Monday, October 10, 2011

NBA lockout: Whose side are you on? [poll]

It's official. Commissioner David Stern canceled the first two weeks of the NBA season after a lengthy negotiating session with locked-out players in New York failed to achieve a new collective bargaining agreement.

Stern, his deputy Adam Silver and selected owners met with union executive director Billy Hunter and president Derek Fisher, working into the night to solve differences on how to divide income and handle caps on each team’s costs.

Thirteen hours of talks in two days, and still no deal.

Who do you side with? Vote in our poll below, and, if you are a Facebook member, leave a comment below telling us why you voted the way you did.

 

 

RELATED:

NBA labor meetings begin as season's start hangs in balance

No deal reached as NBA negotiators meet Sunday

Drew League earns payback against Goodman in exhibition

--Lance Pugmire and Houston Mitchell

USC basketball: Trojans announce TV schedule for 2011-12 season

Usclogo_200 About half of the USC men's basketball team's 31 games during the 2011-12 regular season are scheduled to be televised, according to a release from the school Monday.

Sixteen USC games are scheduled to be telecast: Six nationally on Fox Sports Net, seven regionally on Prime Ticket or Fox Sports West and one each on the Big Ten Network, the Mountain West Sports Network and Comcast SportsNet.

Here are the six games scheduled to be shown on Fox Sports Net:

Dec. 17 vs. Georgia at the Galen Center (7 p.m.)
Dec. 22 vs. Kansas at the Galen Center (8 p.m.)
Jan. 8 vs. Arizona at the Galen Center (2:30 p.m.)
Jan. 15 vs. UCLA at the Galen Center (6 p.m.)
Feb. 4 at  Washington (8 p.m.)
Feb. 12 vs. Stanford (4:30 p.m.)

Also, the Trojans' Nov. 26 game at the Las Vegas Invitational is scheduled to be shown nationally on ESPN2 if they face North Carolina in the final or semifinals.

Here's the list of USC games that are scheduled to air regionally on Prime Ticket or Fox Sports West:

Nov. 14 vs. Nebraska (Prime Ticket, 7:30 p.m.)
Dec. 10 vs. New Mexico (FS West, 4 p.m.)
Dec. 31 at Stanford (FS West, 3:30 p.m.)
Jan. 21 at Oregon State (Prime Ticket, 7:30 p.m.)
Jan. 28 vs. Utah (Prime Ticket, 8 p.m.)
Feb. 15 at UCLA (Prime Ticket, 7:30 p.m.)
Feb. 25 at Arizona State (Prime Ticket, 5 p.m.)

Also, USC’s games Feb. 9 vs. Cal, Feb. 23 at Arizona, March 1 vs. Washington and March 3 vs. Washington State are listed as "wild-card" games under consideration to be televised.

Lastly, three of USC’s road games are scheduled to be televised in the local market and will be available on some cable systems in L.A. Those games are:

Nov. 17 at San Diego State (Mountain West Sports Network, Channel 4 San Diego, 7 p.m.)
Dec. 3 at Minnesota (Big Ten Network, 1:15 p.m.)
Dec. 29 at California (Comcast SportsNet California, 6 p.m.)

-- Baxter Holmes

Video: Remembering Al Davis


Thoughts of the Raiders’ owner often lead to his penchant for swimming against the tide, says William C. Rhoden.

Arizona fires Mike Stoops

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The first Pacific 12 Conference coach fired this year won't be UCLA's Rick Neuheisel. Instead, it was the coach of UCLA's next opponent.

In a somewhat surprising move, given that the season is only half over, Arizona announced Monday it had fired Mike Stoops six games into his eighth season. The school announced that defensive coordinator Tim Kish would be the interim coach for the rest of the season.

Arizona has been reeling of late, losing 10 straight games to Division 1opponents dating back to last season. The Wildcats fell to 1-5 this year after losing last weekend at previously winless Oregon State. Arizona's only win this season came against 1-AA Northern Arizona.

"We're appreciative of Mike's dedicated work for the Arizona Wildcats," Athletic Director Greg Byrne said in a statement. "Coach Stoops had many successes as our head coach over the last eight seasons. It was a difficult decision but I feel now is the time for new leadership and direction."

Stoops leaves with a 41-50 overall record and was 27-38 in conference games. Arizona stuck with Stoops through four straight non-winning seasons before he broke through with an 8-5 season in 2008. He followed with another 8-5 year and started 7-1 last year before losing five straight.

Arizona has faced a brutal stretch of late, losing twice each to Oregon, Stanford and Oklahoma State during the recent downturn.

Arizona's last win over a major college school was, ironically, at UCLA last Oct. 30. The Wildcats have a bye this week before hosting UCLA on Oct. 20.

 -- Chris Dufresne

chris.dufresne@latimes.com

Photo: Mike Stoops patrols the sideline during Saturday's loss to Oregon State at Reser Stadium. Credit: Jim Z. Rider / US Presswire

 

 

David Stern: First two weeks of NBA season canceled

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NBA Commissioner David Stern on Monday announced the cancellation of the first two weeks of the regular season after a lengthy negotiating session with locked-out players in New York failed to achieve a new collective bargaining agreement.

Stern, his deputy Adam Silver and selected owners met with union executive director Billy Hunter and president Derek Fisher, working into the night to solve differences on how to divide income and handle caps on each team’s costs.

Thirteen hours of talks in two days, and still no deal.

We’ll have more later at latimes.com/sports.

-- Lance Pugmire

Photo: NBA Commissioner David Stern arrives for labor negotiations today in New York. Credit: Louis Lanzano / Associated Press

Plate Contests, Neutral Refs, Overpriced Tickets and Openside Flankers


Week six here in New Zealand and it's a twiddling thumbs moment as we wind down from the quarter-finals and wait for the high-octane weekend ahead. So, a few thoughts:


 


1 ) Why isn't there a plate competition for the best losers in the pool stages? A football World Cup gathers pace in the knockout stages: RWC has no option but to take a breather because of the battering players take.  As the teams begin to rev up here in Auckland, wouldn't it be a great focal point to be heading off tonight to, say, Hamilton for the semi-final plate game between Samoa and Japan, then to Rotorua tomorrow for Fiji against Canada? Money, as ever, is the root reason why not. I say there has to be a way round it. These countries crave exposure and competition. This is a way to get both.


2) Discussion point. Would it matter if Steve Walsh, a Kiwi by birth, an Aussie by trade now, were to referee a final between the All Blacks and whomever? I say not. Just as Geoff Coooke once said that he wouldn't mind if Clive Norling did every England-Wales game, so the same is true now. Give the best man the whistle. As for Walsh, well what a comeback. He's been criticised, and rightly so, but he's served his time and is the best whistler here.


3 ) Memo to RWC 2015. Don't price every bugger out of the market. It's galling to see empty seats as there were at the quarter-finals. The host union can only gets its quid back through tickets sales. That's why the tickets available were at around £200. It will be even more for Wales-France on Saturday. Tickets are still available. Better to reduce revenue to increase atmosphere and spectacle.


4) This has been the tournament of the no.7s. David Pocock's display for the Wallabies against South Africa was the best individual performance of any player in any position. Brussow's injury might have helped, and, by the by, would Ireland have beaten Australia if Pocock had played that day? I only ask. Sean O'Brien v Pocock would have been worth the admission price alone. Greatest ever no 7 ? Great man of Samoa and New Zealand, Michael Jones. Unless you think differently, of course.



Week 5 Quick Hits: Bills Up, Eagles Down

Andy Benoit takes a quick tour of every N.F.L. game on Mondays. Did he miss something? Share your thoughts in the comments section.

Bills 24, Eagles 21

Much will be made of Michael Vick’s career-worst four interceptions. But if Jason Avant had held onto a very catchable third down pass near the red zone late in the fourth quarter, we’d probably be talking about how Vick led a jaw-dropping comeback similar to the one he spearheaded at  New Meadowlands Stadium last season. By the fourth quarter, the Eagles had the Bills figured out on both sides of the ball.

Of course, Dream Teams are supposed to have the opponent figured out by the first quarter. Instead, it was Chan Gailey’s club that played with the upper hand. The Bills’ D had a beat on the Eagles’ offense, as George Wilson and Jairus Byrd were all over the field, forcing two turnovers and a litany of other mistakes. Offensively, Gailey tailored the gameplan for exploiting Philly’s dreadful linebacking corps. Aiding this cause is that Juan Castillo’s new defensive scheme places an extra heavy burden on linebacking. The Bills successfully isolated Fred Jackson outside, mainly through off-tackle runs and screen passes. Jackson, the most underrated running back in the A.F.C., finished with 111 yards on 26 carries and 85 yards on six receptions.

Shrewd offensive planning, as well as timely forced turnovers (the Bills lead the league with 12 interceptions, one more than they had all last season), are why a team can go 4-1 despite  defense giving up over 450 yards four straight weeks.

Chiefs 28, Colts 24

The water has stopped gushing into Kansas City’s boat. Taking advantage of favorable scheduling (Minnesota and Indy in back-to-back weeks), the Chiefs have temporarily dropped out of contention in the Andrew Luck sweepstakes. That’s fine if their quarterback can continue to post 100-plus ratings (he’s done so the last three weeks). Perhaps all this team needed was to see Matt Cassel berate Todd Haley.

As for the Colts, they’d be wise to go with Curtis Painter at Cincinnati next week, even if Kerry Collins is healthy. Not because Painter has posted spectacular numbers – he threw for a hearty 277 yards Sunday, but his 281 yards Monday against the Bucs were misleading given that 146 of them came off Pierre Garcon catch-and-runs – but because he at least has a feel for Indy’s system.

Vikings 34, Cardinals 10

Adrian Peterson scored three first-quarter touchdowns, each of them ending with a fierce blow to the Cardinals rookie cornerback Patrick Peterson at the goal line (more “Welcome to the N.F.L.” moments for a gifted but slightly overwhelmed first-round pick). The Vikings finished with 172 yards on the ground, a somewhat surprising figure given how stellar the Cardinals’ run defense was against the Giants last week.

The cliff notes of this game paint a perfect portrait of the 2011 Vikings: 172 yards rushing, Donovan McNabb completing just 10 passes to his limited (read: awful) receiving corps, and the defense beating up an inconsistent Cardinals offense thanks in large part to drastic pro-purple mismatches on the edges: end Jared Allen against tackle Levi Brown on the left, and end Brian Robison against tackle Brandon Keith on the right. Allen and Robison, who have been playing with great quickness and tempo the past few weeks, each had two sacks.

That said, the Vikings are 1-4 because a run-only offense and shaky pass defense masked by two good edge-rushers is not a formula for success against non-N.F.C. West opponents.

Seahawks 36, Giants 25

When it comes to turnovers, the Giants are reverting these days. They’re not just dishing them out – they’re dishing them out in ideal locations (two fumbles inside their 20-yard line last week, two this week). Five turnovers and 11 failed third down conversions on 12 attempts? Giant players would be wise to arrive to Tom Coughlin’s next meeting twenty minutes early.

Seattle’s cross-country victory may have been a Pyrrhic one if quarterback Tarvaris Jackson’s pectoral injury is serious. Too bad; with Sidney Rice finally healthy, Jackson was starting to show glimmers of comfort. Jackson was also developing a rapport with Doug Baldwin, an intriguing undrafted rookie wideout who, with 136 yards receiving, would have been the story of this game if not for the spectacular reel of highlights turned in by the undrafted second-year receiver Victor Cruz (eight catches for 161 yards and a touchdown dance that is sure to catch on once fans forget that it was Cruz’s slip that caused Eli Manning’s late pick-six to Brandon Browner).

Steelers 38, Titans 17

Forget vitamins, exercise routines, crossword puzzles and drinking from the Fountain of Youth. The Steelers have cracked the anti-aging code: five touchdown passes from your quarterback, 107 yards on 11 carries from your second-year power back, a dominant performance from your backup defensive line and a handful of impressive solo plays from your superstar safety. Mix these ingredients together and you won’t be accused of being old for at least seven days (and probably 20 days if your next two games are against Jacksonville and Arizona).

Saints 30, Panthers 27

It’s almost as if Cam Newton came into the game agreeing with all the analysts who worried about Gregg Williams baiting him into turnovers. Instead of living in constant fear of that, Newton, like a swimmer accepting the initial misery of icy cold water, just dove right in. He threw his first pass directly to Saints cornerback Patrick Robinson. After he got the senseless turnover out of the way, there was nothing to worry about, and he went on to have a borderline spectacular game.

But, once again, the Panthers lost. In terms of points, Newton’s opening interception was the difference (it led to an easy Saints touchdown). Not that the Carolina faithful are worried. No team has ever managed to excite its fan base with losses quite like these 2011 Panthers. They’ve dropped four of their first five, yet somehow the momentum only continues to build.

Understandably so; Newton is as impressive as any first-year quarterback we’ve seen. But if you really want to be impressed, take a gander at how Drew Brees is conducting a Saints offense that now runs through Darren Sproles and sensational second-year tight end Jimmy Graham. Sproles had 91 total yards on 16 touches; and Graham 129 yards on eight receptions.

Bengals 30, Jaguars 20

The other two starting rookie quarterbacks squared off before a television audience composed of family and close friends. Andy Dalton of the Bengals had the edge over Blaine Gabbert of the Jaguars. Dalton was 21 for 33 for 179 yards, 2 touchdowns and an interception; Gabbert was 15 for 28 for 221 yards and a touchdown.

In viewing the film of both quarterbacks in the weeks leading to the game, two things are apparent: Dalton has slightly more talent around him (including receivers who can create their own separation), and his team has kept him in the simpler chapters of its playbook, especially on first and second down. If Dalton had Gabbert’s arm strength and athleticism, it’s possible the Bengals would be shoveling more on his plate.

Raiders 25, Texans 20

The two most run-oriented offenses in football (statistically speaking) aired it out. Jason Campbell attempted 35 passes, and Matt Schaub 51. Both completed less than 50 percent. Darren McFadden and Arian Foster, maybe the two best runners in the A.F.C. right now, had fewer than 23 carries and 70 yards each.

The Raiders wanted to attack cornerback Jason Allen and the still-mysterious Texans secondary; the Texans wanted to….apparently, not attack a Raiders run defense that had given up a league-worst 5.9 yards per attempt coming in, and apparently not account for the absence of leading receiver Andre Johnson.

To be fair, Houston’s passing game did generate 116 yards from throws to Arian Foster, and it managed to capitalize on the heavy-footedness of gimpy middle linebacker Rolando McClain in coverage. Tight ends Owen Daniels and Joel Dreessen combined for 12 catches and 201 yards. But none of those came on the final play, which was highlighted by Michael Huff’s game-saving interception in the end zone.

Don’t be surprised if the Raiders’ “Winning one for Al” story line grows  over the next month. Oakland’s coming schedule: home vs. Cleveland, home vs. Kansas City, bye, home vs. Denver.

49ers 38, Bucs 3

Chalk this one up to a young Bucs team traveling 2,800 miles on a short week after playing their first nationally televised game in the Raheem Morris era. It happens.

Niner fans, don’t take this as a slight to your team. Elementary as the Niners are offensively, they’re one overtime away from being undefeated.

Chargers 29, Broncos 24

As quarterback controversies go, it doesn’t get worse than the one John Fox has on his hands. First, the controversy has climaxed with the team fresh off its fourth loss and entering a bye. So it has two weeks to fester.

Second, deep down, Fox knows that there will be at least a few players in his locker room who feel that he sacrificed the good of the team by capitulating to the Mile High fans. Those who know football, including Broncos players, know that – this game aside – Tim Tebow can’t match Kyle Orton as an all-around quarterback.

But Orton has been hounded by critics all season, and his performance has suffered. After a reportedly tough week of practice, he went 6 for 13 with an interception in the first half Sunday. Fox apparently felt as if he had no choice and nothing to lose in benching the usually steady Orton.

With Tebow leading two scoring drives and giving the Broncos a shot at the end zone for a chance to defeat the Chargers on the final play, fans will criticize Fox for not making the switch sooner. And they’ll assume that he and his staff are giddy to see what Tebow has. In truth, Fox and his staff know that a gameplan full of quarterback draws and screen passes can work in improvisational fashion, but not against a defense that will have seen it on film and prepared accordingly.

This logic won’t register with a lot of Bronco fans. All they know is that Tebow came in and showed grit, had that “It” factor and gave the offense a spark.

Patriots 30, Jets 21

The Jets concluded their brutal three-game road trip with a third straight loss. Time for panic? No. But it’s certainly a time for concern. With 7:14 remaining in the fourth and the score 27-21, the Patriots ran the ball 11 times for 62 yards to set up a game-icing field goal with just over one minute remaining. New England, featuring a solid but thoroughly unspectacular BenJarvus Green-Ellis, finished with 152 yards on 35 carries (Green-Ellis accounted for a career-high 136 of those yards).

What has happened to the Jet run defense? Supposedly the foundation of Rex Ryan’s club, it ranked 27th the conclusion of this game.

Packers 25, Falcons 14

The Packers finally got a defensive win, but their offense once again deserves a  tip of the cap. Aaron Rodgers was able to get comfortable behind a makeshift offensive line and throw for nearly 400 yards. An astounding 12 Packers caught a pass. As for that makeshift line, it appears to have a bright future given that its most impressive performer was Derek Sherrod, the first-round rookie who could barely make the game-day roster last month.

Andy Benoit is an NFL analyst for CBSSports.com and founder of NFLTouchdown.com. He can be reached at andy.benoit-at-NFLTouchdown.com or @Andy_Benoit.

Delmon Young back in lineup for Tigers in Game 2

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Delmon Young was activated by the Detroit Tigers on Monday, and the American League division series hero will be in left field and batting third in Game 2 of the AL championship series against the Texas Rangers at the Ballpark in Arlington.

Young, a former Camarillo High School standout, hit three home runs in the division series against the New York Yankees, but he suffered a rib-cage strain in Game 5 and was left off the roster for the ALCS.

But when right fielder Magglio Ordonez suffered a season-ending broken right ankle in Game 1 Saturday night, a 3-2 Rangers win, the Tigers, in a move that hints of desperation, turned to Young on Monday.

"He did not swing [Sunday], but he was tested by the doctors and did all kinds of other workouts and exercises," Tigers Manager Jim Leyland said. "He's fine. He's swinging good today. So he will play."

Texas left-hander Derek Holland will oppose Detroit right-hander Max Scherzer in Game 2, which was scheduled for Sunday night but postponed to 1 p.m. PDT Monday because of rain some four hours before first pitch.

NBA lockout: NBA labor talks inching forward

Fabforum In Monday's labor negotiations to try and salvage the start of the NBA season, ownership led by NBA Commissioner David Stern and players representatives are working to solve a system that has left more than two-thirds of the teams losing money last season -- according to the league -- without taking an unfair drop in pay -- according to the players.

One of the key issues is settling on the return of a mid-level exception, which allows a team once a season to sign a veteran player for the average NBA salary, even if that payment puts the team over the league-instituted salary cap. In the past, that player could be signed even if the team was already over the salary cap.

According to TNT's David Aldridge, the two sides are nearing agreement Monday on how to treat the mid-level exception. Other reports from New York say the sides are showing "movement" on how to split basketball-related income (BRI), which before talks resumed Sunday had the players seeking 53% after the owners last week sought a 50-50 share.

The Times is monitoring the lockout meeting and will have further updates today on latimes.com/sports.

RELATED:

NBA labor meetings begin as season's start hangs in balance

No deal reached as NBA negotiators meet Sunday

Drew League earns payback against Goodman in exhibition

--Lance Pugmire  

Photo: Derek Fisher arrives at the negotiating session on Monday. Credit: Louis Lanzano / Associated Press.

 

Chris Dufresne: BCS Dream or Nightmare? [Video]

The Times' Chris Dufresne talks about college football's 13 undefeated teams and what's in store when the BCS rankings are released.

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Chris Dufresne: The BCS and the unbeaten

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Tim Tebow fans will have to wait at least one more day

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Tim Tebow is going to be Denver's starting quarterback the next time the Broncos take the field -- we all know it, right? The only person who doesn't seem to know it is the one person whose opinion actually matters, Coach John Fox.

Fox insists the decision has not been made, saying he will wait until meeting with his staff and reviewing film on the players' day off Monday before revealing the starting quarterback on Tuesday.

Poll: Should Tim Tebow be the Broncos' starting quarterback?

Fan-favorite Tebow replaced ineffective starter Kyle Orton in the second half of the Broncos' 29-24 loss to the San Diego Chargers on Sunday. Although his first several drives went nowhere, Tebow eventually led Denver on two scoring drives, reaching the end zone on a 12-yard run of his own and a screen pass that Knowshon Moreno took 28 yards for a touchdown.

Tebow also drove the Broncos 51 yards on their final possession before having a desperation pass batted down in the end zone on the final play.

Overall, he completed four of 10 passes for 79 yards. Obviously those aren't very impressive numbers, but Tebow did give them a chance to win the game. Isn't that what coaches always say they want from their quarterbacks?

ALSO:

NFL Week 5 two-minute drill

Green Bay Packers: Will Aaron Rodgers & Co. go 16-0? [Poll]

Jets-Patriots: Well, at least one team feels better about itself

-- Chuck Schilken

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Photo: Tim Tebow. Credit: Doug Pensinger / Associated Press

Your votes are in: The 20 greatest L.A. sports figures of all time

Oj_275 It started out as the 10 greatest L.A. sports figures of all time, but after getting 1,712 ballots, we are expanding it to the top 20. It is quite the eclectic group, a nice mix of announcers, coaches, athletes and owners.

We will unveil No. 20 Tuesday, and follow it with one each weekday until No. 1 is revealed. But first, a look at some of those who just missed the top 20:

O.J. Simpson: Finished in 21st, with many people noting that they wanted to vote for him but just couldn't after his involvement in certain legal matters.

Bob Miller: The Kings announcer just missed the top 20. He was often in the top five on the ballots he was on but just wasn't on enough of them.

Kirk Gibson: One swing almost landed the former Dodger among the top 20.

Deacon Jones: The legendary Ram fell short, but one of his teammates made the top 20.

Others bubbling below the top 20: Eric Dickerson, John McKay, Rafer Johnson, Willie Shoemaker, Oscar De La Hoya, Luc Robitaille, Shaquille O’Neal, Orel Hershiser, James Worthy, Gene Autry, Elroy Hirsch, Bill Walton, Duke Snider, Muhammad Ali, Tiger Woods and Nolan Ryan.

Eighty-seven people received votes, with the rest of the list consisting of names such as Jaime Jarrin, Zenyatta, Classie Freddie Blassie, the Dodgers' infield of Garvey, Lopes, Russell and Cey, and the Coliseum.

Thanks for voting everyone! Let the speculation over the top 20 begin!

ALSO:

Meet the new Dodgers, same as the old Dodgers?

Kobe Bryant says he'd love to play with Carmelo Anthony

-- Houston Mitchell

Photo: O.J. Simpson, shown with the Trojans in 1968, just missed the top 20. Credit: Los Angeles Times

Chicago Marathon: One runner dies, another gives birth [Updated]

Runners compete in the Chicago Marathon

A Greensboro, N.C., firefighter collapsed about 500 yards from the finish line of the Chicago Marathon on Sunday and was pronounced dead at a hospital soon after.

Capt. William Caviness was running to raise money for a charity that helps burn victims. According to the Chicago Tribune, Caviness, 35 and the father of two children, was a veteran marathon runner and lifelong athlete.

"Will was a great man, father, husband, son, brother, uncle, cousin," his father, Lee, said in an email. "He was a real HERO doing something to help others until the very end. ... I am just heartbroken. Devastated, and it feels so unreal."

The cause of death has not been determined. An autopsy was scheduled for Monday.

[Updated at 12:52 p.m.: The Cook County medical examiner's office reported Monday that further tests are needed to help determine why Caviness died.]

It was the first death at the marathon since 2007 but the sixth since 1998.

In much happier news, another marathon participant -- Chicago's Amber Miller -- gave birth hours after crossing the finish line. She was 39 weeks pregnant but was given a doctor's approval to run half the race and walk the other half.

"Everybody just kind of stared as I'm running by," said Miller, who was accompanied by her husband during the race. 

Although contractions started toward the end of the race, Miller had time to grab a bite to eat before baby girl June was born at 10:29 p.m., weighing 7 pounds, 13 ounces.

Moses Mosop of Kenya set a course record (2:05:37), and Russia's Liliya Shobukhova claimed the women's title (2:18:20), becoming the first person to win the race three straight times.

ALSO:

Al Davis, football's ultimate bad guy, will be missed

Ryan Braun, Prince Fielder deliver momentum swings for Brewers

-- Chuck Schilken

Photo: Runners compete in the Chicago Marathon on Sunday. Credit: Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune / MCT

Chicago Marathon: One runner dies, another gives birth

Runners compete in the Chicago Marathon

A Greensboro, N.C., firefighter collapsed about 500 yards from the finish line of the Chicago Marathon on Sunday and was pronounced dead at a hospital soon after.

Capt. William Caviness was running to raise money for a charity that helps burn victims. According to the Chicago Tribune, Caviness, 35 and the father of two children, was a veteran marathon runner and lifelong athlete.

"Will was a great man, father, husband, son, brother, uncle, cousin," his father, Lee, said in an email. "He was a real HERO doing something to help others until the very end. ... I am just heartbroken. Devastated, and it feels so unreal."

The cause of death has not been determined. An autopsy was scheduled for Monday.

It was the first death at the marathon since 2007 but the sixth since 1998.

In much happier news, another marathon participant -- Chicago's Amber Miller -- gave birth hours after crossing the finish line. She was 39 weeks pregnant but was given a doctor's approval to run half the race and walk the other half.

"Everybody just kind of stared as I'm running by," said Miller, who was accompanied by her husband during the race. 

Although contractions started toward the end of the race, Miller had time to grab a bite to eat before baby girl June was born at 10:29 p.m., weighing 7 pounds, 13 ounces.

Moses Mosop of Kenya set a course record (2:05:37), and Russia's Liliya Shobukhova claimed the women's title (2:18:20), becoming the first person to win the race three straight times.

ALSO:

Al Davis, football's ultimate bad guy, will be missed

Ryan Braun, Prince Fielder deliver momentum swings for Brewers

-- Chuck Schilken

Photo: Runners compete in the Chicago Marathon on Sunday. Credit: Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune / MCT

Are Better Times Ahead for the Jets?

It was somewhat surprising that the Jets left Gillette Stadium late Sunday night with mixed emotions. Players spoke of frustration, of shock, at losing three consecutive games, all against quality A.F.C.
opponents. Yet they also sounded much more encouraged than in weeks past, happier certainly than after the debacles in Oakland and Baltimore.

“It’s a shame,” Matt Slauson said, “because our team did get better this week. Still, too many mistakes made.”

Slauson wondered why the Jets have lost their aura of confidence on the road, where they went 15-7 the last two seasons, but perhaps his general optimism reflected the feelings of their coach, Rex Ryan, who told his players that a turnaround was imminent, that he saw evidence of improvement. This is the Jets’ third three-game skid under Ryan, and, as he is quick to mention, they still reached the playoffs in 2009, when it happened twice.

The Jets’ staggering offense – 151 yards through three quarters against the N.F.L.’s worst defense? – presents potential for discord, and steering his team through this adversity will be a stiff test for Ryan, perhaps the stiffest of his tenure.

The schedule suggests that luck swings toward the Jets next week, when the hapless Dolphins visit MetLife Stadium on Monday night. If they do not defeat Miami, much larger problems exist. Even if they win, a victory hardly legitimizes their standing as playoff contenders, let alone Super Bowl contenders.

If the Jets, as they say, witnessed progress Sunday – in Shonn Greene’s rushing performance, in the offensive line – then it almost would seem more representative of their improvement if a more challenging opponent appeared on the schedule. Then, the Jets could know glean a better idea whether, despite being 2-3, they are headed toward respectability or infamy.

Monday Matchup: Bears at Lions

Bears (2-2) at Lions (4-0), 8:30 p.m. Eastern, ESPN
Line: Lions by 5

Lost in the excitement over the Detroit Lions’ 4-0 start is this shocking news item out of Chicago: the Bears have a fullback.

That’s right, Mike Martz finally broke down and got himself a player who can protect the quarterback and help with run blocking. It was like when dad finally gave in and had his cholesterol checked, and the doctors found a three-pound slab of bacon lodged in his bloodstream.

The new fullback, Tyler Clutts, is a 26-year-old rookie who played in the Canadian Football League, the only place on earth where a fullback is more irrelevant than in Martz’s playbook. Clutts has somehow earned playing time, and he responded with a big block on Matt Forte’s 46-yard run and some other quiet-but-significant contributions last week against the Carolina Panthers.

Clutts is part of Martz’s latest effort to not lapse into complete self-parody: the Bears ran the ball, frequently and effectively, against the Panthers. Emphasizing the run and keeping Clutts at Jay Cutler’s side against the Lions’ defensive line this week will also be a wise move: the first-round pick Nick Fairley is expected to play, meaning the Lions now have two defensive tackles (along with Ndamukong Suh) who are hard to block and treat roughing-the-passer penalties as something of a dare.

Pick: Bears
Pick does not reflect the betting line

London 2012 Olympics: Do we really want drug cheats to wear the Team GB vest in London?


David Millar (left) and Mark Cavendish (right) at the World Championships

Hot topic: should reformed drug cheat David Millar (l) be allowed to help world champion Mark Cavendish (r) win Olympic gold in London?


The big question for British sports fans is: do you want people who have cheated, lied, sneakily pumped themselves full of drugs, not just once as a mistaken error, but in a systemised, deliberate series of actions, to represent the country?


Or is it okay that because these athletes are good at what they do (and who knows how much of this has been influenced by their previous drug-taking) that they are worthy of wearing the TeamGB vest?


Clearly the door has been opened for athletes like Dwain Chambers and David Millar to legally challenge the lifetime ban imposed by the British Olympic Association in the wake of LaShawn Merritt's successful appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.


And in the end they might legally, and technically, earn the right to compete at the London 2012 Olympics. But is this morally and ethically the right thing to do?


There are lots of justifications that readers have suggested – like allowing athletes the chance for redemption, not to keep punishing them once they have served their time and perhaps, most potently, the fear that other countries will have their disgraced, duplicitous athletes competing at the London Olympics, so why not the UK?


But this last argument simply reduces the UK to the lower standards of other countries.


And why shouldn't authorities here decide the calibre of people and the appropriate standards of conduct that are worthy for such a privileged berth? Certainly the large majority of athletes believe this to be the case, and more than 95 per cent of Olympians support the BOA stance.


Yet a Telegraph poll, which elicited one of the website's most popular responses, showed that 53 per cent of readers thought Dwain Chambers should be allowed to compete at the London Olympics.


The World Anti Doping Agency had previously made an interesting pitch to CAS, saying that the reduction of sanctions for athletes who provide information about their suppliers has not been as successful as anticipated.


They had been enticing athletes to provide information about doping, the deal being that their sentences would be reduced to six months for the information.  But these sentences still fell under the International Olympic Committee's ban for the next Games (the very ban that has collapsed after the Merritt test case).


The argument, made before the Merritt ruling, was interesting because, with WADA's detection not progressing at the pace they would like, it could have been interpreted as a request for more lenient sentences for whistlebowers, which would then have allowed them to appear in London.


The Merritt ruling now keeps the incentive in place for athletes like Millar to come clean about their drug taking with the offer of possible Olympic places for those who tell the truth.


On Tuesday, UK Anti Doping is launching its "Clean Sport" mantra at Trafalgar Square, which now has a hollow note. The only certainty that will come out of this is that the nine-month lead-up to the London Olympics will be enveloped by possible legal challenges from Chambers and Millar.



Jets-Patriots: Well, at least one team feels better about itself

The New England Patriots and New York Jets
The Jets and Patriots each entered Sunday's AFC East matchup with some concerns: New York on offense, with quarterback Mark Sanchez and company struggling at times this season; and New England on defense, giving up 477.5 yards a game.

A day later, the Patriots have got to be feeling better about their defense after a 30-21 victory, during which they held the Jets to just 255 yards and kept them from a first down on seven of their 11 possessions.

“We said, ‘Enough's enough,' and that's where you make your stand,” said Patriots defensive end Andre Carter, who had seven tackles.

And the Patriots (4-1) accomplished all of that without star linebacker Jerod Mayo, who was out with a serious knee sprain.

“I think every week we've been getting better and better and better [defensively], and today was a good day to get back on track,” defensive tackle Vince Wilfork said.

The New England offense continued to roll, with quarterback Tom Brady completing 24 of 33 passes for 321 yards, a touchdown and an interception and BenJarvus Green-Ellis rushing for a career-high 136 yards and two touchdowns.

Meanwhile, the question marks linger for the Jets' (2-3) offense. A New York Post headline reads, "Three and Doubt," referring to the team's three-game losing streak (a headline on the Jets' website is a bit more optimistic: "Not Perfect, But Offense Makes Some Strides.")

“We lost two in a row last year, but we bounced right back from it,” said Sanchez, who completed 16 of 26 passes for 166 yards and two touchdowns a week after going 11 for 35 for 119 yards in a 34-17 loss to the Baltimore Ravens. "This is a little different territory. So we're going to see what a lot of guys are made of on this team, and it's my job to get guys ready to play this next week against Miami."

The Jets might get a little relief by hosting the winless Dolphins next week, but then things get tough again, with games against three 4-1 teams: the San Diego Chargers, the Buffalo Bills and the Patriots.

ALSO:

NFL Week 5 two-minute drill

How the West is winning this season in the NFL

Tim Tebow: Does he deserve to be an NFL starter?

Raiders hang on to beat Texans on day after Al Davis' death

-- Chuck Schilken

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Photo: New England Patriots running back BenJarvus Green-Ellis dives for a touchdown as quarterback Tom Brady (12), and guard Brian Waters celebrate against the New York Jets on Sunday. Credit: Greg M. Cooper / US Presswire

Green Bay Packers: Will Aaron Rodgers & Co. go 16-0? [Poll]

Rodgers_640
The Green Bay Packers are 5-0 after a 25-14 victory over the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday night. Quarterback Aaron Rodgers and his cohorts are riding an 11-game winning streak dating back to the end of the regular season last year and including their run to the Super Bowl championship.

So how long can they keep it going? Long enough to become only the second 16-0 team in NFL history? The toughest games on the Packers' schedule appear to be a pair of matchups with the league's only other undefeated team, the Detroit Lions, and a date with the 4-1 San Diego Chargers.

Writers from around the Tribune Co. will be discussing the topic -- check back throughout the day for their responses. Also join the discussion by voting in the poll and leaving a comment of your own.

Sam Farmer, Los Angeles Times

Of course the Packers stand a chance of going undefeated in the regular season. Will they? I doubt it.

We’re just five weeks into the season, and so many things can happen over the next 11 games -– key injuries, a letdown, or simply a good team that’s better than Green Bay on that particular day. Plus, there’s the likelihood that if the Packers were to build a comfortable lead in the division -– no guarantee, considering how Detroit is playing -– they would take their foot off the pedal, rest some starters, and coast into the postseason.

It wasn’t so long ago that the 14-0 Colts did that, and, despite all the criticism from their fans, made it to the Super Bowl.

ALSO:

NFL Week 5 two-minute drill

Tim Tebow: Does he deserve to be an NFL starter?

Jets-Patriots: Well, at least one team feels better about itself

Photo: Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, whose team is now 5-0, with an 11-game winning streak dating back to last season. Credit: Rich Addicks / Associated Press

The Victor Cruz Show, the Good and the Ugly

Giants  games boil down to Victor Cruz. At least it has seemed that way recently. He caught two touchdown passes to help beat the Eagles. He lived to tell the tale of laying the ball on the turf even though he wasn’t touched against Arizona. And he had a spectacular catch against the Seahawks but also played a role in two crucial turnovers.

In the fourth quarter, he fumbled after a short completion, and he later tipped a pass deep in Seattle territory that turned into a long interception return for a touchdown by the Seahawks – a huge swing in the game.

Cruz’s on-the-job training has been entertaining/aggravating. After the success of his tip-the-ball-to-yourself touchdown (you should see the clip above if you haven’t already), he seemed to want to try something similar late in the game. But tipping the ball in traffic near the goal line isn’t as advisable.

Here are his responses to questions from reporters after Sunday’s loss:

Q: On the interception, when you stuck out that one hand, did you think you had it?

A: I thought I gripped it, but as soon as I went to grip it in I got hit and it got bobbled up in the air and I knew it was all downhill from there because there were two guys. I knew one of them was going to pick it off.

Q: Does it erase your big highlight earlier in the day?

A: Kind of because that was for the game. There was about a minute and some change left, maybe less. We were driving, we were in there, we potentially could have won the game on that play. It kind of erases it. You always want to win the game, but whenever you do something to negate that it always wipes the good and you see the bad.

Q: How tough is this loss?

A: It’s very tough. Especially when you have a good game and you want to see yourself get the win and get the victory and lift your teammates up. You’re at home. Get the crowd behind you. It’s tough, but it happens in this league and we have to come back the next week and be ready to play.

Q: Did you slip coming out of your break and did that mess up your timing?

A: A little bit. I kind of got my feet out from under me a little bit, but I feel like I still had a chance to make a play. I still kind of had enough energy, enough body motion to get over there and make that play. I kind of tried to stick my hand out and as soon as I tried to reel it in I got hit. It was tough, but we had some opportunities to win the game. Like I said, we didn’t capitalize.

Extra point: Cruz has the talent to make Giants fans forget Steve Smith. But Smith’s steadiness and  savviness are still being missed.

Steve Bruce is under pressure whether you like it or not


Another week, another set of Steve Bruce on the brink reports. No matter how many times senior club figures and media handlers deny their validity, this is a story that simply refuses to go away.


More stubborn than a red wine stain on a pristine white carpet, the pressure on Bruce is not going to vanish quickly.


For what it is worth, my information remains consistent. Bruce’s position is not under any immediate threat.


While his chief ally Niall Quinn is no longer chairman – concentrating instead on overseas development and international business links – owner Ellis Short has personally assured his manager he retains his full backing.


With just one win in eight games in all competitions this season, results have been disappointing, but at this stage, far from disastrous.


After seven games, the Black Cats are one point worse off in the table than Arsenal and Everton.


After seven games, it is hard to justify any manager’s position being under threat unless their team is bottom of the table, pointless, the fans are protesting and the players are clearly playing with the intention of earning him a P45.


In Sunderland’s last game before the international break, they were two goals down at home to West Bromwich Albion and disgruntlement was turning into open hostility towards Bruce.


By half-time the Black Cats were level and by the end of an entertaining game, they probably should have taken all three points.


The players are clearly still playing for the manager – half and perhaps the most important part of the battle – and there is a genuine desire at boardroom level to maintain stability rather than push the managerial ejector seat.


Bruce has spent a large chunk of the international break with Short in Korea, pushing the Sunderland brand in a potentially lucrative overseas market. Hardly the behaviour of a condemned man.


Yet, others continue to fuel the uncertainty. The latest reports over the weekend have even claimed Martin O’Neill – still out of work after walking out on Aston Villa at the start of last season – has already been lined up to replace Bruce when the bullet comes.


Bruce must feel like he is drinking in the last chance saloon with a selection of rather large knives sticking out of his back. It is unhelpful, distracting and unsettling, but it is unlikely to go away anytime soon.


It might be subdued if Sunderland win – or even secure a point at Arsenal on Sunday – but it remains in the background, simmering away and ready to boil over again as soon as a bad result emerges.


Like it or not, Bruce is fighting for his job even as those around him offer him protection. He cannot stop people speculating about his future, he cannot stop the rumours, all he can do is try to win football matches.


Two from the next four would be great given the opposition, but two and a couple of draws would be the sort of exceeding of expectations he needs to silence the doubters in his current predicament.


After the trip to the Emirates this weekend, Sunderland travel to bottom of the table Bolton before entertaining Darren Bent and Aston Villa at the Stadium of Light.


Should all three pass without success, the prospect of a visit to Old Trafford to take on champions Manchester United will hardly instil confidence a corner is about to be turned. Crunch time, therefore, could come at home to Fulham on November 19th.


Football is and always will be a results business. Bruce will live and die by them. He probably does not deserve to be under-pressure given the progress made over the last two years, but he is.


Regardless of the support he has at boardroom level and the understanding he has been shown, only a good run of results, not the odd one here and there, is going to change things for the better.



Rugby World Cup 2011: five reasons why South Africa lost to Australia


Going nowhere: Pierre Spies breaks blind off a scrum and gets bundled into touch


The quarter-final between South Africa and Australia was one of the best games of international rugby since the Lions Tests of 2009. Actually, there's no maybe about it. It was.


It had everything: skill, commitment, heart, tension, and some of the most robust collisions you are likely to see on a rugby field.


After the match I spent nearly four hours in the pub picking over the bones of the defeat with my cousin and we couldn't find too much to fault in South Africa's tactical approach, or their performance.


Now I've had a chance to re-watch the tape of the match in the cold light of day there are a few things to be critical of from that Springbok performance, but also plenty to be positive about.


I must also add that I think it's too simplistic to boil this game down to South Africa's attack not being good enough to beat Australia's admittedly superb defence. Here are my five reasons why they lost:


1. Bryce Lawrence


I have put this at the top because having watched the game in its entirety twice it is clear that Lawrence is the dominant figure of the match. As Mark Reason has blogged, Lawrence made a complete hash of the breakdown and a complete mockery of the IRB's directives. They were handed down to make sure the breakdown was strictly refereed with no funny business. This, the IRB hoped, would lead to a more attacking game as there would be less turnovers or defensive penalties at the breakdown. Lawrence failed in this. As he failed to award two clear high tackle infringements from James Horwill and Quade Cooper in the final 10 minutes. As he failed to spot Dan Vickerman's hand in the ruck with the Boks three metres out from the line. The lack of consistency in refereeing styles continues to blight Test rugby.


2. David Pocock


The openside made 26 tackles and was a force of nature at the breakdown. He must be given credit for his chutzpah. He realised pretty damn quickly that Lawrence was not going to penalise him very often at the tackle area, and he certainly wasn't going to bin him. He rode his luck for the full 80 minutes, using his physique, fitness and technique to slow down or pilfer the ball at every opportunity. It's going to take some performance from Richie McCaw to keep this boy quiet next week.


3. Heinrich Brüssow's injury


Prior to this match Brendan Venter wrote in his column that while Pocock was clearly an exceptional rugby player he would not been given a free pass at the breakdown because South Africa had stumbled upon a great balance in the back row, with both Brüssow and Schalk Burger there. Burger went on to produce another incredible Test match performance (in fact, he is so good and plays with so much heart I have noticed a few Lions fans forgiving him for fiddling with Luke Fitzgerald's eyes) but without Brüssow there he was unable to neutralise Pocock. Francois Louw had a super game off the bench but he is not in the same class as Brüssow when it comes to pilfers. I have no doubt that had Brüssow not gone off after the first quarter Pocock would not have exerted nearly as much influence over the game.


4. Too late to use the boot


When did South Africa look their most dangerous in this game? When Fourie du Preez, Morne Steyn and Pat Lambie were aerially bombarding the Aussies. JP Pietersen also played a blinder in this respect, chasing and tackling like a man possessed. It certainly ruffled the feathers of Quade Cooper, who went missing in action yet again at the World Cup, but we didn't see enough of this tactic in the first half. Nor did we see enough territorial kicking, which is particularly surprising when you consider that the Springboks won all 14 of their line-outs and stole five of the Wallabies'. I know it sounds bizarre to say it about this Springbok team. But they probably didn't kick enough.


5. Selections and injuries


The biggest debate in SA rugby over the last year has been about what the superior starting XV was. And three substitutions yesterday showed what was the real best team. Bismarck du Plessis at hooker, Francois Hougaard on the left wing and Willem Alberts at No 8. The trio, who replaced John Smit, Bryan Habana and Pierre Spies respectively, improved the side to the extent that you wonder what might have been had they started. Smit's impact at the set-piece was clear but he didn't add much around the park other than a few routine carries. Habana took a bit of a battering with the ball in hand and a quick comparison between his contributions and those of Hougaard show who is the bigger attacking threat at the moment. As for Spies? Well Opta say he made 121 metres with the ball in hand, more than anyone in the four quarter-finals, but unfortunately for South Africa a high proportion of these were runs down blind allies. Alberts got through his fair share of carrying but he also hit rucks and tried to spoil Australia's ball. Spies could learn a lot from his work-rate.



Final Dagger on 0-3 Road Trip for Jets

If the Jets knew before Sunday’s game that they would hold Wes Welker in check for the most part while limiting Tom Brady to one touchdown pass and intercepting him once, they probably would have signed up for it.

What they wouldn’t have signed up for was what happened after the Jets cut their deficit to 27-21 with 7 minutes 7 seconds left.

The Patriots put the finishing touches on the Jets’ miserable road swing by running the ball and daring the Jets to stop them. They couldn’t. Here is the sequence of New England offensive plays — the knockout punch delivered by Bill Belichick to Rex Ryan — that burned nearly five minutes off the clock until right before the two-minute warning.

1) 1st and 10 at Patriots 22 BenJarvis Green-Ellis right end for 8 yards (David Harris).
2) 2nd and 2 at Patriots 30 Brady up the middle for 3 yards (Jamaal Westerman).
3) 1st and 10 at Patriots 33 Green-Ellis left end for 15 yards (Darrelle Revis, Brodney Pool).
4) 1st and 10 at Patriots 48 Green-Ellis right guard for 6 yards (Marquice Cole).
5) 2nd and 4 at Jets 46 Green-Ellis right end for no gain (Mike Devito; Sione Pouha).
6) 3rd and 4 at Jets 46 direct snap to Green-Ellis left end for 14 yards (David Harris).
7) 1st and 10 at Jets 32 Green-Ellis left end for 5 yards (Harris).
8) 2nd and 5 at Jets 27 Green-Ellis left tackle for 3 yards (Jim Leonhard; Harris).

The Jets used their first timeout with 2:13 remaining, but by then the damage was done. In moving from their 22 to the Jets’ 24, the Patriots did not attempt a pass. The Patriots ran Green-Ellis 7 times for 54 yards, with Brady picking up 3 yards on the other play, before Brady finally attempted and completed a pass, to Rob Gronkowski for 7 yards. By the time the Jets finally held on third down at their 8, there was only 1:06 left, and the game was essentially over.

Stephen Gotskowski’s 28-yard field goal provided the final points in the Patriots’ 30-21 victory.

Extra Point Can the Jets count on their home field in the next two weeks against Miami and San Diego to help get them back on track?

So Much for Perfection: Two Extra Points Missed

Do I owe kickers Mike Nugent and Olindo Mare an apology? On Sunday, the Times published an article I wrote on how infrequently kickers miss extra points.

Before the start of play on Sunday, N.F.L. kickers had been perfect this season, making all 309 extra-point attempts in the first four weeks of play. Not surprisingly, the article appeared to  hex two kickers: the Panthers’ Olindo Mare, who had an extra point blocked; and, about a half hour later, the Bengals’ Mike Nugent, who missed one off the right upright. It was Mare’s first miss since 2003 and Nugent’s first since 2007.

The good news is that neither missed extra-point turned out to be critical, and the even better news is that I didn’t mention or interview either player for the article, so I can’t be blamed for the blunders.  Kickers are known to be a superstitious lot, and several who are on active rosters didn’t want to speak to me for an article about how seldom extra points are missed.

But Seahawks kicker Steven Hauschka threw caution to the wind and spoke to me for the story, and I’m happy to report that he made all four of his extra-point attempts on Sunday, and also nailed both field goals he attempted, one from 43 yards and the other from 51.

The two misses are surely a coincidence, but who knows, maybe some secret society of kickers saw the story and resolved to miss a few extra points in order to discourage the N.F.L. from moving extra points back or eliminating them altogether. In all seriousness, every kicker I spoke to was emphatic in stating that extra points aren’t gimmes — even Matt Stover, who went nearly 14 years without missing one.

“I never, ever, ever went out there thinking it was easy,” Stover said.

We may not see another extra-point miss for weeks or months, but Sunday’s games were a reminder that to err is human. Even from the 2-yard line.

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