вторник, 9 октября 2012 г.

SPORTS TODAY - The Buffalo News (Buffalo, NY)

Micheel, Maruyama tied for Nissan lead

PGA champion Shaun Micheel doesn't feel like a star, not withTiger Woods and Vijay Singh in the Nissan Open, and certainly not instar-crazed Los Angeles.

As long as he plays like one, that's fine with him.

Micheel put some putting practice to good use Thursday, holing a30-foot eagle putt and a couple of other long birdies for a 7-under64 at Riviera and a share of the first-round lead with ShigekiMaruyama.

'I don't know what it takes to be a star,' Micheel said. 'I don'tknow if I have that quality. I would like to become top 10 in theworld at some point, be a more consistent player.'

Micheel and Maruyama, who played in the same group, had a one-shot lead over Hank Kuehne. Ten players failed to finish beforedarkness.

Woods, meantime, continued to struggle at Riviera.

This is the only course on the PGA Tour he has played at leastfive times without winning, and Woods put himself in a hole with a 1-over 72, the first time he has been over par in the first round of aregular PGA Tour event since last year at Riviera.

Singh, whose streak of 12 top 10s ended last week at Torrey Pineswhen he missed the cut, shot a 71.

Brunell, Redskins agree to deal

Jacksonville quarterback Mark Brunell agreed to a seven-year, $43million deal with the Washington Redskins, clearing the way for atrade next month.

Brunell will receive an $8.6 million signing bonus, according toagent Leigh Steinberg, who wrapped up negotiations with Redskinsowner Dan Snyder.

Brunell is expected to displace Patrick Ramsey as the starter,giving Joe Gibbs the veteran he sought in the coach's first seasonback in Washington after an 11-year retirement.

The deal cannot become official until the offseason tradingperiod begins March 3. A source said the Redskins have offered theJaguars a third-round draft pick for Brunell.

Ramsey's agent recently suggested Ramsey might request a trade ifBrunell were signed. Gibbs has said he has no intention to tradeRamsey.

Dodgers beat Gagne in arbitration

National League Cy Young Award winner Eric Gagne lost his salaryarbitration case and will receive $5 million from the Los AngelesDodgers instead of $8 million.

Gagne was 2-3 with a 1.20 ERA and 55 saves in as many chanceslast season, and made $550,000.

Owners beat players 4-3 in the cases that went to hearings, theeighth straight year management has won a majority.

Shorthanded Bona takes care of UMass

A short-handed St. Bonaventure women's basketball team proved tobe too much for UMass, the Bonnies claiming an 82-76 overtimetriumph before 423 in the Reilly Center.

The Bonnies played the Atlantic 10 contest without junior forwardTory Vyborny and backup sophomore guards Shannon Bodamer and TamicaBarnett. All were suspended one game for violating team policy.

Lyndsey Maurer scored a game-high 26 points to lead Bona (8-16, 4-9), while Audrey Latendresse scored 20 points.

In men's basketball, Daemen beat visiting Malone, 87-72, in anonconference game. Kharmen Wingard (Bennett) scored a game-high 28points for the Wildcats (20-9), who clinched a berth in the NAIAnational tournament.

At the Atlantic 10 Swimming and Diving Championships in theFlickinger Aquatic Center, the St. Bonaventure men and women are insecond place after the first day of competition. The Bona men's 400-yard medley relay team of Morgan Hagerman, Seth Johnson, AdrianBlaszczak and Dan Freeland won in 3:26.04. Blaszczak also won the200 individual medley (1:52.30). In women's diving, Bona's MaureenTheis won the 3-meter event (397.90).

At the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Swimming Championshipsat Loyola, Md., Niagara's Traci Liberi won the 50 freestyle in24.47.

Unbeaten Stanford wins school-record 22nd straight

Stanford survived another threat to its perfect season.

Josh Childress scored a career-high 36 points and the top-rankedCardinal rallied from a 13-point first-half deficit to beat SouthernCalifornia, 76-67, for its school-record 22nd consecutive victory.

Stanford (13-0) clinched a share of its fourth Pacific-10 titlein six years with three weeks remaining in the regular season.

USC (10-13, 5-9) threatened until the final minutes afterStanford blew an 11-point lead in the second half.

In other games:

Salim Stoudamire had a career-high 37 points and No. 14 Arizona(17-6, 9-5) took a 100-87 win over Oregon (12-8, 7-6) in the Pacific-10.

Jarrett Jack scored 21 points and No. 18 Georgia Tech (19-6, 6-5Atlantic Coast Conference) ended a nine-game losing streak atMaryland (13-9, 4-7) with a 75-64 victory.

Henin-Hardenne withdraws in Belgium

Top-ranked Justine Henin-Hardenne withdrew from the Diamond Gamesbecause she is sick, letting officials know just hours before shewas scheduled to play her first match in Antwerp, Belgium.

The tournament said the Belgian has had a sore throat for a fewdays.

Henin-Hardenne said she isn't sure whether she will defend hertitle in Dubai next week.

Angelo in 13th place in PBA event in Dallas

PBA Tour points leader Brad Angelo of Lockport bowled a nine-game total of 2,026 to stand in 13th place after the first round ofqualifying for the PBA Days Inn Open in Dallas. Angelo averaged224.11 as he tried to advance to match play for the 14th time in 16Tour events this season.

Robert Smith of Thousand Oaks, Calif, last week's winner inTucson, Ariz., was the qualifying leader with 2,177.

None of the other Western New Yorks pros were among the 64bowlers who will advance to the second round of qualifying today.

Jack Jurek of Lackawanna just missed making the next round. Hewas 65th with 1,896. Tom Baker of Buffalo continued to struggle. Hewas in a tie for 72nd with 1,881. Joe Ciccone of Buffalo was 111thwith 1,802.

Around & about

John Tavares of the Buffalo Bandits has been named NationalLacrosse League Player of the Week. Tavares had five goals and sevenassists in two games last week.

LSU's Nick Saban has signed a seven-year contract that guaranteesat least $2.3 million this year, making him the highest-paid collegefootball coach.

понедельник, 8 октября 2012 г.

Sports Today / News, notes & quotes - The Buffalo News (Buffalo, NY)

Tejada's frustration builds

The ire of Miguel Tejada is hotter than ever. The BaltimoreOrioles star shortstop reiterated his request to play elsewhere in2006, backing away from recent comments that seemed to have put manyfans' worries at ease.

'Next year, I want to be somewhere where they want to win,' hesaid Thursday before playing in a Dominican League game.

'I don't want to say anything bad that can hurt my teammates, butlook at Toronto, they have strengthened themselves and we haven'tdone anything,' said Tejada, who hit .305 last season with 26 homersand 98 RBIs.

On Dec. 8, Tejada said that 'the best thing will be a change ofscenery.' He said Thursday night that while he was prepared to betraded when he made those remarks, he thought his comments mightencourage Orioles management to make some necessary moves to bolsterthe lineup.

If he isn't traded by the Orioles, Tejada said he would 'respectthe game as I have always done.'

***

Dotel joins Yankees

Reliever Octavio Dotel agreed to a one-year, $2 million contractwith the New York Yankees. Dotel, a 32-year-old free agent, wasplaced on the disabled list May 19 and underwent Tommy John surgeryon his right elbow. Elsewhere in baseball:

Joe Randa, the third baseman on the only Pirates team in 13 yearsto contend for a division title (1997), is returning to Pittsburgh,pending the results of a physical. The Pirates and Randa were closeto agreement on a $4 million, one-year contract.

Kevin Millwood signed his $60 million, five-year contract, givingthe Rangers their legitimate No. 1 starter.

Right-handers Ramon Ortiz and Tony Armas Jr. agreed to one-yeardeals with the Washington Nationals.

***

UMass-Lowell tops Canisius

Despite taking a 3-2 lead into the third period, the Canisiusmen's hockey team suffered a 5-4 loss to UMass-Lowell at the DodgeHoliday Classic hosted by Minnesota.

Lowell tied the game at 3-3, then went up, 4-3. The GoldenGriffins tied the game again, 4-4, on a goal by Bret Norris with10:19 left to play. But two minutes later, Lowell scored the game-winning goal when Jason Tejchma knocked in a loose puck pastCanisius goalie Max Buetow.

Michael Cohen, Fred Coccimiglio and Chris Angelo also scored forthe Griffs (5-11-1).

In basketball action, both Daemen teams suffered losses. Thewomen had a 72-66 setback to Bluefield (W.Va.) State despite a 22-point, 15-rebound effort by Allison Depp (Lockport). The men droppedto 10-6 with a 78-62 loss to Gannon. Joe Olsen scored 32 points forthe Wildcats.

James McNeil scored nine points for Medaille's men in a 109-36loss to Division I Robert Morris.

***

Bowler dies after 300

Ed Lorenz, 69, bowled his third 300 Wednesday in his first leaguegame of the night at Airway Lanes in Portage, Mich. When the retireegot up to bowl in the fifth frame of his second game, he clutchedhis chest and fell over, and efforts to revive him failed. The causeof death wasn't immediately known.

'If he could have written a way to go out, this would be it,'said bowling partner Johnny D. Masters.

Friends said Lorenz started bowling in 1957 and ended last seasonwith a 223 average. He rolled his first two 300 games over a one-week period in 2004.

воскресенье, 7 октября 2012 г.

WANTED: BUDGET SOLUTION CRISIS MANAGEMENT IS NOT THE ANSWER FOR BOSTON ATHLETICS - The Boston Globe (Boston, MA)

No matter how the Boston budget fiasco turns out this year, thereis no question that a long-term solution to the annual question ofathletic funding must be attempted.

In the past 15 years, Boston's school budget has skyrocketednearly $220 million, yet the athletic/physical education budget inthe city has remained virtually the same. In good years, it goes up$200,000 or so, and in bad years, like this, $100,000 is trimmed.When you consider that Boston's coaches have received salaryincreases amounting to 49.5 percent this decade, it's easy to seehow much the programs have been downgraded.

Boston's school administrative leadership has never treatedathletics and physical education with respect. They've always beensomething to lean on when budget cuts were needed and they'vealways been viewed as a necessity rather than a priority.

In criticizing superintendent Laval Wilson's proposed $500,000cuts in school sports, Mayor Flynn cited a 1986 national studyamong urban school systems that found Boston had the highestadministrative costs per pupil of 13 comparably sized systems. Thatyear, Boston was 72 percent higher than the average system and 46percent higher than Pittsburgh, the next highest in the study.

While the city's Court Street school headquarters has beenoverflowing with administrators, the staff for athletics andphysical education has been reduced.

What was a 13-person department in 1978 is down to one, andall internal matters in the school once handled by athleticcoordinators will be handled by an unpaid designee of the school'sheadmaster.

In 1982, UMass-Boston athletic director Charlie Titus and thelate Frank Power worked to create a master plan for improvingphysical education and athletics.

Most of their plan was implemented in 1983, but it has sincecollapsed because the over-administered Boston School Departmentkept chipping away at the sports budget and its people.

Wilson's school sports proposal met with opposition fromSchool Committee members last week. They cited all the rightreasons school sports are necessary -- the incentive to keep kidsin school, scholarship opportunity, etc.

But the committee and Flynn, the most vocal proponent of highschool sports, are guilty of supporting school sports by rhetoricrather than by performance.

It's baffling that school sports and physical education, whichuse up less than one-half of 1 percent of the $360 million schoolbudget, dominated the news last week.

There were many other cuts in Wilson's $2.6 million reductionproposal, but the media and public focused on the school sportsproblem. It happens all the time. Propose cuts and start off withschool sports. It's sure to provoke reaction and indignation.

During the past year, we experienced the usual 'we're going tocut school sports' threats all over the suburbs, and as Septembernears, almost everything is neatly back in place. When will thepoliticians learn that their act is becoming increasingly boring?

Solutions galore have been forthcoming from all over,including one that proposed asking Boston's sports teams and itspro athletes to donate hefty sums.

Fund-raising and other temporary measures are not thesolutions.

Boston must establish a physical education and athleticcommittee that will recommend and guarantee that the city'sathletes have safe fields, proper medical attention, cleanuniforms, good coaching and solid administrative support.

An opportunity will be lost if this crisis merely becomesanother crisis in a year or two.

суббота, 6 октября 2012 г.

BACK TO HAMILTON; EX-RAIDER TO SEE HER NUMBER RETIRED.(Sports) - The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Byline: Matt Michael Staff writer

Former Colgate University soccer star Jennifer Hughes did not wear uniform No. 2 because that's the number worn by New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter.

'I had it first,' Hughes said, laughing. 'He took my number.'

Indeed, Hughes took uniform No. 2 in her freshman year at Colgate in 1993 because her favorite number, 13, was already taken. Jeter starting wearing No. 2 in 1996, his rookie year with the Yankees.

In the end, No. 2 will never be worn again by another Yankee or another Colgate women's soccer player. The Yankees will surely retire Jeter's number one day, and Colgate will retire Hughes' number during a ceremony before Friday's 7 p.m. game between the Raiders and Navy at Van Doren Field.

'It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and certainly an honor,' said Hughes, a Minoa native who is attending graduate school at the University of Massachusetts.

Not a superstitious sort, Hughes wore No. 13 at East Syracuse-Minoa High School, where she led the Spartans to three Section 3 championships and was a scholastic All-American. She wanted No. 13 at Colgate, but it was already worn by a junior player. So Hughes took No. 2, one of only two numbers remaining when it came time for her to pick.

Hughes, the Raiders' all-time leading scorer with 106 points (40 goals and 26 assists), is just the second player in the 21-year history of the Colgate's women's soccer program to have her number retired. The other is Jessica Tuthill, a first-team All-American who wore No. 17 and graduated in 1995 - one year ahead of Hughes.

'She's the best player to go through Colgate soccer,' Hughes said of Tuthill. 'To be mentioned with her as the two people to have their number retired is pretty special.'

Hughes helped Colgate capture three consecutive Patriot League titles from 1994-96, and three Eastern Collegiate Athletic Association championships in 1993, 1995 and 1996. In her senior season she won several awards, including Patriot League Offensive Player of the Year, NCAA Division I Soccer Buzz All-American and Patriot League Academic Honor Roll.

'People don't always associate Colgate and soccer,' Hughes said. 'For the team to be so successful my four years at Colgate, I can't think of any other word than special to adequately describe it.'

Following Colgate, Hughes played for the New York Magic of the United States Independent Soccer League in 1998 and a professional team in Sweden in 1999. She returned to Colgate as an assistant coach for the women's soccer team in 2000-01, and she's now pursuing a dual graduate degree (MBA and sports management) at UMass.

Hughes, 27, does not have any classes on Fridays, so she'll be free to travel to Hamilton for Friday night's ceremony. She'll be joined by her parents, Robert and Judith Hughes of Fayetteville, other family members and friends from East Syracuse-Minoa High School.

'Going to Colgate was such a special experience. I wouldn't change a thing,' Hughes said. 'To have your number retired is simply icing on the cake.'

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File photo/Jim Commentucci, 1996

пятница, 5 октября 2012 г.

OFF THE ICE WITH PETE GIACOMINI.(SPORTS) - The Capital Times

Byline: Todd Milewski

When the goals and assists get tallied at University of Wisconsin men's hockey home games, that's Pete Giacomini at work. Giacomini is in his sixth season as the Kohl Center's official scorer. He's also the chief operating officer of AgSource Cooperative Services, a Verona-based company that specializes in dairy information management, and is an assistant coach for the Madison Metro Lynx, a cooperative high school girls hockey program.

In baseball, the official scorer has all sorts of data to report to the league after a game. What kind of information do you have to turn in?

It's very much a team effort on the stats crew even though mine is the only name on the score sheet. My responsibility is awarding points after a goal is scored. In addition, we have a five- to six-person crew under the direction of hockey (sports information director) Paul Capobianco. This group charts shots, counts saves, records penalties and plus-minuses, and enters everything as it happens into the computer system that feeds the scoreboard shot totals, online stats, between-period summaries and the official score sheet.

When you're behind the bench for the Metro Lynx, do you ever find yourself watching plays for potential assists like you might during a UW game?

No, if anything it can happen in reverse at a Badger game. I coach goaltenders and still play in nets with the old guys -- at least I try to -- so I like to watch a game as a fan from the goalie's perspective. My wife, who knows the game pretty well, hates to watch a game with me because she'll ask what happened on a certain play and I'll have been watching the goalkeeper. When I first started working UW games I had to break those habits to keep focused on the puck. It's not a good job if you're distracted easily.

If there's a questionable call on an assist, would you rather give a player the point or not?

It was a surprise when I first started doing this that there was a lot more subjectivity and judgment than I expected. You try to do what is right by the rules, but benevolence wins out in a close call. You err on the side of the player. These guys work hard for what they do and if a second assist is the reward, so be it.

Your first game as scorer was the Badgers' 9-6 win over Massachusetts to start the 2000-01 season. What kind of experience was that in trying to keep up with all the goals?

Six years ago and still the most total goals in any game I've ever worked! The replay system didn't work the first period. No one told me I could overrule the referee on who got a goal. On one Badger goal the UMass defenseman cleared the puck from the corner, hit his partner in the low slot and deflected it into his own net. Rule says the last player to touch the puck gets the goal with no assists. The ref awarded it to a guy who never touched it. Being my first game with no training, no replay and little experience, I assumed I missed something and awarded assists to the other two forwards. After the game, when (Dany) Heatley was asked what the strangest thing about that goal was, he said it was the fact we gave two assists. I saw coaches (Jeff) Sauer and (Mark) Johnson after the game and asked them what they had gotten me into.

Have you ever had to make any particularly controversial decisions in regard to who gets a goal?

My most controversial decision was getting Luke Kohtala his only save in his Badger career -- it was legit. Nothing serious with goals. Third-period game-winners when media is on deadline are important to get right as quickly as possible. It can change how they write about the game. Goals are pretty obvious most of the time -- player reactions will tell you even if you miss it. It's the helpers that get tricky. Luckily for me, most people pay less attention to them. My objective is to have scoring decisions be non-controversial, and the scorer be as anonymous as possible.

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MICHELLE STOCKER/THE CAPITAL TIMES

четверг, 4 октября 2012 г.

CHANEY HAS REACHED POINT OF NO RETURN.(Sports) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: BRIAN ETTKIN

They slapped John Chaney on the wrist with a boa, sent him to bed without milk and cookies, and ground him for three basketball games.

A kid has a fractured arm, his basketball career over because Chaney lost his temper and crossed a line that coaches must never transgress. Yet, Chaney will return 'to lead' his team in the Atlantic 10 Tournament. He's embarrassed Temple before, and since no one is inclined to stop him, why wouldn't Chaney do something 'reprehensible' - that's how Chaney described his actions - again?

We give legends leeway. That's how Bob Knight coached Indiana long after his bullying and abusive behavior would've gotten lesser coaches fired.

We give legends a second chance at a second chance.

But Chaney has exhausted his.

Which is why Temple president David Adamany should've thanked Chaney for all he's done, then asked for his resignation.

Saint Joseph's John Bryant can't suit up to play on Senior Day. He won't be able to play in his final Atlantic 10 Tournament and the NCAAs or NIT, either. He'll watch it all because Chaney became so angered by how the referees officiated a game his team would lose that Chaney told 6-foot-8, 250-pound Nehemiah Ingram to become an elbow-throwing, body-shoving vigilante, to foul and befoul the night.

Chaney risked injury to young men for the sake of plaintively making known his displeasure. He didn't instruct Ingram to injure anyone. He did know that might happen anyway.

And you can't pardon Chaney's lapse in judgment because it occurred in 'the heat of the moment.' This was premeditated mayhem. In a conference call the day before, Chaney went Charles Bronson on Saint Joe's, Chaney complained about what he considered illegal screens set by the Hawks and told reporters he would insert 'one of my goons and have him run through one of those guys and chop him in the neck or something.'

Can you imagine your outrage if a coach did that against your son's team, and your son lay on a hospital bed because someone wanted to make a point?

The only thing Chaney proved was, at the age of 73, after more than 700 wins and a plaque in the Basketball Hall of Fame, he no longer should be coaching his team.

Now, supporters of coaches such as Chaney and Knight argue that their ugly public outbursts are outweighed by the greater good they've done. These coaches graduate players and instill values such as commitment and perseverance. That's true. In a sport in which coaches may take ethical shortcuts, these two don't cheat anyone.

But here's the rub: They demand self-discipline from players but won't control themselves. I don't recall Dean Smith or John Wooden wrestling with that.

Whereas in Chaney's third game coaching Temple he had to be pried off Stanford coach Tom Davis, just as Chaney's fingers had to be loosened from George Washington coach Gerry Gimelstob's trachea, in 1984. Chaney once went into the stands after fans. And everyone remembers his charging then-UMass coach John Calipari, who was seated on a podium during a news conference, and threatening, 'I'll kill you.'

Now this.

Chaney has three games to reevaluate his behavior and try to curb the anger that fuels him.

But change?

It's Temple that ought to make one.

Brian Ettkin can be reached at 454-5457 or by e-mail at bettkin@timesunion.com.

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среда, 3 октября 2012 г.

Rams' Nicosia picks Colgate; Talented Amsterdam star decides against UAlbany.(Sports) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: JAMES ALLEN - Staff writer

AMSTERDAM - For some time, Vinnie Nicosia thought he'd be playing football next season for Bob Ford's University at Albany team.

But a recent trip to Colgate University in Hamilton changed everything for Nicosia, who is as talented on the offensive side of the ball as he is on the defensive side.

In a 2:30 p.m. ceremony today at Amsterdam High, the senior will sign a letter of intent to play for the Red Raiders. Coach Dick Biddle's team went 7-4 in 2007.

'I'm pretty relieved,' Nicosia said.

Nicosia, a standout receiver, defensive back and special teams performer for the Rugged Rams, visited the Colgate campus on an official visit Jan. 19-20, and then some Colgate coaches came to Nicosia's home Jan. 22.

'That was the hardest part,' Nicosia said regarding his ultimate decision to pick Colgate. 'I thought I was going to UAlbany.'

The 6-foot-1, 190-pound Nicosia earned first-team All-Area Large School honors from the Times Union in 2006 (defensive back) and 2007 (wide receiver). He will play safety at Colgate. Nicosia helped Amsterdam capture the state Class A title in 2005.

'I'm glad for Vinnie, as long as he is happy,' Amsterdam coach Pat Liverio said. 'I feel bad for Bob. Once Vinnie made the trip to Colgate, he just fell in love with everything.'

Among the other schools interested in Nicosia were Maine, UMass and Holy Cross.

вторник, 2 октября 2012 г.

Olympic ring goal of Harrison graduate Reams Three-sport star takes up boxing - The Gazette (Colorado Springs, CO)

Ronnie Reams was once best known for his quick feet and sprinter'sspeed after earning All-State honors at Harrison in football, trackand basketball.

Now the 2004 graduate's fists are drawing most of the attention.

After a year playing football and track at NCAA Division IIHastings (Neb.) College, Reams has returned home to train for anOlympic boxing bid.

Reams has enjoyed some success after only six months of training.

With a victory at the Ringside International Amateur Championshipin Kansas City, Mo., Reams won the 141-pound novice championship, hisfirst title belt.

'I feel like I'm getting better very fast, and every time I fightI get better,' Reams said. 'The state championship is in December,and if I can keep winning I can make it to nationals. That would be ahuge step toward the Olympics.'

His coach, longtime boxing mentor Hal Adonis, has nothing butpraise for his young talent.

'I don't think there is anybody in the state that can beat him...and a lot of people now believe that,' Adonis said. 'He's a very goodbody puncher. He has very quick hands and he's very strong for hissize.'

In preparation for the state championships, Reams has beensparring with larger and more experienced fighters. Some of his bestsparring sessions have been with 1988 Olympic gold medalist AndrewMaynard.

'He taught me a lot,' Reams said. 'A lot of people don't get totrain with gold medal winners.'

Despite his limited experience, the Pikes Peak Community Collegesophomore and business management major doesn't get pushed around.

'I have worked him with open fighters that are 165 pounds with 70or 80 fights under their belts and he really holds himself because heis so quick,' Adonis said.

Tax-deductible donations can be made to the Colorado Local BoxingChapter by contacting the chapter president Scott Gomez at 719-240-4749.

Haley Jones,

Fountain Valley '02

The senior women's soccer midfielder set a school record fourassists against Oregon Tech on Saturday for NAIA member ConcordiaUniversity of Portland, Ore.

Kyle VanHorn, Doherty '02

The Colorado State Rams junior is working his way back from a near-fatal boating injury in July 2005.

His knee was sliced open by the boat propeller after he fell intothe water. The blade split his left kneecap and cut into, but notthrough, his patella tendon. Six months ago, his kneecap split again.

VanHorn remains on the school's depth chart as the backup 'B-Back' when the Rams football team goes into a two-back formation onoffense.

Cheryl Lyles, Harrison '04

The junior college basketball transfer signed with the Adams StateGrizzlies in July after spending two years at Umpqua CommunityCollege, where she averaged 4.5 points and 7.5 rebounds per game.

Sarah Williams,

Cheyenne Mountain '06

Freshman goalkeeper set a school record for saves (33) in a gamefor UMass women's field hockey (3-9). Has appeared in seven games,starting the last four.

She's allowed 11 goals for a 2.04 goals against average and savepercentage of .776. She is 2-3 on the season.

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понедельник, 1 октября 2012 г.

SPORTS LOG - The Boston Globe (Boston, MA)

Hockey

First poll has UNH, BC at even strength

Little has changed in the Hockey East men's hierarchy since theend of last season. Reigning regular-season champion New Hampshireand second-place finisher Boston College received the same number ofpoints (84) and first-place votes (five) in the Hockey East Coaches'Poll released yesterday to share the top preseason ranking. BostonUniversity (77 points) was third, followed by Maine (61),Massachusetts and Vermont (54), Northeastern (43), Providence (39),UMass-Lowell (25), and Merrimack (19) ... Buffalo Sabres defensemanTeppo Numminen is expected to be released from a Cleveland hospitalwithin days following open heart surgery last week. Numminen said hecould return to the Sabres by December ... Former BC goalie CorySchneider was reassigned by the Vancouver Canucks to Manitoba of theAHL. Another ex-Eagle was sent to the AHL, center Jeff Giuliano goingfrom the Los Angeles Kings to Manchester, N.H.

Baseball

Huntington appointed new Pirates GM

Neal Huntington, a former Cleveland Indians assistant generalmanager who was moved to a mostly scouting role two years ago, washired as the Pittsburgh Pirates' general manager. The 37-year-oldHuntington replaces Dave Littlefield, who was fired earlier thismonth after failing to produce a winning season since being hired inJuly 2001. Huntington, a graduate of Amherst who also has a master'sdegree in sports management from the University of Massachusetts, wasconsidered a surprise pick of new Pirates president Frank Coonelly.'Neal is extremely intelligent, analytical, and driven to succeed,'Coonelly said ... Reds outfielder Adam Dunn, who is third in theNational League with 40 home runs, will undergo arthroscopic surgerytoday to clean out his right knee ... Orlando Hernandez threw a pain-free bullpen session at Shea Stadium that left him very encouragedabout his injured right foot. Hernandez is scheduled to pitch asimulated game tomorrow, but it's unclear if he will pitch in aregular-season game ... Orioles reliever Danys Baez will undergoelbow ligament replacement surgery and will probably miss the 2008season. Baez, who last pitched Sept. 12, was a huge disappointment inhis first season with Baltimore after signing a three-year, $19million contract in November. He finished 0-6 with a 6.44 ERA andthree saves ... Phillies GM Pat Gillick said he plans to retire afterhis contract runs out after next season ... China will enter a teamin the upcoming Arizona Fall League, and it will be coached by formerRed Sox pitcher Bruce Hurst and ex-major leaguer Jim Lefebvre.

Basketball

Thomas, Dolan take witness stand

New York Knicks coach Isiah Thomas climbed onto the witness standin US District Court in Manhattan, charming a federal jury andrecalling his storied basketball career as he defended himselfagainst sex discrimination charges brought by a fired team executive.His testimony came soon after Madison Square Garden chairman JamesDolan told jurors he fired Anucha Browne Sanders, a former MSG vicepresident, upon learning she tried to get her subordinates to helpbuild her case against Thomas. Dolan said he was also told before theJanuary 2006 firing that Browne Sanders was demanding $6 million notto lodge a harassment complaint ... Corliss Williamson, who playedfor Sacramento last season, his 12th in the NBA, said he is retiringto become an assistant coach at Arkansas Baptist College ... BrianChase signed with the Miami Heat, giving the team four point guardsheading into training camp ... Former Milwaukee Bucks assistant coachMike Sanders was hired to replace Dell Curry, who stepped down as anassistant with the Charlotte Bobcats. Curry will remain with the teamto work in community relations.

College football

Buckeyes' backup QB is arrested

Ohio State's third-team quarterback, redshirt freshman AntonioHenton, was arrested Monday night on a charge of soliciting aprostitute in Columbus, Ohio. Henton, who entered a not guilty plea,will not travel with the team to Minnesota for Saturday's game ...Iowa wide receiver Andy Brodell is likely to miss the rest of theseason after tearing his hamstring during Saturday's loss toWisconsin. Brodell also was the Hawkeyes' primary punt returner ...Texas Christian star defensive end Tommy Blake will miss at least twogames on medical leave, the second time this season he's beensidelined for undisclosed reasons ... Oklahoma senior defensive endJohn Williams had surgery to repair a torn Achilles' and will missthe rest of the season ... Florida State coach Bobby Bowdenreinstated linebacker Geno Hayes following his suspension for beingarrested for an altercation with police last week, but also demotedHayes to the second-team unit and ordered him to get behavioralcounseling.

Miscellany

Garrahan a finalist for NCAA award

воскресенье, 30 сентября 2012 г.

Sports - The Boston Globe (Boston, MA)

So, what's the difference between Ben Cherington and hisimmediate predecessor at 4 Yawkey Way?

'Well, I can't play guitar,' the Red Sox new general manageracknowledged when he took the job last week. 'And I don't have agorilla suit - although I don't think Theo did, either.'

What the 37-year-old Cherington does have that Theo Epstein didnot when Epstein took the job before the 2003 campaign is two WorldSeries rings, higher expectations, and much more on his To-Do List.Before the ball club begins its 100th season at Fenway Park nextspring, Cherington will have to hire a manager to replace thedeparted Terry Francona, make decisions about retaining iconicveterans Jason Varitek, Jonathan Papelbon, David Ortiz, and TimWakefield, and deal with the fallout from the biggest late-seasoncollapse in baseball history.

'The level of scrutiny holds us accountable,' said Cherington.'As painful as September was, that will be healthy for us in thelong run to be held accountable for it because we may not have beenheld as accountable were we in a different market.'

Cherington grew up in that market and has worked in the Bostonfront office for 13 years under two ownerships and three generalmanagers as coordinator of international scouting, director ofplayer development, and senior vice president and assistant GM aswell as acting co-GM with Jed Hoyer during Epstein's 2005sabbatical.

'Ben's paid his dues,' said J.P. Ricciardi, the former Blue JaysGM who now serves as a Mets special assistant. 'He learned thebusiness from the ground up. He's been in that high-profileenvironment for a long time so he's not going to walk in and say,`Oh my God, this is what the job entails?' '

Like Epstein and Dan Duquette before him, Cherington was to theNation born. He grew up in Meriden, N.H., a village that had only afew dozen more people than the Sox farm system. He made his firstFenway pilgrimage at 5, sitting spellbound in the bleachers in theJuly heat, and saw subsequent games with his grandmother, aCambridge resident who would drive up to New Hampshire to bring himdown.

'I remember distinctly a couple of Sox-Brewers games againstHarvey's Wallbangers when they had all those big power hitters,'said Cherington. 'I remember a couple of very lopsided losses backwhen there was just a net above the Monster. I remember GormanThomas hitting balls over it.'

That was when the town team was en route from third to sixthplace, and when first place was a fantasy.

When the 1986 club had its one-strike-away tease in the Seriesagainst the Mets, Cherington was in disbelief.

'He was just so mad at what happened,' recalled his mother,Gretchen. 'I was taken away by how upset he was at the loss. He tookit very personally.'

Aiming for front office

Cherington developed into a sanguine and solid pitcher atAmherst, where the baseball tradition predates the Sox by decades.

'He was unflappable on the mound,' remembered Bill Thurston, whocoached the Lord Jeffs for 44 years. 'Ben was one of the fewpitchers I had who was comfortable pitching to contact. He had a lotof confidence in himself.'

But Cherington's pitching career ended after he tore his labrumbefore his junior season, and while he came back as an outfielderfor his final year, his playing days were over.

'On the one hand, it was a low moment because it was the firsttime I couldn't play baseball in my life,' he said. 'But out of thatlow moment came an appreciation for how much I loved the game andhow much passion I had for it, because being detached from it was sopainful.'

So Cherington served as a volunteer pitching coach with thevarsity and sent letters and resumes to every major league club,looking for a front-office job.

'Fortunately, there was already a bit of an Amherst traditionthere, so I had something real to point to where it didn't seem soimpossible,' he said. 'Harry Dalton blazed the trail and Dan cameafter him, and by that time Neal Huntington was working for theExpos. So you could end up in a front office without playingprofessionally.'

Cherington had spent the summer before his senior year as a Soxintern, most of it holding a radar gun.

'For a 20-year-old who loves baseball, to sit behind home platefor the entire summer and chart pitches was like a dream come true,'his mother recalled. 'It didn't matter that Ben didn't sleep or eator do anything else. He loved that.'

When the letters and resumes didn't produce a job, Cheringtonenrolled in the sports management program at UMass, earned hismaster's degree, and kept working as a varsity assistant withThurston.

'Bill taught me it doesn't matter how many people are watching orwhether you're getting paid or not,' said Cherington. 'You can be aprofessional.'

His coach, impressed with his pupil's maturity, diligence, andcandor, recommended that Duquette hire him.

'If you give him a chance, you'll be happy,' Thurston told him.

There wasn't an opening in Boston in 1998, but there was one inCleveland, which was looking for a part-time video advance scout.Josh Byrnes and Paul DePodesta, who both became GMs, auditioned him.

'I watched an Indians-Yankees game with them on TV and they askedme to break down the Yankee hitters and talk about how I would goabout pitching them,' Cherington said. 'I don't know if I got any ofthem right, but I guess I did well enough so that they hired me.

'My job was to prepare a report for the major league staff beforeevery series, based on a combination of watching games, chartingthem, and collecting data from other resources.

'It was daunting. It wasn't any major league staff but the staffof a team that expected to win and had been in the World Series theyear before. Looking back, I'm amazed still that they gave me thatresponsibility, but it was certainly a terrific opportunity.'

Prospecting in Boston

Cherington was back in Boston a year later with a full-timepaycheck and a wider range of duties.

'With executives, like players, there are naturals,' saidDuquette, who made a point of exposing his former intern to an arrayof front-office tasks. 'Guys that understand it and get it and thatdo things easily and efficiently. Ben was a natural baseballexecutive.'

Before long, Cherington was commuting to Latin America, checkingout prospects in the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Panama,Colombia, and Curacao, learning beisbol Spanish on the fly.

'It was a really rewarding experience, an opportunity to learnabout a new culture,' he said.

A highlight was a dinner with a part-time Dominican scout at atwo-room, tin-roofed house in a village outside of San Pedro deMacoris.

'I'll never forget that night because his wife made this feast,'Cherington said. 'Fish and vegetables and a bucketful of Presidenteon ice. It was a great night, and they couldn't have been more proudto have me there.'

What struck Cherington was that he and the scout both were RedSox employees doing the same job - finding and evaluating thetalent that eventually would wear the uniform of Young and Speaker,Cronin and Williams, Yastrzemski and Rice. What sets Cheringtonapart from his 10 predecessors is his extensive background inscouting and player development.

'There's no substitute for that,' said Ricciardi.

Scouting teenagers, particularly in foreign countries, decidedlyis more art than science but Cherington had the requisite qualities.

'Ben's a great listener,' said Thurston, who now does videoanalysis of pitching prospects for the Pirates. 'He takes everythingin, he really observes things. He's not a psychologist but he canreally read people.'

When the Red Sox were sold in 2002, Cherington was one of ahandful of front-office veterans who were retained.

'Ben's very bright, very deliberate and decisive and thorough,'said Mike Port, who served as interim GM that year.

Writing the book

When Epstein was hired, Cherington was a natural baseballsoulmate and sidekick. They both were what club president LarryLucchino calls 'hybrids,' baseball executives who are conversantwith statistical analysis while respecting old-school observationalscouting.

Epstein and Cherington spent considerable time pondering what thefarm system should look like and came away with 'The Red Sox Way,' acomprehensive manual covering everything from scouting todevelopment to playing in the middle of a pennant race before 35,000of the frenetic faithful.

Beyond the fundamental tools and the 'makeup' intangibles, thefront office wanted prospects with passion.

'If you watch a player over a period of time, no matter whatlevel they're at, you get a feeling for how much the game means tothem,' said Cherington. 'People can come from all sorts ofbackgrounds but if the game means something to them, more often thannot when they hit that first period of adversity they'll pushthrough it. The game needs to matter.'

The game mattered enormously to Epstein and Cherington, who werepart of a nightly beer-fueled spring training symposium before the2004 season at the eight-bedroom house they rented at Cape Coralwhere baseball was the sole subject. Everyone from Francona, who'djust signed on as skipper, and stats guru Bill James came by to hangout with the passionate post-grads who peopled the front office.

'There definitely were a lot of nights of argument that spring,'recalled Cherington. 'That's something that Theo encouraged all thetime. He'd walk in your office and challenge you on something andhe'd usually do it in a fun way and that was good for everyone.

'Sometimes it was in a not-so-fun way, but you knew thatafterward he still wanted you here. It wasn't personal.'

Epstein made it clear that he thought Cherington should be hissuccessor and said last week that he wouldn't have left for Chicagootherwise.

This job, especially at this time, requires someone who knows thesystem, the people, the culture, and the history and who can endurethe year-round hot seat. Naming Cherington was a major announcement,said Lucchino, but not a major surprise.

His attributes were obvious to his employers and Lucchino tickedthem off at last Tuesday's press conference: 'his trademarkdiligence and competitiveness, his remarkable work ethic, hiscommitment to excellence and to getting the job done well, hisbalance and fairness, his humility and selflessness.'

Better still, Cherington has served an unprecedented on-siteapprenticeship.

'It's not a matter of someone else coming in and getting up tospeed,' said Port.

The man goes back to the days of Jimy Williams. He knows theunrelenting spotlight that once prompted his predecessor to adoptthe King Kong escape route.

'My eyes are open to that and I know that's part of what comeswith this job,' Cherington acknowledged. 'I'm not naive.'

Duquette, who received belated credit for laying much of thefoundation for the curse-ending championship, can empathize.

'Ben will get a lot of help,' he said wryly. 'There are a lot ofassistant general managers he can depend on for their opinion.That's just the nature of this market. They follow it from dusk todawn.'

That's what Ricciardi, a Worcester native, used to warn hisToronto players about before their visits to the Fens: 'Half of thepeople yelling at you I probably went to high school with.'

Restoration project

If anything, the job has only become more pressurized during thelast decade as sports talk radio and the blogosphere make for adaily dissection of every decision.

'These jobs are not fun,' said Ricciardi. 'There's not a lot ofguys who enjoy it. It's become that kind of job because of theintense scrutiny from everybody. It's just like the society is.Instant gratification, has-to-happen-now.'

Red Sox Nation, which celebrated a renaissance seven years ago,now demands a restoration. What more suitable overseer than the manwho was in charge of developing the Ellsburys and Pedroias andPapelbons and Lesters, who had a hand in acquiring the Gonzalezesand Crawfords and Lackeys and who co-wrote the cultural manual thatevidently was misplaced last month.

'It's a lot easier taking over at a place than it is going to aplace,' observed Ricciardi. 'Ben's not coming in there trying tochange a philosophy. Theo going to Chicago, he has to incorporate aphilosophy and get people on board.'

These are not his grandmother's Red Sox, but that's where whatCherington calls the 'incredibly fortunate path' that led to hisfantasy job began on a hot summer day in the bleachers in 1979.

'There's a picture of him at that game,' his mother said. 'Allthe other kids are running around and not paying any attention andBen is sitting there riveted to the game. That's the beginning ofhow he got here.'

John Powers can be reached at jpowers @globe.com.

суббота, 29 сентября 2012 г.

SPORTS BRIEFS - The Columbian (Vancouver, WA)

Biffle wins in Tucson, eyes $15,000

Vancouver driver Greg Biffle still has a chance to take the topprize in the Tucson Winter Heat racing series -- $15,000, the sameamount he won last year.

Biffle, although nearly two laps down at one point, stormed tothe150-lap Late Model win Sunday at Tucson Raceway Park in Arizona.'I was really concerned in the first half because I was drivinghard and all these cars were passing us,' he said.'When I got intothe pits at intermission (75 laps), my crew told me the right rearonly had 11 pounds of air. When I found that out I got a lot ofconfidence.'Biffle drove the first 75 laps with a punctured tire which wasslowly leaking. The pole sitter, Biffle went a lap down afterspinning, then struggled.After intermission, Biffle took advantage of several yellow flagsto inch closer. He passed four cars in the final five laps,including Tucson track champion and leader Carl Trimmer, to win bytwo car lengths.The next Winter Heat race is Jan. 12. Biffle is fifth in points.Should he jump to first, he would win the $15,000 Winston Challenge.St. Louis Blues fire coach, team presidentThe St. Louis Blues, floundering in the third season of the MikeKeenan regime, reportedly fired their coach and general managertodayas well as team president Jack Quinn. A St. Louis radio stationreported that the management team would be replaced by coach JacquesDemers, general manager Ron Caron and president Mark Sauer.Demers, currently an NHL broadcaster, coached the Blues from1983-86.Keenan apparently lost a power struggle with right wing BrettHull. The two have been feuding almost since Keenan came to town inJuly 1994.Lawyer charged with extortion in Camby caseA lawyer was charged today with attempted extortion in an allegedeffort to blackmail former UMass basketball star Marcus Camby.WesleySpears surrendered to police in West Hartford, Conn., this morningoncharges of first-degree attempted larceny by extortion and promotingprostitution, prosecutors said.Camby, drafted in June by the Toronto Raptors of the NBA, saidSpears tried to blackmail him in May after learning he was signingwith another sports agent.Judge dismisses Seles' civil suitA judge in Hamburg, Germany, today dismissed Monica Seles' civilsuit against the German Tennis Federation over her 1993 stabbing.Seles, 22, was seeking $15.7 million in damages for lost income,blaming the federation for lack of security. Seles, ranked No. 1 inthe world at the time of the attack, was sidelined for 27 monthsafter being stabbed in the back during a break in a match in Hamburgon April 30, 1993. Guenter Parche, a fan of German star Steffi Graf,was convicted and received a two-year suspended sentence.Yale hires new football coachJack Siedlecki, football coach atAmherst, was hired today as the new football coach at Yale,replacingCarm Cozza, who retired after 32 years.Siedlecki, 45, was one of six candidates who interviewed for thejob. He will be the 32nd head football coach at Yale.Montana QB heads All-America teamQuarterback Brian Ah Yat, who has Montana within a victory of itssecond straight national title, and 2,000-yard rusher Archie Amersonof Northern Arizona topped the AP's I-AA All-America team. Ah Yat,who threw for 3,615 yards and 42 TDs, leads a five-player Montanacontingent on the first team. Receiver Joe Douglass also made theteam, along with center Jason Kempfert, guard Mike Agee andlinebacker Jason Crebo.Woods to play in Phoenix OpenTiger Woods, Sports Illustrated's Sportsman of the Year, will playin the Phoenix Open golf tournament on Jan. 23-26. Woods, 20,followed his third straight U.S. Amateur title with two late-seasonPGA Tour victories.

пятница, 28 сентября 2012 г.

Q & A: JOHN BARKER; WALK-ON CAN'T WAIT TO TRY GAME-WINNING FIELD GOAL.(SERIES: ORANGE INSIDER)(Sports) - The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Byline: staff writer Bob Snyder

John Barker admits it.

Without athletics, where would he be?

That said, he's at Syracuse ... without a dime of scholarship money. But the 5-foot-8, 150-pound freshman walk-on from Avon, Mass., is making his pitch for some dough not with his mouth, but his right leg.

Not long ago, Barker's back was to the wall. A stress fracture in his back turned off Division I-A programs such as Ohio State. Trips to Virginia and Connecticut proved fruitless.

He took a year off to heal, rehab and search for a school where he could play. Baseball, too, was in his plans.

Barker, 19, showed the Cavaliers he could kick by nailing, in his first collegiate attempt, a 27-yard field goal from the right hashmark (not an ideal spot for a right-footed kicker) to tie the game at 24 in an eventual 27-24 loss on Sept. 17.

Tonight in East Hartford, Conn., No.6 would like nothing better than to split the uprights to beat UConn.

Barker, who is not even listed in SU's media guide, spoke recently with staff writer Bob Snyder about getting his kicks on and off the field.

Bob Snyder: You hadn't kicked a competitive field goal in two years. Did it bother you that your first try was from the right hash?

John Barker: They said Wednesday or Thursday I'd be doing the field goal kicking. They had confidence in me to make it. That's what I'd been looking for.

Snyder: Now you're outdoors on grass. Big deal?

Barker: It's grass; what's the difference? I had an unbelievable pre-game at Florida State (outdoors, grass). The toughest place will be at Pitt, with that wind that can blow. Forty-eight's the longest anyone's made there. But we get vicious winds out here (during practice) ... and all the time, it's in your face.

Snyder: Have you always been a kicker?

Barker: Well, I started kicking when I was 10. In Pop Warner, coach asked if anybody could kick extra points. I'd practice with my dad, kicking'em over power lines in Fort Myers.

Snyder: You're not from New England originally?

Barker: No, I was born in Naples, Fla. My parents divorced when I was 2; I lived with my mom. After my freshman year in high school, I lived with my dad in Massachusetts. He coerced me to go to Catholic College Prep; all boys. But I missed my dad; he was my coach from Day One.

Snyder: Were you a good student?

Barker: My grades were down, my athletics up.

Snyder: Was your high school program strong?

Barker: I graduated from Xaverian Brothers. We were in the best conference in the highest classification. I played wide receiver, defensive back, special teams and weighed 135-140.

Snyder: How are your grades now?

Barker: I took summer courses and had a 3.2 GPA. I'm in Sports Management.

Snyder: Career-wise, what do you hope to do outside football?

Barker: Coach, personal trainer, sports agent. Something sports-related. My dad owns a mechanical insulation piping company. I've worked for him. I could do it, but probably not ..

Snyder: Why not?

Barker: Because without athletics ... well, when I was diagnosed with a broken back (June '04), I almost lost it. Life without sports? I was freaking out.

Snyder: How did it happen?

Barker: From kicking, lifting (weights), genetics. My father has a bad back. I keep my body at the optimum level, especially because of my back. I know I've got to be in the best shape of my life. I'm a healthy kid, rarely even drink soda.

Snyder: Did you go to a lot of kicking camps?

Barker: No, and that hurt me in recruiting. My dad and I did fly to Ohio State after baseball season my senior year to watch Mike Nugent. Even I didn't understand how incredible a kicker he was and is 'til we went to practice That's where I wanted to go, but they got a sixth year eligibility for their kicker and, well ... (Barker's offer to walk on was rescinded).

Snyder: How about kicking contests?

Barker: This past January, I won in Las Vegas for field-goal kicking. In January'04 in Miami, I finished second to (Pitt PK) Josh Cummings. And last summer, I was camp MVP in Pennsylvania.

Snyder: And you had to walk on behind two untested scholarship underclassmen?

Barker: Well, at one point I was set to go to Massachusetts for football and baseball. But I was better than UMass. I wanted to play baseball though.

Snyder: You look like a second baseman, yes?

Barker: Pitcher/second baseman. Pitched the state championship game; we won. Had a 1.2-something ERA.

Snyder: Did you know SU had a baseball program that went to the College World Series and for penny-pinching reasons, among others, was foolishly dropped more than 30 years ago?

Barker: They had baseball here?

Snyder: So how'd you end up at Syracuse?

Barker: Me and my dad were sick of the recruiting process. Nobody (in Division I-A) took me seriously. I sent'em (SU) tapes, talked to'em. Nothing. Finally, I said to Coach White (recruiting coordinator Chris White), 'I don't care; just get me in. I'll prove myself.'

Snyder: You're 1-for-1. Think the real proof comes when win-lose rides on your right leg at game's end.

Barker: First, I just want to get that opportunity. How's it gonna play out? Two seconds on the clock, down 1. Make it, you're a hero. Miss, everybody hates you. Some kickers don't want that; great kickers do. I'm looking forward to that.

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Frank Ordonez/Staff photographer

четверг, 27 сентября 2012 г.

CAN FINCH SELL IOC ON SOFTBALL?(Sports)("Snyde" Remarks)(Column) - The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Byline: BOB SNYDER STAFF WRITER

As I said here last week, Carmelo Anthony puts a smiling face on our Olympic men's basketball team.

But there's no Olympic face I'd rather watch than that of Jennie Finch.

Her height - 6-foot-1 - means she's probably taller than Allen Iverson. But she's not in the backcourt for our Olympic women's hoop team.

Finch is part-model, part-analyst.

And Finch - when in the circle - may be the hottest softball pitcher in the world. On USA Softball's 'Aiming for Athens' exhibition tour, she won her first 12 decisions, posted an anemic earned run average of 0.09 and gaudy strikeout average of 19.19 per nine innings.

In one at-bat against Finch, the Cardinals' Albert Pujols fanned.

So, as it once again faces review by the International Olympic Committee as an Olympic sport following the Athens Games, who better to make the ultimate sales pitch for softball?

Just ask Arizona Diamondbacks minor-league pitcher Casey Daigle, who'll wed Ms. Finch in the fall.

National goal: Two Syracuse Blitz soccer teams - the Blizzard (under-19 boys) and Vortex (under-15 girls) - are competing in this week's U.S. Youth Soccer Region I Championships in Kingston, R.I.

The teams won New York West State Cup competition. Regional winners at University of Rhode Island advance to the National Championships, July 20-25 at Disney's Wide World of Sports Complex in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.

Strickland goes corporate: Syracuse grad Bill Strickland ('81), a former SU assistant sports Information director, later media relations boss/associate AD at Massachusetts, and currently working toward completion of an MBA from SU, is joining college sports' largest media rights management company.

Strickland has exited UMass for Collegiate Images, a Fort Lauderdale outfit, as its first vice president of business development/sales.

Deja vu, all over again: That's what Yogi Berra would say about the SkyChiefs.

What is about Syracuse baseball, circa the 1990s and this millennium? In 12 of the last 15 years, including this season's basement ballclub, our town's Triple-A franchise has been going, going, gone by the time school lets out for the summer.

Nice timing!

Makes you wonder - and this from the writer who was the first to push for the Blue Jays to enter, the Yankees to depart (before George Steinbrenner dropped the hammer on Syracuse 27 years ago) - if it soon won't be time for another change.

If Major League Baseball doesn't opt to roll the dice in Las Vegas, and instead transplants the Montreal Expos in Washington, D.C., or northern Virginia, could the Mets be enticed into leaving Norfolk, Va., for P&C Stadium?

Fore, please!: First, there was Rick Smith-designed Shenendoah. Then, Kaluhyat, created by Robert Trent Jones Jr.

Now, Atunyote.

The third of Turning Stone Resort and Casino's golf trilogy, Atunyote unofficially opened Thursday. The Tom Fazio design is the track the Oneida Nation hopes will attract a professional tour event.

Atunyote (un-DUNE-yote), an Oneida word meaning 'the eagle,' offers a secluded setting off Route 31 in Vernon, a two-mile entryway, a course with vast, open stretches, gently rolling hills, rock formations, preserved deadwood swamp, stream and small waterfalls, lakes and ponds.

Director of golf Bob O'Brian described Atunyote as 'a traditional parkland setting ... the perfect venue for players who appreciate the history of the game and want an unforgettable golfing experience.'

среда, 26 сентября 2012 г.

SARATOGA WOMAN ROWER MINES GOLD FROM OAR.(SPORTS) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: ALAN HART Staff writer

Five years ago when Saratoga Springs native Heather Wakeley was a freshman at Dartmouth College, she decided she needed to try a new sport.

``I was on the volleyball team at Saratoga for three years, but I knew I wasn't good enough to make the volleyball team at Dartmouth,'' Wakeley explained. ``I heard about the rowing team and thought it might be interesting to try. I needed something to do, so I went to a meeting about it and decided to give it a try.''

Wakeley made the right decision.

After a noteworthy collegiate career in which, among other things, she became an All-America Collegiate Rower (one of only eight in the country) in both 1999 and 2000, Wakeley is now a national champion in two categories.

At the USRowing National Championships held this July 26-29 in Camden, N.J., Wakeley competed in both the Women's Intermediate Singler and the Women's Senior Single Sculls divisions. She won a gold medal and the national title in both events, winning with a big lead over the competition.

Wakeley raced in heats and semifinals, winning each Singles race. Competitors at Camden represented clubs from all over the country.

Last summer, she participated in two other National Championships in the Women's Eight and Fours, earning bronze and silver medals.

After attending Pre-Elite Camp at the Olympic Training Center in San Diego, she was selected for the Nations Cup (world championship for under-23 rowers) in Copenhagen, Denmark, where the U.S. team won the gold medal.

Thus a young lady who never knew what talent she possessed in this sport until her freshman year of college is now someone who has every right to think realistically about competing someday in the Olympic Games.

``Do I have Olympic goals? I definitely do, but I know I have to take one step at a time,'' Wakeley said. ``Right now I have one more year of grad school at Dartmouth, but I'm keeping in touch with the national team and what's going on.''

Wakeley has earned two undergraduate degrees from Dartmouth, getting her B.A. in 2000 and a B.E. in 2001. She is currently working on completing her Master's degree in Engineering Management.

In April this year, she attended National Speed Orders in Princeton, where she competed for the first time in a Single Scull, taking seventh place.

This summer, she has been training and coaching a women's Masters rowing program at Amherst, Mass. She has been training in doubles and in single sculls with a friend -- Francesca Beaudoin, a UMass-Amherst student.

Wakeley loves the sport of rowing and its challenges.

``They started the rowing team at Saratoga High the year after I graduated, so I really didn't know anything about the sport until I got to Dartmouth. But I have found that it really suits me,'' she said. ``I have always loved being outdoors, and I especially love being out on the water early in the morning. Rowing is extremely challenging, because mentally and physically the sport pushes you to your limit.''

She admits that making the adjustment from being one rower on a team to becoming a single scull racer was a difficult one.

``In college, you only row in eights, and you only have one oar,'' she said. ``In single scull, you have two oars and, obviously, you're on your own. It's definitely different. You have to learn a different technique.''

вторник, 25 сентября 2012 г.

PROMOTING TEAMS A GAME ASCENT CAN'T LOSE EVER-CHANGING VENUES INSPIRE SPORTS MARKETING PLOYS.(Business) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: Dina Bunn Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer

Sports marketing has become as dynamic as the games it promotes.

``It's a product that changes every day,'' said Dennis Mannion, senior vice president of marketing and sales for Ascent Sports, which owns the Denver Nuggets and Colorado Avalanche.

Your star player breaks his ankle - everything's different. From out of nowhere, a rookie player emerges as a superstar - you have a new product to promote.

You have to react quickly to the changes, said Mannion, who is assuming the duties of President Ellen Robinson. Robinson announced her resignation last week.

Mannion, 38, former vice president of marketing for the Philadelphia Phillies, is the new breed of sports marketing executive. He earned a bachelor's degree in business and sports management from the University of Massachusetts in the early '80s when most sports teams were just beginning to become more business-minded.

With the advent of free agency and the competition for players, sports teams have grown in their sophistication from computerized ticket sales to creating community relations departments, corporate sales and entertainment and fan development.

``You have to get people like Dennis in there who have the creativity and experience to pull off promotions designed to sell tickets'' said Bernie Mullin, president and chief executive officer of Roller Hockey International, who also was a professor of Mannion's at UMass.

``Free agency has forced teams to exploit every revenue,'' Mannion said. ``It's made teams sober up and realize your parking situation matters, your ticket-takers matter, concessions matter. And way beyond that, it's made teams realize the way in which we entertain our fans and the way we communicate to our fans is critical.''

Cue the music.

Mannion and his team at Ascent, including director of entertainment and fan development Greg Von Schottenstein, are planning their attack strategy to make going to Avalanche and Nuggets games - yes, Nuggets games - as entertaining as possible this season. And they don't plan to slack off next year when everyone moves into the $165 million Pepsi Center under construction in the Central Platte Valley.

A regular feature at home games will be bass guitarist and popular New York disc jockey Harlan Hendrickson. Hendrickson will perform between periods and game play from a hangout in the upper deck at McNichols Sports Arena. Other features may include zoo keepers for mascot Rocky, a dance floor, jewelry giveaways. There will be some fan contests, but not just some guy shooting baskets from half court.

``Our job is to create a really sizzling, entertaining ambience so people feel they are getting the full experience,'' Mannion said.

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понедельник, 24 сентября 2012 г.

Sports & Expo Authority boosts NJ economy, ego - New Jersey Business

The Meadowlands Sports Complex has been a phenomenal success by any economic or entertainment measure, and has put New Jersey on the international map of top venues. Some 8 million people visit here every year for more than 600 night and day events. It has hosted Pope John Paul 11, Pavarotti, the Final Four, the Army-Navy Game, World Cup, the Hamiltonian, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus and the Harlem Globetrotters. It is the only venue in the nation that hosts five professional teams Giants, jets, Nets, Devils and MetroStars.

The New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority (NJSEA), created by the Legislature in 1971, opened the Meadowlands Racetrack, which handles the single highest volume of wagering of any track in America, and the $75-million, 77,000-seat Giants Stadium in 1976 (the Giants came that year; the jets in 1984); and the $90-million, 20,000-seat Continental Airlines Arena in 1981.

Since then, the State of New Jersey has called upon the NJSEA to expand its operations and assume new functions, and it has done so with spectacular success. In 1986, it purchased the Monmouth Park Jockey Club and operates Monmouth Park Racetrack. In 1992, the Legislature asked the Sports Authority to launch a new $268-million Atlantic City Convention Center, which opened two years ago and is a stellar, sellout venue. The NJSEA oversees operations of the Atlantic City Convention & Visitors Authority and is now rebuilding the former Atlantic City Boardwalk Convention Center.

The Legislature tapped the NJSEA to oversee the design and construction of the Thomas H. Kean State Aquarium in Camden, a world-class cultural and educational complex on the Delaware River, which features the second-largest open ocean tank in the nation.

The year 1992 also saw the Sports Authority provide $29 million in financing for the renovation of Rutgers University Stadium. In December, 1997, the Legislature authorized the Authority to acquire, construct, own and operate a convention center in Wildwood. In February plans for the $70-million center, four times as large as the existing Convention Hall, were unveiled. It will have a 72,000 square-foot exhibit hall, seating up to 10,000 people, a 12,000 square-foot ballroom, retail space and a glass-enclosed lobby it would be surrounded on three sides by beach.

Dennis R. Robinson, NJSE president and CEO, estimates the Authority generates a $1.24-billion annual economic impact on New Jerseys economy. The Authority has annual net revenues of over $200 million, employs more than 3,000 union and nonunion staffers and generates $62 million a year for state and local treasuries. Robinson, a graduate of Wesleyan University who earned a Masters in Sports Management from UMASS and has a Harvard MBA, has been with NJSEA since 1990. He had been chief operating officer for sports, entertainment and administration prior to taking over as President/CEO when Robert E. Mulcahy III left to become athletic director at Rutgers University. It was Robinson who worked out the financing package for the Atlantic City Convention Center and the State Aquarium and made sure their construction programs were on-time and on-budget.

Robinson personifies the current-age sports and entertainment CEO with a wide-ranging background in budget, operations, marketing, development and strategic responsibilities. He is repositioning the Sports Complex for the 21st century as a complete family complex combining sports, entertainment, cinema, dining, action bars, hotel, transit facilities, participatory game and sports facilities--and retail shops. While he is working on a strategic plan for the new millennium, he also has to oversee cost controls; worry about new revenue enhancement; keep current sporting team tenants happy; continue to upgrade existing facilities; and plan new venues.

Against this backdrop, John McMullen, owner of the New Jersey Devils of the National Hockey League (NHL), wants to move his team to a new stadium he is trying to convince the state to build in Hoboken. He says the Continental Arena doesn't have enough executive boxes to earn more income and that the Meadowlands site does not have rail transit. The Devils' lease at Continental Arena runs out at the end of the NHI. 2006/2007 season. His franchise gets an extra $5 million a year in a deal worked out by Governor Christie Whitman when McMullen threatened to leave a few years ago.

Meanwhile, the New Jersey Nets of the National Basketball Association (NBA), has been purchased for $150 million by a consortium of well-known people, led by Ray Chambers, the leveraged buyout genius and former partner with William E. Simon, who established Amelior, a philantrophic entity. He seeks to relocate the Nets to a new $300-million arena complex he wants to build in Newark, through a non-profit corporation. it would be a few blocks from the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, which he brought to the city.

His partners in the Nets now include Lewis Katz, Allen Bildner, L. Dennis Kozlowski, Alan Landis, Ray Walsh, Stan Gale, Finn Wentworth, Bill Cosby, David Gerstein, Henry and Joseph Taub, Jerry Cohen, Alan Aufzien and some management people, such as Nets President Michael Rowe and Willis Reed. Chambers wants the arena in downtown Newark to help boost the city's image and economy.

The Nets' lease, signed last October (which included enhanced multimillion-dollar annual payments in a ticket sale formula) at Continental Arena runs out at the end of the 2007-08 NBA season; but, the team can leave at any time. The NJSEA could penalize the team financially if it left the state before 2004. If it moved to Newark, however, there would be no penalty.

The 19-year-old Continental Arena, Robinson says 'has great sight lines, has been beautifully maintained and has been a pleasant venue to watch an event.' But, he concedes, it is short on luxury boxes, with only 29 private suites. New arenas around the country have 100 or more such suites. He says a new 20,000-seat arena now being discussed for a site between Giants Stadium and Route 120, would have many more luxury suites and would be accompanied by multitiered parking garages of two or three levels. As envisioned by NBBJ of Los Angeles and Ewing Cole of Philadelphia, a joint architectural effort, this 'new New Jersey Meadowlands' would have commercial development on the site of the existing arena, which would be connected to the proposed arena by a broad boulevard, or artery lined with sports bars, restaurants and shops. The commercial development on the site of the demolished Continental Arena may include a hotel and meeting facilities, multi-plex cinema and a phalanx of other entities to attract visitors, night and day, 365 days a year.

'This is a five-year project and by the time it is done, the current arena would be 23 or 24 years old -- a good shelf life,' advises Robinson. 'We need a long-term solution for the franchises in order for them to make long-term commitments. To maintain the competitiveness of the teams, you need new facilities.'

He says the Nets team is an exciting franchise and the Devils play a key role in the life of the Sports Complex and the state. He would like to keep them both. 'They will have to make a decision as to what is in their best long-term interests,' the Sports Authority chief executive says. 'We are offering a very viable proposal.'

The new arena-commercial enterprises development is indicative of the direction Robinson is moving the Sports Complex into the 21st century -- juxtaposing sports, entertainment, cinema, shops, sports bars and lounges and the like. 'There are bits and pieces of it all over the state, but we want to merge it into a critical mass here at the Sports Complex.'

That critical mass means transportation has to be improved for the new millennium, he says. 'It is a regional issue,' he explains. 'We have to have a heavy rail connection to the Sports Complex, so we can move great masses of people and reduce car traffic. The Allied junction endeavor is part of that. It is a sleeping giant.' Allied junction is a mixed-use commercial complex to be built over a train station in the Meadowlands.

'We had one of our best years in 1998,' he explains. 'Revenue from the three facilities was $156.6 million, one of the best years in a decade.'

Racing had its best year since 1990, with a $19.8 million bottom line. 'Despite the well-documented struggles of the regional and national racing industry and the need for continued reform, the Meadowlands Racetrack remains one of the country's most profitable facilities,' he advises.

Robinson says the NJSEA is adding $6 million in purse money to the Meadowlands Track and $3 million to Monmouth Park. 'We're also working with the horse racing industry to draft legislation for off-track betting and account wagering for racing.'

If a referendum is approved by voters this fall, it will be a boost to the states $1-billion racing industry. The 12 or so off-track betting parlors would be removed enough from the Sports Complex so as not to dampen attendance, and would be large enough (20,000 square feet or so) to accommodate dining and other activities.

'The stadium operating revenue came in at $11.2 million, another historically strong year.' There were 71 events at the stadium last year, drawing over 2 million people. The Dave Matthews Band, which appeared last June, grossed more than $2 million, the highest of its 1998 U.S. tour. The stadium will host the FIFA Women World Cup of soccer on June 19 and 26, with the opening ceremonies and two doubleheaders. Robinson says the 46 new private boxes, added for the 1998 Giants and jets season, completely sold out before construction was completed. They lease for $156,000 to $350,000 apiece and bring the total suites to 118. They include 26 tower suites, 14 terrace suites and 6 super suites. Robinson views that as another phase of a constant do-over of the stadium.

Now, the NJSEA is considering the possibility of creating a club seats section on the north side of the stadium, perhaps as many as 2,500. They would have wait-service, club space and a controlled environment. 'There are many small companies that want to entertain clients but can not afford the full suite. We think there's a market there.'

The arena's net income showed a historically very strong $1.5-million bottom line. 'We had 187 events at the arena in 1998, including 18 concerts, versus 10 the prior year,' explains the CEO. 'That the most this decade.'

воскресенье, 23 сентября 2012 г.

BASEBALL FOR THE `BARN'-STORMERS.(SPORTS) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: ALAN HART Staff writer

Some people were born to sing or dance. Some were born to be writers, or teachers. For still others, their destiny was always to be an airplane pilot or a carpenter.

But Ken and Norm Hayner were born to play baseball . . . and teach it, and coach it. The game, the sport, the experience of baseball is the fabric that has woven the tapestry that is both their lives.

``My brothers and I, we pretty much grew up playing baseball at the field where Harris Stadium is now or else playing on the land behind our parents' house,'' Ken Hayner said recently in the office of The Sports Barn.

The ``barn'' is an indoor baseball and softball batting facility that the brothers and their wives opened this April. They broke ground exactly one year ago, on Oct. 26, 1998. The building is across the street from the house and that land where Ken, Norm and a third brother -- Craig Hayner -- grew up as the sons of Harry and Carol Hayner.

``Mom and Dad have owned the land on both sides for a long time,'' Ken said. ``The building and the business actually came about after Norm and I had already begun our business of running a summer baseball camp for boys back in `92.''

The Hayner camps were a great success, so much so that they were in demand to the point that they had to keep moving to various locations around the Capital Region to accommodate more and more boys.

Norm and Ken needed a facility, or, if you'll forgive the irresistable baseball pun, a home base. They had a need. Their parents just happened to own a lot of land and were glad to help out in the family venture. Thus was the plan to build the batting facility hatched.

``We had the family property here and we knew our parents would retire soon, so we thought we'd use some land to develop our camps and our business,'' Ken said.

Ken and his wife, Sharon, and Norm and his wife, Deana, decided to go into business as joint partners and managers.

A lot of family love and passion for baseball has gone into the venture.

``I've had a lot of great memories in my life tied up in baseball, and most of them would be about playing on the same team with Norm,'' Ken said. ``In 1982 when I was a senior at Siena and Norm was a freshman, it was really the first time we'd been on a team together. We got to play a lot of summers together, too, after that in the Albany Twilight League. We were on the Apex Printing team, and one year we went to the Stan Musial World Series. Two other years, we missed going to the World Series by one game.''

Ken, who now is 39, retired from playing in 1992. Norm, who is 36, retired last year.

The youngest brother, Craig, is 32. Craig remains close to his brothers and parents both in spirit and in a very real physical sense. The younger Hayner and his wife, Carolyn, own Hayner's Farm Stand and Old-Fashioned Country Store just a long fungo fly ball down the road from the batting facility and their parents' home.

Norm, too, remembers the years he played baseball with his older brother as ``a very special time.''

``I pretty much followed Ken in my career path,'' Norm said. ``We both played at Shenendehowa High and then I followed him to Siena. We both got our master's degrees in sports management at UMass. After that, he coached at Hartwick. I always wanted to be a full-time college coach, but after I was an assistant at UMass, Siena and Skidmore for a few years, about five years ago my wife heard they needed a varsity coach at Burnt Hills High, so I inquired about it.''

Norm got the position. He's coached the Spartans for the past five years and is looking forward to April.

``I wanted the opportunity to be a head baseball coach, and it's been a great blessing,'' he said.

Norm also works for the Saratoga County Sheriff's Department as a road patrolman and also has taught a DARE class at Shenendehowa High for the last seven years.

``In the spring when my Burnt Hills season is in full swing, between the team and the road patrol job and this business, I probably average about 75 to 80 hours working per week,'' Norm said. ``I don't mind, though. I enjoy working with high school players and trying to develop a whole program. It can be a roller coaster ride, but it's worth it all.''

Ken and Sharon Hayner have two children -- Jessica, who is 5, and Josh, who is 2. Norm and Deana Hayner have two daughters -- Nicole, who is 2, and Rebecca, who is 5 months old.

Is there a potential line-drive hitter, like slick-fielding shortstop Ken was in his playing days? Or maybe a longball slugger, like feisty catcher Norm was in his day? If so, these Hayner offspring will be able to hone their swings year-round along with people of all ages who drop by the Barn.

``I like to teach hitting. We both do. We have all ages coming in here. We have some women in their 50s who are on softball teams who come in for hitting lessons,'' Ken said. ``I don't have a preference for any age group that wants to learn. No matter what age or gender, you always seem to get the full attention of whoever wants to learn. And whether it's a young person or someone older, it's exciting to see them get better.''

CAPTION(S):

WHAT THE HECK GIVES?(SPORTS) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: Steve Campbell

You can have the real world.

You can have the bomb blasts, the traumatic trials, the pontificating about presidential private parts, the ranting over rent control.

You can have -- preferably in small doses, under the supervision of a physician or astrologist -- the drugs, the degradation, the crime, the chaos, the lechery, the lawsuits, the floods, the tornadoes, the calamities, the collapsing water slides, that infest the real world.

Reality bites, and it doesn't always bother to get a rabies shot first. Reality puts a cup of hot coffee between the legs, has a spill, sues because the coffee is too hot, and wins.

Some of us need a semblance of sanity. Some of us need a sanctuary, a place to go where nobody needs to know your name. Some of us need the kind of escape that is only possible in the sports world, where:

. . . New York Knicks rookie forward John Wallace has been arrested on charges he punched his girlfriend in the face and tried to choke her. According to 21-year-old Michelle Bolger, Wallace attacked her during an argument. About their two children. How nice. A couple of the '90s.

. . . Quarterback Jake Plummer, the Arizona Cardinals' second-round draft choice, has been charged with four counts of felony sexual abuse. Though Plummer reached out-of-court civil settlements with three women for his conduct at a nightclub, he faces up to eight years in prison. Jake the Snake, indeed.

. . . The Karsten Manufacturing Corp. has sued the Walt Disney Co. because of a film, tentatively entitled ``Mulan,'' that is scheduled for a 1998 release. Why? Because the film, which is based on an ancient Chinese tale about a woman warrior, has a character named Ping. And Karsten is the manufacturer of PING golf clubs. There is no word on whether the International Management Group, which fronts Tiger Woods, intends to sue Frosted Flakes for using Tony the Tiger as a spokesman.

. . . The NCAA has erased the UMass Minutemen's 1996 Final Four finish from the record books. UMass also forfeits $151,000 in NCAA tournament money because Marcus Camby, who made the 1997 NBA All-Rookie team, received gifts from an agent while under scholarship. According to an internal UMass investigation, Camby paid $28,000 to protect one agent from being killed by loan sharks.

. . . UCLA has forfeited its 1995 women's softball title and gone an a three-year probation. Tanya Harding -- no, not her -- went 17-1 for UCLA in '95, collecting all four of her team's victories in the national tournament. Harding didn't complete a single semester as a UCLA student, leaving after that championship season to join the Australian Olympic team. There is no evidence to suggest that Harding got a spot on the team because of a mysterious crowbar attack.

. . . Former Cy Young winner Denny McLain has been sentenced to eight years of prison and ordered to pay $2.5 million for stealing from the pension plan of a packing company. The company went bankrupt 18 months after McLain purchased it. McLain, the major leagues' last 30-game winner, is a two-time loser. He served 29 months for racketeering, extortion and drug dealing before an appeals court overturned that conviction.

. . . New York Yankees pitcher Dwight Gooden, who is still trying to prove he can keep his nose clean after a 20-month exile because of a cocaine addiction, admittedly punched out a cap driver during a recent road trip. It seems Gooden ventured to a Texas nightclub on the off chance that such a pilgrimmage would hasten his recovery from a hernia operation that has sidelined him this season. On the way back to the hotel from the Fantasy Ranch, the cab driver picked up a topless dancer from the same club, Lace, where former Yankees manager Billy Martin got into a 1988 fight. The cabbie insists Gooden, who is married with five children, propositioned the dancer. Gooden says it's a lie.

Upon arriving at his hotel, Gooden refused to pay his $4.20 fare. You read that correctly: $4.20. The cabbie followed Gooden to the fourth floor and put a hand on the pitcher's shoulder. Gooden, by his admission, started swinging away at the cabbie. ``This,'' an executive vice president for Yellow Cab said, ``doesn't happen very often to our drivers.''

суббота, 22 сентября 2012 г.

the best laid plans ...(Sports) - The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)

By Rich Radford | The Virginian-Pilot

NORFOLK

Ronnie Cameron built a computer from scratch when he was 10.

He purchased a shell, a motherboard, a hard drive and a CD-ROM drive. He wired and programmed it with the help of 'Computers for Dummies.'

Back then, Cameron didn't figure on being a college football player and knew nothing of Old Dominion, the school for which he now stars.

Back then, his game was chess, and he was good enough to play in the New York State Championships. He played a little football, but it was all for fun.

When he transferred from Westbury High to Holy Trinity Diocesan before his junior year, he knew he couldn't play football that season. It didn't matter: He had transferred for the academic opportunity.

He had his sights set on the Ivy League. Columbia, Princeton and Penn were at the top of his list. He saw himself as the next Donald Trump, attending the Wharton School of Business at Penn and taking on the world.

Had things gone according to plan, Cameron might be at the University of Pennsylvania this afternoon.

Things don't always work out the way we envision them.

And that's not always a bad thing.

As a senior at Holy Trinity, Cameron played defensive end. To say he burst onto the scene would be an understatement. Two games into the season, Hofstra University offered him a football scholarship.

Not bad for someone who didn't play as a junior.

The son of immigrants - his father, Ronnie Sr., was born in Trinidad, and his mother, Ritha, in Haiti - Cameron weighed the options.

'If I'd gone to Penn or some other Ivy League school, I was going to be scrambling all the time to make ends meet,' he said. 'I would have spent a lot of time seeking out grants and applying for loans.

'Hofstra said full ride. I said yes.'

Cameron, who turned 22 a month ago, should still be playing football for Hofstra. He had been born 2 miles from campus, and he had made many friends there.

After redshirting as a true freshman, Cameron began establishing himself as a force on Hofstra's defensive front four.

His academic prowess continued when he made the Colonial Athletic Association's All-Conference Academic team.

Had things gone according to plan, Cameron might be headed for practice at Shuart Stadium on Hofstra's campus.

Things don't always work out the way we envision them.

And that's not always a bad thing.

On Dec. 3, 2009, football died at

Hofstra.

It came as a shock. Cameron was attending a management 101 class when he got a text message about the program's demise.

Chaos ensued. Cameron talked to at least a dozen college coaches as programs descended on Hofstra's campus, trying to snatch up players.

In the end, Cameron entertained offers from ODU and Massachusetts. He made the first recruiting trip to Norfolk, then one to UMass.

Playing for the Minutemen would have let him stay closer to his native Long Island. UMass also has a rich football history, having won the Football Championship Subdivision's national championship in 1998.

Had Cameron gone there, though, he'd be guaranteed of no postseason: the Minutemen decided last spring to leave the FCS and join the Football Bowl Subdivision beginning in 2012, so they are ineligible for the playoffs.

Had things gone according to plan, Cameron might be in the middle of the UMass campus this afternoon, contemplating his team's upcoming game against Rhode Island. And if Cameron were there, he'd know he would be home for Thanksgiving - that's the first week of the playoffs.

Things don't always work out the way we envision them.

And that's not always a bad thing.

On opening day this season, Cameron and his older brother Garry went to the Sports Zone in the Ghent section of Norfolk. After almost two years here, Cameron has learned his way around town.

They were there to get replica ODU jerseys. Mom, Dad and brother wanted everyone to know Ronnie Cameron was their kin.

For Mom and Dad, Cameron bought No. 96 jerseys with 'CAMERON' sewn across the back shoulders.

Garry wanted something different, so he had 'DAS MY BRO' sewn onto his.

'We were walking down 21st Street and he was stopping people on the sidewalk and saying, 'This is Ronnie Cameron, he plays football at ODU,' ' Cameron said.

He is, according to coach Bobby Wilder, the complete package.

'Great person, great student, great athlete,' Wilder said. 'I'm always asking our players if they have their 10-year plan in order. Ronnie is one of the few who knows where he wants to be in 10 years.'

Cameron chose ODU because Wilder and his staff made - and kept - some promises.

Cameron needed only another semester to graduate from Hofstra, so Wilder made sure all of his classes would transfer. Cameron walked with the 2010 spring graduating class. It was important to Cameron, who took pride in earning his undergraduate degree in three years.

He has spent the past 15 months pursuing a master's degree in business administration with a concentration in information technology.

His high school coach, Tony Mascia, isn't surprised.

'I remember him walking into my office the first time like it was yesterday,' said Mascia, coach for the past 21 years. 'His parents hardly opened their mouths. Ronnie did all the talking, and he spoke like a 30-year-old. He knew then what he wanted and how he wanted to get it done.'

Cameron's plan was to get an MBA in finance while playing football at Hofstra. 'But when the economy tanked, I jumped ship,' he said.

Had things gone according to plan, Cameron would have had a degree in finance at a time when the economy is in crisis.

Things don't always work out the way we envision them.

And that's not always a bad thing.

When Cameron walks in December to receive his MBA from ODU, he might have to put off using that degree for a while.

This season, no fewer than 10 NFL teams, including the Green Bay Packers, Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers, have sent scouts to ODU's practices to see him.

Cameron is a bull on the field. While the pros probably would like it if he were a little taller than 6-foot-2, he carries a tightly packed 296 pounds on that frame.

'If he can put together a 70-tackle season with 10 sacks and 20 tackles for losses, teams will take an even closer look,' Wilder said.

He faces double-teams regularly.

'I like Warren Sapp's approach to that,' Cameron said, referencing the former NFL Pro Bowl player. 'He said, 'If teams are double-teaming you, that means they think enough of you to game plan for you.' '

With parents from the West Indies who grew up playing cricket and soccer, Cameron had no family background in football.

'Now, I think about playing on Sundays,' Cameron said.

'I'm not naive. It's in the back of my head. What was once a dream is now more of a goal. It's something to work for.'

If things go according to plan, Cameron might hear his name called in next spring's NFL draft. If it happens, he will be the first Monarchs player to be drafted.

That's what Cameron envisions - his cell phone ringing and some NFL general manager welcoming him to the club.

Sometimes things do work out as we envision them.

And that would be a really good thing.

Rich Radford, (757) 446-2463,rich.radford@pilotonline.com

Explanation of the number goes here and goes here and goe shere and goes here and goes here and oges

The path that led Ronnie Cameron to where he is - standout defensive end for the Old Dominion Monarchs - was part road map, part algebraic equation. By season's end, he could position himself to play on Sundays next year - for a paycheck.

Ronnie CameronBy the numbers as a Monarch

In 2010, Cameron's 72 tackles ranked second on the team behind Craig Wilkins' team-leading 74 tackles.

Cameron's 51/2 sacks in 2010 ranked second on the team behind Deron Mayo's 61/2 sacks.

Cameron's 19 tackles for loss led the team and ranked ninth in the nation in the Football Championship Subdivision.

After two games this season, Cameron leads ODU in tackles with 17, sacks with 21/2, tackles for losses with 4 and quarterback hurries with 5. He had a team-high 8 quarterback hurries (rushing the QB to throw the ball faster than planned) a year ago.

пятница, 21 сентября 2012 г.

Sports Log - The Boston Globe (Boston, MA)

NBA

Report: Nets lead way in Anthony chase

The New Jersey Nets are emerging as the front-runner in thepursuit of Denver Nuggets star Carmelo Anthony, according to areport on ESPN.com last night. The report said the Nets are willingto offer No. 3 overall pick Derrick Favors, the expiring deals ofTroy Murphy and Kris Humphries, plus at least one future first-round pick for Anthony, whose contract expires after next season . .. Lakers forward Ron Artest is motivated to win another NBAchampionship because he plans to auction his ring from last season'stitle to raise money for mental health counseling in schools. Afterthe Lakers beat the Celtics for the title in June, Artest thankedhis psychiatrist for helping him relax during the playoffs. He saidhe received counseling for a few months when he was 13, but thatfunding for the program dried up . . . Raptors rookie forward EdDavis is expected to sidelined up to six weeks after undergoingarthroscopic surgery to repair a meniscus tear in his right knee.

College football

UMass cracks top 10 after near upset

UMass climbed six spots to No. 9 in the FCS Coaches Poll afterits narrow loss to Michigan Saturday. The Minutemen also moved upfive spots to No. 11 in The Sports Network poll. UMass, which lostto the Wolverines, 42-37, ranked 21st in the FBS, joins five otherColonial Athletic Association teams in the FCS top 10: No. 2Villanova, No. 3 James Madison, No. 5 Richmond, No. 6 Delaware, andNo. 8 William & Mary. New Hampshire, which dropped to 1-2 afterlosing to Rhode Island Saturday, fell 10 spots to No. 18 . . .Florida State quarterback Christian Ponder has a sore throwing armand will take it easy at practice this week. Ponder wore a sleeveyesterday to protect a bruised right tricep muscle he suffered inthe Seminoles' Sept. 11 loss at Oklahoma. The injury stiffened up onhim during Saturday's 34-10 win over BYU . . . Brandon Hanning, akaOhio University's Rufus Bobcat, said his 'whole plan' was to tackleOhio State's Brutus when he tried out for the mascot's job at OUlast year. He did just that Saturday, wrestling unsuspecting Brutusto the ground before 105,075 fans at Ohio Stadium. The 19-year-oldHanning is banned from further affiliation with the school'sathletic department, although he isn't actually a student thereanymore; he now attends nearby Hocking College.

Pro hockey

Penguins hand Shero 5-year extension

Penguins general manager Ray Shero, whose deft handling of thesalary cap and midseason hiring of coach Dan Bylsma in 2009 helpedPittsburgh win its first Stanley Cup in 17 years, agreed to a five-year contract extension that runs through the 2015-16 season.Shero's current five-year contract, signed at the start of the 2006-07 season, would have expired at the end of this season. ThePenguins have twice played for the Stanley Cup and won it once underShero, an assistant general manager in the NHL for 14 seasons beforebeing hired by the Penguins. They've made the playoffs in all fourseasons since Shero took over . . . The former owner of the HartfordWhalers is taking control of business operations of the city's minorleague hockey team. Howard Baldwin announced his company, HartfordHockey LLC., will be responsible for marketing, ticket sales, andother day-to-day business operations of the AHL's Hartford WolfPack. Madison Square Garden and the NHL's New York Rangers willcontinue to own the team and retain control over the players andcoaches. The team will be renamed the Connecticut Whale sometimethis year. Baldwin is trying to convince the NHL that the citydeserves a team.

Baseball

Selig won't expand use of replays

Commissioner Bud Selig ruled out increased use of instant replayby umpires to review close calls during the postseason this year.Selig said he discussed the matter with the special committee ofmanagers, management, and ownership he appointed in December. 'Idon't get the feeling that there's a lot of support for it, at leasttheir conversations with me,' he said. Baseball instituted videoreview to assist umpires late in the 2008 season, but limited itsuse to whether potential home runs are fair and whether the ballwent over the fence . . . Cubs outfielder Tyler Colvin remainedhospitalized in Miami, a day after his season ended when part of ashattered bat punctured his chest. Colvin was hit in his upperchest, allowing air into his chest well and potentially into hislungs.

miscellany

Symphony Hall ready to make a racket

Boston's Symphony Hall may be known as the 'house of strings' toconcert-goers, but other stringed instruments - squash rackets -take over tomorrow night as four of the world's foremost championsplay for $30,000 in prize money in the Sharif Kahn Cup. The'Showdown at Symphony' features four players who have claimed theworld's No. 1 ranking, including Egyptian Ramy Ashour, the currentboss, fellow Egyptian Amr Shabana (2007-08), Frenchman GregoryGaultier (2009), and Canadian Jonathon Power (2006). The eventbegins at 6 . . . The University of Maine gave women's basketballcoach Cindy Blodgett a two-year contract extension. The former BlackBears star is 20-69 in three seasons at Maine . . . Tomas Rojas beatKohei Kono by a unanimous decision to capture the vacant WBC superflyweight title in Saitama, Japan.