5526. alistairConnor - 5/8/2007 1:32:26 PM So the Swedes beat the Spanish boat and stay alive. The Spaniards have to face Oracle, today, and Luna Rossa, tomorrow, and will probably lose both.
But I got one thing wrong : the Swedes have not only to beat the Latin Rascals tomorrow, but Team NZ today. Which is a bit of a long shot. TNZ beat Luna Rossa yesterday.
5527. alistairConnor - 5/8/2007 1:33:49 PM But goddam! the Swedes won the start! Not sure what happened there... they have a 50 metre lead. They are capable of avoiding mistakes to cover the Kiwis, but have they got the boat speed to stay in front? 5528. alistairConnor - 5/8/2007 1:45:09 PM So far, the Swedes are impeccable in the tacking duel with the Kiwis. When two boats come together on opposing tacks, the leading boat will tack right on the nose of the other. This is the sailing equivalent of farting in their face -- it fouls their air, they are obliged to tack away to clear it.
The Kiwis have crept back a bit, they are only a dozen metres behind... 5529. alistairConnor - 5/8/2007 2:11:21 PM Tactical error from the Swedes on the run! Gybed too early, opened up a passing lane and the Kiwis storm through... it's going to be very close rounding the top mark! 5530. wonkers2 - 5/8/2007 3:37:36 PM AC, thanks for the report. The Vuitton Cup races aren't available on my cable service. Here's a link to today's NYT report on the racing yesterday. Vuitton Cup Report 5531. jexster - 5/8/2007 8:16:42 PM I haven't followed NWord Ball for some time for reasons that to Wonkers at least should be obvious. I didn't even know that the NBA removed the ban on zone defense fer crissakes!
So I must admit to pleasant surprise when I tuned into the Warriors Jazz game last night...
Who says white men can't jump!
Only one nappy hair in sight Wonk!!!
And THAT is beautiful 5532. alistairconnor - 5/9/2007 2:25:21 PM Last day of the round-robin phase of the Louis Vuitton cup. We already know the four semi-finalists, the other esven teams will be going home.
The substantial match of the day is Team NZ vs Oracle, for the first place. The winner gets to pick their semi-final opponent. Presumably that will be the Desafio Espanyol, clearly the weakest of the four, currently getting hammered by Luna Rossa, the fourth semi-finalist.
And the big surprise of the NZ/Oracle match up is that it looks completely one-sided : NZ correctly picked a big wind shift on the first beat, and they are now defending an advantage of more than a minute, which is rare at this level. 5533. wonkers2 - 5/9/2007 8:43:33 PM Full ThrottleFrance's Francois Brenac is tied for first with Italian, Nicola Celon in the Melges 24 Worlds in Santa Cruz. 5534. alistairConnor - 5/9/2007 10:01:30 PM Cool!
That would be more my size of boat, to tell the truth... I could do that...
Only one French entry, and they are tied for first place!
I didn't know the class -- I see it's rather in the spirit of the Americas Cup boats.
5535. wonkers2 - 5/9/2007 10:32:35 PM The Melges 24 is the most popular small one design keelboat in the U.S. 5536. wonkers2 - 5/10/2007 3:08:08 PM The Morning Line on Tony Soprano from Jersey 5537. jexster - 5/13/2007 10:51:16 PM Hattiesberg/Baton Rouge Rookie NWord
Hits for Cycle in Colorado
Fred Lewis CF 6 3 5 4 1 1 1 0 1 .500
Now with 6 hits
5538. wabbit - 5/14/2007 2:39:06 PM The Utah Jazz sure knew how to close a great show. When the Golden State Warriors wanted to run their pell-mell offense Sunday night, the Jazz patiently slowed the tempo. When Baron Davis attempted his usual magic tricks, Utah pulled back the curtain with dogged defense. And when a tight game came down to the final minutes, Derek Fisher upstaged the Warriors with a shooting show of his own that put the businesslike Jazz on the edge of an unlikely stage: the Western Conference finals. Carlos Boozer had 34 points and 12 rebounds and the Jazz handed the eighth-seeded Warriors their first home loss of the postseason, 115-101 on Sunday to put Utah up 3-1 in their second-round playoff series. Fisher scored 14 of his 21 points in the fourth quarter for the surprising Jazz, who hadn't been to the playoffs since the Stockton-to-Malone era ended in 2003. Utah won the Northwest Division title this season, but is learning the playoff game on the fly.
The Chicago Bulls built another big lead, and the Detroit Pistons were rallying. Sound familiar? This time, there was no collapse. Luol Deng scored 25 points, Kirk Hinrich and Ben Gordon added 19 apiece, and the Bulls hung on to beat Detroit 102-87 in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on Sunday afternoon and avoid a sweep. Unlike Game 3, when the Bulls saw a 19-point lead dissolve into a seven-point loss, Chicago withstood a late push by Detroit. The Bulls outscored the Pistons 27-13 in the third quarter to turn a seven-point halftime lead into a 77-56 advantage going into the fourth.
The physical style of play returned in Game 3, and it seemed to bring out the best in the San Antonio Spurs again. Manu Ginobili got a bloodied and bruised eye Saturday, and 24 points, as the Spurs took a 108-101 victory for a 2-1 lead in their second-round series with the Phoenix Suns. Phoenix's Steve Nash got a gash to the nose that required six stitches during Game 1 after a collision with Tony Parker. The Spurs won that game 111-106 and had a 101-81 loss in Game 2.
NBA scores
5539. wabbit - 5/14/2007 2:39:26 PM The moral of the story: you can never have too many Niedermayers. They might not get as much publicity in Southern California as Jessica and Ashlee Simpson or Owen and Luke Wilson; but as siblings go, Scott and Rob Niedermayer do all right. The Ducks won 4-3, at 14:17 of overtime Sunday night, courtesy of the firm of Niedermayer & Niedermayer. For the second time in three games, the brothers combined on an overtime playoff goal. The two conspired to close out Vancouver in Game 5 of the second round and now evened the Western Conference final against Detroit after two compelling road games that have established Anaheim's physical superiority. Scott, the heralded defenseman, notched the winner, again, and Rob helped create it, again -- this time by making a sweet backhand pass off the right-wing boards to his slick-skating big brother, who crept in unmarked from the blue line and lasered a shot past Red Wings goalie Dominik Hasek.
Joseph Corvo never scored a bigger goal, and the Ottawa Senators have never been in such an advantageous position in the playoffs. Believe it, these Senators are for real. Corvo's bouncing shot skipped in at 4:58 of the second overtime, giving Ottawa a 4-3 win over the stunned and suddenly silenced Buffalo Sabres in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals on Saturday night. The goal gave Ottawa a 2-0 series lead heading home for Games 3 and 4 on Monday and Wednesday, and marks the first time the Senators have won the first two games of a series.
Canada used a different formula to achieve familiar results at the world hockey championships. Relying on youngsters and journeymen instead of stars, the Canadians defeated Finland 4-2 Sunday to win their third world title in five years and their 24th overall. Earlier, Russia won the bronze medal by beating Sweden 3-1. Canada has won 24 senior and 13 junior world titles, as well as seven Olympic golds and five Canada Cup and World Cup titles. Its previous world title was in 2004.
NHL scores
5540. wabbit - 5/14/2007 2:39:42 PM In his third week with a new coach, Phil Mickelson suddenly looks as good as ever. Mickelson added a mini-major to his collection Sunday by winning The Players Championship with control that had been lacking the last three months, closing with a 3-under 69 for a two-shot victory that returned him to No. 2 in the world and pointed him in the right direction with the U.S. Open approaching. Sergio Garcia birdied four of his last five holes for a 66, but he was a ceremonial runner-up. The real victim was Sean O'Hair, and the familiar culprit was that island green on the par-3 17th at the TPC Sawgrass. O'Hair was two shots behind until his 9-iron flew the green into the water. He went to the drop area and watched another shot bounce over the green, and finally walked away with a quadruple-bogey 7. O'Hair bogeyed the final hole for a 76 and went from second place to 11th, the difference of $747,000. Mickelson finished at 11-under 277 for his second victory this year, and the 31st of his career. He earned $1.62 million from the $9 million purse, the richest in golf.
Suzann Pettersen became the first Norwegian winner in LPGA Tour history, making a 1 1/2-foot par putt after Jee Young Lee missed one from about 2 feet on the third extra hole Sunday in the Michelob Ultra Open. Both players parred the par-4 18th on the first two extra holes, and Lee seemed to have the upper hand the third time around when she hit her approach to about 12 feet while Pettersen's ball rested against the high grass at the edge of the fringe. Pettersen's putt rolled just past the cup on the right side, leaving 1 1/2 feet, and Lee's attempt at the victory missed to the right, leaving a short putt for the tie. Lee quickly went to knock her ball in, seemed to rush and it skated by on the right as the crowd gasped and she looked up, astonished. Pettersen, making her 82nd career LPGA Tour start, then stepped up, made hers for the victory and pumped her right fist as the ball disappeared in the hole, then doubled over in apparent disbelief.
South African teen golf star Ashleigh Simon turned professional Saturday and signed a management deal with IMG. Simon, the three-time South African Open winner who turned 18 on Friday, also announced an endorsement deal with Nike and received an invitation to the HSBC Women's World Match Play Championship on July 19-22 at Wykagyl in New Rochelle, N.Y. "I can't wait to get out on the tour," Simon said. "I have thoroughly enjoyed my amateur career and feel I am absolutely ready for the next stage."
PGA news
5541. wabbit - 5/14/2007 2:39:58 PM A day after setting a record for most victories on one surface, Rafael Nadal became the only player to win the Rome Masters three consecutive times. Then consider this: He hasn't been feeling all that well. Nadal beat Fernando Gonzalez of Chile 6-2, 6-2 in the title match Sunday. But before reaching the final, the No. 2-ranked Spaniard had to overcome a dizzy spell and an apparent stomach problem that forced him to go to the hospital. He also spent nearly four hours on the court against Nikolay Davydenko in the semifinals. This was Nadal's fourth ATP title of the year. He also won in Indian Wells, Calif.; Monte Carlo, Monaco; and Barcelona, Spain. He has a 21-3 career record in finals. Rome is a key clay-court warmup for the French Open, which begins May 27. Thomas Muster and Jaroslav Drobny -- a Czech player in the 1950s -- also won in Rome three times, but not in succession. The last time Nadal lost on clay was to Igor Andreev in the quarterfinals in Valencia, Spain, in April 2005. Sunday's victory extended his winning streak on clay to 77 matches. By reaching the final, the 20-year-old Spaniard broke John McEnroe's record for most victories on one surface.
Mired in his worst slump in more than three years, Roger Federer is splitting from coach Tony Roche. The top-ranked Federer announced the change on his Web site Saturday, saying he and Roche mutually decided to end their arrangement. The move leaves Federer without a coach two weeks before the May 27 start of the French Open, the only Grand Slam tournament he hasn't won. Roche has worked with Federer part time for the past 2˝ years. The Swiss star won six of his 10 major championships in that span.
Ana Ivanovic's right foot hurt so much she tried to hit winners and end the rallies quickly. After the match, she was still hobbling. Ivanovic, however, preferred to think of more pleasant things than her pain: The 19-year-old Serbian was the German Open champion after beating Svetlana Kuznetsova 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 (4) Sunday and was headed for a top-10 ranking. Ivanovic's foot was taped during the second set against Kuznetsova, the 2004 U.S. Open champion, at this key French Open warmup. Ivanovic, who expects to play in Rome next week, didn't feel herself get injured.
SI Tennis
5542. wabbit - 5/14/2007 2:40:38 PM Josh Beckett was forced to come out of the game. Jeremy Guthrie probably should have stayed in. Guthrie took a three-hit shutout into the ninth inning and came within two outs of his first complete game before Baltimore manager Sam Perlozzo pulled him, only to watch the Boston Red Sox score six runs and beat the Orioles 6-5 on Sunday. Guthrie was cruising, having retired eight straight, when catcher Ramon Hernandez dropped Coco Crisp's popup near the third-base line for an error. Boston then got four hits, three walks and a hit batter against Danys Baez and Ray (3-3). J.C. Romero (1-0) struck out two in 1 1-3 scoreless innings for the win.
Perhaps it was the pink bats - or a shuffled lineup, or the rookie on the mound for the other team. Torii Hunter and the Minnesota Twins weren't worried about the analysis. They were just happy to have some fun at the end of a rough week. Hunter homered twice and drove in a career-high seven runs, and the Twins ended a four-game losing streak with a 16-4 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Sunday night. Ruining Tigers emergency starter Virgil Vasquez 's major league debut and racking up season highs in runs, hits (22) and homers (four), Minnesota salvaged the last game of this series and finished 3-6 on its homestand. The Twins won for only the fourth time in their last 13 games.
Four days after being called up from Triple-A Fresno, Fred Lewis became the 22nd player in franchise history to hit for the cycle. He went 5-for-6 and drove in four runs, three on his first major league home run. He's just the fourth major leaguer in history to hit his first home run as part of a cycle, and the game was his 16th major league game and just his fourth start. He doubled in the first, and hit 1-0 pitch over the left-field wall in the fourth off right-hander Taylor Buchholz (1-2). He greeted reliever Tom Martin with a run-scoring triple in the fifth and sent a Denny Bautista fastball into right field for a single in the seventh that sparked a six-run inning.
MLB scores
5543. wabbit - 5/15/2007 3:01:48 PM Scotland Yard investigators have concluded that Pakistan cricket coach Bob Woolmer died of natural causes and was not strangled as local police have said, a Jamaican newspaper reported on Sunday. In London, Scotland Yard declined to comment on the report in the Jamaica Gleaner newspaper that Woolmer died of heart failure and said it would not discuss an analysis of toxicology tests that a British government lab conducted on behalf of Jamaican authorities. "This is an inquiry being conducted by the Jamaican authorities," said a Scotland Yard spokesman, on customary condition of anonymity in line with policy. "It's down to them to comment on developments."
The report, which did not identify its source beyond saying it was in London, was the latest in the slew of conflicting media accounts since Woolmer was found unconscious in his Kingston hotel room on March 18 and pronounced dead at a hospital. The previous day, his powerhouse team had lost to underdog Ireland in the World Cup, ensuring Pakistan's first-round exit. Jamaican police later said Woolmer had been strangled, after initially saying the cause of death was inconclusive. A barrage of unsourced media reports, especially in the British press, has said Woolmer was first drugged or poisoned before being strangled. Mark Shields, the lead Jamaican police investigator in the case, has refused to comment on the reports, saying he was awaiting independent verification in a British government-owned lab of toxicology tests that were done in Jamaica.
Australia's government Sunday barred the national cricket team from touring Zimbabwe in September, saying it wanted to avoid giving a propaganda victory to "grubby dictator" President Robert Mugabe. Prime Minister John Howard, who has repeatedly expressed concerns over the deteriorating situation in the southern African nation, said his government had taken the decision out of Cricket Australia's (CA) hands. Howard said it was not fair to leave foreign policy matters with sportsmen, preferring that the government accept responsibility. He urged other cricketing nations to follow suit. "We don't do this lightly, but we are convinced that for the tour to go ahead there would be an enormous propaganda boost for the Mugabe regime," Howard told ABC television. "The Mugabe regime at present is behaving like the Gestapo towards its political opponents, the living standards of the country are probably the lowest of any in the world and you have an unbelievable rate of inflation. I have no doubt that if this tour goes ahead it would be an enormous boost to this grubby dictator and whilst it pains me both as a cricket lover and as somebody who genuinely believes these things should be left to sporting organisations... it leaves me with no alternative."
Zimbabwe reacted angrily, describing the ban as "desperate" and "racist." "The Australians are mixing politics with sport and the decision shows how desperate the Howard government is to isolate Zimbabwe," junior information minister Bright Matonga told AFP. Australia is one of the worst human rights violators in this whole world. Look what they have done to the aborigines and yet they have the audacity to stand up and claim to have the moral authority to condemn us. This is also a racist ploy to kill our local cricket since our cricket team is now dominated by black players as we slowly transform cricket from being an elite sport."
5544. wabbit - 5/15/2007 3:02:22 PM Former Olympic medalist and World Cup champion Bode Miller is leaving the U.S. ski team, ending his contentious relationship with the federation that oversees the sport in this country. The fiercely independent Miller has been at odds with the association for years, and there long had been rumblings that he would leave the team. U.S. officials have been unhappy with Miller's late-night partying and his outlandish public comments. But he was by far the best skier on the team. The 29-year-old Miller won two silver medals at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics, but was shut out at the 2006 Turin Games despite being a favorite in nearly every Alpine discipline. He was criticized for spending too much time in local clubs. The announcement of his departure came as the U.S. team opened its training camp in Park City, Utah, on Saturday. Miller told U.S. men's coach Phil McNichol of his decision to leave the team following a meeting at the headquarters of the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association in Park City.
Miller has been a part of the U.S. team for 11 years, but will have to travel and train on his own if he competes in the 2008 World Cup season as expected. His super-giant slalom title last winter was his fourth World Cup championship. He won the overall World Cup title in 2005. Miller, who lives in Bretton Woods, N.H., has 25 World Cup victories, two shy of Phil Mahre's U.S. record. In an interview last month, Miller said he expected to break Mahre's record next winter.
Liko Kenney, a cousin of Miller, had at least two confrontations in 2003 with Bruce McKay, the local police officer he killed Friday night in a shooting that left both men dead. Records released Monday by the Grafton County attorney’s office showed that Kenney was convicted of assaulting McKay when McKay and three other police officers tried to detain him in January 2003. About three months after that scuffle, McKay responded to a call concerning Kenney’s violation of the conditions of his bail. The shootings Friday took place less than a mile from where the Kenney family lives and where Miller grew up.
5545. alistairConnor - 5/15/2007 11:31:06 PM Louis Vuitton cup semi-final is well under way.
I expected Oracle to be on top of Luna Rossa, probably winning the first-to-five match in 7 or 8 races. Now I think they'll go the whole nine rounds. One all so far.
I still think that Oracle will win, just as soon as they stop making mistakes. Larry Ellison should hire me as his tactician : sitting behind my computer yesterday I picked the wind shifts better than they did on the water... either that or the Italians got lucky. Or perhaps the shifty wind conditions suited their characters.
Today, Luna Rossa had them beaten several times... James Spithill is the meanest helmsman on the seven seas, he humiliated them at the start and then again at the third mark. But the Oracle boat is so fast with the wind behind her, she stole the race.
The other match, Team NZ / Desafio Espanyol, is as unappetising as I feared, and will almost certainly end in a 5-0 whitewash. It's nice for the Spaniards to be there, but they are not yet in the same class as the big boys.
The final is scheduled for the first half of June. Then the winner (Team NZ or Oracle?) gets to take on the Swiss team in the actual Americas Cup, in the second half of June.
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