Sunday, November 13, 2011

BCS standings: A good week for Oregon and Houston

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It was a bad weekend for Stanford and Boise State but not for Oregon and Houston.

Losses by Stanford and Boise State likely knocked the Cardinal and Broncos out of national title contention. Stanford can still win out and make a major bowl but Boise State’s chances are likely doomed.

There are only three undefeated teams left: Louisiana State, Oklahoma State and Houston.

LSU and Oklahoma State solidified their spots at the top of the Bowl Championship Series standings on Sunday.

LSU remained first this week with a BCS average of .9933 while Oklahoma State is second at .9642.

It can be safely said the Tigers and Cowboys, if they finish undefeated, will play Jan. 9 in New Orleans for the BCS title.

Alabama is third with a BCS average of .9099, followed by Oregon at .8755. The Ducks jumped three BCS spots this week after a 53-30 victory over Stanford on Saturday.

Oklahoma moved up to No. 5 this week, followed by Arkansas, Clemson, Virginia Tech, Stanford and Boise State.

Houston (10-0) is No. 11 in the BCS and in prime position to snag the BCS bowl bid that seemingly was Boise State’s to lose.

An automatic bid is guaranteed to the highest non-automatic qualifying conference champion finishing in the top 12.

Boise State, which lost to Texas Christian, might end up ranked higher than Houston in the final standings but it might not be a conference champion.

TCU needs only to defeat Colorado State and UNLV at home to claim the Mountain West title.

Houston needs three more victories to finish 13-0 and secure a likely bid to the Sugar Bowl.

--Chris Dufresne

Photo: When Oregon took down quarterback Andrew Luck and Stanford, 53-30, on Saturday, it put the Ducks back in the BCS picture. Credit: Beck Diefenbach / Reuters

Tim Tebow leads Denver Broncos to another win — somehow

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Tim Tebow, the much-maligned young quarterback of the Denver Broncos, has done it again. He led his team to its third victory in four games.

Although he completed only two of eight passes, including a 56-yard touchdown strike to Eric Decker in the fourth quarter, Tebow put Denver in the thick of the AFC West race with a 17-10 victory over the division-rival Chiefs in Kansas City.

Denver is now 4-5, tied with the Chiefs and San Diego Chargers, one game behind the Oakland Raiders (5-4), who lead the AFC West.

"I'm not trying to send a message," Tebow said. "I'm just trying to be a football player. We can improve from what we did today and get better."

Tebow, who rushed for 44 yards and a score, managed to lead the Broncos to victory despite the loss of their top two running backs to injury. Willis McGahee was forced out by a hamstring injury in Denver's first offensive series, and Knowshon Moreno came out later in the first quarter with a knee injury. Their departures left journeyman Lance Ball to carry 30 times for 96 yards.

Chiefs quarterback Matt Cassel completed 13 of 28 passes for 93 yards and a touchdown as Kansas City managed only 258 yards of total offense.

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DeSean Jackson is benched for Eagles' game against Cardinals

— Dan Loumena

Photo: Denver quarterback Tim Tebow scores on a seven-yard run against Kansas City on Sunday. Credit: Peter Aiken / Getty Images

Tony Stewart leads halfway through NASCAR race in Phoenix

Phoenix

The battle for NASCAR's Sprint Cup title went off as advertised Sunday.

Tony Stewart, who started the day trailing Carl Edwards by only three points in the championship standings, was leading at the halfway point of the Kobalt Tools 500 at Phoenix International Raceway.

But Edwards kept up the pressure, running a close third behind Stewart and second-place Matt Kenseth, who was the race pole-sitter.

Stewart was aggressive from the moment the green flag waved, charging from his eighth-place starting spot to the lead in less than 40 laps of the 312-lap race on the one-mile Phoenix oval.

Brad Keselowski was fourth and A.J. Allmendinger fifth. Kyle Busch, who started near the back of the 43-car field, had climbed to 13th. Dale Earnhardt Jr. was 23rd.

Overall, though, passing proved difficult for the drivers and much of the racing was single file on the newly repaved Phoenix International layout.

This is the next-to-last race in the 10-race Chase for the Sprint Cup title playoff; the finale is next Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

--Jim Peltz in Avondale, Ariz.

Photo: The field takes the green flag Sunday at the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Phoenix International Raceway. Credit: Christian Petersen / Getty Images

Controversy ? Check for yourself…Manny Pacquiao-Juan Manuel Marquez III official scorecard and punch stats



Here's the official scorecard from Pacquiao-Marquez III. The judges concurred on 6 of the 12 rounds – 1, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7.


The Telegraph had it as a draw, 114-114. I gave Pacquiao rounds 3,4,6,10,11 and 12; Marquez 1,2,5,7,8 and 9.


Here are the punch statistics:

Pacquiao ————- Marquez

578 TOTAL PUNCHES 436

176 TOTAL PUNCHES CONN 138

304 JABS THROWN 182

58 JABS CONN. 38

274 POWER PUN THROWN 254

117 POWER PUN CONN. 100


AVERAGE PER ROUND: Pacquiao landed 17 per round from 49 thrown, Marquez 11 from 36 thrown.


On final analysis, in a close fight there are always doubts. The judges make a decision based on individual rounds and hand their scores in each round. Over the generality of the fight, Marquez looked the more impressive; Pacquiao came on strong at the end. But all judging is subjective.



Should N.H.L. Stand Still for This?

The N.H.L.’s general managers will meet on Tuesday in Toronto to discuss the progress of the league’s expanded rule against hits to the head and boarding as well as the length of suspensions, among other topics. Curiously, the penalties have decreased from the preseason to the regular season.

But a newer agenda item will be what to do, if anything, about the bizarre tactics in the Philadelphia-Tampa Bay game last Wednesday, won by the visiting Lightning in overtime, 2-1.

The gamesmanship started in the opening minute and continued through more than a half-dozen episodes, bringing the action on the ice to a standstill.

When the Flyers had uncontested puck possession deep in their end, the Lightning backed away and fanned out in the middle of the rink, setting up a strict 1-3-1 defense.

One Lightning player stood just behind the Flyers’ blue line, three more lined up across the red line, and the fifth parked himself in his own zone. There they stood, nearly immobile, waiting for the Flyers to run a breakout play.

That is not unprecedented. But what the Flyers did was. They refused to challenge this passive defensive formation and did not move the puck forward. In response, the Lightning refused to break ranks to go after the puck.

The situation turned into a coaches’ stalemate between Tampa Bay’s Guy Boucher and Philadelphia’s Peter Laviolette. The Flyers on the bench taunted the Lightning players, calling them cowards for hanging back. Bloggers hit their DVRs, and within minutes, video clips were circulating.

Twice the referees whistled a halt to the stall and called for face-offs, the Flyers guilty of not trying to advance the puck. The other times, the Flyers finally tried breaking through or the Lightning finally swooped forward.

The standoffs totaled about four minutes of playing time, the longest being 35 seconds. But the game’s lasting image was more freeze than flow.

Neutral-zone trapping tactics are hardly new. They reached their nadir in the prelockout N.H.L. beginning in the mid-1990s. But rule changes coming out of the 2004-5 lockout rendered them far less effective than they were when teams like the Devils and the Dallas Stars were N.H.L. powers.

Ken Hitchcock, who coached those Stars, acknowledged the old tactics last week when he was hired to coach St. Louis. He called his trapping 1999 Stanley Cup team “kind of slow” and likened it to “an old dog” that waited for opponents’ mistakes, then pounced.

“If you’re going to win in this league, you’ve got to play 200 feet now,” Hitchcock said. “You can’t play in 150.”

Most teams still trap situationally, especially to protect leads.

“There’s probably 15 teams that play 1-3-1,” Sabres Coach Lindy Ruff told The Buffalo News. “We play it on occasion. We like a couple different looks, though.”

Boucher has trapped with some success, largely to compensate for a mediocre defense corps. Facing Philadelphia, with two of his better defensemen out with injuries against the league’s top offense, Boucher had little choice but to use the trap to frustrate the Flyers. His team limited Philadelphia to a season-low 15 shots.

Also among the frustrated were some commentators who said the spectacle had embarrassed the league and hurt the game. But the impasse in the Flyers-Lightning game consumed about 6.5 percent of the game’s 62 ½ minutes, nothing like the full-game trapfests of the prelockout N.H.L.

Certainly fans don’t pay to watch teams stand still. But if the league’s managers start devising new rules, they would risk destroying the current balance between offense and defense, which has made for entertaining hockey the last six seasons.

Like Ruff and most coaches, Boucher uses the trap with other defensive formations to be unpredictable. There is no evidence that the prolonged stalling of the past will become a tactical fixture.

As Ruff said, “That’s his right to play whatever system he wants.”

Promoting Discipline

The N.H.L. is cracking down on injurious hits more than ever. And it is doing more to explain the rules to players. This month, Brendan Shanahan, the league’s new on-ice disciplinarian, started visiting teams to discuss what is and is not legal.

Still, when it comes to strictness, the N.H.L. is a far cry from the junior Ontario Hockey League.

Last week the O.H.L. gave a 20-game suspension to the Niagara IceDogs’ Tom Kuhnhackl for a runaway-train hit he delivered to the head of Kitchener Rangers defenseman Ryan Murphy, who sustained a concussion.

It was the eighth suspension of 10 or more games levied by Commissioner David Branch this season. The longest suspension handed down by Shanahan so far was nine games, to Columbus defenseman James Wisniewski during the preseason.

The O.H.L. has outlawed all head contact for about five years. It is partly motivated by the desire to protect teenage players — most of whom will never become professionals — from concussions, as well as the need to compete with colleges for players.

But it is also, as Branch said, an effort to “legislate respect, as best we can, back into the game.”

Another Howe Heads to Hall

On Monday, the Hockey Hall of Fame inducts its newest members: goalie Ed Belfour, centers Joe Nieuwendyk and Doug Gilmour, and defenseman Mark Howe.

Howe broke into the pro game on a line alongside his brother Marty and legendary father, Gordie, with the Houston Aeros of the World Hockey Association in 1973.

He went on to a career as a fine puck-moving defenseman with Hartford, Philadelphia and Detroit from 1979 to 1995, scoring as many as 24 goals and 82 points from the blue line in a season. But he was also rock-steady defensively. Howe finished at plus 400, the 10th-highest mark among N.H.L. players whose careers started after 1967.

Giants at Niners: Matchup to Watch

Giants (6-2) at 49ers (7-1), 4:15 p.m. Eastern, Fox

Matchup to Watch: Brandon Jacobs vs. 49ers defensive line

The 49ers have few serious passing threats, so their offense will revolve around having Frank Gore run, which, if done well, will allow them to control the game’s pace. The Giants need Jacobs, who ran with purpose for 72 yards against New England, to show similar ferocity against a San Francisco defense that is the N.F.L.’s best against the run. Without Jacobs as a counterbalance, the 49ers could dominate time of possession.

Number to Watch: 131.0
That’s San Francisco quarterback Alex Smith’s passer rating this season in the final two minutes of the game, highest in the N.F.L. Eli Manning has been superb in the fourth quarter for the Giants, but Smith, clearly, is also reveling in pressure situations. Just another reason to think this game will be decided late.

Quotation of the Week

“He has a crazy-looking face, and I was kind of hurt that we lost him.”
San Francisco running back FRANK GORE on Giants center David Baas, who left the 49ers after six years to sign with the Giants as a free agent.

Patriots at Jets: Matchup to Watch

Patriots (5-3) at Jets (5-3), 8:20 p.m. Eastern, NBC

Matchup to Watch: Mark Sanchez vs. Patriots’ defense

A major beneficiary of the Jets’ improved rushing offense has been Sanchez, who is passing less but succeeding more. During the last four games, his completion rate was 60.7 percent and he had seven touchdown passes, with two interceptions. For the Jets to win on Sunday, they do not need Sanchez — nor will they ask him — to shred the Patriots’ dreadful pass defense, as did the victorious quarterbacks Ryan Fitzpatrick, Ben Roethlisberger and Eli Manning. They just need him to play efficiently, which is what he has done over their three-game winning streak.

Number to Watch: 152
That is how many rushing yards the Patriots totaled Oct. 9, taking advantage of the Jets’ extra defensive backs inserted to protect against the pass. “They ran the ball more effectively than obviously we wanted them to or even expected them to,” Coach Rex Ryan said. Still wary of Tom Brady, the Jets are likely to use a similar strategy, when they will see just how much their emphasis on alignment, assignment and technique has paid off.

Quotation of the Week

‘It’s one of those deals where they know that we know that we know that they know that we know.’

Coach BILL BELICHICK of the Patriots, when asked about the challenges of preparing for a team they played five weeks earlier.

UCLA basketball: Marques Johnson Q&A regarding opening loss

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Former UCLA All-American and five-time NBA All-Star Marques Johnson (above), who is also an analyst for Fox Sports Net, spoke with The Times on Saturday evening regarding his thoughts about the Bruins' season-opening 69-58 loss to Loyola Marymount on Friday at the Sports Arena.

Did Friday night show that for all the hype about UCLA's big men, college basketball is really mostly about guard play?

That's what it's all about. That's the main ingredient for success. If you have good guards in college and adequate big guys, you can win a lot of games. If you have good big guys and average to adequate guard play, you're going to struggle.

Did Loyola Marymount expose anything with its approach to the Bruins' big men?

Smart coaches know you spread them out, whip that ball around the perimeter and get these bigs firing out and then use the quickness of their guys, the dribble penetration, to create all kinds of problems. It's gonig to be tough to stop quicker teams and that's what you saw.

Did Joshua Smith seem significantly different than last year as far as conditioning, and was he a disappointment?

Yes. And again, you say that taking into account that the defensive strategy that Loyola brought into the game was to surround him, front him, get deep backside, weak-side help to discourage the pass over the top. And UCLA's got to do a better job; they missed him on five or six occasions where he was either posting up or coming across the lane. That's the one thing they need to stress more in practice -- feeding the post. That was the same thing Kevin Love kind of went through at times when he was there. He might have great post-up position, and it's a small window of opportunity. It's like, one-thousand-one and it's gone and if you don't pull the trigger with a pass, the opening is closed. And that's where UCLA was a little slow in pulling the trigger on some of those passes.

The weight, I was hoping, as we all were, that he would come back in better physical condition. It is what it is. He's probably not going to be in shape to run up and down the floor to be an effective player within a month or so, but he's still a force. I'm watching him just beat up those interior guys last night establishing position and catching it. I mean, he's going to pound anybody he plays against, but he needs to get in better condition and once he does that, he's obviously going to play a lot better.

Does UCLA need to consider zone defense?

Kings after deadline: Notes and quotes about 5-2 win over Wild

Kings-colin_275Kings Coach Terry Murray on his 1,000th game:

"It doesn't really feel any different, anything special. It's a game that was very important for us to win."

Murray had more to say about his first game as a head coach in the NHL, when he replaced his brother Bryan as Washington's coach in 1990.

"Everything. I remember everything," Murray said. "It was like it happened two years ago. Time goes too fast, doesn't it? It was difficult because in the sense I was replacing my brother. That was hard. I was there as his assistant for six years. I was prepared for an opportunity.

"When I got the phone call, he (GM David Poile) said, 'I just want you to know that a change has been made already. It happened three hours ago. So here’s the deal: If you want to be the head coach, I want you to have the job. If you say no, somebody else is going to get the job.'

“He (Bryan) supported me 100 percent. He was totally on board with me being the person who was selected. I moved forward from there."

Center Colin Fraser, who scored his first goal as a King:

"It feels like a big weight off my shoulders. It was a huge relief. Scoring goals any time feels good. It’s especially good  because of the issues with my foot."

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Helene Elliott: Pluses and minuses around the league

Helene Elliott: Kings need to make some noise or they will hear it

--Lisa Dillman

Photo: Colin Fraser, right, celebrates his first goal as a member of the Kings on Saturday night. Credit: Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press

Gary Klein discusses USC football [Video]

Times' columnist Gary Klein discusses USC football with CineSport's Brian Clark, looking back on Saturday's 40-17 victory over Washington and ahead to next week's showdown with Oregon.

The Trojans played their most impressive defensive game of the season against the Huskies, Klein says, which is a good thing considering the team that awaits them.

As Klein wrote for Sunday's Times:

The Trojans, who improved to 8-2 overall and 5-2 in the Pac-12 Conference, head to Autzen Stadium next week to play sixth-ranked Oregon, a 53-30 winner over third-ranked Stanford on Saturday.

"It gives us a big boost," junior defensive end Nick Perry said of the Trojans' performance. "We're going to be ready to go."

That might not be enough against the Ducks.

The last time the Trojans traveled to Eugene, they were all but massacred on Halloween Night in 2009, 47-20.

USC players are confident it will be different this time, mainly because the defense appears to be much improved.

The Trojans recorded a season-high seven sacks against Washington. They also got a game-turning play from Kyle Negrete on a fake punt and a kickoff return for a touchdown by Marqise Lee.

That helped complement an offensive performance that included Curtis McNeal's career-best 148 rushing yards, but only one touchdown pass by Matt Barkley and two receptions by Robert Woods.

RELATED:

Oregon's speed is too much for Stanford, 53-30

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Bill Plaschke: Punter Kyle Negrete offers inspiration for free

Pacquiao-Marquez: Round-by-round recap

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The time had come for Manny Pacquiao to act on his desire to convincingly defeat Juan Manuel Marquez, his great rival from Mexico.

With the World Boxing Organization welterweight title on the line, Pacquiao received as well as he gave on Saturday night at the sold-out MGM Grand Garden Arena in winning a majority decision over Marquez, who had twice before taking the Filipino champion to the limit in earning a draw and losing a split decision.

Judges Glenn Trowbridge (116-112 ) and Dave Moretti (115-113) scored it for Pacquiao. Robert Hoyle called it a draw, 114-114.

PHOTOS: Pacquiao vs. Marquez fight

Here's a round-by-round recap (scoring is unofficial):

Round 1: Pacquiao jabs. Marquez swings a left. Pacquiao double-jabs. Marquez misses a left counter. Pacquiao lands one. Marquez pounds the body. Pacquiao with a left counter. Pacquiao throws a right-left combination. Marquez goes to body. Another classic close round between two. Pacquiao wins round, 10-9.

Round 2: A lot of jostling early here. Both boxers are looking for openings. Marquez misses with a right. Nice counter by Marquez. Jab by Pacquiao. Marquez right to body and blocked uppercut. Pacquiao surging with lefts. Marquez backs wisely. Marquez right. Marquez wins round, 10-9. Fight is even, 19-19.

Round 3: Pacquiao working jab. Marquez gets in a good right. Marquez jabs to the body. Nice lefts by Marquez, and an uppercut to the chin. Pacquiao jabs. Marquez gets in a right. Pacquiao lands a stronger right. He lands an extra shot, but just after bell. Marquez wins round, 10-9. Marquez leads, 29-28.

Round 4: Nice hard left by Pacquiao. Marquez doesn’t land all of his left shot. Marquez with a jab. Nice left by Pacquiao. Heads collide softly. Good left by Pacquiao. They tie up. Pacquiao lands a flush left. Marquez answers to the body. Nice counter right by Pacquiao, but Marquez answers with two sharp rights, and pulls away impressed at bell. Pacquiao wins round, 10-9. Fight even, 38-38.

Round 5: Hard left uppercut by Marquez to the face of Pacquiao, who is swinging with ferocity. Chants of “Marquez!” in the arena. Marquez lands a jab. Pacquiao jabs back. Nice right by Marquez backs up Pacquiao. Now a hard left by Marquez. Great right by Marquez. Pacquiao flustered. He’s backing away. Marquez wins round, 10-9. Marquez leads, 48-47.

Round 6: Both boxers jab. Pacquiao gets in a left. Marquez lands a left-right combination to the body. Hard right by Pacquiao. Now a good left by Pacquiao. Marquez tries to answer with a stiff right, and then a left to the head. Pacquiao lands a left to the body. Marquez gets in a combination to the body. Pacquiao wins round, 10-9. Fight even, 57-57.

Round 7: Marquez to the stomach. Pacquiao tries to jab. Nice shots by Marquez. Pacquiao charging, like he wants to go for the kill. Marquez lands a good right, though. Marquez then gets the best of an inside exchange. Pacquiao lands a left to the face. Marquez nails a sharp left to the body and right to the face. Marquez gets in a strong uppercut at bell. He’s here to win. Marquez wins round, 10-9. Marquez leads, 67-66.

Round 8: Marquez landing jabs. Some at ringside have him up five rounds to two. Pacquiao to the body. Marquez pounds Pacquiao with a right as Pacquiao darts in. Marquez lands a left. Pacquiao answers with a combination. Pacquiao with a late combo to the face. Marquez wins round, 10-9. Marquez leads, 77-75.

Round 9: Marquez strikes with a left and right. He sends Pacquiao to the ropes with a hard left. Wicked combination to Pacquiao's body and face by Marquez. Marquez works the jab. He keeps his right up to protect his head while beating Pacquiao in exchanges. It’s been an impressive effort by 38-year-old. Nice combo by Pacquiao, but Marquez whacks him with a right. Wow! Great combos by Pacquiao. Marquez backing up. Crowd is exploding. It's crazy in here. Pacquiao wins round, 10-9. Marquez leads, 86-85.

Round 10: Marquez lands a right. Pacquiao answers with a combination. Hard right flush to the face by Marquez. Marquez slips, but he recovers and belts Pacquiao with rights as he works inside. Pacquiao looks cut on the right side of his head. Marquez's right eye is swelling. Marquez lands a right. Pacquiao connects with a left on a charge. Marquez wins round, 10-9. Marquez leads, 96-94.

Round 11: Pacquiao’s cut looks like it came from an accidental butt in the 10th round. It’s not bad. Marquez works to the body. Pacquiao lands a combination. Marquez answers. Pacquiao is thinking now before charging forward. Marquez lands a clean right as he becomes the aggressor. Pacquiao lands a right. Pacquiao then strikes with a left. Marquez finishes with a right. Pacquiao wins round, 10-9. Marquez leads, 105-104.

Round 12: Pacquiao has salve over the cut on top of his right eye. He starts slow, can't find an opening.  Marquez counters. Pacquiao throws a barrage of punches. Pacquiao jabs. No openings for Pacquiao, though. He's waiting, looking. Pacquiao jabs, Marquez answers stronger -– the story of the fight. Pacquiao loses mouthpiece in last minute. Marquez jab and combo. Pacquiao to the body. Marquez raises right fist at bell, stands on corner ropes. Pacquiao kneeling in corner, praying. Marquez wins round, 10-9. Marquez wins fight, 115-113.

The judges have awarded Manny Pacquiao a majority decision. Glenn Trowbridge (116-112 ) and Dave Moretti (115-113) scored it for Pacquiao. Robert Hoyle scored it 114-114.

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These bouts worth more than a sequel in boxing

Hearing will be required to clear Antonio Margarito to fight

--Lance Pugmire, reporting from Las Vegas

Photo: Juan Manuel Marquez and Manny Pacquiao square off during their WBO title fight on Saturday  night in Las Vegas. Credit: Jae C. Hong / Associated Press

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