the same season.
“When he first came into the league, he beat people with pure athleticism. Then he started beating them with skill,” Magic coach Doc Rivers said. “When he gets the whole package together I hope I’ll be doing television.”
If and when they meet the Magic again in May, the Celtics will hold the advantage in four of the five starting positions. Point guard Rajon Rondo, now in his third season, will blow past Rafer Alston. Shooting guard Ray Allen will school rookie Courtney Lee. Paul Pierce will score on small forward Hedo Turkoglu almost anytime he wants. And Kevin Garnett should toast Rashard Lewis.
Yet Howard makes it all even. Four to one doesn’t sound fair unless that one is Superman. The key to the series will be keeping Howard on the floor and out of foul trouble. If he stays clean, the Celtics may have trouble getting past the second round because they have no one to guard him. Nobody else does, either.
For the Magic, who haven’t been past the second round of the playoffs since Shaquille O’Neal left in 1996, Wednesday was a breakthrough victory. The teams split their four regular-season meetings. The Magic also are even with Cleveland in the season series.
“We’ll see this team again. To get to our goal, we’ll have to go through Boston and Cleveland,” said Rashard Lewis. “But we welcome that challenge.”
Garnett, in his fourth game back after missing a month with a muscle strain in his right knee, played only 17 minutes. But as Van Gundy quickly pointed out, the Magic dominated the game when Garnett was playing, giving them a 10-point advantage with him on the floor.
Van Gundy loved the win, loved the way his team out-defended the best defensive team in the league, and he didn’t like any suggestion that it was tainted because by Garnett’s less-than-full contribution.
“All I know is, we’ve beaten a lot of the teams that everyone thinks are better than us,” he said. “The perception of us does not always match up with reality. We’re not feared defensively, but I’ll put us up against anyone in the league when it comes to being ready to play night in and night out.”
Howard had his double-double in the first quarter, the fourth time this season he has done it so quickly. He ended the third quarter with a flurry that was typically Dwight-like, but so unlike anyone else in the league. Spinning to the basket, Howard took a lob pass from Turkoglu that was thrown near the top of the backboard, catching it between Kendrick Perkins and Glen “Big Baby” Davis, putting both into his poster dunk.
Then he raced down court to block a buzzer-beating shot by a surprised Rondo.
Howard, 23, has turned this franchise into a contender again, allowing the Magic to assemble a team of shooters that capitalizes on his inside presence. Even on a night when Turkoglu made only 3 of 18 shots, and the Magic scored only 14 in the final period, they beat the defending champs.
The victory also was further evidence of how the Magic have withstood the loss of All-Star point guard Jameer Nelson. They’re now 14-4 since Alston arrived, proving that a great center can overcome a myriad of other problems.
“With Dwight, my job isn’t as difficult as you might think, even coming in the middle of the season,” Alston said.
Howard, now in his fifth NBA season, has never been past the second round of the playoffs, and he likely won’t get there this year unless the Magic can get past the Celtics. After Wednesday, they have more reason to believe they can.
“I don’t think this team lacks for confidence,” Van Gundy said. “People can say what they want about us, but this isn’t the BCS. People aren’t voting to see who plays for the championship. That’s decided on the court. And I like that.”

Calhoun avoids answers about report


Connecticut basketball coach Jim Calhoun declined to directly answer questions Wednesday in the wake of a Yahoo! Sports report documenting improprieties in the recruitment of former guard Nate Miles.
Calhoun met with media for 15 minutes at the University of Phoenix Stadium, site of the NCAA West Regional, and read from a prepared statement. Then he fielded questions but said he hadn’t seen the story in its entirety.
Yahoo! Sports reported that Josh Nochimson, a former Huskies student manager turned sports agent, provided Miles with lodging, transportation, meals and representation from 2006 to 2008. UConn’s basketball staff was in constant contact with Nochimson during a nearly two-year period up to and after Miles’ recruitment. Five UConn coaches traded at least 1,565 phone and text communications with Nochimson, including 16 from Calhoun.


Former UConn assistant Tom Moore told Yahoo! Sports he knew Nochimson and Miles had talked, also a violation. As an alumnus and former associate of the men’s basketball program, Nochimson is defined by the NCAA as a representative of “athletic interests.”
The NCAA plans to investigate the matter. UConn officials said earlier Wednesday that they would conduct their own probe. Moore’s current employer, Qunnipiac University, will also examine the situation.
After the news conference, in a stadium hallway, Calhoun was again questioned about the report.
“Right now all I know is that some words were written about us,” Calhoun said. “We should react to that and have someone else look into it. I’m not going to do that. The university administration is going to do that.”
Pressed further, Calhoun gritted his teeth.
“I haven’t read [the report],” he said. “I’ve been given pieces of exactly what was said.”
Calhoun was asked to respond to those “pieces.” Calhoun opened his mouth and began to speak, but the words never came. Instead he was whisked away by media relations director Kyle Muncy.
“He can’t answer any more questions,” Muncy said.
Calhoun shrugged and walked away.
Connecticut, the No. 1 seed in the West Region, takes on No. 5 Purdue on Thursday.
Calhoun said he learned of the report around 5:30 a.m. when athletic director Jeff Hathaway called him.
Calhoun’s first public comments about the story – or, as he incorrectly called it, the “blog” – came during a previously-scheduled news conference that was supposed to focus on the Huskies’ game against Purdue.
Calhoun, 66, appeared rattled and focused his comments on issues not mentioned in the report. He talked at length about how Connecticut had done everything in its power to ensure that Miles would be eligible before signing him to a national letter of intent, and about how Connecticut wouldn’t have to forfeit any games as a result of the allegations, because Miles – who was expelled in October – never played a game for the Huskies.
The Yahoo! Sports story focused on excessive phone calls, illegal benefits and contact between coaches, Nochimson and Miles.
Calhoun said over the course of his 37-year career that he has had no NCAA violations.
When Calhoun walked onto the court for shoot-around Wednesday, the mood seemed solemn. The players appeared to mope through drills and the 200 or so fans in attendance, for the most part, sat in silence.
“I woke up excited to be here, and then I turned on the TV and it ruined the mood,” said Tana Hart, a Connecticut fan who lives in Phoenix. “I just don’t understand why all of this had to come out now, during the NCAA tournament.”
Calhoun said he met with his team Wednesday morning to tell them to pay no attention to the story.
“I told them that [the] university is taking care of it,” Calhoun said. “As far as we’re concerned, we’re here to beat Purdue. If you vary from that, you will look back and say, ‘I was worried about something that really didn’t affect me one way or the other, and we let an opportunity slip by.’ ”
The Huskies said they aren’t concerned about the situation becoming a distraction.
“We don’t let stuff like that bother us,” forward Jeff Adrien said. “We’ve been through a lot of ups and downs in our lives. We know how to block it off. We are mentally tough.”

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Swimmer Michael Phelps Returns to competition in May


Michael Phelps will swim in a meet in Charlotte in may, ending his three-month suspension for being photographed inhaling from a marijuana pipe.

meet officials announced that the Olympic great has committed to the Charlotte UltraSwim from may 14 to 17.

The grand Prix event will be the first major meet for which Phelps is eligible, and his first tuneup before julys world championships in Rome.

Phelps won a record eight gold medals at the beijing Olympics, but he was suspended by USA swimming this month after a published photograph showing him with pipe at a party in november at the U.S.C


Michael Phelps returns

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Ronaldo getting back to form


Sao Paulo - Ronaldo is overcoming his off-the field problems with solid performance in practice, showing he is getting ready for his much-anticipated debut with Corinthians.

Ronaldo scored three goals in a scrimmage with the Brazilian club on saturday, just a day after he was fined to arriving late at the team's hotel.

see more here: HTTP://MSN.FOXSPORTS.COM/SOCCER

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Vonn clinches second straight World Cup downhill title


Bulgaria - Lindsey Vonn joined Picabo Street on saturday as the only americans to win two straigth world cup dowmhill championships.

The 24 years old, Vonn cliched her second straight title by finishing 12 at a race in Bulgaria to mach the feat first achieved by street in 1995 and 1996.

http://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2009-02-28-vonn-downhill_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip

Friday, February 27, 2009

Marbury signs with Boston Celtics


Former New York Knicks guard Stephon Marbury got a much - neesed fresh start in Boston on friday, and the Celtics acquired the backup point guard they wanted to help them push for back - to back NBA titles.

read more?  here :  http://sports.yahoo.com/nba

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Friday, February 13, 2009

UConn’s Dyson might be out for season

STORRS, Conn. (AP)—Connecticut guard Jerome Dyson requires surgery on his right knee and could miss the rest of the season.
Dyson was injured Wednesday night less than four minutes into the top-ranked Huskies’ 63-49 win over Syracuse. He banged knees with a Syracuse player as he fought through a screen and had to be helped from the court.
An MRI Thursday revealed a torn lateral meniscus.
School officials say the junior will have surgery in the next week. They won’t know his status for the rest of the season until surgery is done.
Dyson started all 24 games for UConn, averaging over 13 point per game. Coach Jim Calhoun called him a big part of UConn’s 23-1 start and said he expects Dyson will be back for his senior year.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Brisk Wind Infuses the U.S. With Zip and Zing


When Mexico and the United States meet, the heavens always rumble — although not necessarily like the nasty storm that blew in Wednesday night before the home team defeated the Mexicans, 2-0, in a World Cup qualifying match.
The rivalry has enough crackle of its own without any help from the winds and heavy rain that blew through at about 5:20 p.m., just when American and Mexican fans were heading toward Crew Stadium.
For a while during the downpour, spectators were urged to stay in their cars, but then the teams took the field on schedule, and the fans braved the elements, even with tornado warnings earlier and falling temperatures during the game.
The United States played wisely most of the time, and produced two finishing goals by Michael Bradley, the son of Coach Bob Bradley, in the 43rd and 92nd minutes. Both goals were the result of hard work and pressure, not easy under the conditions.
The United States has now won nine and drawn two in the last 11 home meetings since March 1999, including three consecutive 2-0 victories over Mexico in World Cup qualifying, at Crew Stadium — in 2001, 2005 and Wednesday.
Mexico still has the edge, with 29 victories and 11 draws in 55 matches in the competition, which has become so intense that Frankie Hejduk, one of the American mainstays, compares it to an American football rivalry. Hejduk, who plays for the defending champion Columbus Crew of Major League Soccer, gets to feel that other rivalry up close.
“This is just like the — can I say the word? The M word?” Hejduk said, joking on Tuesday, knowing that people in Ohio do not even like to utter the name of their rival from the neighboring state of Michigan.
That game every November brings out the extreme partisan in this part of the world. Mexican fans found their way to Columbus on Wednesday, even though the American federation does its best to sell tickets only to American fans. Dozens of fans wearing green Mexican jerseys were walking around a generally desolate downtown.
“If we play in L.A., you’ve got 25,000 Mexican fans,” Hejduk said Tuesday, noting that Mexican fans would find a way to attend any Mexico game in the southern tier of the United States.
“You’re hearing cheers for the other team,” Hejduk, 34, said, repeating the wisdom that causes matches to be placed in heartland cities like Columbus or Birmingham, Ala., or Nashville.
“Here, we’ve got the 12th man,” Hejduk said. He has been part of the national team going back to the 1998 debacle in France, the three humiliating losses in the World Cup.
“We’ve had their number the last few times,” he said of Mexico, adding that it would be fine with him if the Mexicans did have a psychological disadvantage here, “if that’s what it takes.” But he added, “It’s a difficult game.”
Hejduk heard that Mexican entrepreneurs were selling voodoo dolls back home, sponsored by an American company, Blockbuster, instructing fans to stick pins where they wished to inflict pain. “It tells me they’re passionate,” Hejduk said with a smile. “No pain yet. I’m going to get one of those dolls.”
Hejduk, who has scored two of his six international goals against Mexico, was one of the best American players Wednesday, running hard from his right back position. The United States chose to play with the strong wind at its back in the first half but averted trouble in the third minute when Tim Howard made a kick save.
The United States mostly controlled the ball after that, focusing on possession and short passes. Then Hejduk earned a corner kick with a hard run down the right side, tangling with a Mexican defender, both of them slamming into the advertising boards.
DaMarcus Beasley, who was all over the field, swung a long, left-footed kick from the right corner that curled back to Landon Donovan, who headed the ball back across. Oguchi Onyewu headed it on goal, and Bradley slotted home the rebound for a 1-0 lead.
Playing into the wind in the second half, the United States used its height to control the shorter kicks. Mexico did launch an attack of a different kind when the Mexico captain Rafael Márquez kicked Howard in the right thigh on his way down, and earned a red card in the 67th minute, putting the Mexicans down a player.
The United States dominated, and then in extra time outworked the outmanned Mexicans, with Jozy Altidore and Donovan setting up Bradley’s second goal.
The major negative for the United States was that Howard was hit with a yellow card for delay of game after being kicked by Márquez, and must now sit out the next match, in El Salvador on March 28. This meeting was the first in the final round of qualifying for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. While both teams should be among the three nations from a six-team group guaranteed to qualify, every game between them is an event.
The two rivals are expected to meet next in Azteca Stadium, on Aug. 28. There may not be February wind and rain, but it will be noisy, and the place will rumble.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Armstrong’s Testing Plan Ends Before it Begins


Nearly five months after Lance Armstrong announced with great fanfare that he was returning to cycling and would subject himself to a strict and transparent anti-doping program, that program has been abandoned without ever really beginning.


Don Catlin, the prominent anti-doping scientist who was supposed to run Armstrong’s program, said Wednesday that they had decided earlier in the day to part ways, without Catlin’s ever obtaining a single full blood and urine sample from Armstrong. The program was simply too complex and too costly to implement, Catlin said, and the decision to terminate the program was mutual.
“In the real world, when you try to implement a program as grandiose as what you had in mind, it just becomes so complicated that it’s better not to try,” Catlin said, adding that a contract with Armstrong had never been signed. “We’re all disappointed, but it’s just not going to be possible.”
Neither Armstrong nor Mark Higgins, Armstrong’s manager, immediately returned e-mail and phone messages Wednesday.
Armstrong is still subjected to testing by other anti-doping entities, like the International Cycling Union and the United States Anti-Doping Agency. His professional cycling team, Astana, also has an internal anti-doping program.
Still, Armstrong, the seven-time Tour de France winner who has been dogged by doping allegations throughout his career, made his private anti-doping program one of the cornerstones of his comeback to cycling, after he took three years off. He will begin racing Saturday at the Tour of California, which will be his first major cycling race in the United States since he said he would retire in 2005.
Before the Tour Down Under in Australia last month, Armstrong said that his customized anti-doping program was under way, but he began to back off of his initial announcement to publish all of his biological data online. A news release by Astana on Jan. 18, the first day of the race, said Armstrong would be tested about every three days by Catlin’s program. At that point, Catlin said, Astana had paid Catlin a “small contribution” to begin taking samples.
When asked about the program’s details, Armstrong said Catlin would answer all the questions. Catlin, the former chief of the U.C.L.A. Olympic Analytical Laboratory, is now running the Anti-Doping Sciences Institute, a for-profit research and analytical laboratory based near Los Angeles.
Details of the program remained a mystery, sparking criticism. Dick Pound, former chief of the World Anti-Doping Agency, last week said: “Armstrong made all the big announcements and the testing has dropped right off the radar. No sign that anything is actually getting done.”
Since September, when Catlin accompanied Armstrong at news conferences announcing his return to cycling, Catlin had not returned more than a dozen e-mail messages and phone calls — until Wednesday.
Catlin said he and Armstrong’s representatives had been trying to come to an agreement to implement the program, but the closer the season came, the harder it was to solidify the details. Slowly, the comprehensive program — which Armstrong had touted as “the most advanced anti-doping program in the world” — was being watered down because of logistical problems and cost restrictions.
Armstrong had promised that all of the biological data gleaned by Catlin would be posted on the Internet, a move that Catlin said was necessary to make the program completely transparent. But at the Tour Down Under, Armstrong’s first race out of retirement, he said he was worried that publishing all of his biological data would prompt unfair questions about him from the public. A layman would likely not be able to understand complex information, he said, adding that there are natural fluctuations in some blood levels when a rider travels to a high altitude.
“Not everyone in this room is going to say that means I must have cheated,” he said in a news conference. “But a few of you say it was suspicious.”
In September, Catlin said: “The key is to have the information out there for the public to see and to analyze because it shows you have nothing to hide.”
In recent months, Catlin’s and Armstrong’s representatives discussed limiting the biological information that would be made available to the public. “When you start reducing that kind of program and limiting what you put on the Web, it was difficult to figure out how to accomplish it without running into enormous legal and media issues,” Catlin said.


Catlin said he was still running the internal anti-doping programs of two professional cycling teams, Team Columbia and Garmin-Slipstream. He said those programs were going well and were easier to handle because they are not the comprehensive doping program of a single athlete, Armstrong, who had at first agreed to be tested at any time.
But as of Feb. 4, according to his Twitter page, Armstrong had been tested 16 times, which may or may not have included the aborted collection done by Catlin’s team at the Tour Down Under.
Those collections — and a battery of testing — were done by the United States Anti-Doping Agency and the International Cycling Union, which use laboratories accredited by the World Anti-Doping Agency. Catlin said his testers were constantly bumping elbows with other testers.
“There are so many people lining up to test cyclists right now,” Catlin said. “We tried to do one sample in Australia, but we didn’t even get that done because it was so hectic. There are practical issues, but I think someday that will change.”
Testing in all sports — not just cycling — has increased since Armstrong retired in 2005, changing the landscape for athletes hoping to prove they are clean. The cycling union, for example, has a program that collects biological information on each rider and uses it to gauge whether any rider is doping.
Armstrong has been in the out-of-competition testing pool for about six months since deciding to return to competition. According to Erin Hannan, the spokeswoman for Usada, some American athletes were tested as many as 15 to 20 times out of competition in about a six-month time frame last year.
Some athletes, including the swimmer Natalie Coughlin and the decathlete Bryan Clay, were part of a trial program with the agency that set out to prove they were clean. They were also part of their regular out-of-competition testing pool conducted by their respective international federations. It took about four to six blood and urine tests to create an initial baseline for the athletes’ biological profiles, Hannan said.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

The bare minimum amount of exercise you need to stay healthy (it's less than you think!)

We've heard time and time again that people should be active almost daily to stave off weight gain and disease. But busy people want to know: What's the least amount of exercise I can get away with and still stay healthy? The answer will shock you...
What number did you guess? An hour a week? A half hour? Try seven minutes.
Check out these exercise trends for 2009!
According to British researchers, just seven minutes of exercise weekly may prevent diabetes by controlling your blood sugar. Type 2 diabetes affects an estimated 246 million adults worldwide and accounts for 6 percent of all global deaths. People with this condition gradually lose the ability to use insulin to convert food to energy.
Here's the catch: The exercise has to be vigorous. (We're talking on the level of an all-out sprint.) But at seven minutes a pop, I can deal with that! And you don't even have to do those seven minutes all at once, either. In the study, volunteers rode exercise bikes four times a day in 30-second spurts twice a week. After two weeks, subjects had a 23 percent improvement in how effectively their body cleared blood sugar from their bodies.
Studies show that vigorous exercise also reduces the risk of breast cancer.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

St-Pierre crushes Penn to retain welterweight title at UFC 94


By Sergio Non, USA TODAY


BJ Penn's dream of holding two belts disappeared beneath four rounds of non-stop pressure from welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre.
St-Pierre, of Montreal, thoroughly dominated Penn with a grinding, unrelenting ground-and-pound barrage over the last three rounds of their fight on Saturday at UFC 94, in Las Vegas. Although scheduled for five rounds, the fight was stopped after the fourth round on the advice of the ringside doctor.


Penn never managed any meaningful offense. He spent much of the second and almost all of the third and fourth rounds on his back, smothered by St-Pierre, who wore down Penn with a steady stream of strikes that left Penn bruised and bleeding.
Although Penn resisted St-Pierre's wrestling in the first round, the welterweight titlist started scoring takedowns at will in the second round. The French Canadian said he wanted to neutralize the excellent boxing of Penn, UFC's reigning lightweight champion.


"My strategy was in the first two rounds to make a wrestling match with him, because he has very quick hands and his shoulder is made for boxing," St-Pierre said immediately after the bout. "Because he has small shoulders, by making him wrestle, all the blood would have (to) go into his shoulder and it would have become stiff, and his hand would not come out as it is usually."
The matchup was billed as a bout between two of the world's most skilled fighters, with St-Pierre and Penn rated among the top four in several pound-for-pound ranking lists, including those of Sports Illustrated and Yahoo Sports. Online oddsmakers listed St-Pierre as a slight favorite.
St-Pierre (18-2) has won both of his fights against Penn (13-5-1), whom he beat via split decision in March 2006.
Saturday's bout was only for the belt of the welterweight division (170 pounds). St-Pierre said he now views rising star Thiago Alves as the top contender for the welterweight championship.
Machida KOs Silva
On a night filled with bouts decided by judges' scorecards, it took a light-heavyweight fighter known for decision wins to pull off the show's only conclusive finish outside of the main event.
Lyoto Machida kept his perfect record intact with a first-round knockout of previously undefeated Thiago Silva (13-1). Machida (14-0) followed his usual pattern of evading damage, but with Silva coming straight ahead, the eventual winner took advantage of several openings to land combinations and score takedowns against his fellow Brazilian.
Machida knocked down Silva twice with punches in the first four minutes of the contest, but the final shot had the most impact. As the first round came to a close, Machida tripped down Silva as they clinched against the fence and followed it with a downward right hand that knocked Silva unconscious as he lay on the mat, milliseconds before the bell.
Going into Saturday's event, Machida had won four of his five UFC fights via decision.
After the bout, Machida played to the crowd as he clamored for a championship fight in the light-heavyweight division (205 pounds). "People, do I deserve a title shot?" he asked as the audience cheered.
Other results from UFC 94:
• Light heavyweight: Jon Jones def. Stephan Bonnar via unanimous decision
• Welterweight: Karo Parisyan def. Dong Hyun Kim via split decision
• Lightweight: Clay Guida def. Nate Diaz via split decision
• Welterweight: Jon Fitch def. Akihiro Gono via unanimous decision
• Lightweight: Thiago Tavares def. Manvel Gamburyan via unanimous decision
• Welterweight: John Howard def. Chris Wilson via split decision
• Light heavyweight: Jake O'Brien def. Christian Wellisch via split decision
• Welterweight: Dan Cramer def. Matt Arroyo via split decision

Monday, January 26, 2009

Puyol: "El Barcelona ya pasó su bache"


El capitán del Barcelona, Carles Puyol, pasó por los micrófonos de Radio MARCA, en 'El Intermedio' de Paco García Caridad. Los perseguidores esperan un bache azulgrana para recortar distancias, Puyol advierte: "Todos los equipos pasan baches, sí. Pero nosotros ya hemos pasado el nuestro, en las dos primeras jornadas, que perdimos y empatamos. Fue duro, veníamos de dos temporadas difíciles, pero confiamos en el método de trabajo".
Preguntado por la posiblidad del triplete, el capitán mantuvo la cautela, en la línea de declaraciones del resto de estamentos del club: "Somos conscientes de que esto es muy largo y de que aún no hemos ganado nada. El triplete es muy complicado. Por ejemplo, en la Copa tienes un partido malo y te vas".
"Lo tendrán dificil para llevarse a Messi"Puyol habló de la situación del Real Madrid. "Hay que respetarle, es un gran equipo que lleva 5 victorias seguidas". A propósito del comentado juego 'aburrido' de los blancos: "Lo importante son los puntos, esos te dan confianza y con la confianza llega el buen juego".
¿Qué piensa Puyol del rumor de Messi al Real Madrid? "En el fútbol a veces se publican estas cosas, pero con Messi lo tienen complicado, es feliz aquí". Sobre la gran temporada del argentino, el capitán azulgrana afirmó tajante: "Es el mejor del mundo, no deja de crecer".
A propósito del cambio del Barcelona de la temporada pasada a la actual, Puyol no cree "justo" cargar las culpas en antiguos compañeros como Deco o Ronaldinho: "No es justo, son jugadores que han dado mucho al equipo. Los culpables somos todos, el equipo entró en un bache".

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Australian Open midterm grades


After a week of play, the 2009 Australian Open has reinforced what most already thought to be the case in tennis: the men's game is gripping on account of the consistently excellent performances of the top players. The women's game is gripping because of the inconsistency at the top, and the wide open fields it creates. Herewith our midterm grades.
A
Jelena Dokic: The Week 1 story. Back from her exile -- and poignantly candid about what she endured -- the former top-five player reached second the week by winning four three-setters.
Rafael Nadal: For all the talk about his lack of a hardcourt Grand Slam, the Spaniard has looked as sharp as anyone through the weekend.
Andys: Roddick and Murray, both former Brad Gilbert charges, cruise into Week 2 without much challenge.
Mother Russia: Even with Maria Sharapova injured, nearly half of the players in the round of 16 come from the same country.
Father France: Even with Richard Gasquet losing a five-set heartbreaker, three hommes -- Gael Monfils, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Gilles Simon -- remain alive at the time of this writing
A-minus
Roger Federer: Looked decidedly mortal for two sets against Tomas Berdych. But what a comeback, pulling out a five setter.
Amer Delic: Former Illini star serves his way to round three and gave Novak Djokovic a workout.
B
American TV coverage: One wishes the times were more standard but the ESPN/Tennis Channel partnership continues to work well
The Williams Family: Serena is angling for still another title, but Venus goes crashing out early.
Ex-girlfriends of Spanish players: Flavia Pennetta and Gisela Dulko (who gave Serena a good match) impress, while Ana Ivanovic crashes.
B- minus
American men: Roddick and James Blake carry all the water again as the "B" team musters little
The Serbs: Djokovic, the defending champ, is still going strong. But both Ivanovic and Jelena Jankovic are upset early. In Jankovic's case, she'll almost surely lose the top ranking as a result.
C
Ivanovic: The backsliding continues. A finalist a year ago -- and world No.1 just last summer -- AI lacks the answer as she falls to Alisa Kleybanova in Round 3. (Get a coach!)
Nicole Vaidisova: Boy, have the wheels fallen off this train.
Ethnic violence: And here we thought "tennis hooligan" was an oxymoron.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Duke makes claim to No. 1 ranking by blasting Maryland


DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Jon Scheyer was a freshman on the Duke team that lost four straight games to end the season and fell out of the Top 25. So he can't help but feel a little bit of excitement about the possibility of being No. 1 — even if he's quick to say rankings don't matter much.
"Watching Duke when I was in high school, it did seem like they were No. 1 a lot," the junior said. "I feel like this is where we belong."
Gerald Henderson scored 17 points to help the second-ranked Blue Devils rout Maryland 85-44 on Saturday, a victory that likely will propel the Blue Devils to the No. 1 ranking next week.
Scheyer scored 12 points for Duke (18-1, 5-0 Atlantic Coast Conference), which dominated from the opening tip and led 40-15 at halftime. From there, the lead only grew, including a couple of dazzling transition scores that pushed the Blue Devils to a 60-20 lead less than 4 minutes into the second half.
GAME REPORT: Duke 85, Maryland 44
Duke led by as many as 44 points, handing the Terrapins (13-6, 2-3) their worst loss under coach Gary Williams. It was the fourth-largest margin of defeat in school history.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: Duke Atlantic Coast Conference Virginia Tech Wake Forest North Carolina State Blue Devils Mike Krzyzewski Terrapins All-America Henderson Terps Gary Williams Jon Scheyer Kyle Singler Nolan Smith Kay Yow Greivis Vasquez Scheyer Brian Zoubek
The Blue Devils haven't been ranked No. 1 since the final poll of 2005-06, but that could change after Wake Forest's home loss to Virginia Tech on Wednesday. Duke had been ranked No. 1 at least once every season from 1998-2004 under Hall of Fame coach Mike Krzyzewski, but had not reached the top spot in the past two seasons.
Fittingly, the Blue Devils' next game is at Wake Forest on Wednesday night.
"It'll be a big deal for our guys and it's a big deal for us because it means we're playing really well," Krzyzewski said of a No. 1 ranking. "We talked about it last week that, just don't worry about anything, let's just play. It's the same thing we're going to tell them going into this next week.
"It's an honor and it says you're playing real well. You don't get anything from it except a really big headline when you lose."
Duke shot just 43%, but hit 12 of 25 three-point attempts and finished with a 56-38 edge in rebounds. More importantly, the Blue Devils completely shut down Maryland's offense early to take the big lead and didn't let the Terrapins have much room to operate after that.
Maryland shot 28%, including 2-for-12 from three-point range.
"I wouldn't use (the word), 'Surprised,"' Henderson said of the lopsided result. "I know how good this team can be when we're playing together and playing defense like we did the entire game. We can be pretty spectacular and explosive. I feel like we should play like that all the time."
It was Maryland's worst defeat since a 39-point loss to Wake Forest in 1963. It was also the Terps' worst ACC loss ever.
Landon Milbourne scored 19 points to lead Maryland, but the rest of the team shot 9-for-48 (19 percent) for the game.
"It wasn't how good they are defensively. What makes them good is their intensity," said Greivis Vasquez, who managed four points on 2-for-10 shooting. "If you don't play as hard as they do, you're not going to win games in here. You've got to play hard. If you don't, you're going to lose by 40."
The frustration was evident early when Dave Neal of Maryland flung his arms into the air in and cursed in disgust after Duke's 7-footer Brian Zoubek beat several Terps to the ball for the second offensive rebound of the possession before drawing a foul.
Things didn't get any better in the second half, which opened with a stretch in which Duke seemed more like it was putting together a highlight reel than playing an ACC opponent.
First came a three-pointer from Nolan Smith, followed by another three from Henderson. Then, after a missed shot, Henderson threw an underhanded alley-oop pass in transition to Kyle Singler for a dunk.
Finally, after another Maryland turnover, Scheyer saved a ball from going out of bounds near midcourt in transition, leading to a perfect touch pass from Smith to Henderson for another score that capped a 14-0 run and pushed the lead to 40 points with 15:28 to play.
"The start of the second half, for about 4 or 5 minutes there, that was as good a basketball as can be played," Krzyzewski said. "It was lights-out basketball for about 5 minutes. I was proud of my team because with a lead, you can have a tendency to let down. And they didn't."
Before the game, there was a moment of silence to honor longtime North Carolina State women's coach Kay Yow — who died Saturday morning after a two-decade fight with cancer — and Bill Werber, who was the oldest living ex-major leaguer and Duke's first All-America basketball player. Werber died Thursday.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Brady on knee injury: '(Expletive) happens'


Patriots QB Tom Brady appeared on a Toronto radio station today and offered a frank explanation for his devastating Week 1 knee injury.
"(Expletive) happens," Brady said on the Fan 590. The station did not censor the swear from its internet broadcast.
Brady, promoting the pain cream Myo-Med, said that his rehab is "going really well," but did not address the infection that plagued him after knee surgery in October and gave no estimate of when he will be back on the field.
"There's some good days, some bad days," Brady said. "You've just got to plug through them. It's a process.
"It tests you in a lot of ways."
The Patriots quarterback, who chose California doctor Neal ElAttrache to perform his surgery, has been rehabbing at the team's New England facility. "I'm the most well-taken-care-of knee patient in history," Brady said.
The Patriots finished 11-5 and did not make the playoffs, just the second team since 1985 to miss the playoffs with 11 wins. Brady suggested he's frustrated that the tiebreakers fell against the Patriots while the Arizona Cardinals, whom New New England beat 47-7 in Week 16, won the NFC West with a 9-7 mark and advanced to the Super Bowl;
"We had a great year, being that we finished 11-5 and didn't make the playoffs," Brady said. "And the team that's in the Super Bowl, the Cardinals, we beat by 40 points."
Brady compared the Cardinals' postseason success to the New York Giants' emergence as a wild card in last year's playoffs before spoiling the Patriots' perfect season in Super Bowl XLII."You get hot at the right time," Brady said, who noted the NFL prides itself on allowing teams like the Cardinals a chance to reach the big game."The rules that are in place are to bring everybody back to the middle," Brady said. "That's the way it's set up."Other notes from Brady's appearance:-- He said used the pain cream Myo-med on his arm in recent years for "pretty bad tendonitis" and again on his ankle before last year's Super Bowl. Brady appeared on the Patriots injury report for several seasons with a mysterious shoulder ailment that the team rarely clarified, and the team offered very few details on his foot injury before Super Bowl XLII.Brady is a paid endorser of Myo-med, an agreement that launched before he hurt his knee.-- Brady brushed off the departures of offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels and general manager Scott Pioli. "It's the responsiblity of the people who are still with the Patriots to worry about the Patriots," Brady said."As long as we have coach (Bill) Belichick, I always think we're going to be just fine."

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Armstrong more prominent in second stage Down Under


ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) — Lance Armstrong gave his comeback to professional cycling new credibility when he took a prominent role in the second stage of the Tour Down Under on Wednesday.
Armstrong was always near the front of the peleton, joined in two attacks in the late uphill stages of the 145-kilometer (90-mile) stage and finished 45th of 133 riders, 13 seconds behind the Australian stage winner Allan Davis.

"I feel OK, but it was very hard," said Armstrong, the seven-time Tour de France winner who is making his return to cycling after three years in retirement. "Attacking on the hills wasn't the smartest thing to do.
"It felt pretty good. It's going to take a while to adapt to race speed and today proved that. The long drags uphill were never my long suit and when you get into the race and it's fast and guys are strong it's a suffer-fest. But I like to suffer, although it sounds weird."
Armstrong, 37, took part in an 11-rider breakaway as the stage through rural South Australia state neared an uphill finish in front of more than 10,000 fans at Stirling, 30 minutes outside the state capital Adelaide.

He then attacked again in a two-man breakaway with Australian Jack Bobridge, a rider 18 years his junior. On both occasions he came back to the bunch but he fulfilled a pre-race promise to be close to the front of the race and to take an opportunity when it presented itself.
"It's fun to be at the front of the race and as they say over here (in Australia), to give it a twist, to give it a crack," he said.
Davis led the race on general classification after two stages, with a three-second advantage over first-stage winner Andre Greipel of Germany. Armstrong was officially 68th on overall standings and 23 seconds behind the leaders with four stages remaining.
The race ends Sunday.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Wake Forest jumps Duke for No. 1 spot in coaches' Top 25


Wake Forest, the last undefeated team in Division I, moved up to No. 1 in the latest USA TODAY/ESPN men's college basketball coaches' poll.
The Demon Deacons, who won at previously unbeaten Clemson on Saturday, received 25 of 31 first-place votes and leapfrogged No. 2 Duke


Wake tops the poll for the first time since November 2004, the start of current NBA star Chris Paul's sophomore season.
Pittsburgh's two-week reign at No. 1 came to an end with its first loss of the season at Louisville. The Panthers slipped to fourth, while the Cardinals made the biggest move of the week from 20th to 12th. Illinois and Memphis, tied for 24th, moved into the rankings, replacing Michigan and California.
Forward James Johnson (23), Wake Forest's second-leading scorer, smiles with teammate David Weaver after an ACC victory over Boston College on Jan. 14.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Record crowd welcomes Armstrong back to peloton


A record crowd of 138,000 people flocked to Adelaide's Rymill Park tonight to welcome back to the peloton, seven time Tour de France champion, Lance Armstrong, in the Cancer Council Classic, a prelude to the 2009 Tour Down Under.
The introduction of the 37 year old Texan was greeted by a deafening roar of support with fans of all ages clamouring for a glimpse of a true legend of sport.
But the 30 lap criterium, which covered a total distance of 51 kilometres, was never going to be one in which Armstrong was expected to shine. Rather it was a race for sprinters as three time Tour de France sprint champion, Queensland's Robbie McEwen, proved with his first win for his new team Katusha.
McEwen, who had won on this course in 2004, 2005 and 2006 powered over the line to claim the win ahead of Willem Stroetinga (Milram) and Sydney's Graeme Brown (Rabobank). His finishing time was 1hr04min32sec gave the event an average speed of 47.417km/h. Lance Armstrong crossed the line in 64th place at 23 seconds but was happy to have a race under his belt.
"It was tough," said Armstrong. "I think the last time I did a criterium of this style it was in 1990.
"It was a tough criterium and I found it safer and a little easier in the back," said Armstrong who admits he is not yet at full fitness. "It's fun to get back in there (but) it will probably take a while and I need to get more power and do some more hills."
"I was a little nervous in the corners, honestly the weirdest thing was the sun - the sun was going down here (points to a corner) you had the sun really in your eyes," said Armstrong. "But after that, it was fine.
"I felt good, I've trained a lot for this comeback, I've trained a lot for this race," he said. "I'm glad the first day is over and now we can get into the race and maybe relax a little bit more.
"There was a lot of anxiety before today," admitted Armstrong. "It's not my style (of racing), but I enjoyed it.
But the tight circuit and fast pace was tailor made for McEwen.
"I love a crowd," said the 36 year old. "This was my first day out with my (new) team and I worked fairly hard during the summer and I wanted to be in good shape for this race.
" I said before, if I get one win when I’m down here this week, it will be fantastic, so we’ve got it ... great start to the year, and I couldn’t be happier," he said. "The guys (team) did a very good job, considering it's their first race of the season.
"They haven’t got any race fitness, but they came out and gave it everything," he explained. "We got together and worked out a bit of a tactic. I also just said to them, ‘Listen fellas, there’s no pressure. We’ll do it, and if it works out, great, but if you haven’t got the legs, it’s the first race of the year, there’s plenty to go.’
"We’ve got win number one so we’re the happiest team, here at the moment," said McEwen who only arrived in Adelaide on Saturday night and took the opportunity early in the race to say hi to Armstrong with whom he shared the podium in 2002 and 2004 when he won the green jersey and Armstrong the yellow in the Tour de France. "He looked OK, I went and said, ‘G’Day’ to him somewhere in the first 10 laps of the race, and he was glad to be there. I said to him, ‘welcome back’ and he was cruising, just trying to stay out of trouble. He said, I’d give you a handshake, but I don’t want to take my hands off the bars... first race back.
"My last big win was in Paris-Brussels in the middle of September but there’s something special to win in your own country, in the biggest race of the country, in front of all these people, is a really special atmosphere.
"I love coming to this race, and when you’ve got all these people cheering for you, it does give you a little bit extra," said McEwen who some media pundits have said is getting to the end of his career. "It’s been written, ‘Getting old, this and that’... but I’ve just done my thing, done my training and here I am ... first, that’s all that matters."
Meantime 19 year old Jack Bobridge, riding with the UniSA - Australian National Team gave his hometown crowd something to cheer for early in the race when he sprinted clear to win the Skoda Sprint at the end of lap five and the Hindmarsh Sprint at the end of lap ten. Frenchman Jeremy Roy (Francaise de Jeux) attacked mid way through to claim the Cycle Instead Sprint at the end of lap 15 and his team mate Timothy Gudsell of New Zealand collected the SA Lotteries Sprint at the end of lap 20 before the teams of the favourites upped the speed to set up their fast men for the finish.
The 133 riders will tomorrow have their final training rides before lining up in the first UCI ProTour event of the season, the Tour Down Under, which kicks off in the Adelaide suburb of Norwood on Tuesday morning.

Results1 Robbie McEwen (Aus) Team Katusha 1.04.32
2 Willem Stroetinga (Ned) Team Milram
3 Graeme Brown (Aus) Rabobank
4 Andre Greipel (Ger) Team Columbia-High Road
5 Jose Rojas (Spa) Caisse D'Epargne
6 Allan Davis (Aus) Quick Step
7 Baden Cooke (Aus) UniSA
8 Francesco Chicchi (Ita) Liquigas
9 Hilton Clarke (Aus) Fuji-Servetto 0.01
10 Chris Sutton (Aus) Garmin-Slipstream
11 Mark Renshaw (Aus) Team Columbia-High Road
12 Nicholas Roche (Irl) Ag2R La Mondiale 0.02
13 Sebastien Hinault (Fra) Ag2R La Mondiale
14 Mauro Santambrogio (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C
15 Rony Martias (Fra) Bbox Bouygues Telecom
16 Inaki Isasi (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi
17 Andrea Grendene (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C 0.03
18 Gert Steegmans (Bel) Team Katusha 0.05
19 Aliaksandr Usau (Blr) Cofidis 0.06
20 Julien El Fares (Fra) Cofidis
21 Markel Irizar (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi
22 Mikael Cherel (Fra) Francaise Des Jeux
23 Alexandr Pliuschin (Mda) Ag2R La Mondiale 0.07
24 Alexandre Pichot (Fra) Bbox Bouygues Telecom
25 Jussi Veikkanen (Fin) Francaise Des Jeux
26 Cameron Meyer (Aus) Garmin-Slipstream
27 Martin Elmiger (Swi) Ag2R La Mondiale 0.08
28 Matthew Goss (Aus) Team Saxobank
29 Timothy Gudsell (NZl) Francaise Des Jeux
30 Kasper Klostergaard (Den) Team Saxobank
31 Luca Barla (Ita) Team Milram
32 Aaron Kemps (Aus) UniSA 0.09
33 Dries Devenyns (Bel) Quick Step
34 Christian Knees (Ger) Team Milram
35 Greg Henderson (NZl) Team Columbia-High Road
36 Josu Agirre (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi
37 Jos Van Emden (Ned) Rabobank
38 Jacopo Guarnieri (Ita) Liquigas 0.10
39 Yoann Offredo (Fra) Francaise Des Jeux 0.11
40 Pablo Urtasun (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi
41 Frank Hoj (Den) Team Saxobank 0.12
42 Nikolay Trusov (Rus) Team Katusha
43 Guillaume Blot (Fra) Cofidis 0.15
44 Matteo Tosatto (Ita) Quick Step 0.16
45 Cladio Corioni (Ita) Liquigas 0.17
46 Nicki Sorensen (Den) Team Saxobank
47 Olivier Kaisen (Bel) Silence-Lotto 0.18
48 Mickael Buffaz (Fra) Cofidis 0.19
49 Ryder Hesjedal (Can) Garmin-Slipstream
50 Mathew Hayman (Aus) Rabobank 0.21
51 Kurt Hovelijnck (Bel) Quick Step 0.22
52 Jonas Ljungblad (Swe) Silence-Lotto
53 Nicolas Portal (Fra) Caisse D'Epargne 0.23
54 Thomas Rohregger (Aut) Team Milram
55 Oscar Pereiro (Spa) Caisse D'Epargne
56 Stuart O'Grady (Aus) Team Saxobank
57 George Hincapie (USA) Team Columbia-High Road
58 Bernhard Eisel (Aut) Team Columbia-High Road
59 Michael Schar (Swi) Astana
60 Imanol Erviti (Spa) Caisse D'Epargne
61 Aliaksandr Kuchynski (Blr) Liquigas
62 Mathieu Claude (Fra) Bbox Bouygues Telecom
63 Luis Leon Sanchez (Spa) Caisse D'Epargne
64 Lance Armstrong (USA) Astana
65 Florent Brard (Fra) Cofidis
66 Jesus Hernandez (Spa) Astana
67 Steve Morabito (Swi) Astana 0.24
68 Assan Bazayev (Kaz) Astana
69 Francesco Reda (Ita) Quick Step
70 Vitaliy Buts (Ukr) Lampre - N.G.C
71 Travis Meyer (Aus) UniSA
72 Davide Malacarne (Ita) Quick Step
73 Wesley Sulzberger (Aus) Francaise Des Jeux
74 Markus Eichler (Ger) Team Milram
75 Daniele Nardello (Ita) Fuji-Servetto
76 Vincent Jerome (Fra) Bbox Bouygues Telecom
77 Mathieu Drujon (Fra) Caisse D'Epargne
78 Jens Voigt (Ger) Team Saxobank
79 Anders Lund (Den) Team Saxobank 0.25
80 Perrig Quemeneur (Fra) Bbox Bouygues Telecom
81 Kenny De Haes (Bel) Team Katusha
82 Juan Horrach (Spa) Team Katusha
83 Jose Luis Rubiera (Spa) Astana
84 Stef Clement (Ned) Rabobank
85 Hubert Schwab (Swi) Quick Step
86 Aitor Hernandez (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi
87 Ronny Scholz (Ger) Team Milram 0.26
88 Rene Mandri (Est) Ag2R La Mondiale
89 Glenn D'Hollander (Bel) Silence-Lotto
90 Vladmir Efimkin (Rus) Ag2R La Mondiale
91 Stijn Vandenbergh (Bel) Team Katusha 0.27
92 Sergio De Lis (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi
93 Sergey Klimov (Rus) Team Katusha
94 Ivan Dominquez (USA) Fuji-Servetto
95 Ermanno Capelli (Ita) Fuji-Servetto
96 Rick Flens (Ned) Rabobank
97 Simon Clarke (Aus) UniSA
98 Maxim Iglinskiy (Kaz) Astana
99 Gianni Da Ros (Ita) Liquigas 0.28
100 Andoni Lafuente (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi
101 Emanuele Bindi (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C
102 Javier Megias (Spa) Fuji-Servetto
103 Alexander Efimkin (Rus) Ag2R La Mondiale
104 Frederick Willems (Bel) Liquigas
105 Timmy Duggan (USA) Garmin-Slipstream
106 William Walker (Aus) Fuji-Servetto
107 Trent Lowe (Aus) Garmin-Slipstream
108 Martin Muller (Ger) Team Milram 0.29
109 Adam Hansen (Aus) Team Columbia-High Road
110 Mario Aerts (Bel) Silence-Lotto
111 Kai Reus (Ned) Rabobank
112 Christian Meier (Can) Garmin-Slipstream
113 Jack Bobridge (Aus) UniSA
114 Volodymyr Zagorodniy (Ukr) Lampre - N.G.C
115 Pieter Jacobs (Bel) Silence-Lotto
116 David Loosli (Swi) Lampre - N.G.C
117 Jeremy Roy (Fra) Francaise Des Jeux
118 Matteo Bono (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C
119 Matthew Lloyd (Aus) Silence-Lotto
120 Scott Davis (Aus) UniSA
121 Tom Stubbe (Bel) Silence-Lotto
122 Matthew Wilson (Aus) UniSA
123 Remy Di Gregorio (Fra) Francaise Des Jeux
124 Matthieu Sprick (Fra) Bbox Bouygues Telecom 0.30
125 Maciej Bodnar (Pol) Liquigas
126 Rein Taaramae (Est) Cofidis
127 Laurent Lefevre (Fra) Bbox Bouygues Telecom
128 David Moncoutie (Fra) Cofidis
129 Pablo Lastras (Spa) Caisse D'Epargne 0.31
130 Davide Vigano (Ita) Fuji-Servetto 0.43
131 Julian Dean (NZl) Garmin-Slipstream 0.45

Mark Coleman just wanted another 24 seconds.


"This is by far the most disappointing loss of my life. This is devastating," Coleman said on Saturday, in an interview with UFC.com after his loss to Mauricio Rua at UFC 93. "I just don't see how the guy stopped it. ... I just deserved more."
Referee Kevin Mulhall halted the fight 4:36 into third round after Rua dropped his visibly exhausted opponent with a right uppercut, preceded by four straight punches and followed by a short left hook as Coleman fell to all fours.


Although Coleman was doing little to defend himself at that point, the same was true at various points earlier in the bout when his hands were at his sides and he seemed barely able to stand. Coleman was incredulous immediately after the Mulhall stepped to end the affair.
"I'm a little lumped up but I'm fine," Coleman said. "I can take a damn shot. It's frustrating. This is the most frustrating loss of my life ever. Ever."
In losing with fortitude, Coleman gained the Irish crowd's respect. Although he was booed during his entrance at Dublin's O2 Arena, the audience cheered him at the end of the fight for surviving the much-ballyhooed Rua's assault for most of the fight.
"I think I heard a lot of boos coming out, which is fine," Coleman said. "But (there's) a little satisfaction in winning some of the fans over. ... I hope I didn't embarass nobody." Q&A: No end in sight for Coleman
If anyone had reason to be embarassed by the fight, it was Rua. Coleman survived longer than most observers expected — every online sports book listed him as a heavy underdog, and 19 of 25 MMA pros surveyed by Sherdog saw Coleman losing — but Rua disappointed anyone who expected to see the man who once was called the best light heavyweight in the world.
Rua's lack of endurance was particularly surprising. He was gasping by the end of the second round and appeared ripe for the picking in third, except that Coleman looked just as tired.
But Coleman has run out of gas before, while Rua used to be a cardio machine. Less than three-and-a-half years ago, he maintained a furious, high-energy pace for 20 exciting minutes with Antonio Rogerio Nogueira in the best fight of 2005; now he's had his second straight fight in which he looked out of shape, and this time he doesn't have the knee injury that hindered him in 2007 against Forrest Griffin.
Had Coleman survived the last two dozen seconds, Rua likely would have won on the judges' scorecards anyway. Even though Rua looked winded, cautious and often unsure of himself, he remained far more effective with strikes than his opponent and never appeared at risk on the ground, despite being taken down multiple times.
It would be easy to say Coleman looked old, but he looked no worse than the man who was battered on the feet 12 years ago in consecutive losses to Maurice Smith and Pete Williams. Coleman has never been a good striker, relying instead on his wrestling to put foes on their backs.
UFC after the fight announced that Rua will face another light-heayvweight striker who has seen better days, Chuck Liddell, at UFC 97 in April. Rua has beaten every stand-up fighter he has faced in the past, but Liddell's counterpunching has served him well against fighters who come straight ahead, as Rua has done throughout his career.
UFC 93 RECAP: Henderson edges out Franklin
Coleman's perseverance on Saturday earned him and his opponent some extra money. UFC awarded $40,000 each to Coleman and Rua as Fight of the Night bonuses. Also receiving Fight of the Night rewards were Marcus Davis and Chris Lytle, whose aggressive stand-up clash opened the pay-per-view broadcast.
Dennis Siver took home an added $40,000 for Knockout of the Night. Siver earned a technical knockout of Nate Mohr in the third round with a flurry of strikes that started with a spinning back kick.
Alan Belcher's guillotine choke on Denis Kang was Submission of the Night by default, since it was the only submission of the show. Belcher also received $40,000.