jeudi 29 octobre 2009

N.F.L. Scolded Over Injuries to Its Players


WASHINGTON — The commissioner of the N.F.L. faced heated criticism Wednesday before the House Judiciary Committee, with lawmakers, former players and even a former team executive accusing the league of neglect in its handling of active and retired players with brain injuries.

Brendan Smialowski for The New York Times
N.F.L. Commissioner Roger Goodell testified before a Congressional committee that was investigating head injuries in football.
Prepared Statements (pdf)



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With evidence mounting of a link between playing professional football and cognitive impairment in later life, and news reports of poor medical treatment for some former players with dementia and other signs of mental decline, the committee repeatedly challenged the commissioner, Roger Goodell, to defend the league’s policies and research.
“The N.F.L. sort of has this blanket denial or minimizing of the fact that there may be this link,” Representative Linda T. Sánchez, Democrat of California, said to Mr. Goodell during the daylong hearing. “And it sort of reminds me of the tobacco companies pre-’90s when they kept saying, ‘Oh, there’s no link between smoking and damage to your health.’ ”
When pressed, Mr. Goodell would not say whether he thought there was a link between football and cognitive decline among N.F.L. players. He did say, “I can think of no issue to which I’ve devoted more time and attention than the health and well-being of our players, and particularly retired players.”
“We are changing the culture of our game for the better,” he later added.
In his opening statement, the committee chairman, Representative
John Conyers Jr. said the issue of brain injuries in football warranted federal scrutiny because “the N.F.L. is a monopoly whose existence was legislatively sanctioned,” referring to the antitrust exemption for broadcasting that has helped the league grow into a multibillion-dollar operation. The league is also arguing a case before the Supreme Court hoping to expand its antitrust privileges.
“I say this not simply because of the impact of these injuries on the 2,000 current players and more than 10,000 retirees associated with the N.F.L. and their families,” said Mr. Conyers, Democrat of Michigan. “I say it because of the effect on the millions of players at the college, high school and youth levels.”
Several Republican members of the committee said that Congress should have no role in regulating football on either the professional or youth levels. “We cannot legislate the elimination of injuries from the games without eliminating the games themselves,” said Representative
Lamar S. Smith, Republican of Texas.
The hearing included testimony from Mr. Goodell and the players union’s executive director, DeMaurice Smith; doctors from the league’s committee on concussions; and researchers who have found brain damage commonly associated with boxers in 10 deceased N.F.L. players, most of them younger than 55.
Tiki Barber, Merrill Hoge and George Martin, all former players, and Gay Culverhouse, a former Tampa Bay Buccaneers team president, gave inside views of league medical trends.
Family members of injured players also testified: Eleanor Perfetto, whose husband, Ralph Wenzel, is now is institutionalized with dementia at age 66; and Dick Benson, whose teenage son died of a brain hemorrhage in 2002 after repeated concussions playing high school football.
Missing from the two panels of witnesses was Dr. Ira Casson, the co-chairman of the N.F.L.’s committee, who has been criticized for discrediting outside research and for his role in the league’s study of brain injuries in retired players. Independent experts have said the study is flawed by conflicts of interest, statistical and sampling problems.
None of the three primary authors of the committee’s research — Dr. Casson and the co-chairman David Viano of Wayne State University, and Dr. Elliot Pellman,
the Jets’ team physician — were present.
When asked why Dr. Casson was not present to testify, Mr. Goodell said the committee did not request him. Mr. Conyers disputed that, and an aide for Mr. Goodell handed him a note that led Mr. Goodell to say he would get back to the committee to clarify his answer.
Ms. Sánchez and Representative
Anthony D. Weiner, Democrat of New York, criticized the N.F.L. committee’s continuing brain study of retired players. Independent experts have warned that the study could have negative effects on youth sports if conclusions of few risks are improperly derived.
Mr. Weiner said, “Wouldn’t it be perhaps most wise to put the brakes” on the study, and “start from scratch to try to get this right?”
“This is a worker safety thing — no different than if someone was coming off the assembly line at a production plant and 20 years later, they all had arthritis in their right knee,” he added. “We’d look at it the exact same way.”
Mr. Goodell responded: “We want you to have confidence in the study. That’s one of the reasons for 15 years we’ve been involved in this issue. We have published every piece of data in the N.F.L. We have published it publicly, we have given it to medical journals, it has been part of peer review. We don’t control those doctors. They are medical professionals. They’re scientists. They do this for a living.”
Mr. Smith, of the players union, was also criticized for its sluggishness in addressing the issue of concussion risks years ago and for not better educating its players. “We will do better,” Mr. Smith said.
He and Mr. Goodell were warned not to allow players’ health care to become embroiled in contract negotiations.
Mr. Conyers repeatedly pressed Mr. Smith and Mr. Goodell to turn over all medical records to Congress for independent review, and they agreed to do so.
However, in an interview after his testimony, Mr. Goodell said he had agreed to turn over league studies and research that had already been released, not player medical records. Turning over such records, he said, could cause confidentiality conflicts, and “there’s going to be a lot of issues.”
“Whatever the committee asks — that we can do — we will,” he said.
Ms. Sánchez, in a subsequent interview, said: “Unfortunately, I didn’t find him to be a very helpful witness. He was really vague on certain things and didn’t know the answers to certain things. The committee had requested that Dr. Casson be there to be able to answer questions like that, and obviously he was a no-show.”
Although the hearing’s most contentious portions involved the N.F.L., a consensus emerged that how the N.F.L. and its players handle the issue of brain-injury management will, however indirectly, influence behavior on the youth and high school level.
Representative Dan Lungren, Republican of California, said the N.F.L. and its media partners had to discourage the celebration of overly violent play.
Representative Mike Quigley, Democrat of Illinois, said that although Congress focused mostly on N.F.L. policies on Wednesday, “the norms of the N.F.L., for better or worse, become the norms of high school football players.”
Katie Thomas contributed reporting.

Dan Snyder: Just Call Him King Darius (That History Major Is Finally Paying Off!)

Jim Zorn isn't the only man Dan Snyder and Vinny Cerrato have martyred in the last two years. While looking up something else on The Player Hater's Ball, I stumbled across this entry written during the Redskins coaching search:
Here's my question: If Dinny (writing Dan and Vinny became too superfluous; plus they're single-handedly disproving the old maxin "two heads are better than one" - they need a nickname) is completely against hiring Gregg Williams, why haven't they been leaking negative stuff to the press about him? Dinny knows that public perception of the Redskins is crucial, this is why Jim Fassel is still unemployed. So why have they failed to put out some on-the-record, unattributed stuff about him? Watch, it's easy:
According to senior team officials, Williams' defensive players became disenchanted with his abrasive coaching style late in the season. His standing was also hurt by poor interviews in which his leadership abilities came into question.You see? And I just made that up in 15 seconds.Yet through inaction, Dinny has turned Williams into a martyr. It's gotten so bad that people who were on the fence about him just two weeks ago (like me) are demanding that he be hired. The Redskins rarely lose PR battles, but they are getting killed on this one.

The ACC Tournament Downsizes

I think I dislike ACC commissioner John Swofford even more than Dan Snyder and Vinny Cerrato. The errors of those two jackasses, you see, can one day be righted. Swofford's follies are irreversable. Letting in Virginia Tech, Boston College and Miami ruined the ACC and, so far there has been no benefit, other than that it pleased Mark Warner. Now Swofford's actions are hitting the ACC where it counts, the ACC tournament. Because of sagging attendance, the 2012 ACC basketball tournament will be held at Philips Arena in Atlanta and not the Georgia Dome.This isn't about the recession as much as its about people not wanting to commit to buying four full days of mediocre basketball games. The Thursday games have ruined the tournament, forcing bad match-ups and, sometimes, worse quarterfinal games upon a group of fans used to seeing high-quality basketball in a three-day stretch.Back in the day an ACC fan could buy a book with little uncertainty. They'd show up Thursday, go to the games starting on Friday and know they'd see their team at least once. It was a great way to spend a weekend.Now because of the full day of games on Thursday, people have to leave earlier, stay longer and watch Seth Greenberg. Who the hell wants to do that? I love ACC basketball more than anything, but that's too much even for me.It makes much less sense to buy tickets in advance now unless you know you're team is going to get a bye. And if your team doesn't, there's a 50/50 chance they won't make it to Friday, making your trip meaningless. Plus, the Friday slate has become so diluted with teams that pull Thursday upsets that the quality of basketball has diminished greatly. Before you were guarnanteed to see at least five compelling match-ups at the ACC tournament. Now you're lucky if there's two.Thanks, John.

NEWS


The Sports Illustrated cover on August 16, 1976 features Calvin Hill (father of Grant), who was one of four high-priced free agents brought to Washington to get the team back to the playoffs. The others: Jean Fugget, former Heisman Trophy winner Pat Sullivan and another name you might remember: a mowhawked malcontent from the Jets named John Riggins.
As expected, the signing bonanza flopped even though the team made it to the playoffs in '76. But, over the next four seasons they were good enough to be a contender, but not good enough to make those smaller playoff fields. Eventually the team regressed, two coaches were let go as the records spiraled toward mediocrity and new owner Jack Kent Cooke made a surprise hire when he swiped a little-known assistant from San Diego to be his first head coach in 1981. Eleven years later, there would be three Super Bowl trophies at Redskins Park.
Maybe there's similar good news on the horizon, but I doubt it.In the past few days I've found myself reading my old books and newspapers from the Redskins glory days so I can remind myself how much I love the team. It still excites me to read about the '83 season or read Rypien's passing stats from '91. I still love talking about the games I went to and the memories from working at RFK. It makes me irrationally happy.

Philadelphia 76ers 2009-10 Season Preview

After the Philadelphia 76ers signed Elton Brand in the 2008 offseason, everyone expected them to become one of the best teams in the Eastern Conference, possibly challenging for a top 3 seed. That never materialized, as Brand's slower style did not mesh with the Sixers breakneck pace. The team struggled mightily out of the gate, only getting back on track once head coach Maurice Cheeks was fired and Elton Brand got injured, allowing them to fully go back to their fast style which made them so successful the previous year.Due to financial constraints (in part because of Brand), there weren't very many additions in Philadelphia. The biggest story of their offseason was the departure of Andre Miller, the point guard and catalyst of the offense, who signed with the Portland Trailblazers. That gives the PG role to Lou Williams. He is an explosive player with the ball in his hands, but it is hard to know how he will perform as the playmaker of the offense. He great in transition or getting the ball to the basket (and getting to the free throw line), but it will be interesting to see how well he can facilitate.Their best player is Andre Iguodala, who is solid offensively and defensively on the wing. He has come into his own over the past few seasons, and has a chance to make his first all-star game this season. He is not a great offensive player, but his athleticism allows him to fly around the court. He is an excellent finisher at the rim, and he is getting better and better shooting the basketball. Defensively, he uses his quickness to be a pest, making him one of the best wing defenders in the game.The future of the team looks to be Thaddeus Young, a star in the making. Entering his third season, he is still only 21 years old, and made huge strides from year one to two. He averaged over 15 points per game at age 20, and looks poised to make another leap in year three. If he can continue to progress, then he can be the key cornerstone for the 76ers as they try to get back to their success from the 1970s and 1980s.Down low, they will look to Mareese Speights and Elton Brand. Speights has a very high ceiling, as he was wildly efficient last season scoring and rebounding the ball. Elton Brand is a little harder to figure out. We know that when things are right, he can be one of the most productive players in the NBA. However, they have to fit him in their system, which was a huge problem last year. If they can, Philly will be right back in the hunt for a playoff spot.What are your thoughts on Philly?

Toronto Raptors 2009-10 Season Preview

After another abysmal season and rampant rumors that star forward Chris Bosh could bolt after this season in Toronto, it was clear that Bryan Colangelo needed to do something big in the offseason that stir some excitement and positive feelings about basketball in Toronto heading into the 2009 season.Enter Hedo Turkoglu, who the Raptors brought in from the Orlando Magic to help rejuvenate the franchise. After nearly signing with the Portland Trailblazers, Turkoglu changed his mind and decided to make Toronto his home at the last minute. He helped the Orlando Magic make it all the way to the NBA Finals last season, and has plenty of big game experience that he can pass on to his new teammates. He is an excellent scorer and creator.He has a good enough handle at 6'8'' to get to the lane and score, find open teammates, and make the right decisions. He is also a solid outside shooter, and hit plenty of huge shots late in ballgames over the past couple of seasons, both during the regular season and during the playoffs. While a lot of NBA experts feel that he might be a little bit overpaid compared to what other guys in the market were getting, he should make a big difference in the Raptors fortunes.Of course, however, Chris Bosh is still the man, and he is one of the best players in the NBA. He is excellent both on the block and at the elbow, and can hurt you in a variety of ways. He has gotten better every year since being in that vaunted 2003 draft class. He is also in the last year of his deal, and there is a lot of speculation that he could leave the Great North for a place like New York or Miami, bigger markets where he would be seen more.Rounding out the big 3 is Jose Calderon, one of the most underrated point guards in the NBA. Since taking over the offense full-time after the departure of TJ Ford, he has been very steady. He's a great shooter from the outside, and one of the best assist men in the NBA. He won't ever be a star in the NBA, but he is a very good player, a PG that you can definitely win with. He should be able to find the scorers often, potentially making Toronto a potent offense.While Toronto does not have enough to challenge the elite of the NBA's Eastern Conference, they should have enough talent with the acquisition of Hedo Turkoglu to be strong contenders to make it back to postseason play.What are your thoughts on Toronto?

Danish teenager Caroline Wozniacki overcame a crippling



DOHA — Danish teenager Caroline Wozniacki overcame a crippling cramp to edge closer to the WTA Championships semi-finals on Thursday defeating Russia's late call-up Vera Zvonareva 6-0, 6-7 (3/7), 6-4.
Wozniacki ended the 2hr 48min match in floods of tears after collapsing to the court in agony, her body wracked by cramp, when she was just two points from victory.
But world number nine Zvonareva, the runner-up in 2008 and who was summoned to the 4.55 million dollar event after Dinara Safina withdrew on Wednesday, failed to take advantage, allowing the Dane to secure an emotional win.
Wozniacki, the US Open runner-up and playing in her first season-ender, had led by a set and 5-2 before wasting two match points in the 12th game of the second set.
"In the third set, I just knew I really had to go for it," said world number four Wozniacki.
"When it was 3-1 for me in the final set, I got cramp in my left leg. From there, it just got worse and worse. I have absolutely no idea how I pulled it through, but I'm very happy about it.
"I'm going to do everything I can to get ready for tomorrow (her last group match against Jelena Jankovic). I'll drink a lot of fluids, eat some good food, do stretching, get massage, take a salt bath."
The 25-year-old Zvonareva battled impressively, even overcoming a nasty courtside nosebleed in the second set.
She admitted she felt for Safina, who pulled out of the tournament with a back injury.
"I feel bad for Dinara because I know what it is to deal with an injuries. I hope she can recover fast," said Zvonareva
"But I was here. It is tough when you are an alternate because you never know what's going to happen. It happened so fast. So it's difficult to prepare yourself the best you can."
For the second consecutive evening, the 10-minute heat rule was invoked after the second set, allowing Wozniacki, who needed three hours to win her opener against Victoria Azarenka, and Zvonareva to recover from the heat and crushing humidity.
On their return, Wozniacki led 3-1, but was pinned back to 3-3 before needing treatment on her bandaged thigh.
But with the tie seemingly slipping away, she bravely broke to lead 5-4 before claiming victory when Zvonareva netted a forehand.
Later Thursday, Serena Williams, who made sure of claiming the year-end world number spot when Safina withdrew, faces Elena Dementieva.
A win for the Russian world number five would mean defending champion Venus Williams's outside hopes of making the last four will be dashed.
Venus completes her first round campaign later Thursday against French Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova, who needs to win to stay alive in the competition.
Copyright © 2009 AFP. All rights reserved


Football: Williams Named Campbell Finalist



Football: Williams Named Campbell Finalistby Shannon McNamara for MSNsportsNET.com October 29, 2009
NFF Release and Notes


Reed Williams
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – West Virginia University senior linebacker
Reed Williams has been named to the 2009 National Scholar-Athlete class and will vie as a finalist for the William V. Campbell Trophy, endowed by HealthSouth, as announced today by The National Football Foundation (NFF) & Collage Hall of Fame.
Selected as the best and the brightest from the college gridiron, from a nationwide pool of 154 semifinalists among all NCAA divisions and the NAIA, Williams joins the 15 other members of the 2009 class, which are: Jon Asamoah (Illinois), Matt Bauman (Brigham Young University), Eric Decker (Minnesota), Moses Harris (Fresno State), Tim Hiller (Western Michigan), Paul Jasinowski (Brown), Beau Kildow [Morningside College (Iowa)], Josh Mahoney (Northern Iowa), Colt McCoy (Texas), Jarrell NeSmith [Tusculum College (Tenn.)], Joe Pawelek (Baylor), Todd Reesing (Kansas), ZaVious Robbins [Hardin-Simmons University (Texas)], Tim Tebow (Florida) and Blaine Westemeyer [Augustana College (Ill.)].
“There is no doubt that this year’s class of NFF National Scholar-Athletes is one of the greatest of all time,” said NFF President & CEO Steven J. Hatchell. “Mediocrity is not in their lexicon in any aspect of their lives. They have exhibited the same drive to compete in the classroom that distinguished them on the field, and they have found the time to be leaders in their communities too. We will be very excited and proud to name one of these extraordinary young men the recipient of the 20th Anniversary William V. Campbell Trophy on Dec. 8.”
“The 2009 NFF National Scholar-Athlete Class boasts the highest average GPA in the history of our awards,” said NFF Chairman Archie Manning, whose sons Peyton (Campbell winner) and Eli were NFF National Scholar-Athletes in 1997 and 2003, respectively. “They are truly the best of the best among all college sports and the epitome of our mission to build leaders through football. Bob Mulcahy and the NFF Awards Committee should be credited for the research, time and commitment it took to select this outstanding group.”
Williams, a Moorefield, W.Va., native, becomes the sixth Mountaineer to earn the honor and joins a list that includes Oliver Luck (1981), Jeff Hostetler (1983), Eric de Groh (1998), Jeff Berk (2004) and Jay Henry(2006).
Williams is the force within the Mountaineer defense, having played in 45 career games and recorded 93 unassisted tackles, 217 total tackles, 14 tackles for loss, seven forced fumbles and two interceptions. Additionally, he maintains a 3.86 grade-point average (GPA) while pursing a second degree in marketing after already earning a finance degree.
Though forced to medically redshirt the 2008, Williams has bounced back with a strong showing in his final WVU season, and through six games has totaled 32 tackles, six pass breakups, one tackle for loss and one forced fumble.
A member of four-consecutive bowl-winning teams, Williams had a breakout performance in the Mountaineers’ 2008 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl win, earning the game’s defensive MVP honors and CollegeFootbalNews.com’s All-Bowl Team accolades. He has twice been named the “Ideal Mountaineer Man” by his teammates and the coaching staff.
Off the field, Williams, an eight-time member of the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll, was named a 2007 Academic All-American. He is a member of the National Society of Collegiate Scholars and the Golden Key National Honor Society, and has frequented both the WVU Dean’s List and the BIG EAST Academic All-Star team. He has also been chosen a member of the Huntington Bank Junior Board of Directors and volunteers with both the Boys and Girls Club and the Special Olympics.
The NFF’s National Scholar-Athlete program, launched in 1959, is the first initiative in the history to award scholar-athletes post graduate scholarships for their combined athletic, academic and leadership abilities. This year’s class members find themselves in good company, as former National Scholar-Athletes include NFL standout Derrick Brooks (Florida State); actor Mark Harmon (UCLA); NASA astronaut Leland Melvin (Richmond); former Dateline NBC anchor Stone Phillips (Yale); chairman of Augusta National Golf Club, home of the Masters Tournament, Billy Payne (Georgia); famed NFL quarterback Steve Young (BYU); and Heisman Trophy winners Terry Baker (Oregon State), Gary Beban (UCLA), Doug Flutie (Boston College) and Danny Wuerffel (Florida).
Nominated by their schools, which are limited to one nominee each, candidates must be a senior or graduate student in their final year of eligibility, have a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale, have outstanding football ability as a first team player and have demonstrated strong leadership and citizenship. Selected by the NFF Awards Committee, the 16 National Scholar-Athlete Award recipients will be honored at the 2009 NFF Annual Awards Dinner December 8 at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City. The event will also include the induction of the 2009 College Football Hall of Fame and the presentation of several major awards.
Each finalist will receive an $18,000 post-graduate scholarship, and one of the 16 will be announced as the recipient of the 20th Anniversary William V. Campbell Trophy, endowed by HealthSouth (and formerly known as the Draddy Trophy), which recognizes an individual as the absolute best scholar-athlete in the nation. Renamed this fall in honor of Bill Campbell, the chairman of Intuit, former player and head coach at Columbia University and the 2004 recipient of the NFF’s Gold Medal, the award comes with a 25 pound bronze trophy and a $25,000 post-graduate scholarship. A total distribution of $300,000 in scholarships will be awarded that evening.
ABOUT HEALTHSOUTH: HealthSouth is the nation's largest provider of inpatient rehabilitation services. Operating in 26 states across the country and in Puerto Rico, HealthSouth serves more than 250,000 patients annually through its network of inpatient rehabilitation hospitals, long-term acute care hospitals, outpatient rehabilitation satellites and home health agencies. HealthSouth strives to be the health care company of choice for its patients, employees, physicians and shareholders and can be found on the Web at www.healthsouth.com
ABOUT THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION & COLLEGE HALL OF FAME: Founded in 1947 with leadership from General Douglas MacArthur, legendary Army coach Earl “Red” Blaik and immortal journalist Grantland Rice, The National Football Foundation & College Hall of Fame, a non-profit educational organization, runs programs designed to use the power of amateur football in developing scholarship, citizenship and athletic achievement in young people. With 121 chapters and 12,000 members nationwide, NFF programs include the College Football Hall of Fame, the NFF Hampshire Honor Society, Play It Smart, the NFF-FWAA Football Forum, the NFF Gridiron Clubs of New York City, Dallas and Los Angeles, and scholarships of over $1 million for college and high school scholar-athletes. The NFF awards the MacArthur Trophy, the William V. Campbell Trophy, endowed by HealthSouth, and releases the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) Standings. Learn more at www.footballfoundation.org.

College football: TCU keeps focus on field


UNLV coach Mike Sanford had an explanation why BYU quarterback Max Hall joined a growing list of Mountain West Conference quarterbacks who have had problems finding an open receiver in the TCU secondary.
Hall had decent completion numbers in the 38-7 loss to the Horned Frogs, 18 of 28.
But he managed just 162 yards and was sacked five times despite a lack of blitzes by TCU.
Sanford compared the 7-0 Frogs' coverage technique to the NFL, where there is little separation and the windows to throw the ball are smaller. Tight coverage by a speedy, physical secondary forced Hall to hold onto the ball longer, which led to the sacks.
"They play receivers closer and tighter than a lot of people," Sanford said. "[Quarterback] judgment changes a little. It changes the perception of who's open."
That defense, along with its workmanlike offense, guided by quarterback Andy Dalton , has kept TCU unbeaten and in the thick of BCS talk. The Frogs have the look of being the 2009 version of last year's Utah team that was undefeated and went on to beat Alabama in the Sugar Bowl.
TCU, ranked sixth nationally, was selected the National Team of the Week by the Football Writers Association of America.
"We're trying to control our own destiny," TCU coach Gary Patterson said. "This team has shown a lot of resilience.
"I'm glad three of our five [remaining] games are at home."
UNLV

'The League': More fantasy than football


How is it possible to screw up America's favorite two contact sports -- sex and football -- this badly?
"
The League," a sitcom debuting on FX on Thursday is about a set of suburban, yuppie friends who have a fantasy-football league. The idea appears to be to use this framework as a window into the relationships and rivalries of the guys in the league, their wives, children, dogs, bad habits, etc., and viewers will come to care about this lovable bunch of misfits as the season progresses.
Maybe they'll get around to that, but the rough cuts of the first two episodes made available to reviewers suggest shockingly original plot lines: Boy, do guys think about sex a lot! So do their wives! Guys sit on the toilet and drink beer! Women talk at group dinners about the prowess of their own genitalia! Watching porn is great, hunh?
And, oh yeah, don't we all love football! Trade me Peyton Manning and I won't tell your wife you watch bra advertisements on your computer, you twisted freak!
Perhaps the most obvious way is to leave any real interest in the game off-camera.
In the hubbub to get to the next wee-wee gag, the script forgets to mention a reason why any of these people have the slightest interest in football, much less the obsession required to participate in the numbers-crunching minutiae of a fantasy league. (This is, by the by, a
competition in which you pick players in pro football, and their statistics in each game constitute your score, and the person with the highest score at the end of the season is the winner.)
Nobody mentions, say, even such hoary cliches as their dad taking them to a snowy game at Lambeau Field when they were a kid, or of having grown up Down South where the sport is a tribal passion, or having played the game as a kid. Nobody appears to be so much as a season-ticket holder.
Alas, no. There's just the man-child Pete, whose marriage is in trouble and is thereby new to the dating scene; Ruxin, whose babe of a wife isn't interested in sex after the birth of their child; Andre, the high-school dweeb who grew up to be a dweebish plastic surgeon who is comically inept at seducing women; Kevin, whose wife is proud of her private parts and who secretly runs his fantasy team; and Taco, the pothead who sings wildly inappropriate songs at kids' birthday parties and is, of course, a chick magnet.
The last is played by Canadian comedian Jon LaJoie, who is mostly known for his low-tech songs seen on YouTube. "Show Me Your Genitals" has racked up 20 million hits.

football players more likely to suffer brain injuries

I love fantasy football, even though I only got into it 2 years ago. I never really watched football all that much, mostly because I'm from Detroit and the Lions suck. In the 90's I used to watch the Lions play every Sunday thanks to my grandfather who had season tickets. Thanks to being involved in fantasy football, I usually watch a lot of football on Sundays to see how my players are doing. It's sometimes difficult to see the players as real people when playing fantasy football, mostly because they are reduced to statistics based upon how well they play.
But football players are more than statistics, they are people who play a grueling sport that can severely injure them or
prematurely cause brain injury. When I went to watch all those Lions games in the 90's, I do recall one game very well; it was the last game Mike Utley would ever play due to a spinal cord injury. He is now paralyzed from the waist down due to his participation in a sport that glamorizes violence.
According to a recent study, football players aged 30 to 49 have a significantly increased rate of developing
Alzheimer's disease compared to the normal rate. In fact, the study found the rate to be 19 times higher. This is a pretty startling statistic and the National Football League (NFL) is fighting back against allegations that playing football endangers it's players. The problem for the NFL is the medical data they have collected so far indicates far more concern then the league would like to acknowledge.
Not only is there an increased rate of
Alzheimer's disease for football players, there are also increased rates of dementia, depression and other related head injuries. The medical evidence is beginning to demonstrate a link between cognitive impairment and playing football. From a non-medical point of view, it makes sense to me that if you spend your work life hitting your head against other people most of the year for 5-10 years, you are likely to injure your head.
Just the other day a congressional hearing was held by
John Conyers Jr. on the issue of brain injuries in the NFL. Roger Goodell, NFL Commissioner, testified at the hearing but did not indicate whether he sees a link between football and head injuries. He did say he and the league believe the health of their players is very important and that they are looking into the issue.
I agree that Mr. Goodell is concerned with the health of his players, but I am concerned he has a strong financial incentive to say there is no problem or to downplay the significance of a problem. According to reports, the
NFL had revenue totaling nearly 7 billion dollars, that's a lot of incentive to keep the system as it currently stands. Of that, players receive 57.5% of the revenue, or approximately $3.85 billion. That's not a bad sum of money for the players to be sure.
The real question for me at the end of the day is this: Do I think
playing football causes brain injury, and if so, what can be done about it? I see lots of data to support such a finding, but it's not clear what can be done. However, not much will be accomplished to prevent or diminish such injuries if the NFL continues to deny a link between playing football and head injuries. If you can't admit there's a problem, it's very difficult to work on solutions. Hopefully this new research will pressure the NFL into taking steps to address this growing concern.
by njuryboard.com

Recap: San Antonio vs. New Orleans

Recap: San Antonio vs. New Orleans
By Sports Network
The Sports Network
Tony Parker led a balanced attack with 17 points and dished out six assists before taking a hard fall in the third quarter, as the Spurs opened the season with a 113-96 win over the New Orleans Hornets.
Parker fell hard to the floor after making a layup late in the third quarter, but later came back to the team's bench.
Manu Ginobili, who missed 38 games last season and the entire playoffs because of ankle problems, added 16 points off the bench for the Spurs. Rookie DeJuan Blair, a second-round draft pick, tallied 14 points and 11 rebounds, while Tim Duncan contributed nine points and 12 boards for San Antonio, which has made the playoffs 12 years in a row, but was ousted by the Dallas Mavericks in five games in the first round last season.
"Our defense in the first half was good, very good. Our defense in the second half was very poor," said Spurs coach Gregg Popovich. "I was disappointed in our defense the second half, the amount of points we gave up and the shots they made. We really lost our focus defensively. Fortunately we kept scoring."
Chris Paul registered 26 points and nine assists for the Hornets, who were bounced in five games by the Denver Nuggets in the first round a season ago. Emeka Okafor and David West both scored 18 with Okafor having 10 rebounds and West nine boards in defeat.
Ahead 19-13 after the first quarter, the Spurs shot 63.6 percent (14-of-22) during the pivotal second stanza. Parker's jumper with 6:53 left extended the lead to 36-18.
Antonio McDyess, signed as a free agent in the offseason, hit a layup with a minute left in the half for a 57-37 difference before Julian Wright's bucket capped the quarter for the Hornets.
The double-digit margin remained throughout the second half with the Spurs holding an 88-68 cushion moving to the fourth. But in the third, the game turned ugly. Parker's layup with 2:21 left in the quarter came after he sliced through traffic.
San Antonio's Richard Jefferson and Paul were each hit with technical fouls for arguing with each other.
"Those guys came in and looked like they've been playing with each other for years," Paul said of the Spurs. "Of course, they're going to have to get a little bit more comfortable, but McDyess hit some big shots. It's the same old Spurs, just different people in those uniforms."
Game Notes

Wolves-New Jersey game recap

GAME RECAP
MVP
Jonny Flynn, Wolves
Playing his first NBA game, he scored 11 of his 18 points in the Wolves' deciding 24-6 run that ended the game and played fearlessly down the stretch after struggling for more than three quarters.
NUMBERS
0 Brook Lopez's fourth-quarter points after the Nets center scored 27 through the first three quarters.
19 New Jersey's biggest lead, at 72-53 midway through the third quarter.
26 Damien Wilkins' combined points (12), rebounds (10) and steals (four) in his Wolves debut.
JERRY ZGODA

Double Coverage: Panthers, Cards then and now


Posted by ESPN.com's Mike Sando and Pat Yasinskas The
Arizona Cardinals did more than knock the Carolina Panthers from the 2008 postseason. Their 33-13 victory in Charlotte delivered a knockout blow from which the Panthers' organization has yet to recover. What should be a Week 8 grudge match between playoff contenders is looking more like a mismatch. Arizona is 4-2 and riding high following a nationally televised victory over the Giants, the Cardinals' fourth consecutive road victory dating to their divisional-round upset of Carolina. The Panthers are 2-4 and contemplating whether to bench veteran quarterback Jake Delhomme, who has more interceptions through six games (13) than he had in 16 starts last season (12). What happened? NFC West blogger Mike Sando and NFC South counterpart Pat Yasinskas pick up the discussion. Pat Yasinskas: That playoff game changed the momentum for both franchises. Going into that game, the thinking was how the Panthers would thump the Cardinals. Arizona had beaten Atlanta in the wild-card round to get its playoff victory, but the Cardinals were ultimately a 9-7 team from a weak division. They would be no match on the road against a 12-4 team. The upset vaulted the Cardinals toward the Super Bowl while absolutely crumbling the Panthers. Carolina hasn't recovered from it, starting with the quarterback and extending to the defense. The game led to changes on the coaching staff. The Panthers still could have a mental block heading into the rematch at University of Phoenix Stadium. Mike Sando: These teams share quite a few similarities. Both re-signed older quarterbacks during the offseason. Both made significant changes to their coaching staffs. Both faced salary-cap limitations in free agency after naming franchise players. The results have been vastly different. Fateful QB decisions
Chris Keane/Icon SMI
Jake Delhomme and the Panthers haven’t been the same since last season’s playoff loss to Arizona.Pat Yasinskas: After the playoff game, I personally had some doubts about Delhomme, as did a lot of fans. He threw those five picks and I thought there was a chance they would at least bring in someone to compete with him -- not to replace him, but to compete with him. They did not do that. He had one year left on his deal and they signed him to a contract extension. I understand the loyalty coach John Fox and general manager Marty Hurney felt toward Delhomme because he has obviously done a lot for that franchise and he is a leader in the locker room. But in hindsight, that game against the Cardinals and even a few late-season games last year showed that he was declining and they should have sought out alternatives. Mike Sando: The Cardinals had little choice but to re-sign Warner. In the back of their minds, though, they would have been entitled to wonder when Warner might hit the wall. Quite a few other quarterbacks have faded at around age 38. Would Warner be next? He made the trip to San Francisco in free agency, but there was still a sense the Cardinals were bidding against themselves. Committing $22 million to him over two seasons was a necessary risk. In the end, Arizona could not walk away from the quarterback who put them ahead in the final stages of Super Bowl XLIII. The Cardinals made the right move. Coaching turnover Pat Yasinskas: I think the playoff debacle against Arizona contributed to a rift on the Panthers' coaching staff over the direction of the team. Defensive coordinator Mike Trgovac decided he no longer wanted to be a coordinator. His departure started a near-total disbandment of the defensive staff. Line coach Sal Sunseri left for the University of Alabama. Linebackers coach Ken Flajole bolted to become defensive coordinator for the Rams. Secondary coach Tim Lewis left for the Seahawks. On the offensive side, Delhomme's longtime position coach, Mike McCoy, became offensive coordinator in Denver. Fox had passed over him for the same position on his staff a couple of years earlier. Some on the staff felt McCoy should have gotten that job.
Jason Bridge/US Presswire
Kurt Warner has thrown for 1,672 yards and nine touchdowns this season.Mike Sando: The Cardinals had a good thing going on the offensive staff when coordinator Todd Haley left to coach the Chiefs. I think Arizona is still sorting through the aftermath of that one. Haley and Warner were tight. Haley knew how to push players' buttons. He called the plays and the offense was in a rhythm. The offense is still finding its identity a little bit. On defense, Whisenhunt failed to land Keith Butler from the Steelers after firing coordinator Clancy Pendergast. He promoted linebackers coach Bill Davis instead. Either way, the defense was going to become more straightforward, with an emphasis on reducing big plays allowed. It's still too early to pass judgment on Davis, but the defense has played very well recently. Overall, Whisenhunt is certainly on the rise, whereas there's a perception Fox has possibly run his course in Carolina. Pat Yasinskas: Absolutely, Mike. There’s a sense of that.
Julius Peppers asked out after last season, shocking given that Fox is supposedly a defensive wizard. There was precedent for this. Kris Jenkins asked out for two years before Peppers did. People shrugged and said Jenkins was a flake. But when Peppers, who was born and raised in North Carolina, asked for the same, it raised some eyebrows. Fox used to build his team around the defensive line and suddenly you had the two cornerstones of that line asking to get out of there. That tells you something pretty major right there. Salary-cap limitations Pat Yasinskas: Franchising Peppers cost about $18 million total in cap space. The Panthers re-signed tackle Jordan Gross to a long-term deal. With those moves, they tied up their cap to a point where they could not do anything else. They did not sign any free agents. They had to let veteran cornerback Ken Lucas go. They could not even re-sign veteran snapper Jason Kyle, even though the savings for letting him go was only $600,000. That severely affected their depth across the board, which was demonstrated when defensive tackle Ma'ake Kemoeatu went down with an injury on the first day of training camp and there were no decent replacements behind him. The Panthers have struggled on the interior of their defensive line ever since. They bragged coming into the season that they had 21 of 22 starters back, but the salary-cap issues meant they had absolutely no depth behind those starters. Mike Sando: The Cardinals charged $9.678 million against their cap by naming Karlos Dansby their franchise player. They paid more than $10 million per year to Warner. Larry Fitzgerald was already making that kind of money. Re-signing Adrian Wilson ate up another huge chunk of cap room, although some of that seemed by design. Arizona did manage to sign cornerback Bryant McFadden from the Steelers in free agency. When defensive end Antonio Smith left in free agency for $8 million a year, the Cardinals plugged in second-year player Calais Campbell, who has played well. Again, the Cardinals' moves have simply worked out better. Divergent outlooks Pat Yasinskas: I think we're seeing the end of the Fox era in Carolina. The Panthers still have talent, but Delhomme appears finished. It’s time to blow up the roster and rebuild. Mike Sando: The Cardinals are a good team with the potential to get better. The Cardinals were 4-2 at this point last season heading into their 30-24 regular-season defeat at Carolina. They should beat the Panthers this time. The rest of the schedule sets up favorably. Some of the games that once appeared toughest this season -- at Seattle, at the Giants, at Tennessee -- are either in the bank already or looking like they will be.

Harsh words fly in McCourt divorce filings

The dramatic tale of the Dodgers ownership battle took another turn Wednesday when Jamie McCourt's attorney said that she had lined up financing for a possible bid to buy out her estranged husband."Whatever it takes to buy Frank McCourt out, she's got," attorney Bert Fields said.Yet Frank McCourt has no intention of selling the Dodgers, to her or anyone else, his attorney said Wednesday."Congratulations to her for being a prospective buyer," attorney Marshall Grossman said. "There is no seller. Perhaps she could explore some other sport."The day started with a new and salacious twist, with Frank McCourt claiming in a 664-page court filing that he fired Jamie McCourt as the club's chief executive in part for having an affair with her driver, who was employed by the Dodgers. His attorneys also allege the two spent 2 1/2 weeks in France this summer and billed the team for the trip.Frank McCourt, who says he is the sole owner of the team, fired his wife last week after the team was eliminated from the National League playoffs. She filed for divorce Tuesday and asked the court to reinstate her as chief executive. She also says that she is a co-owner of the team.Frank McCourt's attorneys claimed in Wednesday's court documents that her reinstatement would be "akin to throwing a bomb into a crowded room."The court scheduled a Nov. 5 hearing on her bid for immediate reinstatement and a Dec. 1 hearing to discuss spousal support and other issues pending trial.If the court does not recognize Jamie McCourt as a co-owner, Fields said, she believes the court would declare the team community property and she would attempt to buy it. She has asked the court to invalidate a 2004 agreement she signed that gives her sole ownership of the couple's residential properties and gives him sole ownership of the team.Fields would not say how much money a buyout might require or identify any of the investors that might support her, but he said she already had been offered sufficient financing, including one person who contacted her Wednesday and offered to finance the purchase himself.Frank McCourt has asked the court for an expedited ruling validating that he is the sole owner, calling her claims of co-ownership "false and baseless" and damaging to the team."It is time to end this nonsense," the filing states.Dodgers President Dennis Mannion said in the court documents that Jamie McCourt did not show up for work more than half the time, put her own image ahead of the team's and "exhibited an almost disdainful disregard for the fundamental requirements of her job and workplace etiquette."Lawyers for Frank McCourt not only alleged that Jamie McCourt had an affair with her driver -- his grounds for firing her included "an inappropriate relationship with a subordinate employee" -- but also that she charged the Dodgers for the cost of a European trip with him, in the middle of baseball season.Fields admitted that Jamie McCourt is in a romantic relationship with Jeff Fuller, her driver, but said the relationship started after she separated from Frank McCourt on July 6. Fields said she did not bill the team for the trip."What does that have to do with ownership of the Dodgers? Nothing," he said. "It's a vicious smear campaign."Mannion denied Jamie McCourt's claims that he had instructed team employees not to work with her and excluded her from management discussions and decisions. He said he would have welcomed her involvement had she shown up for work more often.Mannion further alleged that Jamie McCourt focused on initiatives "designed to cultivate and promote her image as the highest ranking woman in Major League Baseball," even when those activities "were not financially successful ventures and did not fit the strategic needs of the organization."The filing in particular cited DodgersWIN, described in her biography as a program that "brings women closer to the game, brings the game closer to women's lifestyles, and helps inspire women to use their voices."Upon his promotion to team president in March, the same day Jamie McCourt was promoted to chief executive, Mannion reported directly to Frank McCourt. In Jamie McCourt's court papers, she alleged that Mannion and Frank McCourt worked together to ensure she was "systematically excluded from business or management decisions."Mannion told the court he opposes her reinstatement and said her animosity toward him and his colleagues makes clear "she will never again be able to work with the executives in a collaborative environment."Fields denied those charges and said the court proceeding would show Jamie McCourt to be a more qualified executive than Frank McCourt."When people find out what she did as opposed to what he did, they're all going to want her to run the team," Fields said.The Major League Baseball commissioner had no comment on the divorce proceedings or the unusually harsh words that have accompanied them, spokesman Pat Courtney said Wednesday. MLB President Bob DuPuy said last week that the league was monitoring the situation.But one sports executive put the chances of the team eventually being sold to a third party as high as 50-50, saying the financial partners that might be required to sustain either of the McCourts as the Dodgers' owner could be turned off by the harsh public spectacle of this divorce."This obviously doesn't help your image if you're going into business with them," said the executive, who declined to be identified because he knows the McCourts. "This type of battling and all this personal slander doesn't make partners feel comfortable coming in."bill.shaikin@latimes.com
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Copyright © 2009,
The Los Angeles Times

Anthony, Lawson lead Nuggets to victory against Jazz

DENVER (AP) — Ty Lawson (FSY) might need to dust off an old nickname.
Before his days at North Carolina, Lawson was called "Sparkplug" because of his ability to come into a game and provide instant energy.
The rookie did just that Wednesday night, scoring seven of his 17 points in a pivotal fourth-quarter run to help the
Denver Nuggets to a season-opening 114-105 win against the Utah Jazz.
GAME REPORT:
Nuggets 114, Jazz 105
"Play fast and get people involved," Lawson said. "I've been doing that since I was younger."
Although Anthony Carter
(FSY) got the start, it was Lawson who was in the game at crunch time.
Lawson ignited a 9-0 run at the start of the fourth quarter, scoring on driving layups and quick jumpers to help the Nuggets pull away in what had been a close game.
"There's such a speed to the game when Ty's on the court," Nuggets coach
George Karl said. "Right now, I'm just going to ride guys that are going."
That would definitely include
Carmelo Anthony (FSY), who scored a game-high 30 points. He's simply starting where he left off in the preseason, when he led the league with 23.6 points a game.
"It was a statement game for me," Anthony said.
The Jazz certainly got the message.
"He's a terrific player," Utah coach
Jerry Sloan said. "He's one of those players who knows when to start. He knows when the season is ready to start. He's very hard to guard."
Chauncey Billups (FSY) finished with 25 points, and Kenyon Martin (FSY) added 16 points and 11 rebounds.
Deron Williams (FSY) led Utah with 28 points and 13 assists. Andrei Kirilenko (FSY) and Ronnie Brewer (FSY) each contributed 16 on a night when two-time All-Star Carlos Boozer (FSY) struggled, shooting 3-for-14 and scoring 12 points — most coming late. He also had 11 rebounds.
"They really jumped us in the fourth quarter," Williams said. "They gained some momentum with that start, and we never regained it."
It all started with Lawson, who lived up to his childhood nickname.
"That might come back now," he said, grinning.
Denver took the lead for good with time winding down in the third quarter when Billups was fouled by Williams on a three-point attempt with four-tenths of a second left. Billups made all three free throws to give the Nuggets an 82-80 lead.
Anthony put the exclamation on the win with a dunk over
Paul Millsap (FSY) with just over 6 minutes remaining, giving the Nuggets a double-digit lead.
Before the opening tip, Anthony grabbed a microphone and thanked the capacity crowd for braving the weather to attend the game. The Denver area was blanketed with nearly a foot of blowing snow throughout the day.
With the Jazz already in town, though, there was no thought given to postponing the game.
The Nuggets, who are coming off a trip to the Western Conference finals, unveiled their Northwest Division championship banner before the game. Denver and Utah have won the last four division crowns, capturing two apiece.
That's why, although early, this was a crucial divisional game, at least as far as tiebreakers are concerned. Karl said the schedule-makers did the teams no favors by having this matchup so early.
Denver plays at the Portland Trail Blazers, another top contender in the division, Thursday night. The Nuggets were hoping that the snow tailed off enough for their flight to Oregon to depart.
Denver was missing the long-range touch of
J.R. Smith (FSY), who served the first game of a league-mandated seven-game suspension for pleading guilty to reckless driving over the summer.
The Jazz were short-handed as well, playing without
Matt Harpring (FSY) (ankle, knee), C.J. Miles (FSY) (left thumb) and Kyle Korver (FSY) (left knee). Korver had arthroscopic surgery on his knee in New York on Wednesday. He is to return to Salt Lake City for rehab and will be re-evaluated Nov. 9.
Utah received a scare 24 seconds into the game when center
Mehmet Okur (FSY) hobbled to the locker room after trying to draw a charge on Nene.
But he returned late in the first quarter wearing a flexible brace on his left knee.
"It could have been worse," said Okur, who had 13 points. "I'll be OK."
NOTES: This is the second time the Nuggets have hosted the Jazz in the season opener. Denver beat Utah 139-125 on Oct. 28, 1983, at McNichols Sports Arena, the Nuggets' previous home. ... Official Leroy Richardson was briefly examined by the Nuggets training staff after he tumbled while running up the court in the fourth quarter.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Buffalo 4, New Jersey 1

FINAL
1
2
3
SCORE
Sabres
2
0
2
4
Devils
0
1
0
1

First period summary
Time
Team
Scoring Detail
1:21
Buffalo
Clarke MacArthur (5), from Craig Rivet and Jason Pominville.
6:00
Buffalo
Tim Kennedy (1), from Jochen Hecht and Steve Montador.
Time
Team
Penalty Detail
12:05
Buffalo
Steve Montador - 2 minutes for Roughing
12:05
New Jersey
David Clarkson - 2 minutes for Roughing
Second period summary
Time
Team
Scoring Detail
4:17
New Jersey
Andy Greene (1), from Zach Parise and Jamie Langenbrunner (power play).
Time
Team
Penalty Detail
2:56
Buffalo
Paul Gaustad - 2 minutes for Hooking
10:01
New Jersey
Ilkka Pikkarainen - 2 minutes for Hooking
17:37
New Jersey
Johnny Oduya - 2 minutes for Holding
Third period summary
Time
Team
Scoring Detail
9:25
Buffalo
Paul Gaustad (2), from Matt Ellis and Steve Montador.
17:21
Buffalo
Jason Pominville (3), from Chris Butler and Tim Connolly (power play).
Time
Team
Penalty Detail
11:01
Buffalo
Jason Pominville - 2 minutes for Interference on goalkeeper
13:05
Buffalo
Paul Gaustad - 2 minutes for Hi-sticking
14:37
New Jersey
Nicklas Bergfors - 2 minutes for Too many men/ice - bench
17:04
New Jersey
Nicklas Bergfors - 2 minutes for Hi-sticking
18:49
Buffalo
Derek Roy - 2 minutes for Tripping
19:28
Buffalo
Mike Grier - 2 minutes for Hooking

Shots on goal
Team
1
2
3
Total
Sabres
14
6
7
27
Devils
7
10
15
32

Power Play
Buffalo 1 for 4
New Jersey 1 for 5

Goaltending
Team
Goaltender
SA
GA
Saves
SV%
TOI
PIM
Buffalo
Ryan Miller
32
1
31
.969
60:00
0
New Jersey
Martin Brodeur
27
4
23
.852
60:00
0

Buffalo individual statistics
Player
G
A
+/-
SH
PIM
Steve Montador
0
2
2
1
2
Jason Pominville
1
1
1
2
2
Tim Kennedy
1
0
1
2
0
Tim Connolly
0
1
1
2
0
Paul Gaustad
1
0
1
2
4
Chris Butler
0
1
1
1
0
Matt Ellis
0
1
1
0
0
Clarke MacArthur
1
0
1
2
0
Craig Rivet
0
1
1
1
0
Jochen Hecht
0
1
1
2
0
Nathan Paetsch
0
0
2
0
0
Mike Grier
0
0
1
2
2
Patrick Kaleta
0
0
1
2
0
Derek Roy
0
0
0
0
2
Henrik Tallinder
0
0
0
0
0
Drew Stafford
0
0
0
2
0
Thomas Vanek
0
0
0
5
0
Tyler Myers
0
0
0
1
0
New Jersey individual statistics
Player
G
A
+/-
SH
PIM
Andy Greene
1
0
0
2
0
Zach Parise
0
1
-1
7
0
Jamie Langenbrunner
0
1
-1
3
0
Mark Fraser
0
0
0
0
0
Brian Rolston
0
0
0
6
0
Matt Halischuk
0
0
0
1
0
Nicklas Bergfors
0
0
0
1
2
Travis Zajac
0
0
0
2
0
David Clarkson
0
0
0
0
2
Colin White
0
0
-1
0
0
Dainius Zubrus
0
0
-1
2
0
Rod Pelley
0
0
-1
2
0
Rob Niedermayer
0
0
-1
3
0
Mike Mottau
0
0
-1
0
0
Ilkka Pikkarainen
0
0
-2
0
2
Pierre-Luc Letourneau-Leblond
0
0
-2
0
0
Bryce Salvador
0
0
-2
1
0
Johnny Oduya
0
0
-2
2
2

Officials

Jackson rumors all over the map

With rumors again swirling that the Warriors might grant Stephen Jackson his trade request, the sold-out, opening-night crowd had a power struggle in how to deal with the swingman Wednesday.
//
The crowd's boos overpowered the cheers during pregame introductions. Jackson was booed like he was on the road throughout his first four touches. And, after the happy side out-applauded the hater side during his first free-throw attempt, the jeers prevailed when the shot missed.
Jackson requested a trade to a contender before training camp, but he has publicly backed off that desire in recent weeks. Still, ESPN reported Wednesday that trade talks have "heated up."
The report said the Warriors are mulling several offers, including deals from Cleveland, Denver, New Orleans, San Antonio and the Clippers. Apparently, the sticking point in a potential deal with Cleveland is the approval of center Zydrunas Ilgauskas, and the talks with Denver died quickly.
Coach Don Nelson said he hadn't heard the latest rumor. The team's policy is not to discuss trades, so general manager Larry Riley did not comment.
"I speak to Larry every day and I haven't heard that," Nelson said. "This is the first I've heard about it, so it would surprise me if it's true."
Asked if he thought Jackson would be traded, Nelson said, "It wouldn't surprise me. I hope he doesn't, because I think we've worked that out now, but we have to roll with the punches."

In dominant outing,

NEW YORK -- It remains to be seen whether his mastery will allow the Phillies to celebrate a second consecutive World Series title. But whatever happens, Cliff Lee has certainly already guaranteed that he'll never again have to answer questions about the possibility that he might succumb to the pressures of the postseason.

"It's been a long time since I've been nervous playing this game," Lee said. "It's what I've been doing my whole life."
Lee has undoubtedly established himself as one of the game's best pitchers over the course of the past two years. Nevertheless, the reigning American League Cy Young Award winner had certainly never experienced anything that would have prepared him to be as dominant and downright cool as he was while leading the Phillies to a 6-1 win over the Yankees in Game 1 of the World Series on Wednesday night.
"This is the same game I've been playing my whole life, and this is the stage that I've wanted to get to from a little kid," Lee said after seeing a ninth-inning unearned run stand as the only thing that separated him from marking his World Series debut with a shutout.
While going the distance, Lee lowered his career postseason ERA to 0.54. This stands as the best mark recorded by a pitcher who has completed at least 30 postseason innings.
"He seems like he's been in a rhythm for the last year and a half," said Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez, who struck out in three of his at-bats against Lee. "He's been pitching at a great pace, using four pitches, pounding both sides of the strike zone doing a lot of things well, so [we] turn the page."
In the process of limiting the Yankees to six hits and tossing his second complete game of the postseason, Lee displayed a sense of youthful innocence. Not intimidated by the raucous Yankee Stadium crowd or potent lineup that served as his opposition, the Phillies southpaw found the strike zone with great regularity and made a couple of defensive plays that would have made the Harlem Globetrotters proud.
Going the distance
Cliff Lee recorded the first Game 1 complete-game victory in 14 years.
WP
Date
Team
Opp.
Res.
C. Lee
10/28/09
PHI
@ NYY
6-1
G. Maddux
10/21/95
ATL
CLE
3-2
T. Glavine
10/17/92
ATL
TOR
3-1
D. Stewart
10/14/89
OAK
SF
5-0
J. Morris
10/9/84
DET
@ SD
3-2
M. Caldwell
10/12/82
MIL
@ STL
10-0
M. Flanagan
10/10/79
BAL
PIT
5-4
L. Tiant
10/11/75
BOS
CIN
6-0
D. McNally
10/9/71
BAL
PIT
5-3
M. Cuellar
10/11/69
BAL
NYM
4-1
B. Gibson
10/2/68
STL
DET
4-0
B. Gibson
10/4/67
STL
@ BOS
2-1
M. Grant
10/6/65
MIN
LA
8-2
S. Koufax
10/2/63
LA
@ NYY
5-2
W. Ford
10/4/62
NYY
@ SF
6-2
W. Ford
10/4/61
NYY
CIN
2-0
W. Spahn
10/1/58
MIL
NYY
4-3
W. Ford
10/2/57
NYY
MIL
3-1
S. Maglie
10/3/56
BRO
NYY
6-3
J. Black
10/1/52
BRO
NYY
4-2
D. Koslo
10/4/51
NYG
@NYY
5-1
V. Raschi
10/4/50
NYY
@PHI
1-0Since 1950
"He definitely was in a zone tonight," Phillies outfielder Shane Victorino said after seeing Lee find the strike zone with 80 of his 122 pitches and encounter a three-ball count against just three of the 32 batters that he faced.
Lee needed more than six pitches to record just two of his 27 outs, and it was at the conclusion of one of these seven-pitch at-bats that he provided reason to wonder if he does have ice water running through his veins.
After Derek Jeter singled with one out in the sixth, Johnny Damon ended his seven-pitch at-bat with a pop fly that a flat-footed Lee fielded with his right hand nonchalantly protruding from his right hip. It was as if he was catching a soft toss that might have been projected from a distance of just a few feet.
"I was just like, 'Wow,'" Phillies first baseman Ryan Howard said.
"I don't know, it's 15 feet in the air and came right to me," Lee said. "It was a pretty simple catch. Whatever. I don't know. I caught it. He was out. So that's all that really matters."
Phillies manager Charlie Manuel was more impressed with the behind-the-back grab that Lee made on Robinson Cano's comebacker to begin the eighth inning.
"I liked the one behind his back," Manuel said. "Popup, he was trying to pull a Willie Mays on us or something. But outside of that, he was very good."
"I don't know how I caught that ball," Lee said. "To be successful at this level, you've got to be confident. You've got to go out there and think you're going to get everybody out and think you can. I definitely do that. I try not to go over the edge and rub things in and be cocky, but I definitely have confidence, there's no doubt about it."
While getting his first taste of the postseason this year, Lee has actually been greater than good. When Jeter and Damon opened the ninth inning with consecutive singles, it marked just the third time in the course of 17 innings that an opponent had moved into scoring position against Lee.
Lee, who hasn't issued a walk in his past two starts, saw his scoreless innings streak snapped at 16 one batter later, when shortstop Jimmy Rollins made an errant throw on a double-play relay to first base. Still the ever-composed hurler responded to this by striking out the final two batters of the night.
"I'll pat myself on the back when it's over hopefully, but until then I'm going to keep grinding and do everything I do each day to prepare for my next outing and leave it at that," Lee said.
Manuel hasn't said whether Lee will come back to pitch Sunday's Game 4 on short rest. Instead, he's going to spend some more time enjoying the latest gem that his club found on July 29, when they acquired him in a trade with the Indians.
"You know, when we got him, I knew he was good," Manuel said. "I had seen him before. But if you want to know the truth, I didn't know that he was as good as he's been. When you see him pitch tonight, he had all of his pitches going."

Clinique du Sport: plaidoyer pour des médecins confrontés à un "calvaire"

Clinique du Sport: plaidoyer pour des médecins confrontés à un "calvaire"
PARIS - Les infections nosocomiales survenues il y a 20 ans à la Clinique du Sport datent du "néolithique" de l'hygiène hospitalière, aussi les trois ex-médecins jugés pour ce drame ne peuvent se voir reprocher leurs pratiques de l'époque, ont plaidé leurs avocats au dernier jour du procès.
"Le ministère public vous a bien dit que cette épidémie avait conduit à renforcer les normes en matière d'hygiène hospitalière pour lutter contre les infections nosocomiales", a souligné mercredi Me Xavier Flécheux, avocat de l'un des prévenus, le Dr Didier Bornert.
"S'il y a eu des évolutions, c'est bien que les choses ont changé et que ces trois médecins doivent être jugés en fonction des données d'une époque (...) où l'appréciation des risques était très différente", a rebondi Me Sylvie Tran-Thang qui défend l'ancien directeur de la Clinique du Sport, le Dr Pierre Sagnet.
Point après point, les avocats ont déroulé la liste des normes, selon eux appliquées "par tous, partout" à l'orée des années 90, au "néolithique" de l'hygiène hospitalière, selon les termes de Me Dominique Pagani, avocate de la compagnie d'assurance de la Clinique du Sport.
Dans cet établissement parisien réputé, dont la liste des patients avait des allures de bottin mondain, 58 personnes opérées des lombaires ou des cervicales entre janvier 1988 et mai 1993, ont été contaminés par une redoutable mycobactérie qui provoque une maladie s'apparentant à une tuberculose osseuse.
Les trois chirurgiens jugés depuis le 6 octobre devant la 31e chambre du tribunal correctionnel de Paris sont poursuivis pour "blessures involontaires", "tromperie" ainsi qu'"omission de porter secours" s'agissant de Pierre Sagnet.
C'est ce dernier qui a fait l'objet des réquisitions les plus sévères prononcées mardi par le ministère public: trois ans de prison dont deux avec sursis et 30.000 euros d'amende.
Contre les deux médecins, Didier Bornert et Patrick Béraud, des peines respectives de deux ans de prison avec sursis et 20.OOO euros d'amende pour l'un et huit mois avec sursis pour l'autre ont été demandées.
Il leur est reproché d'avoir transmis aux patients la mycobactérie xenopie, présente dans le réseau d'eau de la clinique, via leurs instruments chirurgicaux dont la stérilisation était défaillante. Décontaminé à froid, le matériel aurait dû l'être à chaud et rincé à l'eau stérile en flacon plutôt qu'à l'eau filtrée des lave-mains.
"A l'époque, c'était comme ça qu'on faisait, le froid, le chaud, c'était pareil", a affirmé Me Flécheux. Idem pour l'usage de l'eau filtrée, "un processus qui faisait l'unanimité", selon l'avocat.
"Dans l'organisation du bloc, c'est l'infirmier qui a la charge du travail de stérilisation, pas le médecin", a souligné le défenseur du Dr Béraud, Me Guy-Claude Aron, rappelant les nombreux témoignages en ce sens entendus durant le procès.
Sans mettre le cas de son client sur le même plan que celui des victimes, il a évoqué le "calvaire" que cette affaire représente pour lui, "le boulet psychologique dont il ne se défera jamais". "Une épreuve" également pour le Dr Bornert, alors jeune médecin de 34 ans, pris dans la tourmente d'une affaire érigée au rang de symbole des maladies nosocomiales.
Mais "un symbole ne fait pas une culpabilité", a conclu son avocat.
Le jugement a été mis en délibéré au 3 février 2010.

mercredi 28 octobre 2009

Lakers' ceremony has a familiar ring to it

One by one they marched to the center of the Staples Center floor Tuesday, a parade of Lakers champions, gathered for the most unusual of championship ring ceremonies.These weren't the Lakers wearing the new diamonds.These were the Lakers who cut them.Jerry West, Norm Nixon, Jamaal Wilkes . . .In the finest of this town's greatest sports traditions, an opening night intended to honor last season's Lakers' NBA champions first recognized the nine previous ones.Before celebrating what they won, the Lakers' organization celebrated why they win.James Worthy, Michael Cooper, Magic Johnson . . .Nine former players, one for each title, not just photos on a wall, but live, large, as only the Lakers can do it.On their backs this organization was built, and at their feet the fans now roared.A.C. Green, Rick Fox, Robert Horry . . .Outside, the winds had turned their glitzy corner of downtown into a howling dust bowl.Outside, the Michael Jackson movie premiere had packed their neighborhood streets with fans who care more about moonwalks than skywalks.But inside it was a night seemingly like any other night in the Lakers' 50 years in Los Angeles.Inside, amazingly, wonderfully, little had changed.New season, same Lakers, thank goodness.There was the NBA's most famous player, its most famous cheerleaders, its most visible celebrities.There were corny promotions on the scoreboard, funky old music on the sound system, and that brass band in the rafters playing the theme from "Rocky."For the 27th consecutive opener, Jeffrey Osborne sang the national anthem.For the 27th consecutive season, public address icon Lawrence Tanter announced him.A couple of the current players are new, the championship ring is bigger -- think dinner plate -- but the Lakers' experience seemingly never changes, the world's most trendy fan base once again happily stuck in time.
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AC Milan join the race for Ajax striker Luis Suarez

AC Milan are the latest major club to express an interest in Ajax’s free-scoring striker Luis Suarez.Technical director Adriano Galliani admitted that the Rossoneri "lack creative attackers, we only have Alexandre Pato and Ronaldinho with these qualities."On Suarez, Galliani admitted "we have tracked him for some time. We hope he will be the new Marco van Basten."Galliani also admitted that AC Milan hope to secure a deal for CSKA Moscow midfielder Milos Krasic in the January transfer window. "We have already spoken once, it is now time for contacts to intensify."Besides Suarez (20 goals and five assists in 16 matches this season) and Krasic (nine goals and six assists in 26 games), Milan are also tracking Santos playmaker Paolo Henrique Lima

Italian Serie A betting preview – Napoli vs AC Milan

AC Milan travel to Naples tonight hoping to build on their recent momentum. The visitors have won their last two games, including a victory at Real Madrid, after an appalling start to the season which saw them take one win from their first seven games and a 4-0 loss to rivals Inter. Napoli can tell a similar tale, winning two of their first seven but winning their last two in a row to sit in ninth place, two points below the famous visitors.
Milan go in as slight favourites for this game at 8/5 (bet $50 to win $80 profit), leaving Napoli as underdogs at 21/20. The draw is priced at 23/10 and two of Milan’s last three visits to Naples have ended honours even, including their most recent contest in March.
Tonight’s match is seen as being very close by the bookies, who have made 1-1 the most likely score at 6/1. 1-0 to Milan is at 7/1 and 1-0 to Napoli is 15/2. 2-1 to the visitors is 9/1 and a 0-0 draw, the result last time the two played, is priced at 17/2.
Alexandre Pato, Milan’s twenty year-old striker who scored the winner against Real Madrid earlier this month, is favourite to open the scoring tonight at 6/1. Following Pato is Filippo Inzaghi at 7/1. However, The veteran striker has so far failed to score this season in seven appearances. Fabio Quagliarella, Napoli’s twenty-six year-old striker, is 7/1 and their best chance to score the first goal of the game.
Milan are 7/2 to be winning at both half-time and full-time tonight and 5/1 to win after drawing at half-time. Both halves to be drawn is at 4/1, along with Napoli to be winning at half-time and full-time. For fans of comebacks, Napoli/Milan is 33/1 and Milan/Napoli is at the same price.
The visitors are third favourites to win Serie A this year at 16/1 despite a start which leaves them in sixth place and already seven points adrift of leaders Inter. Napoli are not seen as contenders for the title at 400/1 but will aim for a spot in the top four and a possible place in Europe.