Monday, September 28, 2009

Formula 1: Hamilton took Singapore Grand Prix

After 61 punishing laps of the Marina Bay Street Circuit on Sunday, the podium featured not one team or driver in the running for the 2009 championship. Instead it was McLaren, Toyota, and Renault celebrating.However, Jenson Button and Brawn left Singapore quietly satisfied, the former having extended his championship lead to 15 points, the latter having all but wrapped up the constructors’ crown with three rounds remaining…Reproduced with kind permission of the FIA

1st Lewis Hamilton (McLaren), 1h56m06.337s; 2nd Timo Glock (Toyota), 1h56m15.971s; 3rd Fernando Alonso (Renault), 1h56m22.961s.

Q: Lewis, winning from pole. What an evening for you.
Lewis Hamilton: It was a very, very tough race. I think I can speak for all of us. The conditions made it very tough, but generally the race was pretty straightforward for me. I got a good start and I just managed to bridge a big enough gap. I knew I was longer than the guys behind me, so I was never really under serious pressure. When (Sebastian) Vettel was behind me I knew that I was five laps longer than him, so all I had to do was keep him behind. I was looking after the tyres. I felt myself that I nicely controlled the race and have to say a big thank to all my team for as always doing a fantastic job and to my family for supporting me. I want to say hi to my brother and everyone back home. It was a great weekend.

Q: We heard on the radio early on that perhaps you had a bit of trouble with the KERS unit. Talk about that and that early phase of the race and Nico Rosberg putting a bit of pressure on you in that early phase.
LH: Yeah, well I don’t know what lap it was. I had no problems in the car with the KERS but the team came across the radio and said there was possibly a fault. It was still working at that point and I had to disable it and re-engage it and it worked after that. There were quite a few switch changes. I did have a little bit of pressure from Nico and the cars behind at the beginning. They just seemed to be very quick through the first sector but I was just looking after my tyres and I think it paid dividends in the end.

Q: As you said, a very demanding circuit. Did it feel like a long, physically exhausting race and talk about racing at night.
LH: It is a tough race. It is not easy, that’s for sure. It is just the temperatures. But also it is corner after corner after corner. There is never a real break and it is very bumpy. The focus you probably need here is as much as you can possibly get. But the track is fantastic. The fans here are amazing. There was a huge crowd here and they put on a great show here in Singapore again. I came here hoping to have a good result, hoping to kind of redeem myself after the last race and we did it and we are very, very happy.

Q: Timo, a great result for the team. The best result of the year so far. This time you could do it from the right end of the grid after a very strong qualifying performance.
Timo Glock: It was a really good race for me. The start was a bit of a mess up in the first corner. I had to attack quite a lot but then I had a good first stint. But I knew I could not go the pace of the first two or three guys, so I just settled down for me and concentrated on it and saw what I can do with my car, keep it on 100 per cent. Before I came to Singapore I knew that last year we were good here. The driver can make a difference here and I just pushed as hard as possible. I had a lot of ups and downs over the weekend. Friday’s first free practice I said ‘ok, we are not looking really strong’ and then suddenly we just picked up and really concentrated with my car crew and did everything right. In qualifying again I thought we would get easily into Q3 and then struggled in Q1, but suddenly we just got better and better in qualifying. A bit of a shame to not use the last set of tyres. But during the race it was really good. I lost a bit with the view where the other guys were, so after that I changed to the option tyres and I pushed quite a lot. My team did not say where I am and then suddenly they said you are safe for P2 and I was really surprised and just brought it home at the weekend.

Q: On that first lap Mark Webber ran wide, there was a bit of an incident with Fernando, but you managed to get inside him. Talk us through that and you should know that Mark was surprised that he had to let you pass again.
TG: Definitely. I saw that they were battling quite a lot and the chance could be there if they did a mistake. I just took it and I knew from the free practice than Fernando and Renault struggle a bit over the race distance and we were quite okay. I just saw that I have to get in front of him to make the strategy work. That worked out really well and at the end with the safety car coming out I just crossed the safety car line in front of Fernando and that was important. Just a perfect weekend and a podium at the right moment for us.

Q: Fernando, what a fantastic result for Renault after all that has happened in the build-up to this race. That first lap for you was an interesting one, for you with Mark. But let’s get your take on Timo coming down inside you. Was that related to the previous corner?
Fernando Alonso: Yeah, it was fantastic obviously and the result is great for us to be in the first podium of the season. The first lap was a little bit stressful arriving to turn seven side-by-side with Mark. We both ran wide and over the kerb and then Timo took the benefit there and overtook me into turn eight. Because of the battle with Webber I think I lost the position with Timo and I think we finished the race behind him, but no real complaints. To be fair it is fantastic for us. We did not have the pace all weekend to be on the podium and we have the podium, so much better than we expected.

Q: There was a lot of mechanical attrition but for Renault another aspect of this great weekend.
FA: The team have been fantastic. All season I think we have had a fantastic team. The mechanics, engineers, everybody in the factory, did their maximum. Sometimes we did get some good results, sometimes we have been a little bit unlucky. But finally this podium in this particular moment after what happened from Monza to here with the team. It has been a difficult time for the team. Now we put that behind us and we concentrate on the remaining races. I dedicate this podium to Flavio (Briatore) at home as he is part of the success we had today.

Q: Lewis, going to Suzuka now for the Japanese Grand Prix which a lot of the drivers say is their favourite circuit. You have never raced there but you do so with the team within three points of Ferrari for third place in the Constructors’ Championship. It is a weekend no doubt that you are very much looking forward to.
LH: Yeah, I am sure Martin (Whitmarsh) and the rest of the team will be happy to hear that. I am not sure where Heikki (Kovalainen) came but clearly he did a good job today, possibly. I have never been to Suzuka but I have heard that it is, apart from Monaco, the best circuit. Just growing up watching television with Ayrton (Senna) and Alain (Prost) and Fernando and Kimi (Räikkönen) racing there. I always wanted to go there. I am very excited to go. I am sure it will be a very tough weekend and undoubtedly it will be very tough to learn that circuit and master it in one weekend but I will do all I can. Going with the momentum we have from this race hopefully we will have a competitive car there.

PRESS CONFERENCE

Q: Lewis, you said you wanted to win this but what a weekend it has been for you.
LH: It has been an incredible weekend in terms of the whole show, the build-up. It has been the busiest weekend probably of my life. I have had more appearances this week than I can remember. Obviously not a perfect Friday but Saturday was great. I have my Dad and my step-mum, Linda, here. I have my girlfriend here and I have got a friend of mine here. I got to meet Beyonce here, so it has been overall an incredible weekend. A great experience. I am very, very happy and I look forward to the celebration tonight.

Q: You never had a huge gap. Was that because you were managing tyres?
LH: Yeah, through our practice sessions our tyres never really lasted very long. I had to try and do all I could to look after them today. I also knew that the strategy I was on was very strong and I didn’t particularly need a huge gap to the people behind me. I kept a two-to-three second gap over Nico and it was good enough. Then with Vettel he was very competitive but he was again five laps shorter than me, so it had to be accepted that he was going to be on my tail, but it was never really a problem, so I just kept cruising and at the end there was a decent gap to Timo. He was putting in some good times but I was able to answer back, so I was able to keep the gap. I was very happy with it.

Q: There were quite a few drivers with brake problems here. How much attention did you pay to the brakes?LH: I try to treat my car as good as I can. We don’t have any problems with the brakes. It has never been a problem for us, so fortunately we did a great job with the cooling and everything, so it was never an issue here.

Q: Timo, what made the difference in qualifying, because that’s been important in the races we’ve had so far?
TG: I think that for the first time since, I would say, Australia, Malaysia, Bahrain, I could just set the car up more for my driving. The car has slightly changed a bit over the year, it’s a bit more aggressive and it didn’t suit my driving style a lot for one lap, especially in qualifying. I knew from last year that you can make a difference here as a driver and you can just fight a bit more with the car. We could set the car up much, much better and we did a really good job over the weekend, we just never lost the way. We struggled in first free practice and just made our way up and just went better and better. In Q2 I just got in a really good lap and got through to Q3 and the top ten. When you see the last races when we’ve had to start out of the top ten and we made it into the top ten, I was really looking forward to the race. I just knew that we couldn’t go at the same pace as the top two or three guys, so I just said ‘OK, just find your own way, just push as hard as possible with what you have and just get the best out of it’, and at the end, we pushed at the right moment, we got into P2. The first lap was really important, when I overtook Fernando as well as under the safety car when he came out of the pits and I just stayed in front of him. That was really important for our strategy and at the end, I lost where I was really and then suddenly my engineer said ‘you are safe in P2’ and that was really surprising. I was happy with that. I think it’s been a perfect weekend for me and for the team, really important for us, a really important podium at just the right moment for us.

Q: What is the significance of this podium; why is it just at the right moment?
TG: We had goals from the beginning of the year. We started really well and got two or three podiums into the season and just had the pace at the beginning and then we had a couple of difficult weekends where we struggled and the team came down a bit. We pushed as hard as possible and then recovered over the weekend quite quickly, because we knew we had the chance to be in the top five. When you start a season as we did this year and you fall down and you fight back again, it’s just really important for the team and for us.

Q: And what are your thoughts about next weekend in Japan?
TG: It’s good to go to Japan with a podium and P2. I don’t know how our car will be in Suzuka but I think the high speed corners suit our car, so I’m looking forward to it and hopefully we can be on the podium again in Suzuka. That would be great.

Q: Fernando, I’m sure it’s also important timing for you and your team.
FA: Yeah, no doubt. It was a very important podium for Renault and they deserve this podium after all the difficulties the team had over the last two weeks, plus they have had some unlucky moments in some races when we’ve lost the possibility of podiums. I think this weekend everything came to us and we took the benefit of some circumstances like yesterday in qualifying when I think the lap was good and fifth position was better than expected. Today, running fifth, with the two penalties for Rosberg and Vettel we recovered these two positions. We made no mistakes, we kept the concentration to one hundred per cent all through the race and we knew that we were not super fast here in Singapore this weekend but if we didn’t make any mistakes we could be on the podium and we did it.

Q: All three of you were in the top four last year here; how important is it to have that experience here?
FA: It’s very important. I think it’s one of those circuits which you either like or don’t like. There’s no halfway. The people who don’t like it never find the right way, they lack confidence in some corners, it’s difficult to attack in qualifying and we know how important qualifying is on a street circuit where it’s difficult to overtake. I didn’t know that all of us were in the top four last year but I’m happy to repeat those positions.

QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

Q: (Frederic Ferret – L’Equipe) Fernando, the hard times that you’ve had these last few weeks, did they give you extra motivation for this race and this weekend?
FA: Not really. I think we arrive very motivated to every race, so it was no different this time. Obviously now that we have this podium, I would like to dedicate it to Flavio, who watched the race at home, for sure. Part of the success this season is due to him, to the great job that the team did. I think the whole team deserved this podium because it has a been difficult for everybody, for the mechanics, the engineers, stressful weeks for them and now everything is clear, everything is behind us and we look forward with this initial podium.

Q: (Sudhir Chandran – Chequered Flag) Lewis, when my mother was in hospital some years ago, I spoke to the doctor and he said that you get just three chances to revive. This is 61 laps here, demanding clinical precision and you still come out strong, so whom do you give the credit to: your father for keeping a stoic face but then smiling at the end of it? To Nicole (Scherzinger) for being very subdued this year but smiling big time at the end? Or to the team for sweating it out and saying ‘hey man, we did this?’
LH: I always think it’s a job done by a lot of people. We wouldn’t have had the pace here if it wasn’t for the guys back at the factory who don’t always get the acknowledgement but they’re always there for me. But they are the guys that are working non-stop, really trying to get these components out, making sure that we compete for wins. But for me, the one person for me is God. He’s the one who has given me the opportunity to be here, he’s the one that keeps me healthy, has blessed me with a great family and great people around me. I think that answers it.

Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Lewis, is third place in the Constructors’ Championship your goal at the moment?
LH: Definitely, definitely. I think the team would be very happy with that. It doesn’t really have too much importance exactly where I finish in the championship. If you’re not first, then it doesn’t matter where you are really. First is where you want to be, but for the team, after the hard work they’ve put in, they’ve had a couple of tough years but they’ve done a great job this year and they deserve to first make a step forward and hopefully at least get third, that would be great for them.

Q: (Frederic Ferret – L’Equipe) Fernando, how do you rate this third place? Is it the maximum opportunity that you took? Or do you think you can get on the podium again before the end of the year?
FA: Obviously you never know, but I think here was the best chance for us to get a podium. Knowing that there are some very demanding circuits to come in terms of aerodynamics like Suzuka and we would not have improvements on the car and there are some other teams that keep producing new pieces, so we know that every race is going to be more and more difficult for us. So I think we were quite confident here in Singapore and we take this podium back home to all the guys back at the factory and from now on we will obviously try, starting from Suzuka next weekend but I think it will be more difficult, for sure, than it has been here.

Q: (Michael Schmidt – Auto Motor und Sport) Lewis, according to people who listen to television, you had some conversation with your team in the early stages of the race about KERS. Did you have to switch it off?
LH: No, no. It was working the whole time, as far as I was concerned, but they came across on the radio saying that there was possibly a problem with it, but I wasn’t seeing that. I just had to make some switch changes. I believe I had to disengage it and re-engage it or something like that, restart it, reboot it. Like I don’t have enough things to think about in the car, pressing all these buttons, but it was good fun!

Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Lewis, looking at the championship today, Jenson (Button) got the most out of it, even if he started in the worst position. Do you think that at this point it’s almost finished for him? I mean, he has 17 points over Rubens with three races to go.
LH: I don’t know where he finished today, but if he’s done a good job, that’s good for him and his team. But let’s not forget, I was leading by 17 points with two races to go and I lost it. It’s very, very, very tough, right up until the last moment, so I just suggest that they all keep pushing and we will see over the next few races but he’s done a fantastic job up until now, so I wish him all the best.

Q: (Don Kennedy – Hawke’s Bay Today) Fernando, given that you seem to be the key to the drivers’ market for 2010, does this podium help you make the decision as to which team you might drive for next year, including it could possibly be Ferrari?
FA: No, this podium doesn’t change anything. I took the decision already, so soon we will know.

Q: (Don Kennedy – Hawke’s Bay Today) Are you going to tell us?
FA: If you pay a good amount.
LH: I’ll give you a tenner, ten euros.
FA: Not enough. At least twenty!

Q: (Frederic Ferret – L’Equipe) Timo, you said you now have the car you had at the beginning of the season. Do you think you could win a race before the end of the year?
TG: It’s difficult to say. Singapore is a completely different race track. As I said, a driver can make a difference here. I think that as the teams are really, really close together, it becomes more and more difficult for us to win a race, but I would say that I will fight as long as possible and I will never give up. There will be a time when we have the chance to win a race and it will come and if we work as we have this weekend and really concentrate with little steps, little improvements on the car, then I think something is possible. When conditions are changing, maybe a wet race or whatever, there is another chance again, but at the moment I think we have to be realistic. The top two teams are still a step ahead of us, so it will be difficult.
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Monday, July 27, 2009

Soccer: Beckham clashes anew with another fan

David Beckham has clashed with another fan just one week after an ugly confrontation with spectators during his first home match for the Los Angeles Galaxy after returning from Italy.The latest incident saw the 34-year-old exchange words with a male in the crowd, who was wearing an England shirt, during the Galaxy's 1-1 draw with the Kansas City Wizards on Saturday.

Beckham appeared to take offence at something the man said, and later claimed the spectator had insulted his wife, Victoria.

"He shouldn't actually be wearing that shirt because what he was saying about my wife was a disgrace," Beckham said.

The former England captain was on Friday fined £600 by Major League Soccer over his earlier confrontation with fans.

Beckham had received a less than friendly welcome at his first home game after returning from a five-month loan spell at AC Milan - the team the Galaxy were playing.
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NBA: Gooden to sign 1-year deal with Mavericks

The Dallas Mavericks have struck a deal with unrestricted free agent Drew Gooden to make use of some of the money they got back when Orlando matched their offer sheet earlier this month to restricted free agent Marcin Gortat.

Gooden announced via his Twitter feed shortly past midnight Saturday that he is signing with the Mavericks. "Dallas here I come," he wrote. In response, Mavericks owner Mark Cuban tweeted: "Welcome Drew."

Sources with knowledge of the deal said that Gooden is receiving a one-year contract worth a guaranteed $4.5 million with incentives that will likely take it beyond $5 million by season's end. A formal announcement of the signing is expected Monday or Tuesday.

Gooden had previously announced via Twitter on Friday that he would be "making my decision tomorrow on which team I will be playing for." Sources said that Gooden had narrowed his final choices to Dallas, Cleveland and Charlotte.

Despite leg and abdominal injuries that cost him 31 games last season, Gooden was highly coveted in February after negotiating a buyout with the Sacramento Kings and wound up signing with the San Antonio Spurs. It's believed that he'll get a shot at starting at center for the Mavericks ahead of Erick Dampier, after that spot had been earmarked for Gortat with a five-year, $34 million offer sheet early in free agency.

Although he had a minimal impact in San Antonio's first-round loss to Dallas -- averaging 7.3 points and 3.8 rebounds in 17.8 minutes -- Gooden fared better in 19 regular-season games with the Spurs, averaging 9.8 points and 4.4 rebounds in just 16.8 minutes per game. He posted a double-double (12 points and 13 rebounds) in his only game with the Kings after arriving with Andres Nocioni in Sacramento as part of the deal that sent Brad Miller and John Salmons to the Bulls.

The Mavericks will be Gooden's seventh team in eight seasons of a career that has been unsettled since his rookie season, when he was dealt from Memphis to Orlando after being selected by the Grizzlies with the fourth overall pick.

Yet he's just 27 and has the ability -- when his focus is there -- to provide a low-post scoring option that Dallas has lacked, whether he starts or comes off the bench. Finishing games is hardly assured, as Dallas is apt to close with a small-ball lineup of Jason Kidd, Jason Terry, Josh Howard, Shawn Marion and Dirk Nowitzki to maximize its offensive firepower. But Gooden should have ample opportunity to supplant Dampier, who is entering what is widely considered to be his final season in Dallas.

Gooden will be asked to fill the void created by the departure of face-up forward Brandon Bass, who signed a four-year deal with Orlando worth $16 million while the Mavericks' money was tied up in their offer sheet to Gortat. Taking the full seven days allowed by league rules, Orlando stunned many league observers by deciding to match on Gortat -- given that Dwight Howard's backup will essentially be a $12 million player next season when the luxury-tax costs are factored in -- after signing Bass.

Gooden would be the Mavericks' second prominent newcomer this season following its recent trade acquisition of Shawn Marion. Dallas awarded a five-year deal worth nearly $40 million to Marion in a sign-and-trade arrangement featuring three other teams and also re-signed point guard Jason Kidd to a three-year deal worth $25 million.
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Formula 1: Massa to miss Hungarian Grand Prix after undergoing surgery

Ferrari’s Felipe Massa will not race in Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix following his high-speed qualifying crash at the Hungaroring, the team have confirmed. Massa was airlifted to AEK Hospital in Budapest, where he is in a stable condition.

“Felipe was conscious at the arrival at the hospital,” said a Ferrari statement, adding that Massa had suffered a cut on his forehead, concussion and a bone lesion of the skull. Massa underwent surgery to treat these conditions, the outcome of which was positive. He will now remain under observation in intensive care.

The Brazilian speared off the track and into the tyre wall at Turn 4 late in the Q2 session after a rear damper spring that had come loose from the Brawn car of Rubens Barrichello struck his helmet.

Medics were quickly in attendance and the start of Q3 was delayed as they extricated the Brazilian. After initial examinations at the medical centre, Massa, eighth fastest in Q2, was transferred to hospital for further treatment.

Ferrari are expected to release an update on Massa's condition on Sunday morning.
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Cycling: Lance Armstrong a favorite for 2010 Tour de France



Christophe Ena / Associated Press
Lance Armstrong, who finished third in the Tour de France on Sunday, is a favorite to win the race in 2010 with his new team.
The seven-time Tour champion finished third in this year's race and will be the leader of a possibly powerful RadioShack team next season.Armstrong stood on the podium in Paris on Sunday in the spot reserved for the third-place finisher of the Tour de France, a couple of rungs below where the seven-time Tour winner is accustomed but a placing that earned the 37-year-old Texan as much applause as that given Astana teammate Contador.

His comeback also became the impetus for the formation of a third American-based pro cycling team.

Team RadioShack will begin racing next season with Armstrong as its lead rider, with Armstrong's long-time associate Johan Bruyneel as its likely director and rumors of everyone from three-time Amgen Tour of California winner Levi Leipheimer to the Schleck brothers Andy (2009 Tour runner-up) and Frank as possible members of the new powerhouse squad.

As has been the case for most of this 2009 Tour, the other two American-based teams were in the thick of Sunday's finish as well.

Mark Cavendish, a brash British sprinter, won his sixth stage, this time on the Champs Elysees for Columbia-HTC, a team based in San Luis Obispo.

To win, Cavendish fought off a strong challenge from American Tyler Farrar of the Boulder-based Garmin-Slipstream. Garmin's Bradley Wiggins, another Briton, finished fourth overall.

Dave Cassaro, president of advertising sales for Comcast Network (which includes Versus), had attracted sponsors such as Cadillac and Infiniti to this year's Versus broadcast and, with numbers that as of Thursday were up an average of 95% over the Lance-less 2008 Tour, said he was bullish on cycling.

"What's happened this season, with Columbia and Garmin, plus with Lance proving his staying power, this is only going to get bigger," Cassaro said.

Garmin-Slipstream director Jonathan Vaughters said by telephone from Paris on Sunday that the addition of Team RadioShack and the continued presence of Armstrong in the peloton can be nothing but good.

"It's the best-case scenario," Vaughters said. "We're going to have to watch each other, we're going to possibly have the three best teams in the world all based in America, it doesn't have any negative impact. We've all got our sponsors, so from a business perspective it's good."

Steve Johnson, chief executive of USA Cycling, also spoke Sunday from France. He said USA Cycling's membership had grown annually between 5% and 6% during Armstrong's 1999-2005 reign as Tour champion, then dropped to less than 4% in the three years of Armstrong's retirement. "This year," Johnson said, "it's back up over 5%, and I'm optimistic it will be higher next year."

A beneficiary of Armstrong's 2010 return could be the Amgen Tour of California, which is moving from the February racing dates of its first four years to May 16-23 next year. The switch was made to ensure better weather and allow for a possible mountaintop finish in the Sierras, but it also puts the U.S. race in direct conflict with the Giro d'Italia, which is, along with the Tour de France and Spanish Vuelta, considered one of the top three stage races in the world.

Tour of California director Andrew Messick, who watched Saturday's Mont Ventoux finish in France, said he "expected" that top American teams would race in California with their top American riders. "Lance, Levi, George Hincapie would, I think, race here," Messick said.

Whether Armstrong, who at 37 was already the second-oldest podium finisher in the race's history, can win an eighth yellow jersey in 2010 will be argued to the sport's benefit for the next year.

Jim Ochowicz, former Olympian and founder of one of the first U.S. pro teams, 7-Eleven, watched several stages in person and left with a strong impression of Armstrong.

"With his broken collarbone this year," Ochowicz said, "it was remarkable that he finished on the podium. If he stays healthy and trains all year and has a strong team, yes, he can win."

Vaughters disagrees.

"I don't think Lance will win," he said. "But that doesn't mean he won't have a strong impact. And that's good."
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NBA: Lamar Odom and Lakers resume talks

Is the table being set again?

A week after the Lakers pulled a pair of contract offers to Lamar Odom off the table, the sides resumed talks Wednesday.The discussions were labeled productive, but there was nothing to report "at the moment," according to a source familiar with negotiations who was not authorized to comment publicly.

It didn't look great last week for Odom's return to the Lakers after the franchise yanked its offers of three years and $30 million or four years and $36 million, with the fourth year only partially guaranteed.

But the sides began communicating in a more positive light Wednesday. Financial details were not immediately available, though the Lakers were not expected to have improved their initial offers. If anything, the offers might have dropped slightly.

Odom, who will be 30 in November, was a key part of the Lakers' championship run, and his teammates, including Kobe Bryant and Derek Fisher, have unilaterally expressed a desire for his return.

On the other hand, the Lakers are conscious about veering too far into luxury-tax territory. They have already allocated $83.8 million to 12 players next season, which would mean an additional luxury-tax penalty of $13.9 million.

Last season, the Lakers' payroll was $78.2 million and they paid an additional $7.2 million in luxury taxes.

If the Lakers don't get Odom, their options are slim other than a trade. They can sign a veteran forward for about $1 million. They also must decide by Aug. 1 whether to bring back seldom-used guard Sun Yue for $736,000 next season. The Lakers have also considered forward Shelden Williams.

The Lakers have used both spending tools given to teams that are over the salary cap -- the "mid-level exception" of $5.8 million next season was spent on Ron Artest and the "bi-annual exception" of $2 million next season was given to reserve guard Shannon Brown, who re-signed with the team for two years and $4.2 million.

Odom was on the Lakers' books for $14.1 million last season, but will obviously have to take a pay cut. The Miami Heat has expressed interest in him, though the cap-strapped team could offer only a mid-level deal worth $34 million.

The Lakers took their offers to Odom off the table last week after learning he was engaging in discussions with the Heat.

The Lakers will wait until the Odom situation is resolved before signing Bryant to a contract extension.

Bryant will get $23 million next season and is expected to receive an extension on top of it that would pay him $134 million to $138 million over the next five seasons, depending on salary-cap figures to be determined in July 2011. Bryant will be 31 next month.
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Formula 1: Massa’s condition improving says official

Injured Ferrari driver Felipe Massa’s condition is said to be improving, according to a Hungarian government official. Massa remains stable in a Budapest hospital following his high-speed crash at the Hungaroring on Saturday, in which his helmet was struck by a loose spring from the car of fellow Brazilian Rubens Barrichello.

Massa underwent emergency surgery for a fractured skull on Saturday evening before being placed in an artificially induced coma to aid his recovery. He was awoken briefly for a CT scan on Sunday morning, the signs of which were positive, before resting peacefully again overnight.

On Monday a Hungarian Defence Ministry spokesman reported that Massa is now able to communicate ‘actively’ and can move his hands and legs, suggesting that he has not suffered significant brain damage.

"He's woken up (from sedation) more and more often now and he's able to communicate actively, that is, he reacts when he's talked to,” Istvan Bocskai told Hungarian television. “We are optimistic - in our hope a slow recovery is beginning."

Ferrari chairman Luca di Montezemolo is due visit Massa in the AEK Hospital on Monday, after dedicating the team’s second-place finish in Sunday’s Hungarian race to his absent driver.

"I hope I will have good news," Montezemolo told Ferrari’s website. "Today's result, the best in this difficult season so far, is for Felipe!”

In addition to members of his family, who flew into Budapest on Sunday, Massa has also had visits from Barrichello, Bernie Ecclestone and several members of the Ferrari team, including team principal Stefano Domenicali.

http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2009/7/9686.html
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Sunday, July 26, 2009

Formula 1: Hamilton earns first victory in Hungary

Lewis Hamilton brought McLaren their first victory of the season after a surprise result in Hungary on Sunday afternoon, his dominant success also marking Martin Whitmarsh’s first as team principal and the first for a KERS-equipped car. Kimi Raikkonen was second for Ferrari, containing a challenge from Mark Webber’s Red Bull.

Hamilton’s hopes of snatching P1 at the start were thwarted as lightweight Fernando Alonso blasted off the line from pole and quickly opened a lead in his Renault, and Mark Webber slotted his Red Bull back inside the McLaren in Turn One to regain second.

Hamilton stayed close to Webber, however, and slipped ahead around the outside of Turn Two on the fourth lap. After the first round of pits stops he really got the hammer down to build a seven-second lead over similarly fast-starting Raikkonen, the pair benefiting from their KERS systems.

The Finn was put under investigation for first corner brushes with Hamilton and Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel, but was cleared by the race stewards and secured a strong second place ahead of Webber. Raikkonen overtook Webber in their first stops on the 19th lap after what the Australian described as a moment of confusion as his car was refuelled. Red Bull were later reprimanded for releasing the Australian unsafely, which almost led to a collision with the Ferrari.

It was a bad day for the other title contenders. Vettel went from second to seventh by the end of the first lap, lost time in traffic, and then slid a lap down after an unscheduled stop for a new nose proved the prelude to retirement with a suspected suspension problem.

Jenson Button was unable to make real use of a long-run opening stint strategy in his Brawn but seventh place earned him two crucial points. He now leads with 70 from Webber on 51.5, Vettel on 47 and Rubens Barrichello on 44. Brawn continue to lead the constructors’ championship on 114, with Red Bull closer still on 98.5s.

There was a strong fourth place finish for Nico Rosberg and Williams, ahead of Heikki Kovalainen whose points brought further joy to McLaren. Timo Glock was sixth for Toyota after a very long opening stint, then came Button and a long gap before Toyota’s Jarno Trulli took the final point after holding off strong challenges from Williams’ Kazuki Nakajima and Barrichello to the flag.

Alonso’s opening dash came to nought after he lost the right front wheel following his early pit stop on Lap 12 and then had to retire because of associated damage. Besides Vettel, the other non-finisher was Force India's Adrian Sutil, the victim of a first-lap brush.

The BMW Saubers of Nick Heidfeld and Robert Kucica were 11th and 12th, sandwiching Nelson Piquet’s Renault, while Giancarlo Fisichella brought his Force India home a lapped 14th. Far from proving ‘dangerous’, as some had suggested, rookie Jaime Alguersuari did a great job to match lap times with Toro Rosso team mate Sebastian Buemi, and to lead him home after the Swiss twice spun. The Spaniard never put a wheel wrong.
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Thursday, July 23, 2009

NBA: No. 1 pick Griffin sidelined with shoulder injury


LAS VEGAS (AP)-Blake Griffin has pulled out of USA Basketball's minicamp
because of a strained right shoulder, possibly hurting the No. 1 pick's
chances of playing next year in the world championships.

USA Basketball officials were told Wednesday that Griffin was unable to play
because he was injured during the third of the Los Angeles Clippers' five
summer league games. He will spend the next three to four weeks resting the
shoulder.

U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski said Tuesday he was looking forward to seeing
Griffin play this week.

Griffin averaged 19.2 points and 10.8 rebounds in the summer league and was
chosen the league's MVP. Clippers physician Dr. Steven Shimoyama diagnosed
the injury Tuesday and Dr. Lewis Yocum confirmed the diagnosis after an
examination Wednesday.

The minicamp is being used to identify candidates for available spots on the
U.S. team in the world championships. Griffin could still be invited to
compete for a spot next summer.
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NBA: Bryant 'optimistic' Odom will re-sign with Lakers


SINGAPORE (AP)-Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant is optimistic the NBA
champions will re-sign key free agent Lamar Odom .

"I'm optimistic that he'll be back," Bryant said Wednesday at a news
conference in Singapore as part of a six-country Asian tour. "He makes us a
much, much stronger team."

Negotiations broke down last week and the Lakers retracted a contract offer
to Odom. The Miami Heat are also wooing the 6-foot-10 forward.

Odom played a key role off the bench in the Lakers' championship run,
averaging 12.3 points and 9.1 rebounds during the playoffs.

Bryant said forward Ron Artest , who signed as a free agent with the Lakers
earlier this month, will help bolster the team's chances to repeat as
champions.

"I think Ron's going to be a great addition to us," Bryant said. "It's about
how well we play together. No matter how much talent you have, it's about
how you put those pieces of the puzzle together."

Bryant downplayed speculation that Lakers coach Phil Jackson may take some
games off next season because of health problems.

"Who said he's coaching less?" Bryant said. "Phil likes messing with you
guys. He'll be there all the time, unless he has a doctor's appointment to
get to."

Bryant also said he was more likely to agree to play for Team USA at the
World Championships in 2010 and the 2012 London Olympics now that Duke coach
Mike Krzyzewski has committed to lead the team.

Bryant and Krzyzewski won the gold medal at the Beijing Olympics last year.

"I'm very excited to see that he signed on," Bryant said. "It influences all
the guys just because we've been through that experience before and it
becomes like a family."

"It definitely influences me."

Bryant, an 11-time All-Star, said a possible showdown against LeBron James ,
former Lakers teammate Shaquille O'Neal and the Cleveland Cavaliers in next
season's finals would be "crazy."

"Just the hoopla that surrounds it and all the stories that would come out
of it," Bryant said. "If that match up is to happen, we have to take it one
day at a time, we can't get caught up in it being a given that we're going
to be in the finals."

"We have to take care of our business, but that being said, it would be a
heck of a show."
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NBA: Timberwolves pick Rubio to leave Spanish club


GERONA, Spain (AP)-Ricky Rubio plans to part ways with Spanish basketball
club DKV Joventut even if the Minnesota Timberwolves cannot reach a deal to
bring their first round draft pick to the NBA.

Timberwolves president David Kahn was in Spain this week to try and help the
fifth overall pick negotiate a buyout of his contract with Joventut. Rubio
is at odds with his boyhood club over a buyout clause that could cost the
18-year-old point guard as much as $6.6 million. The NBA's collective
bargaining rules limit the Timberwolves' contribution to $500,000.

Regardless of whether Rubio makes the trip across the Atlantic next season,
he won't be playing at Joventut.

"I want to continue with the club but, after everything that's happened, I
don't think they're too comfortable having me in their squad," Rubio said
Wednesday. "I want to play in a winning team, on a team that can achieve
many things."

Rubio signed with Joventut at 14 years old, becoming the youngest player
ever to play in a Spanish ACB League game. He rose to prominence over the
next few years, playing for Spain's silver medal-winning team in the Beijing
Olympics at 17 and becoming a popular player thanks to his flashy passes and
floppy hair.

Minnesota drafted him fifth overall in June and holds his NBA rights for as
long as Rubio is playing basketball professionally. But it is not exactly
clear what ramifications, if any, Rubio's parting with Joventut has on the
Timberwolves' chances of bringing the popular point guard to the United
States this season.

Rubio has two years remaining on his deal with Joventut. The enormity of the
buyout has a player who made less than $100,000 last season thinking twice
about coming to the NBA right away.

That's what prompted Kahn to hop a plane to Spain on Monday. He met with
Joventut officials to see if he could help resolve the issue, but declined
to comment-both on the news that Rubio will leave Joventut and the trip in
general-when reached by The Associated Press on Wednesday.

Spanish basketball clubs Real Madrid and Barcelona are both interested in
signing Rubio if he cannot make it to the NBA this season. Unlike the
Timberwolves, they are not subject to the collective bargaining rules of the
NBA and could pay the entire buyout fee to get him.

Kahn has said in the past that the rebuilding Timberwolves are willing to
wait a year, or even two, for Rubio to come to Minnesota. But the sooner
Rubio can get there, the better for a franchise that has struggled to fill
seats at Target Center since trading Kevin Garnett to Boston two years ago.

The Timberwolves chose point guard Jonny Flynn out of Syracuse with the
sixth overall pick right behind Rubio last month, so the team has a backup
plan if the Spanish sensation decides to play another year in Europe and
reduce the cost of his buyout.
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NBA: Warriors' Randolph looks long on talent



WALNUT CREEK, Calif. - As Anthony Randolph tried to squeeze his long, lean
frame into a booth at P.F. Chang's this week, his fellow restaurant patrons
gave him little more than a he-must-play-basketball glance. A week removed
from his 20th birthday, Randolph can easily be mistaken for a local college
player. One season with the Golden State Warriors has hardly made him a
recognizable face, even in the Bay Area.

But if Randolph's recent performance in the NBA's summer league is any
indication, the locals will know him well soon enough.

Randolph averaged a Vegas summer league record 26.8 points, along with 8.5
rebounds, 3.0 blocks and 2.3 steals. In a game against the Chicago Bulls, he
scored 42 points. Los Angeles Clippers rookie forward Blake Griffin was
named the summer league's Most Outstanding Player, but it was Randolph who
had most league executives and scouts buzzing with his quick first step,
fearless dunks, improved jump shot and all-around versatility.

"He's the real deal," gushed one Western Conference scout. "He reminds me of
Lamar Odom ."

Randolph is generating equal parts praise and regret from rival teams, many
of who passed him over in last summer's draft. Though he fell to the
Warriors at No. 14, Randolph now looks capable of joining Chicago Bulls
point guard Derrick Rose as one of the top two elite players of the 2008
class.

Randolph's improvement over the second half of last season had already begun
to open eyes, including several pairs on his own team. Warriors coach Don
Nelson was hard on Randolph, whose work ethic was openly questioned to the
point that rival teams said Golden State made him available in trade talks.

"In January, they would've given him away for a bag of balls," one West
executive said. "By March, you couldn't touch him."

After averaging 7.9 points, 5.8 rebounds and 1.17 blocks last season,
Randolph was back in the gym just three weeks after the Warriors failed to
make the playoffs. He worked on his shooting and ball-handling, and just as
importantly, spent considerable time in the weight room.

"He almost died doing that," Warriors assistant coach Keith Smart said of
Randolph's workouts. "I went to watch him at one of the local colleges and
he had nothing in the tank."

The hard work has paid off: Randolph, who was listed as 6-foot-10, 205
pounds last season, has since added about 10 pounds of muscle and is said to
have also grown an inch. Warriors officials think there's room for both his
frame - and game - to expand.

"I don't know where the ceiling is for Anthony, but it's awfully high,"
Warriors general manager Larry Riley said. ". He's probably about two years
away from being as good as he can be."

Scouts think Randolph's all-around skills will enable him to play like a
point forward in the Warriors' go-go-go offense. As one East GM said, "he's
perfect for Nellie's system."

While it's not etched in stone until Nelson says so, Randolph is expected to
start for the Warriors at power forward next season. Warriors officials have
downplayed their interest in Utah's Carlos Boozer , and while the team did
have conversations with the Phoenix Suns about acquiring Amare Stoudemire,
those talks have since cooled. For now, the Warriors seem intent on giving
Randolph every opportunity to prove he is ready to start.

Randolph, in turn, has been wise to keep his summer-league success in
perspective. That 42-point performance? "I was mad after the game," he said,
"because I only grabbed three rebounds."

Randolph is well aware that few summer heroes become legends of the fall.
"Von Wafer and Marcus Banks , they are all-right players, but not
All-Stars," Randolph said of Wafer and Banks, both of whom had previously
scored 42 points in a summer league game. "It doesn't really mean you're
going to have a great season."

USA Basketball officials, however, were impressed enough. They added
Randolph to this week's minicamp in Las Vegas, where some of the NBA's top
young players hope to compete for roster spots on the national team for the
2010 World Championships in Turkey. Randolph will face long odds in making
the cut for next summer or for the 2012 Olympics. Still, he's determined to
use the minicamp to not only prove he should some day wear the red, white
and blue, but also show that his summer league dominance wasn't a fluke.

"You have to respect everybody, but at the same time you have to go at
them," Randolph said. "They're blocking my path to where I want to go to. I
look at them as a wall that I want to go through."

If it's stardom that Randolph hopes to reach, he's already made some modest
progress. As he walked out of P.F. Chang's after dinner, a young woman shyly
approached him and said, "Hi, Anthony." Soon, she had gathered her girls to
take a photo with him.

Randolph smiled. Eating his shrimp dumplings in peace might not be so easy
next summer.
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NCAA: Light Bomber Saret shoots 89 points


MANILA, Philippines - It was just one of those days when the rim looked
bigger than usual for Jose Rizal University high school guard Joshua Saret.

Nailing baskets from all over the floor, the 5-foot-8 playmaker knocked in a
staggering 89 points to shatter the NCAA single game scoring record in the
Light Bombers' 171-43 annihilation of the Angeles University Foundation
Junior Danes yesterday at the FilOil Flying V Arena in San Juan.

Almost lost in the din of Saret's record-shattering performance was the
Heavy Bombers' 82-53 conquest of the AUF Great Danes that gave JRU a fifth
straight victory and a share of the lead with the San Sebastian Stags in the
seniors' division.

Later, Emilio Aguinaldo College finally barged into the win column as the
Generals stunned Mapua, 80-69.

Saret, a senior, had 43 in the first two quarters, scored 19 in the third
before capping his performance with 27 in the final period.

He obliterated the previous record of 82 points set by former teammate Keith
Agovida last season.

"When he scored 43 in the first half, I told him to go for the scoring
record," said JRU juniors coach Boy de Vera, whose team improved to 4-1.

Playing the entire game, Saret actually finished with a rare
quadruple-double, grabbing 11 rebounds, dishing out 12 assists and posting
13 steals.

The scores:

First Game (Jrs)

JRU 171-Saret 89, Garcia 17, Vigil 17, Vasquez 10, Barranco 10, Oliveria 9,
dela Paz 8, Fegidero 6, Rosales 2, Yasa 2, Ludovice 1, Damian 0, Rodriguez
0, Tnaquntic 0, Ocampo 0.

AUF 43-Gando 18, Bondoc 10, Dizon 5, Maniti 4, Lakandula 3, Castilllejos 2,
Olalia 1, Tuazon 0, Tamayo 0, Sanchez 0, Cayanan 0.

Quarters: 41-12, 85-22, 125-32, 171-43

Second Game (Jrs)

EAC 98-Canaynay 35, Alanes 26, Guinita 19, Cuello 10, Booc 3, Mayone 2,
Magtaas 1, Ocampo 1, Onwubere 1, Denora 0.

MAPUA 93-Aviso 22, Sevilla 19, Valdez 12, Mena 10, Alejandro 8, Basas 8,
Abad 7, de Castro 4, dela Cruz 3, Macalino 0.

Quarters: 20-23, 32-37, 81-81, 91-91, 98-93

Third Game (Srs)

JRU 82-Sena 19, Agas 13, Wilson 12, Cagoco 11, Lopez 7, Njei 4, Matute 4,
Hayes 4, Kabigting 3, Apinan 2, Bulangis 2, Montemayor 1, Salazar 0, Gabriel
0.

AUF 53-Carney 17, Fuertez 14, Manarang 7, Gigante 5, Nacu 4, Santos 2, Musni
2, Gomez 2, Maniago 0, Dumlao 0.

Quarters: 17-11, 35-27, 61-42, 82-53

EAC 80-Santos 22, Mendoza 18, Cubo 13, R. Yaya 10, L. Yaya 10, Jabaybay 3,
Dolanto 2, del Rosario 2, Chiong 0, Liwag 0, Sablan 0, Ong 0.

MAPUA 69-Raneses 15, Guillermo 13, Acosta 12, Mangahas 11, Pascual 6,
Cornejo 4, Soriano 2, Espinosa 2, Cinco 2, Sarangay 0, Maniego 0, Equipilog
0.

Quarters: 18-10, 35-34, 55-50, 80-69
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Boxing: Roach sets eight-week camp for Pacman


FREDDIE ROACH THINKS MANNY PACQUIAO is in for a tough fight against Miguel
Cotto on Nov. 14 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

But the famed trainer also feels that his prized ward will come out the
winner of the fight set at a catch weight of 145 pounds.

Pacquiao, the International Boxing Organization light welterweight titlist,
has been installed as an early 2-1 favorite over Cotto, the World Boxing
Organization welterweight champion.

Roach said he plans to conduct at least an eight-week training camp for
Pacquiao at his Wild Card Gym in Hollywood.

The serious buildup starts after the fight's press tour calendared in Los
Angeles (Sept. 9), New York (Sept. 10) and San Juan, Puerto Rico, (Sept.
12).

Noting Pacquiao's impressive wins in his last two fights, an eight-round
stoppage of Oscar De La Hoya and a two-round demolition of Ricky Hatton,
Roach told Brad Cooney of 8countnews.com via podcast on Tuesday that he's
very confident the world's best pound-for-pound fighter will emerge
victorious over the Puerto Rican.

Cotto was described by Roach as a "solid fighter and a game guy who likes to
fight," adding that Pacquiao has to deal with the Puerto Rican's perceived
built-in advantage in size and strength.

This early, Roach said he wants to watch tapes of Cotto's previous fights,
specifically his triumph over Shane Mosley, to come up with a game plan.

"We'll be ready for this fight," Roach said.
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PBA: ROOKIE CAMP SLATED JULY 28, 30 & 31


PROSPECTIVE applicants for this year's Rookie Draft get to show both their
physical and mental skills when the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA)
hold its traditional rookie camp in two different venues at the end of the
month.

The camp is set on July 28, 30 and 31, with supervisor of officials Ramil
Cruz acting as camp director.

The first day of the event will be a whole-day affair at the Club 650 gym in
Libis, Quezon City from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Initial activities include measurement of the rookies' physical aspects from
height, wing span to current weight.

Then skills and strength evaluation follows, from the simple push ups, bench
press, sit ups, sprints to pull ups.

Finally in the afternoon, drills will be conducted, with participants
engaging in agility, shooting, dribbling and fastbreak activities.

The camp takes a break the following day, but resumes on July 30-31 with all
rookies seeing action in the four-game schedule to be played at the Caruncho
gym in Pasig City.

All participants will be split into four teams. Group 1 plays Group 3 in the
first game at 2 p.m., while Group 2 clashes with Group 4 at 4 p.m.

The final day of the camp is a crossover double header between Group 1 vs.
Group 2 (2 p.m.) and Group 3 vs. Group 4 (4 p.m.).

The official rookie team rosters will be sent out this Friday (July 24),
although coaching assignments are going to be announced later.

This year's PBA Rookie Draft is set August 2 at the Market Market Place in
Taguig.

Burger King own's the no. 1 overall pick.
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Basketball: RP team succumbs to Lebanon


NATIONALS LOSE ANEW TO LEBANON

TAIPEI - The halftime music in the Powerade Team Pilipinas-Lebanon game -
the Eagles' "Take It Easy" - turned out to be a plea for mercy that echoed
before Fadi El-Khatib and company lowered the boom in the fourth quarter.

El-Khatib, the Lebanese leader, finished with 14 points and rode the
backseat to Dallas-born Brian Feghali and naturalized player Jackson Vroman
as Lebanon drubbed the Nationals, 95-83, Wednesday in the 31st William Jones
Cup tournament at the Hsinchuang gym here.

Feghali, who played three years for Louisiana State in the US NCAA, led
Lebanon with 29 points, including five 3-pointers, and 10 rebounds, while
Vroman, the replacement for Joseph Vogel, added 24 points with seven
rebounds, four assists, and five steals.

The Philippines outrebounded the Lebanese, 36-28, but turned the ball over
on 27 occasions, 12 more than the opposition.

"We just beat ourselves, and too many fouls were called on us," said
national coach Yeng Guiao, noting the RP team was awarded 15 free throws and
the Lebanese 32.

Flexing it muscle on the rare occasions it needed to, Lebanon moved up to
solo second behind unbeaten Jordan (4-0).

Three other teams - Iran, South Korea and host Taiwan - are tied at third to
fifth with 3-1 slates.

After dropping their first two games and beating Kazakhstan, the Nationals
lost their next two, falling to 1-4 just above Taiwan-B (1-5) and the
winless Kazakhs (0-5).

The RP team trailed 50-35 late in the second quarter on the strength of
Brian Feghali's outside shooting before James Yap closed out the first half
with seven straight points.

Behind Kerby Raymundo, the Nationals came back to narrow the gap at 59-57
midway in the third quarter before the veteran El-Khatib drained a
three-point shot to spark a 15-5 Lebanon run to end the RP uprising.

Four more games remain in the country's schedule, with South Korea, a
groupmate in the 25th FIBA Asia Men's Championship in Tianjin, China next
month, up next this Thursday.

In an earlier game, Jordan (4-0) kept an unblemished slate intact by
crushing previously unbeaten South Korea, 83-67, as Rasheim Wright scored 21
points and the defense forced the usually accurate Korean snipers (3-1) to
miss 20 three-point shots.

Before that, Iran (3-1), powered by 7-foot-3 Hamed Ehadadi, who had 18
points and 11 rebounds, routed Japan (1-3), 82-70, and later, Taiwan-B upset
Kazakhstan, 82-69, picking up its first win while handing the Kazakhs their
fifth straight setback.

The scores:

LEBANON 95 - Feghali 29, Vroman 24, El-Khatib 14, Fahed 11, Nour 9, Mahmoud
4, Turk 3, Kanaan 1.

POWERADE-RP 83 - Helterbrand 12, Raymundo 11, Yap 11, Pennisi 9, Santos 7,
Norwood 7, Aguilar 6, Baguio 4, Thoss 3, Taulava 3.

Quarterscores: 30-19; 50-42; 78-66; 95-73
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Wednesday, July 22, 2009

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Basketball: Japan beats RP Team

Japan edged out Powerade-Pilipinas in a William Jones Cup game that both teams played at half-throttle, but national coach Yeng Guiao believed there were valuable lessons gained from the defeat.

“Our emphasis before the game was to learn as much as we can from the Japanese,” Guiao said after an 87-85 loss to Japan which dug itself out from a 19-point hole at the Hsinchuang Gymnasium here.

“We know deep in our hearts that we can beat them,” he added. “There were just lapses on our part, some mental mistakes.

“But we can handle them come (Tianjin) China,” Guiao assured Filipino scribes, referring to the Fiba Asia world championship qualifier where Japan, South Korea and Sri Lanka are bracketed in the same group with the Philippines.

Japan also tried to conceal some of its aces during the game, but went all out in the stretch by unleashing its veterans and dealing the Philippines its third loss in four outings in this nine-team event.

The Japanese (1-2) drew 24 points and eight rebounds from 6-foot-10 center Kosuke Takeuchi, and 12 points, two assists and two blocks from guard Shin Kashiwagi, who rejected Jayjay Helterbrand’s potential game-winning triple try at the buzzer.

Japeth Aguilar shot 17 points and had seven rebounds in sustaining his improved play. His excellent form made him a shoo-in for the final 12-man roster for Tianjin which Guiao, consultant Jong Uichico and the rest of the coaching staff were deciding on Tuesday night.

Guiao declined to identify the two players who will be cut at the end of this tournament. The Philippines hopes to submit the team’s final roster the end of office hours today, the deadline set by the Fiba.

The Philippines made 9 of 26 attempts from the three-point arc as Willie Miller, again starting out at the point, finished with 14 markers and five rebounds.

James Yap hit a triple with 4:45 left in the second period to give the Filipinos their biggest lead of the game, 36-17.

Japan, however, pruned this down to four points at the end of the half as Guiao tried different combinations and the enemy began to connect from the field.

A three-point play by Kei Iragashi off Kerby Raymundo with 7.3 seconds left gave the Japanese an 86-82 lead, which Jared Dillinger cut down with a trey from way out with 4.8 seconds left, 86-85.

Kashiwagi then split his free throws off a Helterbrand foul with four ticks left for what turned out to be the final score. But Helterbrand, after bouncing the ball off the back of Kashiwagi, went for a triple but got rejected.

Lebanon, meanwhile, welcomed Jackson Vroman to the lineup but did not suit up Fadi El-Khatib in a 77-73 decision of Kazakhstan in an earlier game marred by lousy officiating.

The scores:
JAPAN 87—Takeuchi 24, Kashiwagi 12, Takeda 9, Ishizaki 9, Sakurai 7, Orimo 7, Amino 7, Igarashi 5, Ito 4, Okada 3.

POWERADE-PILIPINAS 85—Aguilar 17, Miller 14, Santos 10, Dillinger 8, Thoss 8, Raymundo 5, Yap 5, De Ocampo 5, Norwood 5, Baguio 4, Taulava 2, Helterbrand 2.
Quarters: 12-27, 36-40, 61-61, 87-85
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Golf: Singh boosted by Watson heroics


Vijay Singh believes Tom Watson's showing at the Open can be an inspiration to him and his fellow 40-something golfers.

Singh, 46, has won 22 tournaments since his 40th birthday, more than anyone else in PGA Tour history, but even he was impressed by Watson's runner-up finish at Turnberry on Sunday when the 59-year-old lost a four-hole play-off to fellow American Stewart Cink.

Speaking ahead of his World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational title defence in Akron, Ohio, in two weeks, Fijian Singh was asked if Watson's performance had been inspirational to over 40s.

"Yes, definitely. People are still talking about Tom Watson, I've had more questions about his age and (how that) makes us old guys look great," Singh said.

"I said, 'hang on a second, I'm not that old'.

"But it does. It does give me a lot more inspiration. It would have been great if he had won, but what he did is just incredible. It shows how good of a player he is, and really, that age doesn't really matter.

"If you're healthy and you're fit and your golf game is good, you can play for as long as you want to play, and that gives me a lot more confidence.

"Just like when Tom won the TPC at the age of 48, 47, that shows that you are healthy and that if you can play with the boys, why not?

"That's the kind of feeling that I have, and I think that I can last out here as long as my mind says 'go ahead and do it'."

Singh, with 56 total career wins worldwide, became the oldest player to win a WGC event last August when he held off Lee Westwood, Stuart Appleby and Phil Mickelson with a final-round 68 at Firestone Country Club to land the Bridgestone Invitational.

The victory was his first of 2008 and it served as the springboard for the rest of the campaign as he moved into the PGA Tour's FedExCup play-offs, won two of the four events and captured the FedExCup itself.

After a below-par 2009 to date, with three top-10 finishes from 17 starts, the world number 11 is hoping for a similar kickstart when he returns to Firestone in two weeks.

"I'm really disappointed this year, but I came out of February well, and I just started playing a little too soon and it kind of put me back quite a bit," Singh said.

"Instead of taking two months off, I took a month and a half off, and going to the range created a lot of bad habits for my golf swing. And it took two or three months to get out of it because every time you get out of something, you develop something new.

"But, it was the first time in a long time that I won so late in the season (at the Bridgestone), and that gives me a lot of confidence going back there.

"I'm feeling really confident about the golf course. My golf game is coming around. I just can't wait.

"I have two weeks to practice, and I can't wait to get out there and do it again. So it will be great and I hope it will be the place where it started out."
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Ateneo dominates in UAAP, beats UST

Update: Full Story
MANILA, Philippines - Ateneo's main man spent more time riding the bench, but the Blue Eagles still proved unstoppable, rolling past the University of Santo Tomas Tigers, 93-77, yesterday to grab the solo UAAP men’s basketball lead at the PhilSports Arena.

A bristling shooting performance starring the 5-foot-6 Emman Monfort carried the Blue Eagles to their third straight triumph despite reigning MVP Rabeh Al-Hussaini riding the bench due to early foul trouble.

Monfort, who was cut from the team last year, unloaded 18 points from three-point range to finish with a career-high 20.

“It’s a blessing for us that he’s (Monfort) here,” said Ateneo coach Norman Black. “With Chris Tiu not here anymore, obviously teams are trying to grab Rabeh a lot more. I think right now nobody really respected the game of Emman because nobody really knows him and forgot about him.”

“Every shot I took was open, maybe it’s also a lapse on [UST’s] defense,” said Monfort, the first player coming off the bench this season to lead his team in scoring.

Earlier, the University of the East veterans helped avert another meltdown and the Warriors flogged the National U Bulldogs, 73-59.

“We were able to recover,” said coach Lawrence Chongson, three days after the Warriors blew a 17-point advantage in their 72-57 loss to the Eagles.

Pari Llagas buried nine of his 16 points in the third quarter while Paul Lee collected 14 points, six boards and seven assists for the Warriors, who now share second place with the Tigers at 2-1.

The Eagles outscored the Tigers in a 15-5 run that included three Monfort triples that jacked up Ateneo’s lead from 37-27 to 52-32 late in the second period.

“We’ve done a better job shooting threes this year,” said Black.

Eric Salamat and Ryan Buenafe added 14 points apiece for the Eagles. Al Hussaini, who picked up two fouls right in the first quarter, finished with 13 markers after averaging 22.5 points in the Eagles’ back-to-back victories against preseason favorite Far Eastern University and UE.

In women’s play, the University of the Philippines nipped Ateneo, 48-47, and UST thumped National U, 61-50.

The scores:
First Game
UE 73—Llagas 16, Lee 14, Lingganay 12, Acuña 12, Espiritu 11, Reyes 4, Zamar 2, Duean 2, Tagarda 0.

NU 59—Baloran 19, Ponferrada 11, Hermosisima 11, Malanday 8, Singh 5, Cabaluna 5, Terso 0, Manito 0, Magat 0, Luy 0, Batac 0.
Quarters: 15-18, 36-31, 61-47, 73-59

Second Game
ATENEO 93—Monfort 20, Salamat 14, Buenafe 14, Al-Hussaini 13, Salva 8, Tiongson 7, Long 7, Bacalo 4, Golla 2, De Chavez 2, Chua 2, Sumalinog 0, Reyes 0, Gonzaga 0, Burke 0, Austria 0.

UST 77—Maliksi 20, Ababou 17, Mirza 13, Teng 6, Bautista 6, Afuang 5, Mariano 4, Green 2, Fortuna 2, Camus 2, Ungria 0, Felix 0, Cam 0.
Quarters: 30-21, 52-35, 68-49, 93-77
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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

U.S. begins search for next Olympic team


Even as confident as Jerry Colangelo is that the United States will retain
most of the core of its gold-medal Olympic team, the USA Basketball chairman
concedes this week's minicamp will be important for helping identify the
program's next wave of talent.

Colangelo told Yahoo! Sports in a recent interview he still expects most of
the roster from last summer's Beijing Olympics to return for the 2010 World
Championships and the 2012 Olympics. Among the players he expects to return
are: Kobe Bryant , LeBron James , Dwyane Wade , Dwight Howard , Chris Paul ,
Carmelo Anthony , Chris Bosh and Deron Williams .

Even so, fatigue, free agency and injury could end up changing a star's mind
next summer.

"Generally speaking, you can expect turnover and there should be," Colangelo
said. "That's part of the pipeline. But a number of them say they want to
come back.

"I haven't talked to them lately. But I talked to them all during All-Star
break [in Phoenix] and laid out a plan. If it's my decision, I want them for
two years, 2010 and 2012. 'What do you think? How do you feel?' They all
said, 'Let's do it.' The World Championships are held in high esteem. The
guys who played in Japan [in the 2008 World Championships] still remember
losing to Greece. It's not like we're starting from scratch."

One major challenge for USA Basketball is keeping its stars interested after
last summer's success. Wade, Anthony and James have played for the national
team since the 2004 Athens Olympics. Bryant will be 32 years old during the
World Championships next year in Turkey.

Colangelo, however, has several reasons to believe the U.S. stars will live
up to their word. One is that many of those players appear to have
thoroughly loved the rare experience to be teammates and would hate to miss
out on another opportunity to make more history. They also won't be lacking
for a challenge: The United States hasn't won the World Championships since
1994.

"I will only be 27 years old," Anthony said during the 2008 Olympics. "I
want all the gold medals I can get throughout my career."

The opportunity to play in the 2012 Olympics in London is an easy recruiting
pitch. But will those same players show similar enthusiasm for a long trip
to Turkey and the Worlds' lengthy 24-team tournament? Colangelo has been
trying to sell to his stars that some nations consider the World
Championships to be a more prestigious event than the Olympics.

"We have some unfinished business," Colangelo said. "That's the theme. Let's
take care of that with the next step being the Olympics. It's one thing to
get to the Olympics; it's another to defend it. We're taking it one step at
a time."

U.S. head coach Mike Krzyzewski and his assistant coaching staff of Mike
D'Antoni, Nate McMillan and Jim Boeheim have already committed to return.
USA Basketball is expected to make the announcement during a news conference
this week in Las Vegas.

"If it's not broke, don't fix it," Colangelo said. "There is a good thing in
place. You don't want to make change."

A Chicago native, Colangelo also is on the committee to try to bring the
2016 Olympics to the Windy City. He can envision some of the younger players
from last summer's gold-medal team competing seven years from now. But even
if most of the veteran U.S. stars return for the 2012 London Games, there
will be at least four new players on the roster. Oklahoma City Thunder
forward Kevin Durant is expected to be a lock. Portland Trail Blazers guard
Brandon Roy , who isn't expected to participate in the minicamp, Chicago
Bulls point guard Derrick Rose , Indiana Pacers forward Danny Granger and
Los Angeles Clippers rookie forward Blake Griffin should be also among the
top candidates competing for roster spots.

"The talent will be outstanding," Colangelo said. " . I'm excited to see
them work together with one another."
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NBA: Rubio's buyout could be softened by endorsements


MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-When Matt Delzell takes a look at Ricky Rubio through his
sports marketer's glasses, all he sees are dollar signs.

"He's young. He's Spanish. He's a good-looking kid," said Delzell, a
director for Los Angeles-based Davie Brown Talent, one of the largest talent
buyers in the United States. "There is a lot of hype and buzz that is
already around him."

"Buzz" is that most fickle, slippery of qualities that is harder to get a
grip on than one of the point guard's no-look passes. But Delzell said that
intangible quality, combined with a flashy style of play, a baby face and a
shaggy 'do that is en vogue with young people make the 18-year-old Rubio a
highly marketable commodity in the endorsement world.

That's icing on the cake for most big-time athletes. But for Rubio, who is
facing a contract buyout from his Spanish professional team that could cost
him more than $6 million, it might mean the difference between playing for
the Minnesota Timberwolves in the NBA this year or delaying that dream for
another season or two.

"The majority of the rookies that come into the league aren't faced with
this dilemma," Delzell said. "Whatever they sign for, they get to keep. With
him having to give up so much, he may be more inclined to consider endorsing
opportunities or appearances."

The opportunities should be plentiful for a precocious young talent with the
flair for the dramatic.

Darin David, a director with the sports marketing firm Millsport in Dallas,
said Rubio's appeal both in Europe and the United States would make it
conceivable for him to recoup much of the money he loses on the buyout, if
not all, through endorsements.

"If he is able to deliver the kind of play that's expected of him, then
certainly between the U.S. and Spain he's going to be more popular and have
a lot more interest globally," David said.

Minnesota Timberwolves president of basketball operations David Kahn left on
Monday to fly to Spain to meet with Joventut officials in hopes of reducing
the cost of the buyout.

"I'm hopeful that in some small way I can be helpful in this process and
keep it moving forward and solving the singular the issue, which is the
buyout," he said.

The Timberwolves jumped at the chance to grab Rubio with the fifth overall
pick on draft night, a move that had the 2,000 or so fans at Target Center
for a draft party cheering wildly.

"We understand how special he is. Frankly, how unique he is," Kahn said
after the draft. "There's never been a player like this. Nobody has ever
played in the gold medal game against Team USA at the age of 17. There's no
such thing. It's almost surreal."

Under the rules of the NBA's collective bargaining agreement, the
Timberwolves can only contribute $500,000 to the buyout cause, so Rubio can
use all the help he can get. He made less than $100,000 playing for Joventut
last year, so he is by no means a wealthy man who can just write a check and
be done with it.

That's where the business world comes in.

Rubio signed with Joventut at 14, the youngest player ever to appear in a
game in the competitive Spanish ACB league. His emergence coincided with the
Internet explosion, and his YouTube highlights have drawn massive amounts of
hits after Rubio helped Spain to the silver medal at the Beijing Olympics.

"He's going to be in the news more and more, and people are going to
anticipate more and more what this kid can do on the court," David said. "He
does have that going for him."

Rubio is already appearing in a television commercial for Gillette, a
company that has been aggressive in securing relationships with some of the
biggest names in sports. Rubio appears in the spot with New York Yankees
shortstop Derek Jeter, tennis superstar Roger Federer and golfer Tiger
Woods, perhaps the most recognizable sports figure in the world.

"It's a pretty good start," Delzell said. "Hype got him this commercial. He
hasn't played one second of NBA basketball, but there's already so much
hype."

Hype, of course, will only take him so far. Once he arrives in the States,
Rubio will have to show on the court that he is every bit the "virtuoso" and
"orchestra conductor with the basketball" that Kahn described in a letter to
Timberwolves fans after the draft.

"There are plenty of companies who will say that he's interesting and will
keep an eye on him, but we're not going to invest or commit that significant
amount of money without seeing that he's legit," Delzell said. "So if he
performs, I don't have a doubt that he will be able to make up that buyout
amount. It will come down to performance."
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Timberwolves, Clippers swing 4-player deal


MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-On the same day that he left for Spain to discuss Ricky
Rubio's buyout with DKV Joventut, Minnesota Timberwolves president David
Kahn traded the only veteran point guard he has on his roster.

Was Kahn clearing room for Rubio by sending Sebastian Telfair and forwards
Mark Madsen and Craig Smith to the Los Angeles Clippers for Quentin
Richardson ?

"This is not a precursor of any sort," Kahn said Monday from New York
shortly before he was scheduled to hop a flight across the Atlantic. "We
have no feel yet as to whether Ricky will be joining us."

Rubio has a multimillion-dollar buyout of his contract with Joventut that
threatens to keep him in Spain for another season, or possibly two. Kahn
hopes to lower the number-which could go as high as $6.6 million-to make it
easier for the 18-year-old point guard to join the Timberwolves this season.

The deal, which was first reported by YahooSports.com, also ends Minnesota's
glut at power forward. Smith was a capable scorer off the bench for the
Wolves, but he had trouble getting consistent playing time behind Al
Jefferson and Kevin Love .

For the Clippers, Telfair is another play-making point guard behind Baron
Davis . Smith can put points on the board quickly, while Madsen has shown
the same hustle and chemistry in the locker room that he did when he played
for the rival Lakers.

"We are really excited to add these three players to our team," Clippers
general manager and coach Mike Dunleavy said. "This move really gives some
much needed depth."

The Clippers thinned their ranks of big men by trading Randolph, leaving No.
1 draft pick Blake Griffin , Chris Kaman , Marcus Camby and DeAndre Jordan
to compete for playing time in the middle.

The deal gives the Clippers some options later, too. Madsen and Smith are in
the final year of their contracts while Telfair has a player option for
2010-11 at a modest $2.7 million.

Richardson has one year remaining on his contract at $9.3 million and gives
Minnesota a veteran presence at shooting guard that was not there after they
traded Randy Foye and Mike Miller to Washington in June.

Rookie Wayne Ellington was the only true shooting guard on the roster
before the Wolves acquired Richardson.

"I felt we needed to start addressing some of the roster imbalances that
were created as part of the Wizards trade and this is a step toward that,"
Kahn said. "If we want to add another player, we now have a place to do
that."

After selecting point guards Rubio and Jonny Flynn back-to-back in the
first round of the NBA draft last month, Telfair's days with the
Timberwolves appeared to be numbered.

"Because of how the point guard situation may evolve, and this doesn't have
anything to do with Rubio per se, I sensed that playing time for Sebastian
would wane over the next few years," Kahn said.

It had already started to wane for Madsen, whose hustle and geniality made
him a fan favorite in six seasons in Minnesota, a place he said felt like
home. He was a valued leader for a young team that is rebuilding.

"That's going to be the hardest thing, leaving the locker room," Madsen told
The Associated Press in a phone interview. "There were some very, very
special relationships that you'll always have. I'm definitely going to miss
these guys as players and as people."

It won't be a totally new start for him. He'll be accompanied by two
teammates to a city he knows well. Madsen spent the first three years of his
career playing for the Los Angeles Lakers before signing with Minnesota in
2003.

"How do I feel about the trade???" Love tweeted. "Well . We lost a lot of
good men out there."

Smith, despite being undersized at 6-foot-6, averaged 10.1 points in less
than 20 minutes a game last season. He grew up in Los Angeles, starring at
Fairfax High School before leaving to play at Boston College.

Telfair averaged 9.8 points and 4.6 assists last season in the first year of
a three-year extension. In Los Angeles, Telfair will serve as the quality
backup to Baron Davis that the team lacked last season.

"I'm going going back back to Cali, Cali," Telfair posted on his Twitter
account, referencing a popular hip-hop song. "Just got traded to clippers.
I'm a little upset becuase (sic) I love Minnesota but I think I will be
happy in LA also."

Richardson averaged 10.2 points and 4.4 rebounds last season for the New
York Knicks. This is the third time the shooting guard has been traded this
summer. He went from the Knicks to Memphis in a deal for Darko Milicic in
June, then was shipped from the Grizzlies to the Clippers for Randolph last
week.
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O'neal to face Phelps, Big Ben in TV shows

Maybe Shaquille O'Neal's new nickname should be the Big Experimenter.

In a new ABC reality television series that begins filming this week, Shaq will take on other top athletes in their own sports.

"Shaq Vs.," which is set to premiere Aug. 18 at 9 p.m. ET, begins filming Wednesday in Pittsburgh, where Shaq will take on Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger in football.

Future episodes of the hour-long show will feature Shaq against Olympic swimming sensation Michael Phelps, boxing legend Oscar De La Hoya, St. Louis Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols, tennis star Serena Williams and beach volleyball Olympians Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh.

Shaq told USA Today that he came up with the idea as a way to train for the NBA season. Shaq figured Americans "would really want to see an athlete play another sport," according to the newspaper. The Cleveland Cavaliers, Shaq's new team, have cleared the 37-year-old O'Neal to take part in the show.

He is scheduled to report for the Cavs' opening of training camp on Sept. 15.

According to USA Today, the episodes will feature preliminary challenges, news conferences, quality time with needy kids and negotiations of a handicap between Shaq and his competitors. Each episode will climax with a main event.

There's no cash prize for the winner. "Bragging rights are always better than any monetary prize," O'Neal told USA Today.

Shaq will train with a coach for one week leading up to each challenge.

"These athletes may be on top of their game, but I am up for the challenge," O'Neal said. "I plan to train hard and win, so look out."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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Tennis: Safina returns to winning ways


Dinara Safina recorded a first round win in the Banka Koper Slovenia Open in Portoroz today.

The world number one eased past local wild-card Tadeja Majeric 6-0 6-4 in her first match since her All-England Club ambitions were so ruthlessly exposed by Venus Williams in their semi-final match-up on Centre Court.

Sixth seed Lucie Safarova beat Great Britain's Katie O'Brien 6-4 6-4 but third seed Kaia Kanepi was a surprise loser, going down 6-1 6-2 to the impressive Olga Govortseva of Belarus.
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