5374. wabbit - 2/4/2007 8:15:18 PM Jeff Quinney survived the wildest day at the PGA Tour's biggest party. Now the rookie is 18 holes away from his first PGA Tour victory. Quinney shot a 3-under 68 to hold on to a two-stroke lead in front of a raucous, near-record crowd of 162,750 Saturday in the FBR Open. The former Arizona State player and 2000 U.S. Amateur champion stood at 16-under 197 heading into the final round Sunday. Aaron Baddeley was second at 14 under after a 64, and Brett Quigley (66) and Bart Bryant (68) were three strokes back. Quinney, a top-10 finisher in the last two events, earned his PGA Tour card after toiling five seasons on the Nationwide Tour. He tied for fourth two weeks ago in the Bob Hope Classic and tied for seventh last week in the Buick Invitational.
Henrik Stenson shot a 4-under 68 Sunday to win the Dubai Desert Classic, finishing one stroke ahead of Ernie Els and two in front of defending champion Tiger Woods. Stenson, who has lived in Dubai for three years, began the day two shots behind Els. But the Swede had five birdies at the Emirates Golf Club to finish at 19-under 269. Els (71) had three bogeys, the same as Woods (69), who shared third place with Niclas Fasth (68) at 17 under. Woods, who had a difficult time putting despite the quality of the greens, said it was one of his most frustrating tournaments. Ross Fisher (71) finished fifth at 16 under after leading the tournament for the first two days. Peter Hanson (71) was two more shots back in sixth place.
Karrie Webb shot an even-par 72 in the final round of the MFS Women's Australian Open on Sunday for a six-stroke win. Webb, who began the day with a four-stroke lead over Wei Yun-jye of Taiwan, never saw her lead drop below three shots at Royal Sydney. She finished with a 10-under 278. Wei shot 74 Sunday to finish second at 4-under 284. Paula Marti of Spain and Minea Blomqvist of Finland, each with closing 69s, finished tied for third at 2-under 286. Brittany Lincicome of the United States and Shin Ji-yai of South Korea also finished with 69s and were another shot back tied for fifth. Katherine Hull of Australia shot a 7-under 65, the best round of the day, to move into ninth place at 1-over 289.
5375. wabbit - 2/4/2007 8:15:41 PM Sidney Lowe always knew how to beat North Carolina as a player. The first-year coach proved he can also top the Tar Heels from the sideline. The former North Carolina State point guard earned his first big victory as its coach when the Wolfpack upset No. 3 North Carolina 83-79 on Saturday in just the kind of rivalry game he was hired to win. Courtney Fells scored 21 points, Ben McCauley had 17 and Gavin Grant added 16 for N.C. State (13-8, 3-5 Atlantic Coast Conference) -- which led by 12, held off the Tar Heels' frantic comeback bid and beat two of the ACC's best teams in a four-day span. The Wolfpack upset No. 16 Virginia Tech 70-59 on Wednesday.
Ninth-ranked Oregon set out on a four-game trip 10 days ago as one of the best road teams in the nation. After three losses, the Ducks can't wait to get back to Eugene. Taj Gibson scored 18 points and Southern California held off a late rally for a 71-68 victory Saturday to give the Trojans a season sweep of Oregon for the first time in six years. Coming off a 69-57 defeat to No. 5 UCLA on Thursday, Oregon lost two in a row for the first time this season and has dropped three of its last four.
Jared Dudley had Boston College heading for an easy victory over No. 16 Virginia Tech on Saturday when he was called for three fouls in four minutes. That's when the BC bench picked up the pace. With three subs on the floor for the last seven minutes of the first half, Boston College extended its lead to as many as 23 points and coasted to an 80-59 victory over Virginia Tech. Rice had 20 points and eight assists while playing all 40 minutes to help the Eagles (16-6, 7-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) improve to 2-3 against ranked teams and beat one for the first time since shotblocker Sean Williams was kicked off the team Jan. 17. BC, which had been tied with the Hokies for second place in the ACC standings, have beaten them six times in a row.
NCAA Basketball
5376. wabbit - 2/4/2007 8:16:02 PM Josh Howard didn't let an All-Star snub and missing two games affect him. As for his slight lapse of judgment at the very end, that's easily forgiven by the Dallas Mavericks. Holding the ball after a wild scramble under Minnesota's basket in the closing seconds, Howard threw the ball to the other end of the court. Randy Foye had enough time to track it down and hit a buzzer-beating 3-pointer, but Dallas still won 94-93 for its 15th straight home victory Saturday night.
Mehmet Okur and the Utah Jazz apparently know something about the Phoenix Suns that the rest of the NBA does not. Okur scored 19 of his 29 points in the second half, including a decisive 19-footer with 5.1 seconds remaining, and the Jazz beat Phoenix 108-105 Saturday night for their third win over the Suns this season. Deron Williams added 28 points and 10 assists for the Jazz, who have handed Phoenix three of its 10 losses this season and have won four straight against the Suns overall.
The big rematch with Kobe Bryant turned out to be too big for Gilbert Arenas, who psyched himself out before the game even started. Departing from his usual happy-go-lucky routine, Arenas donned his headphones 90 minutes before tipoff and had the edgy nervousness of a kid waiting in a lobby for a job interview. That's no way to approach a game against the Los Angeles Lakers, especially when Bryant is seeking to settle a score. Round 2 went to Bryant on Saturday night as two of the NBA's most riveting playmakers tried to outdo each other, point for point, flashy move for flashy move. The Los Angeles star scored 39 points in the Lakers' 118-102 victory over Arenas and the Washington Wizards.
NBA scores
5377. wabbit - 2/4/2007 8:16:22 PM The Nashville Predators and the Anaheim Ducks have been fighting for supremacy in the Western Conference for most of the season. The Predators continued to pad their lead in the West, shutting down the Ducks 3-0 Saturday night. It was the Predators' second straight win over Anaheim and their first regulation win against the Ducks since Oct. 9, 2003.
I still think it would be easier to take ice hockey seriously if they didn't name teams after Disney movies.
The Boston Bruins found an effective way to end their lengthy losing streak by facing a team that's stuck in a similar slump. Zdeno Chara scored a power-play goal with 3:11 left in overtime and the Bruins snapped a five-game slide with a 4-3 victory over the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday night. Chara took a pass from Marc Savard behind the right circle and one-timed the puck past Cam Ward , sending the defending Stanley Cup champions to their fourth straight loss, their third straight on home ice and their sixth in seven games.
Mats Sundin steered coach Paul Maurice in the right direction as the Toronto Maple Leafs started to go deep in their shootout list. John Pohl scored on Toronto's fifth attempt and the Maple Leafs matched their longest winning streak of the season with a 3-2 victory over the Ottawa Senators on Saturday night. Andrew Raycroft , who made 30 saves, stopped Jason Spezza 's shot after Pohl scored on his first career shootout attempt with a backhand over Ray Emery 's right pad. Pohl scored on a penalty shot against Minnesota's Manny Fernandez in a 4-3 win over the Wild on Dec. 26.
NHL scores
5378. wabbit - 2/4/2007 8:16:35 PM I love Rick Reilly. 5379. wabbit - 2/5/2007 5:33:32 PM The game - The 12th man was definitely the rain. While it looked like there was potential for a competitive game (the first quarter was great), by the end of the first half yesterday's Super Bowl XLI became another in a long line of forgettable mismatches. Indianapolis 29 - Chicago 17. It was surprising that the Bears were that close. I am sick and tired of Peyton Manning, but I'm very happy for Tony Dungy. Congratulations to Bears coach Lovie Smith, he was a class act in a tough game.
Despite the game itself, there were some interesting firsts. The obvious first is that both head coaches are African-American. Personally, I like that they are both soft-spoken men who lead by example rather than intimidation. It was the first time in Super Bowl history that the opening kick was returned for a touchdown, a 92-yard return by Devin Hester that was also the fastest score in Super Bowl history (14 seconds). This was the first Super Bowl with brothers officiating, Umpire Carl Paganelli and Back Judge Perry Paganelli. Hard to believe this was the first time the Super Bowl was played in the rain.
The halftime show - It's getting rave reviews from most people, but I just don't see it. Prince was fine, but nothing that would keep me from going to the bathroom or getting something to snack on. Still, he was an improvement over the last few halftime shows (Paul McCartney?). It must look better from the seats in the stadium, and the pouring rain didn't help. One thing I thought was a nice touch and a throwback to the old style halftime shows was the marching band. Updated, but still looking like a marching band, and it made me think of Arky's Message # 3608 in thread 140 about the movie Drumline in the Movie thread. Overall, halftime was ok, not great. Oh, and Billy Joel sucked. He last sang the National Anthem at Super Bowl XXIII in 1989 and he was surprisingly good, but yesterday was painful.
The commercials - Disappointing overall. The fan-made Doritos ad was good, as were the feel-good ads by Coke (GTA video game), GM (anthropomorphic robot) and Budweiser (wannabe Dalmatian), but what were the folks at M&M/Mars thinking with that Snickers ad? And the heart getting beat up? I get the point, but that was just dumb. GoDaddy's mediocre commercial was promoted as the most salacious ad that would been seen during the game. I did like the quick cameo appearance of the Orange County Motorcycle guys. Revlon, we women who watch football aren't buying hair coloring based on ads seen during the Super Bowl. Allocate your advertising budget more wisely and spend it elsewhere. Congratulations to CareerBuilder.com for getting rid of the chimps. Budweiser had a couple losers, too - does anyone believe Jay-Z drinks Bud? Taco Bell's lions rolling their R's was cute, but I'm not sure what it has to do with Mexican food. Letterman and Oprah was clever, short, and a nice surprise. And honestly, didn't everyone laugh at the K-Fed ad for Nationwide? Finally, the NFL "Goodbye" commercial was well done, and also submitted through a contest. Can we all see the future for commercial advertising coming from YouTube? The Super Bowl ads can be seen at MSNBC.
5380. alistairconnor - 2/5/2007 6:54:57 PM Well, it has occurred to me that the next generation of genius film directors are currently making cute kitten videos with their cell phones and posting them on YouTube.
But you're right. For every one of those, there will be a hundred who will make money out of advertising. 5381. wabbit - 2/13/2007 2:31:15 AM
Even while the star-studded AFC cruised to a comfortable lead in the Pro Bowl, Carson Palmer could sense a wacky finish lurking just beyond everybody's control. Palmer's hunch proved correct in the improbable final minutes -- but thanks to Palmer's poise and a costly NFC penalty, the AFC's Hawaiian vacation ended with another win. Nate Kaeding kicked a 21-yard field goal as time expired to cap another strong drive led by Palmer, the MVP of the AFC's 31-28 victory in the 57th edition of the NFL's all-star game. The NFC trailed 28-14 with 3 minutes to play before injecting a little drama into this normally mellow exhibition. Steven Jackson scored on a fourth-down TD run, and Ronde Barber recovered an onside kick to set up Anquan Boldin 's 47-yard TD catch from Tony Romo with 1:48 left -- followed by a tying 2-point conversion catch by Carolina's Steve Smith.
5382. wabbit - 2/13/2007 2:31:33 AM Who cares about the Pro Bowl, the Westminster Kennel Club dog show begins today.
Bill Cosby’s terrier bounced into the show ring, wagging his tail a mile a minute. Harry walked onto the green carpet at Madison Square Garden as if he had no competition — in fact, he didn’t. Of the 2,628 entries at the Westminster Kennel Club dog show, little Harry was the only Dandie Dinmont. So he merely needed to take a leisurely stroll to win best of breed Monday. The 6-year-old Harry is royalty in the show world and fittingly, he’s named for Prince Harry. He’s playful and a bit of a mischief maker — much like his namesake. He’s also the No. 1 show dog in America, winning 57 events last year. And that makes him a top favorite at the No. 1 dog show in the country.
5383. wabbit - 2/14/2007 4:35:36 PM Virginia Tech topped North Carolina for the second time, after previously upsetting Duke. Maybe the Hokies should push for an extension of Tobacco Road. The Atlantic Coast Conference newcomers are making a habit of upsetting the league's traditional powers, with Zabian Dowdell scoring a career-high 33 points Tuesday night in an 81-80 overtime victory over No. 4 North Carolina which sealed an improbable season sweep of the Tar Heels.
Bob Knight chose not to take a timeout with 6 seconds left, the game tied and his Red Raiders with the ball. Jarrius Jackson hit a jumper at the buzzer to give Texas Tech a 77-75 win over No. 6 Texas A&M on Tuesday night, ending a five-game losing streak. Acie Law tied the game with a 3-pointer from the top of the key with 6 seconds left, before Jackson drove the length of the court and pulled up for the winning score. The crowd sat in stunned silence for a few seconds while officials looked at a replay of the basket before declaring it good.
The police officers who arrested Gonzaga basketball players Josh Heytvelt and Theo Davis smelled marijuana and spotted a bag of dried mushrooms in the back seat of a vehicle Heytvelt was driving, according to court documents. The Chevy Trailblazer was stopped shortly before midnight last Friday because the tail lights were not on, a dead giveaway that stoners were behind the wheel. Two Cheney police officers could smell a strong odor of burnt marijuana coming from Davis, the passenger, the document said. The baggie of dried mushrooms was protruding from the top of a gym bag that had Heytvelt's name and jersey number embroidered on the front, the court papers said...The players have both been suspended from the team indefinitely. Heytvelt has been Gonzaga's second-leading scorer and top rebounder this season. Davis is a freshman who has not played because of injuries. Heytvelt, 20, is from Clarkston. Davis, 21, is from Brampton, Ontario.
NCAA Basketball
5384. wabbit - 2/14/2007 4:36:33 PM A 6-year-old certified therapy dog, English springer spaniel Diamond Jim, was picked for best in show Tuesday night at the Westminster Kennel Club. Diamond Jim beat out a Dandie Dinmont terrier called Harry, co-owned by Bill Cosby, as he did at the big AKC/Eukanuba event in December. The springer was the nation's No. 2 show dog last year behind Cosby's entry -- handler Kellie Fitzgerald also repeated, having gone best in show at Westminster in 2000. This was his 51st best in show victory, and his last. Commonly called James, he's retiring from the show world to live the life of a therapy and obedience dog.
Judge Robert Indeglia said he wished he had seven ribbons to present to the final contenders at Madison Square Garden. Given only a purple-and-gold one, he pointed to Diamond Jim. Diamond Jim beat out the Dandie Dinmont, a pair of white poodles and a petit basset griffon vendeen, plus an Akita and a Bouviers des Flandres that pitted a husband and wife against each other. Larry Fenner handled the Bouviers and Laurie Jordan-Fenner guided the Akita.
With a few dogs barking and baying backstage, Diamond Jim was judged the best of the overall 2,628 entries in 165 breeds and varieties. This was the 100th time that best in show was presented at Westminster, and the sixth time that an English springer spaniel won.
For those who cannot get enough dog news, the Iditarod starts in less than three weeks, and the Crufts dog show begins the following week on March 8.
5385. wonkers2 - 2/18/2007 4:31:49 PM Tim Hardaway is a homophobe! Mitch Albom on gays in the locker room 5386. JayAckroyd - 2/19/2007 3:59:15 AM Steve Gilliard says it's a black (male) thing. 5387. arkymalarky - 2/19/2007 4:09:34 AM 'Ol Frank Broyles is finally retiring--
at the end of the calendar year, he says. 5388. JayAckroyd - 2/19/2007 4:10:56 AM Clark's gonna be in the neighborhood end of the month. What should I ask him, Arky? 5389. arkymalarky - 2/19/2007 4:17:55 AM Hmmm. Is he running for president is the first one that comes to mind. I get his email alerts, and he's obviously very opposed to Bush's Iraq plan. Personally, as one Arky to another, I'd like to know what he thinks Huckabee's chances are of getting the Republican nomination. ;-)
But for the rest of the country I would wonder what his domestic agenda and any specifics wrt it are, especially health care. I haven't read much in the email alerts, so he may have already outlined it. I wish he'd get more out front and let people know what his political plan is. 5390. iiibbb - 2/23/2007 8:07:29 PM Another riffle in the Floyd Landis case. 5391. alistairConnor - 2/23/2007 9:21:05 PM There is a second reason why they will probably leave the Tour de France title to Floyd (as I think they should)...
Pereiro, who came second, narrowly escaped disqualification the other day... he had a positive control for salbutamol, the asthmatic's drug (it increases your lung capacity... sort of useful for a cyclist), and hadn't bothered to supply a medical justification. It was looking, for a while, like the Tour was actually cracking down on the whole field of phony medical justifications for dope... But they let him off the hook.
Personally I think chronically ill riders should get another job. 5392. iiibbb - 2/23/2007 9:30:12 PM I am reminded of the SNL skit, the all-drug olympics 5393. wabbit - 2/24/2007 1:25:21 AM Reminiscent of the Upper Class Twit of the Year competition.
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