Sunday, September 12, 2010

GAMES


FORMULA 1 NEWS

Race - Alonso back in title hunt after Monza win










For 36 of the 53 laps at Monza on Sunday a silver car led the reds of Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa, but when McLaren’s Jenson Button ducked into the pits then it was Ferrari’s Alonso who led from Massa until he stopped on Lap 37. When he resumed, Alonso just made it to the first chicane ahead of Button, and thereafter there was never any question about who would win.




While the McLaren was ahead the gap between Button and Alonso fluctuated between 0.5s and 1.6s, but once the Spaniard got in front he opened it to as much as 4.0s before finishing 2.9s ahead. Massa was another 1.2s adrift, on a day when the Scuderia moved firmly back into contention for the drivers’ world championship.



It was a disastrous day for Lewis Hamilton in the other McLaren, who jumped to fourth as Mark Webber’s Red Bull again started slowly, but at the second chicane Massa’s left rear wheel came into contact with Hamilton’s front right, and by the first Lesmo the McLaren driver was in the gravel, his day done.



It also seemed like being a bad day for Sebastian Vettel as a brake problem momentarily dropped him behind Red Bull team mate Webber, from fifth to sixth. But a very clever bit of strategy from the Milton Keynes team saw them keep their man out until the 52nd lap before he finally made his mandatory tyre stop.



By then his long run had taken him ahead of fast-starting Nico Rosberg who’d held fourth for most of the race for Mercedes GP. Vettel got out of the pits ahead of the silver arrow, which had Webber on its tail after the Australian had doggedly fought by Williams’ Nico Hulkenberg. The young German made a mistake on the 49th lap, blocked Webber enough to provoke an angry gesture from the latter, then Mark made a move stick a lap later.



Webber now leads the world championship again with 187 points to Hamilton’s 182, but Alonso’s great drive vaults him to third on 166, just ahead of Button on 165 and Vettel on 163. Red Bull have 350 points to McLaren’s 347 and Ferrari’s 290.



It was a tense rather than thrilling race, but the scrap for the lower points places was always entertaining. Hulkenberg chased fifth-placed Robert Kubica for much of the race and jumped the Renault in the pit stops, but the Williams driver dropped back to seventh after Webber’s successful attack. Kubica took eighth, with Mercedes GP’s Michael Schumacher a distant ninth ahead of Rubens Barrichello in the second Williams.



Toro Rosso’s Sebastien Buemi just headed Force India’s Tonio Liuzzi over the line for 11th, with Renault’s Vitaly Petrov benefiting from a very late pit stop to take 13th ahead of BMW Sauber’s Pedro de la Rosa. Toro Rosso’s Jaime Alguersauri was 15th after a drive-through penalty for missing a chicane, while Force India’s Adrian Sutil fought up to 16th after contact on the opening lap sent him into the pits.



Timo Glock won the new teams’ race for Virgin after Jarno Trulli’s Lotus blew up late in the race, from Heikki Kovalainen in the other T127 and Sakon Yamamoto’s HRT, after Lucas di Grassi had to make a pit stop on lap 52.



During Yamamoto’s pit stop a crew member was hurt after the lollipop was lifted too early. He was taken to hospital for checks and the team were subsequently fined US$20,000 for an unsafe release.



Besides Hamilton and Trulli, HRT’s Bruno Senna stopped with mechanical woes and Kamui Kobayashi did not actually leave the pit lane after problems with his BMW Sauber before he got to the grid.

GAMES

BASKET BALL

Durant powers U.S. over Lithuania and into gold-medal game



ISTANBUL (AP) -- Kevin Durant is unlike most of America's biggest basketball stars. He couldn't wait to wear the red, white and blue this summer.

Especially on Sept. 11.

With a special memorial message on his sneakers, Durant carried the United States into the gold-medal game at the world championship, scoring a U.S.-record 38 points Saturday in an 89-74 victory over Lithuania.

"I just wanted to remember everybody back in the States, everybody that was affected by 9/11,'' Durant said. "And to play on this day was a great honor and we just tried to do our best to play hard for our country and our families.''

Durant soared over defenders or stepped away from them for 3-pointers, scoring 17 in the first quarter to stake the Americans to an early lead that was never seriously challenged.

He went on to surpass Carmelo Anthony's single-game record of 35 points and raise his average in the tournament to 22.1, which would be the best ever by a U.S. player.

"I've seen him score 45, 35, back-to-back,'' guard and NBA teammate Russell Westbrook said. "It doesn't surprise me at all what he's been doing.''

More importantly, Durant guaranteed the Americans a chance at their first world title since 1994. They will play Sunday against Turkey, which beat Serbia 83-82 in the other semifinal.

"That's what we came here to do,'' guard Eric Gordon said. "We're a young team and we fight through a lot of adversity and that's what we're here for, to win the gold.''

There was some doubt this team was the one that could end the U.S. drought after all the superstars from the 2008 Olympic gold medalists declined to play this summer. But Durant kept saying yes, and he's on the verge of going down as the most accomplished U.S. player ever in this event.

Durant posted a message on his Twitter page Saturday that read: "May God bless those who were effected by the events on Sept 11, 2001....9-11-01 on my shoes tonight..you guys will watch over us..''

Then he went out and dominated the first quarter, shooting at the basket in front of section 324, which was completely awash in Lithuania green and filled with fans banging drums and waving flags.

Lamar Odom added 13 points and 10 rebounds, while Andre Iguodala led the defensive effort that took Lithuania star Linas Kleiza right out of the game.

"They did a great job on our leader, Linas Kleiza. We couldn't find a solution on their star Kevin Durant,'' Lithuania coach Kestutis Kemzura said. "He was unstoppable today.''

The teams met last month in an exhibition game in Madrid, and the U.S. shot just 3 of 21 in the first quarter before rallying for a 77-61 victory. There would be no slow start this time.

Lithuania led by two midway through the first quarter before Durant seized the game, showing off his entire repertoire. First there was a dunk, followed by a three-point play and two free throws. Iguodala briefly interrupted the Durant show with a dunk, then Durant scored on a follow shot and made a 3-pointer.

In just 3 1/2 minutes, he had taken the U.S. from down two to up 10, and Lithuania never really recovered.

The Lithuanians hit their first eight 3-pointers in their quarterfinal victory over Argentina, but the outside shot wasn't falling Saturday. They hit only three of 12 in the first half, yet still were down only eight with 3 minutes left before Thunder struck - the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Durant and Westbrook combined for nine straight points, extending the lead to 42-25. The U.S. took a 15-point advantage into the half.

The Americans extended the lead to 19 in the third quarter, and though Lithuania kept making little runs, could never get within single digits. Durant finished 14 of 25 from the field, adding nine rebounds in 38 minutes before taking a seat with 44 seconds remaining.

Robertas Javtokas had 15 points and nine rebounds for Lithuania, which lost for the first time and will play for bronze. Kleiza, who was averaging 19.1 points, was limited to four on 1-of-11 shooting.

Odom said playing on Sept. 11 was "an incredible moment for all us.'' A native New Yorker, he said he lost friends from high school in the terrorist attacks on the United States nine years ago, and U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski also said he knew people that died.

"So to be playing and representing your country, it's a big deal,'' Odom said.

The Americans came in averaging 95 points and led the tournament in many other categories. But that was the case four years ago, too, and none of that mattered when Greece executed at will over the final three quarters in a 101-95 semifinal victory.

That was the latest U.S. disappointment in an event it was won only three times. Krzyzewski had lost in the semifinals of both previous appearances, with his team of college players winning a bronze in 1990.

Now the Americans have a chance at gold, and with it an automatic berth into the 2012 Olympics. Many of the stars have indicated they may return for that, so it's unknown how many of these players will be back.

One thing has become clear: There will be a place for Durant.

"Really nobody can guard him, really,'' Gordon said. "He's like that in the NBA and it's translating over here.''

GAMES

VOLLEY BALL

NORCECA Beach Circuit - Chula Vista, Calif.



August 27, 2010 to August 29, 2010 - Chula Vista, California, United States




USA Volleyball has announced the teams that will compete this weekend at the NORCECA Beach Volleyball Circuit event at the Olympic Training Center sand courts in Chula Vista, Calif.

The NORCECA beach volleyball circuit brings together teams from North and Central America and the Caribbean. The U.S. stop is the seventh on the 2010 calendar. Play will begin on Aug. 27, continue on Aug. 28 and conclude with the semifinals and medal matches on Aug. 29.

Representing the United States on the women’s side will be the teams of Heather Hughes (Fallbrook, Calif.)/Michelle Moriarty (Hermosa Beach, Calif.), Summer Ross (Carlsbad, Calif.)/Tara Roenicke (Alta Loma, Calif.), Kelly Bruning (Mesa, Ariz.)/Lynne Galli (San Diego, Calif.), Emily Day (Torrance, Calif.)/Kaitlin Sather (Santa Rosa, Calif.) and Tealle Hunkus (Girard, Ohio)/Heather Lowe (Cypress, Calif.).

The men’s teams competing for the United States will be Avery Drost (Redlands, Calif.)/Mike Maghy (Fountain Valley, Calif.), Will Montgomery (Santa Barbara, Calif.)/Evan Barry (San Diego, Calif.), Kevin Beukema (Redondo Beach, Calif.)/Kevin Gregan (Hermosa Beach, Calif.) and Andrew McGuire (Manhattan Beach, Calif.)/Seth Burnham (Santa Cruz, Calif.).

International teams competing in Chula Vista:

Women

Costa Rica: Ingrid Morales and Natalia Alfaro

Puerto Rico: Yarleen Santiago and Dariam Acevedo

Guatemala: Maria Jose Orellana Aragon and Anna Lourdes Ramirez Sarti

Men

Costa Rica: Jonathan Guevara and Esteban Escobar

Costa Rica: Luis Raul Sandoval and Julio Cesar Alvarez

El Salvador: Ovidio Alonso Quintanilla Osorio and Rafael Francisco Vargas Coreas

Guatemala: Rodrigo Gonzalez Flores and Erick Rolando Garrido Ruiz

Mexico: Aldo Miramontes and Juan Virgen

Puerto Rico: Roberto Rodriguez and Orlando Irizarry

GAMES

MOTERBIKE RACING



World Supersport contender Eugene Laverty has signed for the Sterilgarda Yamaha WSB squad for 2011.




The 24-year-old from Northern Ireland will campaign the factory R1 alongside current MotoGP rider Marco Melandri, who signed last week.



Laverty, who is currently second in the World Supersport class behind Kenan Sofuoglu, said: “It’s great to have a contract signed at this stage while still fighting for the title in the Supersport class. I desperately want to win this year before moving on.



“When I rode the Yamaha YZF-R6 in World Supersport in 2008 I was having a tough time in 250s, it’s nice that Yamaha brought me to the fore and are now giving me the opportunity within superbike.



"Ben Spies winning the championship in 2009 and Cal Crutchlow now stepping up and winning races shows the bike and team are more than capable so the rest is up to me.



On riding with Marco Melandri, Laverty commented: "Having a teammate like Marco Melandri is great, he has a wealth of experience to learn from so I’m going to enjoy riding with him.”

GAMES

BASE BALL


Latos belongs in the NL Cy Young discussion

SAN DIEGO – Patrons and employees at the East Village Tavern and Bowl a few blocks from Petco Park agree on who should win the National League Cy Young Award: the talkative young blond guy who drops by late on nights the Padres are in town, gabbing with the bouncers, eating appetizers and bowling the occasional game – left-handed.







Mat Latos credits his new-found maturity for his turn-around.


(Jason O. Watson/US Presswire)

Mat Latos(notes) pitches with his right hand and won’t jeopardize his health by rolling a 16-pound ball with it. He has grown up enough to know that much. The playoff chances of the reeling San Diego Padres might hinge on his continued ability as a stopper, a pitcher who lifts a sagging team every five days. Latos knows that, too.

As for baseball’s most prestigious pitching award, Latos becomes uncharacteristically humble at its mention.

“Having Cy Young and my name being in the same sentence alone would make my day,” he said. “But it wouldn’t make my year. The passion I show on the mound and the trust and respect I’ve gained from my teammates, the bonds and friendships I’ve made, you can’t trade that for anything.”

Latos faces the San Francisco Giants on Sunday and will be matched against two-time reigning Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum(notes), whose off year could serve as a cautionary tale. Giants manager Bruce Bochy has suggested that Lincecum took his dominant stuff for granted, that he needs to devote more time to conditioning.

Even without Lincecum, legitimate candidates for the NL Cy Young are plentiful. Early on it appeared Colorado’s Ubaldo Jimenez(notes) would run away with it when his ERA was under 1.50 through mid-June and he started 15-1. Then Florida’s Josh Johnson(notes) was the leader when his ERA stayed under 2.00 until early August. Adam Wainwright(notes) of the Cardinals became the favorite by mid-August before losing four decisions in a row. Tim Hudson(notes) of the Braves remains on the periphery, although the comeback player of the year award might be a better fit.

Now steady workhorse Roy Halladay(notes) of the resurgent Philadelphia Phillies is at the forefront of any Cy Young handicapping, leading the league in innings, strikeouts, complete games and shutouts.

NL Cy Young Award candidates

Name W-L ERA IP HA SO BB WHIP BA/A

Mat Latos 14-5 2.21 162.2 113 170 43 0.96 .191

Adam Wainwright 18-10 2.38 208.1 163 191 51 1.03 .219

Tim Hudson 15-7 2.41 198.0 158 117 60 1.10 .243

Roy Halladay 18-10 2.44 228.2 212 201 28 1.05 .246

Ubaldo Jimenez 18-6 2.75 196.1 147 186 79 1.15 .212

All are veterans and all but Johnson pitch for playoff contenders. No wonder Latos, who leads the league in ERA and lowest batting average against, is honored to be in the discussion.

“I’m just a 22-year-old kid who wants to compete,” he said. “I thrive off it. I love the energy. I love the atmosphere. I know I’ve matured. I hear it day in and day out from people. It’s great to make those kinds of strides and it keeps me wondering, what am I going to be like in the next five years? How mature? How composed?”

In spring training, Padres manager Bud Black made a simple request of Latos: Be reliable. How is this for a response? In his last start, a seven-inning, 10-strikeout gem against the Dodgers, Latos broke the major league record of 14 consecutive starts of five or more innings with two or fewer runs allowed, a mark held by Greg Maddux(notes) and Mike Scott.



Roy Halladay leads the league in innings, strikeouts, complete games and shutouts.

(Anthony Gruppuso/US Presswire)

Latos’ transformation from an abrasive, immature jerk trying to harness his immense talent to a well-liked, dependable staff ace is a remarkable tale involving a promise to his dying grandfather and a particularly persuasive pitching coach. Another breakthrough came in December when he was home visiting his parents in Virginia. Latos was watching a movie on DVD with his 21-year-old first cousin, Josh Branick. Latos began popping off as usual, and Branick, whom only-child Latos says is as close as a brother, got in his face and asked him if he was ever going to grow up.

“It really sunk in,” Latos said. “I remember every detail. We were watching ‘Underworld: Rise of the Lycans.’ The fireplace was going. I had both of my dogs lying at my feet. The Christmas tree was lit up behind us. I have a deep appreciation for what Josh said. He doesn’t know it yet. I haven’t given him credit.”

Already Latos had made strides. He was so difficult to handle in high school that he fell to the 11th round of the 2006 draft even though scouts throughout baseball agreed he had first-round talent. The current mid-August deadline to sign draftees hadn’t been implemented yet, so the Padres didn’t sign him until he spent a year at Broward Community College. Scout Joe Bochy (brother of Giants manager Bruce Bochy) watched every start and came away convinced he was worth the gamble. The Padres paid Latos $1.25 million a few days before he would have gone back into the 2007 draft.

“Money had quite a bit to do with it, I’m not going to lie,” Latos said. “Joe Bochy expressed a lot of interest in me. I showed a little more maturity than I did in high school and they offered a lot more money.”

Latos’ maturation continued through his rapid ascent through the minor leagues. He stopped yelling at teammates for making errors, stopped snatching at return throws from the catcher when he believed an umpire missed a call, and toned down the self-loathing when he didn’t perform up to his own expectations.

“I learned to breathe through my eyelids,” he said. “When I was younger, I always had an excuse. Now, I throw a pitch and I can accept that I made a mistake and somebody hit it. How can I be mad at somebody else on the field? I’m never going to be perfect, so how can I expect anybody else to be perfect?”

“I still have that hotness in me. There are plenty of times I want to let it out.”

In Latos’ last start, Rafael Furcal(notes) of the Dodgers hit a hanging changeup for an RBI single. As Latos backed up home plate, he unleashed a string of expletives that were overheard by umpire Hunter Wendelstedt.

Wendelstedt: “Were you talking to me or talking to yourself? Because you were freaking me out.”

Latos: “Oh, I was mad at myself. I was talking to myself. I apologize.”

Wendelstedt: “All right.”

Latos goes through a stick of chewing gum every two innings to help him avoid chewing out himself or anyone else. Whatever his methods, they clearly are effective. He is 2-0 in four starts against the Giants, allowing 16 hits and two walks in 28 innings while striking out 22.

Those are numbers that impress Cy Young voters. Latos has been best against his team’s toughest competition. He’s an undisputed ace, and the only reason he hasn’t logged as many innings as Halladay, Jimenez and Wainwright is that the Padres have limited his workload because of his youth.

Despite his belated maturity, Latos is more polished than other heralded pitchers his age: Stephen Strasburg(notes), Clayton Kershaw(notes), Mike Leake(notes) and Trevor Cahill(notes). And for now, he’s the only one whose name belongs in the same sentence as the Cy Young Award.

GAMES

HOCKEY





Belfast Giants bolster lineup for Bruins


Thursday, 09.09.2010 / 2:44 PM / 2010 Compuware NHL Premiere

The Belfast Giants Selects are just about halfway home in their quest to find a lineup that can challenge the Boston Bruins in next month's 2010 Compuware NHL Premiere Challenge exhibition game in Belfast.



Thursday, the Giants Selects coaching staff added four more players to the roster, bringing the total of named players to 11.



Long-time American Hockey League defenseman Richard Seeley headlines the latest quartet named to the roster for the Oct. 2 exhibition, which is the opening game in Boston's two-week European tour to start the 2010-11 season.



Forwards Ashley Tait, Jade Galbraith and Dan Carlson were also named to the roster.



"These four players are an indication that we are not just trying to have an All-Star team," Belfast Giants Selects coach Doug Christiansen said. "We are looking for a complete team that can push the Bruins for 60 minutes."

"These four players are an indication that we are not just trying to have an All-Star team. We are looking for a complete team that can push the Bruins for 60 minutes." -- Belfast Giants Selects coach Doug Christiansen

Seeley, drafted by the Los Angeles Kings in 1997, played his junior hockey in the Western Hockey League before spending eight seasons in the AHL, suiting up for Lowell, Bridgeport, Manchester and Norfolk. He amassed 81 points and 658 penalty minutes in 399 AHL games before leaving for Europe in 2006.



Since, he has played in the German Elite League and the Austrian Elite League. This is his first season in the UK Elite League, joining the Giants as a marquee signing this summer.



"Rich Seeley is arguably the best defender in the league," Christiansen said. "He is a career AHL defender and is a guy who we expect to be a rock for us. His playing is second to none in the EIHL and he should be fantastic for the Giants Selects."

2010 COMPUWARE NHL PREMIERE



Six teams to open season in Europe

Once again, the start of the NHL regular season will have a European flavor in 2010-11 as the Compuware NHL Premiere series will see an unprecedented six teams begin play "across the pond." READ MORE ›





RELATED STORIES:



• Belfast Giants add to roster for Bruins exhibition

• Belfast names four players to team facing Bruins

• Sharks add preseason game in Germany to sched

MORE 2010 COMPUWARE NHL PREMIERE STORIES ›

Tait, who plays for the Sheffield Steelers, is one of Great Britain's most accomplished players. He began his career with Nottingham in 1990 and has also played for Kingston, Coventry and Sheffield, which he joined in 2007. In 2008-09, he helped led the Sheffield Steelers to the regular season and playoff titles, scoring 57 points in 52 games.



"Ashley Tait is a player who can play on any line and grind and skate with the Bruins," Christiansen said. "He has a great work ethic and does all the little things well."



Galbraith, from Hinton, Alberta, spent three years in the ECHL before chasing his hockey dreams to Europe. He has spent the past three seasons with Nottingham, scoring 77 points in 56 games last season.



"Galbraith is magical on the puck," Christiansen said. "We need someone who can be crafty and create against the Bruins defense. He is a player who has shown how skilled he is. The Giants Selects are looking for him to have an impact."



Carlson, born in Edina, Minn., has found a home in Coventry, playing for the Blaze in five of the past six seasons. Carlson played his college hockey at the University of Notre Dame and spent three years in the North American minor leagues before heading to Europe. He had 70 points in 56 games last season and has 377 points in his five seasons with the Blaze.



"Carlson is another player who knows the game and can help the EIHL on the penalty kill and five-on-five," Christiansen said. "In my opinion, he is the most underrated player in the league."



These four players join the seven players already named to the roster: Cardiff's Scott Matzka, Sheffield's Ben Simon, Nottingham's Corey Neilson, Coventry's Luke Fulgham and Jonathon Weaver and Belfast's Colin Shields and Jon Gleed.

GAMES

SWIMMING

SWIMMING AUSTRIALIA 2010:


Date Event Location


2010 September
Sat 18 – Mon 20 2010 State Teams Age Short Course Championships
AIS, Canberra ACT

October Sun 3 - Thurs 14 2010 Commonwealth Games New Delhi, India

November Mon 22 2010 Telstra Swimmer of the Year Awards Melbourne

December Wed 15 - Sun 19 FINA World Short Course Championships Dubai, UAE

2011 March Sat 5 - Sun 6 2011 Australian Open/Age Open Water Championships
Sydney International Regatta Centre, Penrith

April Fri 1 - Fri 8 2011 Telstra Australian Swimming Championships
SOPAC, Sydney

Mon 18 - Sat 23 2011 Australian Age Championships
South Australian Aquatic Centre, Adelaide

June
Wed 29 - Sun 3 Jul 2011 Australian Short Course Championships TBC

September
Sat 17 - Mon 19 2011 State Teams Age Short Course Championships Canberra

October
Fri 7 - Sun 9 2011 Australian Age Multi Class Championships TBC