Sunday, October 31, 2010

What were you thinking Mike?

Today Mike Shanahan, the current coach of the Washington Redskins, did a really stupid thing as a leader. I have a healthy respect for Shanahan as a coach, especially when he was in Denver. After all, the man won back to back Superbowls in 1997 and 1998. He built a winning team and has a winning system, both things I admire. But in benching Donovan McNabb two minutes before the end of a game while losing, and bringing on Rex "Mr Reliable" Grossman, who hasn't done anything meaningful in almost three years. You have to be kidding Mike... seriously!

What message are you trying to send here?That the benching was just a situational substitution with no long-term effect.Who are you kidding mate? You have sent a loud, clear message that you don't trust your number one quarterback, you don't have faith in him in tough situations, and that the huge money and hype you put up to bring McNabb to Washington was all talk. One small call but one with massive implications. All of a sudden you have cut the foundations you have built since pre-season and the team is rudderless. What were you thinking, I would truly like to know, but you blew it. It was a juvenile, knee-jerk decision that will come back to haunt you. You, of all people, should know better. Oh, and did Rex win you the game? Hell no, he fumbled and the opposition scooped up the ball and ran it home for a touchdown.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

I hate it when both are right!

My beloved Tottenham Hotspur played Manchester United today and, yes the Red Devils won as expected, 2-0. The game ended as a farce when the referee abrogated his responsibility to the players and failed to inform them of what was going on after a free-for-all in the penalty. Nani thought he was fouled, which was a load of cobblers (he went to ground after being breathed on), and then touched the ball. Believing a free kick had been awarded the Spurs keeper tried to take a free kick, when Nani walked around Gomes and tapped the ball into the net. Then all hell broke loose and the referee almost got lynched.

Manchester United's manager, Sir Alex Ferguson, said that the goal was Gomes fault because he should have known better. And I totally agree with him. Gomes is a good keeper physically but goes on mental walkabouts too many times; maybe a spell on the bench might clear his mind! Tottenham's manager, Harry Redknapp said that Nani had touched the ball and should have been booked. If he's booked it's a free kick, and Spurs can get on with trying to salvage the draw and a point. He's right too and that's annoying. I hate when they both are correct.

They are also both correct when each manager says that nobody knew what was going on. It was a total stuff up. The referee should have clarified what was happening and then got on with the game. Instead he says nothing and stands there with his hands on his hips like some poncy scarecrow. Thankfully, the game was not decided on this one incident although it did totally take the result away from Spurs when a nail-biting finish was on the cards. Mark Clattenburg, the referee, is obviously not capable of controlling such a high class and important game and should be sent to the Championship or lower to brush up on his skills. It's not the first time he has committed such a howler. Either way, a complete farce finish to a good, tight game.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Pre-season games mean nothing

Pre-season basketball and NFL games are meaningless, except for their ability to suck in tons of fans (and therefore money) to watch their teams play. The perfect example of this is the recent run of form that the new Utah Jazz have been showing. They had a perfect pre-season, winning all of their games, even against top opposition like the LA Lakers and Phoenix Suns. But that means diddly! The Jazz got absolutely clobbered by the Denver Nuggets in the opening game of the regular season by 22 points. Some much for the big run, it's all show. Pre-season is basically practice, and club owners should come clean and sell these tickets for $5.00 a pop. Anything is robbery. Some sports, like Rugby League and Australian Rules football have a trophy for their pre-season competition which at least makes it semi-honest. The rest is rubbish. And there was all that feel good stuff about a new look Jazz team.

Broncos can't buck this trend

Republished from ESPN: So that's it, then. It's done. The fix is arranged. It's Game Over and everybody knows the score. The BCS computers TKO Boise State. Why keep punching when it's not a fair fight?

Auburn and Oregon are No. 1 and No. 2 in the country according to Sunday's latest, most fraudulent compilation yet from the BCS rankings. If those two schools win the rest of their games, they'll play in the BCS Championship Game.

And Boise State? Members of football's lowest caste system? It doesn't matter. The BSUntouchables play Louisiana Tech on Tuesday night, but they're just cleaning windows on the Titanic now. If Auburn and Oregon win out, Boise State can wipe out every opponent 50-0 and not make it in now. And the Broncos probably won't even if the Tigers and Ducks don't win out. Yes, we're talking about Auburn. The team that has 13 fewer wins over the past five seasons than Boise State. Yes, we're talking about Oregon. The same team Boise State punched out last season 19-8.

It's the biggest rip-off since the Nigerian prince scam. It makes you wonder why you watch college football at all. What Boise State is being asked to do isn't doable. It's like trying to win a Cuban election. Or break into the Genovese family.

The Broncos are 6-0. They've won 20 straight games, the longest streak in the country. They've beaten two BCS automatic qualifiers -- 6th-ranked Virginia Tech and 24th-ranked Oregon State. Doesn't matter. BSU could whip the 103rd Infantry and it wouldn't get a sniff. The computers are in charge. The pod bay doors won't open.

Boise State is going to get seated at the kids' table again. The Broncos will go to some pointless bowl and beat somebody like they always do -- they've already bested Oklahoma and TCU in bowls like that -- and they'll come home with a win and a hatful of "You kids sure play with a lot of heart up there" put-downs from the BCS blazers.

To read the complete article by Rick Reilly please click on the title link: "Broncos can't buck this trend".

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Who Says Sports and Politics Don't Mix?

Former Philadelphia Eagles hardman John Runyan is in the race of his life. Not going for any fumbled football or a quarterback's head in this one, but running for the District 3 Congressional seat in southern New Jersey. Bit of a switcheroo you might say, and you'd be right! Apparently being named one of the dirtiest players in the NFL during his stint in the City of Brotherly Love is just the kind of training that Runyan can use in his campaign and possibly in the job itself. After all, New Jersey is pretty much known as the corruption capital of the United States. I think we'd all get out the way real fast is this guy was running at you hard.

As is the case with many political outsiders, Runyan's campaign casts his non-experience as an asset, and his opponent Adler's incumbency, as a liability. A recent ad from the Republican candidate called Adler a "career politician" and "part of the problem for 21 years." Runyan got a boost last Friday from New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who told supporters "there's nothing moderate about John Adler's record" and accused the incumbent of being a reliable vote for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. That could be a death knell for Runyan's opponent without the guy taking a swipe at him physically.

Sports Shorts

Perth star Erin McGowan is the new WBO female 135 champion. Erin showed brilliance and superstar potential with a near-flawless performance last night over the United Kingdom's Lindsey Scragg at the Arena Jundaloop here in front of a raucous crowd that came to cheer for their fighter. McGowan worked behind a crisp jab, and surprised everyone when she took the fight to Scragg instead of just using her height and reach advantage to cruise to a victory. The undefeated McGowan proved the busier and stronger fighter in this exciting and explosive 10-round dukeout which had the crowd on their feet throughout.

By winning his third crown in 2010, Roger Federer matched Pete Sampras in career ATP titles at 64. The Swiss is now targeting John McEnroe’s 77 for the No. 3 spot. At the If Stockholm Open, Federer found himself down a break at 4-3 in the final to Florian Mayer until the German admitted that situation got into his head. After consecutive weeks in Shanghai and now Stockholm, Federer now has a week of rest before his home Basel tennis event begins next Monday.

Lote Tuqiri has played in World Cups in two codes, contested State of Origin deciders and tasted NRL premiership success during his 11 years as a professional footballer. But the veteran winger still found himself in a "dream state" when his name was read out in Australia's starting line-up for Sunday's Four Nations match against Papua New Guinea. The selection means the 31-year-old is the first player to earn selection as a Kangaroo, then a Wallaby, before returning to rugby league's international stage with Australia.

Former BYU player Ben Cahoon, 5-foot-9 and 180 pounds, is one of only nine professional football players to catch more than 1,000 passes in a career (see chart), and only the second to do it in the CFL. Heading into an Oct. 10 game against the Calgary Stampeders, he needed four catches to surpass Terry Vaughn's CFL career record of 1,006. He made the fourth catch with five minutes left in the game, hauling in another pass from Anthony Calvilo, the former Utah State quarterback who arrived in Montreal the same year as Cahoon.

Chelsea are planning to test the resolve of Liverpool's new owners by making a fresh bid for Spain striker Fernando Torres in the Barclays Premier League January transfer window. Liverpool rejected an offer of £25 million ($40.2m) for the Spain striker last northern summer, but Chelsea are hoping to exploit the regime change at Anfield and the team's poor start to the season by signing one of their prized assets. Torres professed his loyalty to Liverpool in a prearranged statement in August, but his commitment is contingent on the club challenging for the biggest trophies, which are already looking out of reach this season as the Reds are languishing in 19th place.

While Sonny Bill Williams will be forever grateful to former Toulon coach Tana Umaga and the club's colourful owner, Mourad Boudjellal, for the opportunity and support they gave him in adapting to the new code, Williams's development has accelerated at a rate faster than even he anticipated since his move to New Zealand. In just five national provincial competition appearances for Canterbury, the 25-year-old has confounded his critics with a devastating attacking style that convinced New Zealand selectors to choose him in a 30-man squad for this weekend's Bledisloe Cup match against Australia in Hong Kong and the end-of-season European tour. Should he make his Test debut on tour, Williams will become only the second Kiwi league international to switch codes and represent the country in rugby union.

Should football follow rugby’s lead?

Republished from The Globe and the Mail: On the football field, the uniform is a suit of armour that makes players feel invincible and has the NFL in a sudden scramble to make the game safe. On the rugby pitch, where the action is every bit as vicious, they've been playing for decades with little more than a paper-thin set of shoulder pads. These are two violent games, each of which produce more than their fair share of injuries. But if a rugby player is going to get “blown up” — as they like to say in the NFL — the sound will be that of bone-on-bone, not the loud, made-for-TV popping of a helmet onto a pair of shoulder pads. When you put those pads and helmets on, it does protect you, but only to an extent,” said Eddie O'Sullivan, a former rugby player in Ireland who now serves as head coach for the U.S. national team.

By eschewing pads and helmets, rugby players say they avoid the perils of the so-called “Superman effect,” a sensation that emboldens players to take bigger chances and make bigger hits because they feel safeguarded by equipment that essentially turns them into armour-plated projectiles. “A helmet would actually be seen as a form of protection, so that would massively change the way the game is played,” said Chris Jones, who has played for the Sale Sharks rugby union team in Britain for 10 years. “It wouldn't really suit rugby to wear helmets.” Indeed, helmets and thick shoulder pads would alter the fundamentals of rugby — especially the tackling part, which has less to do with knocking an opponent to the ground, more to do with wrapping him up and keeping him there. “It's a more precise skill, rather than just the car wreck effect that you see on the gridiron, and that's the thing that keeps the game pretty safe for us,” O'Sullivan said.

Rugby players are taught to never use their head in making the tackle, and without a helmet to protect them, the logic is pretty clear. Any player leading with the head is almost certain to get hurt as badly as the person he's trying to hit. Meanwhile, ballcarriers in rugby — a game with continuous play and no forward passes — are also taught that it's better to go down easily so they can more effectively work the ball back to a teammate and keep play moving. This is not the way of the NFL, and suddenly, the league finds itself in the midst of a safety crisis. On Sunday, a new era in the NFL will begin, one in which extra scrutiny will be given to hits made at shoulder level and above. Players who have been taught since childhood to hit hard, and often to lead with their helmet and shoulders, have become confused about what's allowable and what's not.

In the middle of this debate, a couple of the sport's icons, Penn State coach Joe Paterno and former Bears coach and tight end Mike Ditka, have suggested helmets either be scaled back or completely eliminated from football — an almost certainly unworkable prospect that would make football look the way it did in the 1940s and 1950s ... and more similar to what rugby still looks like today. “I don't think people would strike with the head as much,” Ditka said during the week. “You would learn to strike with the shoulder pads if you didn't have a helmet on your head. ”While they're far from helmets, rugby does make “scrum caps” — soft, padded head guards — available, though they are mainly used to protect players from getting their ears bents and tweaked during scrums. The caps, more recently, have fallen out of favour because players think they feel awkward and don't want to appear “soft” by wearing them. Instead, many favour tying a simple cloth or elastic band around their heads to protect their ears.

If you would like to read the entire article by Eddie Pells, please click on the highlighted title link, "Should football follow rugby's lead?".

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Big Brother Should Be Watching!

I hold former French soccer star and current UEFA President in very high esteem. What a player he was in his prime. But like many of his era, he is dead set wrong about not introducing electronic tools into adjudicating football matches. I have read his assertion that goal-line technology will lead to "PlayStation football, which is plainly ridiculous. Both rugby league and tennis have successfully integrated some form of technology to assist umpires and referees, and with great success. In tennis the spectators have become increasingly aware of the nuances of the game through players challenging calls made by chair or line umpires. To the betterment of the game.

He is however, considering an extra assistant referee, at each end of the field to help adjudicate on contentious points near the goal mouth. I agree that this can help, however, the human eye can still be fooled by a soccer ball moving at the speed of light. Michael Essien can hit the ball so hard and fast it can be past a referee in the blink of an eye, and human's do blink. But a camera, saved for specific and special moments, can slow things down and make the correct call. For the betterment of the game.

What must not be allowed to happen is to use technology to the point adopted in American football, which has become pedantic to the point of exasperation. There must be a good balance. I like the fact that NFL coaches have three call challenges per half. I like that a tennis player can challenge a call that they believe to be erroneous, but again, a limited number of times. Rugby league uses technology to determine whether a try has been scored according to the rules, but not on many other occasions. The key is making sure as much as is possible and as quickly as possible the correct decision is made. That means giving referees and umpires access to appropriate technology and teaching then when it is the right time to use it.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Rangers Rip The Yankees

I can't think of anything better for baseball right now than the Texas Rangers eliminating the New York Yankees from the World series with a crushing 6-1 win in game six. I am tired of the Yankees constantly winning pennants and series with a team that they bought but did not develop. I am especially happy that it was the Rangers, from my wife's wonderful home state of Texas, that put the Yankees to the sword. The fact that this is the Rangers first American League pennant and first trip to the World Series is just icing on the cake for me and for diehard baseball fans.

It must be a very special moment for the legendary Nolan Ryan who only returned to the Rangers in 2008 as club president. Apparently Ryan the career strikeout king pumped his fist, hugged his wife and clapped after Alex Rodriguez took a called third strike to end the American League championship series. He high-fived fans near him that oddly included former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, then went to the middle of the diamond to join in the festivities.

It is also fitting the have the Rangers joined by the San Francisco Giants in the World Series. Again, it was game six that proved the hoodoo for the Philadelphia Phillies, who were attempting their own threepeat at the top of the heap. Nobody would have predicted the Rangers versus the Giants competing for the championship, which is exactly what makes this postseason so special. What a great weekend for baseball, but I will be hoping for a Rangers win in the Series. Don't Mess With Texas!

Sir Alex Ferguson's pragmatic approach ends Wayne Rooney saga

Republished from The Guardian: Wayne Rooney has shown staggering self-interest but Sir Alex Ferguson demonstrated his powers of persuasion. It has been a week of breathtaking cynicism and opportunism seldom exceeded when it comes to exposing so much that is wrong and morally bankrupt about modern-day footballers and a grubby industry where the rich are so obsessed with getting richer it can feel like money is how we must now keep the score.

Never again will anyone speak of Rooney, that old street footballer, being a throwback to those days when we would like to believe there was a bit more nobility about the men we wanted as our heroes and the most important words in the lexicon of the sport were not "pound", "thanks" and "cheerio".

Football has become a business where young men with fluffy chins can barely spell their own name but sure as hell do a good job when it comes to adding up – and there is a depressing inevitability that we will soon be subjected to the sight of Rooney putting the badge on his shirt to his lips, as if all the posturing and strategic manoeuvring and the cha-ching of men who like to chew gum as they swig their champagne has been a trick of our collective imaginations.

A part of you admires his nerve. It takes a special form of self-interest, after all, not only to wangle an extra God-knows-how-many millions out of England's biggest club over the space of his new five-year contract but to have done so at a juncture in Rooney's life when public opinion of him had dropped to a point where it was not just low but subterranean in some places.

And yet it has also been a week in which there has been at least one glowing reminder of the pleasures and the pride that should accompany being employed by Manchester United and the impression left is this: whatever you think of Sir Alex Ferguson, his hypocrisies, the frequent mistruths and the even more frequent rages, how can anyone not have at least begrudging admiration for that shrewd, political mind, still as sharp as a tack as we approach the beginning of his 70th year?

A preconception has built that Ferguson will send any player who challenges his authority to the guillotine. It is one he likes to cultivate himself. "If footballers think they are above the manager's control," he once said, "there is only one word to say: 'Goodbye.'" And there is a decent XI – Jim Leighton, Jaap Stam, Paul McGrath, Gabriel Heinze, Norman Whiteside, David Beckham, Paul Ince, Neil Webb, Roy Keane, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Dwight Yorke – who could testify to this ruthlessness.

But Ferguson is a pragmatist. He did not move on Peter Schmeichel after losing a 3-0 lead at Liverpool in January 1994, when a screaming match came close to turning into a punch-up. Paul Scholes was not transfer-listed in 2001 when he turned up his nose at playing with the kids in a Carling Cup tie against Arsenal and refused to board the bus. Whiteside and McGrath were ushered out for their apparent belief that beer and football were virtually synonymous but Ferguson kept Bryan Robson even though the great warrior had many of his own lost nights.

This was what compelled Ferguson to seek out Rooney at the club's training ground at 10am yesterday: the knowledge that losing him would cause too much damage to the team.

It was the morning after the night in which manager and player had never seemed further apart. Paul Simon once sang there are 50 ways to leave your lover and Rooney's idea was the worst kind of infidelity, namely to go off with their worst enemy, Manchester City. To twist Ferguson's analogy, he had seen a cow in a different field and, well, he wanted to milk its udders. But Ferguson, however much he felt personally let down, never lost sight of the fact that Rooney is the talisman of this team and, still only 24, the great hope.

The manager set to work, reminding him of the club's history, the trophies he has already won, the size of the place, the traditions, the romance and what it means to put on that red shirt. He told Rooney he was making the most calamitous mistake of his professional life contemplating a move to Eastlands. He asked him whether it was worth becoming a pariah, to be remembered for all the wrong reasons. He asked him to put a price on the prestige of running out at Old Trafford – before answering the question himself and saying there was none.

As we have seen over the past five days, there is nobody better when it comes to long, impassioned homilies. Rooney listened, took it in and rang his agent, Paul Stretford, on the drive home to suggest they arranged another meeting, one final set of make-or-break talks.

A conference call was set up with the club's chief executive, David Gill, and two of Malcolm Glazer's sons, Joel and Bryan. Ferguson had done his bit. He had seen in Rooney's eyes that his words had got through but he knew there was still the issue of money to be resolved. Then, finally, at some point last night he took a call from Gill. The first two words were: "Good news."

Whether it is a cause for celebration is another matter but Ferguson was entitled to blow out his cheeks and chuckle as he sat down for an interview with MUTV today. Rooney, he said, had apologised to him and the other players, and would do likewise to the supporters. Rooney was then interviewed, but there was no apology. Somehow it symbolised a grubby week.

To read the complete article by Daniel Taylor please click on the highlighted link, "Sir Alex Ferguson's pragmatic approach ends Wayne Rooney saga".

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Racial vilification is not just wrong, but pure evil

In this day and age (not that it ever was ok) it is totally unacceptable to disparage any person because of their race. The fact that LeBron James is being vilified in some quarters as a sportsperson who is black, is beyond my ability to comprehend. In fact it makes me so angry that he, and many other like him, are subjected to racial abuse it makes me boil. Three of my favorite soccer players over the years, Thierry Henry of France, Ruud Gullit of the Netherlands and England's John Barnes, were all subject to racial epithets during their playing days. It cannot and must not be allowed to continue.

In 2004, a Spanish television crew filmed Spanish national team head coach Luis Aragonés trying to motivate José Antonio Reyes by making offensive and racist references to Reyes' Arsenal club teammate, Thierry Henry. Aragones said in translation, "Show that you're better than that black shit". The incident caused uproar in the British media who wanted Aragonés sacked, but the Spanish federation showed their true colors by doing nothing about it, which is pathetic. John Barnes, was taunted by his own Liverpool fans, but put it all behind him and went on to become one of England's greatest players, and the man I most wanted to watch play in his prime.

Blackpool player Jason Euell, who was sitting on the substitutes bench during a match with Stoke City in 2009 was racially abused by a Stoke fan. This person was ejected from the stadium and subsequently arrested by Staffordshire Police. Blackpool manager Ian Holloway, who had to restrain Euell, was furious in his post-match interview, saying:

"We are human beings and Jason is a footballer. The color of his skin shouldn't matter. It was disgusting. The stewards believed what Jason said, got the bloke out and I hope he is banned for life. (He is) an absolute disgrace of a human being. I thought those days had gone. Jason was just sat in the dugout at the time. I saw his reaction and I had to calm him down. It's absolutely disgraceful."

Euell, who received an official apology from Stoke City, later said: "It did hurt. I felt I had to stand up for all colors and creeds and show that we won't accept it. I'm proud that I made a stand. It was a shock to hear what came out of the guy's mouth. Racism in football is not dead and buried but it's still a shock to hear that kind of thing in close proximity. There were people near the idiot who didn't agree with it, but there were others who turned a blind eye, which was disappointing."

In the wake of the incident, Tottenham Hotspur's fantastic manager Harry Redknapp called for fans who racially abuse players to be sent to jail: "That is disgusting – there's no place for that in the game. Surely we can't have that sort of behavior now? Anyone who does it should be put in prison – not banned from football. Stick them where they belong, in the nut-house. It's wrong." Everyone, from the Rednapps, the clubs, to the fans themselves, must stamp this evil out of sport, permanently. Every sport and every situation, we need to stand up and be counted.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Pakistan Cricket: On the Ropes

Pakistan sure is the worldwide center of intrigue right now. Osama bin Laden is hiding out somewhere in the tribal badlands, the Pakistani Taliban are training American citizens to attack their own homeland, and Pakistani cricketers are the subject of police investigations on conspiracy to defraud bookmakers. Busy little fellows aren't they? Oh yes, I almost forgot, the chairman of their cricket council may also be telling porkies!

The recent Test series between England and Pakistan has been overshadowed by claims that bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir deliberately bowled no-balls after an undercover journalist paid money to a middle man.The duo, along with captain Salman Butt, played no part in the following one-day series and have been provisionally suspended by the International Cricket Council ahead of a hearing into the claims.

After all this drama it was reported in the cricket media that there was a very real prospect of expelling the PCB chairman Ijaz Butt as an ICC director. This shows just how thin the ice that the Pakistan cricket board was and still is skating on. Well-placed observers vary on the degree of the threat but some believe Butt was compelled to accept a series of wide-ranging reforms to Pakistan cricket without protest because the alternative would have been to face expulsion.

The biggest tragedy is to the game of cricket and the millions of fans the world over. The security situation in Pakistan has forced the cricket world to by pass the country to keep both players and spectators safe. This was especially so after the terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team in 2009. I have had the greatest pleasure watching the Pakistani's play, both in New Zealand and Australia. My biggest thrill was seeing opening bowlers Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis throwing their thunderbolts at opposing batsmen.

I am not sure when these ignominious goings-on will cease and Pakistan get back to its rightful place amongst the best of cricketing nations. But the actions of some of their players are not helping their cause in any way. Ijaz Butt, in my opinion, needs to be replaced by someone with more stature and better leadership. Imran Khan would be great in the role as chairman. The sooner the better.

Sports Shorts

The future of Wayne Rooney is dominating media reports in the United Kingdom as speculation mounted that the Manchester United superstar was set to leave Old Trafford following a rift with Sir Alex Ferguson. Several newspapers reported that Rooney's previously close relationship with Ferguson had deteriorated irrevocably following a bust-up over lurid tabloid revelations about the striker's private life which emerged last month.

Former San Diego Charger Junior Seau is telling investigators that he fell asleep before driving his SUV off a cliff in Carlsbad, just hours after being released from jail in connection with a domestic violence case. Carlsbad police say Seau's Cadillac SUV was found on the beach 30 feet below the roadside just before 9 a.m. Monday. The 12-time Pro Bowler, was pulled from the vehicle by law enforcement officials and was taken to Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla.

Casey Stoner has won the Australian MotoGP at Phillip Island for the fourth successive year. Having earned pole position on his 25th birthday on Saturday, the Australian Ducati rider led from start to finish to seal the win in superb fashion. Stoner was the stand-out performer, capping an impressive weekend which saw him claim pole in rainy conditions on Saturday and he is now closing in on Rossi's five straight victories at Phillip Island between 2001 and 2005.

Brett Favre is scheduled to meet behind closed doors today with the NFL over allegations that he sent lewd photos and inviting text messages and voicemails to a female employee of the New York Jets two years ago, back when both were with the franchise. The woman, Jenn Sterger, has not commented about the allegations posted on the Deadspin website.

Cliff Lee, the Ace of October, went through the New York Yankees like a buzzsaw again, striking out 13 and pitching the Texas Rangers to an 8-0 victory Monday for a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven AL Championship Series. Mr. Automatic improved to 7-0 with a 1.26 ERA in eight postseason starts. Three of those wins have come against the power-packed Yankees, including two in last year's World Series for Philadelphia.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Banging Your Head Against A Brick Wall: What will it take for the NFL to act on deliberate head shots?

I watched my favorite NFL team win and lose yesterday. One the scoreboard things looked just fine for the Philadelphia Eagles; notching up a convincing 31-17 win over a very good Atlanta Falcons team. Kevin Kolb had an excellent day at the office too, in his second start in place of injured Michael Vick, completing 23 of 29 passes for 326 yards and three touchdowns. Nothing to worry about... right?

Wrong! Some chump deliberately targeted DeSean Jackson's head with a helmet-to-helmet shot that left him unmoving on the ground and with a severe concussion. That's not football, that's a cheap shot, one that should be stamped out in football. It has absolutely no place in the NFL. I'm not talking about accidents, after all, this is a contact sport. I am talking about a premeditated smash to the head of an unprotected player. A hit that is meant to take an opponent out. DeSean has the right to play his game for as long as he can and wants too, not to have his career cut short by some gorilla in a uniform with a head like cement.

The only way for Roger Goodell and the NFL brass to handle this rash of head high hits is to suspend players, from a couple of games to indefinitely if it continues. Players need to be protected and concussion is becoming a big issue. Again, this is no namby-pamby sport, is not pick flowers in the park on Sunday afternoon! But, there have to be some common-sense boundaries. Coach Tony Dungy said that fining players will not change the culture, but if a player is missing from the line-up then that cripples a team, and minds will change. Both coaches and players have to take this seriously.

DeSean Jackson wasn't the only victim either, his tackler Dunta Robinson even concussed himself, hopefully causing him to not try that maneuver again; ever! Two other vicious hits by James Harrison of the Steelers; his helmet-to-helmet shot against Cleveland receiver Mohamed Massaquoi will certainly have serious repercussions, and it's incredible not one official flagged the hitting a defenseless receiver. In New England, Brandon Meriweather belting Baltimore's Todd Heap with a hit to the head so vicious that either a mouthguard or some fragment flew high into the air at the moment of impact. Come on people! Get real!

The helmet and pads were provided to football players for safety reasons. The were not supplied for the purposes of becoming a human missile. I have played and watched rugby union and rugby league for years and they don't wear protective equipment except for the mandatory mouthguard and occasionally, soft headgear. But you don't see anywhere near the head contact int hose two sports which are as tough as any, because the players don't use their helmeted heads and padded shoulders to purposefully take out an opponent. Times, they are a changing, and not a moment to soon. If I was DeSean Jackson or Coach Andy Reid, I'd be looking at suing Dunta Robinson and the Falcons, for medical costs and time lost due to a dangerous hit!


Sunday, October 17, 2010

Serbian Accusations Against Italian Police Are Pure Spin

Serbian soccer officials are trying to put a fresh, albeit ridiculous spin on the riot their fans caused at the recent Italy Serbia Euro 2012 Qualifier in Genoa. Despite the fact that the whole world watched Serbian fans throwing flares onto the field and at rival Italy supporters. So instead of apologizing for this appalling behavior, the Serbs have accused their Italian counterparts of being responsible for the crowd disorder that caused the abandonment of the match. What a total crock, although Sepp Blatter, the FIFA President believes that if the local police had been tougher with the Serbs fans the problem would have not have so severe. Maybe so, but the jury is still out on that one.

However, it is the Serbian fans who are responsible for this debacle and should be punished appropriately. Not only did they attack the Italians but also their own goalkeeper Vladimir Stojkovic as the team made its way to the game. He was seen hiding in the Italian dressing room shaking like a leaf, according to the Italian coach. The team bus was also reportedly attacked with hoodlums going on board and threatening the team. This attack was completely premeditated, and by some reports was orchestrated by criminal elements for the fee of 200,000 Euros.

Whatever the final outcome, which should not necessarily result in the complete ejection of the Serb team from the competition, should not be rushed. A full police and UEFA investigation must be completed before any decision is made. What Soccer-Serbia is trying to do is emulate their fans, and bully the European federation into making a hasty decision in their favor. Their charges against Italy are baseless and must not be given any credence.

The solutions to this problem are not easy. If Serbia is allowed to continue in this competition, away games may have to be played without any of their fans present. Home games, if they progress further, could be rescheduled for a neutral venue. They could even be docked points. Whatever happens, the Serbs themselves, Soccer-Serbia and the government need to get a lot more ruthless withe the hooligans themselves. Long jail terms would send a clear message that this rioting will not be tolerated. This is how the English, long the scourge of European soccer, cleaned up their act. Serbia needs now to put this behind them and ensure that they rebuild their reputation by corrective action.

Being Number One Isn't All Its Quacked Up To Be

The last two weeks have proven to be a graveyard for number one ranked teams in college football. Last week Alabama was humbled 34-17 by the South Carolina Gamecocks and yesterday their replacements at the top, the Ohio State Buckeyes, were pummeled by #18 Wisconsin Badgers 31-18. It's not easy being the best, you end up having a big old target painted on your back. So maybe the Oregon should be a little scared right now having being voted into the #1 spot.

Try telling the Ducks they need to be worried and that'll ruffle a few feathers! No heartburn happening in Eugene. For the first time in their history the Oregon are number one, on top of the college football pile. Still the Ducks are playing UCLA and USC in their next two games, both good teams in their own right, capable of beating anyone on the day. But will Oregon be looking over their collective shoulders trying to catch a glimpse of the hungry packs chasing them down? Nope, I doubt it, they will just keep on trucking, doing what they do best, although flying under the radar will now be kind of difficult.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Real takes it to Dallas at home

Real Salt Lake defeated FC Dallas 2-0 at Rio Tinto stadium tonight in front of a club record crowd of 20,236. In doing so, RSL extended its unbeaten streak at home to 25 straight games. The victory also stopped Dallas' league-leading run of 19 consecutive wins and avenges Real's last loss that occurred way back in April.Salt Lake were on a great little run of their own at that time, and it must have been sweet to be able to repay in kind.

What a difference a season can make! Last year, RSL barely sneaked into the playoffs in last place. Yet that feat has proved a catalyst to a dazzling rise up the ranks in Major League Soccer. With nothing to lose, they backed themselves and played the most dazzling football of the post-season. Coming up big every single game they advanced to the final and outplayed the far more fancied Los Angeles Galaxy, winning on the back of a marvelous performance in the penalty shootout by keeper Nick Rimando. The secret to their success is one that is replayed on every sporting stage across the globe. Teamwork.

Teamwork and the ability to play cohesively as a unit will outplay and outgun a team full of 'stars' almost every time. For example, Manchester United played West Bromwich Albion this morning and drew 2-2 after being in front 2-0. The difference is how hungry West Brom was and how they ignored the fact they were supposed to lose. Real Salt Lake has no major stars, no Landon Donovan, no David Beckham. But they have self-belief and they play every game like winners. Attitude determines altitude! Now they are just one point of the Galaxy once again, and I can't wait for Real to repeat!

Pedigree Counts For Everything

New Zealand beat Australia for the Rugby Sevens gold medal at the 2010 Commonwealth Games. This was the Kiwi team's fourth successive gold in this competition, a dynasty in the building. The final score was 24-17, not a great margin, and one that hid the Houdini-like escape that New Zealand had to perform to come from behind . Australia led 17-7 in the second half and it was only three quick blitzkrieg-like tries that allowed the team in black to respond with the win.

Although the path to the final for both teams was aided by the absence of twice-silver medalist Fiji, the final was closely fought, to the bitter end. The Fijians were not allowed to compete in the Games as they were expelled from the Commonwealth over the military coup that brought the current regime into power. It is sad for sport that the hugely popular Fijians were not on the field, where they so much belong. Instead, the Indian public were treated to their first taste of the trans-Tasman rivalry in rugby that rocks the oval-ball world.

South Africa won the bronze medal with a 17-14 victory over England. The three southern hemisphere championship teams finishing in a nice tight trifecta. Once again the Tri-Nations teams dominate over their northern cousins. After the gold medal winning performance, New Zealand coaching wizard Gordon Teitjens hinted broadly that he would stay on to see his charges fight for gold again, this time in the 2016 Olympic Games. Why not, Tietjens is the master tactician in charge of a team undefeated in sevens since 1988.

Police detain 17 after Serbia-Italy soccer riot

Republished from TMCNet. Police have detained 17 people including the alleged ringleader of a riot at a soccer match between Serbia and Italy, and UEFA warned that sanctions may include disqualification from the European Championship or exclusion from future competitions. The match in Genoa was called off after seven minutes when Serbia fans threw flares and fireworks onto the field, burned a flag and broke barriers. Violent clashes continued through the night, and sixteen people, including two policemen, were injured. UEFA has opened an investigation into the events and its disciplinary panel will hear the case on Oct. 28.

Police found the alleged instigator of the riot in the trunk of a bus that was due to take the Serbian fans home from the European Championships qualifier. While his face was covered by a mask during the violence, police identified him by his tattooed arms and found explosives material with him. Of the 17 people detained, 16 are Serbian fans and one is Italian, Genoa police official Sebastiano Salvo. Salvo identified the ringleader as 30–year–old Ivan Bogdanov, who climbed onto a barrier separating fans from the field, used a wire cutter to slice apart a mesh fence and launched fireworks onto the field. Bogdanov didn't say anything when he was arrested and is being held in a Genoa jail under accusations of causing violence and damage and resisting arrest, Salvo said, adding that 600 pieces of fireworks and explosives were found in four bags inside the bus holding Serbian fans.

To read the full article, written by the Associated Press, please click on the title link, "Police detain 17 after Serbia-Italy soccer riot".

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Netball's Finest Hour

There are many great sporting rivalries in sport: the Yankees and the Red Sox, Manchester United against Liverpool, the All Blacks versus the Springboks. Arm wrestles year after year, and nothing is more important in the universe. But there is one that is only spoken of locally but is as intense and competitive as anything I have ever witnessed, and that is the annual duel between the New Zealand Silver Ferns and the Australian Diamonds in netball.

The jewel in each teams' crown is either the world championship or the Commonwealth Games, both held every four years. This week, Australia's champion netball team slumped to a second consecutive loss in a Commonwealth Games final, a two-goal double overtime heartbreaker against New Zealand. Worse still, defeat came in the last event of India's Games against the arch enemy who inflicted that Melbourne 2006 loss on home turf.

Both sides were locked when the full time whistle sounded after an Australian fightback from seven goals down, and they remained locked after the first period of of extra time. Then New Zealand and Australia went goal for goal in double overtime for ten nerve-wracking minutes in search of the win. Finally the Diamonds cracked when Cath Cox's shot to win bounced off the rim, Silver Ferns shooter Maria Tutaia's attempt dropped in to give New Zealand a classic 66-64 win.

The great thing is, that this titanic struggle is the norm, not the exception. It is often only a mere couple of points that separate the two after each match, so well matched are they. One thing is for sure, a loss is like losing an arm or a leg, so fierce is the competition. Some of the best matches, in any sport, anywhere, at any time!

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Weight of Expectation

Weight of expectations, whether personal or from fans, can cause crazy things to happen. Sometimes it can create a groundswell beyond the norm or sink a team to into an abyss. It seems that the latter is to blame for the Pakistani hockey team's recent disastrous showings, first at the recent World Cup and now at the Commonwealth Games, both held in India, home of their arch rivals.

Pakistan has always done well in field hockey, and are expected by the legion of screaming fans to compete well at the highest level. Their 12th-place finish at the World Cup created huge consternation in sport-mad Pakistan. It looks like this trend has continued in a very ill-tempered match against South Africa, where both teams had failed to qualify for the semi-finals.

South Africa fought back to beat 10-man Pakistan with a golden goal to finish fifth in the Commonwealth Games men's hockey competition. With the scores tied 2-2 at full time, Justin Reid scored the decisive goal in extra-time after Pakistan were reduced to ten men following a red card to Muhammad Irfan (shown above) in the 58th minute. Irfan was punished for bringing down South Africa's Marvin Harper inside the "D".

It was veteran striker Rehann Butt who put Pakistan ahead, scoring field goals in the 28th and 52nd minutes. Trailing 2-0, South Africa fought back to level the scores with Reid converting a penalty-corner in the 55th and Gareth Carr in the 62nd. The seocnd goal was scored while Pakistan was down a man after the red card. It went from bad to worse when Irfan was banned for three matches for hitting an opponent with his stick, which drew an angry reaction from the South Africans who believed the tackle was deliberate and Irfan aimed for his opponents head. But try telling the Pakistani fans that they should let up on their national team; somehow I think that it simply won't happen.

Keep On Swinging

Last night I watched the quintessential warrior, Brett Favre, play his heart out for his Vikings, albeit in a losing cause. Anyone who watched that game against the New York Jets saw Brett at his best and worst, the gunslinger. Nothing has really changed at all in his 20 season in the NFL, he just keeps doing what he has to do, and tries his darndest to keep winning.

Brett became the first NFL player to throw 500 touchdown passes and pass for 70,000 yards. But two early fumbles against his former team helped put the Vikings in a 12-0 hole. It's funny how two stats almost go hand in hand, most TD passes and most fumbles, because he holds that record too! Favre finally finished 14-of-34 for 264 yards for the Vikings. This is what I love about Brett, he just keeps swinging.

Favre reminds me of Hank Aaron. Aaron once said, when asked what he did to keep batting so well; "My motto was always to keep swinging. Whether I was in a slump or feeling badly or having trouble off the field, the only thing to do was keep swinging." How familiar that sounds in today's context for Favre. What many people do not know, was that Aaron, when he claimed the home run record in baseball, was also the player who had struck out the most. A good lesson for life that one... Keep On Swinging!

Monday, October 11, 2010

Sports Shorts

Derek Stepan had the kind of NHL debut every player dreams of. The 20-year-old became the first player in the 85-year history of the Rangers and the fourth in the NHL since 1927 to score three goals in his first NHL game, powering New York to a season-opening 6-3 victory over the Buffalo Sabres on Saturday night.

Colt McCoy, the final member of the big four QBs in this year's draft, may be getting his shot under center. The former University of Texas star appears to be the last QB standing for the Cleveland Browns. Jake Delhomme, who suffered a high ankle sprain in Week 1, is scheduled for an MRI today after re-injuring the same ankle in yesterday's 20-10 loss to Atanta. Meanwhile Seneca Wallace, who started in place of Delhomme since Week 1, is scheduled for his own MRI after also going down with an ankle injury vs. the Falcons. So now it's down to McCoy, who hasn't taken a snap this season, to start against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday. The Browns figure to sign another QB if there's no improvement from Wallace or Delhomme.

Spraying champagne in the visitors' clubhouse after completing the first postseason sweep in franchise history was merely a ritual for the Philadelphia Phillies. They won't really celebrate unless they win the World Series. The Phillies moved a step closer toward becoming the first NL team in 66 years to win three consecutive pennants by beating the Cincinnati Reds in three straight games in the division series. Now they'll wait to face the winner of the San Francisco-Atlanta series in the NLCS. Game 1 is Saturday at Citizens Bank Park.

World number two Novak Djokovic easily defended his China Open title for his second win on the ATP tour this year. Djokovic recorded a 6-2 6-4 win over Spain's David Ferrer in a final that had been carried into a reserve day because of heavy rain in Beijing. Caroline Wozniacki celebrated taking over from Serena Williams as the new world number one by beating second seed Vera Zvonareva in the women's event. The 20-year-old Dane came through 6-3 3-6 6-3 to earn a sixth title of 2010. She officially succeeded injured American Williams as the top ranked player in women's tennis on Monday, and got off to a fine start in the final in Beijing against Russian Zvonareva.

Tony Stewart still needs help to catch Sprint Cup Series points leader Jimmie Johnson, but he jump-started his climb back into contention for the series championship Sunday at Auto Club Speedway. Stewart beat resilient Clint Bowyer to the finish line by .466 seconds in Sunday's Pepsi Max 400 to win his first race at the 2-mile track, his second of the year and the 39th of his career. In sharp contrast to Stewart's victory, which left him 107 points behind third-place finisher and Chase leader Jimmie Johnson, a handful of Chase drivers took big hits in the championship battle.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

The Fresh Start Jazz

I did a lot of listening and observing at the Utah Jazz scrimmage game last Saturday afternoon and the opening pre-season game against the Portland Trailblazers. I wanted to gauge something ethereal: a feeling, a mood. What emotion was I attempting to measure? How the fans saw the upcoming season with all the major changes that had taken place with the team in the off-season. You know what the vibe was? Really great, very positive, with real hope of something special happening. It was really great watching all the people with big smiles on their faces. So what did Offseason Santa bring in his big old sack?

The Negatives:
  • The trade of Kyle Korver to the Chicago Bulls. Kyle was a great guy, perfect off the bench, with a tremendous work ethic and example, who hit 3-pointers with regularity. He will be missed.
  • The acquisition of Wes Matthews by the Portland Trailblazers, who made him an offer he couldn't refuse, and the Jazz couldn't (not wouldn't) match. He was a real gentleman and very humble. He too will be missed.
The Positives:
  • The trading of Carlos Boozer to Chicago. Carlos is a good player, when he wants to be, but is too injury prone and not tough enough mentally. As nice a man as he was to me personally, the Jazz are better off without him for a number of reasons best left unsaid.
  • The signing of Al Jefferson and Raja Bell, both of whom, WANT to be here in Utah, not like some others who will remain nameless.
  • The acquisition of rookies Jeremy Evans, Gordon Hayward and Ryan Thompson who are already bringing their fresh-faced enthusiasm into everything they do.
  • The physical transformation of C.J. Miles to 232 lbs of muscle just adds so much more hustle to the team who he is on the court.
  • That captain and talisman Deron Williams will be as good as ever and may be even better than he was last year.
  • The continued upward evolution of Paul Millsap at power forward.
You don't have to be a rocket scientist to see the list of positives is much longer than the other. No wonder then the Jazz fans feel good about their prospects for 2010-11. If you add to that that Mehmet Okur will return to the fray hopefully sooner rather than later from his achilles injury, and things look bright. Since sport at the elite level is as much or more mental than physical, all that positive energy and attitude ought to amount to something great.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Sports Shorts

Atlanta goaltender Ondrej Pavelec collapsed on the ice and had to be taken off the ice on a stretcher just 2:35 into the Thrashers' season-opener against Washington on Friday night. With play stopped after a whistle in the Washington zone and just 2:35 gone in the game, Pavelec collapsed onto his back a few feet in front of the Atlanta net and did not move. Medical personnel from both teams raced onto the ice, and after several minutes he was taken off on a stretcher. The Thrashers said Pavelec lost consciousness and was taken to a local hospital for evaluation, but that no other details were available.

Snooker world champion Neil Robertson
showed why he is the new world number one with a 5-1 win over Ronnie O'Sullivan in the final of the World Open in Glasgow. He claimed his sixth ranking title with an assured display, capitalising every time O'Sullivan made an error. After losing the first two frames, a 72 break gave O'Sullivan the third and he looked good in the fourth before a slip let in Robertson to win. The Australian made it 4-1 and won the title by edging a nervy sixth frame. Robertson said the confidence boost of being world champion had transformed his game.

Ducati rider Casey Stoner has won the Japanese Moto GP at Motegi. Starting third on the grid, the Australian immediately beat pole sitter Andrea Dovizioso and reigning champion Valentino Rossi off the line. Dovizioso finished second, with Rossi third after a thrilling battle with championship leader Jorge Lorenzo, who had to settle for fourth. The victory is Stoner's second in as many races following his win at the Grand Prix of Aragon.

Liverpool: Between a Rock and a Hard Place!

LIVERPOOL FC is a proud and storied, champion football team. The club has won a record eighteen league titles, seven FA Cups and seven League Cups (currently called the Carling Cup after its sponsor). Liverpool is one of the most successful clubs in English football, also one of the wealthiest and most widely supported football teams in the world. The club is the most successful English club in European competition, having won five European Cups and three UEFA Cups.

BUT their last two seasons have been a massive disappointment. 2009-10 was a frustrating season for the Reds, who underperformed for most of the season and finished 7th in the Premier League, their worst finish since 1999. This was not good enough for their fans and owners, who haven't won the Premier League since 1990. Rafael Benitez, under increasing pressure throughout the season as results continued to slide, finally left the club in June, 2010 by mutual consent.

ROY HODGSON was appointed manager a few weeks later, in time to start fresh for the new season. The former Fulham coach was seen as an inspired choice, one seen as changing the fortunes of the slumping team. However, his appointed to drink from the poisoned chalice as Liverpool has become has seen Liverpool drop into the relegation zone, third from bottom, with only six points from seven games. The Red's fans are seeing red, if you know what I mean.

IN THE MIDST of this awful start comes a new controversy. This is in the form of a takeover bid for Liverpool by the owners of the Boston Red Sox baseball team. In fact, Liverpool's board have agreed to sell the club to John Henry's New England Sports Ventures group, though the current owners, Tom Hicks and George Gillett, have said that they intend to oppose the deal, which they say dramatically undervalues the club.

I PREDICT that Hicks and Gillett will lose their battle. They are universally despised by the Liverpool faithful. But event more importantly, the Royal Bank of Scotland is owed £237m ($378m) in debt and they want their money, now! They have threatened to put the club into administration if the offer from Henry is not accepted. The result of administration would see the English Premier League dock 9 points from the club's results for the season, which on current form, would pretty much doom them to relegation. This something all parties would want to avoid.

IN MY VIEW, this puts the current owners on the rack. They will try their hardest to delay administration and anything like it. Only by attrition can they hope to get a better deal. And they need a better deal, because the NESV will leave them with almost nothing for their personal investment in Liverpool. Sad but true. Hicks and Gillett not have to face the fans and the RBS, but their own board is hostile. The NESV plan is great for the club but terrible for the owners. But with the weight of administration and green light from the board will see Henry and his team owning Liverpool within the week.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Patience MUST be a Virtue

Roy Halladay spent twelve long seasons in Toronto, Canada, playing for the Blue Jays. The Blue Jays were actually a top team at one time, winning the World Series in 1992-93, becoming the fastest American League expansion team to win the Fall Classic. But unfortunately for Doc he went to Toronto in 1998, five years after their heyday and things never quite gelled after that. But his luck changed when he was acquired in the 2009 off season by two-time National League Champions the Philadelphia Phillies, and baby, as the song goes, he's never looked back.

Last night, he showed why the Phillies wanted him so bad, Halladay pitched only the second no-hitter in postseason history, leading the Phillies over the Cincinnati Reds 4-0 in Game 1 of the National League division series. Quoting the Associated Press Halliday said ""It's surreal, it really is, I just wanted to pitch here, to pitch in the postseason. To go out and have a game like that, it's a dream come true." The patience that Doc grew in Toronto must have really paid off because Mr. Calm only allowed one runner on base and that was a walk not a whack. A single-minded Halladay got into the heads of the batters quickly, throwing first-pitch strikes to 17 of the first 18 batters. He even worked his magic with the bat when he sparked a three-run, two-out rally in the second with an RBI single.

Alberto Contador: Guilty Until Proven Innocent?

Spain's ace cyclist Alberto Contador is once again in the spotlight. Earlier this year he won his third Tour de France, the Holy Grail of road cycling. However, this time he is in media headlines for something less palatable... he has been found with a banned substance in his bloodstream. The tested samples were taken during the actual race. Unfortunately some people are calling for his blood, literally, before the full facts are known. Trial by innuendo, privately or in the press, is not justice and never has been. If proven to be a dope cheat, by an appropriate body, then and only then, should the floggings and lynchings begin! Until then, Contador continues to vigorously maintain his innocence and hide in his grandmother's garage.

The Current Facts:
  1. Alberto Contador was declared winner of the the 2010 Tour de France.
  2. He tested positive for clenbuterol.
  3. This substance is banned by the International Cycling Union.
  4. This has been confirmed by both the A and B tests.
  5. The samples were taken in Pau, on July 21 2010, a rest day.
  6. Traces of plastic were also found in the samples, suggesting that Contador had received a banned blood transfusion.
The Anomalies:
  1. Contador was tested rigorously throughout the entire Tour.
  2. This positive test is apparently the only one displaying any blood abnormality.
  3. The trace element of the drug found was the extraordinarily low amount of 0.000 000 000 05 grams per millimeter (50 picograms).
  4. This 400 times less than the minimum volume a World Anti-Doping Agency or UCI accredited tester must be able to detect to formulate a sound analysis.
  5. Contador has blamed tainted meat, flown in from Spain for his Astana team, for the trace of clenbuterol.
Because of the delicate nature of this controversy we all need to be patient and wait until all the testing is complete and results in. I truly hope that Contador is innocent because neither he or the Tour need this bad publicity right now. Of course, like Floyd Landis, Contador will be stripped of his Tour win if found guilty. Cycling, and especially the Tour de France, has also been surrounded by dope scandals, with some suggesting that the Tour cannot be won without doping. This, of course, is ridiculous; if nobody doped, then the winner would be clean.

Australia's Big Day Out In Cycling

Australia has won 10 out of 11 cycling medals contested so far at the 2010 Commonwealth games in India. A lot countries would be happy with a single gold medal at a major games competition. Totally amazing! Here is how they did it:
  • Shane Perkins won Australia’s 10th gold medal with victory in his pet event - the men’s sprint.
  • Anna Meares won her third gold medal of the meet in the women’s sprint final.
  • Teenager Megan Dunn grabbed her second in the women’s scratch race.
  • The Australian men’s pursuit team shattered the Commonwealth record in taking gold.
  • Then it was the men’s pursuit team’s turn to become gold medallists - Jack Bobridge, Michael Hepburn, Cameron Meyer and Dale Parker clocking a new Games record of 3min 55.476sec to beat New Zealand, who took the silver medal.
  • It was the second gold medal of the Games for both South Australian Bobridge and West Australian Meyer.
  • Bobridge, 21, won gold on Tuesday in the 4000m individual pursuit, while Meyer backed up from his men’s points race gold medal on Wednesday.
  • Hepburn, 19, of Brisbane, added gold to his bronze medal won in the individual pursuit.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Rewarded for hard work, just like it should be!

Stephen Kearney, the Kiwi Rugby League coach who engineered the imposing but unexpected (to the Australian public) triumph over the Kangaroos in the 2008 World Cup has been rewarded for his efforts and innovation, by being selected as the Parramatta Eels new head coach in the NRL. An imposing player and character Kearney has been the assistant coach at the Melbourne Storm for the last five years.

Kearney is such a respected individual in league circles I am sure he will make an immediate impact on a club that surprisingly struggled under the leadership of Daniel Anderson. He was an inspirational and talismanic captain, who always led from the front. I know the Eels players will respect that and that he will stamp his authority and structure on the club, which they sorely need. It is almost enough to make a longtime Canberra supporter switch allegiances, as times definitely change, but unfortunately, Parramatta was always the league team I could not stand. So we shall see. Whatever the outcome, I wish big Steve all the best in his new role.

Kearney played 264 first grade games in Australia over 13 seasons from 1992-2004 for Wests Tigers, Auckland Warriors and Melbourne Storm, before concluding his career at Hull in the English Super League. He is still New Zealand’s youngest ever captain at 21 and has played 44 Tests for the Kiwis, placing him fourth in the Kiwis appearance list behind Ruben Wiki’s 55. Stephen has also been awarded New Zealand’s Order of Merit Medal.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Everybody have fun tonight, everybody Pat Chung tonight!

Patrick Chung is the latest New England Patriots hero. A kick blocker extraordinaire! Last night Patrick block a field goal, then blocked a punt and finally intercepted a pass from Chad Chenne and returned it for a touchdown. Never in the history of all the crazy games and antics that have taken place in the NFL never has a team scored a touchdown on a kickoff return, a blocked field goal return and an interception return in the same game.

However wonderful all these records are, having your Monday Night Football interrupted by a Condo Association Meeting is not my idea of fun! In fact I was absolutely fuming when I found out I had to attend and I uttered a few classified four-letter words. It probably showed in my demeanor during the proceedings, but, too bad as they say. The score was 7-6 to Miami when I left for the meeting and blown out by the time I returned. Nothing should get in the way of football!

Europe Deliver With Everything Ryding On The Final Match

Sporting contests that are decided in the very last minute or come down to a final drive or play, are those that are the best remembered and provide the greatest entertainment. The also bestow the best opportunity for a new ulcer, nails bitten down to the quick, or the direst need for a quick cigarette to calm the troubled nerves. The 2010 Ryder Cup in Wales was no exception when Europe prevailed 14½ to 13½, the narrowest margin possible, in the final game of the series. It just doesn't get any better than this.

Super Saturday saw Europe, with home field advantage, surge ahead with a series of wins, taking both foursomes. This took the Europeans from 6-4 down, to being up by 9½ to 6½. The favoured Europe side (how they were preferred with the world's #1 and #2 players on the American team is beyond me) were then expected to comfortably walk away with the trophy. But the U.S. staged a valiant fightback with Steve Stricker, Dustin Johnson, Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Jeff Overton and Zach Johnson all victorious in their matches.

With the scores locked at 13½ each, there was only one match left to play, pitting the U.S. Open Champion Graeme McDowell against Hunter Mahan for the big prize. McDowell sank a crucial 15-footer on the 16th green to move two up with two holes to play. He then shot a sound approach on the 17th leaving Mahan with a tricky putt from the edge of the green to salvage the match. Unfortunately, the American didn't sink it and the miss sparked jubilant scenes of celebration as the European fans invaded the course to mob their heroes. McDowell admitted later that the pressure during his win at Pebble Beach earlier this year was nothing compared to the tension he felt while standing over the putt at the 16th.

Who expected humble golf to provide such fireworks? In a game where sometimes the grass grows quicker than the play unfolds, it was absolutely heart-stopping at times. I still think that my Scottish ancestors who invented the game were just sheep-stealing larrikins with too much free time on their hands, but this years Ryder Cup was everything a top-notch sporting event should be. Congratulations to Europe, but the United States will be gunning for you next time, for sure!

Monday, October 4, 2010

Nolan Ryan hasn't lost his fastball

Republished from ESPN MLB. There is a statue of the Texas Rangers owner at Arlington's ballpark. Of course, there is a statue of George Steinbrenner at the new Yankee Stadium as well, but the big difference is the Nolan Ryan statue was erected before he became the team's owner in August. And if ever the Rangers someday feel the need to add a plaque honoring Ryan, they would have to make it twice as big as any other, not because of his ego, but simply to provide ample space for all that he accomplished as a player.

Which explains why this owner receives a whole lot more autograph requests than his players. This is not the situation with, say, Boston's John Henry.

"It's not even close," Rangers third baseman Michael Young says of the owner-to-player autograph ratio. "Nolan is synonymous with Texas sports. You think about the icons in our area and Nolan is at the top of the list, maybe even ahead of some of the Cowboys, or all the Cowboys. Nolan is just on a different level. It's another reason for us to realize how lucky we are.

"I can't think of another scenario where a guy has had such a significant impact on the field and now is calling shots as an owner."

Ryan, who bought an unspecified share in the Rangers with majority owner Chuck Greenberg in August, is the first former major leaguer to become a big league owner since Haywood Sullivan (192 career hits), who had a minority stake in the Red Sox, and the first Hall of Famer since Hank Greenberg (who was a partner with White Sox owner Bill Veeck). He also is the first owner with 5,700 strikeouts and seven no-hitters.

Ryan retired 17 years ago as a player, but he has not retired. He's just turned his competitive juices into transforming the Rangers from a last-place team when he took over as team president in 2008 to American League West champions this season. In other words, Stuart Sternberg better not try charging the owners' suite or they may learn the same lesson Robin Ventura once did.

To read the complete article written by Jim Caple, please click on the link "Nolan Ryan Hasn't Lost His Fastball".