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Biggest first-round upsets

March 23rd, 2010

BUFFALO, N.Y. — no one can identify for sure when exactly the term “mid-major” became a fixture in college basketball, but the 2006 NCAA tournament — the year George Mason reached the Final four — was clearly its boiling point.

Years from now, here’s hoping we’ll similarly look back at the 2010 Dance as the event that rendered said phrase outdated, unnecessary and (this one’s a long shot) extinct.

We’ve been conditioned to believe in some mystical distinction between schools that belong to the six power football leagues and those that don’t, even when discussing a completely different sport. but if that’s the case, how is it that 11 different conferences will be represented when this year’s Sweet 16 commences Thursday night?

On the heels of Northern Iowa’s second-round takedown of no. 1 Kansas and Cornell’s demolition of Temple and Wisconsin; on the eve of Xavier’s fourth Sweet 16 appearance in the past seven years and Butler’s third in the past eight; isn’t it about time we stop viewing certain basketball teams through the prism of their football affiliation and start seeing them as, you know, really good basketball teams?

“Everybody wants to make it seem like it’s a big gap — it’s not a big gap,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said Sunday after his team’s second-round rout of Gonzaga.

“I watched Northern Iowa play. There’s no doubt in my mind that [on Saturday] Northern Iowa was better than Kansas. Northern Iowa made four or five bad turnovers at the end of the game or it would have been a 10-point game. Saint Mary’s outplayed Villanova. It’s as simple as that. These are good teams.”

The NCAA tournament is often two events packed into one. the first weekend is all about buzzer-beaters and Cinderellas; the rest is to determine a national champion. This year, however, the lines were blurred.

The outdated school of thinking would suggest that Ali Farokhmanesh and his Northern Iowa cohorts “exposed” the Jayhawks as frauds, but that would be silly. Kansas didn’t win 33 games against one of the nation’s toughest schedules by accident. Bill Self‘s team was unquestionably one of the nation’s best this season.

But it’s also no secret that the nation’s best teams aren’t nearly as dominant as in previous eras, which leaves them vulnerable to the nation’s next-best teams. as we move into Stage 2 of this championship, the favorites will remain those schools with the number 1 in front of them — Syracuse, Kentucky and Duke. None were remotely threatened in their first two contests, and surely, we must assume, the clock will run out at some point for our friends at Saint Mary’s, Cornell and Northern Iowa. it always does.

It would be a mistake, however, to label any one team the new “favorite” in lieu of Kansas’ ouster. it would be downright insane, in fact, because it would mean we didn’t learn a darn thing this past weekend.

The Orange looked quite impressive in throttling Morgan State and Gonzaga. They looked far more like the team that originally inspired title aspirations back in November and December than the team that fought to stay afloat during February and early March. Wes Johnson, his hand fully healed, played his best basketball to date, showing an Evan Turner-like ability to take over a game. Syracuse’s suffocating zone showed no ill effects from the absence of injured center Arinze Onuaku. It’s easy to envision them cutting down the nets in Indianapolis.

But first, the Orange (30-4) have to get by a formidable foe from Indianapolis — 30-4 Butler. Eventual national champ Florida endured its toughest test of the 2007 tourney against the Bulldogs — and that Butler team didn’t boast a single NBA prospect like this year’s version does with Gordon Hayward. and this ‘Cuse team doesn’t start three top-10 picks like the Joakim Noah-Al Horford-Corey Brewer Gators did.

Butler is not going to win the national championship — but it’s fully capable of preventing someone else from doing so.

Many will understandably declare Kentucky (34-2) the new favorite, as the Wildcats are the closest thing in the modern era to the talent-overloaded UNLV teams of the early ’90s. (Related aside: would Jerry Tarkanian‘s teams have been considered a mid-major had the BCS existed then?) the talent “gap” which Boeheim downplays will be fully evident Thursday night when John Calipari‘s cast of soon-to-be-lottery picks meets Steve Donahue‘s cast of soon-to-be professional something-elses. but if athletic talent were the sole determinant of basketball games, Northern Iowa never would have beaten Kansas. the big Red very nearly beat Kansas on the Jayhawks’ home floor. Think they’ll be intimidated by Kentucky?

And you’ve got to believe the consensus perception of Duke has changed considerably over the past week. On Selection Sunday, they were the Devils of bracketdom, the cheats who weaseled their way into someone else’s no. 1 seed. but while sexier teams like Kansas, Georgetown and Villanova spit the bit last weekend, Duke went out and demolished Cal, which some may downplay due to the Bears’ much-maligned conference, the Pac-10, but remember, the Bears, not Sweet 16 team Washington, won that league’s regular-season crown.

Others felt back on Selection Sunday that Baylor would emerge from Duke’s South regional, especially considering the two teams will face off in Houston if they meet. but who’s to say the Bears will even survive Saint Mary’s? are you ready to dismiss a team whose center, Omar Samhan, rolled up 32 points on a team (Villanova) from the purportedly badass big East?

That’s the thing about the tourney these days: the talent is far more dispersed. Xavier swept past Minnesota and Pittsburgh on the strength of do-everything guard Jordan Crawford, who famously dunked on LeBron James and who, after averaging 27.5 points his first two games, will likely be playing in the same league as LeBron sooner than later.

Turner and Ohio State are as likely as anyone to emerge from the upset-riddled Midwest. Da’Sean Butler and West Virginia would love a shot at John Wall and the Wildcats in the East. and the third remaining no. 2 seed, Kansas State, may have cleared its biggest obstacle when three-time tormentor Kansas got eliminated.

Will any of the remaining … you-know whats … reach the Final four? It’s possible. It’s also irrelevant. Only four conferences at most can send a team to Indy. maybe the Horizon League will be one of them. maybe it won’t.

“This is different from football,” Boeheim said. “We find out in this tournament who the best teams really are.”

But when the “best teams” aren’t all that different than “the next-best teams,” upsets happen. Here’s guessing we’ve hardly seen the last of them in this, the nation’s most egalitarian sporting event.

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Purdue scores just enough to reach Sweet 16

March 23rd, 2010

INDIANAPOLIS – Purdue isn’t the offensive juggernaut it was with Robbie Hummel. Yet here are the Boilermakers in the Sweet 16.

Purdue struggled to make baskets in several games after Hummel went down with a torn ACL in his right knee late last month. The Boilermakers (29-5) increased their productivity in NCAA tournament wins over Siena and Texas A&M, and no. 4 seed Purdue has advanced to play no. 1 seed Duke (31-5) on Friday night in Houston.

“When Rob went down, we had to adjust,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “We had some growing pains with that, but I think we have.”

JaJuan Johnson and E’Twaun Moore have done what was expected of them in the NCAA tournament, but other offense has finally emerged.

Chris Kramer, known as a defensive stopper, is averaging 13.5 points and made the game-winning layup in overtime against Texas A&M. Keaton Grant, a senior, scored 11 points in the first-round win over Siena. D.J. Byrd, a seldom-used freshman guard, scored 10 points in the 63-61 overtime win over Texas A&M.

“This is what we’re going to have to have for us to continue to win basketball games,” Painter said. “Chris Kramer and Keaton Grant both scored in the Siena game, and we win the game. Chris Kramer steps up and scores tonight (against Texas A&M), we’re able to win the game. We need those next guys to score — the third, fourth guys to score.”

This time they’ll have to do it against Duke’s trademark man-to-man defense, which helped carry the Blue Devils past California and the Golden Bears’ high-scoring trio of Jerome Randle, Patrick Christopher and Theo Robertson on Sunday.

Kramer’s scoring, in particular, has been important. The Big Ten defensive player of the year has been a capable, but reluctant, shooter throughout his career.

“Chris Kramer can play,” Painter said. “He can play a lot of sports. He’s just a competitive kid that wants to win and he’ll do whatever it takes. If we had Rob up here right now he wouldn’t be taking as many shots, and he would be fine with it. That’s why he just continues to help us win.”

Kramer’s assertiveness caught Texas A&M coach Mark Turgeon by surprise in overtime. The senior guard averages just 6.7 points per game, but he didn’t hesitate to take Purdue’s final shot.

“A good play by them, aggressive play by a senior, but really disappointing to just give the layup the way we did,” Turgeon said. “You tell the guys that they’re probably going to go to Johnson, probably going to go to Moore, but you play by your principles.”

Purdue shot 46 percent in its 72-64 win over Siena. Johnson had 23 points and 15 rebounds, and his teammates made up for Moore’s 5-for-15 effort from the field.

Purdue shot just 41.3 percent against Texas A&M, but that was better than the Aggies’ 35.4 percent clip. Purdue’s offense was markedly better than when it produced 44 points against Michigan State on Feb. 28 and 42 points against Minnesota in the Big Ten tournament.

The Boilermakers made some corrections after the loss to Minnesota.

“I think our offense was much better,” Lewis Jackson said after the Siena game. “It wasn’t stagnant, and guys weren’t just watching each other play one-on-one.”

President Barack Obama said before the NCAA tournament that he felt sorry for Purdue because of Hummel’s injury. Purdue never bought into self-pity.

“You can’t feel sorry for yourself, you’ve got to go out there and play,” Painter said after the Siena game. “This isn’t the time of the year to say ‘Well, since we don’t have a guy, now we’re just going to cash our chips in and go home.’ That’s not the way it works.”

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Tiger Woods Sums Up His Scandal

March 23rd, 2010

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IPL Mange More

March 22nd, 2010

that cricket in India attracts bigmoney is well known. yet the price that the Indian Premier League’s (IPL) twonew franchises fetched is eye-popping. The two teams, Pune and Kochi, were soldtogether for Rs 3,235 crore at the auction on Sunday whereas the combined amountfor eight teams in 2008 was only Rs 2,853 crore. to put the figures inperspective, the current promoters of Liverpool bought the English PremierLeague club for the equivalent of Rs 1,511 crore in 2007 while the Saharagroup’s successful bid for Team Pune was at Rs 1,702 crore. The IPL looks set tobecome one of the most expensive sports events in the world.

Thespinoffs of IPL’s success are many. Money is good for any sport. Cricket can beno exception. more IPL teams will mean better cricketing infrastructure acrossthe country. many tier-II cities now have IPL teams. That’ll help them build newstadiums and spur youngsters to take to the game. a Kochi-based IPL team islikely to help cricket gain deeper roots in Kerala. Cricket has not been apremium sport in Kerala, though the state has a rich sporting tradition. a localteam is likely to change that and open up opportunities for young cricketers inthe state. The state’s economy, increasingly dependent on tourism, is alsolikely to benefit from the traffic generated by cricket buffs. Similarly Pune,for long overshadowed by Mumbai as a cricketing centre, will emerge on its ownas a sporting destination. These cities have sizeable cricket-mad populations,but rarely do they get to see international cricketers in action. IPL matchescould bridge that gap. These could be the first step towards turning thesecities into regular venues for Tests and one-day internationals.

With 10 teams, IPL has now expanded its reach. But the geography ofthe league tells us a few things about the Indian economy. It’s dominated bycities in the south and the west. This region has outstripped the rest of Indiain terms of economic indicators in the past two decades. Businesses recognisethat these cities, with growing markets and substantial middle-classpopulations, are ripe for branding. There’s a message here for state governmentsin India’s north and eastern regions.

Finally, do the millions ofrupees splashed out at the IPL auction indicate that the worst of the economicslowdown is behind us? It seems so, at least as far as cricket is concerned. Thesentiment is surely upbeat. And, macro-economic figures confirm the turnaround.After all, cricket’s just a reflection of life around us.

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Sports in Brief: Johnson roars back for NASCAR victory | Philadelphia Inquirer …

March 22nd, 2010

Jimmie Johnson finally knocked Bristol off his to-do list yesterday, plowing from sixth to first in just three laps to grab his first career NASCAR Sprint Cup victory at the revered Tennessee half-mile track.

Kurt Busch led for 278 of the 500 laps and had a lead on Johnson when his easy drive to victory was clouded by a debris caution with 17 laps remaining. he finished third behind Johnson and Tony Stewart.

COLLEGES: Jessica Wong scored late in the third overtime to lift Minnesota Duluth (31-8-2) to a 3-2 victory over Cornell in the championship game of the Women’s Frozen Four in Minneapolis. Wong redirected a shot by Tara Gray, ending the longest title game in women’s college hockey history. the Big Red finished with a 21-9-6 record.

Alabama football coach Nick Saban won the inaugural Bobby Bowden national collegiate coach of the year award. Saban was presented the award by the over the Mountain Touchdown Club of Birmingham, Ala.

The Houston Chronicle said basketball coach Tom Penders will announce his resignation today. Houston reached the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1992 but lost to Maryland, 89-77, in the first round. In more than 30 years as a head coach at Houston, Texas, Rhode Island, George Washington, Fordham and Columbia, Penders won 648 games.

TENNIS: Ivan Ljubicic of Croatia outlasted Andy Roddick, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (5), to win the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, Calif.

Jelena Jankovic defeated Caroline Wozniacki, 6-2, 6-4, to win the women’s title.

MARATHONS: Wesley Korir successfully defended his title at the Los Angeles Marathon while Edna Kiplagat of Kenya won the women’s race. Korir, a native of Kenya living in Louisville, Ky., won in 2 hours, 9 minutes, 19 seconds.

Peter Kamais of Kenya captured the men’s NYC Half Marathon and Mara Yamauchi of England passed American Deena Kastor with two miles to go to win the women’s race in a record 1 hour, 9 minutes, 25 seconds on the New York course. the old record was 1:09:43 by Catherine Ndereba of Kenya in 2006.

WINTER SPORTS: Olympians Sarah Schleper and Tommy Ford won slalom titles at the U.S. Alpine Championships at Whiteface Mountain in Wilmington, N.Y.

China and South Korea dominated to win every gold medal at the short track speedskating world championships in Sofia, Bulgaria.

South Korea’s Lee Ho-Suk won the men’s 1,000 meters in 1 minute, 34.198 seconds. Defending champion Wang Meng of China took the women’s 1,000 in 1:31.603.

Sven Kramer of the Netherlands became the first speedskater to win four straight titles at the World Allround Speedskating Championships in Heerenveen, Netherlands, by winning the men’s 10,000 meters in 12:57.97.

Benjamin Karl of Austria and Maelle Ricker of Canada clinched the overall snowboard World Cup titles after the season-ending parallel giant slalom in La Molina, Spain.

Double Olympic champion Petter Northug of Norway captured the last cross-country race of the World Cup calendar in Falun, Sweden.

SOCCER: Manchester United beat Liverpool, 2-1, to move two points ahead in the English Premier League. Man United has 69 points and second-place Arsenal 67.

-Staff and wire reports

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RCN Offers Customers Free Preview of CBS College Sports Network Highlighted by …

March 22nd, 2010

HERNDON, VA, Mar 18, 2010 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) –RCN Corporation /quotes/comstock/15*!rcni/quotes/nls/rcni (RCNI 15.08, -0.16, -1.05%) announced today that it is offeringcustomers a free preview of CBS College Sports Network, the officialcable home of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship,until April 5.

CBS College Sports Network complements CBS Sports’ exclusive livenetwork game broadcasts by providing over 80 hours of coverage of the2010 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship. the Network willbe available to RCN customers on Channel 421 in Lehigh Valley and onChannel 380 in all of its other markets.

RCN Corporation is a leading provider of all-digital and highdefinition video, high-speed internet, and premium voice services toresidential and small-medium business customers, in Philadelphia,Lehigh Valley, PA, new York City, Boston, Chicago and Washington,D.C., as well as high-capacity transport services to carrier andlarge enterprise customers.

CBS College Sports Network presents all the action and excitementsurrounding the tournament, including the official highlight show ofthe tournament, NCAA March Madness(R) Highlights PRESENTED BY COKEZERO. Immediately following the conclusion of each day’s games on CBSSports, NCAA March Madness Highlights PRESENTED by COKE ZERO, willrecap the excitement of the day with all the scores, news, highlightsand analysis.

In addition, NCAA MARCH MADNESS CENTRAL ENGINEERED BY GMC SIERRAbrings viewers exclusive in-progress game highlights, live look-insand press conferences from every team at every site from thefirst-round through the championship game.

For CBS College Sports Network’s complete broadcast schedule, log onto cbscollegesports.com.

*NCAA and March Madness are trademarks owned or licensed by theNational Collegiate Athletic Association.

About RCN Corporation RCN Corporation /quotes/comstock/15*!rcni/quotes/nls/rcni (RCNI 15.08, -0.16, -1.05%) , rcn.com, is a competitivebroadband services provider delivering all-digital and highdefinition video, high-speed internet and premium voice services toresidential and small-medium business customers under the brand namesof RCN and RCN Business Services, respectively. in addition, throughits RCN Metro Optical Networks business unit, RCN deliversfiber-based high-capacity data transport services to large commercialcustomers, primarily large enterprises and carriers, targeting themetropolitan central business districts in the company’s geographicmarkets. RCN’s primary service areas include Washington, D.C.,Philadelphia, Lehigh Valley (PA), new York City, Boston and Chicago.(RCNI-G)

RCN Corporation Media Contacts:Lisa Barder(215) 355-7175Lisa.Barder@rcn.netMichele Murphy(703) 434-8471Michele.Murphy@rcn.netCBS Media Contacts:Jen Sabatelle(212) 975-4120jsabatelle@cbs.comDan Sabreen(646) 731-2357dsabreen@cbs.com

SOURCE: RCN Corporation

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Top 10 Worst Sport Terrorism Attacks

March 22nd, 2010

En route to their cricket match versus Pakistan on Tuesday, March 3, the Sri Lankan team bus was attacked by roughly a dozen gunmen, who fired an assault of rockets, grenades and multiple rounds of ammunition at the cricketers and their police escorts. eight were killed and six injured.

Needless to say, there are now serious doubts over whether Pakistan will co-host the cricket World Cup, due to be held across four South Asian countries in 2011. And with the assault coming so soon after last year’s deadly attacks in Mumbai, the irony was almost too much to bear: Sri Lanka was only playing Pakistan because the Indian team had pulled out of the tour following Mumbai.

See pictures of the attack on Sri Lanka’s cricketers.

View the full list for “Top 10 Worst Sport Terrorism Attacks”

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Rafael Nadal ousted with first career French Open loss

March 22nd, 2010

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    PARIS — Rafael Nadal’s unbeaten run at the French Open is over.

    The four-time defending champion lost to Robin Soderling of Sweden 6-2, 6-7 (2), 6-4, 7-6 (2) in the fourth round Sunday, ending his record 31-match winning streak at Roland Garros.

    “When one player plays bad, [he] must lose,” Nadal said. “[It] was my fault. … I didn’t play my best tennis and for that reason I lose.”

    Soderling, seeded 23rd at this year’s tournament, ran Nadal ragged on center court with his hard serve and booming forehand.

    Complete results

    Need the scores from any match played in the French Open today? Results

    “I played well today, but I think I played some even better matches in my career,” said the 24-year-old Soderling, who called Nadal “the greatest clay-court player of all time.”

    “I worked good with my forehand, and my backhand worked well, as well. I worked my backhand flat and tried to go around and hit my forehand. I think I played exactly the way I wanted to play before the match. I served well, extremely well, and that really, really helped me today.”

    Nadal has dominated the French Open since his first match on the red clay at Roland Garros.

    “He didn’t surprise me because I know how he plays and how dangerous he can be,” said Nadal, who said he failed to attack Soderling. “I didn’t play aggressive.”

    In his 31 previous matches, he had lost only seven sets — the last one coming against Roger Federer in the 2007 final.

    “He can’t feel good right now,” Soderling said.

    Nadal had won three of the last four major titles, missing out only on the U.S. Open. Because he won the Australian Open, he had been the only man with a chance to complete a Grand Slam.

    He had also been trying to become the first man to win five straight French Open titles.

    On Sunday, Soderling wouldn’t be goaded into saying anything bad about Nadal.

    “I’ve been answering these questions now for two years. I mean, I’m feeling pretty tired of this,” Soderling said. “He’s just another player on the tour.”

    Defending his Wimbledon title will be Nadal’s next major goal, but that will come after a little rest and relaxation.

    “Right now, my preparation is for the swimming pool at my house,” joked Nadal, who was also trying to become the first man to win five straight French Open titles. “Give me three more days.”

    Andy Murray advanced to the quarterfinals with relative ease.

    The third-seeded Murray beat no. 13 Marin Cilic of Croatia 7-5, 7-6 (4), 6-1 on Sunday, giving the Briton the first four-match winning streak on clay in his career.

    Cilic was treated by a trainer for right leg problems in the third set after taking a tumble while chasing a lob.

    But Murray was better throughout the match.

    He will play no. 12 Fernando Gonzalez of Chile for a semifinal berth.

    Gonzalez became the first player to reach the quarterfinals, beating Victor Hanescu of Romania 6-2, 6-4, 6-2.

    Gonzalez, who reached the 2007 Australian Open final, ended the match with his 21st forehand winner. he finished with 50 winners and only 16 unforced errors.

    “I tried to win every point,” Gonzalez said. “And then I’m trying to not be risky if I don’t need it. maybe I got a break, and then I can start to hit my huge shots. … When I have to use my shot, I use it, because I know I’m going to win the match with my forehand and my serve.”

    The 12th-seeded Chilean also reached the quarterfinals at Roland Garros last year, but lost to eventual finalist Federer.

    Hanescu reached the French Open quarterfinals in 2005 but also lost to Federer.

    Gonzalez reached the semifinals at the two other clay-court tournaments he entered this year, but missed a pair of others with an ankle injury.

    Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press

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    So turns out Michael Crabtree is a douchebag

    March 22nd, 2010

    Normally, the unpredictable football decisions of Al Davis adversely affect only the team he owns, the bumbling Oakland Raiders.

    The NFL’s other 31 teams often benefit from his strange personnel moves, which allow talented draft picks and free agents to slide to them.

    In April, the cross-bay San Francisco 49ers rejoiced when the Raiders selected wide receiver Darrius Heyward-Bey(notes) seventh overall. It allowed the Niners to select Michael Crabtree(notes), a pass-catching machine out of Texas Tech, at No. 10. Predraft hype rated Crabtree higher than Heyward-Bey.

    Now the Niners’ dream pick has turned nightmare. In a convoluted strategy, Crabtree is threatening to sit out the 2009 season by negotiating off mock drafts which didn’t occur rather than the real one that did.

    Crabtree has decided that he shouldn’t have to be paid less because – based on all the made-up, predicted drafts – Al Davis made a mistake. He wants to be paid more than Heyward-Bey, demanding his contract reflect that it was actually he who was the higher selected receiver.

    It’s a ground-breaking, if intellectually bankrupt, concept.

    Crabtree’s camp said Thursday that he is even willing to sit out the year and re-enter the draft next spring unless he gets more than the $23.5 million the Raiders guaranteed Heyward-Bey. the news was first reported by profootballtalk.com. anything less than that stratospheric number is “unacceptable.”

    “We are prepared to do it,” David Wells, a cousin of Crabtree, told ESPN. “Michael just wants fair market value. Michael is one of the best players in the draft, and he just wants to be paid like one of the best players.”

    The ridiculousness of a guy who’s never caught a professional pass deeming $20-something million “unacceptable” is a testament to the troublesome way the NFL pays its rookies. a sense of youthful entitlement combines with a flawed structure so that the unproven rookie often makes more than the veteran All-Pro.

    While NFL players tend to earn their money – a disturbing percentage leave the game as near-cripples dealing with neurological problems – Crabtree would be best served getting to camp and focusing on the tens of millions he will earn rather than the few more he may not.

    More intriguing, however, is what Crabtree is trying to pull. Contract negotiations and holdout threats aren’t new. This is. It isn’t just an unorthodox attempt to bypass the traditional (if unofficial) slotting of rookie salaries. It’s putting real value on the unreal speculation that surrounds the buildup to the draft.

    Crabtree is trying to get paid off perception, not reality.

    Pre-draft hype has grown exponentially over the years. What was once the domain of only hard-core fans has taken on a life of its own. all forms of media dedicate enormous resources to it. the Internet is awash in mock drafts. the draft itself has become a major event in its own right. next April, the first round will move to Thursday prime time – where it will, no doubt, pull monster television ratings.

    Still, as fun and harmless as it is to follow the various prognostications, all of it remains conjecture.

    Perhaps Crabtree isn’t aware that even though ESPN will deem sportswriter speculation on “Who will the Raiders pick?” a “Cold Hard Fact,” it is, in fact, not.

    Not only is none of the pre-draft coverage “real” – there is no reason to believe it is accurate.

    Since there is virtually no benefit for a team to publicly disclose their honest opinions of players, teams blatantly lie about their plans. why wouldn’t they? everything you hear should first be assumed inaccurate, not something you can later use in contract negotiations.

    The rest of the coverage and discussion that lead up to the draft is opinion – opinion based mostly on pathetically thin research.

    Crabtree may indeed be a better player than Heyward-Bey, however much of the public and media sentiment to that regard is because Crabtree played on a high-profile Texas Tech team and scored a dramatic touchdown to upset Texas. Heyward-Bey, meanwhile, played on a fairly anonymous Maryland club.

    Just because fans and media – very few of whom watch even a smidgen of tape, have access to team scouting reports or even comprehend the game of football all that well – were more excited about Crabtree means absolutely nothing.

    Even if you could prove (and you can’t) that 31 NFL teams felt the same way, it wouldn’t matter. the draft isn’t about consensus opinions; it’s about the decision of each individual franchise.

    In this case, the Raiders believed Heyward-Bay was better than Michael Crabtree and they put an oversized contract behind it. that was the only actual, factual thing that occurred. Whether everyone disagreed with Al Davis or whether his recent track record is sketchy doesn’t matter.

    The pick is the pick.

    Crabtree apparently operates in a world ruled by Mel Kiper Jr. He wants to be paid based on what was wrongly predicted to occur rather than what actually did. In his mind, he was the first receiver drafted, even if he wasn’t.

    Talk about your mock drafts.

    Dan Wetzel is Yahoo! Sports’ national columnist.

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    Sports quiz: How much do you know?

    March 21st, 2010

    Don’t forget — if you’re a big current events fan, try your luck with our weekly news quiz.

    READERS: how well did you score? Share your tips on acing USA TODAY’s sports quiz in the comments. Got a question you think should be asked in the next quiz? Send an e-mail to our reporters. be sure to include correct answers, explanations, and your full name, hometown and phone number.

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    Parliament Oak students busy with clubs, sports

    March 21st, 2010

    Students looking forward to report cards, March Break. Posted By Julia B. & Cierra P. Parliament Oak students Posted 9 days ago

    Julia B. & Cierra P.

    Parliament Oak students

    There are always many fun things happening at Parliament Oak.

    In the JK/SK classes, Mrs. Inglis’ students are learning to infer and they are also learning about community helpers. They are looking forward to March Break. miss Mason’s students are learning how to look for clues to help them to read more fluently. They are also learning about different shapes. Both classes are looking forward to report cards.

    The Grade 1/2 class did an Olympic unit in which they did worksheets, research on the computer and crafts to accompany books, as well as doing different fun Olympic events. in science the Grade 1/2s are looking onward to starting a new Science unit on structures.

    The Grade 2/3 class also did an Olympic theme. They did an Olympic booklet where each child was a reporter. in science, the class is working on simple machines. in math they are working on geometry. in literacy they are working on a persuasive letter.

    Also, like the Grade 2/3 class, our Grade 3/4 class is working on a persuasive letter. The Grade 4s are learning about medieval times. The Grade 3s are practising for standardized provincial tests. Their math unit is also on geometry. our whole class is looking forward to March Break, but not the report cards.

    A fun trip to the Parkway for bowling is in the works for students who have earned their hundred reward bucks. Way to go 3/4s.

    The Grade 4/5s are studying ancient Greece in history and studying a young person who changed the world.

    The Grade 6/7s have earned enough ‘fake’ money to go to Peak’s Indoor Rock climb Centre.

    Sports News ,

    Fired Sports College Teacher Made Late Students Do Push-Ups

    March 21st, 2010

    A British schoolteacher has been suspended after making his pupils do push-ups as a punishment for arriving late to class, Britain’s main teaching union said on Thursday.

    Ian Jennison, a representative for the National Union of Teachers, said the suspension could have a negative impact on how teachers dealt with their students in the future.

    “It’s political correctness gone mad. The repercussions are quite far-reaching,” Jennison said. “If this man is sacked for this, teachers are not going to take kids on trips, if two kids are having a fight they won’t intervene, because they will be too worried.”

    Jennison said different punishments for latecomers had been discussed by the whole class and that it was the pupils who had suggested push-ups.

    The Derby Moor Community Sports College, where the unnamed teacher worked, said an investigation was underway and that its “priority is to ensure that students are happy to be in school.”

    Sports News ,

    The News & Advance earns top state press award again

    March 21st, 2010

    ROANOKE — For the fifth year in a row, the News & Advance has been named the top mid-sized daily newspaper in Virginia by the Virginia Press Association.

    The News & Advance won the sweepstakes award as the top award winner in the category for papers with circulations between 20,000 and 100,000 at the annual press association banquet at the Hotel Roanoke on Saturday night.

    The Lynchburg paper won 13 first-place awards for writing, photography, layout, and multimedia, and 32 total awards.

    The VPA contest covered work produced from Dec. 1, 2008, through Nov. 30, 2009. there were 101 publications participating in the contest; 87 received awards. the contest was judged by journalists from the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association.

    In layout and design, the N&a won first place for front page, business pages, sports pages, editorial pages, special sections and individual page design.

    In photography, the N&a won two first-place awards, including general news and picture story or essay.

    In multimedia, the paper won first-place awards for multimedia feature and sports reporting. in all, the paper also won seven out of the possible 15 total multimedia awards.

    In writing, the paper won first-place awards for column writing, critical writing, and combination picture and story.

    The sweepstakes award is determined by a point system, with three points awarded for first place, two for second and one for third. the News & Advance had the most total points in its group for news presentation and multimedia. the paper had 32 total awards and 68 points.

    The News & Advance has won the sweepstakes award each year since 2005.

    The press association also recognized the Virginian-Pilot of Norfolk as the top daily paper in the state in the large circulation category; and in the smaller daily category, the Northern Virginia Daily of Strasburg.

    Here is a look at Lynchburg’s individual award winners:

    Jill Nance: Picture story or essay, first place; feature photo, second place; pictoral photo, second place; sports news photo, second place; online video, second place.

    Kim Raff: General news photo, first place; photo illustration, second place; picture story or essay, third place; online video, third place.

    Jon Ness: Page design, first place; informational graphics, second place.

    Bryan Gentry and Jeremy Falls: business pages, first place.

    Logan Anderson, Jon Ness and Jeremy Fogt: editorial pages, first place.

    Jason Snyder, Matt McWilliams and Jon Ness: front page, first place.

    Sports staff and designers: Sports pages, first place.

    Darrell Laurant: Column writing, first place.

    Casey Gillis: Critical writing, first place.

    Liz Barry and Jill Nance: Combination picture and story, first place.

    Kim Raff and Liz Barry: multimedia sports reporting, first place; combination picture and story, second place.

    Chet White and Darrell Laurant: Multimedia feature reporting, first place; multimedia sports reporting, third place.

    Jill Nance, Darrell Laurant, Matt McWil-liams, and Matt Busse: Multimedia news reporting, second place.

    Jill Nance and Sarah Watson: Multimedia feature reporting, third place.

    Jeremy Fogt: Specialty pages or sections, second place.

    Liz Barry: Feature writing portfolio, second place.

    Matt McWilliams: Page design, third place.

    Sarah Watson: Feature writing portfolio, third place.

    Ray Reed: Government writing, third place.

    Ray Reed, Christa Desrets and Dave Thompson: General news writing, third place.

    The staff of the News & Advance also won a first-place award for its special section reviewing the top stories, photos and people of the year and a third-place award for general makeup.

    Weekly awards

    The News & Advance’s sister papers, the Amherst New Era-Progress and the Nelson County Times, also received awards at the banquet in the category for weeklies with a circulation of less than 5,000.

    Erin McGrath won first-place awards for breaking news and business and financial writing for the Nelson paper. the Nelson weekly won 16 total awards.

    Justin Faulconer won first place for government writing for the Amherst paper. the paper also won first-place awards for its editorial and sports pages. the Amherst weekly won eight total awards.

    Photographer Lee Luther Jr. won four photography awards for the Amherst paper, including two first places.

    Luther also won eight photo awards for the Nelson County Times, including three first-place awards.

    The Nelson paper also won first place for front page, general makeup and special sections.

    Sports News ,

    Jessica Lynch Confesses: The Pentagon Made It All Up!

    March 21st, 2010

    Last updated at 10:31 25 April 2007

    Putting the record straight: Jessica Lynch in Washington

    The American military has been accused of telling lies about twoof its most famous soldiers.

    Official versions of the rescue of prisoner of war Jessica Lynchand the death of former US football star Pat Tillman turned bothinto national heroes.

    But the propaganda was dismissed as “utter fiction” at a CapitolHill hearing to expose the false battlefield stories peddled by thePentagon.

    Jessica Lynch, now 23, said she was giving testimony “to set therecord straight”.

    “I’m no hero, the people who served with me who died are thereal heroes,” she said. “The truth of war is not always easy. Thetruth is always more heroic than the hype.”

    She said the stories of derring-do did not apply to her.

    The former army private became a celebrity after being takenprisoner as the first wave of U.S. troops invaded Iraq in March2003.

    Military chiefs hailed her a gritty heroine who was onlycaptured after putting up fierce resistance during a gunfightduring which she was shot and stabbed.

    She was eventually freed in a US raid on a hospital where shewas being held captive, the Pentagon said.

    But it later emerged that her gun was jammed with sand so shecouldn’t use it and she was only injured when her vehiclecrashed.

    There were no Iraqi troops at the Saddam Hussein GeneralHospital when the Americans carried out their “rescue” and medicalstaff had unsuccessfully tried to hand over the wounded private toUS forces prior to the raid.

    Back home: The former PoW with her daughter Dakota Ann

    Although an authorised book about her ordeal claimed she wasraped by enemy soldiers, Iraqi doctors have disputed theallegations and miss Lynch says she was too traumatised to rememberit.

    “My parents were hearing the story that I was this little girlRambo from the hills of West Virginia who went down fighting. Butit wasn’t true.

    “The bottom line is the American people are capable ofdetermining their own ideals of heroes and they don’t need to betold elaborate tales.

    “Why did they lie when the real heroes were my fellow soldierswho rescued others or fought to the death?”

    She told Congress she had a sixinch gash in her head and severeback and leg problems from injuries suffered during the battle thatkilled 11 US troops.

    Her testimony began with a recollection of the March 2003attack. as she and her fellow soldiers drove through Nassiriya,Iraq, they noticed armed men standing on rooftops. Three soldierswere quickly killed when a rocket-propelled-grenade hit theirvehicle.

    Pat Tillman, 27, became a national hero after he gave up alucrative contract with the National Football League’s ArizonaCardinals

    Another eight died in the ensuing fighting. miss Lynch said shelater woke up in hospital. “When I awoke, I did not know where Iwas. I could not move. I could not call for help. I could notfight,” she said.

    “The nurses at the hospital tried to soothe me, and they eventried unsuccessfully at one point to return me to Americans.”

    On April 1, US troops came for her. “A soldier came into theroom. he tore the American flag from his uniform, and he handed itto me in my hand and he told me, ‘We’re American soldiers, andwe’re here to take you home’. and I looked at him and I said, ‘Yes,I’m an American soldier, too’.”

    “I had the good fortune to come home and to tell the truth. Manysoldiers, like Pat Tillman, did not have that opportunity,” sheadded.

    “I’m still confused as to why they chose to lie and try to makeme a legend when the real heroes were my fellow soldiers thatday.”

    Pat Tillman, 27, became a national hero after he gave up alucrative contract with the National Football League’s ArizonaCardinals to join the US Army and was killed during an ambush in anAfghan mountain pass three years ago.

    Tillman, a member of the army’s elite Rangers force, was awardedthe Silver Star, the military’s thirdhighest combat decoration,after the Pentagon said he was killed leading a counter-attack.

    The story was revealed as bogus after pressure from Tillman’sfamily. In reality he died as a result of friendly fire.

    His brother Kevin – who also joined up in the wake of the 9/11attacks and was in a convoy behind his brother – rejected armyclaims that the confusion arose because of the fog of war.

    He said the Pentagon version was “utter fiction” and charged themilitary with “intentional falsehoods that meet the legaldefinition for fraud”.

    “We believe this narrative was intended to deceive the familybut more importantly the American public,” he added.

    The committee’s Democrat chairman Henry Waxman said: “The bareminimum we owe our soldiers and their families is the truth. Thatdidn’t happen for two of the most famous soldiers in the Iraq andAfghanistan wars.”

    Share this article:

    Here’s what readers have had to say so far. why not debate this issue live on our message boards.

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    When miss Lynch says she is “still confused” as to why the military lied, maybe I can enlighten her. The Bush administration had pulled out every lie they could in order to get the American public behind the invasion of Iraq. am I the only one who remembers the frequently reported trips by VP Cheney to CIA headquarters in order to craft the case against Saddam Hussein, prior to the invasion, in order to get the “story” that they needed. If you think that no CIA official’s career was on the line if the didn’t tell Cheney what he wanted to hear then you are probably as confused as Jessica.

    - George, USA, 25/4/2007 16:56

    Shame on this little girl who all of America were happy to see her safely rescued and returned home. Her whole true story came out as soon as all the facts were known. Now she wants to set the record straight when the facts have been know from almost the start. as for Tillman; within a month the family knew he was killed by friendly fire. at the time not letting his brother know the facts in the field was most likely a smart leadership move to protect him and the soldiers who accidently killed him. I have a hard time understanding their greivances at this time. All of this is just another Bush bashing attempt. as for my president lying to me…who are we talking about? Clinton? I watched the WTC come down this was an attack on my country. All of you longing to live under a dictator because they lie less (right)… move.

    - S Holland, Novato, CA, 25/4/2007 16:53

    In this age with the falsehood of Weapons of Mass Destruction, does anyone believe at face value what the American Government says anymore?

    - Lisa Freeman, Ontario Canada, 25/4/2007 16:51

    Sorry, is this story supposed to be some kind of ‘revelation’? It was common knowlege at the time of its occurance, apart from those with an IQ of below 60 it seems.

    - Mike ‘Spudgun’ Hardy, Romney Marsh UK, 25/4/2007 13:49

    The word “hero” has become so watered down these days, now everyone’s a “hero”. Cancer victim = hero, Lone minority in a room full of white people = hero, Joining the Army and going off to war = hero. What is the criteria for heroism? We have to come up with a different word now just so we can identify the real heros!

    - Tom, USA, 25/4/2007 13:38

    Quit calling her a hero just because she is admitting to her lies now, she has to. She went along with the coverup in the beginning so she could get her free house, money and college. She is nothing more than a lying coward.

    - Dolly, Pittsburgh, USA, 25/4/2007 13:22

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    Local Sports Roundup for March 15, 2010

    March 21st, 2010

    H.S. Baseball

    Dickinson Wins, Ties at Tournament

    The Gators closed out play in the Texas City tournament by beating Aldine (13-3) and tying Channelview (6-6).

    Luke Meza, Lane Eliff and Colby Ginn each had two hits for Dickinson (9-2-1) against Aldine. Justin Jenson was the winning pitcher.

    Against Channelview, the Gators scored two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning to tie the game. with two outs, Joey Meza hit an RBI-triple, and Cody Robinson followed with a run-scoring double. Robinson and Cody Whitley each had two hits.

    Whitecaps Split with San Jac

    Galveston College split a doubleheader against San Jacinto College on Saturday, losing 6-2 and winning the second game, 6-3.

    In the win, Andrew gross hit a two-run homer and drove in three. Justin Pruess also had three RBIs, while Dickinson grad Tyler Magliolo had two hits.

    Brandon Campbell got the win in relief of Jay Burditt, who pitched five solid innings.

    In the loss, will Hatchett hit a solo home run, Collin Hetzler had an RBI, and Magliolo had two hits. Ball grad Chad Rogers (2-2) was hit with the loss.

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