Thursday, September 1, 2011

U.S. Open: American Mardy Fish cruises into third round

Mardy3
Mardy Fish, 29, is playing in his 11th U.S. Open. He's never gotten further than the quarterfinals. It is, Fish says, something that disappoints him about his career. It is the place where he thinks his game is best suited, and yet success hasn't come.

Fish won his second round Thursday over qualifier Malek Jaziri of Tunisia 6-2, 6-2, 6-4. Fish had the same effortless winning style in the first round as well, advancing 6-2, 6-2, 6-1 over Tobias Kamke of Germany. Fish, who is modest and never one to overestimate his level of play, said he hasn't gotten much sense, yet, of how well he is playing.

"I haven't really been tested that much," he said. "I can't do anything about that. I can't do anything about who I come up against. Just happy to move on."

Jaziri, 27, was the first Tunisian player to have reached the third round of a Grand Slam event in the open era, and the U.S. Open was Jaziri's first tour-level event other than Davis Cup. So Fish was clearly the class of the matchup.

"I think I'm playing well," Fish said. "I'm very confident right now. That guy is in the second round for a reason. He's won four matches in a row [including qualifying]. But, yeah, he's in a position that he's never been in before. I guess I took advantage of that."

Next up for Fish will be big-serving South African Kevin Anderson who upset 29th-seeded Michael Llodra of France 6-1, 6-2, 6-2.

RELATED:

Serena Williams, Roger Federer cruise to victory at U.S. Open

Venus Williams exits U.S. Open because of autoimmune disease

-- Diane Pucin in New York

Photo: Mardy Fish returns a shot during his second-round match against Malek Jaziri at the U.S. Open on Thursday. Credit: John G. Mabanglo / EPA

USC football: Trojan scout team wears UCLA colors

USCUSC plays its opener against Minnesota on Saturday.

The Trojans do not play rival UCLA until the final game of the season in late November.

But USC Coach Lane Kiffin and his staff got the Trojans in the mood for the Bruins on Thursday. During the final scrimmage portion of practice, scout team players donned powder blue jerseys with gold numbers.

 "I guess they put them in UCLA jerseys to make it a statement as an enemy,” tailback Curtis McNeal said. “It was pretty funny."

Kiffin said, "Hopefully they’ll be motivated to get off the service team so they won’t have to wear the powder blue jerseys."

Were the jerseys a symbolic message?

“Not really,” Kiffin said. "We were bored.”

More later at latimes.com/sports

RELATED:

USC football: Matt Barkley preparing to 'go out with a bang'

USC football: Willie Mack Garza resigns from coaching staff

USC football: NCAA President Mark Emmert addresses questions about Trojans

-- Gary Klein

Fundraiser for aspiring Olympians will feature gold-medal lineup

Gymnasts, kayakers, rowers and swimmers seem to get their moments of glory every four years during the Olympics. The training to reach that moment can be expensive, and that’s where a group called Southern California Olympians and Paralympians comes in.

The group, comprised of athletes who took part in the Olympics or Paralympics, mentors kids and holds fundraisers to help aspiring Olympians realize their dreams. The group’s next fundraiser will be Sept. 13 at the Cannery in Newport Beach and will feature an illustrious roster.

Special guests will include the indomitable Louis Zamperini, a 1936 Olympian and subject of the best-selling novel “Unbroken”; swimmer turned motivational speaker John Naber; gymnast Peter Vidmar; four-time shooting medalist Kim Rhode, who has qualified for the 2012 London Games next summer; swimmer Brian Goodell; cyclist/speedskater Connie Paraskevin; 1948 and 1952 diving gold medalist Sammy Lee; and kayaker Cathy Marino. The event will feature a reception, three-course dinner and conversations with the Olympians.

Tickets are $275 per person or $1,500 for a table of six. Proceeds will go to the Koroibos Foundation, a nonprofit that provides financial aid to potential Olympians.

Naber, an accomplished master of ceremonies, will lead a question-and-answer session that should be the highlight of the event.

“Everyone there wants to do this to give back and help Olympic hopefuls who are training for London,” said Marino, an Olympic kayaker in 1988 and 1992. “We have athletes who are struggling to pay their airfare to events. We fill in the gap between what’s provided by the U.S. Olympic Committee and national governing bodies and what they need.

“We know what it takes. We’ve been there. We want to help.”

For more information, contact Marino at cathymarino@live.com. The Southern California Olympians and Paralympians also have a Facebook page that includes updates on activities of athletes and the governing bodies of Olympic sports. 

-- Helene Elliott

USC Football: Gary Klein previews the Minnesota game (video)



 Times USC reporter Gary Klein previews Saturday's game against Minnesota:



 

 

Jockey Tyler Baze suspended

Fabforum Jockey Tyler Baze has been suspended by the Del Mar stewards pending a formal hearing after refusing to take a breathalizer test as agreed to in a previous signed testing agreement with the California Horse Racing Board, according to a Del Mar track spokesman.

Baze was taken off his mounts Thursday at Del Mar.

--Eric Sondheimer

Photo: Tyler Baze. Credit: Associated Press.

U.S. Open: Roger Federer, Serena Williams making things easy

Serena 

Serena Williams on Thursday served 10 aces, hit 25 winners to five from her opponent, won 30 more points than outgunned Michaella Krajicek and pounded her way into the third round of the U.S. Open, 6-0, 6-1. It took the 28th-seeded Williams only 49 minutes to win.

Asked about her older sister, Venus, who pulled out of the tournament Wednesday because of an autoimmune disease called Sjogren's syndrome, Williams said, "I'm praying for her to be fine."

Serena now advances to a match with either fourth-seeded Victoria Azarenka or Gisela Dulko.

Equally impressive was third-seeded Roger Federer, who was little tested in his 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 win over Israel's Dudi Sela.

"Not much trouble on my serve," Federer said, "and from the baseline I also thought I had the upper hand. When it's like that, obviously it's tough for the opponent, but I just think I was superior today. It was a good match for me in the breezy conditions. It was a bit tricky early on to find the rhythm. That's why I was happy to get the first break."

MORE:

Serena Williams, no smiles, 22 winners, easy victory

Venus Williams exits U.S. Open because of autoimmune disease

Venus Williams shakes off rust to win in first round at U.S. Open

Click here to find out more!-- Diane Pucin in New York

Photo: Serena Williams. Credit: Nathan Denette / Associated Press.

Live chat with USC reporter Gary Klein on Friday at noon

Times USC reporter Gary Klein will take part in a live chat with readers Friday at noon to discuss all things USC football. Sign up after the jump to take part in the live chat!

UCLA football: Chris Foster previews the Houston game (video)

Times UCLA reporter Chris Foster previews Saturday's game against Houston:



 

 

Chris Johnson, Tennessee Titans agree to contract extension

Fabforum

Running back Chris Johnson has agreed to a four-year contract extension with the Tennessee Titans, ending his holdout.

Johnson has led the NFL in rushing the last three seasons and refused to report to preseason camp without a new deal. The 24th pick overall in the 2008 draft out of East Carolina, Johnson became only the sixth man in NFL history to run for 2,000 yards in 2009 when he ran for 2,006 yards.

The Titans revised his contract a year ago, accelerating some payments, but he still was set to earn only $1.065 million for this season.

Now the running back will be under contract for through 2016 with a revised deal worth $53.5 million, including $30 million guaranteed, according to a person familiar with the contract. The person spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the contract details remained confidential.

Fullback Ahmard Hall said Johnson would have some work to do to learn new offensive coordinator's Chris Palmer's offense, especially with the different terminology.

"You're going to have to think," Hall said. "You're not going to just be able to roll in and hit the ground running.... Coach Palmer has put in a lot of good things, but the language is different. He's definitely going to have to think. The sooner he gets in the better."

ALSO:

Texas A&M says it's leaving the Big 12 Conference

USC football: Willie Mack Garza leaves coaching staff

Houston quarterback Case Keenum returns with new outlook

-- Houston Mitchell

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Photo: Chris Johnson. Credit: Elaine Thompson / Associated Press.

 

Angels call up four reinforcements

Photo: Angels relief pitcher Horacio Ramirez gets a visit from catcher Jeff Mathis. Credit: Gina Ferazzi/ Los Angeles Times. 

The beleaguered Angels bullpen got a bit of relief Thursday when the team called up left-hander Horacio Ramirez from triple-A Salt Lake. But it's their offense that may have been helped most.

Big-league clubs can expanded their rosters from 25 to 40 players for the final month of the season. So in addition to Ramirez the Angels added first baseman Efren Navarro, infielder Andrew Romine and outfielder Jeremy Moore from Salt Lake.

The first appearances by Navarro and Moore will mark the major league debut for each. Romine and Ramirez played with the Angels earlier this season with Romine going 1 for 9 in five games and Ramirez pitching five innings in seven appearances, giving up five earned runs.

Angels Manager Mike Scioscia said earlier this week he expected to call up as many as eight players for the stretch drive with the rest expected to join the team this weekend in Anaheim.

Navarro hit .317 with a career-high 12 homers this season but has a .424 batting average and a .924 slugging percentage since Aug. 12. He also leads Pacific Coast League first baseman with a .998 fielding percentage, having made just three errors in 1,326 chances.

Moore leads the PCL with 18 triples and is one of only two players in the league with double-digit totals for stolen bases (21), doubles (24), triples and home runs (15)

The Angels, 3 1/2 games behind the Texas Rangers in the American League West, close out a seven-game road trip Thursday night in Seattle before returning home to face the Minnesota Twins on Friday at Angel Stadium.

RELATED:

Trout leaving an impression on Angels

Details of Jered Weaver's contract are revealed

-- Kevin Baxter in Seattle

Photo: Angels relief pitcher Horacio Ramirez gets a visit from catcher Jeff Mathis. Credit: Gina Ferazzi/ Los Angeles Times.

USC football: Willie Mack Garza resigns from coaching staff

Willie 

Willie Mack Garza, USC’s secondary coach, has resigned, citing personal reasons "unrelated to USC."

"I stepped down today from my coaching duties at USC," Garza said in a statement. "I have some personal issues unrelated to USC that I need to address. I wish the Trojans the best and I am sorry I won't be with them in what I know will be a very successful season."

USC is in final preparations for Saturday’s season opener against Minnesota at the Coliseum.

Garza was not at practice Thursday morning. Asked afterward why Garza was absent Coach Lane Kiffin said, "Willie's dealing with a personal issue. That's all I can say."

Asked if he was still a member of the staff, Kiffin reiterated that Garza was dealing with a personal issue. "At this time, right now, that's all that I can say."

Kiffin informed players of Garza's resignation via text message at noon.

Athletic Director Pat Haden could not be immediately reached for comment.

Garza, 42, came with Kiffin from Tennessee, where the 2009 coaching staff was recently found to have committed 12 secondary violations of NCAA rules.

Haden has spoken of creating a "culture of compliance" at USC, which is still on probation after being hit with some of the most severe sanctions in college sports history. The penalties included a two-year bowl ban and the loss of 30 scholarships over three years.

Garza played at Texa and was in his 18th season of coaching college football. He was a graduate assistant at Texas and also coached at Western Michigan, Texas Christian, Tarleton (Texas) State and North Dakota State before joining Kiffin’s staff at Tennessee in 2009.

Former USC and NFL safety Sammy Knight is a graduate assistant on the staff and could oversee the secondary.

More later at latimes.com/sports

-- Gary Klein

Photo: Willie Mack Garza. Credit: Robert Lachman / Los Angeles Times.

Kings voice Bob Miller to return for two more seasons

Photo: Bob Miller. Credit: David McNew / Los Angeles Times.  

Bob Miller, the longtime voice of the Kings, didn’t mind going year-by-year when it came to renewing his contract. But this time, he and the club agreed to a two-year deal that will take him to 40 seasons, a remarkable milestone by any standards.

“And then we’ll see how many years we want to go,” Miller said Thursday. “They’ve been very cooperative and good to me.”

Miller will be 73 in October, a few days after the Kings open the 2011-12 season. He was honored with the Foster Hewitt award and a plaque in the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2000.

It's amazing that his 40-year tenure isn’t even the longest among Los Angeles sports broadcasters: Dodgers voice Vin Scully recently announced he will return for his 63rd season, and Spanish-language broadcaster Jaime Jarrin will return to the Dodgers for his 54th season.

“I’m not going to go 63 years like Vin,” Miller said, laughing. “If I did, in the 63rd year I’d be 98.

“I think in the last year there was more talk, even by me, along the lines of ‘How long are you going to do this?’ It crept into my mind, too. But every August and September I get enthusiastic about next season. From all indications the team is making strides. After all these years it’s not time to walk away.”

Miller’s broadcast partner, Jim Fox, is in the middle of a multiyear deal. Next season will be their 22nd working together.

“It's amazing what he's done coming after a playing career. He's not just an ex-athlete who walks in and thinks he knows everything. He works very hard at it,” Miller said. "I’m looking forward to getting started again."

MORE:

Former NHLer Wade Belak dead at 35

Three pennies for their thoughts as Kings prepare for season

-- Helene Elliott

Photo: Bob Miller. Credit: David McNew / Los Angeles Times.

London 2012 Olympics diary: green argument over cauldron bubbling over


Pivotal: the lighting of the cauldron is the moment everyone is waiting for (Photo: AP)

Pivotal: the lighting of the cauldron is the moment everyone is waiting for (Photo: AP)


Pressure is building on London Olympic Games organisers to keep the Olympic cauldron as energy efficient as possible after failing to deliver on recent ”green” promises.


Some of the bonus monies due to chief executive Paul Deighton, paid £480,000 last year, rely on having the Games classified as sustainable.


But offsetting carbon emissions, a bid promise, was scrapped two years ago and the Olympic torch biofuel idea fell by the wayside in April.


Reducing the carbon footprint has cost Locog an extra million pounds in offsetting costs and renewable targets will only be half of the  20 per cent target.


The announcement of the cauldron fuel is being closely watched by the green movement.


National interest


Downing Street is concerned about the escalating security costs eating into the contingency buffer of Locog’s £600m  security budget, because its security numbers may double from 10,000 to 20,000 taking up an extra £150 million.


That equates to £15,000 for each security guard. But insiders say the extra guards are good news for the public because Locog is expanding the number of venue entry checkpoints to reduce queue times.


Locog is trying to get queue times down to around 20 minutes, but with sold out sessions for the morning heats at Olympic Park, hundreds of thousands of people will be wanting to enter around the same time.


3D or not 3D?


With the announcement this week that the London 2012 Olympics will be the first Games broadcast in 3D, the question remains whether the 25m square screens dotted around the country at the Olympic ”live” sites will showcase the groundbreaking technology.


Thousands of spectators would have to don the special glasses to view the screens and its pop-out action, but the decision rests not with sponsor Panasonic or the Olympic Broadcast Services, but with the BBC.


The BBC, while committed to showing some of the 10 days a day of available 3D footage, is not convinced the public are big fans of the product.


But the normal 2D coverage will feature many of those super-slow motion shots like quivering arrows and divers breaking the surface tension of the water, because of the latest technological advances with high speed cameras.


Commentary teams cut


Television stations around the world are scaling back on their commentary teams for the London 2012 Olympic Games, partly because Olympic Broadcast Services, with its 6,000 staff and 1,500 cameras, is providing pre-packaged products, including a half hour rolling Olympic news show with multiple language options.


Some networks in Hong Kong, Taiwan, New Zealand, Argentina, Brazil and Mexico are finding it cheaper to stay at home.


Rent a (young) crowd


It looks like Locog’s free Ticketshare scheme for schoolchildren, Tickets for Troops and former Olympians is largely skewed towards filling Olympic football matches and Paralympic seats.


Two-thirds of the 125,000 seats for schoolchildren are for football or the Paralympics.


Bizarrely almost 20 per cent of London schools didn’t sign up for the scheme, which offered free tickets to one in eight schoolchildren.



How competitive will Texas A&M be if it joins the SEC?

Photo: Texas A&M fans. Credit: David J. Phillip / Associated Press.

Writers from around the Tribune Co. discuss the topic of the day. Weigh in with a comment of your own.

Matt Murschel, Orlando Sentinel

The idea of Texas A&M joining the Southeastern Conference isn’t sending shivers down the backs of  SEC coaches and fans, at least not yet.

To be fair, until recently, the Aggies haven’t been relevant in the college football landscape for the last decade. However, with the recent upswing in the program the addition of A&M could be good for both the school and the conference.

The school gets better exposure with games being played on national television almost every weekend while also adding an increase in revenue. The SEC would gain traction in the state of Texas for recruiting and fan base.

Texas A&M would probably join the SEC West, which means they will have to compete against the Alabama, Arkansas, LSU and Auburn. If the Aggies, who were 9-4 last season, had been in the SEC West in 2010 they would have finished fifth or sixth in the division.

Teddy Greenstein, Chicago Tribune

Great question. You wonder if Texas A&M’s leadership has even gotten that far in weighing the pros and cons of deserting the Big 12.
 
We know that what’s fueling this move is the Aggies’ inferiority complex to Texas. It’s certainly not a desire to form a rivalry with Ole Miss and Vanderbilt.
 
Bottom line, the Aggies have been only marginally competitive in the Big 12 for the last 15 years. They’ve won one bowl game since 1995, and that was sponsored by a furniture company.
 
The temptation is to say that with A&M moving up in class to the SEC the Aggies will get crushed like a folding chair under the weight of a Longhorn. But A&M is on the rise, now in the trusty hands of Coach Mike Sherman. And, hey, it’s hard to imagine them being less competitive than they have been in the Big 12.

RELATED:

Texas A&M says it's leaving the Big 12 Conference

Houston quarterback Case Keenum returns with new outlook

Photo: Standing throughout a game, ready to suit up and play if needed, is a tradition for fans at Texas A&M's Kyle Field. Credit: David J. Phillip / Associated Press

US Open 2011 Diary: Get well soon Venus



Venus Williams revealed she is suffering from an auto-immune disease

Venus Williams revealed she is suffering from an auto-immune disease


Wednesday in New York


The walking wounded

It may be something in the air, the water, the burgers. Even a bizarre aftermath of Irene, if you will. But this year’s US Open has not been kind on the health front. Venus Williams last night became the latest player to join the mass visits to the medical centre, withdrawing ahead of her second round match against Sabine Lisicki and disclosing that she has been suffering from Sjögren’s Syndrome, an autoimmune disease that causes extreme fatigue and joint pain. Not good.


Hours earlier, Robin Soderling had done pretty much the same, citing illness.


Add to that the retirements of Yanina Wickmayer (body had enough), Louk Sorensen (cramps), Conor Niland (food poisioning), Jamie Hampton (cramps), Kei Nishikori, Ayumi Morita (shoulder), Misaki Doi, Frank Dancevic, Karol Beck, Marinko Matosevic, and the physios and doctors on site at Flushing have certainly been kept busy.


It’s a horrible time of the year, that’s for sure. Those hard courts are not exactly like cushions.


Far more importantly though, it raises severe questions about Venus’s future. Is it the beginning of the end? She doesn’t think so.

“We’ve decided to just enjoy tennis,” she said earlier this week. “It’s such an honor. We’ll do it as long as we can. Right now the end is not really in sight.”


I do hope so. Get well soon, V.


Men in red, green and black

Two men in adidas red produced two very different performances yesterday. Andy Murray crunched his way to an at times tricky, but ultimately extremely positive three-set win over Somdev Devvarman, while Marcos Baghdatis bumped and pumped but came up short against John Isner in four sets.


In a way it was the perfect first round match for Murray (and I like the red, by the way) – not too easy, not too hard. Robin Haase is next.


For Baghdatis, it proved that the now ponytail-less Cypriot still has plenty to bring to a tennis court. Yelling to the New York skies as he walloped and whacked, the much trimmer Bag-man had John Isner on every inch of his toes for two tie-breaks, won the third set, before squeezing the wrong way out of the fourth. Credit to Isner, but he needs to think about those 61 unforced errors.


An ugly grind

It seems to be a rather fashionable argument that there is not much time left on the tennis court for Andy Roddick. The original A-Rod is lacking form and results, and is dragging around a body that would much rather be on a beach in the Bahamas. But it’s not over yet. The 2003 champion survived a first round four-setter in over four hours against Michael ‘muscle’ Russell. Google him and you’ll see why.


Over and out

Bye bye, Bryans. The chest-bumping twins, who have owned New York, looked less than godly as they suffered a shock defeat in the first round, as the Wimbledon champions no less, to the lowly likes of Ivo Karlovic and Frank Moser. Human after all?


There were untimely exits also for Marion Bartoli against her lookalike Christina McHale (into her first Grand Slam third round), and Aga Radwanska, who peaked three weeks ago instead of this week.


Passing through

Maria Sharapova
may have been a little grumpy at getting onto Arthur Ashe at past 11pm. And so she didn’t hang around, dropping just two games to screech into round three. Scary. Also cruising along were Sam Stosur, Juan Martin Del Potro, Julien Benneteau, and Vera Zvonareva, albeit not in cruisy fashion. 


Stat attack

1


30 year-olds left in the women’s draw. Following Venus’s withdrawal, Francesca Schiavone is on her own.


Soundbite

“It’s the only thing I know where you can break your own stuff and get penalized for it, you know. If you take your shoe and throw it and break it, what happens to you? You’re out of a shoe, but it doesn’t really affect anyone else. If you’re hurting someone, or someone is in harm’s way, you know, I think if you took a poll of who would want to see someone go mental and hit something into the stands or something, I mean, people would probably vote for that. I said in Cincinnati, there’s a reason that Monday Night Raw gets better ratings than we do.”

Andy Roddick on why we should all get a little angry. Erm, ok.


Name check

Irina Falconi. Anyone else thinking of Batman? The young American dumped out 14th seed Dominika Cibulkova.


Back-pat

Speaking of young guns, a little retrospective praise for Laura Robson.  She may have been short of a game or few against Anabel Medina Garrigues yesterday, but still. A second consecutive Grand Slam second round (and making it through qualifying for the first time), for a 17 year-old who can still get so much better. As a friend and I were discussing, a few weeks ago, who would have thunk? Well done Robbo. More to come.


Tweet of the day

“In the lockerroom getting relationship advise from Serena and Venus. = #trouble

@CaroWozniacki. Just, scary.


Coming up this evening…


Marin Cilic v Bernard Tomic

Remember when Bernard Tomic complained about being kept up past his bedtime? Well it was Mr Cilic that forced him to do so, the pair contesting a tense five-setter at the Australian Open in 2010. Cilic won that one in five, but a lot has changed since then. The 21 year-old, once seen by many as a future Slam champ, has been in a win-less hole for a while, while Tomic, who has guile oozing from every swing of his bat, made his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Wimbledon. Still, anything can happen.


Elena Baltacha v Svetlana Kuznetsova

I watched these two play against each other in Eastbourne a couple of years ago, and mainly remember a lot of Russian exclamations  from both ends of the court. More of the same tonight, no doubt. Bally has a chance.


Caroline Wozniack v Aranxta Rus

Why this one? I’m not quite sure. It just caught my eye. Rus can hit the ball, that’s for sure, and could be a handful. Plus it will give us a chance to see if Caro’s incognito coach has made any difference yet.


Also in action

Roger Federer
(v Dudi Sela), Novak Djokovic (v  Carlos Berlocq), Gael Monfils (v Juan Carlos Ferrero), Richard Gasquet (v Ivo Karlovic), Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (v Sergei Bubka Jr, Vika Azarenka’s current beau), Serena Williams (v Michaella Krajicek), Ana Ivanovic (v Petra Cetkovska), Victoria Azarenka (v Gisela Dulko).


Who knew?

Jack Sock, the young American who earned his wild card into the main draw after winning the Kalamazoo play-offs, won his first-round match against Marc Gicquel without his long-term coach in his box. Why? He’s afraid of flying.


The daily click

Strong is beautiful - Must-see from the WTA.



US Open 2011 Diary: the walking wounded



Venus Williams revealed she is suffering from an auto-immune disease

Venus Williams revealed she is suffering from an auto-immune disease


Wednesday in New York


The walking wounded

It may be something in the air, the water, the burgers. Even a bizarre aftermath of Irene, if you will. But this year’s US Open has not been kind on the health front. Venus Williams last night became the latest player to join the mass visits to the medical centre, withdrawing ahead of her second round match against Sabine Lisicki and disclosing that she has been suffering from Sjögren’s Syndrome, an autoimmune disease that causes extreme fatigue and joint pain. Not good.


Hours earlier, Robin Soderling had done pretty much the same, citing illness.


Add to that the retirements of Yanina Wickmayer (body had enough), Louk Sorensen (cramps), Conor Niland (food poisioning), Jamie Hampton (cramps), Kei Nishikori, Ayumi Morita (shoulder), Misaki Doi, Frank Dancevic, Karol Beck, Marinko Matosevic, and the physios and doctors on site at Flushing have certainly been kept busy.


It’s a horrible time of the year, that’s for sure. Those hard courts are not exactly like cushions.


Far more importantly though, it raises severe questions about Venus’s future. Is it the beginning of the end? She doesn’t think so.

“We’ve decided to just enjoy tennis,” she said earlier this week. “It’s such an honor. We’ll do it as long as we can. Right now the end is not really in sight.”


I do hope so. Get well soon, V.


Men in red, green and black

Two men in adidas red produced two very different performances yesterday. Andy Murray crunched his way to an at times tricky, but ultimately extremely positive three-set win over Somdev Devvarman, while Marcos Baghdatis bumped and pumped but came up short against John Isner in four sets.


In a way it was the perfect first round match for Murray (and I like the red, by the way) – not too easy, not too hard. Robin Haase is next.


For Baghdatis, it proved that the now ponytail-less Cypriot still has plenty to bring to a tennis court. Yelling to the New York skies as he walloped and whacked, the much trimmer Bag-man had John Isner on every inch of his toes for two tie-breaks, won the third set, before squeezing the wrong way out of the fourth. Credit to Isner, but he needs to think about those 61 unforced errors.


An ugly grind

It seems to be a rather fashionable argument that there is not much time left on the tennis court for Andy Roddick. The original A-Rod is lacking form and results, and is dragging around a body that would much rather be on a beach in the Bahamas. But it’s not over yet. The 2003 champion survived a first round four-setter in over four hours against Michael ‘muscle’ Russell. Google him and you’ll see why.


Over and out

Bye bye, Bryans. The chest-bumping twins, who have owned New York, looked less than godly as they suffered a shock defeat in the first round, as the Wimbledon champions no less, to the lowly likes of Ivo Karlovic and Frank Moser. Human after all?


There were untimely exits also for Marion Bartoli against her lookalike Christina McHale (into her first Grand Slam third round), and Aga Radwanska, who peaked three weeks ago instead of this week.


Passing through

Maria Sharapova
may have been a little grumpy at getting onto Arthur Ashe at past 11pm. And so she didn’t hang around, dropping just two games to screech into round three. Scary. Also cruising along were Sam Stosur, Juan Martin Del Potro, Julien Benneteau, and Vera Zvonareva, albeit not in cruisy fashion. 


Stat attack

1


30 year-olds left in the women’s draw. Following Venus’s withdrawal, Francesca Schiavone is on her own.


Soundbite

“It’s the only thing I know where you can break your own stuff and get penalized for it, you know. If you take your shoe and throw it and break it, what happens to you? You’re out of a shoe, but it doesn’t really affect anyone else. If you’re hurting someone, or someone is in harm’s way, you know, I think if you took a poll of who would want to see someone go mental and hit something into the stands or something, I mean, people would probably vote for that. I said in Cincinnati, there’s a reason that Monday Night Raw gets better ratings than we do.”

Andy Roddick on why we should all get a little angry. Erm, ok.


Name check

Irina Falconi. Anyone else thinking of Batman? The young American dumped out 14th seed Dominika Cibulkova.


Back-pat

Speaking of young guns, a little retrospective praise for Laura Robson.  She may have been short of a game or few against Anabel Medina Garrigues yesterday, but still. A second consecutive Grand Slam second round, for a 17 year-old who can still get so much better. As a friend and I were discussing, who would have thunk? Well done Robbo. More to come.


Tweet of the day

“In the lockerroom getting relationship advise from Serena and Venus. = #trouble

@CaroWozniacki. Just, scary.


Coming up this evening…


Marin Cilic v Bernard Tomic

Remember when Bernard Tomic complained about being kept up past his bedtime? Well it was Mr Cilic that forced him to do so, the pair contesting a tense five-setter at the Australian Open in 2010. Cilic won that one in five, but a lot has changed since then. The 21 year-old, once seen by many as a future Slam champ, has been in a win-less hole for a while, while Tomic, who has guile oozing from every swing of his bat, made his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Wimbledon. Still, anything can happen.


Elena Baltacha v Svetlana Kuznetsova

I watched these two play against each other in Eastbourne a couple of years ago, and mainly remember a lot of Russian exclamations  from both ends of the court. More of the same tonight, no doubt. Bally has a chance.


Caroline Wozniack v Aranxta Rus

Why this one? I’m not quite sure. It just caught my eye. Rus can hit the ball, that’s for sure, and could be a handful. Plus it will give us a chance to see if Caro’s incognito coach has made any difference yet.


Also in action

Roger Federer
(v Dudi Sela), Novak Djokovic (v  Carlos Berlocq), Gael Monfils (v Juan Carlos Ferrero), Richard Gasquet (v Ivo Karlovic), Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (v Sergei Bubka Jr, Vika Azarenka’s current beau), Serena Williams (v Michaella Krajicek), Ana Ivanovic (v Petra Cetkovska), Victoria Azarenka (v Gisela Dulko).


The daily click

Strong is beautiful


Who knew?

Jack Sock, the young American who earned his wild card into the main draw after winning the Kalamazoo play-offs, won his first-round match against Marc Gicquel without his long-term coach in his box. Why? He’s afraid of flying.



UFC Ross Pearson: I suffered deep depression after Cole Miller loss, but left with winning feeling against Edson Barboza


UFC lightweight Ross Pearson has revealed that he suffered “serious depression” after losing to Cole Miller last year but left UFC 134 in Rio last week “with the winning feeling” in spite of losing to Brazilian Edson Barboza on a split points decision in a razor-close contest.


Ross Pearson

Ross Pearson


In the encounter with Barboza, the highly-regarded Brazilian muay thai fighter, Pearson appeared to win the first and edge the third round, although the contest was seen 29-28 by two judges. The third judge gave Pearson two of the three rounds.


Pearson, who also received a bonus $100,000 for fight of the night as well as his fight fee, insisted there would be no time required for mental recovery. “I was devastated last year after losing to Cole Miller,” revealed Pearson yesterday. “I fell into a deep depression over it. I really needed time to recover, and get myself back again. To be honest, I left Rio last weekend feeling like a winner. There is no down from the fight. I’ve watched it again, I thought I won, but I take nothing away from Edson, because he’s a classy guy.”


Pearson enhanced his credentials with this contest, and said he would fight anyone the UFC matchmaker Joe Silva put in front of him, and would even fight in November on the UFC 138 event in Birmingham if he was needed.


Pearson is interviewed by your correspondent on this week’s ESPN UFC PODCAST http://es.pn/kRAf1o

The podcast can also be downloaded on iTunes: http://bit.ly/eRhWHQ.


The entire UFC 134 main card receives the full break-down treatment, after Anderson Silva once again showed why he could be regarded as the best mixed martial artist, pound for pound, possibly of all time.



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