Tuesday, November 1, 2011

NBA lockout: Derek Fisher vs. foxsports.com

Fisher1Derek Fisher is demanding a retraction of two recent foxsports.com stories, saying they were "libelous and defamatory" in a statement released Tuesday night through his publicist.

The president of the National Basketball Players Assn. was annoyed that a foxsports.com column Monday suggested he had met secretly with NBA Commissioner David Stern and was willing to accept the owners' hard-line proposal of a 50-50 split of basketball-related income. The players association publicly has toed the line at accepting 52% of BRI.

The column also alleged there was a rift between Fisher and players association executive director Billy Hunter.

"The implication that I am doing anything but working in the best interests of the players is disgusting, defamatory and a flat out lie," Fisher said in the statement. "I have issued a letter through my attorneys demanding a retraction for the libelous and defamatory stories the site and reporter have continued to publish.

"Regardless of the media reports, the Players Association, our staff, Executive Director and Executive Committee are unified and working side by side to serve our players. There should be no more distractions. We must continue to negotiate a fair deal for our players."


Angels sign pair of Dominican outfield prospects

Angels1Jerry Dipoto vowed to be aggressive in Latin America, and one of the Angels' first moves under their new general manager was to sign two outfield prospects from the Dominican Republic, Ranyemi Alberto Mendoza for $70,000 and Ayendi Perez for $25,000.

The speedy Perez, who is 5 feet 10, 160 pounds and bats left-handed, projects as more of a leadoff hitter, while the 6-2, 180-pound Mendoza is more of a power hitter with a good arm.

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Angels pick Jerry Dipoto as new general manager

-- Mike DiGiovanna

Congressman compares NCAA to Al Capone and the Mafia

Rush3The NCAA certainly has its share of critics -- and it looks like it can add at least one more congressman to its list of detractors.

Rep. Bobby Rush, an Illinois Democrat, described the NCAA as "one of the most vicious, most ruthless organizations ever created by mankind" during a congressional forum on college sports Tuesday, before saying one could "compare the NCAA to Al Capone and to the Mafia."

Rush, whose district includes much of Chicago's South Side, made the comments at the forum after hearing from mothers who complained their sons were mistreated by schools after suffering injuries. The forum, which Rush said was necessary to examine the impact of "back-room deals, payoffs and scandals" in college sports, gave a grim assessment of how the NCAA and colleges handle medical hardship waivers.

The NCAA refuted Rush's claims.

“Congressman Rush obviously doesn't know the NCAA,” Bob Williams, a spokesman for the organization, said in an email to the Associated Press. “The NCAA and its member institutions provide over $2 billion per year in scholarships, financial assistance and academic support to student-athletes . . . second only to the federal government. Student-athlete success is our mission.”

Testimony at the hearing suggested the NCAA needs to do more to help students and their families shoulder healthcare-related costs stemming from injuries on the field, and to do a better job of making sure the immense revenue generated by college athletics actually makes it back to the students.

That said, calling the NCAA "one of the most vicious organizations ever created by mankind" is ignorant on Rush's part. There's no need for knee-jerk sound bites that do little to help college athletes.

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T.J. Simers: Shocking: Readers have a bone to pick about Lane Kiffin, et al.

-- Austin Knoblauch

Photo: Rep. Bobby Rush takes part in a congressional roundtable on college sports in Washington on Tuesday. Credit: Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press

Funeral services set for football coach Gene Murphy

A funeral mass for Gene Murphy, the former Cal State Fullerton and Fullerton College football coach who died Saturday in Los Angeles, will be held Monday at 11 a.m. at St. Juliana Falconieri Church (1316 N. Acacia) in Fullerton. Details regarding a reception will be available at the church.

Murphy, one of the most personable, engaging and quotable coaches in Orange County sports history, had undergone surgery for cancer of the esophagus last Tuesday and was recovering in the intensive care unit of USC University Hospital when he died Saturday. He was 72.

Murphy coached at Cal State Fullerton from 1980 until the program was discontinued in 1992. He led the Titans to two Pacific Coast Athletic Assn. championships and an 11-1 record and a top-20 national ranking in 1984.

He took over at Fullerton College in 1993 and remained there until 2007, still maintaining an office on campus as a consultant for the athletic department. He was inducted into Cal State Fullerton's Athletics Hall of Fame in 2009. 


How much of the Kardashian-Humphries wedding was real?

Kardash
Writers from around the Tribune Co. discuss the topic. Check back throughout the day for more responses and weigh in with a comment of your own.

K.C. Johnson, Chicago Tribune

Carlos Boozer's defense is more real than the Kim Kardashian-Kris Humphries wedding. Phil Jackson's artificial hip has more substance. The Clippers' title hopes are more legitimate.... You get the idea.

Anyone who bought Kardashian's 72-day attempt at reality show fodder, er, marriage to Humphries should consider gullibility training. Dennis Rodman's marriage to Carmen Electra lasted longer. Enough said.

Counting freebies for the $10-million wedding, sponsorships and paydays, Kardashian's take has been reported at close to $18 million. That can buy a lot of tissues.

In her statement, Kardashian sniffed, "After careful consideration, I have decided to end my marriage." Careful consideration? Some TV timeouts during sporting events last longer.

There's surely some truth to fond attractions, er, feelings between Kardashian and Humphries. But any reality TV "star" is as in love with his or her bank account as another human. And it won't take death for Kardashian to part with her financial windfall either.

Broderick Turner, Los Angeles Times

An estimated 5 million people watched Kim Kardashian marry New Jersey Nets forward Kris Humphries.

Were they all duped into believing this was a real marriage?

Hmmm?

Hard to believe it was after news came down that Kardashian has filed for divorce from Humphries just 72 days after their nuptials.

Maybe Kim just can’t get over the fact that she is the only breadwinner in the family right now, seeing as how Humphries is “unemployed” due to the NBA lockout. Besides, it wasn’t like he was pulling down the kind of bread Kim was. Humphries earned $3.2 million last year in the final season of his contract with the Nets.

Heck, the ring alone he purchased for Kim reportedly cost $2 million.

Supposedly, they earned $17.9 million from the wedding, which included $2.5 million for a photo deal with People magazine and $12 million to $15 million for the four-hour, two-part wedding special for the Kardashian crew.

Now that’s good money, no matter how long you stay together.

Shannon Owens, Ft. Lauderdale Sun Sentinel

The Kim Kardashian-Kris Humphries wedding was very real. Just ask the sponsors who paid an estimated $10 million for it.

The marriage, however, is up for debate --  and one I don’t feel comfortable participating in for the purposes of a newspaper.

I don’t know these people and judging by what they’ve shared in magazines, reality shows and interviews, I don’t care to.

Here’s what I do know. He just gave teammates a wealth of comedic material and Humphries should request a private locker room for the rest of his NBA career to avoid the embarrassment that is his personal life.

As if buying a $2-million engagement ring on a $3-million or so salary in 2010 wasn’t funny enough, now teammates have the gift of watching his vows on tape courtesy of E!.

On the bright side, this should help Humphries' NBA career. Coaches know he’ll work hard since he’s got some bills to pay.

MORE:

The 20 greatest sports figures in L.A. history

Matt Barnes announces split with Gloria Govan

Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries: What happened?

Photo: The Kardashians at the Metropolitan Pavilion in New York City on Sept. 12. Credit: Ilya S. Savenok / Getty Images.

New Angels GM Jerry Dipoto begins to fill front office positions

Angels

Larry Corrigan, who has performed a wide variety of roles in his 26-year career as a baseball scout, has been hired by the Angels as a special assistant to new General Manager Jerry Dipoto.

Reached by phone at his home in Fort Myers, Fla., Corrigan said he and Dipoto are still in the process of structuring his job description and that he wasn't necessarily taking the place of long-time special assistant Gary Sutherland, who was the team's director of pro scouting for 12 years until being let go after the season.

Corrigan, 61, worked one year for the Oakland Athletics, 21 years for the Minnesota Twins and the last four years with the Pittsburgh Pirates. He has been an amateur scout, a professional scout, a West Coast supervisor, a scouting director and a special assignment scout and an on-field coordinator.

Dipoto, the former Arizona executive who was officially named GM on Saturday, is in the process of hiring an assistant GM, a farm director and several scouts. Tory Hernandez, the team's manager of baseball operations, could be a candidate for assistant GM.

Among the Diamondbacks scouts Dipoto is believed to be considering for jobs with the Angels are international scouting director Carlos Gomez and pro scouts Joe Bohringer, Tim Schmidt and Mike Brown.

MORE:

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T.J. Simers: Is Arte Moreno the Angels' problem?

Bill Plaschke: Should Mike Scioscia catch hell for trading Mike Napoli?

--Mike DiGiovanna

Photo: Jerry Dipoto. Credit: Jae C. Hong / Associated Press.

Angels pitcher Jerome Williams throwing well in Venezuela

Jerome

Jerome Williams, the journeyman right-hander who boosted the Angels rotation by going 4-0 with a 3.68 earned run average in 10 starts in August and September, has not allowed an earned run in his first three starts for Magallanes of the Venezuelan winter league.

Williams is 3-0 and has allowed 10 hits in 17 innings, striking out 12, walking eight and limiting opponents to a .175 average. A strong winter would put the 29-year-old pitcher in a strong position to win one of the Angels' final two rotation spots next spring.

The Angels' top winter league offensive performers are outfield prospect Jeremy Moore, who is hitting .333 with two homers, three doubles, 10 runs batted in and three stolen bases in 13 games in Venezuela, and infield prospect Jean Segura, who is hitting .320 with four doubles and eight RBIs in 13 games in the Arizona Fall League.

Outfielder Mike Trout and catcher Hank Conger, who spent significant time with the Angels last season, have struggled in the Arizona Fall League, Trout hitting .273 with no homers and two RBIs in 15 games and Conger hitting .227 with no homers and eight RBIs in 11 games.

MORE:

Angels to hire Jerry Dipoto as general manager

T.J. Simers: Is Arte Moreno the Angels' problem?

Bill Plaschke: Should Mike Scioscia catch hell for trading Mike Napoli?

-- Mike DiGiovanna

Photo: Jerome Williams. Credit: Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press.

Greatest sports figures in L.A. history No. 6: Jerry West

Continuing our countdown of the 20 greatest figures in L.A. sports history, as chosen in voting by our online readers, with No. 6, Jerry West.

No. 6 Jerry West (41 first-place votes, 3,961 points)

FabforumFor all the immortal players, great coaches and colorful owners the Lakers have had, no man has exerted more influence over the franchise from more positions — player, coach, executive — over a longer period of time than Jerry West.

His career as a player was one of such sustained and ubiquitous brilliance in the face of circumstances many times star-crossed that it seems right and fitting his image makes up the NBA’s logo. He also became the third Lakers icon to be memorialized in a statue outside Staples Center, joining Magic Johnson and Chick Hearn when his statue was unveiled on Feb. 17, 2011.

Drafted with the second pick in the 1960 NBA draft, West, a two-time All-American at West Virginia, would be named to the All-Star team 14 times. From 1967 to 1973, he was named to the All-NBA’s first team every year but two; the two years he wasn’t — 1968 and 1969 — he was named to the second team.

He averaged 27 points and 6.7 assists during his 14-year career, but, fittingly for the man known as "Mr. Clutch," averaged more points — 29 — in the playoffs.

Bill Plaschke: Raffi Torres in blackface is a disgrace to the NHL

Fabforum

This year’s award for the scariest Halloween costume goes to the NHL’s Phoenix Coyotes, who dressed Plaschkein racial insensitivity then masked it as fun.

Did you hear about Monday night’s team Halloween party? Forward Raffi Torres and his wife, Gianna, showed up dressed as rapper Jay-Z and singer Beyonce Knowles, which would have been trendy and cute, except both of them were wearing blackface.

For those who forgotten their history -- and these two folks clearly did -- blackface was a type of makeup worn by vaudeville performers in the 19th century as a parody of African Americans. It was degrading then, and it is degrading now, but Torres’ teammate, Paul Bissonnette, thought it was so funny he sent out a photo of the happy couple on Twitter.

An understandable wave of criticism followed, leading to the ignorant statement that makes this costume so frightening.

The Coyotes, you see, publicly defended Torres.

Kevin Durant: Kobe Bryant would beat LeBron James in one-on-one

It would be the Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier of basketball.

Imagine Kobe Bryant and LeBron James stepping onto a basketball court to play a game of one-on-one, pure intensity vs. pure strength.

The question is, who would win?

Basketball fans imagine the epic battle and indefatigably debate its enigmatic outcome. NBA players, whom regularly play with both men, are no different.

In one of a series of interviews at the Drew League vs. Goodman League rematch last month at Long Beach State, Oklahoma City forward Kevin Durant said Bryant would win.

"He's probably the best one-on-one player in the game," Durant said.

Washington Wizards point guard John Wall disagreed.

"Depends on how LeBron plays," Wall said. "If he plays like he can with his size and his strength, like can't nobody stop him when he goes to the basket, then I pick him."

Perhaps New Orleans Hornets guard Trevor Ariza said it best.

"I don't know," he said, "but I know I would pay to watch that."

ALSO:

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-- Melissa Rohlin

 

Could the 49ers clinch before Thanksgiving?

Frank-gore_600

The San Francisco 49ers haven't been to the NFL playoffs since 2002, but they could be ending that drought this season in record time.

Yes, the 49ers could actually clinch the NFC West before Thanksgiving.

Mike Sando of ESPN.com has crunched the numbers and determined that San Francisco, which has the league's second-best record at 6-1, would win the division no matter what with six victories in its final nine games. Winning six would put the 49ers at 12-4, whereas the best second-place Seattle can do is 11-5.

Sando suggested a scenario by which the 49ers could win by Week 11, or Nov. 20, by getting to nine victories while their division opponents could finish the season with no more than eight. For that to unfold, the following would have to happen:

San Francisco (6-1) -- The 49ers win at Washington, then at home against the New York Giants and Arizona.

Seattle (2-5) -- The Seahawks lose at Dallas, at home against Baltimore, and at St. Louis.

Arizona (1-6) -- The Cardinals beat St. Louis, then lose at Philadelphia and San Francisco.

St. Louis (1-6) -- The Rams lose at Arizona and Cleveland, and beat the Seahawks at home.

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Life at the bottom of NFL has its moments -- mostly bad ones

-- Sam Farmer

Photo: Running back Frank Gore is surrounded by 49ers linemen after scoring in the first quarter against the Cleveland Browns. Credit: Nhat V. Meyer / McClatchy-Tribune

Newcastle must be taken seriously even if they still have questions to answer


The shock has faded, but the smiles are spreading. Newcastle United are not content with being the Premier League’s surprise packages, they want to become serious contenders again.


Most anticipate a slump at some point, most believe the Magpies have over-achieved after ten games, but nobody is denying they need to be taken seriously.


It may still be autumn and Guy Fawkes remains unburned, but a quarter of the Premier League campaign has already gone.


In case anyone needed reminding, Newcastle’s impressive 3-1 win at Stoke on Monday night moved them above Chelsea into third, one point behind Manchester United, three points ahead of Spurs, four clear of Liverpool and six better off than Arsenal.


Newcastle’s achievements cannot be dismissed as a flash in the pan success, their unbeaten start cannot be waved away as a quirk of the fixture list.


Detractors may point to their relatively easy run of games, but try telling Stoke City they are a push over at home. Try persuading Arsenal and Tottenham they are not good enough to play in the Champions League. All three have faced Newcastle this term and failed to beat them.


Stoke were made to look distinctly ordinary in front of supporters who have seen their side beat Liverpool at the Britannia Stadium this season and draw with Chelsea, Manchester United and Spurs.


Perhaps the biggest compliment I can pay Alan Pardew’s side is I wasn’t even surprised they won at Stoke.


Others were, most notably Gary Neville. The former Manchester United player has proven to be an excellent pundit for Sky Sports and was clearly impressed by what he had seen from the Magpies.


Not only did he concede that Demba Ba – eight goals in nine starts – was a far better player than he had ever given him credit for, he tipped Newcastle for Europa League qualification.


They will need some good luck along the way. Pardew has been careful not to say so publicly, but his squad lacks the strength in depth to cope with anything approaching an injury crisis.


Should either centre back, Fabricio Coloccini or Steven Taylor pick up an injury while Mike Williamson remains sidelined they are in trouble. Should Yohan Cabaye pick up an injury while Chiek Tiote recovers from a knee problem, it’s the same.


Foreign imports to English football normally start to feel the strain of a hectic schedule, the climate and the lack of a winter break around Christmas so we do not know how Cabaye, Ba, Sylvain Marveaux and, as he was injured last season, Hatem Ben Arfa are going to cope.


The fact Ben Arfa still cannot force his way into the starting line-up is encouraging of course and Marveaux provides cover for Obertan on the right, but there is not a specialist left-sided player to deputise for the industrious Jonas Gutierrez.


Newcastle are moving into unchartered waters and there are plenty of hazards waiting for them over the next month or so.


If Newcastle haven’t played anyone yet as some argue, they will play virtually anyone who is anyone in English football over the course of their next four games.


Everton arrive at St James’ Park this weekend, before the international break is followed by successive away games at Manchester City and United. After that Chelsea land on Tyneside.


Should Newcastle remain in the top four at the end of that daunting run of games, nobody can dismiss their European credentials.


Of course, there are other important questions to answer. The chief complaint against owner Mike Ashley and managing director Derek Llambias has been the club’s performance in the transfer market, so will that also change for the better now the club is on firm financial ground?


Will Newcastle resist bids for their star players in January? Will they look to strengthen the squad from a position of strength?


Striker Modibo Maiga is expected to arrive from Sochaux in the New Year, but is there room in the budget for another centre-back and a left-winger as well?


Finally, will Coloccini finally put pen-to-paper on the new contract that has been “virtually agreed” for more than a month?


There are murmurings of interest from Liverpool for a player who will have one year left on his current deal at the end of this campaign.


Kenny Dalglish has already stolen Jose Enrique and Andy Carroll – albeit paying hugely over the odds for the latter – from his former club, he must not be allowed to take another.


If Newcastle really want to be taken seriously again, they must stop their best players signing for a rival which, at the moment, they look strong enough to stand toe-to-toe with once more.



Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries: What happened?

Fabforum

Hopefully, with almost a full day to digest the news, everyone reading this has had time to recover from the shock and devastation of the Kim Kardashian-Kris Humphries breakup.

But what happened? How could two people so fully in love call it quits after an amazing 72 days of marriage? Why throw away all those hours of memories? Some theories:

--Kardashian wants to challenge Liz Taylor's marriage record.

--Humphries refused to change his last name to Kardashian.

--Humphries couldn't stand being the second-best basketball player in the family, behind Lamar Odom.

--Kardashian suddenly found out that Humphries does not play for the Lakers.

--Humphries decided "I've given her the best 72 days of my life, what more does she want?"

--Humphries angered Kim when he went up to stepdad Bruce Jenner and said: "You won an Olympic gold medal in the decathlon? Dude, what happened to you?"

--Their "buy one marriage, get one free" coupon expired after 72 days.

We may never know what happened to cause this marriage to end. All we can do now is stand back and wonder what might have been.

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-- Houston Mitchell

Photo: Kim and Kris in happier minutes. Credit: Ilya S. Savenok / Getty Images

Pakistan spot-fixing convictions mean cricket has won a battle, but not the war


Today is not a sad day for cricket, as I have heard it described. It is a joyous day. That Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif have been found guilty of their parts in a spot-fixing scam during the Lord’s Test between Pakistan and England last year can only be a good thing for cricket worldwide.


This verdict can be the beginning of a major clean-up operation. For there clearly is a problem. All of us have known that for a long time. Even for me as former professional cricketer, it took some time to admit that. But there is a problem.


When I was playing, any mention of anything such as this sounded as if it had been coming from a different planet, such was my blissful ignorance. But, starting with the shock revelations about the late Hansie Cronje, it began to emerge that cricket was hiding some sinister secrets in its darkest recesses.


That these cricketers now seem certain to face jail sentences is a very powerful deterrent. It is easy to mock the International Cricket Council about this. After all, it took a sting operation from a newspaper to uncover this scam first.


But theirs is a devilishly difficult task, and I’m sure they will have learnt an awful lot from this case. I actually think they are doing a good job in educating today’s players about the dangers of becoming involved with unsavoury characters.


So too the Professional Cricketers’ Association in this country. They work tirelessly to warn the players, and to give them easy and confidential methods of reporting anything untoward.


This will not be the end of corruption in cricket. I am pretty certain it is still going on, and that certain players are trapped in a vicious circle of vice. There may be more days like today. But this can be the start. And it is a good start.



NASCAR team owner Rick Hendrick, wife OK after plane crash

A Gulfstream jet carrying Rick Hendrick, one of NASCAR's most successful team owners, and his wife ran off a runway in Key West, Fla., but there were no serious injuries

A Gulfstream jet carrying Rick Hendrick, one of NASCAR's most successful team owners, his wife Linda and two pilots ran off a runway in Key West, Fla., on Monday night but "there were no serious injuries," Hendrick Motorsports said.

The G150 jet was "experiencing brake issues upon landing at Key West International Airport," the team said, adding that all four people aboard "were taken to a local hospital for evaluation."

"Hendrick Motorsports is gathering additional information on the incident," the team said.

Four of the leading drivers in NASCAR's Sprint Cup Series drive for Hendrick: Reigning champion Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Mark Martin.

The incident occurred seven years after Hendrick's 24-year-old son, Ricky, Hendrick's brother John and two of Hendrick's nieces, along with six others, were killed when their small plane crashed on the way a race in Martinsville, Va.

-- Jim Peltz

Photo: The Gulfstream aircraft carrying Rick Hendrick and his wife after it ran off the runway Monday night in Key West, Fla. Credit: Evan Calhoun / Monroe County (Fla.) Sheriff's Office / Associated Press

Ian Thorpe will need to swim faster than ever before to make London 2012 Olympics


Challenge: Ian Thorpe returns to Australian swimming to see plenty of rivals for Olympic places (Photo: REUTERS)


It’s one of the most eagerly anticipated comebacks of the year, certainly in swimming circles, and quite possibly in sport generally.


After five years out of the water Ian Thorpe makes his competitive swimming return at the Singapore leg of the Fina World Cup tour, with a plethora of interested spectators eager to see what sort of shape he is in and to assess whether he can be a contender in London next year.


Having missed the 2006 Commonwealth Games through illness, Thorpe hasn’t been seen in international waters since the Athens Olympics, a competition where he cemented his place as a great of the sport by defending his 400m freestyle crown and adding the 200m freestyle title that had eluded him at a home Games in 2000.


For good measure he also picked up bronze in the 100m freestyle in Athens and it is on the shorter events that his comeback has been focused.


Even during his middle distance heyday, Thorpe often expressed a desire to improve his sprinting and given the relatively short period between announcing a return in March 2011 and the Olympics in August 2012, it was always likely that the sprints would be the priority, with there being simply not enough time available to become competitive over 400m.


To that end Thorpe has aligned himself with legendary Russian coach Gennadi Touretski, the man who guided the great Alex Popov to consecutive Olympic sprint doubles in 1992 and 1996 and who was responsible for the distinctive straight armed freestyle that took Michael Klim to a 100m freestyle world record.


Based in Lugarno in Switzerland, largely out of sight, Thorpe and Touretski have quietly been going about their business to prepare for this week’s big splashdown.


Expectations are unsurprisingly high, but a dose of realism is needed.


Looking at the case of fellow Australian sprinter Libby Trickett, the former women's 100m freestyle world record holder who was somewhat off her best when she returned to the race pool in July this year, gives credence to the view that Thorpe will not be on the pace immediately in Singapore .


What will be more interesting is whether he can develop his speed sufficiently in time for the Australian Olympic trials early next year. Such development is likely to mean technical changes to his stroke, but even if these are bedded in, Thorpe still faces a monumental challenge to even make the Australian team.


There has been a presumption that all Thorpe has to do is turn up to book his place in London, but the facts don’t necessarily reflect that view and, in fairness to Thorpe, he himself has said that he is prepared for failure.


Remember that Australia boasts two of the fastest freestylers of all time in Eamon Sullivan, a former world record holder, and James Magnussen, the fastest man ever seen in a textile suit, and that the Australian 4 x 100 freestyle relay team won the World Championships in Shanghai.


Thorpe’s best ever time is 48.56 which is slower than the best times of all four of that quartet, albeit that some of those times benefited from bodysuits providing more assistance than that which Thorpe wore, and would only have been good enough for 18th in the 2011 world rankings, behind a fifth Australian, James Roberts.


Against that background just making it to London will probably mean Thorpe swimming faster than he ever has before.




Suh and Goodell to Discuss Rules in Meeting

If image is everything, then Detroit Lions defensive end Ndamukong Suh realizes he could have a problem.

Suh, who has been drawing attention, along with three fines, for rough hits over the past two seasons, will be meeting with N.F.L. Commissioner Roger Goodell on Tuesday to plead his case that he’s really just playing hard, and not dirty.

“It’s more or less just to get an understanding of how they want to look at my play,” Suh told The Detroit News on Sunday, after the Lions’ 45-10 win over the Broncos in Denver. “It’s just an opportunity to have a great dialogue and see what I can take out of the meeting. If it’s nothing, then it’s nothing. If it’s something, then it’s something.”

The meeting will include Suh, Goodell, the league executives Ray Anderson, Carl Johnson, Merton Hanks and the operations consultant Jeff Fisher.

“Commissioner Goodell and his staff have had many meetings with players, both individually and in groups,” the N.F.L. spokesman Greg Aiello told The Detroit News. “This particular meeting has been in the works for several weeks and grew out of Commissioner Goodell’s respect for Ndamukong Suh and Ndamukong’s desire to gain a deeper understanding of NFL rules and policies.”

Lions Coach Jim Schwartz is also expected to be at the meeting, and he could have some words about NFL.com’s dubbing of Sunday’s Lions-Broncos game as “Good vs. Evil,” the inference being that Tim Tebow and the Broncos are good and Suh and the Lions are evil.

“I don’t think that’s appropriate at all for anybody associated with the game to bill it that way and it was especially disappointing coming from an arm of the N.F.L.,” Schwartz said. “It wasn’t a rallying cry or anything else but it was disappointing and I don’t think it was appropriate. We are trying to win games. We’re certainly not trying to market ourselves that way.”

Suh also took issue with the good vs. evil story line.

“Evil prevails and hopefully we are going to continue to keep it that way if that’s (how) they want to perceive us,” Suh said to MLive.com. “For me personally, it means nothing to me. I’m going to continue to be me. I know who I am. I’m not an evil person.”

Suh was most recently accused by Atlanta Falcons players of mocking and taunting quarterback Matt Ryan while he was down with a knee injury. Suh was angered by the accusation, denying that he had done anything to Ryan.

“Go back and watch the film and then come to me and point to where I made mistakes,” he said. “Point to where I cut somebody, where I hit somebody late in the back. Let me know. I want to see it.”

But the Lions did not help their increasingly dark reputation against the Broncos. Several Lions mocked Tebow on Sunday for his public professions of faith, first when linebacker Stephen Tulloch kneeled in “prayer” (a take-off from Tebow’s genuflecting pose coined as “Tebowing“), and then Tony Scheffler punctuated his touchdown with a half-kneel nod to Tebow and a mock Mile-High salute.

“It was just something that I thought about throughout the week knowing that I’d be spying him and have a couple blitzes to get after him,” Tulloch to MLive.com. “It’s something I was having fun with. I told one of my friends I was going to do it, so I was able to do it.”

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