Monday, October 24, 2011

B.J. Penn looks to write history again at UFC 137

FabforumThroughout his storied MMA career, B.J. Penn has frequently found himself at the center of controversy. From his departure from the UFC while still holding the UFC welterweight title to his heated words with Jens Pulver and Sean Sherk to the controversy surrounding his second bout with Georges St. Pierre, Penn has not shied away from the public limelight. Heading into UFC 137, Penn again finds himself in the middle of controversy. But this time it has absolutely nothing to do with him.

UFC 137 was originally scheduled to be headlined by a UFC welterweight title bout between Georges St. Pierre and Nick Diaz. But after Diaz no-showed a pair of press conferences promoting the bout, UFC president Dana White called off the bout. Penn was scheduled to fight Carlos Condit in the semi-main event of the show, but Condit was moved up to face St. Pierre for the title. White then decided to give Diaz another chance by putting him in the semi-main event with Penn. Penn had a new fight against a man he had trained with in the past and had now become a lightning rod for controversy.

As if that wasn’t enough, Georges St. Pierre then had to pull out of his main event contest due to injury. Diaz would end up headlining UFC 137 this Saturday night after all, only against Penn rather than St. Pierre. Penn takes the events in stride and doesn’t seem to know what to make of the situation.

“I don’t let it bother me,” Penn said. “Such is life. I’m definitely feeling positive about being in the main event. Some things happen for a reason. What Nick does in a press conference doesn’t affect my life. I get a kick out of watching what Diaz does. But I do understand that Dana doesn’t want other fighters thinking they can do that and needs to set a precedent.”

Diaz vs. Penn has all the makings of an action packed fight between two fighters that have followed similar career trajectories. Both men started in MMA with jiu jitsu training and developed reputations for excellent submissions before slowly gravitating towards striking. Now their submissions almost serve as a backup plan to their lethal striking ability. Diaz’s heavy volume punching and reach is extremely difficult to deal with, while the smaller Penn’s striking has been labeled the best in MMA by no less an authority than Freddie Roach.

UCLA football: Safety Ilaiu Moeakiola opts for Bruins

Uclalogo_150UCLA may be struggling on the football field, but the Bruins still picked up a commitment Monday.

Ilaiu Moeakiola, a senior safety at Euless (Texas) Trinity High, said he will attend UCLA. Moeakiola was also being heavily recruited by Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado and Tulsa.

“Over the weekend, I was praying with my family, looking over the colleges to see which one was the best fit,” Moeakiola said. “UCLA has the academic excellence, the location is great and I have plenty of family out there for support.”

Moeakiola, who is 6 feet and 185 pounds, had 108 tackles and intercepted one pass last season.

--Chris Foster

Report: NBA to scrap two more weeks Tuesday

Adam-silver_600

The NBA is expected Tuesday to cancel more than 100 additional games from Nov. 15 to 28, the New York Daily News reported late Monday.

League and union officials did not immediately respond to The Times’ requests for confirmation of the report.

The cancellations would come more than two weeks after the league on Oct. 10 scrapped 100 games from the Nov. 1 season-openers through Nov. 14.

NBA owners have locked out their players since July 1; players and owners are trying to resolve issues that include how to split basketball-related income in the increasingly bitter labor dispute.

Losing the Nov. 15-28 games would cost the Clippers eight games, including a road swing to Houston, San Antonio and Utah, with home games against the Chicago Bulls and Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Lakers would lose five games, including a Nov. 17 home game against the New York Knicks and a Nov. 23 trip to Oklahoma City.

--Lance Pugmire

Photo: NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver addresses the media before a NBA labor negotiation last week in New York. Credit: Patrick McDermott / Getty Images

UCLA basketball: Two players recovering from concussions

UCLA sophomore center Anthony Stover and junior forward De'End Parker are recovering from concussions sustained in practice last week.

Parker is expected to be sidelined at least a week after taking an inadvertent elbow to the head during an intrasquad scrimmage Saturday.

Stover should return to practice early this week after suffering his concussion Oct 17.

Parker and Stover aren't the first Bruins to sustain concussions recently. Freshman guard Norman Powell needed three staples to close a wound in his forehead after he was struck by an elbow during workouts. Powell has returned to practice.

--Ben Bolch

Should alcohol be banned from all MLB clubhouses?

Writers from around the Tribune Co. discuss the topic -- join the discussion by voting in the poll and leaving a comment of your own.

Mike DiGiovanna, Los Angeles Times

Yes, I do think alcohol should be banned from all clubhouses, and frankly, I'm not sure why baseball didn't take such action after Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart was killed in an automobile accident that was caused by a drunk driver in 2009. What if a player drank too much in the clubhouse after a game and caused a fatal accident on the way home? By removing alcohol from the clubhouse, baseball teams would eliminate any liability in such matters. If players want to drink after games, let them do it on their own time and on their own dime.

Plus, I'm guessing that Texas Rangers star Josh Hamilton is not the only major leaguer who has struggled or is struggling with an addiction to alcohol. Removing alcohol from the clubhouse would show a sensitivity to such players and help curb or eliminate the temptation for them to drink while at the park.

Chris Dufresne recaps a wild weekend of college football [Video]

The Times' Chris Dufresne talks about a Hail Mary in East Lansing, a bad loss for Oklahoma and USC's trip to South Bend.

Ndamukong Suh, Cliff Avril accused of taunting injured Matt Ryan

Suh_640
Detroit's Ndamukong Suh and Cliff Avril could very easily let their playing on the field do the talking -- each of them recorded a sack of Atlanta quarterback Matt Ryan during Sunday's game. But according to some Falcons players, the Lions defensive linemen ran their mouths at the most inappropriate time.

Falcons center Todd McClure and wide receiver Roddy White are accusing Suh and Avril of taunting Ryan while he was injured during the Atlanta's 23-16 victory.

“I had respect for Suh before the game,” McClure told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “But when Matt was on the ground, the things [Suh] was saying and the trash he was talking was definitely uncalled for. There are certain things you don't do. [He said], ‘Get the cart' and several other things that I can't repeat.”

Ryan had to leave the game briefly after teammate Will Svitek stepped on his left ankle, tweaking his knee.

“I lost a whole lot of respect for 90 [Suh] today, and also 92 [Avril],” White said. “[What] they were doing when Matt got hurt, that was unacceptable. ... Like 92 was kicking [Ryan's] feet, saying, ‘Get him off the field.’ We don't do stuff like that. We don't rally over guys when they get hurt. It was just inappropriate behavior. I mean, ‘Get the cart'? Are you serious? Come on. When you compete, you never want to see a guy get hurt.”

Suh has not commented publicly on the allegations, but Avril denied them via Twitter: “Come on I'm not in the business of hurting not one guy on the field... I would never taunt anyone on an injury.”

ALSO:

NFL Week 7 two-minute drill

Would you want Tim Tebow as your team's QB? [Poll]

DeMarco Murray rushes from obscurity into Cowboys' record book

-- Chuck Schilken

The Sports Xchange contributed to this report.

Photo: Detroit's Ndamukong Suh pressures Atlanta quarterback Matt Ryan. Credit: Julian H. Gonzalez / Detroit Free Press / MCT

Greatest sports figures in L.A. history, No. 11: Tommy Lasorda

Tommy Lasorda was voted the 11th greatest figure in Los Angeles sports history by online readers.

Continuing our countdown of the 20 greatest figures in L.A. sports history, as chosen in voting by our online readers, with No. 11, Tommy Lasorda.

No. 11 Tommy Lasorda (39 first-place votes, 1,641 points)

There have been few figures in L.A. sports history who have been as larger-than-life as former Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda. You either love him or love to hate him, but it's almost guaranteed that everyone has some sort of opinion.

After serving four seasons as third-base coach, Lasorda became the Dodgers manager on Sept. 29, 1976, upon the retirement of the legendary Walter Alston. All Lasorda did in his 20 years as manager was win 1,599 games, two World Series championships (1981 and 1988), four National League pennants (1977, 78, 81 and 88)  and seven division titles (1977, 78, 81, 83, 85, 88, 95). The Dodgers also led the division when the rest of the 1994 season was canceled because of a labor dispute.

His final game was a 4-3 victory over the Houston Astros on June 23, 1996. The following day he drove himself to the hospital complaining of abdominal pains, and in fact he was having a heart attack. He officially retired on July 29, 1996. His 1,599 career wins rank 16th in MLB history.

He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1997 in his first year of eligibility and the Dodgers retired his uniform number, 2, on Aug. 15, 1997.

RELATED:

No. 12: Wayne Gretzky

No. 13: Walter O'Malley

No. 14: Don Drysdale

No. 15: Merlin Olsen

No. 16: Jerry Buss

No. 17: Elgin Baylor

No. 18: Marcus Allen

No. 19: Jim Murray

No. 20: Wilt Chamberlain

Your votes are in: The 20 greatest sports figures in L.A. history

--Houston Mitchell

Photo: Tommy Lasorda looks on from the dugout as he serves as an honorary coach during the game against the San Francisco Giants at Dodger Stadium on Sept. 22, 2011. Credit: Jeff Gross / Getty Images.

 

Second U.S. Formula One race reportedly on tap in New Jersey

Formula One hasn't competed on U.S. soil in four years, but now the international racing series reportedly is set to unveil a second American stop starting in 2013.

A news conference is scheduled Tuesday to announce that Formula One plans a street race in June 2013 in the Weehawken and West New York areas of New Jersey along the west side of the Hudson River, with the Manhattan skyline serving as a backdrop, according to reports in the Wall Street Journal and the Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J.

Formula One's return to the United States already was planned for next November in Austin, Texas, where a course called Circuit of the Americas is being built specifically for the series.

The last U.S. Grand Prix was held in 2007 on a 2.6-mile road course built within the famed Indianapolis Motor Speedway, which hosted the race for eight years. But the series and track then parted ways when they couldn't come to financial terms and other agreements to extend their contract.

But there always has been pressure on Formula One to return to the United States, because the U.S. is a major sales market for many companies that provide racing equipment or F1 sponsorships, such as Mercedes Benz and Vodafone.

--Jim Peltz

Jets Approach a Critical Juncture

Making projections is a dangerous business. It is often fruitless, too. But it has become fairly obvious that November is shaping up as a critical month for the Jets, and not just because it comes after October.

The Jets, after defeating San Diego on Sunday, are 4-3 heading into their bye week and ninth in the A.F.C. The top six teams in the conference make the playoffs.

To earn a spot in the top four, the Jets would have to win the division. That is possible, but pretty much only if they defeat New England (5-1) at MetLife Stadium on Nov. 13. To improve their chances of earning one of the two wild-card spots, the Jets must beat other teams in contention.

None appear on their schedule except for the Buffalo Bills, who play the Jets twice next month — on Nov. 6 in Orchard Park, N.Y., and on Nov. 27 at MetLife Stadium. The Jets’ other November game is at Denver, which could be trickier than the Broncos’ record — 2-4, after the legend of Tim Tebow grew Sunday — suggests.

Clearly, the Jets are trending upward. Their defense shut out the Chargers’ high-powered offense in the second half. Plaxico Burress caught three touchdown passes, all in the red zone, in a performance that showed why he was given a guaranteed $3.017 million deal. And for the first time all season, the Jets amassed more rushing yards (162) than passing (156) on the strength of a breakout day by Shonn Greene.

Was the Jets’ comeback Sunday enough to slough aside their early woes and inconsistency, or will the tough November schedule derail their playoff hopes?

Would you want Tim Tebow as your team’s starting QB? [Poll]

Tebow_640
Say what you want about Tim Tebow — and people always have plenty to say about him — but there seems to be some sort of magical quality about him. But is magic enough to make it as a starting quarterback in the NFL?

It seems to be working so far for Tebow. Though he looked horrible for the first 54 minutes of Sunday's game against the Miami Dolphins, the quarterback somehow led the Denver Broncos on a 15-point rally, passing for a pair of touchdowns and running for a successful two-point conversion to force overtime. The Broncos won with a long field goal.

The same thing almost happened in the Broncos' previous game, when Tebow took over for Kyle Orton in the second half of a 29-24 loss to the San Diego Chargers. Although his first several drives went nowhere, Tebow eventually led Denver to two touchdowns before having a desperation pass batted down in the end zone on the final play.

A two-time BCS champion at Florida and a Heisman trophy winner, Tebow has had plenty of success as a quarterback. But many have wondered whether he has the skills to play the position as a starter in the NFL -- and his overall performances so far this season may not have erased any of those doubts.

What do you think? Would you like Tebow as the quarterback of your favorite NFL team? Vote in the poll and then leave a comment explaining yourself (please note which team you root for).

RELATED:

How long will Tim Tebow lead the Broncos? [Poll]

Tim Tebow gets called out by Hulk Hogan [Video]

Tim Tebow to start for Broncos on Gators reunion day in Miami

— Chuck Schilken

Photo: Tim Tebow. Credit: Doug Murray / Reuters

Monday Matchup: Ravens at Jaguars

Ravens at Jaguars, 8:30 p.m. Eastern, ESPN
Line: Ravens by 9

You know a franchise is in sorry shape when even opponents are nostalgic about its past. Ray Lewis sounded almost misty-eyed last week when he talked about the glory days of the Ravens-Jaguars rivalry. The teams played twice a year from 1996 through 2001 in the old A.F.C. Central and had some memorable meetings, including a 6-3 game in 2000 that featured 10 sacks and only 374 yards of total offense. “You know, we did have some great rivalries with the Jaguars for many years — for many, many years,” Lewis said, pining for the days of Fred Taylor, Mark Brunell and Jimmy Smith.

Baltimore and Jacksonville now meet every three years, and any “great Jaguars rivalries” have receded into the past. The Jaguars are on a five-game losing streak since their narrow 16-14 win over the Titans in the season opener, with the rookie quarterback Blaine Gabbert completing 48.8 percent of his passes while opponents stack the line to stop the team’s one recognizable star, Maurice Jones-Drew. Lewis also had kind words for another figure from the past: Jaguars Coach Jack Del Rio, a former Ravens assistant. “Anytime you play a Jack Del Rio team, you have to know that they’re going to be ready to play,” he said. Even if you’re not certain who they are.

Pick: Ravens
(Pick does not reflect betting line)

Week 7 Quick Hits: The Return of Big-Game Burress

Andy Benoit takes a quick tour of all the Week 7 games. Did he miss something? Share your thoughts in the comments.
Jets 27,   Chargers 21

Now THAT’S what the Jets thought they were getting when they signed Plaxico Burress. Few are better equipped to thrive in the red zone, where spacing is tight, than a man who’s that tall and sinewy. Burress beat Antoine Cason, San Diego’s most talented cover artist, for all three of his red zone touchdowns Sunday. Twice he did it with physicality and once with elusiveness.

One reason expectations are high for Burress is, being a Jet, he’s assured of never having to face Darrelle Revis. A week after punishing Brandon Marshall and the Dolphins for attacking him, Revis stifled Vincent Jackson, one of the toughest covers in the league. According to ESPN, “Jackson was targeted four times on passes of more than 15 yards, and he finished with one reception for 15 yards and an interception.” Revis is clearly the league’s most valuable player on defense. The question is whether he’s the most valuable player, period.

As for the Chargers, what do we make of them? They’re not posting the huge numbers of recent years, and their four victories have come against hapless opponents (Minnesota, Kansas City, Miami and Denver). That said, 4-2 is 4-2. And it’s difficult to fault a West Coast team for losing an early window game on the East Coast – especially when that early window game is against a quality opponent.

Broncos 18,   Dolphins 15

If it’s Tim Tebow worship you’re looking for, wrong place. Being a winner and having fourth-quarter moxie and all that other Hollywood stuff is great…but not sustainable.

Neither is Tony Sparano’s career in Miami – unfortunately for Sparano. The Sun Sentinel reports that though the Dolphins just gave away what would have been their first win of the season, Sparano is unlikely to be fired…for now. That means he  gets to continue working for an owner who tried to replace him during the off-season and who gladly traded   a few extra tickets sold for  honoring the opposing team’s quarterback at halftime of this week’s game.

To end this bit on a positive note, the Dolphins’ stagnant pass rush finally came alive. Miami entered with eight sacks on the season and exited with 15.*

*If you think this “positive note” is just a veiled attempt at mentioning that Tebow was slow in his reads and release on Sunday, you would not necessarily be wrong.

Browns 6,   Seahawks 3

Might as well have been the Indians and Mariners out there. This marked the second time this season that the Browns have run 80-plus plays. The first time – a loss against the Titans – involved a slew of late pass attempts out of the hurry-up offense. This 80-plus-play effort was more run-oriented, with Montario Hardesty getting 33 carries. Also helping matters was that the Browns were a whopping 12 for 24 on third down.

Falcons 23,   Lions 16

In seemingly related but actually unrelated news, the Lions were just 1 for 12 on third down. Two straight home losses are a bit concerning but nothing to sound the alarms about. Moving forward, though, this will prove to be a different offense with Jahvid Best out of the lineup. The Lions are not a good running team with or without Best, but his speed and agility are perfect for the short-passing game and draw plays. Those elements are a key because they make the Lions two-dimensional out of their frequently used shotgun sets.

We’ve been following the Falcons’ search for an identity all season. For the second straight week, with Julio Jones out of the lineup, they stuck to their ground-and-pound recipe (Michael Turner, 122 yards on 27 carries). However, in the process, they appeared to lose one of their most important ingredients, fullback Ovie Mughelli, to a knee injury. That could prove to be one of the most expensive losses for any team this season.

Perhaps it will lead to even more receiving opportunities for Tony Gonzalez. Can you believe he’s now caught more passes than anyone other than Jerry Rice? What an interesting debate it’ll be when the Hall of Fame voters discuss him in (presumably) six years. The man is the most productive tight end in league history but has never won a playoff game. That’s not his fault, of course. But it may delay his enshrinement. The second-most productive tight end, Shannon Sharpe, was a key contributor on three Super Bowl champions, yet did not get in until his third year of eligibility.

Texans 41,   Titans 7

We could wow you with all sorts of lopsided stats here – Texans, 296 passing yards, Titans, 95; Texans, 222 rushing yards, Titans, 53; Texans, 29 first downs, Titans 11 – or talk about Chris Johnson’s continued efforts to break the single-season record for “tarnished fantasy teams.”

But more interesting is the emergence of Arian Foster as a receiver. Maybe the best  runner in the A.F.C., he has posted 287 yards receiving the past three weeks, including 119 (all in the first half) against Tennessee. It’s not just backfield screens and dumpoffs that Foster is catching, either. Lately, the Texans have split him out wide for bubble screens and underneath pass patterns. We knew he had good hands (66 receptions in 2010) and solid open-field instincts. We didn’t know he could merge the two traits so seamlessly.

Bears 24,   Bucs 18

So much for all the “Mike Martz needs to run the ball more” talk. The Bears have pounded the rock 25-plus times in each of their past four outings. They’ve gone 3-1 while averaging 160 rush yards per game in that stretch, and Matt Forte has only added to the negotiating leverage that everyone but General Manager Jerry Angelo seems to realize he has. Forte has been the most valuable running back in the N.F.C. this season. Most impressive is his improved lateral agility – highlighted in his 32-yard touchdown against the Bucs – which is augmented by his outstanding patience.

One final note (and hopefully this comment will soon prove to have been unnecessary…it’s a shame it’s even come up): the N.F.L. would be beyond foolish to expand to 33 or 34 teams just to put a franchise in London. Relocating an existing team? Yes. Expanding? Lord, no. Let’s hope this idea is nothing more than the usual week-of-London-game diplomacy that we get from Roger Goodell each year.

Panthers 33,   Redskins 20

It’s not often that a last-place N.F.C. South team beats a second-place N.F.C. East team and no one comes away surprised. Cam Newton has already tied Vince Young’s rookie record for rushing touchdowns by a quarterback (seven). Unlike Young, Newton is not running at the expense of his offense’s passing game. The Panthers remain sharp through the air, even with Steve Smith (seven receptions for 143 yards Sunday) being the only quality wideout on the roster.

Steelers 32,   Cardinals 20

It was somewhat of a throwback day for the Cardinals, playing at home in front of a crowd that was nearly 50 percent in favor of the visiting team. Felt like Sun Devil Stadium again. The split crowd at University of Phoenix Stadium would have had a 2008 Super Bowl rematch feel except that Florida Super Bowl crowd was about 90 percent pro-Steeler.

The Cardinals fans who were on hand Sunday grew frustrated at times with their 1-5 team’s new franchise quarterback. What’s interesting about Kevin Kolb is that he’s had the financial success of a big-time quarterback without the starts.

Kolb has made over $35 million guaranteed in his career strictly on potential. (Safe to assume he’s the only second-round draft pick  ever to do that.) The Eagles signed Kolb to a four-year, $4.3 million contract as a rookie. In the last year of that deal, he was extended for one year at $12.25 million (franchise tag). After seven career starts, he was traded to Arizona, where he immediately signed a contract worth $21.5 million guaranteed. All the while, no one has ever seen the guy actually play for any extended period. Until now.

Cowboys 34,   Rams 7

DeMarco Murray looked great – much more fluid than in his first few outings – and the Cowboys took care of business. More interesting, though, were the two World Series participants being on the field for the coin toss. Lance Berkman (representing the St. Louis Cardinals) and Josh Hamilton (representing the Texas Rangers) walked out with the captains for the game’s opening ceremony. Both were in full uniform, which looked weird. The question is, with Game 4 of the World Series a little more than four hours away, do you think Berkman and Hamilton stayed in their uniforms from coin toss until game time? Or, given that baseball players are so routine-oriented, do you think they changed once they got back to Rangers Ballpark in Arlington?

Packers 33,   Vikings 27

These days an average game for Aaron Rodgers is anything with less than 350 yards passing and four touchdowns. He’s now posted a passer rating over 110 in each of his past six outings. That’s what an amazing arm, an innovative system and a terrific array of weapons will generate for a smart quarterback.

Viking fans have reason to be excited. Their team’s season is all but officially over, but Christian Ponder at least looks compelling. The Viking offense has more rhythm with him under center than with Donovan McNabb, and not just because Ponder is quicker and more consistently accurate. From afar, the first-round rookie quarterback seems to have a better grasp of the system.

Chiefs 28,   Raiders 0

Don’t look now but the Kansas City Chiefs are suddenly back at .500 and just a game out in the A.F.C. West. All it took was a schedule that gave them three straight games against backup quarterbacks: Week 4 against the now-benched Donovan McNabb, Week 5 against Curtis Painter and Week 7 against Kyle Boller and Carson Palmer.

Boller and Palmer each threw three interceptions in two quarters, including a pick-six on outside routes that were undercut by the cornerback. Seems hard to blame the Raiders for any Palmer move they made, though. The alternative to inserting him in this game after halftime was going with Boller. And the alternative to trading for him was also going with Boller.

Saints 62, Colts 7

When does flex scheduling begin?

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

Comment

Comment