Monday, August 29, 2011

Joel Pineiro takes mound for Angels in familiar surroundings

Joel
Joel Pineiro started his big-league career with the Mariners and he still has friends in Seattle. But there's little love lost when the right-hander takes the mound against his former team.

Pineiro had won three consecutive starts against the Mariners before Monday's game. And with 34 wins in his career at Safeco Field, he has won there nearly three times as often as he has at any other park.

"There's some ballparks the mound -- whether it's the visual, whether it's  just the dimensions, the infield grass -- there are things that affect the pitcher's comfort level," Angels Manager Mike Scioscia said. "Some guys sometimes struggle with a ballpark until they slay that dragon; go in there and get that one good start and all of sudden they say, 'Hey, I can do this.' And they gain confidence.

"There are some guys who can actually feel at home in certain parks. There is a comfort level that develops. The good pitchers that are going to be around a long time and pitch well eventually get that comfort level in any park they are in, to varying degrees."

U.S. Open: Venus Williams wins first match since Wimbledon

Venus-williams_600

Venus Williams started slowly, going down a break to unheralded Russian Vesna Dolonts, who had only arrived in the United States Monday morning after experiencing a visa problem and flight delays  related to Hurricane Irene. Yet it was Dolonts hitting all the lines and Williams barely finding the court.

But as the first night match of the 2011 U.S. Open progressed, Williams began to work the kinks out of her game. The 31-year-old, after all, hadn't played since losing in the fourth round at Wimbledon, citing a viral illness as she continually withdrew from summer hard-court prep events.

And after the Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd wished singer Tony Bennett a happy 85th birthday, it was also able to congratulate Williams on her 6-4, 6-3 first-round victory over the 91st-ranked Dolonts, 22, who was playing only her second U.S. Open match.

Williams, now 51-3 in first-round matches at major tournaments, has won two titles at the U.S. Open, where she has never lost before the fourth round.

"It's great to be back in New York," Williams told the crowd. "It's tough because this is my first match since Wimbledon. I tried my best to be on the ball tonight. My serve is a huge part of my game, my game is built on my serve, and I want to follow that up with a up lot of aggressive play and it was great to see those balls land in."

MORE:

Mardy Fish wins, Ryan Harrison loses

Serena Williams on '09 blowup: 'I don't think about'


Wimbledon champ Petra Kvitova loses in first round

-- Diane Pucin, reporting from New York

Photo: Venus Williams volleys a return to Vesna Dolonts during their U.S. Open match on Monday. Credit: Andrew Gombert / EPA

U.S. Open: Maria Sharapova survives in first round

Maria-sharapova_600Maria Sharapova, seeded third and one of the few women other than Serena Williams given a chance to win this U.S. Open, needed to find her full survival mode Monday in the first round.

Sharapova, 24, needed three sets and 2 hours 34 minutes to oust 19-year-old Heather Watson of  Britain, 3-6, 7-5, 6-3. Watson, ranked 104th in the world, was making her U.S. Open debut and it was in Arthur Ashe Stadium. By the final set, fans had embraced Watson's quietly powerful game, chanting "Hea-ther Wat-son," often as a noise counterpunch to Sharapova's achingly loud shrieking.

The last of Sharapova's three major titles was at the 2006 U.S. Open and her seeding here is her highest at a Grand Slam since she was third at the 2008 Wimbledon.

Sharapova overcame 58 unforced errors and eight double faults

This season Sharapova is 12-0 in three-set matches. She said her best explanation for that is, "I guess no matter how tired I am, I keep going for it, keep fighting for it.

"I knew I wasn't playing my best," Sharapova said. "The goal on a day like this is just to get through."

As for her opponent, Sharapova said, "I think she showed some of her best tennis today. She played really smart, especially in the first set when I was making so many errors."

MORE:

Mardy Fish wins, Ryan Harrison loses

Serena Williams on '09 blowup: 'I don't think about'


Wimbledon champ Petra Kvitova loses in first round

-- Diane Pucin, reporting from New York

Photo: Maria Sharapova returns a backhand shot to Heather Watson during her first-round match at the U.S. Open on Monday. Credit: Mike Groll / Associated Press

NBA, players to meet Wednesday

Trying to bridge a great divide, a small group of NBA and players' union representatives are expected to gather for a Wednesday meeting in New York, league sources said Monday.

League owners and players are far apart in their efforts to address reports that as many as 23 teams are losing money. The players are willing to accept less than their 57% of 2010-11 basketball-related income (about $2.15 billion), but they don't want to accept a hard $2-billion salary cap for several years.

Owners have locked out the players and are willing to ultimately miss games and cost the players paychecks should there not be some more significant bargaining.

League owners are scheduled to gather Sept. 15 at a board of governors' meeting to establish how to move forward based on the tone of the negotiations.

The players have asked the National Labor Relations Board to consider a complaint that the owners haven't bargained in good faith, but there's no guarantee the NLRB will act soon on that matter.

--Lance Pugmire

UCLA football: Brandon Willis working on returning to the Bruins

 Logo_300 Defensive tackle Brandon Willis is crisscrossing the country one more time, saying he intends to return to UCLA this fall.

Willis, who left North Carolina last month, was at the Bruins' practice Monday, observing. He said he will complete administrative requirements this week so he can return to school.

He said he will also request a waiver from the NCAA that would allow him to play this season. Willis, who has four years of eligibility remaining, was to meet with Coach Rick Neuheisel on Monday about the waiver.

"I'm planting roots now," Willis said. "This is where I want to be. Coach Neuheisel has welcomed me back with open arms."

Willis has made the rounds during a college career in which he has yet to play a down. If he can cover the field as well as well as he has covered the country, he will end up an all-American.

As a senior at Byrnes High School in Duncan, S.C., Willis was ranked as the seventh-best defensive tackle in the nation by Rivals.com. He committed to Tennessee, then signed with North Carolina and was to be part of the Tar Heels 2010 recruiting class.

But Willis transferred to UCLA last summer and sat out as a redshirt. He left UCLA prior to spring practice, saying he wanted to return to North Carolina to be near his grandmother, who was facing surgery.

"My grandmother is fine now; she has had her surgeries," Willis said. "This move is for me. Not even my dad is coming out here."

Willis said that he did not leave North Carolina the second time because Coach Butch Davis was fired.

"I had some differences with my position coach," Willis said. "I couldn't see staying there."

Willis said that "North Carolina would not allow me to transfer to another Atlantic Coast Conference school or any school in the South." But he said he was already considering UCLA.

"I thought about playing at an I-AA school, where I could be eligible," Willis said. "But I think I belong on this level."

MORE:

Commentary: College football turns itself in to authorities

USC football: NCAA President Mark Emmert addresses questions about Trojans

 -- Chris Foster

Photo: UCLA Logo

U.S. Open: Mardy Fish wins, Ryan Harrison loses

Fish
Ryan Harrison, hoping to keep progressing in his summer play which has brought his ranking to No. 67 in the world, said he was confident before his opening U.S. Open match Monday against 27th-seeded Marin Cilic of Croatia.

And then the 19-year-old American started playing. He said his shots didn't feel good. His mood became less upbeat as he'd get ahead with service breaks and then give them back. He started playing faster and faster as his temper became hotter and hotter and when it was over, Harrison was a cranky 6-2, 7-5, 7-6 (6) loser.

Another American, Mardy Fish, had a much more enjoyable day. The 29-year-old from Beverly Hills, who is seeded eighth, felt comfortable enough to hit a between-the-legs shot because he was always ahead of his 25-year-old German opponent, Tobias Kamke, playing only his second-ever U.S. Open match. Fish won, 6-2, 6-2, 6-1, in 1 hour and 43 minutes.

MORE:

Kim Clijsters will not defend title at U.S. Open

Serena Williams rolls eyes at mention of '09 tirade

Vera Zvonareva forgets double faults, remembers winners

-- Diane Pucin in New York

Photo: Mardy Fish Credit: Mike Segar/Reuters

U.S. Open: Wimbledon champ Petra Kvitova loses in first round

  Petra_240 Petra Kvitova, who had seemed ready to become the next big women's tennis star after her poised and athletic win at Wimbledon, Monday became the first reigning women's Wimbledon champion to lose before the third round in the open era of tennis.

Kvitova, seeded fifth in the tournament and ranked sixth in the world, moved slowly on the court Monday against Alexandra Dulgheru, a 22-year-old from Romania who is ranked 49th in the world. Kvitova's lackluster performance ended in a 7-6 (3), 6-3 first-round loss.

MORE:

Kim Clijsters will not defend title at U.S Open

U.S. Open: Mardy Fish wins, Ryan Harrison loses

Serena WIlliams rolls eyes at mention of '09 tirade

-- Diane Pucin in New York

Photo: Petra Kvitova Credit: Jason Szenes/European Press Agency.

Floyd Mayweather @*^%$$%£** attack on father – not his trainer


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Who knows if this is genuine… ? I suspect it is. Emotions running high in the Mayweather family.





Tiger Woods to play in Frys.com Open

Photo: Tiger Woods. Credit: Tim Shaffer / Reuters.

Tiger Woods, usually winding down at this time of year, has committed to play in the Frys.com Open in October, tournament director Ian Knight announced. The event, at CordeValle in San Martin, Calif., is part of the Fall Series calendar.

Fall Series events are often filled with players trying to improve their standing to keep their tour cards for the next year. They're held at a time when many of the top players take a break from the game. But Woods, who has played in only two events since withdrawing from the Players championship in May, needs some serious work on his game and has not consistently played like a top player in almost two years.

Fred Couples recently announced he wanted Woods to play on the U.S. Presidents Cup team, which will play an international team in Australia in November. Woods, who missed the cut at the PGA Championship after finishing tied for 37th at the WGC Bridgestone, obviously has some things to work on. 

One interesting note: The defending champion at CordeValle is Rocco Mediate, the player Woods beat in a riveting U.S. Open final at Torrey Pines in 2009. That was Woods' last win in a major.

MORE:

Tiger Woods misses the cut at PGA Championship

Tiger Woods falls apart with a 77 at PGA Championship

Tiger Woods keeps low profile on Steve Williams controversy

-- Mike James

Photo: Tiger Woods. Credit: Tim Shaffer / Reuters

Oscar Pistorius: Paralympic traitor with Olympic desire ?


Blade Runner: Oscar Pistorius will be the star of the Paralympics (Photo: REUTERS)

Blade Runner: Oscar Pistorius will be the star of the Paralympics (Photo: REUTERS)


Oscar Pistorius on the main stage. Seven years of effort. Twenty-four years with no shins and feet. A lifetime’s ambition to compete against the fastest men on earth at 400m. At the IAAF World Championships, ‘Blade Runner’ went out at the semi-final stage today. In exactly one year’s time, there will be talk of the young South African again at the Paralympics in London, when the flame is lit. He will be centre stage. What an advert he has been this week for the Paralympics…while a debate has raged around him.


Judging by some of the comments today … there are many people in this world who believe that being born without shin bones and bones in your feet is not a disadvantage in life. Plus ca change.


There are those who say – nay, insist – he has an advantage. There are those who suggest his competing at both Olympics and Paralympics blur the edges between the two sporting festivals and create illogical conundrums for Paralympic organisers.


Even single-amputees competing against Pistorius whisper that he has an advantage. Yet start to pick apart the Paralympic Games, and take a good, hard look at the classification system, and holes appear everywhere. In many ways, it has its advantages for those at the top and bottom end of the classification bands put in place and then decided by IPC classifiers.


In Beijing, 1 in 4 of the competitors in athletics were re-classified by IPC officials into higher or lower (more able or less able physical groupings). In short, every country was looking for the advantages they can get.


In Paralympic terms, muscle groups in different parts of the body are balanced out. It is an inexact science. Ellie Simmonds, the British swimmer who was born with dwarfism, competes against other athletes who have minimal use of two legs. Look deeply enough, and the Paralympic classifying system is a can of worms.


I’ve been one of the strongest supporters of Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson for five Paralympic Games. The Baroness, 11 gold medals to the good as a wheelchair sprinter, is THE stand-out British athlete of all-time. It was with some surprise to me that her views are that should Pistorius compete in the 400m at the Olympics, Paralympic officials should consider precluding him from that event at the Paralympic Games.


Baroness Grey-Thompson was quoted on a BBC website this week as saying that she does not have a problem with Pistorius competing at the World Championships or Olympic Games. She believes, however, that it could turn the 400m Paralympics event into a B final. It is an interesting argument. “It is blurring the edges, and maybe it is time either before London, or between London, for the IPC to take a look at this situation, as more athletes begin to compete in both,” she told me earlier today.


Two things: knowing Baroness Grey-Thompson as I do, my belief is that she is so competitive, had she been in the same position, she would have done the same as Pistorius (she concurred on that). Secondly, never has one athlete done as much to bring so much attention to the Paralympic Games as the South African, and he has never veered from the view that it is the Paralympic Games which put him on the map.


Even Sir Philip Craven, President of the International Paralympic Committee, is fully supportive of Pistorius’s ambition and desire to compete at both the Olympic and Paralympic Games in London. Pistorius has carried himself with dignity in Daegu, and has had the world watching. The Paralympic Games has a great ambassador in the sprinter, who will be in Trafalgar Square next week when the tickets go on sale for the second sporting festival of next summer.


There are others who are on the cusp of crossing over into both, or have already done so. Sarah Storey, born without a hand, may cycle for GB next summer in both Olympic and Paralympic Games. However, she would compete in different events at the two Games. Natalie Du Toit, the South African swimmer, a single-leg amputee, competed in the open water swimming event at the Olympics in Beijing, before winning a clutch of gold medals a few weeks later at the Water Cube in the Paralympics. Again, different events.


It could be argued that she has less weight to carry through the water, yet she will most likely compete in both Games. Natalia Partyka, a table-tennis player from Poland, born without a hand, competed in both Games in Beijing.


They are stand-outs. They can, because they are good enough. And, significantly, because they can cross over. Some athletes cannot cross over. Wheelchair events are not included in the Olympic Games, but have been included as demonstration events at World Championships and Olympics. Indeed, Baroness Grey-Thompson competed in some of them.


The Paralympic Games are one year away. Between now and then, there are many things to debate, many of them ideological. The British public will need educating on many of the intricacies of Paralympic sport, some of which are complex. Pistorius will be at the heart of that…but we will all emerge enriched. Or maybe just confused.



More ex-players sue NFL, equipment makers over head injuries

Another group of former NFL players has filed a lawsuit against the NFL and equipment makers Riddell and Easton, claiming that the league was negligent in its handling of head injuries during the players' careers.

The list of players includes Hall of Fame Tampa Bay Buccaneers linebacker Lee Roy Selmon, his brother and defensive teammate Dewey Selmon, former Buccaneers tight end Jimmie Giles and running back James Wilder and former New York Jets fullback Woody Bennett.

The suit was filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court late Friday. It claims that the NFL and the equipment manufacturers knew the effects of brain injury, memory loss and dementia from trauma suffered on the football field for years and "acted with callous indifference" and "reckless abandon."

Another of the plaintiffs is Ralph Wenzel, who played with the Pittsburgh Steelers and San Diego Chargers from 1966 to 1973. He claims he was not warned of the risks of long-term injury and now suffers memory loss, headaches and sleeplessness.

Carolyn Lens, the widow of former Atlanta Falcon and St. Louis Cardinal Greg Lens, is also suing, claiming her husband "suffered a premature death as a result of these injuries."

At least two other groups of players previously sued the league claiming it was negligent in addressing safety issues relating to head injuries.

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said the league has not seen the complaint "but would vigorously contest any claims of this kind."

-- Lance Pugmire

 

 

London 2012 Olympics: German eventers burst our bubble in Luhmuehlen


Well, the bubble had to burst some time. After our specialist dressage squad’s best ever championship in Rotterdam the week before, Britain’s 16-year gold medal-winning run in European eventing ended in Luhmuehlen.


Germany ran away with the European team title and the top four individual slots, headed by world champion Michael Jung (La Biosthetique Sam). Even by the closing stages of first-phase dressage, the question was not whether Germany would win, but how large its margin would be over the rest.


The hosts had a 23-penalty lead going into cross-country and, even though a man down following the fall of Andreas Dibowski, had nearly doubled it by Saturday night.


Britain was still clinging on to silver, having lost Mary King on cross-country with Imperial Cavalier (her first ever fall in a championship appearance). But in an influential show jumping phase, single errors by William Fox-Pitt (Cool Mountain) and Piggy French (Jakata) allowed France to slip ahead, leaving the team title-defenders in bronze  - nice, but not quite where Britain wants to be in a competition that is, for obvious reasons,  missing strong eventing nations New Zealand, Australia and the USA.


Germany has always been good at dressage and show jumping – both in eventing and the specialist disciplines – but cross-country was its Achilles heel, now improved considerably by their English trainer, Christopher Bartle, and they are peaking just right for 2012.


As it turned out, Germany needed this substantial team lead because its overnight leader, Ingrid Klimke’s Butts Abraxxas, crashed through six show jumps. But a succession of other talented Germans simply moved up a place each – Jung into gold, newcomer Sandra Auffarth into silver (on Opgun Luovo, who impressed at the Luhmuhlen four-star in June), Frank Ostholt into bronze on Little Paint (who has been off work for two years), and Dirk Schrade into fourth on King Artus. This is the first time one country has had three riders on the individuals’ podium as well as winning the team gold since Britain in 1991.


La Biosthetique Sam is a wonder horse and Jung is versatile – he also show jumps at the specialist level, as does Auffarth. Before the final phase, course designer and BBC commentator Mike Tucker took out a five-to-one bet that Jung would be world, European and Olympic champion at the same time, now looking like a very good value indeed.


On paper, Britain should have been the ones walking away with the  European title – again. We fielded three of our gold medal-winning squad from the 2010 world championships – King (current leader of the HSBC Classics global rankings), Fox-Pitt (on his world individual silver medallist), Nicola Wilson on the glorious Opposition Buzz, probably the most coveted cross-country trailblazer in the world, and French, defending her 2009 European individual silver medal on the horse second at Badminton.


The trouble is, European championships run at the lesser three-star level and this leaves nations that are not stand-out brilliant at eventing dressage very exposed when the cross-country track rides relatively well (56 of 70 starters completed, a good statistic).


Germany was under no pressure to take cross-country risks, though its team riders did so willingly and with aplomb. But for once, every nano-second counted for Britain and although Wilson and Fox-Pitt got home quickly, French was 17 seconds over the 10 min, 5 secs time allowed – hardly the worst recorded instance of poor judgement but she was nonetheless in tears.


The three-star test also means that individuals from nations not necessarily in contention for a team medal find the cross-country well within their comfort zone. This is why riders rarely or never spotted at four-star Badminton and Burghley often feature on a European championship leader-board; exasperating, but that’s the sport.


In a previous era, judges had licence to adjust the scoring co-efficient so that dressage did not over-influence the final result. Even if that tool still existed, one could not argue it should have been applied this weekend, and if nothing else, Luhmuehlen highlighted what Britain needs to finesse before 2012.


The London Olympics will be staged at the upper four-star level and over an arduous terrain at Greenwich. This will strengthen the cross-country influence, and good dressage scorers like Miners Frolic (Tina Cook’s 2008 Olympic bronze medallist) and Redesigned (Pippa Funnell) should be back in contention for Britain after virtually the whole 2011 season on the sidelines.


A final word for Fox-Pitt, who kept Britain’s medal chances alive on cross-country with the competition’s two “You-Tube” moments. First, Cool Mountain capsized and, after some underwater gymnastics, surfaced with 6ft 6in Fox-Pitt still firmly in the saddle. Later, he should surely have tipped over after scuttling across the top of a combination fence instead of jumping it, again defying the laws of physics. ”It is a measure of the horse that he kept going with water down his ears, up his nose and in his lungs,” said Fox-Pitt, modestly omitting that his own sheer force of personality had a little to do with it too!



World Athletics Championships: the curse of the programme


Daily disqualification: Usain Bolt and Dayron Robles have bothe been hit by the IAAF programme curse?

Daily disqualification: Usain Bolt and Dayron Robles have both been hit by the curse of the IAAF programme


When the victorious Dayron Robles faced a protest about his World Championships win in the 110m hurdles, he had no further to look than that day’s IAAF souvenir programme cover for a sign of the outcome.

There he was in full colour effortlessly clearing the hurdles. But it was the curse of the magazine cover than did him in. Day one IAAF poster boy Australian Olympic pole vault champion Stephen Hooker failed to make the final and day two’s, Usain Bolt, didn’t get beyond the start line of the 100m final when he false started. It has become a running joke in Daegu that to be honoured on the cover is bad luck. So of course it was no surprise to the superstitious that Robles, from Cuba, lost his hurdles title, disqualified in the protest room because he had hit the arm of his neighbouring hurdler, China’s Liu Xiang. So who will be on the magazine title page next? Or will more than a few athletes be running for cover?



USC football: NCAA President Mark Emmert addresses questions about Trojans

The Times' Lance Pugmire did a Q & A with NCAA President Mark Emmert.

Several of the questions pertained to USC and how its case related to situations involving former Auburn quarterback Cam Newton, former Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor and former Miami athletic director Paul Dee, who served as  chairman of the NCAA's Committee on Infractions.

Pugmire: What do you say to USC fans after you allowed Newton to play in the BCS title game, and Pryorto play in the Sugar Bowl when USC was banned from a bowl game because of something that occurred six years ago?

Emmert: Every case is unique. We look at facts as different and from different distances. It's natural to make comparisons, but I guarantee you usually don't know all the facts we consider.

Pugmire: In light of what has been revealed about Ohio State, Miami and other schools, did USC's punishment fit the crime when it basically involved one Trojan player and outsiders operating 100 miles away from Los Angeles?

Emmert: We haven't yet passed down penalties in those cases, so they can't draw conclusions. There are still allegations we haven't resolved.

Pugmire: How can the NCAA maintain credibility when a key member of its infractions committee [former Miami athletic director Paul Dee] was in office when the troubling events at Miami allegedly occurred?

Emmert: The chairman [Dee] was one of nine voices on the committee. He has no more power than anyone else. We look at individual cases on their merits. What happened at Miami has no bearing on USC. I understand it doesn't feel right. We decide cases based on the facts on the ground, and we will continue to do that.

--Gary Klein

London 2012 Paralympics will leave us with more lasting memories than Olympics


Blade Runner: Oscar Pistorius will be the star of the Paralympics (Photo: REUTERS)

Blade Runner: Oscar Pistorius will be the star of the Paralympics (Photo: REUTERS)


Come the end of 2012 when Britons look back on a colourful year we will remember snatches of Olympic experiences – the torch, the competition, the tears, the shocks, the partying.


But when it comes to raw and rich emotional connections to sport, it will be the Paralympics that touch the heart.


Today marks one year to go until the opening ceremony of the London Paralympic Games, and in typical Paralympic fashion it has gone largely unremarked.


Organisers are leaving most of the promotion until next week when tickets go on sale and Oscar Pistorius arrives at Trafalgar Square, direct from the world track and field championships in Daegu and fresh from reminding people that athletes with a disability are primarily athletes.


The 1.5 million tickets on sale to the public will help Locog raise £30 million in ticket revenue.


For there is something grounding and innocent about the Paralympics that will catch us all by surprise.


The struggles that engulf the athletes just to accomplish their everyday tasks is herculean.


Then on top of that swimmers with one arm, cyclists that are blind, runners that have no legs will remind us of how good we really have it – and it is delivered by the Paralympians unfailingly with a wicked dose of black humour about their particular disability.


That is how the Paralympics have prospered over the past two decades to an ever-increasingly appreciative audience.


But there are some small challenges for the London Paralympics. For the first time the Paralympics are being televised by a different broadcaster, and sponsored by their own sponsor.


Clearly Channel Four  and Sainsbury’s have smartly tapped into the drawing power of the Paralympians’ quests.


The promotion and airtime and focus on the Paralympics will be unprecedented and richly deserved.


But there is a fine line between telling a story and exploiting a story, so too between empathy and sympathy.The Paralympics have been rocked in the past by scandals involving athletes faking their disability, by drugs and by the debate about technological aids.


Strangely this gives the Paralympics more credibility and a dose of realism. For the Paralympics is also real sport.


When the Paralympics kick off in London in August 2012 we will have thought that our wonderment at human performance from the Olympics couldn’t be surpassed, but then it is.  A hundred times over. And it is not through world records or multi gold medals. It is the personal stories: that will grab you and shake you and change you.



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