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Chrissie Wellington Addicted To Sports

February 19th, 2011

In an editorial piece written for Espn.com, three-time Ironman world champion Chrissie Wellington talks candidly about her addiction to sports, and explains why it’s not necessarily a bad thing.

I’m an addict, pure and simple. but my addiction has brought me five world championship crowns, a little bit of money, chaffing and huge oversized calves. the drug? Sports. and like any addict, when I don’t get my fix, I become like Cruella De Vil (with a decidedly dodgy haircut). I get grumpy, I throw my toys out of the pram, I suffer cold turkey (nothing to do with Thanksgiving leftovers), and I chew on my nails — basically metamorphosing from a relatively stable, sporty person to Godzilla.

I am sure many of you can relate. We all do sports for different reasons: to get fit, to tone up flabby parts, to wear skin-tight Lycra, to justify vacuum-cleaner-style eating habits or to pick up girls/boys. and, yes, for the undisputed “high” that it gives us, the satisfaction that comes from reaching that fine line between pleasure and pain, the masochistic seed that thrives on the endorphin rush that only a good hard training session or race can provide. I know I have always had an addictive personality, but this obsession with sports didn’t develop overnight. I think I gradually morphed from a once-a-week kind of gal to a full-blown, “must-get-the-daily-fix” sport junkie.

Click here to read the complete article at Espn.com.

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NZRU dismiss Carl Hayman reports

January 28th, 2011

Team of the Week – Heineken Cup

The curtain has fallen on the Heineken Cup group stages for another year, but who stood out enough in the final round of pool action to warrant a place in our Team of the Week?

What about spectator burnout?

“While the World Cup obviously offers a unique opportunitiy to be part of a major sporting jamboree, there has to be a limit to what the sport-supporting public can reasonably sustain.” Huw Turner writes

Life through a lens

“The Rugby World Cup has provided plenty of indelible images and chances are that your memory of these events have been shaped by the lens of photographer Dave Rogers.” Graham Jenkins writes

Worsley can do a job on Wales

“I’ve never seen a more destructive low-tackler. he knows Andy Powell very well from Wasps and will feel that he can do a job to keep him quiet.” ESPN’s Ben Kay writes

London Irish centre Seilala Mapusua is set for a stint in the Top League with Kubota Spears, so we’ve selected a handful of Japan’s best foreign imports in Scrum Sevens

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Len Berman: Top 5 Sports Stories

March 28th, 2010

TGIF everyone, here’s my Top 5 for March 26, 2010 from Len Berman at ThatsSports.com.

1. Quick Hits

* There are 4 more NCAA tournament games tonight. After this evening’s action there will be 8 teams left standing.

–Tennessee/Ohio State 7:07pm
–St. Mary’s/Baylor 7:27pm
–Northern Iowa/Michigan State 9:37pm
–Purdue/Duke 9:57pm All times Eastern.

* Butler, West Virginia, Kentucky and Kansas State were last night’s winners.
* Anybody want to coach St. John’s basketball? Georgia Tech’s Paul Hewitt says no thanks.
* Alex Rodriguez talks to federal authorities today in Buffalo about his relationship with a Canadian doctor under investigation for drugs.
* Former ABC, NBC and ESPN executive Chet Simmons is dead at the age of 81.

2. Reality Bites

Ouch. I’m sure some Cornell fans fancied a trip to the Final Four, and even a ride to the championship. But after watching those athletes from Kentucky for a couple of minutes, you knew it wasn’t going to happen. Oh, that 10-2 Cornell lead was heady. But then they managed only 35 points the rest of the way. Maybe the same fate awaits Northern Iowa tonight. The tournament gives you little glimpses of “anything is possible,” and then talent and pedigree throw cold water in your face. Is that an argument for or against expanding the field to 96 teams? Cinderella will always run smack into midnight, but it’s a fun ride while it lasts.

3. Filtering the News

What’s the difference between the University of Florida football program and China? That’s a trick question. There isn’t much difference. While China messes with Google, Florida is dumping on reporters. Coach Urban Meyer didn’t like how the quotes of one of his players turned up in a column so he confronted the reporter. The newspaper was threatened with banishment, and players and coaches were off limits to all reporters after practice the other day. Just the latest example of a college coach who doesn’t know how to lead. But of course the school will stand behind him because he wins football games.

4. Friday eMailbag

In response to Education Secretary Arne Duncan’s proposal that college basketball teams should have a 40% graduation rate to qualify for the NCAA tournament, G.M. writes, “Since 40% is a failing grade in any school, might it be more appropriate to require players be able to sink 70% or more of their foul shots? After all, if we’re preparing these basketball players for life after college in the NBA, being able to make free throws would seem more appropriate.”

When I wrote about Cornell broadcasters vis a vis Syracuse’s, A.K. added the following to the Cornell list: “Bill Maher, Ann Coulter and Ken Dryden (Miracle on Ice).
Editor’s Note: Oh yeah, I’ll see you and raise you Orangemen Ted Koppel, Dick Clark, and Joe Biden… no, wait a second.

S.L. wants to know if I’m working on a Passover-related Top 5. He suggests the Jews trekking through the desert was the “longest marathon…. 40 years.”
Editor’s Note: Just typical athletes where “bread” was the issue.

And when I mentioned the Nets Jewish Family Night and facetiously suggested they should stage a live bris at halftime, D.P. suggested on twitter @LenBermanSports that with the Nets shooting accuracy, the mohel would probably miss.

5. Reeling Them In

So what sport has been booming during the recession? Fishing. Fishing license applications are up, and in 2009 the number of fisherman in the U.S. showed a rare increase. Obviously with unemployment, people have lots of time on their hands, so off to the lake/river/ocean they go. So can Olympic fishing be in our future? Ice fishing for sure in the Winter Games. The winners could stand on the podium with their medals and their catch. Good times.

Happy Birthday: Raiders running back Marcus Allen. 50.
Bonus Birthday: Stop in the Name of Love. Diana Ross of The Supremes. 66.

Today in Sports: Led by Wilt Chamberlain and Jerry West, the LA Lakers set a record of 69 wins in an NBA season. (Later broken by Michael and the Bulls.) 1972.
Bonus Event: Dr. Jonas Salk announces his polio vaccine. 1953.

Follow Len Berman on Twitter: twitter.com/lenbermansports

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Lance racing for cancer awareness, not to disprove critics

March 19th, 2010

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    NEW YORK — Lance Armstrong says he is not returning to professional cycling because of any unfinished business from his previous exit.

    In an exclusive interview with ESPN.com, the seven-time Tour de France winner said he considered his retirement on top to have been ideal and maintained his comeback is not an attempt to address questions about whether he raced clean. While he clearly relishes the thought of competition again, Armstrong said he will judge his success only partly based on his cycling results and mostly by how well it meshes with a campaign to marshall more resources for a global war on cancer.”What happened from 1992 to 2005 is done,” he said. “I’m not trying to rewrite it at all. this feels like a whole other career to me. and this is not all about winning another Tour de France. Could I do it? would I like to do it? maybe yes, maybe no. “If you win an eighth Tour and have the Livestrong International Summit in Paris and nobody shows up and no commitments are made and we don’t effect change in terms of the global burden, then I’ve wasted everybody’s time. however, if you don’t do the Tour, or you do the Tour and you get fourth, and the summit is a smashing success and people participate, and world leaders make commitments that really go towards advancing this issue, then that’s a success. “This has nothing to do with trying to address August of 2005,” Armstrong said, referring to the controversy that erupted two weeks after his final Tour victory, when re-testing of samples from the 1999 race conducted by French anti-doping authorities allegedly showed the presence of the blood booster erythropoietin (EPO). Armstrong disputed those findings, which were not considered positive tests because there were no backup samples to confirm the results. given the multiple layers of anti-doping controls cyclists undergo, Armstrong said his arrangement with venerable anti-doping researcher Dr. Don Catlin may not be absolutely “necessary,” but added, “I think Don can take it to a new level.” Catlin will be paid by Armstrong’s Astana team to independently collect and analyze the cyclist’s samples in addition to the team’s already established outside monitoring program. Armstrong has promised to post results online to demonstrate that he is clean.Armstrong’s first scheduled race with Kazakhstan-financed, Luxembourg-based Astana is the week-long Tour down under in south Australia in January. He’s eager to compete but said he is far from certain that his 37-year-old body will withstand the rigors of a three-week stage race. he has committed to riding in next year’s Tour of Italy but is reserving a decision on the Tour de France.”There’s a lot of question marks there,” he said. “I feel strong, I feel like I have experience, I feel like I have a good team. In my heart of hearts, I’m not sure that it’s that easy.”I can go out and go on hard rides with strong guys for four, five, six hours. But that’s different than going out with 200 guys who’re fighting for a wheel in a crosswind.”Armstrong said he regrets that his new teammates Levi Leipheimer and Alberto Contador, the 2007 Tour champion who won the Tours of Italy and Spain this year, were blindsided by news of his comeback in September. had the news not leaked prematurely, Armstrong said the two would have been advised of his plans by team director Johan Bruyneel beforehand.He dismissed the prospect of potential conflicts with the other team leaders.”This is not a sensitive issue for me,” Armstrong said. “It’s cut and dried. I’m on a team, I know how cycling works. the strongest man, we ride for. no hard feelings. There’s no reason to get dramatic, for anybody. Play the game just like it’s been played for a hundred years.”Bonnie D. Ford covers tennis and Olympic sports for ESPN.com.

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    NHL plans new, streamlined uniforms next season

    March 18th, 2010

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    NEW YORK — the NHL will break with tradition next season by ushering in a new, streamlined uniform that blends fashion with functionality, commissioner Gary Bettman said Wednesday.

    Bettman said the new-look uniforms, designed over the past two years, will be unveiled at the All-Star Game in January.

    In an interview with Reuters at the NHL’s headquarters in new York, Bettman said the players who have tested it so far “have been thrilled.”

    While the new tapered uniforms are fashionable, Bettman said they were designed with players in mind.

    “The new uniform takes advantage of developments in new fabrics,” he said. “But the change was done not for the stylistic. It was done for performance and safety. It was time. our basic uniforms haven’t changed in 40 years.”

    NHL teams have worn basically the same outfit, with big, square shirts, bulky pads and wide socks with horizontal stripes since the 1940s.

    The new leg pads are designed to stay in place when a player moves and not ride up toward the waist.

    “The players will have the ability to have their joints flex and be able to move their arms and legs better than ever before,” Bettman said.

    In a wide-ranging interview, Bettman said attendance during the first two months of the season is down about one percent from last year’s record-setting campaign.

    “In terms of the vital signs, last season was strong,” the commissioner said. “This season remains strong.”

    The league is having attendance problems in some of its bigger markets, such as new Jersey and Chicago, but some of the franchises in non-traditional hockey areas such as Raleigh, N.C., and Nashville, Tenn., are solid.

    “Last year, we set an all-time attendance record,” Bettman said.

    “Part of that record was the strongest October we had ever seen. … if you take away last October, we would have set an attendance record for October this year.”

    Despite sagging attendance in some markets and low television ratings, Bettman said he was thrilled with the way the league has rebounded from the lockout that wiped out the 2004-05 season.

    “I think 25 teams last year either made the playoffs or were within 10 points of making the playoffs,” Bettman said. “And I think we’re doing better than that this year. So almost everybody is competitive and is in the hunt.”

    Bettman said the NHL was committed to boosting its television ratings but added he has secured deals with Internet video firms to reach younger fans.

    “The challenge moving forward with the foundation we have is, ‘How do we grow new fans? How do we take casual sports fans and turn them into hockey fans?’ That’s what we’re working on,” he said.

    “No one can question that this is a solid business, a strong league with an unbelievably strong brand. what other brand could shut down for a year and not lose its customers?

    “Hockey fans are the most loyal fans in sports, and for that we are so grateful.”

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    Iowa fires men’s basketball coach Todd Lickliter

    March 16th, 2010

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    IOWA CITY, Iowa — Iowa fired coach Todd Lickliter on Monday, ending a brief and disappointing tenure that included three losing seasons in a row and a parade of players leaving the once-proud program.

    Athletic director Gary Barta announced the firing at a news conference in Iowa City.

    The 54-year-old Lickliter had four years left on a seven-year contract that paid him $1.2 million a year. He was not at the news conference and not immediately available for comment.

    The Hawkeyes, who had just two upperclassmen play significant minutes, finished the season 10-22 — their first with 20 losses. In all, Lickliter was 38-58 with Iowa.

    Rumors about Lickliter’s shaky job status picked up steam late last week after a 59-52 loss to Michigan in the Big Ten tournament. But his stint at Iowa was also marred by a series of player departures. Four transferred after the 2008-09 season, and sophomore guard Anthony Tucker left last month.

    Lickliter spent six seasons at Butler before coming to Iowa to succeed Steve Alford, who left for New Mexico in the spring of 2007. Lickliter led the Bulldogs to a 29-7 mark and the NCAA regional semifinals in 2007 and was named the Division I Coach of the Year by the National Association of Basketball Coaches.

    But Lickliter could never get the Hawkeyes moving in the right direction.

    Iowa finished 13-19 in 2007-08, Lickliter’s first season, but that was expected to be a rebuilding year following Alford’s departure. Iowa improved to 15-17 in 2008-09, but key contributors Jake Kelly and Jeff Peterson and reserves Jermain Davis and David Palmer transferred following the season.

    The Hawkeyes were forced to start from scratch yet again this season. Their starting lineup featured four underclassmen for most of the season — including true freshman point guard Cully Payne — and the results were predictable.

    Iowa lost to the likes of Texas-San Antonio and Duquesne at home and finished just 4-14 in the Big Ten. Though the Hawkeyes seemed to be improving in the later half of the year, they finished the regular season with a 27-point loss at Wisconsin and an 88-53 drubbing at Minnesota.

    Though Iowa lost more than 20 games for the first time, Lickliter’s job seemed safe until last week’s conference tournament. After the loss to Michigan, Barta issued a statement that praised the players but did not mention Lickliter.

    Off the court, Lickliter had a health scare in early December. He went to the hospital because of headaches, and tests revealed the beginning of a tear in Lickliter’s carotid artery, which supplies blood to the brain. Doctors added a stent the next day, and Lickliter missed three games while recovering.

    Iowa has also seen its attendance dwindle in recent years. The Hawkeyes, who routinely had near-capacity crowds during the Tom Davis era in the late 1980s and ’90s, drew just 9,550 fans per home game this season.

    Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press

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    Washington Redskins Free Safety Sean Taylor Dies After Gunshot Wound

    March 12th, 2010

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    ASHBURN, Va. — Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder’s eyeswere red. His voice cracked and was barely audible. Next to him satcoach Joe Gibbs, barely more composed.

    Safety Sean Taylor ‘s violent death had left his team in tearsand a league in mourning.

    “This is a terrible, terrible tragedy,” Snyder said.

    Taylor died early Tuesday of a gunshot wound from an apparentintruder, a tragic end for a 24-year-old whose life was transformedby the birth of a daughter 18 months ago.

    “We’re going to miss him,” Gibbs said. “I’m not talking aboutas a player. I’m talking about as a person.”

    A day earlier, Taylor and his girlfriend were awakened by loudnoises, according to family friend Richard Sharpstein, who learnedthe details from Taylor’s girlfriend, Jackie Garcia. he said Taylorgrabbed a machete he keeps in the bedroom for protection. Someonethen broke through the bedroom door and fired two shots, onemissing and one hitting Taylor, Sharpstein said. Neither Taylor’sdaughter, Jackie, nor Taylor’s girlfriend were injured in theattack.

    The bullet damaged the femoral artery in Taylor’s leg, causingsignificant blood loss. Taylor never regained consciousness,Sharpstein said, and the news that he had squeezed a nurse’s handlate Monday only proved to give false hope.

    “Maybe he was trying to say goodbye or something,” Sharpsteinsaid.

    Redskins coach Joe Gibbs said he did not know why Taylorreturned to Miami during the weekend. Taylor was not required toaccompany the team to Sunday’s game at Tampa Bay because of a kneeinjury.

    Police had no description of a possible suspect and wereinvestigating whether the shooting was connected to a break-in atTaylor’s home eight days earlier, in which police said someonepried open a front window, rifled through drawers and left akitchen knife on a bed.

    “They’re going to be looking at every angle,” Miami-DadePolice spokesman Alvaro Zabaleta said. “They’re going to belooking at every lead.”

    Authorities from Miami-Dade Police and the federal Bureau ofAlcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were in and out ofTaylor’s home throughout the day. Police were seen taking acomputer from Taylor’s home.

    A stream of family and friends arrived throughout the day,including his father, Florida City police chief Pedro Taylor. Someembraced outside; most came and went without speaking to a group ofseveral dozen reporters.

    Outside Pedro Taylor’s home in suburban Miami-Dade County, thefront lawn was filled with friends and family members who seemed tobe in good spirits. Small children ran through the yard.

    Several people brought large platters of food into the house.when he arrived home, he was met with embrace after embrace byfriends and family members.

    “We’re all hurting,” Taylor said. “I mean that’s my child.”

    Taylor spoke privately with Miami-Dade homicide detectives andexpressed confidence in the police investigation, but couldn’tprovide additional information.

    Speaking of the killer, Taylor said: “I think one day he’llcome to grips with himself and say, ‘You know what, it wassenseless’ and he’ll turn himself in.”

    The elder Taylor said he last saw his son a few weeks ago at afootball game in Washington.

    “We had a wonderful time,” he said. “We laughed and joked andstayed up until 3 o’clock in the morning. we did what fathers anddads do and brothers and sisters, we just enjoyed each other.”

    according to The Miami Herald, Garcia arrived at the father’shouse with her daughter but declined to speak with reporters.

    Dressed in black and clutching her 18-month-old baby, Garciapulled up to Taylor’s father’s house in a black Mercedes.

    With her brown hair held in a ponytail with a black band, Garciacarried her baby girl into the house. she was accompanied by hersister, and her father, Rene. The baby, wearing a pink bow in herhair and pink sneakers, was asleep in her mother’s arms.

    Taylor’s father described the relationship between Garcia andhis son as close, and “a bond that can’t be broken.”

    Taylor said his son had grasped fatherhood “with opens arms,”and it was part of his evolution from childhood to adulthood. Askedif Sean ever disappointed him, Taylor said he always tried to guidehim.

    “We all have high expectations, but we all understand thateveryone has to travel the road and there are going to be somemishaps,” he said. “But guess what? That’s what we’re here for tosteer them in the right direction.”

    Back in Virginia, the Redskins struggled to cope and share theirloss.

    “I have never dealt with this,” Gibbs said. “We’re going onehour at a time here.”

    Gibbs said he planned to have the team practice as scheduledWednesday, following a prayer service, in preparation for Sunday’shome game against the Buffalo Bills. Snyder said the Redskins willhonor Taylor by wearing a patch on their jerseys and the no. 21 ontheir helmets. The league is expected to decide Wednesday how theleague will pay tributes to Taylor at this weekend’s games.

    “We extend our heartfelt sympathy to Sean’s family, friends, teammates, and the Redskins’ organization. this is a terrible tragedy involving the loss of a young man who leaves behind many people struggling to understand it,” commissioner Roger Goodell said. “Our office is staying in close contact with the Redskins to provide all appropriate support to the club and Sean’s family. we also are working to determine the facts surrounding this tragic event. we will honor the memory of Sean Taylor at all games this weekend.”

    There is little precedence on how to go forward, althoughseveral teams have dealt with tragedy in recent years. Denver Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams was killed in a drive-byshooting on new Year’s Day, the day after the season ended in aplayoff loss. San Francisco 49ers offensive lineman Thomas Herriondied of a heart attack after a preseason game in September 2005.Minnesota Vikings tackle Korey Stringer died of heatstroke at atraining camp practice in 2001. Philadelphia Eagles defensive endJerome McDougle was shot in the stomach by three armed robbers insouthwest Miami in July 2005 and missed the following season.

    Gibbs, Taylor’s family and his teammates, past and present, didtheir best to describe a player very few got to know.

    “Sean has been a close friend of mine since our days at theUniversity of Miami,” New York Jets linebacker Jonathan Vilma saidin a statement. “He was a great teammate and an even greaterperson. It is so hard for me to fathom that I am not going to beable to pick up the phone to call him.”

    Taylor had a great smile and a menacing sneer. he was extremelytalented — fast and powerful — and genuinely had a chance to becomeone of the best safeties ever to play in the NFL.

    “What got cut short here was a career that was going to go to alot of Pro Bowls and have a lot of fun,” Gibbs said.

    “I am devastated over the loss of Sean Taylor,” Miami coach Randy Shannon said. “When he was a student at the University of Miami, I got to know him as a person and as a football player. he was passionate about everything he did and was a great friend to his teammates. My thoughts are with his family.”

    Taylor was having the best season of his career on the field andhad stayed out of trouble off the field since the birth of hisdaughter, Jackie, in may 2006. he was becoming a leader, and histeammates had elected him to the players’ committee that meetsregularly with Gibbs.

    “I saw a real maturing process,” Gibbs said.

    he wasn’t the only one to notice changes in Taylor after hisdaughter’s birth.

    “He was kind of a wild child, like myself,” said New York Giants tight end Jeremy Shockey, who played with Taylor at theUniversity of Miami and worked out with him in the offseason. “Butlife changed for Sean after he had his baby girl. Fatherhood reallychanged him. he grew up and matured.”

    Redskins running back Clinton Portis agreed.

    “It’s hard to expect a man to grow up overnight,” Portis said.”But ever since he had his child, it was like a new Sean, andeverybody around here knew it. he was always smiling, always happy,always talking about his child.”

    Private and slow to trust anyone, Taylor rarely grantedinterviews. during his last known full-length interview, conductedwith WTEM-AM in September, he spoke of the joy he felt when he madehis daughter laugh, how he wanted to give her life experiencesdifferent from his own, and how he did not fear death.

    “You can’t be scared of death,” he told the radio station.”When that time comes, it comes. … You never see a person whohas lived their life to the fullest. they sometimes feel sorry forlike a child, maybe, that didn’t get a chance to do some of thethings they thought that child might have had a chance to do inlife. I’ve been blessed. God’s looked out for me, so, I’m happy.”

    Still, Taylor, drafted no. 5 overall by the Redskins in April2004, got off to a rocky start in the NFL.

    he had a drunken driving charge that was later dismissed. Heskipped part of the NFL’s mandatory rookie symposium. he fired twoagents. he didn’t like his contract. he refused to return Gibbs’calls during the offseason. and he was fined at least seven timesfor late hits, uniform violations and other on-field infractions.

    In 2005, he was accused of pointing a gun during a fight overall-terrain vehicles near his Miami home, a legal battle that endeda year later when he pleaded no contest to two misdemeanors and wassentenced to probation.

    recently, Taylor indeed was starting to make his past seemirrelevant. The baby helped him gain perspective, and other changeswere making him a better football player.

    Early in his career, linebacker LaVar Arrington nicknamed Taylor”The Grim Reaper.” Taylor could hit as hard as anyone in the NFL,but he often went for the big impact at the expense of playingbasic football. he would take wrong angles and miss tackles. Evenso, he was enough of a presence to make the Pro Bowl last season.

    this season, Taylor improved his diet and workout regimen andwas given a new role. Instead of playing a hybrid safety position,he was a true free safety. he used speed and power to chase passesand intimidate receivers. His five interceptions tie for the leaguelead in the NFC, even though he missed the last two games becauseof a sprained knee.

    “You think back to how much heat he took for everything,”Portis said. “For missing camp, for not beingaround for this or that, for missing the rookie symposium. You cometo the realization that all of that means nothing.”

    Information from The associated Press was used in this report.

    Sports News , ,

    Kobe, LeBron lead U.S. Olympic basketball team

    March 9th, 2010

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    CHICAGO — MVP Kobe Bryant has a shot at another big prize after falling short of the NBA championship, and he’ll have plenty of help along the way.

    LeBron James is there. Dwyane Wade, too.

    They will lead a U.S. Olympic basketball team that was announced Monday and hopes to capture the gold medal in Beijing in August after a third-place showing in Athens four years ago.

    The team already has “re-established itself” on an international level, USA Basketball managing director Jerry Colangelo said during a news conference.

    The next step is to bring home the gold, and the U.S. will send a deep, versatile team to China. Carmelo Anthony and Jason Kidd were also among the 12 players chosen from a pool of 33. they were joined by the Detroit Pistons’ Tayshaun Prince, along with Carlos Boozer, Chris Bosh, Dwight Howard, Chris Paul, Michael Redd and Deron Williams.

    “It was a very difficult selection process,” Colangelo said. “When you have as many outstanding players as we have in this country — to select a group of 12 is obviously going to leave out a number of outstanding people.”

    The Pistons issued a statement from Prince in which he said he was “honored to be selected.”

    “I take great pride in being given the opportunity to represent my country, and I strongly believe that with the team that has been assembled, the United States will be represented well,” Prince said.

    The team was selected without a tryout. It will have a minicamp this week in Las Vegas and meet there July 20-25 to train and play an exhibition against Canada before heading overseas. the Americans open Olympic play against China on Aug. 10.

    Going for the Gold

    Tayshaun Prince was one of seven players named to the 12-man U.S. basketball roster who will get their first taste of Olympic experience. the roster, to be coached by Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski:

    Although the Americans captured the gold at the Sydney Games in 2000, they no longer dominate international play as they once did. the talent gap has narrowed and many top players have chosen to not play for the national team in recent years.

    Now, the U.S. team appears loaded. then again, the Americans went 5-3 in Athens and lost for the first time since NBA players started competing in 1992 even though they had James, Anthony, Wade and Tim Duncan. That group got routed by Puerto Rico before losing to Lithuania and Argentina, but this one is confident it will take the gold.

    “It’s really the world’s game. We think we’re the best at playing that game,” said coach Mike Krzyzewski, warning that “unless we show the respect to the rest of the world that it is the world’s game” there will be no gold medal.

    Wade and Anthony said they didn’t know what to expect in Athens.

    “I’ve always seen greatness in the Olympics, but that was never one of my dreams,” Wade said. “I never really expected to be on the Olympic team, especially in my first year. I didn’t have a clue what I was getting into. … Now, we respect the game so much. We respect the team basketball that they play internationally so much.”

    Anthony saw the 2004 Games as a chance to have “some of the best workouts in the summertime with the best players in the world” and went there thinking “the USA is supposed to win everything.”

    “Going through that experience really helped me to learn the international game,” Anthony said.

    He’s part of a team that includes one of the best shooters (Redd) and defenders (Prince). there are role players and scorers, including the two biggest.

    Bryant will play in his first Olympics after winning his first MVP while leading the Los Angeles Lakers to the Finals. James averaged 30.0 points, just enough to beat Bryant for the scoring title.

    Those two, along with Anthony, Kidd and Dwight Howard, started for a team that went unbeaten in the Olympic qualifying tournament last year. eight of the 12 players headed to Beijing played on that team and six played in the 2006 world championships.

    “We’re a team already,” Krzyzewski said. “The thing that this program has done is … provide continuity and relationships. … We’ll hit the ground running.”

    Phoenix forward Amare Stoudemire withdrew from Olympic consideration, apparently concerned about pushing his body too hard after knee surgery in 2005 and 2006. So did Detroit’s Chauncey Billups, who would have had a tough time making the team given the backcourt depth.

    Wade’s season ended in March because of a sore left knee that had been bothering him since surgery in 2007. He started working out in his hometown Chicago in May, and James and Paul joined him to help sharpen his game. Colangelo visited recently and left convinced the 6-foot-4 guard was healthy.

    “This was to see how far along he had come in his rehab,” Colangelo said. “That was the whole thing. plus, I had a little conversation I wanted to have with him. We took care of that. I watched him work. I saw him do a few things in terms of explosiveness that showed me that he was pretty much back.”

    Trainer Tim Grover has been working out with Wade. Colanagelo said Grover assured him the Miami Heat star will completely ready when the team gathers in Las Vegas next month.

    “I feel great,” Wade said.

    And he’d feel even better with a gold medal dangling from his neck.

    Copyright 2008 by the Associated Press

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    NFL folds their NFL Europe league, to focus on regular-season games abroad

    March 9th, 2010

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    FRANKFURT, Germany — the NFL folded its development leaguein Europe after 16 years on Friday, calling the decision a soundbusiness move that will allow for a stronger international focus onregular-season games outside the United States.

    the announcement came less than a week after the Hamburg SeaDevils beat the Frankfurt Galaxy 37-28 in the World Bowl title gamein Frankfurt before a crowd of 48,125. Five of the league’s sixteams are based in Germany, with the other in Amsterdam,Netherlands.

    A statement on the German-language edition of the NFL’s Web sitesaid the NFL decided to concentrate its “strategies andresources” on regular-season games outside the United States in aneffort to reach as many people as possible.

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell thanked the fans for theirsupport but said it was time to develop a new internationalstrategy, terming the move to fold NFL Europa the “best businessdecision.” the league reportedly was losing about $30 million aseason.

    “From now on we will focus on regular-season games and use newtechnologies to make NFL more popular worldwide,” he said.

    NFL team owners decided in October to play up to tworegular-season games outside the United States. the first such gameis Oct. 28 in London between the Miami Dolphins and the new YorkGiants.

    the league said it is looking toward other regular-season gamesin Germany, Mexico and Canada, with Germany a strong candidate for2008.

    “NFL Europa has created thousands of passionate fans who havesupported that league and our sport for many years,” said MarkWaller, senior vice president of NFL International. “And we lookforward to building on this foundation as we begin this new phaseof our international development.”

    the league began in 1991 as the World League of AmericanFootball, with 10 teams from the United States and Europe,spreading from Scotland to Spain. After closing for two seasons in1993 and 1994, the league returned with six European teams andretained the same format until the end.

    the league was used by NFL teams to test young talent andproduced players such as quarterback Kurt Warner, who led the St.Louis Rams to the 2000 Super Bowl championship and won two NFL MostValuable Player awards; Carolina Panthers quarterback JakeDelhomme; and star Indianapolis Colts kicker Adam Vinatieri.

    NFL Europa managing director Uwe Bergheim said the league hadsucceeded in establishing a fan base for football in importantEuropean markets.

    “Despite the great support of fans, business partners and thecities where we were active, we decided that it was time to changethe strategy,” Bergheim said.

    Copyright 2007 by the associated Press

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    Study shows new [basket]ball doesn't perform like leather

    March 5th, 2010

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    NEW YORK — NBA players have complained all month that theleague’s new synthetic ball feels and performs differently from theold leather one.

    according to results of a study requested by Dallas Mavericksowner Mark Cuban, they may be right.

    Physicists at the University of Texas-Arlington released resultsof preliminary tests they say proves the microfiber composite balldoesn’t behave like the old leather ball. a number of players havegriped about its grip and unpredictable bounce since trainingcamps opened.

    Cuban contacted Dr. James L. Horwitz, chairman of UT-Arlington’sphysics department, to test both balls — though the owner says hehas no intention of doing anything with the results.

    “Nothing,” he told the associated Press in an e-mail. “Justtry to support the commissioner and the league to the fullest of myability with the data.”

    according to the results released Sunday, the ball bounces 5 to8 percent lower than typical leather balls when dropped from 4feet. it also found that the new ball bounces 30 percent moreerratically.

    Commissioner David Stern dismissed that complaint last week, andsaid the NBA is staying with the new ball. Cuban said the leagueshould do the same in his internet blog.

    Dan Touhey, vice president of marketing for Spalding, said thedifference in bounce could be because of the surface it was bouncedon, or more likely because of the age of the balls. an old leatherball will bounce more than a new one, as well as a new syntheticball.

    He said the leather ball tested had to be an older one, becauseSpalding hasn’t shipped new leather balls to teams since August2005.

    “That ball is probably out of the NBA’s spec, and if it’s not,it has a greater likelihood of being so,” Touhey said. “There wasa lot of wear and tear on that ball, no question.”

    the other finding of the study directly contrasts with what theNBA and Spalding have said about the feel of the ball when it iswet.

    the league has stressed that one of the advantages of thecomposite material is that it’s easier to grip when it starts toget damp. but the researchers found that it’s less absorbent thanleather, causing it to be more slippery when moist.

    but Touhey said one of the strengths of the new ball is that itprevents the absorption of water, which changes the weight of theball as the game goes on.

    “We felt pretty strongly that our tests and the way weconducted them were giving us accurate readings,” he said. “Onething we don’t know is how they wet the material. That’s an unknownfor us. we tried to replicate the rate of perspiration. we did notdunk it in a basin of water. we tried to replicate game situationsthroughout all these tests.”

    the study recommends frequently drying or changing the ballsduring the game, which Cuban also does in his blog. an NBAspokesman said it is up to the officials’ discretion if the ballshould be changed during play.

    also, the physicists recommended inflating the ball to 14.5pounds per square inch, rather than the regulation 8.5 psi, toaddress the problem of its lack of bounce.

    but no matter what, the ball figures to remain a headache forthe league. Players have offered little support for it, and some ofthe harshest criticism came from Shaquille O’Neal, whose Miami Heatplay the first game of the NBA season on Tuesday night.

    At a lunch Monday with fellow TNT studio partners Ernie Johnsonand Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley added his concerns about the ball.

    “The one thing I hate about the ball, it always feels new,” hesaid. “And if you ask Kenny, when we played, we always wanted anold, used ball.”

    Smith, who was part of the press conference in June when theball was introduced, said complaints are natural any time there isa change.

    “It has a different texture,” he said. “I would say if youscore 40 with it, you’ll probably like it a little bit more. Out ofall the things in the game that you can change, the one thing thatdoes affect the game is the ball.”

    the UTA researchers plan further tests to continue evaluatingthe ball.

    Copyright 2006 by the associated Press

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