Sunday, July 31, 2011

X Games: Taddy Blazusiak wins Enduro X title

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Taddy Blazusiak owned the course that claimed so many dirt bikes and their riders’ speed. Blazusiak may not have gotten off to the greatest of starts in the Moto X Enduro X race, but he moved up through the field and then capitalized on Geoff Aaron’s fall to take the lead and, soon thereafter, the gold medal.

Aaron held the lead for the first five laps, with Blazusiak and Mike Brown giving chase. Aaron got caught on a fallen tree with a pile of rocks after it, and the two chasers blew past him.

PHOTOS: X Games 17 flies high at Staples Center

The obstacle that ended Aaron’s medal hopes joined a water pit, tires, a pile of split lumber, log paths and a large mound of dirt in the Staples Center-altering course.

Brown could not quite catch Blazusiak, settling for silver. Justin Soule snagged the bronze medal, passing Joakim Ljunggren in the final lap.

RELATED:

Garrett Reynolds remains unbeaten in BMX Freestyle Street

Brian Deegan takes down the heavy hitters in RallyCross

Ryan Decenzo captures the S-K-8 gold medal

-- Douglas Farmer

Photo: Taddy Blazusiak celebrates after winning the Moto X Enduro X final on Sunday evening at X Games 17. Credit: Harry How / Getty Images

X Games: Garrett Reynolds makes it four BMX Street golds

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When Garrett Reynolds gets on a BMX bike at the X Games, one thing seems to be for sure: He will win.

Reynolds claimed his fourth BMX Freestyle Street gold Sunday. Since it's only the fourth running of BMX Freestyle Street, he has claimed every gold medal since its beginning in 2008.

Reynolds was the only rider of the day to break 45 points, with a 47 in a qualifying run and two 46s in the finals. He bypassed a complete third run since he already had clinched the gold medal, and simply gave the fans a few thrills before accepting congratulations from his competitors.

For the second consecutive year, San Diegan Dennis Enarson finished second to Reynolds. Along with his silver medal in the BMX Freestyle Park competition Saturday, Enarson matched his haul from last year. Enarson’s total of 85 points in the final edged out Huntington Beach native Dakota Roche’s 84.

-- Douglas Farmer

Photo: Garrett Reynolds spins his handlebars while catching air on the BMX Freestyle Street course on Sunday afternoon. Credit: Harry How / Getty Images

Jeff Gordon leads NASCAR Brickyard 400 at halfway point

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It was all Hendrick Motorsports leading the Brickyard 400 at the halfway point Sunday as Jeff Gordon led teammates Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Gordon, seeing a record fifth Brickyard 400 victory, held a 1.2-second lead over Johnson, the five-time Sprint Cup Series champion who also is a three-time winner of the Brickyard 400.

Kasey Kahne, who led nearly 40 laps early in the race, was running fourth and Matt Kenseth fifth.

Earnhardt also led several laps earlier in the 160-lap race moments after it appeared he had suffered a big setback.

He was forced to pit his No. 88 Chevrolet because it was overheating, which dropped the fan favorite to 29th. But the caution flag came out a few laps later and, when most of the 43-car field made pit stops, Earnhardt stayed on the track to gain back positions.

When the race restarted, Earnhardt -- who has gone 112 races with a victory -- took the lead and the crowd erupted on the front straightaway.

--Jim Peltz in Indianapolis

Photo: Kasey Kahne leads the field early in the Brickyard 400 on Sunday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Credit: John Harrelson  /Getty Images

Braylon Edwards out, Plaxico Burress in with the Jets

Photo: Jets receiver Braylon Edwards makes a touchdown catch against Lions cornerback Alphonso Smith in a 2010 game at Ford Field in Detroit. Credit: Rick Osentoski / Associated Press Braylon Edwards, a free-agent receiver who wanted to re-sign with the New York Jets, probably will have to look elsewhere for a job now that the Jets have signed Plaxico Burress.

New York, which lost out on the biggest free-agent acquisition this summer when All-Pro cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha signed with the Philadelphia Eagles, re-signed their top priority, receiver Santonio Holmes, last week.

Edwards has 326 receptions for 5,142 yards and 39 touchdowns in his seven-year career. In two seasons with the Jets, he had 88 catches for 1,445 yards and 11 touchdowns.

Burress, 34, the former Steelers and Giants receiver who spent 20 months in jail on a weapons charge, has 505 receptions for 7,845 yards and 55 touchdowns in his NFL career. The 6-foot-5 receiver has a troubled past that includes missed meetings, fines, a one-game suspension and contract disputes.

RELATED:

Vince Young released by Tennessee Titans

Chad Ochocinco traded from Bengals to Patriots

Reggie Bush reportedly being traded to Miami Dolphins

-- Dan Loumena

Photo: Jets receiver Braylon Edwards makes a touchdown catch against Lions cornerback Alphonso Smith in a 2010 game at Ford Field in Detroit. Credit: Rick Osentoski / Associated Press

X Games: Brian Deegan takes gold; Pastrana crashes in final lap

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Brian Deegan crossed the finish line first in the RallyCross final Sunday, and to Deegan, that is all that mattered.

To fans, though, the question was how did Travis Pastrana do? Pastrana, who had a broken right leg and ankle, drove with a customized steering wheel complete with a gas pedal and was in position for a bronze medal before crashing with less than half a lap left.

Tanner Foust claimed the silver medal and Marcus Gronholm slipped by the sidelined Subaru of Pastrana for bronze.

Liam Doran took the lead off the starting line, but a sloppy first turn relegated him to the back of the field.

Fourteen-time X Games gold medalist Dave Mirra spent most of the race in fourth, holding off a charging Pastrana, before spinning out on the sixth lap.

-- Douglas Farmer

Photo: Brian Deegan leads Travis Pastrana through the RallyCross course on the streets of downtown L.A. on Sunday afternoon. Credit: Harry How / Getty Images

X Games: Travis Pastrana advances to RallyCross final

With one functioning foot, Travis Pastrana advanced to the RallyCross final through a last-chance qualifier heat Sunday.

Pastrana took second in his initial heat, but capitalized on the last-chance opportunity to reach the seven-car final with a 6.46-second cushion.

Pastrana broke his right foot and ankle in the Moto X Best Trick competition Thursday night, forcing his crew to design a steering wheel with a gas pedal control attached to it.

After his first heat, Pastrana admitted he had trouble both steering and working the hand control. Every time he fumbled the steering wheel throughout the street course at L.A. Live, he also lost his grip on the throttle.

By the last-chance qualifier, though, Pastrana appeared to have worked out the kinks. He got out to a poor start, but after a nifty move on the first lap, Pastrana mainly raced himself throughout the five-lap race.

-- Douglas Farmer

X Games: Julian Christianson wins amateur skateboard title again

Julian Christianson won the Hometown Heroes Amateur Skateboard Street final for the fourth time in five years with a final run score of 88.33 points to edge Poway’s Brendon Villanueva.
 
It was a battle between Christianson and Villanueva down the stretch as the two skaters posted top scores in their third runs. Villanueva had a three-point lead heading into the final round of runs, when Christianson put an exclamation point on his winning skate by landing a huge ollie off a set of eight stairs. Villanueva had one chance left to top Christianson, but crashed twice and was buzzed off the course.
 
The 22-year-old Christianson won $5,000 and Chipotle for a year.
 
Dan Coe took third place with a run of 80 points.

The top three skaters finished in the same order in the final as they did in the elimination round.  

--Matt Stevens

X Games: Travis Pastrana will race RallyCross with hand controls

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Three days after breaking his right leg and ankle in a crash during the Moto X Best Trick competition Thursday night, Travis Pastrana will take part in the RallyCross race Sunday at X Games 17.

Pastrana's injured leg prompted his team to develop a steering wheel with hand controls for the gas pedal and clutch pedal. Thus, Pastrana's cast-bound leg will remain motionless during the race.

Pastrana first tested the altered car Saturday morning on the RallyCross course. Saturday night he took it to the Los Angeles Police Academy for test runs on the LAPD's road course.

Sunday morning, word became official that he would be allowed to take part in the RallyCross races. The first RallyCross heat is scheduled to take place in downtown Los Angeles at 2 p.m.

RELATED:

X Games' safety a question as tricks get more dangerous

Nyjah Huston breaks through for Skateboard Street win

Vicki Golden goes wire to wire for Women's Moto X Racing gold

-- Douglas Farmer

Photo: Travis Pastrana injures his right leg and ankle during a crash in the Moto X Best Trick competition on Thursday. Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

X Games: Travis Pastrana finishes second in RallyCross heat

Pastrana_250 Travis Pastrana can now add another unique accomplishment to his lengthy list of X Games' firsts: He finished a RallyCross race without using the gas pedal.

Pastrana’s broken right leg and ankle forced his team to create a steering wheel with an accelerator control attached to the back of it. Thus, while flying through the turns of downtown Los Angeles, Pastrana not only turns the wheel but also uses the hand controls to hit the gas.

Pastrana (pictured at left) has only driven the newfangled car a few times, and he struggled in his initial heat Sunday, finishing second by 4.18 seconds.

Brian Deegan, who won two silver medals in last year’s X Games, won Pastrana’s heat, and the man who beat him twice last year, Tanner Foust, claimed the first heat.

Pastrana will race in a last chance qualifier heat later this afternoon. If he can figure out how to race most effectively with his new device and win that heat, he’ll move on to the final.

-- Douglas Farmer

Photo credit: Jason Smith/Getty Images for Michael Waltrip Racing

X Games: Julian Chistianson leads amateur skateboarders in qualifying

The results from the eighth Hometown Heroes Amateur Skateboard Street elimination are in.
 
Brendon Villanueva of Poway had a large cheering section in house and finished second in qualifying to three-time winner Julian Christianson. Ke’Chaud Johnson, who won the event two years ago, finished seventh.
 
The following 10 teenagers are headed to the final with a shot at $5,000. In order of finish:
 
 1. Julian Christianson
 2. Brendon Villanueva
 3. Dan Coe
 4. Tyson Bowerbank
 5. Anthony Estrada
 6. Miles Silvas
 7. Ke’Chaud Johnson
 8. Ryan Thompson
 9. Wyatt Milhollan
10. Maurio McCoy  

Paul Menard wins Brickyard 400 for first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win

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Paul Menard joined a list of drivers capturing their first victory in NASCAR's premier Sprint Cup Series this season by winning the Brickyard 400 on Sunday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Menard, a 30-year-old Wisconsin native who drives for the team of Richard Childress Racing, passed defending Brickyard 400 winner Jamie McMurray with five laps left in the 160-lap race and then held off Jeff Gordon for the victory.

Menard's win came in his 167th career Cup start, and it was especially sweet because his family, which owns the Mendards home-improvement chain, has raced for years in the Indianapolis 500 open-wheel race.

"I can't believe I won at Indy," Menard said in a television interview after climbing out of his yellow No. 27 Chevrolet. "[There's] a lot of emotion right now."

Gordon, the only four-time winner of the Brickyard 400, finished second in his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

Regan Smith, who won his first Cup race this year at Darlington, S.C., was third and McMurray ended up fourth in a race where many of the leaders were forced to conserve fuel in the closing stages to reach the checkered flag.

Matt Kenseth was fifth and two-time Brickyard 400 winner Tony Stewart finished sixth.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished 16th, pole-sitter David Ragan was 23rd and Jimmie Johnson, the reigning Cup champion and three-time Brickyard 400 winner, finished 19th.

--Jim Peltz, reporting from Indianapolis

Photo: Paul Menard does a burnout after winning the NASCAR Brickyard 400 race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Sunday. Credit: Jerry Markland / Getty Images

X Games: Amateurs hit the street for some skateboarding

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The Hometown Heroes Amateur Skateboard Street elimination round is in full swing on the final day of X Games 17 in downtown Los Angeles.

Though it's not on TV, fans in the stands get to see some of the best teen skaters from across the nation coverging in L.A. for this signature final event.

A spokeswomen for the tour said that Hometown Heroes takes place over three months in major cities across America. In each city, a skate competition features all the best amateurs in the area, and the winner of each local event gets a spot in the X Games event. A handful of other standouts come by special invitation to the field of 32.

Skaters are currently performing one-minute individual intro runs, then five-minute jam sessions that judges will score. The top 10 skaters will advance to the final later this afternoon, with the winner taking home a $5,000 check.

Julian Christianson has won this event three of the last four years and currently leads the elimination round with a score of 91 points.

This is the third year the X Games has hosted the Hometown Heroes final.

--Matt Stevens

Photo: Pedro Barros takes part in amateur skateboarding during X Games 15. Credit: Spencer Weiner / Los Angeles Times

Justin Verlander comes within four outs of no-hitter to beat Angels

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Fans filing into Comerica Park on Sunday were handed a poster commemorating Tigers pitcher Justin Verlander's no-hitter in Toronto in May.  Then they were nearly treated to an encore, with Verlander coming within four outs of another no-hitter in Detroit's 3-2 win over the Angels.

Maicer Izturis ended Verlander's bid for his third career no-hitter with a soft liner to left field on an 0-1 pitch with two outs in the eighth inning. An out later Verlander's day was over as well with the Tigers pulling their ace after 114 pitches.

The game was touted as a duel between Cy Young award favorites Verlander and Jered Weaver, and it lived up to the billing. But Weaver, who was nearly as brilliant as his rival, wasn't around to see the finish, getting ejected with two outs in the bottom of seventh inning after throwing over the head of Tigers catcher Alex Avila.

The background to that incident goes back to the third inning, when Magglio Ordonez put the Tigers in front to stay with a two-out, two-run home run. But Ordonez lingered in the batter's box, admiring his work, and Weaver made his displeasure known.

The right-hander didn't allow another hit until there were two outs in the seventh when Carlos Guillen homered. And Guillen stood at the plate even longer, then baited Weaver as he made his way around the bases.

Plate umpire Hunter Wendelstedt went out to the mound to calm Weaver, then warned both benches. Weaver, however, ignored the warning, throwing his next pitch high and tight to Avila, earning an ejection.

He got his money's worth as he left, though, gesturing wildly and shouting profanities toward the Tigers dugout as players from the Angels bench came onto the field.

As it turned out, all the histrionics might have cost Verlander his no-hitter. Not only did the Tigers pitcher have to sit through an unusually long delay since Angels reliever Hisanori Takahashi was given unlimited time to warm up, but in the top of the eighth inning the Angels' Erick Aybar led off with a bunt, a provocative gesture in a no-hitter and one clearly intended to anger the Tigers.

It surely succeeded in rattling Verlander, who threw wildly to first, allowing Aybar to continue to second on the error. Then two batters later Verlander dropped a throw at the plate, allowing Aybar to escape a rundown to score the Angels' first run.

Two batters after that, Izturis lined a single into left field, breaking up the no-hitter and scoring Peter Bourjos from second base. Verlander escaped further damage by striking Torii Hunter out with a 102-mph fastball -- his swiftest and last pitch of the day. Jose Valverde, who leads the American League in saves, closed out the game with a scoreless ninth.

Verlander started slowly, needing 18 pitches to get through the first inning. But it took him only 58 more to get through the next six. And before Izturis, the Angels didn't come remotely close to a hit. Their  best-hit ball came off the bat of Vernon Wells, who drove right fielder Andy Dirks to the right-field wall to pull down his drive in the seventh.

Verlander, who in addition to his no-hitter in Toronto also threw the first no-hitter in Comerica Park history in 2007, started Sunday's game throwing in the low to mid 90s. He got his fastball dialed up to 100 mph for the first time in the sixth, clocking 98, 99 and 100 mph against Jeff Mathis before striking the Angels catcher out on a soft curveball.

By then the crowd of 36,878 was greeting the end of each inning with a standing ovation.

Weaver (14-5), who lost for the first time in more than two months, was almost as dominant. In addttion to the two home runs he gave up only two others hits, singles in the first and second innings.

-- Kevin Baxter, reporting from Detroit

Photo: Tigers ace Justin Verlander delivers a pitch against the Angels in the first inning Sunday afternoon in Detroit. Credit: Rick Osentoski / US Presswire

Burress Moves Down the Hall

Talks never seemed particularly serious between Plaxico Burress and his former team, the Giants, who spent a lot of last week saying goodbye to long-time players. The Jets, meanwhile, were looking to make a bold free-agent move after losing out on cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha and signed Burress to a one-year deal to stay at the New Meadowlands Stadium. Will the Giants be able to keep up with the rival Eagles? And are the Jets loaded with too many controversial figures?

Angels sit Howie Kendrick for Jered Weaver-Justin Verlander duel

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The Angels will go into Sunday's marquee pitching matching between Jered Weaver and the Tigers' Justin Verlander with one of their chief offensive weapons, All-Star infielder Howie Kendrick, on the bench.

Kendrick, the team's leadng hitter at .304, is sitting out his third game on the team's 10-game road trip but Manager Mike Scioscia said his day off has nothing to do with injury and everything to do with matchups. Kendrick has hit .235 in his career against Verlander while switch-hitter Maicer Izturis, the man who will take his place, is batting .455 against the Tigers right-hander.

The pitching matchup, which the Tigers have been hyping in billboard ads around town, figures to be one of the best of the season. Weaver (14-4) and Verlander (14-5) are tied for second in the majors in wins. Verlander has won nine consecutive decisions while Weaver has won eight in a row.

Weaver leads the majors with a 1.79 ERA and a 1.04 ERA in day games. Verlander in second-best in day-game ERA at 1.32.

"You never know how that ball's going to bounce on the field," Angels Manager Mike Scioscia said. "Both guys have a different gear when you do happen to put pressure on them, they get in trouble. And they both have a knack for getting out of a jam. They both command the game very well.

"I'm sure, as good as those guys are, the margain [for error] is going to be probably very slim who comes out on top."

The lineups:

Angels

2B -- Maicer Izturis
RF -- Torii Hunter
DH -- Bobby Abreu
LF -- Vernon Wells
3B -- Alberto Callaspo
SS -- Erick Aybar
1B -- Mark Trumbo
CF -- Peter Bourjos
C -- Jeff Mathis
P -- Jered Weaver

Detroit Tigers

CF -- Austin Jackson
LF -- Brennan Boesch
RF -- Magglio Ordonez
DH -- Miguel Cabrera
1B -- Victor Martinez
SS -- Jhonny Peralta
2B -- Carlos  Guillen
C -- Alex Avila
3B -- Don Kelly
P -- Justin Velander

-- Kevin Baxter in Detroit

Photos: Jered Weaver (36) and Justin Verlander lead the majors in earned-run average and the American League in strikeouts, respectively, heading into Sunday's matchup. Credits: Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times and Kyndell Harkness / McClatchy-Tribune

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