понедельник, 8 октября 2012 г.

CANSECO CLAIMS STEROIDS ABUNDANT.(SPORTS) - The Cincinnati Post (Cincinnati, OH)

Byline: Compiled from Post news services

Jose Canseco claims 85 percent of major league baseball players are taking steroids.

''There would be no baseball left if they drug-tested everyone today,'' he said Friday during an interview with Fox Sports Net.

Canseco, who announced his retirement earlier in the week, refused to say if he took steroids.

''It's completely restructured the game as we know it,'' he said. ''That's why guys are hitting 50 or 60 or 75 home runs.''

During an interview with the Associated Press on Friday, Canseco refused to answer questions about steroids use, saying he would give details in a book he is writing.

''Basically what it's going to be is the true story of my life - good and bad, the ups and downs,'' Canseco said. ''I'll name names and discuss basically everything and everybody involved in it. There are a million things I could talk about.''

BLACK DIES - Joe Black, the Brooklyn Dodgers right-hander who became the first black pitcher to win a World Series game, died Friday of prostate cancer.

Black, 78, beat the New York Yankees in Game 1 of the 1952 World Series, five years after teammate Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier. Black also lost twice in the series. He pitched for the Reds in 1955 and '56.

SABATHIA ROBBED - Cleveland Indians pitcher C.C. Sabathia was robbed at gunpoint early Friday morning at a downtown hotel by a group of men, who stole his necklace, earrings and wallet.

''It's a life-altering situation,'' a shaken, but uninjured Sabathia said. ''It was totally my fault. There's nobody to blame but me.''

воскресенье, 7 октября 2012 г.

C'MON HILLARY! BE A SPORT AND LOOSEN UP.(SPOTLIGHT)(Column) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: MARY WINTER

Hillary Clinton sits cross-legged on the plush carpet of her White House office. She's wearing blue jeans, her hair's in a ponytail and Socks is at her side, busy licking his furry chest.

An aide drops off a speech, and the first lady issues a melodious 'Okey-dokey, artichokey!'

The president appears and gives her a peck on the cheek.

She beams.

'What's up, Buttercup?' Mrs. Clinton asks her main squeeze.

Is this the kind of behavior Americans want from a first lady?

I think it is.

At least, I think it's what they want from Hillary Clinton.

In two words, they want her to lighten up.

Mrs. Clinton's nosediving popularity has little to do with Whitewater or Travelgate. Her albatross is her goody-two-shoes, Harvard-educated, no-hair-out-of-place image.

The reason polls show 47% of Americans think she's a liar may be because she comes across as a bit cold and stuffy.

I think Mrs. Clinton's image needs a slight adjustment.

And given that over the years I've become somewhat of an expert at spotting others' flaws, I offer the following suggestions on how Mrs. Clinton might reverse those pesky popularity polls:

* Buy a red Porsche.

* Get caught sending slightly flirtatious e-mail to Norman Schwartzkopf.

* Rollerblade down Pennsylvania Avenue in a unitard on the next sunny afternoon.

Just think of the photo ops.

Recall how many times we've seen the president jogging, playing golf, going duck hunting.

Those events don't just happen. They're carefully orchestrated by Mr. Clinton's handlers so voters see what a 'regular' fella our man in the White House is.

What's good for for the goose is good for the gander. Mrs. Clinton should get involved in some kind of sport, and let the voting public see her in the act.

The more flab she shows, the better. Cellulite, not a Wellesley College degree, is what the rest of us can relate to.

* Become a Boy Scout leader.

* Pull out a Little Debbie snack cake at the next big press conference. Unwrap it, bite into it with gusto, and remark that croissants just don't cut it with you.

* Throw a 'Come as Phil Gramm' party at Camp David.

* Take a class in feng shui and fill the White House with red tulips.

* Learn topiary and mold White House bushes into busts of America's forefathers.

The point of such grand-standing activities, of course, is to draw attention to Mrs. Clinton's softer side, to her sense of whimsy and playfulness.

According to a Newsweek cover story, there is a 'goofy' side of Hillary Clinton that wears necklaces of blinky Christmas lights; that uses expressions such as 'Okey-dokey, artichokey' and genuinely enjoys making wreaths with Martha Stewart.

So break the mold, Mrs. Clinton.

You're neither Barbara Bush nor Nancy Reagan. You're a great role model for this generation of women, and millions, including me, admire you for blazing a thorny trail and for calling America on the carpet for neglecting its children.

Now, it's time to loosen your collar.

Okey-dokey, artichokey?

Sprinter Carlos remains survivor.(Sports) - The Seattle Times (Seattle, WA)

Byline: Jerry Brewer; Times staff Columnist

Here was John Carlos, an unapologetic crusader, feeling vulnerable. He looked at his mother, Violis, and tiptoed toward the one question he had spent four decades trying to ask.

This was 2008, 40 years after Carlos had lifted his black-gloved fist into the air at the Mexico City Olympics, teaming with Tommie Smith to make perhaps the most shocking political statement in sports history. Carlos summoned his courage again as he peered into Mom's eyes.

'Were you ashamed?' he asked.

'I was never ashamed,' Violis said. 'I never was, and I never will be ashamed of you. But I was afraid I'd get a call in the middle of the night saying that they'd killed you.'

The son replied: 'Mom, they can kill me. But they can't kill what I stand for.'

That's John Carlos in an anecdote. He's not just a character in a frozen, polarizing moment from 43 years ago. He's an ordinary man -- a high-school guidance counselor -- with extraordinary conviction, a keen sense of humanity and the defiance to make the rigid and the apathetic uncomfortable.

He has written a book with Dave Zirin to explain his dauntless life. He's on a tour promoting 'The John Carlos Story,' and he'll be here at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Northwest African American Museum. Carlos, 66, is as sharp as ever. He's as passionate as ever, too. When he talks, he sounds neither arrogant because he made history nor bitter because he was ostracized for it. Instead, his desire for equality remains his unobstructed focus. And when you ask about his life, he's unabashedly honest.

'If I'm pissed off at anything about my life, I'm pissed off at myself for not making things easier for my family,' said Carlos, whose first wife, Kim, committed suicide in 1977. 'I lost my first wife in this thing. But I'll never be bitter toward anyone -- not for the criticisms or the death threats or anything. If I'm bitter, they win.'

Carlos' book is captivating because it is real and searing. He's not an athlete looking to praise himself or sugarcoat his legacy. It's as objective as an autobiography can be. You feel history come to life, but you also realize Carlos is very much living in the present.

'I don't feel embraced, I feel like a survivor, like I survived cancer,' Carlos says in a blunt-yet-poetic introduction. 'It's like if you are sick, and no one wants to be around you, and when you're well, everyone who thought you would go down for good doesn't even want to make eye contact. It was almost like we were on a deserted island. ... But we survived.'

In a telephone interview last week, Carlos admitted he had spent 43 years wondering one thing: 'Why me?'

He had to possess courage to take a stand. But he had to have the talent to get to the stand. Carlos originally wanted to be an Olympic swimmer, but he soon realized that, during those times, African-American athletes didn't have the proper training to become elite swimmers. So he turned to track. At the 1968 Olympics, he took the bronze medal in the 200 meters. Smith won the race, and Australian Peter Norman finished second.

The three decided to make a statement on the medal stand. They all wore Olympic Project for Human Rights badges. Smith and Carlos didn't wear shoes -- just black socks -- to symbolize black poverty. Smith wore a black scarf around his neck, and Carlos opted to unzip his tracksuit top to represent blue-collar workers and to wear a necklace of beads to represent those who had been murdered and lynched.

But the most enduring part of the protest happened when the national anthem began. Smith and Carlos raised their black-gloved fists -- Smith with his right hand, Carlos with his left -- and they lowered their heads.

'People tried to make it a black thing,' Carlos said. 'They called it a 'black power salute.' It wasn't a black thing. It was for human rights.'

Why me? Carlos ponders it every day. 'When I get before God, that's the only time I'm going to get the answer,' he says.

He doesn't ask the question with regret, however. No, he's proud he had the strength and social consciousness at such a young age to take a stand. The moment defines his life, but in some ways, it was no different than when, as a teen, Carlos set a tree on fire in the courtyard of the public-housing projects in Harlem where his family lived. He did it because a caterpillar infestation was preventing his mother from sitting under the trees in the courtyard, and the building manager had ignored the problem.

'If I've got to take a whuppin' for something I believe in, I'll take that whuppin',' Carlos says.

No shame. No fear. No regrets.

He survived.

Jerry Brewer: 206-464-2277 or jbrewer@seattletimes.com

CAPTION(S):

AP file photo: Extending gloved fists, U.S. athletes Tommie Smith, center, and John Carlos stare downward in poltical protest during the 1968 Mexico City Games. (0343658442)

суббота, 6 октября 2012 г.

Sports Briefs - Telegraph - Herald (Dubuque)

Hampton pleads guilty to DWI charges

CABOT, Ark. - Dan Hampton, who will be inducted into the ProFootball Hall of Fame this summer, has been sentenced to a week injail after pleading guilty last month to drunken-driving charges.

The former Chicago Bears' defensive end also was fined $1,000 andordered to attend alcohol education courses. The arrest was hissecond for DWI in five years.

Hampton's lawyer, Hubert Alexander, said his client hadn't decidedwhen to serve the jail time or attend the classes. He has until theend of this month to pay the fine. The plea and sentence took placeApril 30 but was not disclosed until Friday because Alexander wishedto avoid publicity.

The 44-year-old Hampton, who also played at Arkansas, was draftedby the Bears No. 4 overall in 1979 and was All-Pro in 1981, 1983,1985-86. He retired in 1990.

Former MSU star shot at

LANSING, Mich. - An unidentified gunman fired at least three shotsinto the passenger-side windows of a sport utility vehicle driven byformer Michigan State star basketball player Jason Richardson, policesay.

Richardson, who now plays for the NBA's Golden State Warriors, andfive passengers were not hurt during the shooting early Thursday at aLansing intersection, authorities told The Lansing State Journal fora story Friday.

The shooting took place about 2:30 a.m. Thursday at a stoplightnear downtown Lansing, police said.

Lansing police Detective Sgt. Noel Garcia said the department isinvestigating the incident but had no suspects. Witnesses said therewere three people in the shooter's car.

Sol releases Watson

MIAMI - The Miami Sol cut former Iowa player Jerica Watson, athird-round draft choice, as the WNBA got down to its roster limit of11 on Friday.

Watson, a 6-foot forward, was the 45th pick overall in lastmonth's draft. She had played in all four of Miami's exhibitiongames, averaging 10.8 minutes, two points and two rebounds.

At Iowa, Watson led the Big Ten in rebounding last season (9.4)and averaged 13.3 points a game.

Borton takes over Gophers

MINNEAPOLIS - Pam Borton became the new women's basketball coachat Minnesota on Friday.

Borton, an associate coach at Boston College, agreed to a five-year contract that pays $150,000 annually. She succeeds BrendaOldfield, who left to become the coach at Maryland.

The program still faces NCAA sanctions. The NCAA is expected toannounce its ruling soon.

Woods to skip Kemper

DUBLIN, Ohio - Tiger Woods will skip the Kemper Open to rest forthe U.S. Open.

Woods had strongly considered playing his first Kemper Open, eventhough it would have been his fourth straight tournament - and justtwo weeks before the U.S. Open.

'I don't feel that I can play Kemper and get ready for the Open atthe same time,' Woods said. 'I don't have enough energy for that.'

Eagles playbook stolen

PHILADELPHIA - A Philadelphia Eagles playbook was stolen from thecar of linebacker Shawn Barber.

Barber told police Thursday his 2002 Cadillac was ransackedbetween midnight and 6 a.m. A briefcase with jewelry, cash and theplaybook was stolen.

Several Eagles have been victimized in the past few days. Theburglaries occurred in the outdoor parking lot of the Residence Inn,near the Philadelphia International Airport, where some Eagles arehoused temporarily during offseason training.

Bond set for robbers

CLEVELAND - Bond was set at $50,000 Friday for two former collegebasketball players charged with robbing Cleveland Indians pitcherC.C. Sabathia.

Damon Stringer and Jamaal Harris did not enter a plea when theyappeared in Cleveland Municipal Court.

The former teammates at Cleveland State University face three to10 years in prison if convicted of aggravated robbery and kidnapping.

Sabathia and his cousin, Jomar Connors, of Vallejo, Calif., wererobbed at gunpoint after midnight May 17 at a downtown hotel, wherethey attended a party.

Sabathia was robbed of $44,102 in cash and jewelry, including anecklace and earrings. No one was injured.

Italian scales Everest

KATMANDU, Nepal - A 66-year-old Italian man scaled Mount Evereston Friday, becoming the oldest person to climb the world's highestmountain.

Curnis broke the record set by Japanese climber Tomiyasu Ishikawa,of Nagoya, who scaled the peak last week at the age of 65 years andfive months, according to the China Tibet Mountaineering Association.

Last week, 63-year-old Japanese climber Tamae Watanabe became theoldest woman to scale the peak.

Plane lands in parking lot

ANAHEIM, Calif. - A small plane crash-landed Friday in a parkinglot outside the Anaheim Angels' stadium, just hours before the teamplayed the Minnesota Twins.

The pilot and a passenger, who were not immediately identified,walked away from the crumpled single-engine Cessna 150.

пятница, 5 октября 2012 г.

Sports in 60 seconds.(Sports) - Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL)

Badgers' concussed Ball won't start camp:

Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema says star running back Montee Ball won't be ready for camp after suffering a concussion during a street fight. According to the Wisconsin State Journal, Bielema said during a taping of a show at WISC-TV studios in Madison on Thursday that Ball won't be ready when practice begins Monday. The Badgers open the season at home Sept. 1 against Northern Iowa. Bielema gave no indication Ball would suffer any long-term problems. He said Ball's absence will spare last year's Heisman Trophy finalist hits and give other backs more repetitions. Police said five men knocked Ball down as he was walking near campus early Wednesday. The men kicked him in the head and chest before fleeing.

-- Despite its lopsided loss to Alabama in last January's BCS national title game, LSU will open the 2012 season ranked No. 1 in at least one poll. LSU sits atop the USA Today Top 25 coaches poll released Thursday, with Alabama second and Southern California third.

Young looks for deal in hate-crime case:

Detroit Tigers outfielder Delmon Young is trying to work out a deal with prosecutors in New York in his hate-crime harassment case, his lawyer said Thursday. Young appeared briefly in a Manhattan court Thursday for an update on the misdemeanor case. He's accused of yelling anti-Jewish epithets at a group of tourists, tussling with them and tackling one to the ground in April, when the Tigers were in town to play the New York Yankees. His lawyer, Daniel J. Ollen, said after court that he and prosecutors are discussing a potential 'disposition that's acceptable to both parties.' The Manhattan district attorney's office said only that prosecutors aren't making an offer at the moment. The 26-year-old Young was standing outside the team hotel in New York when a panhandler, wearing a yarmulke and a Star of David necklace, approached a group of about four Chicago tourists standing nearby, police said. Young started yelling anti-Semitic epithets, though it wasn't clear at whom he was shouting, and got into a scuffle with the Chicago group, police said. Major League Baseball suspended Young for seven days without pay after the confrontation. Young is free on $5,000 bond and due back in court Nov. 7.

Cleveland Browns sale gets closer:

Here's one to make Cleveland fans shake their heads: A partial owner of the hated Pittsburgh Steelers is buying the Browns. A person with knowledge of the sale told The Associated Press on Thursday that Browns owner Randy Lerner has reached a deal to sell the team to Tennessee truck-stop magnate Jimmy Haslam III -- a minority stockholder in the rival Steelers. While the papers have been signed, the NFL still must approve the sale. Approval from 24 of the 32 teams is required, and no date has been set for a vote because the sale has not been presented to the league yet. The person said approval is expected by the end of September.

Etc.:

A sampling of the treasure trove that had been untouched for 100 years in an Ohio attic was sold during the National Sports Collectors Convention in Baltimore. The 37 baseball cards featuring the likes of Hall of Famers Ty Cobb, Cy Young and Honus Wagner fetched $566,132 in brisk online and live bidding. They were expected to bring about $500,000.

-- Former NBA guard and Kentucky assistant coach Rod Strickland was arrested near the Kentucky campus in Lexington, Ky., and charged with driving on a DUI suspended license.

-- Ohio State running back Bri'onte Dunn, a 19-year-old incoming freshman, has pleaded innocent to a disorderly conduct charge after a weekend arrest in Alliance, Ohio, resulted in police finding marijuana in the car he was driving.

-- Nearly a year after promising to impose harsher sanctions on the most egregious rule-breakers, NCAA leaders in Indianapolis endorsed a proposal Thursday that would make schools subject to the same crippling penalties just handed to Penn State. The measure includes postseason bans of up to four years, fines that could stretch into the millions and suspensions for head coaches. A final vote on the sweeping overhaul will not occur before the board of directors' October meeting.

-- Cpl. Royce Denny, an Arkansas State Police trooper who found a gun and marijuana during a traffic stop of then-Arkansas State running back Michael Dyer has been fired.

-- Chicago Rush wide receiver Reggie Gray and center Billy Eisenhardt were selected to the Arena Football League's second-team all-arena offense.

четверг, 4 октября 2012 г.

Being a professional athlete brings the money and the prestige, but it also means being a public figure, especially in the eyes of criminals: Dangers run rampant for sports stars. - Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL)

Byline: Fred Mitchell

Jul. 15--Antoine Walker's life-threatening experience with gun-toting intruders at his River North home last week is the latest example of a scary trend in professional sports: Athletes are becoming increasingly frequent victims of street crime.

Criminals, after all, go where the money is, and pro athletes in the major sports reside in an extremely exclusive income bracket.

Last week three masked men entered Walker's posh River North residence through the garage, held a gun to his head, duct-taped his ankles and wrists and robbed him of cash, jewelry and his black Mercedes.

Walker escaped without serious injury, and the Mercedes and some of his jewelry have been recovered. But the emotional scars will linger, in part because Walker has been victimized before. In July 2000, he and former Kentucky teammate Nazr Mohammed, a fellow South Sider, were among five people robbed at gunpoint of cash and a $55,000 watch outside a restaurant on West Roosevelt Road. The diamond and platinum Cartier watch was Walker's.

'Any time your life is threatened, obviously you're going to be hurt by it,' Walker said.

Walker, a Miami Heat forward from Mt. Carmel High School, stands 6 feet 9 inches and is listed at 245 pounds, but his size and strength didn't intimidate well-armed attackers on either occasion.

'I'm not Superman,' Walker said.

The Bulls and Bears employ full-time security personnel to look after players' safety on the road, and to warn them away from spots where trouble might find them in their home cities. Major League Baseball maintains security offices in each league city for essentially the same purpose.

But athletes are basically on their own when they're at home or out and about socially.

Cubs outfielder Cliff Floyd, who grew up in south suburban Markham, empathizes with Walker.

'I know exactly where he's from and I know some of the places he hangs out,' Floyd said. 'Being a Chicago native, it's sad. You want the best for your city, where you come from. You want to see the crime go down. This shows you that times have changed.

'I don't think you can live paranoid. The most important thing for me, for a lot of us, is our families. They're more vulnerable than we are.'

Bull's-eye off the field

Sports history is replete with instances of athletes as victims of violence dating to 1932, when former Cubs infielder Billy Jurges was shot in his hotel room by a jilted girlfriend. Seventeen years later the Phillies' Eddie Waitkus, also a former Cub, was shot in Chicago by a young woman named Ruth Ann Steinhagen.

In 1978, Angels outfielder Lyman Bostock was shot and killed while visiting family in his native Gary, an innocent bystander in a domestic dispute.

More recently Indians pitcher C.C. Sabathia and his cousin were robbed at gunpoint of $44,000 worth of jewelry and cash at a Cleveland hotel in 2002. That same year, Giants receiver Tim Carter was carjacked outside a New Jersey movie complex and robbed of his BMW and $10,000 worth of jewelry.

NBA guard Stephon Marbury, then with the New Jersey Nets, was robbed of a $150,000 diamond necklace as he waited in his Bentley for a light to change in Manhattan in 2000. Gary Payton, then with the Seattle Sonics, was relieved of $30,000 worth of cash and jewelry in his native Oakland.

Being an athlete obviously doesn't ensure safe passage on the nation's streets.

'You've got to be careful where you go, who is around, what you do, how you dress, what you have on. You have to be cognizant of all that,' Cubs outfielder Jacque Jones said. 'There are certain situations where a guy could take it the wrong way, like [wearing] a lot of jewelry or flashy clothes or whatever.'

Floyd agrees.

'The more you see things happen, the more you say to yourself: 'Should I wear this chain today? Should I drive this car today, or should I take off the [fancy] rims?' It makes you think about it, but then it goes back to wanting to enjoy the things that you worked so hard to do. So it's a double-edged sword. Sometimes it's a choice of life over death,' Floyd said.

White Sox shortstop Juan Uribe was exonerated following an alleged shooting incident in his native Dominican Republic last winter. Uribe's agent, Martin Arburua, suggested Uribe, his brother and a bodyguard were the victims of an extortion scheme, that the shooting incident 'probably didn't happen,' but countryman Sammy Sosa said Uribe should not have put himself at such high risk.

'As a baseball player and being at the level you are, you need to be surrounded by good people. Good people who can tell you, 'Go to this place, don't go to that place,'' Sosa said.

Sosa speaks from experience; he and his brother had a large amount of cash stolen from them in a Caracas hotel lobby in 2002. Sosa's agent, Adam Katz, called the amount 'insignificant ... maybe $1,000' at the time, but published reports put the figure at $20,000.

'If you go out by yourself and you punch somebody, you have to pay that guy for life,' Sosa said. 'You shoot somebody and you're in trouble. That never happens to me because I'm surrounded by good people. I would rather pay a bodyguard $1,000 and know that when I go out to a place, I'm going to have a good time and I won't be thinking about something happening to me. I will have somebody taking care of my back.'

Can't be careful enough

Being safe in public and safe in their homes or hotel rooms are two different concerns for high-profile athletes.

'My girl might get tired of hearing it, but I'm telling her all the time: 'When you come in the garage, keep your head on a swivel when you're coming down the alley. Keep your head on a swivel when you are taking the kids out,'' Floyd said.

'I mean, I can get out of the car and if I see someone coming after me, I can run. But she can't leave our two kids. I always tell her that her situation is much different than mine. 'Be home before dark, lock the door and put the alarm on.''

But athletes and their families can't lock out the outside world completely.

'You have people coming into your house that you don't think about: the cleaning lady, the dry cleaner who comes in and gets my clothes,' Floyd said. 'I have the plumber coming in. There are a lot of things you have to think about. They know your routine. You have to trust them at some point.'

Cubs reliever Bob Howry was involved in an incident last month when a fan ran onto the field and approached him after he'd given up a go-ahead home run against Colorado in a game at Wrigley Field. Security subdued 24-year-old Brent Kowalkoski before he reached Howry.

'When you hear about something like [the attack on Walker], it makes you think about it a little bit more,' Howry said. 'More than anything, you're concerned about your family and you want them to be safe. There are only so many precautions you can take. If somebody wants to do something bad enough, I don't know if there's anything you can do to really stop them.'

Additional security has been accompanying Giants slugger Barry Bonds as he approaches Henry Aaron's home run record, and MLB security spokesman Kevin Teenan said 'it's safe to say' they'll be with Bonds as his Giants visit Wrigley Field this week.

Chicago-based agents such as Henry Thomas, Mark Bartelstein, Keith Kreiter and Fletcher Smith advise their clients to be wary of all their many acquaintances, some of whom might not have their best interests at heart.

Walker is moving out of his River North residence following last week's attack, but he says Chicago will remain his off-season home.

'I wish 'Toine the best and I hope everything works out,' Floyd said. 'I hope everything calms down and he can get back to his life. Why should something like this happen to a person?'

fmitchell@tribune.com

To see more of the Chicago Tribune, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.chicagotribune.com.

Copyright (c) 2007, Chicago Tribune

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

среда, 3 октября 2012 г.

'Before, I ran from danger and death. Now, I run for sport.' U.S. flagbearer's tales of survival harrowing.(Sports) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: Clay Latimer, Rocky Mountain News

Lopez Lomong couldn't help himself.

He had to see it.

He had to go back to the place in Africa where his parents buried him 17 years ago, certain their second son was dead after Sudanese soldiers dragged him out of a church.

'They'd made a funeral for me,' Lomong said. 'They had this pile of stones and things like that. They'd buried some of my childhood stuff. Symbols. A necklace. Other things from me.'

Lomong, an assistant cross country coach at the Air Force Academy, will carry the American flag during Opening Ceremonies today for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Last month, he qualified for a spot on the U.S. track and field team, finishing second in the 1,500-meter run in Eugene, Ore.

Very quickly, the 23-year-old has become a symbol of the American dream, a man who found unimagined opportunity in a welcoming land.

For some, that might be an overwhelming burden. But it won't unnerve Lomong, who overnight went from a happy 6-year-old to one of more than 20,000 'Lost Boys of Sudan,' never knowing a moment of safety as he walked through thousands of miles of desert, grasslands and forests. Battling starvation, death squads and lions, Lomong made it to a refugee camp in Kenya, where his ordeal continued for another decade.

Lomong had no one else but the Lost Boys - until he arrived in 2001 in Tully, N.Y., with the help of his adoptive parents, Robert and Barbara Rogers, and started a running career that took him to Northern Arizona University, Colorado Springs and eventually Beijing.

'Becoming an American citizen was a big step,' Lomong said. 'I was seeing everything and said, 'Now, I'm not just one of the Lost Boys, I'm an American. I'm just like any other American out there with my rights, and I can compete for the country that I want to compete for because I have my passport.' It's just payback for the people that helped me through my childhood and coming to the U.S.

'Before, I ran from danger and death. Now, I run for sport.'

The day that changed everything began innocently enough. One moment, Lomong was focused on Mass in the village of Kimotong in southern Sudan; the next, the militia was bursting through the church doors. After ordering everyone else to lie down, soldiers rounded up the children, loaded them on a truck and hauled them off to a prison camp.

Hundreds of boys sat in cramped rooms, pawns in Sudan's long-running civil war between the Arab north and Black African south of the country, where Lomong's family farmed and raised cattle.

Fearful of being turned into government soldiers, Lomong and three other boys crawled through a small hole in a fence three days later, then ran barefoot for three days.

'We kept running and running,' he said. 'We didn't know where we were going, but the whole time they were telling me, 'We're going to go and see your mom,' and I was excited about that.'

At one point, the two older boys carried Lomong on their backs. On the third day, they unknowingly crossed the border, encountering another group of soldiers - the Kenya Border Patrol.

An estimated 2 million died in Sudan's Second Civil War - it's described by the International Rescue Committee as one of the bloodiest wars of the 20th century - and thousands of children were forced into labor or turned into soldiers.

The Lost Boys escaped, but at a devastating cost. They saw friends snatched and eaten alive by lions, drop dead from thirst and hunger, turn violently sick from eating raw animal flesh. They saw others go mad, haunted by the Janjaweed, the Arab horsemen who wiped out villages and then rode away with young women, eventually turning them into concubines.

Lomong was fortunate; the Border Patrol took him to a the Kakuma Refugee Camp, a sprawling slum of 70,000 men, women and children, where he settled in to wait.

'I'm 6. I don't have parents at that point. I was like, I'm going to live my own way to just survive.'

Orphaned and alone, the Lost Boys formed new families. They listened to one another's troubles, shared food, played soccer and ran around the camp to blot out the hunger and boredom.

'Life in a refugee camp is a hustle . . . you've got to get your own food, work just to survive. We had one meal a day,' Lomong said.

'I wanted to go to school, but we had no books or pens or paper. We learned to write in the sand.'

As Lomong got older, he helped take care of the younger children.

'For kids who came there older, they probably had more stress about missing their family. For me, I was brainwashed and said, 'This is my home. This is where I will grow up,' ' he said.

One day in 2000, Lomong ran five miles to a local village, where he paid five shillings to watch the Sydney Olympics on a black- and-white television. The money came from his job shoveling dirt at the camp, but it was worth it when he saw Michael Johnson win the 400-meter dash and then accept the gold medal, The Star-Spangled Banner playing in the background. During his daily runs around the camp, he imagined racing against Johnson.

'It gave me a dream,' he said. 'I said, that's what I want to do.'

In 2001, a Catholic Charities official came to the refugee camp and said there were opportunities to come to the United States. Inspired, Lomong wrote his life story and sent it to the American embassy in Kenya; officials were moved and set up an interview.

'I thought the U.S. is next to heaven, and I wanted to be part of that,' he said.

Shortly before 9/11, Lomong boarded a plane to New York, still wondering about the fate of his biological family.

Two years later, he received an unusual phone call. It was his mother. Incredulous that she was alive, Lomong and Rita Namana exchanged information during several phone calls. Rita told him she lived in a modest apartment near the Kenyan capital of Nairobi with his two younger brothers and a sister. His father, Awei, had returned to Sudan to farm, she said.

Then, one day they realized they'd been at the same camp at the same time.

'We started crying,' Lomong said. 'For 12 years, I thought they were dead and they thought I was dead.'

After developing into a high school track and cross country star, Lomong enrolled at Northern Arizona, the first member of his family to attend college. A month before he became a U.S. citizen, he won the 1,500 meters at the 2007 NCAA championships.

Meanwhile, he continued to send $200 a month to his mother and phone his family in Kenya several times a week.

But Lomong never had been reunited with them - until last Christmas, when he returned to Kenya, unsure of what to expect after 16 years.

'I had no pictures. I didn't know what they looked like,' he said. 'It was so long ago, and I was just 6.'

But Lomong didn't end his trip in Kenya. He insisted on going back to Kimotong, to the cemetery where his family 'buried' him so many years ago.

'I went to the graveyard where they held a funeral for me and had made a little pile of stones,' he said. 'We had to dig me out. We dissected a goat and blessed it and did some ritual stuff.

'And they brought me back to life.'

CAPTION(S):

Photo (2)

вторник, 2 октября 2012 г.

'Fever Pitch' hits a home run for many sports widows - Chicago Sun-Times

When most people see their lives flashing in front of their eyes,they're facing a speeding semi or flying in a plane plunging intofree fall.

My life flashed in front of my eyes during the trailers for themovie 'Fever Pitch.'

The new Drew Barrymore-Jimmy Fallon romantic comedy is a frothylittle tale of opposites attracting. Lindsey, Barrymore's brainy,workaholic numbers-cruncher, meets up with Ben, Fallon's sensitiveschoolteacher whose only flaw is his obsessive devotion to the BostonRed Sox. Sexual sparks fly. But misgivings arise when she begins torealize what life is actually like with someone whose world can beturned upside down by changes in the next game's starting lineup.

Girl, tell me about it.

I should sue writers and directors Lowell Ganz and BabalooMandell, Bobby and Peter Farrelly for dialogue lifted from the scriptof my married life.

Lindsey: 'It's only a game.' 'What makes that a foul?' 'This isnot a man's closet.' 'What time is the game over?'

Ben: 'They need me.' 'I missed the greatest game ever.' 'I don'twant to hear the score.'

Is my home bugged?

For the past several decades, I have been married to a sport fanswhose devotion to his teams, especially in the first years of ourmarriage, stretched even beyond that of the Boys-of-Summer Ben.

Steve is a Cubs fan, a season tickets Cubs fan, a fan who managesto see most of the Cubs' 80-plus home games in person at WrigleyField. But he is also an Ohio State football and basketball fan.Which means, whether at the ballpark or parked in front of the TV, heis living and dying to the rhythm of large or small bouncing, battedor pitched balls for the greater part of the year.

Until he managed to get a grip on his obsession, he spent theremaining time in a funk because his teams were idle and probablymaking bonehead trades or recruiting choices.

I didn't know this when we married. It was the 1970s, and the Cubsweren't doing especially well. He didn't yet have season tickets. Therhythm of our courtship superceded the competing beat of playoffgames.

I had some hints, however. I had lived in New York City in 1969and, not wanting him to think I was entirely sportsphobic, I told himabout the thrill of seeing the victorious New York Mets celebratetheir World Series win with a parade down Broadway. A month afterthat series, he replied, he had checked into the hospital with anulcer probably precipitated by the Cubs' infamous fade that year. Afade, I now know, that coincided with the Mets' miraculous rise.

My worries mounted as our wedding approached. He took me to myfirst Bears game, a night game played in steady drizzle withtemperatures hovering near freezing. I immediately knew I did notwant to spend my married life freezing in rain-soaked stadiums.

I told him as much at our first Ohio State game, in Madison, Wis.A jovial elderly lady, entirely clad in OSU's scarlet and gray colorsand sporting a buckeye necklace, was being passed like a life-sizedoll from row to row. Her knees were shot, and fans were helping herreach her seat in the upper rows of the top deck. If, I said sternly,Steve had the slightest thought that that would ever be me, I was nowofficially disabusing him of the notion.

But there have been pleasant moments for me on Steve's turf. Someof his friends from the ballpark have become my close friends.

A shot in 'Fever Pitch' of a snow-covered Fenway Park reminded meof the year Steve traded his two season tickets in the grandstand(now the terrace reserve) for a single club box ticket. (UnlikeLindsey, I've never developed a taste for baseball and see maybe twogames a year.) We went up to Wrigley Field one January afternoon, andI mimicked arm-waving vendors and crazy fans while he checked out thesightlines from various seats.

Over the years, Steve's emotional investment in his teams, hisfoul temper when the Cubs were playing badly, the fact that we had toconsult Ohio State and Cubs schedules before planning vacations,nights out or family events drove me insane.

It was galling because I had had a brush of my own with that kindof one-sided emotional investment. I moved to New York after collegeexpressly to indulge my passion for ballet and classical music. Itook a day job that would cover the cost of cheap tickets, and Ispent five nights a week at Lincoln Center absorbing all the New YorkCity Ballet, the Metropolitan Opera, New York City Opera and New YorkPhilharmonic had to offer.

In the standing room lines and upper balconies, I encountered thearts equivalent of crazed sports fans. The dance fans were scariest.Little ladies who had been coming to the ballet for decades talkedabout the dancers as if they were intimate friends. The artistsdidn't know they existed, but they worried endlessly if Patty's(McBride) pirouettes were shaky or Eddie (Villella) missed anairborne turn. They were in torment over Suzanne's (Farrell) fallingout with Mr. B (New York City Ballet founder, choreographer GeorgeBalanchine). They stalked away in fury after a performance that didnot meet their expectations. They probably, I thought, went home andkicked the cat.

It was creepy, I decided. Why turn your emotional well-being overto people who don't know your name? Would Patty help you celebrateyour birthday? Would Suzanne give you a call when you were sick? DidMr. B care about your rocky love life?

As the overly wise little boy asks Ben in 'Fever Pitch,' 'You lovethe Red Sox, but have they ever loved you back?'

That was not going to be me. I swore I would either get involvedwith the arts world as a legitimate professional, or I would scaleback my devotion.

Like Lindsey and Ben, Steve and I managed to find a middle ground.He came to realize that grown men don't treasure ball teams abovetheir wives and families. I came to realize that grown women can makeroom in their lives for their husbands' beloved sports teams, butonly if they know their husbands cherish them more than the endlessarray of players to be named later.

I know that Steve will turn off the TV if I ask and give me hisfull attention. But if it's two outs in the bottom of the ninth, thegame is tied and the count is 3-2, the reason had better becompelling. 'The doctor called back, and the lab results aren't good'qualifies. 'Do I look fat in this skirt?' does not.

Steve knows that a football weekend in Columbus, Ohio, had betterinclude time for a long, leisurely dinner at a classy restaurant. Theinvention of the VCR has probably saved our marriage.

If we're lucky, a handful of the billions of people on the face ofthe earth care whether we live or die. The Cubs' power hitters wereunavailable when my elderly mother was lying on the floor of herRogers Park apartment, and I needed Steve to kick in the deadbolt-locked front door. The OSU defensive line was otherwise occupied whenSteve's parents died and early morning flights to California had tobe caught.

None of them was on hand to celebrate when our niece published herfirst book, and our grand-nieces and grand-nephews came into theworld.

The boys of summer have their youthful charms. But infinitely moreprecious and lovable and sexy are the men -- and women -- who willstand unfailingly by our sides in winter as well.

понедельник, 1 октября 2012 г.

There's not much more Brown can do.(Sports) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: B.G. Brooks, Rocky Mountain News

This is a story of mice, men and Mack Brown. And maybe a national championship.

If No. 2 Texas defeats unranked, unraveled Colorado in Saturday's Big 12 Conference championship game, Brown - the Longhorns' eighth-year coach - will win his first league title.

Or, as a fellow wretch from Texas noted earlier this week, 'Unfortunately, we'll only be able to call him America's winningest coach without a conference championship for a few more days, I fear.'

Whatever you think of him or Texans, Brown has had a remarkable run in Austin, and elsewhere. He's the only active Division I-A coach who has guided teams to 10 consecutive seasons of nine or more wins - a streak that encompasses his final two seasons at North Carolina (10-2, 10-1) and the past eight at Texas, including this season's 11-0 string.

Naysayers bark Brown's talent pool finally has become so deep that even he can't foul it, or how the Longhorns perform. Cut the guy a break; somebody has to sell those multi- starred prospects on signing with Texas, then coach them.

If the oddsmakers, seers and even casual observers are correct, the Longhorns will brush aside the Buffaloes on Saturday at Houston's Reliant Stadium and make No. 1 Southern California their final target, catching the Trojans in the Bowl Championship Series' national title game Jan. 4 in the Rose Bowl.

If it all plays out accordingly, that's not a bad itinerary for a first-time conference winner.

To reach Pasadena, Calif., Brown has reached into his trick bag at least once. In preparing his team for last week's rivalry game against Texas A&M, Brown said he scattered rat traps around the football office and even wore one, baited with cheese, around his neck.

The idea, passed on by peers Bill Parcells and Dan Henning, was this: 'Don't let your players bite the cheese' - and, better yet, avoid the trap altogether.

The Longhorns managed to do just that against the Aggies, rallying to win 40-29.

'We nibbled and sniffed, but we didn't bite it,' Brown said. 'We didn't die.'

Said defensive back Michael Huff: 'We were laughing at him. . . . I'd never heard of a coach doing anything like that, but coach Brown will do whatever it takes to get us to win a game.'

No word on what Brown's props might have been this week in preparation for CU. Maybe buffalo chips scattered about the football office, but let's hope not worn as a necklace.

Shaggy 'dog story

CU isn't the only overwhelming underdog to advance to a conference championship game. Florida State opened the season with five wins, including 10-7 against Miami, and climbed as high as No. 4 in The Associated Press top 25.

Some national championship talk even included mention of the Seminoles. It subsided after Florida State's 26-21 loss at Virginia, but there was a two-game recovery and the Seminoles were 7-1 on October's final Saturday.

There hasn't been a win since.

Now, Florida State (7-4) hauls a three-game losing streak into Saturday's Atlantic Coast Conference championship game in Jacksonville, Fla., against No. 5 Virginia Tech (10-1).

'To go out there and play like that, with the talent we have, is really embarrassing,' Seminoles quarterback Drew Weatherford said.

Some postseason projections have CU and Florida State headed for the Champs Sports Bowl in Orlando, Fla., on Dec. 22. If Saturday's conference championship games play out as forecast, the folks in Orlando might be left with the Chumps Sports Bowl.

And the winnah is . . .

Heisman Trophy ballots are due by 3 p.m. MST Wednesday. That allows undecided voters (moi, included) to view the front-runners in this weekend's games.

USC's Reggie Bush or Texas' Vince Young? Or reigning Heisman winner Matt Leinart, who hands off and passes to Bush?

This ballot's forward lean is toward Bush, of whom TV analyst Pat Haden said, 'He's like trying to tackle a balloon on a windy day.'

Then bringing down Young is like trying to lasso a snowflake - albeit one standing 6-foot-5 and weighing 233 pounds.

To many voters, Young slipped a notch in last week's 40-29 victory against Texas A&M, while Bush left a lasting late-night impression in USC's 50-42 comeback win against Fresno State.

It could all change Saturday.

Touring the Big 12

* Keep an eye on both of these predictions: Brown, Texas' coach, said this week he expects Young to return for his senior season, no matter if Young wins the Heisman Trophy and the Longhorns win the national championship. Also, Colorado coach Gary Barnett predicted his junior placement specialist extraordinaire, Mason Crosby, to be kicking for the Buffs in 2006. Crosby is a leading contender for the Lou Groza Award.

* Nebraskans took offense at an off-the-cuff remark Monday by

UCLA coach Karl Dorrell. Asked at a news conference if No.1 USC was the best college team he has seen, Dorrell, a former Bruins player, answered, 'It's up there. I've played against Nebraska teams that were pretty star-studded, too. But they had some steroids.' UCLA sports information director Marc Dellins told the Lincoln Journal-Star that Dorrell's answer 'was a joke. He was just kidding.'

Touring the Mountain West

* Brigham Young's opponent in the Las Vegas Bowl on Dec. 22 might be California, but the picture won't clear until Sunday. Tina Kunzer-Murphy, the bowl's executive director, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal, 'We want Cal in the game. They would be great.'' BYU (6-5) against California (7-4) would be a boon for attendance; the Cougars already have sold 11,000 tickets - 3,000 more than its allotment.

* New Mexico's drive for the Motor City Bowl in Detroit might have blown a tire. The Lobos (6-5) are competing with potential entries from Conference USA (Houston, Southern Mississippi or Memphis, all of whom are 6-5) and the Western Athletic Conference (Louisiana Tech, which is 6-4). Motor City Bowl officials are concerned about New Mexico's potential ticket sales.

INFOBOX

Big 12 championship results

Year Site Attendance Result

1996 St. Louis 63,109 Texas 37, No. 3 Nebraska 27

1997 San Antonio 64,824 No. 2 Nebraska 54, No. 14 Texas A&M 15

1998 St. Louis 60,798 No. 10 Texas A&M 36, No. 2 Kansas State 33, OT

1999 San Antonio 65,035 No. 3 Nebraska 22, No. 12 Texas 6

2000 Kansas City, Mo. 79,655 No. 1 Oklahoma 27, No. 7 Kansas State 24

2001 Irving, Texas 65,675 No. 9 Colorado 39, No. 3 Texas 37

2002 Houston 63,332 No. 8 Oklahoma 29, No. 12 Colorado 7

2003 Kansas City, Mo. 75,491 No. 13 Kansas State 35, No. 1 Oklahoma 7

2004 Kansas City, Mo. 62,130 No. 2 Oklahoma 42, Colorado 3

CAPTION(S):

Photo

воскресенье, 30 сентября 2012 г.

WORK AND WINS: AL ALDRIDGE'S EFFORTS IN SPORTS AND MUSIC HAVE FILLED PRAIRIE TROPHY CASES, BUT NOT WITHTOUT CONTROVERSY ALONG THE WAY - The Columbian (Vancouver, WA)

It's been said that everybody loves a winner.

Why, then, doesn't everyone love Prairie High School's AlAldridge?

By the narrowest of measuring sticks, Aldridge is a successstory. He is best known in girls basketball, a sport in which he isbelieved to be Washington's winningest high school coach. Aldridgehas a 22-year record of 462-99 at Prairie, and his Falcons havequalified for this week's Class 4A state tournament in Tacoma, wherethey hope to win the program's fifth state championship.

In addition, the 51-year-old Aldridge has coached state highschool champions in softball and water polo, and his prize-winningjazz bands have stocked several trophy cabinets.

Yet with all the measurable success, Aldridge has detractors. Thecritics deride his methods and his style, questioning how he dealswith students and the emphasis he places on winning.

The secret of Aldridge's success is no mystery.

'He outworks everybody -- in boys and girls basketball. No oneputs in the hours that Al does,' said Columbia River boys coachDavid Long, who coached River's girls basketball team for severalyears.

Aldridge often is the first person in the school building and thelast to leave. Ken Storey, a longtime Prairie assistant basketballcoach, figures Aldridge watches 20 hours of video tape a week duringthe season, a figure the coach sheepishly says is somewhatexaggerated. During the off-season, Aldridge will coach more than100 games, and spend countless hours supervising open gym.

The payoff shows in the scoreboard, smiles and scholarships.

Aldridge has had one losing season buried among the 18 statetournament appearances and 12 league championships at Prairie. Mostof his players leave the program feeling love and respect for theman. From community colleges to Pacific-10 Conference schools, 43Prairie players have accepted college basketball scholarships,including two on the current team.

The players leave Prairie not only remembering the championships,but the small touches Aldridge provides. Such as an annual Christmasdinner at his house, or the necklaces and stuffed animals he's beenknown to give on Valentine's Day.

'He is the nicest man. He would do anything for any of us,' saidHeather Nevenner, who played at Prairie from 1994-98 and currentlyis a Blazer Dancer. 'One reason he's had such a successful programis he never left anything undone. He has taught me things I willcarry out for the rest of my life.'

Opinions are mixed

Outside the program and the Prairie community, feelings forAldridge range from respect to resentment. He has been accused ofcrossing the line several times during his coaching career, fromrecruiting players to needlessly yelling at players to goingoverboard with his summer program.

The accusations have always been hearsay, as it's never beenproven that Aldridge bends or breaks the rules. Still, theperception is powerful reality.

'I always respected him. I thought he worked really hard. I justwasn't always pleased with how he went about things,' said KarenHill, who coached at Fort Vancouver during the 1980s. 'I never hadany trouble with him. Guess I was just lucky.'

Several current and former coaches declined to talk aboutAldridge. As one said, 'When winning becomes the most importantthing, any time you say something's wrong, it sounds like sourgrapes.'

When asked that perhaps there some good to say about Aldridge,the coach said, 'I don't have anything good to say about (him).'

'I suppose,' Aldridge said, 'I can be misunderstood. Hopefullyfor the people in the know, they understand my intensity and theyunderstand my competitive spirit and that I have the kid's bestinterest at heart.

'And that I care for them.'

As if the girls were his daughters.

'Those kids are my life,' said Aldridge, who married in 1998 andhas no children.

Finding his calling

From childhood to now, Aldridge has always preferred toparticipate rather than spectate. He tried just about every sportimaginable while growing up in Vancouver, from football to fishing,from hunting to horseshoes. He wasn't good at everything, but thatdidn't stop him from wanting to win.

'If we were going to line up pennies against the wall, it wasgoing to be for something,' Aldridge said.

Cut from the Fort Vancouver basketball team in ninth grade,Aldridge settled on swimming and track. He went to Mount HoodCommunity College on a track scholarship, and eventually ended upcompeting for Central Washington's accomplished water polo team.

Coaching came by happenstance. Aldridge's roommate, Ron Rakoce,talked him into helping coach a girls basketball team at BattleGround High School. In time, Aldridge took over a freshman team,then the junior varsity. When Prairie opened its doors in 1979,Aldridge felt ready to try a varsity team.

Success was immediate, although Aldridge admits he was a littlelucky. Prairie went to state his first season, placing fifth in thetournament. That team had the school's first star, Tami Stuart, apost player who went on to play at Boise State and 22 years laterstill holds seven school records at Prairie.

'She was really a special player, a woman playing in a girlsworld,' Aldridge said.

The first taste of success was contagious. Five of Prairie'sfirst six teams went to state, with the 1984-85 team reaching thechampionship game. It was no accident, however, as Aldridge decidedearly on to model his program from ideas he gleaned from some of theNorthwest's best coaches, such as Auburn's Dennis Olson, OregonCity's Brad Smith, and Mark Neffendorf of Glencoe High School inHillsboro, Ore.

The backbone of Prairie basketball is defense, a word that hasbeen stitched into the player's socks since the early 1980s.Neffendorf turned Aldridge onto defense, after his Glencoe teamsroutinely pounded Prairie during summer team camps.

'I always thought defense was an area of the game where you couldhave control,' Aldridge said. 'You could teach defense and have somesay in the outcome of the game. Defense involves effort, so itmotivated us to play hard all the time.'

Danielle Dettorre, who played at Prairie from 1993-96, said:'Even if you weren't a great shooter, Al could always make you intoa great defensive player.'

Breaking the mold

Long believes Aldridge got a jump on competition because heunderstood, before most girls coaches did, that summer was just ascritical to building a program as the school season.

'It used to be roll the balls out, give 'em 3 1/2 good months,then put the balls away and see you next November. Al never didthat,' Long said. 'With girls, if you do not provide theopportunity, they will not play in the off-season. You need a coachto provide the summer program.'

Since the outset of his Prairie program, Aldridge used June andparts of July to play games and participate in individual and teamcamps. In Prairie's slick game program, the first thing writtenabout the Falcons is the team's elaborate off-season schedule.

While Aldridge can't require that players take part in summeractivities, he said, 'they want to play. They're not being forced toplay. The kids understand that if they're not playing and othersare, the others are liable to get better.'

It wasn't until the 1990s that most local girls basketballprograms started playing in the summer.

'Now if you want to compete with him, you have to work with him,'Long said.

Or get out, as Hill eventually did. She felt strongly that winterwas for basketball, and summer for kids.

'I used to tell (the players), go chase boys and do whatever youdo during the summer. Be a kid,' Hill said. 'It's an awful longseason. You get tired as a coach, and you know your kids are gettingburned out.'

The demands of Prairie's program don't end with summerbasketball. Aldridge's practices are no time for slackers. He'sintense, fiery and vocal -- and his players love him for it.

'When we have parent coaches in the spring, we goof off a lot,'Prairie forward Heather Cushing said. 'When we make a mistake, heknows how to push my buttons.'

Aldridge doesn't apologize for his passionate, intense coachingstyle. It's who he is.

A difficult taskmaster

The approach is the main reason outsiders often criticizeAldridge. They see him yell at players, or stomp, scream and whistleon the sidelines, and they conclude that he is a dictator, not acoach.

'Everyone sees him as that taskmaster and somebody that probablyyells too much, but if they saw him with the kids, they'd know himdifferent,' Storey said.

Nevenner said: 'Practices, yes they were intense. You wanted tocry on the way home because maybe you had a bad day or feel bad thatyou let him down. But we had a blast. He taught us how to have funat the right time, and when to work.'

Aldridge admits his feelings are hurt when people criticize hisstyle, because they overlook, or don't see, that he more oftenencourages and nurtures players.

'He is such a nice man, and some people just don't get it,'Nevenner said.

Nevenner started to cry as she told a story about a videoAldridge makes for each senior at the end of the basketball season.

'At the end of the video, he would type a note thanking me forall my hard work, and signed it 'your friend and coach.' It totallybrought me to tears,' she said.

As much as Aldridge dislikes the public's perception of hiscoaching style, it pales in comparison to his rage when accused ofrecruiting players to Prairie.

Informal charges that Aldridge has lured players from outside ofPrairie's school boundaries have been around for almost two decades.The most prominent accusation is that he uses his youth basketballcamps to pinpoint top middle school players, then informally makescontact with the player through Christmas and birthday cards, and anoccasional telephone call.

Aldridge said he has sent Christmas cards, but 'I've sent them toevery kid in camp. And I've only done it a few times. That'sexpensive to send out 120 cards every Christmas.

'I haven't recruited kids. Our program recruits kids. Kids havecome to our program because they want to be here. Parents have movedhere because they want to be here. That's the way it is.'

Aldridge was once forced to formally defend himself regarding arecruiting charge.

In 1989, La Center filed a complaint with the WashingtonInterscholastic Activities Association, alleging Aldridge recruitedone of the school's top musicians to Prairie. Former La Centersuperintendent Bill Thomas charged that Aldridge had been to thehome of the student several times and worked out a deal to where themusician could play piano and other instruments for Prairie.

After a one-month investigation, the WIAA cleared Aldridge andPrairie of the charges, although the explanation was murky.

Asked if there were any evidence to support a claim that a bandstudent had been recruited to Prairie, then-WIAA executive directorCliff Gillies said, 'that depends on how you interpret what isinducement to transfer and what is recruiting.'

At the time, Gillies added that the WIAA had received severalcomplaints regarding Aldridge recruiting girls basketball players toPrairie. Mike Colbrese, WIAA executive director since 1993, saidhe's never heard of a recruiting protest regarding Aldridge.

Fighting back

Although it seems as if everything Aldridge does ends up in thewinner's circle, he has had a few setbacks.

In 1989, he resigned as Prairie's coach to start a women'sbasketball program at Portland Community College. The result was an0-22 season. Aldridge returned to coach Prairie the followingseason.

'It bothers me a little that I wasn't able to succeed there, butyou have to be realistic,' Aldridge said. 'I didn't have anopportunity to recruit kids, there was no program, no athleticdirector to give guidance and leadership, and I had six kids. Whatcan I say?'

The worst bout of Aldridge's life didn't happen in the gym, butinside his house.

In April 1994, while Aldridge was sleeping upstairs, an intruderbeat him with a baseball bat. By the time Aldridge got to his feetand grabbed his gun, the assailant was gone. It took weeks to mendthe bloody wounds and broken bones, but years passed before theemotional scars healed.

The assailant was never caught, and Aldridge still isn't sureabout the motive. Aldridge said he was told that the beating wasplanned, but the person who knew the intruders was unwilling to goto the police, for fear of reprisal.

Aldridge no longer cares how, who or why. He just wants toforget. Just last week, he had a nightmare about the incident, thefirst in years.

'It's made me less trusting, a little more defensive and probablyin some ways, resentful,' Aldridge said.

Shortly after the incident, Aldridge considered getting out ofteaching and coaching, but decided to stick with his career.

'I didn't want an incident like that to get me out of somethingthat I loved doing,' he said.

Look to the future

Aldridge's future is unclear. He plans to retire from teachingthis year, but could return to school through the state's rehireprogram. He intends to continue coaching basketball and softball,for at least four more years.

However long he coaches, Aldridge plans to stick with Prairie. Hehas a few goals left, such as reaching 500 wins, and perhaps a top-10 finish in the national rankings some day.

Boys basketball would be an intriguing challenge, one Aldridgedoesn't think he'll take up. Long believes Aldridge 'coaches morelike a boys' coach and gets away with it, because the girls respecthim, and they know he loves them.'

Public perception won't drive Aldridge out of girls basketball. Agut feeling could, however.

'The time you stop getting excited about the big games andgetting butterflies in your stomach, that'll be the time to stepaside and let somebody else do it,' Aldridge said.

Whoever it is, they'll be hard pressed to do it as well.

The Aldridge File

* Age: 51

* Profession: Music teacher, girls basketball coach and softballcoach at Prairie High School.

* Coaching accomplishments: Aldridge is believed to be the stateleader in wins among high school girls basketball coaches, with 461before Saturday's regional playoff game. In 22 years as Prairie'scoach, he has led the Falcons to four state championships inbasketball and one in softball.

* Career highlight: As runner-up for national high school girlscoach of the year in 2000, Aldridge was named to coach in theWomen's Basketball Coaches Association All-American Game inHartford, Conn., which was televised on ESPN.

* The athletes: 43 Prairie graduates have earned collegebasketball scholarships, ranging from community colleges to NCAADivision I. Among the most notable are Sonja Curtis (Oregon), TamiStuart (Boise State), Jessica Jones (Oregon State), Courtney Cushing(Santa Clara) and Brenda Pickup (Wyoming).

суббота, 29 сентября 2012 г.

BRIEFLY : EX-BENGAL WILSON SENTENCED TO PRISON.(SPORTS) - Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)

Byline: Daily News Wire Services

Former running back Stanley Wilson, whose NFL career with the Cincinnati Bengals was plagued by drug problems, was sentenced to 22 years in prison Friday for stealing about $130,000 worth of property.

Wilson, 37, was convicted last month of stealing jewelry, camera equipment and other valuables from a Beverly Hills home on Jan. 24, 1998.

Under the state's ``three strikes'' law, prosecutors were seeking a 25 years-to-life term because Wilson had already served time for burgling two homes in Long Beach.

Superior Court Judge Frank J. Johnson eliminated one of the ``strikes'' against Wilson, citing mental problems, but sentenced him to the maximum on two others.

In addition to battling a cocaine habit, Wilson suffers from bipolar disorder, defense attorney H. Clay Jacke said. The affliction is characterized by alternating states of mania and depression.

The New York Jets traded backup quarterback Glenn Foley to the Seattle Seahawks for an undisclosed 1999 draft pick.

Foley, 28, last season lost his starting job to Vinny Testaverde, who during the offseason signed a three-year, $19.4 million contract with the Jets.

Free-agent quarterback Steve Bono signed a two-year, $1.4 million contract with the Carolina Panthers, reuniting him with former San Francisco coach George Seifert.

The San Francisco 49ers signed running back Travis Jervey to a four-year, $6 million contract, giving the team one of the best special-teams players in the NFL.

The woman who sued New England Patriots quarterback Drew Bledsoe and lineman Max Lane over a notorious dive from a nightclub stage during a concert has agreed in principle to a $1.2 million settlement, the Boston Globe reported.

HOCKEY: New York Rangers defenseman Jeff Beukeboom will miss the remainder of the season due to post-concussion syndrome.

Beukeboom, 33, hasn't played since suffering his second concussion of the season during a Feb. 12 game against the Carolina Hurricanes. He said he would return for the 1999-2000 season.

OLYMPICS: The IOC began investigating prominent Australian committee-member Phil Coles after his ex-wife said the couple received $6,300 in jewelry from Athens in 1990.

The former wife sent a fax to IOC officials stating the couple received diamond cufflinks and a gold necklace from an unidentified man involved with Greece's failed bid for the 1996 Games. IOC rules prohibit members from accepting gifts worth more than $150.

BASKETBALL: The NBA suspended Portland's Isaiah Rider for one game and fined him $7,500 for kneeing and shoving Sacramento's Jon Barry in Thursday's game. He sat out Friday's game against San Antonio.

MOTOR SPORTS: Nascar driver Bobby Labonte broke his right shoulder blade in a crash during practice for the TranSouth 400 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, putting his status for Sunday's Winston Cup Series race in question.

Jeff Gordon ran the third-fastest lap lap in Darlington history (173.167 mph) to take Sunday's pole.

Mark Martin, the dominant Busch Grand National driver at Darlington, won his record sixth pole in qualifying for the Diamond Hill Plywood 200.

TRACK: Marion Jones and Michael Johnson won their 200-meter races at the Engen Grand Prix Summer Series in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Jones, from Thousand Oaks, led from start to finish and was timed in 21.84, slower than her best of 21.62.

WINTER SPORTS: Olympian Chad Fleischer and Kirsten Clark won the men's and women's national downhill championships in Huntsville, Utah.

Richard Callaghan, one of the premier skating coaches in the U.S. and coach of Tara Lipinski and Todd Eldredge, will retire this spring.

CAPTION(S):

2 Photos

Photo: (1) WILSON

пятница, 28 сентября 2012 г.

FALLEN RAIDER STILL LOCKER ROOM PRESENCE.(Sports)(Obituary) - Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)

Byline: KAREN CROUSE

ALAMEDA - We found a book tucked away in one of the locker cubicles at the Oakland Raiders' practice facility that contains the secret of the defense's success.

It's not classified material. If we tell you how we got our hands on it, we won't have to turn around and kill you.

The Baltimore Ravens, the Raiders' opponent Sunday in the AFC championship game, need not carry out a reconnaissance mission to find out how thickset tackle Darrell Russell and his cohorts managed to manacle Miami last week.

The Ravens don't have to send a mole into Oakland's famed Black Hole. You don't need Howie Long to decode it with the help of a telestrator. The secret of the defense's success is as close as the nearest bookstore.

It requires some digging but anybody who really searches the shelves and his own soul (that's a hint) can find enlightenment. It's all there in Max Lucado's book ``Just Like Jesus.''

You read that right. The team that gave the sports world Lester Hayes is finding inspiration in a Christian tome. If that doesn't convince you the Raiders' renegade image is now more myth than mystique, you haven't been listening to the Raiders talk about teammate Eric Turner's death last May of abdominal cancer.

``Being led by an unseen hand'' is the subtitle of one of the book's sections and the narrative of the defense's season. On Saturday it was as if the Raiders had 12 players on the field when the Dolphins had the ball.

In holding Miami to 10 first downs in a 27-0 win, the defense never was flagged for too many men. It's no wonder; it's hard to collar a memory.

``I know he's still with us,'' said Russell of Turner. ``I know he's smiling down on us.''

You can feel Turner's presence in the Raiders' locker room at their practice facility. His cubicle remains the way he left it at the end of last season, right down to the bottle of mouthwash on the shelf that's one-quarter full.

It isn't really a dressing area, it's a window into Turner's personality. He was spiritual and playful and tough and tender, and all those aspects of his character are on display. A Hollywood set designer couldn't have captured the man's essence any better.

The books ``Just Like Jesus'' and ``Good Morning Holy Spirit'' share shelf space with the stuffed Karate Kritter that screams ``Hai-Yah'' when squeezed. A shell necklace hangs over a team photograph.

One item in Turner's locker he didn't put there. It's a trophy that's bulkier than tackle Lincoln Kennedy. It is the Eric Turner Award. Cornerback Eric Allen, a close friend of Turner, was the first recipient.

``I made a pact with myself after (Turner's) funeral saying I'm going to play to my utmost and always keep him in mind and try and do things that would make him proud,'' Allen said upon receiving the award.

That's a tall order. It entails smiling often and playing each down as though it could be your last and helping the younger players negotiate the rich and, in parts, rocky terrain of professional sports.

``He was a big part of my development,'' said Russell, a former first- round draft pick out of USC. ``He helped me to adapt to the mental side of football at this level. He taught me how to handle success. He taught me how to handle the friends and family who change and become very, very fake once you make money.''

Turner, who starred at Ventura College and UCLA, always kept it real. He was the Lucy Van Pelt of the locker room, sitting at his cubicle and dispensing advice.

Safety Calvin Branch continues to talk to Turner every day. He knows he is listening. How else to explain how Oakland and Baltimore (nee Cleveland), the last two teams Turner played for, are meeting for a Super Bowl berth?

``That's pretty eerie, if you think about it,'' Branch said.

Branch scribbled Turner's number (29) on the shirt he wears underneath his pads. He wrote it close to his heart, of course.

It's a trend among the Raiders. They no longer tattoo their bodies, they Turner them. Players write Turner's number on their taped hands and ankles. They scribble it wherever they can find the space.

Safety Johnnie Harris' fashion statement is a neck band that reads ``29 love E.T.''

The Raiders worship at Turner's altar. His locker is a shrine where every player on the team has come to pray. Harris touches it reverently before every game. Branch will stop at it and offer a benediction.

``It gives you goose bumps to look at it,'' said Marquez Pope, a first-year Raider who feels he has gotten to know Turner pretty well this year because his teammates have talked so much about him.

Reserve linebacker Elijah Alexander visits Turner's locker whenever he's tired and sore and feeling like there's no more he can endure.

``You look at his locker,'' Alexander explained, ``and you realize we've all been blessed.''

CAPTION(S):

photo

Photo: (color) The locker of Eric Turner, who died of cancer in May, has become a shrine for the Oakland Raiders this season.

четверг, 27 сентября 2012 г.

Durandt - the Don of Africa.(Sports) - The Star (South Africa)

BYLINE: Matshelane Mamabolo

The Eskimos would have bought the ice. And Don King would have considered going into partnership.

Yesterday lunchtime at the Golden Gloves Promotions head offices and Nic Durandt is talking up Cassius Baloyi's chances of dethroning Mzonke Fana as world IBF junior lightweight champion.

'Mzonke's going to be knocked out,' says Baloyi's flamboyant trainer matter-of-factly.

It is the drivel he spews afterwards, however, that confirms Durandt's position as local boxing's king of trash talk. And, many will surely add, the man the sport desperately needs if it is to save itself from the slow death it is dying.

That boxing is as popular as it is in the United States of America is partly because it has people as outspoken as King and the likes of Flloyd Mayweather, who attract crowds by merely talking up fights.

Durandt does that locally. And yesterday he was in his element as he predicted the long-awaited showdown between The Rose of Khayelitsha and The Hitman at the University Sports Centre in Mmabatho.

'Mzonke Fana can't break an egg with his fists,' says the man.

'His only chance is to win on points because there's no way he's going to drop Cassius. And the only points he will get are for his attire, and even there he's going to be outclassed as well.'

Durandt, resplendent in his trademark gold rings and necklaces, reminiscent of BA from the eighties hit television series The A-Team, then launched a scathing attack on Fana's experience: 'When he fought (Malcolm) Klassen, Fana said you can't buy experience in a shop. Now the foot is on the other side and he's going to learn the truth of his statement.'

Durandt then threw about statistics, saying his fighter is going into his 24th world title bout, whereas the champion has been in a mere four.

'Who has Fana been in the ring with? The one guy he has defended this title against, Alvarez, had to be hauled out of retirement. He ended up on his backside against (Marco-Antonio) Barrera. This is only his fourth world title fight.'

Then he lauded his fighter: 'Cassius has fought the best. Locally he has been in the ring with the best the country has produced. And he has been amateur champion seven times. What record does Fana have.'

The attack was then directed to fana's trainer, Zola Koti.

'If he is a good trainer, why did he ask me to come help him for Fana's fights against Barrera and Klassen? And after that explosive speech he made at the awards I am going to make sure he hands me that trainer of the year award on Saturday. Fana will give the boxer of the year award to Cassius and they will give us the IBF belt. The fight won't get to eight rounds.'

Any thoughts he was done talking were quickly dispelled when he dropped the clincher: 'After Saturday, Fana will join my gym so I can help resurrect his career.'

среда, 26 сентября 2012 г.

Two men struck by sport utility vehicle. - Daily Oklahoman (Oklahoma City, OK)

Byline: Jesse Olivarez

Feb. 25--Two men were hospitalized Thursday after being struck by a sport utility vehicle in the parking lot of a northwest Oklahoma City bar while trying to stop some robbers, police said.

About 1 a.m., police were called to the Outback Bar at 2601 S Portland Ave., Sgt. Gary Knight said.

Two men at the scene told police the men demanded money and jewelry from some patrons.

When the victims refused, one of the robbers tore a necklace off of one of the victims and got into a sport utility vehicle. As the robber was getting into the SUV, the victims tried to stop him. They were struck by the vehicle as it sped away.

Both victims were taken to local hospitals with non-life threatening injuries. Their names weren't released.

Police do not have a description of the robbers, but they were last seen driving a white 1990s model Chevrolet Suburban.

Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 235-7300.

Copyright (c) 2006, The Daily Oklahoman

Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.

For information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511 (U.S.),

вторник, 25 сентября 2012 г.

WORLD'S FASTEST MAN STOPS LONG ENOUGH TO REFLECT JOHNSON'S BOOK CHRONICLES HOW TO ACHIEVE YOUR DREAMS.(Sports) - Seattle Post-Intelligencer

The sprinter is running a marathon now, from one bookstore and interview to another. It is a cross-country race - New York last week, Seattle yesterday, Portland today and so many more stops to come in the next 14 days.

After becoming the first man in Olympic history to win the 200 and 400 meters, Michael Johnson went from revising the record book to writing his own book.

``Slaying the Dragon'' is an autobiography about Johnson but doubles as an instructional guide, focusing on his ideas of setting goals and attaining them. It is geared toward everyone, not just runners.

``It's taking dreams and visions and learning how to turn them into actual achievement,'' he said.

In his astonishing accomplishment, witnessed by millions at the Summer Games in Atlanta, Johnson won the 400 and then broke his own world record in the 200 by .34 of a second with a time of 19.23 seconds.

Yesterday, the world's fastest man was slouched in a couch in the lobby of the Four Seasons, enduring the endless questions to promote his book. He did not appear to be the sculpted speedster that he is. He did not come off as a glorified athlete who has grown bigger than he is.

He could be the guy across the table, swapping stories over a couple of beers. If you were to meet him, you could ask Michael Johnson about his passion for auto racing. He watches Formula One races and has taken classes driving Formula Three cars. Appropriately enough, he will tell you: ``I like speed.'

And then he will surprise you when he mentions his favorite athlete and you discover it is Jeff Gordon, a stock-car driver.

``He is the most focused driver out there,'' Johnson said. ``He says he's going to do something, and he actually goes out and does it.''

Johnson will go on about others, explaining his admiration for Charles Barkley and Andre Agassi, who play different sports but have the same aggressive, single-minded approach that are characteristic of his own attitude.

And if you need a critique of a movie, he undoubtedly has seen it. To him, the dud of the year was ``Independence Day.'' The smash of the year was ``Mission Impossible.''

He will say, ``I haven't changed at all,'' but you will realize that his life has.

The man who raced in the gold shoes and the gold necklace and won the gold medals is now known worldwide. His rivals can't catch him but fame has and it won't let him go. Autograph seekers descend on him when the paparazzi aren't stalking him, peering through his hotel window in Europe, trying to get a photo for their tabloid. Overseas, the mention of ``Michael'' doesn't automatically mean Jordan.

Johnson wins races, loses privacy but has gained so much in the process. Indifferent to his celebrity status, he just loves to run, accepting the financial rewards but not competing for the money. There are other motivating factors.

``I just want to be a good track athlete,'' he said. ``This is my job. It's what I love to do. I knew I could be the best in the world. I showed that kind of potential.''

When you run like Johnson, there are rapid returns. He earns from $100,000 to $175,000 per meet, of which he enters about 20 a year.

Part of his fortune was invested in a risky venture considering recent NBA history. In April, Johnson became a minority buyer of the Dallas Mavericks, who are similar to their new owner because they have world-class potential. But in the '90s, Johnson's track record is much better than the team he helped purchase.

``I've always enjoyed the business of sports,'' said Johnson, who has a degree in marketing from Baylor. ``Someday I want to be the sole owner of a major sports franchise.''

This first dip has been interesting. When he put his big toe in the water, it turned blue.

``The salaries are not only blowing me away, they're also ticking me off,'' he said. ``What I make in a year, Jordan can make in three games.''

Johnson never got into basketball himself. ``I wasn't gifted enough to put the ball in the hoop,'' he said.

But at Baylor, he figured he could get a running start on his future and began dedicating most of his time to track.

``When you really want to do it, you are willing to make sacrifices and fully commit to it,'' he said. ``You weed out the distractions. When you know you have the potential, it makes it easier.''

The book could have been published four years ago but it would not have been a success story. Food poisoning prevented Johnson from making the 200 final at the '92 Games in Barcelona.

``That was the biggest disappointment of my career and life,'' he said.

But the book talks about picking yourself up, finding the motivation to persevere and overcome setbacks. On two humid evenings in Atlanta, the obstacles in Johnson's steeplechase were left behind like his competition. His world record in the 200 was called the greatest feat in sports by his coach.

``It wasn't shocking,'' Johnson said, sounding confident, not cocky. ``I felt capable of doing it. Most of the people sitting in the stands had already put a gold medal around my neck. I couldn't do that. I've lost races by a hundredth of a second. My concern was winning the race.''

Johnson, 29 ((age)), plans to keep running into his 30s and the next century, for a change not knowing where the finish line is.

понедельник, 24 сентября 2012 г.

SPORTS LOG - The Boston Globe (Boston, MA)

NBA

Clippers' Billups sidelined for season

Clippers guard Chauncey Billups will miss the remainder of theseason after tearing his left Achilles' tendon during a 107-102victory over the Magic in Orlando Monday. Billups will return to LosAngeles tomorrow for further evaluation. The five-time All-Star,whom the Clippers claimed off waivers in December, was averaging14.9 points and 4.0 assists in 30.4 minutes per game this season .. . Nuggets forward Danilo Gallinari is expected to miss a monthwith a severely sprained left ankle that turned out to be lessserious than first feared. Tests revealed the chip fracture in hisleft foot didn't occur Monday against Houston. Doctors said it wasfrom a prior injury, perhaps even before he joined the NBA.Gallinari signed a four-year, $42 million deal last month . . .Knicks All-Star forward Carmelo Anthony will miss 1-2 weeks with astrained right groin suffered Monday against Utah . . . San Diegoprosecutors won't file criminal charges against Kobe Bryant afterreviewing allegations by a man who accused the Lakers star ofinjuring him during a scuffle at church.

Baseball

Kershaw, Dodgers agree to 2-year deal

National League Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw and theDodgers avoided a salary arbitration hearing, agreeing to a $19million, two-year contract. The 23-year-old lefthander was 21-5 witha 2.28 ERA and 248 strikeouts last year, winning the NL pitchingtriple crown . . . The Red Sox signed 17-year-old Australianlefthander Daniel McGrath to a contract. McGrath, who pitches forthe Melbourne Aces, will join the Sox at spring training beforereturning home to finish high school . . . The Yankees agreed to aminor league contract with utilityman Bill Hall and invited him tospring training.

Hall, who was with the Red Sox in 2010, played with Houston andSan Francisco last season . . . Athletics owner Lew Wolff extendedthe contracts of general manager Billy Beane and team presidentMichael Crowley through 2019 . . . Rangers slugger Josh Hamilton,who was in New York Monday to visit with doctors for Major LeagueBaseball and the players' association following his relapse withalcohol, was back in Texas working out . . . A person familiar withthe deal told The Rangers and shortstop Elvis Andrus agreed to athree-year contract, avoiding arbitration . . . Lawyers are seekingclass-action status for a lawsuit in federal court in Des Moines,Iowa, that claims Hall of Fame slugger George Brett has been falselyadvertising necklaces and bracelets as being able to help improvehealth and sports performance . . . Former major league outfielderDanny Clyburn Jr. was shot and killed in the front yard of his homein Lancaster, S.C., early yesterday. Lancaster police said witnessestold them they saw Clyburn, 37, arguing with Derrick Lamont McIlwainshortly before he was shot. McIlwain, 36, turned himself in toauthorities and was charged with murder.

Colleges

Prosecutors: Sandusky belongs indoors

Prosecutors in Harrisburg, Pa., asked to have Jerry Sandusky keptindoors as part of his bail conditions, citing complaints that theformer Penn State assistant football coach was seen outside andwatching children in a schoolyard from the back porch of his home,where he remains under house arrest while awaiting trial on childmolestation charges. The state attorney general's office argued in acourt filing that Sandusky's bail conditions should be revised sothat he is not allowed outside except to seek medical treatment.Prosecutors said they opposed Sandusky's request to be allowedcontact with his grandchildren as he awaits trial on 52 child sex-abuse charges . . . A person familiar with the decision saidMemphis will join the Big East in 2013 . . . Dave Brock, who filledin as Boston College's offensive coordinator last fall when KevinRogers took a medical leave, will become the offensive coordinatorat Rutgers for new coach Kyle Flood. At the end of last season,Brock, who had been BC's tight ends coach, was named special teamscoach. Last month, BC coach Frank Spaziani named former Kent Statehead coach Doug Martin offensive coordinator.

Miscellany

Soccer Hall of Famer Keough dead at 84

Harry Keough, 84, who played for the US soccer team that famouslyupset England at the 1950 World Cup, died at his home in St. Louis.Keough coached Saint Louis University to five NCAA titles and wasinducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 1976 . . .Portland Timbers forward Jose Adolfo Valencia will be sidelined 6-12 months following left knee surgery. Valencia signed with the MLSteam in December on a loan agreement with Colombia's IndependienteSanta Fe . . . Owen Nolan, who hasn't played in the NHL since the2009-10 season, announced his retirement. Nolan played 18 seasonsand scored 422 goals with 463 assists in 1,200 games . . .

Spanish cyclist Alberto Contador said he may appeal the two-yeardoping ban handed down Monday by the Court of Arbitration for Sport,which stripped him of the 2010 Tour de France title . . . The WorldAnti-Doping Agency urged US federal authorities to hand overevidence collected in their lengthy probe into seven-time Tour deFrance winner Lance Armstrong and doping in American cycling. WADAhas said it will continue its own probe . . . Britain's MarkCavendish won the third stage of the Tour of Qatar cycling race inDoha while former champion Tom Boonen of Belgium retained the yellowjersey.

воскресенье, 23 сентября 2012 г.

A BANNER DAY FOR U.S. WOMEN ON SOFTBALL FIELD AND BEYOND.(Sports) - Seattle Post-Intelligencer

With the Little Foxes strip joint, Tattoo Tommy's, the Tasty Chic drive-thru, a military base and too many suspiciously cheap motels serving as the backdrop, the greatest day in history for women's sports started off sharp and sweet and blissfully smokin'.

Here's to a chorus of ``We Shall Overcome.'' Here's to the re-emergence of that idiotic but somehow campy phrase, ``You've come a long way, baby.''

The old marketing slogan once used by a women's tennis sponsor sprung to mind yesterday morning at around 5:22 a.m. By then, a carload of sweaty but eager journalists were barreling 127 miles south out of Atlanta - from Coke country to the home of RC Cola - to witness the making of history.

None of the 7,500 hot but happy spectators who flocked to the Olympic venue at Golden Park was disappointed. That included the bevy of sometimes jaded sports scribes - many of them American, many of the male persuasion, all of whom discovered they were suitably impressed with what they had come so far to see:

Women's softball.

And why not? Michelle Granger and the gang put on quite a show. Just after 9 a.m., with a red flag hung out over bleachers to warn people that the heat might just kill them, Granger of Team USA fired in a called strike one, earning an asterisk in the Olympic record books.

The count was 0-and-1. The 29-year wait for softball to be an Olympic medal sport was over.

It was 98 in the shade, if you could find it, and chances are you could not. It did not matter: the first Olympic softball game was underway.

And Granger, a 5-foot-11 lefty who can surely throw, showed that in softball, a bionic arm is probably the key to a gold necklace.

Granger didn't just say it with strikes, either. For her second pitch of the day, Granger threw it high and hard and over the head of the batter. The ball crashed into the backstop with a thunderous thud.

An intimidation pitch, she said.

``If I throw over their heads, they'll have to stop and wonder, won't they?'' she said.

It may not take too much more intimidation if things keep up.

The U.S. team, up against powers from Canada and Australia and five other nations, has the luxury of depth in pitching. There is Lisa Fernandez, who was 83-7 at UCLA with 11 no-hitters and a .930 winning percentage; Michele Smith, a former Oklahoma State powerhouse; and Lori Harrigan, who set her own share of records at UNLV.

But Granger got the call in the opener. And she threw so well that the U.S. women needed only six innings to beat Puerto Rico. ``I wasn't even in sync, so I'm a little disappointed,'' she said. ``I know I can pitch even better.''

The question is, does she need to?

Granger reeled off 10 strikeouts before the game was called in the bottom of the sixth with the U.S. on a scoring binge.

In theory, the game was over with that opening strike. In reality, it was curtains for the Puerto Ricans by the second inning. Granger's fastball had reduced the Puerto Rican batters to hackers. Granger twice struck out shortstop Janice Parks, who looked like a medieval sword fighter - the bat flying this way and that, up and down and all around.

The U.S. women, meanwhile, uncorked years worth of pent-up hits and RBIs.

The floodgates opened in the sixth. Shortstop and orthopedic surgeon Dot Richardson started the rally with a leadoff homer - another Olympic first.

Richardson, who will resume her hospital rounds in Los Angeles one day after the Games end, earlier had recorded the first hit and the first run scored in Olympic softball. ``This was awesome,'' Richardson, 34, said of the long-awaited softball debut, something she had dreamed about since she was a kid.

In the sixth, the U.S. women ``hit the crud out of the ball'' and scored four more runs. The umpires then waved their arms and told the Puerto Ricans ``No Mas.'' The score was 10-0 in favor of ``The Other Dream Team,'' the one that went 60-1 in pre-Olympic competition and outscored its opponents 441-3. Yes, most of the games were against Billy Beerball's All-Stars.

But in one quick game that did not even last the full seven innings, the U.S. women quieted some doubts about just how good, how fast and how skilled they are.

The victory was for everyone who had ever put on a softball mitt - especially the girls and women of the world who have tried to raise the sport to this elite, Olympic level.

Granger, the 26-year-old ((age)) Alaskan who still owns most of Cal-Berkeley's pitching records, threw nothing but smoke. It was nice that the local Protestant church let her practice in their basement. ``They didn't even seem to mind that I was Catholic and that I was putting holes in their walls,'' said the native Californian.

Granger drew oohhs and ahhs from the hot but hearty crowd, especially when the slick, gleaming white softball landed in the mitt of catcher Gillian Boxx with a stinging, percussive smack.

Men who had never seen the women's game gasped in mock horror.

``Who's got a gun on her?'' one asked.

``She's like Nolan Ryan,'' said another.

``No, she's a lefty. And she's tall,'' noted the first. ``She's Randy Johnson.''

Well, no. Not exactly. But the comparisons are appreciated. They are becoming the norm.

All across the Olympic landscape yesterday, it was women in action, women called to sporting arms.

Soccer became an Olympic sport, too, opening another arena in which women can become Olympians.

Michelle Akers, Mia Hamm and Tisha Venturini commenced their own historic chapter. The U.S. women's soccer team booted home a win over Denmark in Orlando, 3-0.

The USA women's basketball team added to the day's festivities. Teresa Edwards, Sheryl Swoopes and Lisa Leslie led the U.S. to a victory over Cuba.

Women's hoops is coming of age. Or so everyone hopes, with the start-up of two new pro leagues. How well the game plays to audiences during these Hotlanta days may help determine the future.

But whatever comes from these Olympic ventures, it was monumental enough that on one day - one grand Olympic day - there was history made, even if NBC chose not to put some of it on the air.

``Even if it wasn't in front of network television cameras,'' Richardson said, ``to throw the first pitch, to get a hit the first time at bat, to hit the first home run . . . that is awesome.''

That is.