Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts

Sunday, August 7, 2011

The Premier League champion trailed after goals by Joleon Lescott and Edin Dzeko despite dominating chances and possession but got back in the game when Chris Smalling tapped in Ashley Young's 52nd-minute free kick. Seven minutes later, Nani lifted the ball over goalkeeper Joe Hart to round off a sparkling team move.

The Portugal winger then robbed Vincent Kompany near the halfway line, ran unchallenged into the area and rounded Hart to score.

Lescott was arguably City's best player at Wembley, blocking a close-range effort by Smalling on the line and deflecting a free kick by Nani past the post before he headed in David Silva's 38th-minute free kick.

While City's attacking players were overshadowed by Nani, Ashley Young, Wayne Rooney and Danny Welbeck, central defender Lescott also made a crucial challenge on Rooney in the 69th when United had worked a three-on-two opening.

Argentina forward Sergio Aguero was an unused substitute for City, which had seemed happy to settle for a penalty shootout until Nani's second goal.

United cleared a corner kick up to halfway and Kompany, the City captain, was beaten by Nani. With the United fans roaring, the winger outpaced his opponent, dodged to the left around Hart and hit the winner.

The game was littered with yellow cards and rash tackles, with Mario Balotelli squaring up to Nemanja Vidic and rolling on the ground claiming injury when he fell attempting to get out of a tackle by Nani.

Dzeko and Anderson were both booked in the first half when they went chest to chest following the striker's tackle from behind, while City fullback Micah Richards was lucky not to get a red card for a high two-footed lunge on Young on the left corner of the area.

Referee Phil Dowd only booked the defender.

But the 77,169 fans at Wembley were also treated to plenty of entertaining soccer, most of it from United.

Young, Nani, Rooney and Welbeck — picked to play up front instead of Dimitar Berbatov— combined well without carving open clear openings.

Lescott beat Rio Ferdinand to the ball to make it 1-0 before new United goalkeeper David de Gea was at fault for Dzeko's goal — allowing the Bosnia striker's speculative shot from long range to slip over his outstretched hand.

It was only at 2-0 down that United really hurt City.

Manager Alex Ferguson revamped his central defense for the second half, introducing Phil Jones and Jonny Evans for Vidic and Ferdinand, and brought on young midfielder Tom Cleverley for Michael Carrick.

Cleverley was key to the move that was started and finished by Nani, taking a pass from Rooney and slipping it to the Portugal winger to finish from about 6 yards (meters).

De Gea atoned for his error late on when he punched away a goal-bound effort by substitute Adam Johnson, keeping the score at 2-2 and setting the scene for Nani's winner.

Nani's goal in injury time lifts Manchester United

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London, Aug.6 (ANI): Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson believes the club needs at least 84 points to snare this season's Premier League title.

"To win the league in England is very difficult and it doesn't matter how you get the points, you just have to get them. You'll need 84 points to win the league next season - definitely," The Mirror quoted Ferguson, as saying.


He added: "There will be increased competition in the league - I expect Liverpool to be better and added to the top four you have got Tottenham, although they have not done any buying this summer which is surprising, so you expect it's going to be a really tough league. You are looking at a top six fighting for a top four and that can only add to the excitement of the Premier League, which I think is the best product in the game now."

Ferguson also dismissed reports linking Paris St Germain for a move for Dimitar Berbatov as "nonsense", adding: "There's no encouragement for us either."

The United boss is also unconcerned about the effect of internationals taking place on Wednesday, just three days before the start of the Premier League season.(ANI)

Ferguson says Man U needs 84 points to win 2011-12 Premier League title

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Thursday, July 28, 2011

Photo

Chris Graythen - Getty ImagesMore photos »

Jay Glazer of FOX Sports is reporting that the New Orleans Saints and Miami Dolphins have agreed to a trade involving Reggie Bush. The trade, however, is contingent upon Bush accepting a re-negotiated contract with the Dolphins. Here's Glazer's tweet:

I'm reporting the Saints and Fins have worked out terms of a trade for RB Reggie Bush, contingent on Bush agreeing to a new contract w Fins...Bush's agent Joel Segal negotiating w Dolphins tonight. It also hinges upon Bush taking deal and not deciding to stick w NO at reduced rate

Glazer is usually right about these things so I would think this is close to being a done deal. But if that wasn't enough, Jeff Darlington of the Miami Herald confirms the report and adds a few more details:

Source has confirmed, even at this late hour, that Dolphins are indeed working on a trade for Reggie Bush.

GM Jeff Ireland spent much of night working on Bush trade, but has chosen to sleep on terms & make decision in morning.

For now, Ireland is still grinding away at the office, I'm told. He hasn't gone to sleep -- still hammering out details of Bush acquistion.

I'd say this is a good deal all around; well played by Mickey Loomis. The Saints get out of Reggie's contract while still getting value for him and the Dolphins get...Reggie Bush? Who knows, it might be interesting to see him used in the Wildcat. Also good news is the fact that Reggie would not be going to an NFC team.

If this trade is confirmed in the morning, then I wish Reggie the best of luck. It's been a good run and I'll miss the great debates you've caused for years in Who Dat Nation.

The only question remaining: who or what would the Saints be getting!?!? I don't think I'll be able to sleep tonight!

Reggie Bush Likely Being Traded to Dolphins, Taking Talents to South Beach

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Monday, July 11, 2011

David Beckham checked out his bruised backside during an LA Galaxy game yesterday.

0710_david_beckham_splash
Anyone wanna kiss it and make it better?

David Beckham Gets a Little Cheeky

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tiger woods

Tiger Woods is scheduled to give a interview on the Golf Channel this morning, where he plans to make a "special announcement."

What could it possibly be?

The injured golfer has already declared that he won't play in this weekend's British Open. Is he now trying to overshadow it?

Will he shut it down for the year? Forever? (Unlikely) Is it a new shoe endorsement? Is he running for President? Announcing a real estate development with Donald Trump and Richard Branson to build a golf course on the moon?

Your guess is as good as ours at this point. His interview with Kelly Tilghman airs on the Golf Channel at 11 a.m. ET, and we'll cover it as it happens, so check back then for more updates.

Tiger Woods To Make A "Special Announcement" This Morning

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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Nba Finals Game One


MIAMI -- Dwyane Wade's night began with a hug for his mom. It ended with an embrace from LeBron James.

Nearby, Chris Bosh held up three fingers.

No explanation necessary. The Miami Heat are three wins from the reason why the Big Three came together in the first place.

James scored 24 points for his first win in five NBA finals games, Wade scored 15 of his 22 points in the second half and the Heat beat the Dallas Mavericks 92-84 in Game 1 of the title series on Tuesday night - holding the Western Conference champions to their lowest point total of the playoffs after a dominant defensive showing down the stretch.

"Feels good because it's the first game and we played well as a team," James said. "We've got a lot of work to do. ... That's one in the books. We're excited about this game. Tomorrow we prepare for Game 2, and I see ways we can get better."

Dirk Nowitzki scored 27 points - tearing a tendon in the middle finger on his left, non-shooting, hand during the game and revealing afterward that he'll likely wear a splint throughout the remainder of the series - and grabbed eight rebounds for Dallas, which got 16 points and 10 rebounds from Shawn Marion and 12 points from Jason Terry, most of those coming in an early flurry. It was Dallas' fifth straight loss to Miami in finals games, dating to the Heat rally for the 2006 crown.

Dallas held the Heat to 39 percent shooting, Miami's second-worst showing of the playoffs.

Problem was, the Mavericks shot 37 percent - by far, their worst night of the postseason offensively.

"You hold a team to 38 percent shooting and 92 points, for us, that's usually a victory," Marion said.

Sure enough, Dallas had been 7-2 when holding teams to those kind of numbers this season. Game 2 is Thursday in Miami.

"We're a veteran team," said Nowitzki, who had a postgame X-ray on the finger that was injured when he was stripping the ball from Bosh. "You can't get down with a loss. You've got to come back strong on Thursday. I've said it a couple times in this playoff run, if you're the road team, you're happy with a split. So we've got another opportunity on Thursday to get one. Obviously, we don't want to go home down 0-2."

Wade's 3-pointer with 3:06 left put the Heat up 82-73, then the largest lead of the game for either team. The Mavs shaved two points off it on the next possession when Nowitzki hit two free throws, but James gave the Heat their first double-digit lead of the finals a few seconds later.

He dribbled upcourt against Marion, crossed his dribble over and got clear for a dunk while being fouled. The free throw made it 85-75, and most in the sellout, white-clad crowd began standing in anticipation.

Even then, it wasn't over.

Nowitzki made two more free throws - he was 12 for 12 from the line for the game - with 1:36 left, cutting the Miami lead to six.

A momentary blip.

"They have two very good closers," Nowitzki said, "two of the best in the game."

Wade grabbed a key defensive rebound, dribbled away from three Dallas pursuers and found Bosh for a dunk with 1:08 left that restored the 10-point lead. Another dunk by James came with 38.6 seconds left, sealing the outcome.

"For me, going into the fourth quarter, it's winning time," James said.

Sure was, and the Heat fans knew it, breaking into their now-traditional tossing of their white seat covers.

"By and large, we've got to play better, just overall," said Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle, especially noting Miami's 16-6 edge in offensive rebounds.

Miami outrebounded Dallas 46-36, got a gritty effort on both ends from reserve Mike Miller - who left with his left arm in a sling, but insisted he would be fine - and reaped rewards again from another strong fourth-quarter finish by Wade and James.

"That's who they've been their entire careers," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said.

Bosh scored 19 points and Mario Chalmers added 12 for the Heat. The Heat trailed by eight points early in the third quarter before pulling away, remaining unbeaten - now 9-0 - at home in these playoffs and snapping Dallas' five-game road postseason winning streak.

Dallas had 51 points after 26 minutes. The Mavericks scored 18 points in the next 18 minutes, 33 over the remainder of the game, as Miami's defense found another gear.

"That's kind of the way we've been winning games, of late," Wade said. "You've got stay with it. You can't get frustrated because the ball's not going in. There's other ways you can dominate the game and we was able to do that tonight. I thought we did a great job in the second half of rebounding the ball, limiting them to one shot as much as possible."

Take away the 2006 NBA finals, and Dallas came into Game 1 having beaten Miami 14 straight times. The only team that has lost to any team more times consecutively is Minnesota, which finished with the NBA's worst record this season. The Timberwolves have lost 16 straight to San Antonio and Portland, and 15 straight to the Los Angeles Lakers.

In the finals, it simply doesn't seem to matter.

"We'll play better. I'm very certain of that," Carlisle said. "We had some opportunities. Shots we normally make, they didn't go down. Look, it's a long series. We'll adjust."

Wade - the hero of that 2006 championship - found himself with a couple extra minutes before tipoff because of an unusually long delay after the starters were introduced. So he went looking for inspiration. He screamed at his teammates, "Don't say, 'I wish I woulda,'" in the huddle before they took the court, his way of telling them not to leave anything in the proverbial tank during this series.

And then he slowly trotted to the other end of the court, pointed to his mother Jolinda in a baseline seat and gave her a hug as many in the crowd roared. He usually blows her a pregame kiss. On Tuesday, that wouldn't suffice.

"We both said, 'Here we go. We're here again. We're back,'" Wade said.

Both teams expect to ride defense in this series, and that was made perfectly evident in the opening 12 minutes. The teams combined to take 35 shots in the first quarter - and made 10.

Dallas led 17-16 after the first quarter, which was the lowest two-team output in the first quarter of Game 1 of a finals in the shot clock era, according to STATS LLC. It tied the fourth-lowest total for any finals quarter since 1955, bettering only the 30 points by the Magic and Lakers in Game 2 in 2009, and the 31 posted by the Jazz and Bulls in 1998's Game 3 along with the Lakers and Celtics in 1969's Game 4.

Everyone was struggling, maybe a little because of nerves, and mostly to do with the defensive intensity on both ends. James was 3 for 6 in the first quarter, while the rest of the Heat were 3 for 15. Half of Dallas' four first-quarter baskets were 3-pointers by Jason Kidd, the team's 38-year-old point guard searching for his first NBA title.

And the Mavericks had one - that's right, one - 2-point basket in the game's first 15:49, with 10 of their first 18 field goal attempts coming from 3-point range.

"We really didn't play well at all tonight," Terry said. "First quarter, 17 points and third quarter, 17 - that's not our style of basketball. Give them credit. They disrupted our tempo and they finished at the end."

Dallas opened the third quarter by scoring seven quick points, all on jumpers, the burst ending with DeShawn Stevenson's 3-pointer with 10:03 remaining in the period - pushing the Mavericks' lead to 51-43 and silencing a building that was still refilling after halftime.

"He had three days to shoot that and we didn't get anybody near him," Spoelstra said.

That was quickly fixed, and the rest of the third was largely all Miami.

"For the most part, we think we had chances to get a hold of this game," Marion said. "And we let it get out of our hands."

The Heat outscored Dallas 22-10 in the remainder of the quarter. Wade started the rally - just as he did in a series-saving effort for Miami in Game 3 of the '06 finals, giving the memorable "Nah, I ain't going out like this" quote afterward - with two layups. And James beat the clock at the end of the period with an off-balance 3-pointer from near the Dallas bench for a 65-61 Miami lead.

"It's one game, and that's it," Spoelstra said. "We're already moving on."

NOTES: In his annual state-of-the-league address before Game 1 of the finals, NBA Commissioner David Stern was asked about a number of topics, including again about how James, Wade and Bosh all ended up in Miami last summer. "I don't consider it colluding," Stern said. ... James picked up two fouls in the first quarter, the fourth time that's happened in the playoffs. It happened four times in the entire regular season. ... In a scene reminiscent of the 2006 NBA finals, the first time Wade went to the foul line Tuesday night, Mavs owner Mark Cuban stood to argue that he traveled. ... Juwan Howard was guarding Kidd after a switch on a screen in the first half, odd only because both were top-five picks in the 1994 NBA draft.

NBA Finals 2011 Game 1: Heat Beat Mavericks 92-84 (VIDEO)

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Sunday, May 29, 2011

LAS VEGAS – A poor main event capped a desultory Ultimate Fighting Championship pay-per-view Saturday, as boos, and a few tossed beers, rained down upon the cage after Quinton “Rampage” Jackson scored a unanimous decision victory over Matt Hamill in the main event of UFC 130 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

The card was not very captivating, but the main event made it seem even worse. Hamill said he would break Jackson’s will, but all that was broken was the will of the spectators to watch more.

Jackson said he had a broken hand but fought anyway. It appeared that way, as he didn’t land a lot of punches, though he clearly won the fight.

The former UFC heavyweight champion stalked and Hamill occasionally would try a half-hearted takedown. Jackson stuffed each of them with no difficulty and landed several good strikes in a bid to discourage Hamill.

Though it was a win, it was hardly a great audition for Jackson for a title fight against light heavyweight champion Jon Jones. Jackson bloodied Hamill’s mouth but never landed the big shot he has been known for and did little to please the fans.

The crowd booed loudly throughout the third round and when the fight ended, the angry fans booed even more lustily. A couple of thrown beers landed near the cage.

“I expected him to try to take me down,” Jackson said. “I had him rocked there, but I couldn’t capitalize. I wanted to get a knock out for the fans, but I also wanted to make sure I got the win. I wanted to dominate him for saying he was going to break my will. I think I put on a good performance and was ready for him trying to take me down.”

“I was a little shocked by Rampage’s hips and his ability to defend the takedown,” Hamill said. “I wanted to bait him in so that I could secure the double leg. He defended well and was strong just like we expected. Hats off to Rampage. He fought a really smart fight.”

Former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir won the Battle of Las Vegas in one-sided fashion, cracking Roy Nelson repeatedly with knees and taking him down frequently in order to take a unanimous decision. Judges had it 30-27 twice and 30-26. Yahoo! Sports had it 30-27 for Mir, the former UFC heavyweight champion.

The two men were born and raised in Las Vegas and went to high school just a few miles apart. One of Nelson’s cornermen was a groomsman in Mir’s wedding.

But when the fight began, Mir showed no mercy for his friend. At one point, Mir landed five or six knees in a row to Nelson’s face, but Nelson didn’t quit.

Nelson was never able to do much serious damage to Mir, though he landed a couple of good shots in the first round. But Mir kept the fight at the perfect distance and when he felt there was trouble, he took Nelson down.

“Wrestling was my main focus in this camp and I think it worked out well for me tonight,” Mir said. “I’d rate my performance as a seven [out of 10]. I expected to win the grappling aspect. It went even better than I had a planned. I felt like I was able to win in every aspect of the fight. Roy is really tough and I’m glad to leave here with the win.” Travis Browne used a perfectly placed right hand while throwing a Superman punch to put an early end to Stefan Struve’s night in their heavyweight match. Brown cracked Struve with a right on the chin as Struve was getting ready to throw a knee.

The punch landed right on Struve’s chin. It snapped his head back and he was out almost immediately. The time of the knockout was 4:11 of the first round.

“He’s been hit hard before, but I believe I’m the only one to ever put him out like that,â Browne said. “I think I’m now in the mix in the heavyweight division. A few more wins and I think I can find myself in the top five of this division.”

Rick Story scored an unpopular unanimous decision victory over former welterweight title challenger Thiago Alves, winning the first two rounds with a conservative strategy to take the fight 29-28 on all three cards. Yahoo! Sports also had it 29-28 for Story.

Story didn’t allow Alves to get going, staying on top of him and neutralizing much of the Brazilian’s offense. Alves rallied with a number of good strikes, including a well-placed knee, in the third, but he was too far behind to pull it out.

“My goal was to be explosive because I think that’s his kryptonite,” Story said. “I wanted to stay on him and let him know that I wasn’t going anywhere. I’ve had a lot of hard strikes landed on me and it goes back to my conditioning. My coach, Pat White, puts me in situations in training where I have to deal with adversity and have to deal with having my conditioning tested. I was prepared for everything Thiago brought tonight and the end result is a victory for me.”

Brian Stann took another big leap forward in the UFC’s middleweight division, following his impressive win over Chris Leben with an equally impressive stoppage of Jorge Santiago.

Stann landed a straight right that knocked Santiago down late in the second round and then quickly went for the finish. Stann fired several short, hard hammer fists until referee Herb Dean stopped it at 4:29 of the second.

Santiago was returning to the UFC after a five-year absence, during which he compiled an 11-1 record. He was no match for Stann, though, generating little offense and getting nailed by Stann’s punches.

“I thought the fight was going good and then I just got caught,” Santiago said. “I need to go home and fix some of the holes in my game.”

Demetrious Johnson and Miguel Angel Torres put on an outstanding grappling match, with each scoring reversals and going repeatedly for submissions.

Johnson’s wrestling was the difference in a unanimous decision victory over the former World Extreme Cagefighting bantamweight champion. All three judges scored it 29-28 for Johnson. Yahoo! Sports had Torres ahead, 30-27, favoring his submission work from the bottom.

“I thought I had a great game plan,” Johnson said. “My goal was to kick his front leg, but at one point, he checked my kick and hit a soft spot [on my right leg]. It really limited my mobility. My legs are my engine and he took that away from me. Fortunately, I was able to recover and secure good takedowns.

“I worked hard on submission defense for this camp, but I still made a lot of mistakes. I left my hands underneath and on the mat and gave him opportunities that I shouldn’t have. “

Torres, who nearly had a triangle choke in the second round, clearly thought he won, but did not complain about the decision.

“It was a tough fight,” he said. “He took me down and he just held me. I had a couple of submission attempts that gave me the chance to put him away. This was my fault tonight. He’s slippery and he was able to get the takedowns. I just didnât take advantage when I should have.”

Tim Boetsch made the 20-pound drop from light heavyweight to middleweight very easily, outwrestling Kendall Grove en route to a one-sided unanimous decision. All three judges scored it 30-27 for Boetsch.

There was little nuance to Boetsch’s plan. He was looking for the takedown early and often. He repeatedly put the 6-foot-6 Hawaiian onto his back and, though he didn’t do a lot of damage on the ground, he clearly controlled the fight.

“I felt great at this weight,” Boetsch said. “I did the cut twice and really had the system down. I knew when and how to rehydrate and I did the cut the right way. That’s why I felt so great in there tonight. I knew Kendall was going to come out hungry and try to set the tone. I took that away from him right from the start. I didn’t want him to dictate the fight with his range and with his jab. I took all of that away and used my takedowns to control this fight.”

Grove, the winner of Season Three of “The Ultimate Fighter,” now has lost four of his last six and is in danger of losing his job.

Grove said that Boetsch’s strength and physicality were an issue for him.

“I couldn’t get off tonight and he was definitely stronger than I thought,” Grove said. “I didn’t expect him to go for takedowns like that. Congratulations to Tim. He controlled the fight and deserved the win.”

In a battle of Brazilians, Gleison Tibau cracked Rafaello Oliveira with a hard straight left that knocked him down, and then finished him on the ground with a rear naked choke at 3:28 of the second round.

Tibau had taken a close first round but opened up in the second. He landed several shots that seemed to bother Oliveira before connecting on a powerful straight left that dumped him on his back.

“He has some great combos and I didn’t see his left hand coming,” Oliveira said.

Tibau landed some shots from the top before maneuvering to finish with the rear naked choke.

“I think I proved tonight that I’m getting close to my peak,” Tibau said. “I showed everyone that I can strike, that I can finish guys with jiu-jitsu and that my game is coming together. I’m becoming a more complete fighter every day and I know that I’m heading toward the top of this division.”

Michael McDonald, at 20 the youngest fighter in the UFC, pulled out a close split decision victory over Chris Cariaso. Judge Tony Weeks had it 30-27 for Cariaso, but he was overruled by judges Adalaide Byrd and Glenn Trowbridge, who had it 29-28 in favor of McDonald.

McDonald landed a number of good strikes, but he couldn’t force Cariaso to back off. Cariaso landed a number of very hard kicks that clearly impacted McDonald, who likely won the fight by being busier and more accurate with his strikes.

“Chris kicks really hard and his chin is really solid,” McDonald said. “Usually when I hit people that hard, they go to sleep. Fortunately, I felt like I executed very well and was able to handle him in all aspects of the fight.”

Cariaso was clearly disappointed when the scores were announced.

“It’s a bummer to lose this fight,” Cariaso said. “I felt like I did enough to take this fight, but it didn’t go my way. He hit really hard and he showed why he’s a tough match up for anyone at 135. I think we will definitely see each other again in the future. We are two of the top young guys in the division and we definitely need to see a fourth round.”

In the opening bout, Renan Barao won his UFC debut and garnered his 26th consecutive victory with a workmanlike performance in a unanimous decision win over Cole Escovedo.

Barao fought conservatively, but controlled the action in the first two rounds. In the third, he opened up, landing a spinning back fist and several good kicks. The judges scored it 30-27 twice and 29-28 for Barao, who lost his opening bout and hasn’t been beaten since.

“I’m very happy with this performance,” Barao said. “It’s been a dream come true to be here in the UFC and tonight, I accomplished a huge goal of fighting in the Octagon. My goal and game plan was to keep this fight standing and show my striking. I love showing the fans different kinds of striking. The flying knees, the back fists, it’s something that I practice with the guys in my camp.”

Fans jeer Jackson after UFC 130 win

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Friday, May 27, 2011

Kevin McHale has been offered the Houston Rockets' head coach job, according to Yahoo!'s Adrian Wojnarowski. Houston Chronicle beat writer Jonathan Feigen has confirmed the story.

McHale, the Boston Celtics' legendary power forward and a longtime general manager for the Minnesota Timberwolves, has worked for Turner Sports for the past two years on NBA TV and TNT broadcasts. He has some pro head coaching experience, having twice stepped into the hot seat with the Timberwolves, after firing Flip Saunders in 2005 and Randy Wittman in 2009. Under McHale as coach, the Wolves went 39-55. In each case, the Wolves' performance improved under McHale.

Woj reports that while nothing is final, McHale and the Rockets want to get a deal done. Houston let Rick Adelman's contract expire at the end of the season. Reports suggested the Rockets wanted Adelman to agree to groom a successor if re-signed; Adelman declined.

Dwane Casey, a coach McHale hired and fired in Minnesota, and Lawrence Frank were considered finalists for the job with McHale. Casey is an assistant coach for the NBA Finals-bound Dallas Mavericks. Frank is the top assistant for the Boston Celtics.

For more on the Rockets, visit The Dream Shake and SB Nation Houston.

Kevin McHale Offered Houston Rockets' Head Coach Job, According To Report

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Margo Dydek Dead
The Los Angeles Sparks' Margo Dydek, left, protects the ball from Katie Feenstra in a WNBA game on Sept. 11, 2008.

BRISBANE, Australia — Former WNBA player Margo Dydek has died after suffering a heart attack a week ago and being placed in a medically induced coma. She was 37.

Cathy Roberts, the operations manager for the Northside Wizards in the Queensland Basketball League, where Dydek was head coach, told The Associated Press that Dydek died early Friday.

The Poland-born Dydek, who was pregnant with her third child, suffered the heart attack on May 19 and collapsed at her home in Brisbane. Roberts said that Dydek was at an early stage in her pregnancy and that her unborn child had also died.

Dydek was the No. 1 pick in the 1998 WNBA draft by the Utah Starzz. She also played for San Antonio, Connecticut and Los Angeles.

The 7-foot-2 Dydek was once said to be the tallest active professional female basketball player in the world.

She held the record for most blocks in a WNBA career, with 877 in 323 games, and led the league in blocks nine times, from 1998 to 2003 and again from 2005-07.

On August 27, 2008, Dydek signed with the Los Angeles Sparks following time away from basketball due to the birth of her first son in April 2008.

An entry on Dydek's Facebook page says she was born on April 28, 1974, in Warsaw, Poland, to a 6-foot-7 father and a 6-3 mother. She had two sisters, and her elder sister Kashka used to play for the Colorado Explosion of the now defunct ABL, and in Poland.

Tina Thompson, a former teammate of Dydek's on the Sparks, said on the WNBA's Twitter feed: "My condolences to the family of Margo Dydek, may she rest in peace!"

The Brisbane-based Wizards posted a statement on their website Friday.

"Always in our hearts - Margo," it said. "With great sadness we acknowledge the passing of ... Margo Dydek. Margo suffered a heart attack just over a week ago and passed away Friday 27th May, peacefully and surrounded by her family.

"You were a much-loved member of our community and we will miss you greatly. Our hearts go out to your family, David and your beautiful boys xx."

She is survived by her husband, David, and two sons, David, 3, and Alex, seven months.

Margo Dydek Dead: Former WNBA Player Dies At 37

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It didn't take long for 13-year-old Kenner Galeas to become an instant star on his Arlington Soccer Association club team. Playing in a game recently for the U-14 Civitans Bengals, Galeas scored on an incredible bicycle-kick that now has the entire Internet going crazy over the youngster's finish.

As the Washington Post reported, Galeas recently joined the team after moving from Honduras to the United States. In just a few games, Galeas has gone from relative unknown to having his goal compared to the jaw-dropping bicycle-kick that Manchester United's Wayne Rooney scored earlier this year in a derby match against Manchester City.

But before teams start courting the youngster as the next great striker, there's something you should known about Galeas: He's actually a defender. Yep, it was sheer luck that he was playing up front in the first place.

"[Kenner] is a very solid, quick and aggressive player, but the ironic element to this story is that Kenner is a defenseman and this is the first time he has played forward," his coach Luis Alonso told the Washington Post. "To further add to the irony, it is his brother Keysmer who is one of our star forwards and goal scorers. Due to a shortage in forwards for this game on Sunday, I put Kenner in as a forward, and clearly, it paid off big time."

I think everyone would agree with that assessment.

13-year-old soccer player scores on incredible bicycle-kick

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Thursday, May 26, 2011

It's one thing for Miami Heat wing Mike Miller(notes) to even be able to catch and shoot a ball, with the way that both of his thumbs are wrapped up with swelling-reducing braces. It's another to marvel at his game-changing 12 points and nine rebounds in Miami's series-changing Game 4 win from Tuesday night, as we learn today that he has been playing with a torn tendon in his left thumb a month and a half ago. It's yet another to know that he's able to keep his composure and help the Heat move one win away from the Finals with the knowledge that his infant daughter is in a hospital room, fighting for her life.

Miller will travel with his team to Chicago to participate in Thursday's Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals, but for the first time since daughter Jaelyn's birth last Thursday, he'll be away at his job while she recovers from an undisclosed health issue caused by complications from childbirth.

ESPN's Michael Wallace is reporting that, immediately following Miller's hero turn in helping Miami come back in the fourth quarter of Game 4, he went to visit Jaelyn in her hospital room, staying there until 4 in the morning. Miller's struggles have to be a dampening reminder to Heat teammate Zydrunas Ilgauskas(notes), as Wallace reports:

"[Ilgauskas] and his wife were expecting twins in 2007, when complications arose and both babies were lost after being born four months premature.

"He has a lot on his mind," Ilgauskas said. "You just try to be a good friend right now. He's one of the toughest individuals I've ever been around. He's worked so hard, he's just a blue-collar guy who comes to play every day. But this, this is life."

It is, and it's heartbreaking.

But it's also worth pointing out that, in an entirely less-important world, Miller managed double-figure points on Tuesday for just the second time since mid-March, in a season that has been a constant struggle for him. He knows that things can turn, quickly, for the better. It's slim comfort, now, but it needs to be a comfort never the less.

Mike Miller plays well through the health issues surrounding his child

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Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Tia Norfleet is used to breaking barriers. She’s used to being overlooked, and she well knows the low odds and risks involved. None of this matters though.

Norfleet, 24, loves what she does and she’ll stop at nothing to make it.

Racing … is her life.

Growing up the daughter of a minister and a professional racecar driver (Bobby Norfleet), Tia was introduced to the sport at a very young age. In a predominately white, male sport, she is the exception to the rule. Female drivers are rare enough, but an African-American as well? It’s never been done.

Norfleet is trying to become the first to make it into the NASCAR circuit. It’s a goal she’s been aiming toward for quite some time. She has been successful at drag racing and on the shorter tracks circuit known as the NASCAR late models, where she recorded two top-15 finishes, though she has not yet qualified for the longer distance tracks such as Daytona and Talladega.

“Around the age of 14 is when I really, really knew that this was what I wanted to do for a living; this was my passion,” she told me during a phone interview.

“My finest memory of my racing experience would be when I was about 5. I had a little Corvette car, and my dad put two car batteries in it. I literally drove that car until the wheels fell off. Ever since then, I’ve just been so enthused about racing, [or] any kind of motor sport.”

Tia hails from the South — Suffolk, Va., to be exact (she lives in Georgia now) — where racing is not merely a hobby; it’s a way of life.


Source :http://thefreshxpress.com/2011/05/tia-norfleet-tries-to-become-first-female-black-nascar-driver/

Tia Norfleet Tries To Become First Female, Black NASCAR Driver

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Over one-quarter of the performers who took part in 1991's Wrestlemania VII have died, a wrestling website noted in the wake of the death of "Macho Man" Randy Savage.

The Wrestling Observer newsletter discovered that 14 of the 51 performers at the event have died in the past 20 years, with many of the deaths attributed to drug use (link is subscription only).

The list of wrestlers who have died since 1991 include some of the biggest stars in the sport like Savage, Andre the Giant, Miss Elizabeth and The British Bulldog. Causes of death include suicides, murder and heart attacks, some the result of years of anabolic steroid use. Savage died last week after suffering an apparent heart attack behind the wheel of his truck. His ex-wife, Miss Elizabeth, passed away after overdosing on a variety of drugs in 2003.

Looking at the list is a sobering reminder of the realities of a make-believe sport like professional wrestling. Not all of the men and women listed played a part in their own demise; referee Joey Marella was the victim of a car crash that occurred when he was driving home from a match.

As wrestlinginc.com points out, none of the 44 starters from the Super Bowl played in 1991 have passed away and only two of 44 boxers who held a championship belt that year are gone.

At 58, Savage made it nearly a decade longer than some of his deceased colleagues.

Source :http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/post/Over-25-percent-of-the-performers-from-Wrestlema?urn=top-wp132


Over 25 percent of the performers from Wrestlemania VII have died

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Monday, May 23, 2011


OKLAHOMA CITY -- Dirk Nowitzki scored 40 points, Jason Kidd hit the go-ahead 3-pointer with 40 seconds left in overtime and the Dallas Mavericks overcame a 15-point deficit in the final 5 minutes of regulation to stun the Oklahoma City Thunder 112-105 on Monday night and take a 3-1 lead in the Western Conference finals.

Dallas didn't lead until Nowitzki hit two free throws 16 seconds into overtime, needing to rally from a 99-84 deficit in the final 5 minutes of regulation. The Mavericks never let the Thunder -- who were one win shy of tying an NBA record with eight OT wins in the regular season -- go ahead in the extra period.

Kevin Durant missed a 3-pointer on Oklahoma City's opening possession of overtime then didn't get another shot until he missed a 3 off the front rim in the final 10 seconds with the Thunder down by five.

Durant finished with 29 points and 15 rebounds, and Serge Ibaka had 18 points and 10 boards for Oklahoma City. Russell Westbrook added 19 points, eight rebounds and eight assists.

Game 5 is Wednesday night in Dallas.

Only two teams have come back from 3-1 deficits in NBA history without the benefit of home-court advantage in Game 7 -- Houston in the 1995 West semifinals and Boston in the 1968 East finals.

Durant had nine of the Thunder's 26 turnovers, including the one that led to Kidd's big shot.

Kidd stripped him as he went up for a shot with just over a minute left in overtime, then took a pass from Nowitzki, pump-faked to get Westbrook in the air and stepped up and drilled a 3-pointer to put Dallas up 108-105 with 40.3 seconds left.

Westbrook missed on a drive on Oklahoma City's next possession, and Jason Terry hit two free throws with 13 seconds left to give the Mavs a two-possession lead. Durant finally got another shot off, squatting with his head hanging down as Kidd walked up for two free throws to provide the final margin.

Terry finished with 20 points for Dallas and Kidd scored 17 to go with seven assists, five rebounds and four steals.

Fueled by the disappointment of losing Game 3 and squandering home-court advantage, the Thunder took control right away and never trailed in regulation.

With much of the sellout crowd remaining on its feet, the Thunder grabbed control with two separate bursts of seven straight points early in the fourth quarter. Durant had a two-handed slam and a 3-pointer off an offensive rebound in the second run, gesturing as though he were slapping on a pro wrestling championship belt after the 3 made it 99-84 with 5:06 remaining.

He hadn't won anything yet, though, especially with guard James Harden fouling out just after Dallas started the closing run in regulation.

The Mavericks limited the Thunder to just one basket the rest of the way to wipe away the lead and tie it at 101 on Nowitzki's two free throws with 6.4 seconds left.

Nowitzki scored 12 points during the Mavs' 17-2 run and got fouled by Nick Collison, who grabbed the big German's hip as he lunged to tip the ball away, before hitting both foul shots to tie it.

Shawn Marion blocked Durant's 3-pointer at least 30 feet from the basket with 2 seconds left, and the Mavs couldn't convert a chance at the win when Kidd's inbounds lob with 0.7 seconds left hit the rim.

Oklahoma City came roaring out of the gates after trailing by as many as 17 points in the first quarter of Game 3. The Thunder hit their first nine shots and took an 18-8 lead after Durant caught a deflected inbounds pass and zoomed in for a right-handed jam.

Dallas managed to stay within striking distance, never falling more than 12 behind, and used repeated trips to the foul line to get within 59-54 at halftime. Nowitzki's driving layup cut the deficit to 61-59 with 8:53 left in the third quarter, and Kidd missed a jumper for the tie before Oklahoma City started pulling away again.

Durant provided a five-point possession during a 13-4 run that bumped the lead to 74-63 after Collison's two-handed dunk with 4:49 left in the third. He hit the first of two free throws, then added a 3-pointer after Collison got the rebound and kicked it out to him. Finally, Durant hit the free throw after Tyson Chandler was called for a technical foul for elbowing Kendrick Perkins while maneuvering for rebounding position on Durant's 3.

The Mavericks got within 79-77 in the final minute of the third quarter after a string of seven straight points that included a 3-pointer from Terry that made Thunder coach Scott Brooks turn away and put his head down on the scorer's table.

Game notes
The NBA rescinded Chandler's first two technicals in this series, so his postseason count is currently at four -- three shy of what's needed for a one-game suspension. ... Dallas was the only visiting team to win twice in the regular season at the Oklahoma City Arena, where the Thunder were 30-11. The Mavs are 4-0 in the building in the regular season and playoffs. ... Brooks, facing repeated questions about his starting lineup, says he's sticking with it. "We're a young team," he said, "and if you give a young team instability, you're going to get very inconsistent results."


Source : http://scores.espn.go.com/nba/recap?gameId=310523025

Dallas Mavericks Vs Oklahoma City Thunder

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Race driver Danica Partrick talks about The Indianapolis 500 and her future.
Race driver Danica Partrick talks about The Indianapolis 500 and her future. / GREG GRIFFO / The Star

Danica Patrick might be preparing for her last Indianapolis 500.

Rumors that Patrick would jump to NASCAR have dogged her for years and even have been acknowledged by IndyCar officials. The 29-year-old, who has driven in both IndyCar and the NASCAR Nationwide series this year and last, was vague when asked about her plans Thursday.

"I suppose anything is possible," she said. "But I know for me, I haven't made any of those decisions yet."

Patrick's success as a female driver has made her the face of the IndyCar Series since 2005, even though she has just one win in 98 tries. The pressure she has put on herself has reached a peak heading into the Indy 500 on May 29.

"Actually, I feel like I get more nervous every year," she said. "I'm more nervous coming into it this year than last year. Maybe it's because you're getting older and on some level you think you have less of them to do, I don't know."

Her improved performance in NASCAR has fueled speculation that her IndyCar days might be nearing an end. She struggled last year during her first year of stock car racing, but she qualified fourth and briefly led the Nationwide race at Daytona this February before finishing 14th. The next month, she placed fourth in the Las Vegas Nationwide race, the best finish for a woman in a national NASCAR race. She'll return to NASCAR for the Nationwide race at New Hampshire in June.

"The NASCAR stuff I've done has been good, too," she said. "Having a fourth at Vegas was great, leading at Daytona in the Nationwide race. So far, it's been a good year."

Patrick's foray into NASCAR was made possible by her success in IndyCar.

After she finished fourth in the 2005 Indianapolis 500, she quickly became a larger-than-life figure in a 5-foot-2, 100-pound frame, the biggest draw in a series that desperately needed a transcendent star.

After she emerged, things changed. Expectations followed. Pressure mounted. She finally won her first race in Japan in 2008, but she began to chafe under the intense scrutiny.

Danica Patrick won't commit to returning to IndyCar in 2012

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Sunday, May 22, 2011

Oscar De La Hoya

As TMZ first reported, De La Hoya entered a rehab facility in California sometime within the last few weeks. We're told De La Hoya is seeking help for substance abuse issues. A source close to the boxing legend tells us he has "voluntarily commenced proactive treatment to address certain health and personal issues."

Read the whole story: tmz.com

Oscar De La Hoya in Rehab: 'I Have My Flaws'

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Bernard Hopkins made history tonight in Montreal.

Bernard Hopkins made history tonight in Montreal.

He did it again.

Bernard Hopkins, at 46 years old, became the oldest man to ever win a championship in boxing history, outpointing Jean Pascal and taking the younger man to school throughout the fight. Hopkins won on scores of 115-114, 115-113 and 116-112. Bernard Hopkins won the Bad Left Hook card, 117-112.

Hopkins (52-5-2, 32 KO) is the legitimate light heavyweight champion for a second time, following his years of domination in the middleweight division. Pascal, as Hopkins said, fought fairly well for about four rounds, but after that it was all Bernard Hopkins. The Philadelphia legend simply dominated the remainder of the fight, sans a 12th round when Pascal did hurt Hopkins.

Pascal (26-2-1, 16 KO) just is not good enough for Bernard Hopkins, and over their two fights, I think that played out. The first fight was close, but I felt Hopkins won. The second fight was really not close, and luckily this time, Hopkins got the cards he very richly deserved.

Hopkins also complimented Pascal after the fight, though he did try to give him some advice. You may recall that he did the same thing in 2008 against Kelly Pavlik, and Pavlik has really never been the same. This was also Hopkins' best performance, by far, since that fight. The flaws in Pascal's game are obvious, and he badly needs to correct them if he's going to maintain his status as a legitimate top light heavyweight.

Hopkins also says he has no plans to retire, and has two opponents in mind: Chad Dawson first, and Lucian Bute second. Pascal asked for a third fight, and honestly I don't think it would be the worst thing, but Dawson is in line next, and you can expect that fight later this year. Hopkins is 46, and probably doesn't see any need to fight Pascal again.

Congratulations to Bernard Hopkins. Tonight, he made history, and we all got to see it.

Bernard Hopkins Beats Jean Pascal to Become Oldest Boxing Champ Ever

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Saturday, May 21, 2011

Saturday marks the 136th running of the Preakness Stakes, the middle jewel of horse racing’s Triple Crown. Animal Kingdom scored an upset in the Kentucky Derby at 21-1, but this handicapper had him tapped as a top contender, and 2nd choice overall. Can he win again in Baltimore, and head to the Belmont as racing’s Next Great Hope?

Racing in Maryland is dying. The Preakness has pretty much become the only meaningful day in a state rich with thoroughbred tradition. Still, over the past decade, the Preakness has emerged as the key race among the three Triple Crown events. While the Derby has produced a string of winners that went on to accomplish little else (Giacomo, Mine That Bird, Super Saver), the Preakness has produced a host of champions that include Rachel Alexandra, Curlin, Afleet Alex, Bernardini, and Lookin at Lucky. Lately, the Preakness has not been producing flukes.

The New Guns: There was a time when running in the Derby was a key factor to winning the Preakness, and while I still think that there’s some merit to that, Bernardini & Rachel Alexandra are recent examples that it can be done without the Derby experience. 9 of this year’s 14 Preakness contenders enter the fray without a Derby start. Dance City and Sway Away both enter off the Arkansas Derby, finishing 3rd and 4th, respectively. While Nehro’s Derby performance flatters that race, I still see neither as likely to show the required improvement to compete here … Flashpoint was an impressive winner of the 7f Hutcheson Stakes earlier this year, and will be a pace factor, but doesn’t seem capable of carrying them the full 1 3/16 … Norman Asborjson is the local horse, and Maryland trainees often crack the bottom part of the exotics. Based on his last two New Tork races, he’s at least playable…The same cannot be said of King Congie (poor dirt form), Isn’t He Perfect (overmatched), and Concealed Identity (huge step up in class). Any of those three hitting the board would surprise me, but would certainly juice up the payouts … Astrology is an intriguing contender. The Steve Asmussen trainee got going late this year due to injury problems, but has finished second in both his 2011 starts. Draws the rail, and if can make an easy lead, could be a major factor … The most promising newbie is Mr. Commons. The lightly-raced colt has been training marvelously – so marvelously that he caused John Sheriffs, who trained no less a superstar than Zenyatta, to exclaim, “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a horse come out of a work as well as he did.” Eligible for a big improvement, I think he’s a dangerous longshot.
The Derby Boys: In labeling Animal Kingdom a top contender in this spot two weeks ago, I said that he would “offer fantastic value at the betting window.” That he did. The same can’t be said for the Preakness, where he’ll likely be 3-1 or less. Still a top contender no doubt, but without much value … Shackleford figures to run a similar race to his Derby, which means he’ll make the pace. Without much speed to contend him, he held on for 4th in Louisville. A lot more speed here probably means a fade job … Midnight Interlude finished a disappointing 16th in the Derby, but is back for more. Trainer Bob Baffert says the race took nothing out of him; perhaps the Santa Anita Derby winner just needed a Derby prep … Mucho Macho Man rallied for third at Churchill Downs, and has every look of a horse peaking at the right time. With a more serious pace to run at, he is serious threat to wear the black-eyed susans … Beaten Derby favorite Dialed In should also benefit from a more honest pace. Jockey Julian Leperoux waited forever to make his move in the Derby, and indeed ran a blstering final half-mile – but still finished 8th. Every possible factor points to the colt continuing to improve, as well as facing a much more advantageous pace scenario.

And The Winner Is: Dialed In. He had a lot going against him two weeks ago, but much of that can be chalked up to lessons. Both he and Animal Kingdom figure to be flying down the Pimlico stretch, and whichever gets the first jump will likely win the race. Leperoux won’t be so patient this time. Dialed In gets the win, with Animal Kingdom, Mucho Macho Man, and Mr. Commons filling out the superfecta.

Good luck, may they all come back safe…and All Hail Kegasus!

Preakness 2011: Breaking Down the Field

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Friday, May 20, 2011


bones-change-in-the-game-recap.jpg
That's certainly one way to answer the lingering "Did they or didn't they?" that "Bones" dropped on fans one episode before the series finale.

Big, fat spoilers ahead for the Season 6 finale, "The Change in the Game," so don't look any further if you haven't seen it -- unless you're the special kind masochist who likes reading the recaps first.

In the aftermath of the unmentioned Vincent Nigel Murray's death, Booth (David Boreanaz) and Brennan (Emily Deschanel) had sex. Or they did it a little before. Or possibly even a little later. Maybe they've secretly been doing it for months! The particulars aren't important right now, because their long-awaited illicit canoodling has already manifested, albeit off camera, in a baby.

Yup, Brennan is pregnant. And whether this huge development has been in the cards for a while, is a result of Deschanel's real-life pregnancy or a combination of both remains a mystery. But I'm sure I'm not alone in my thinking the series will never been the same again.

So in honor of the last "Bones" of the season, let's make this a traditional recap and save discussion of its lasting impact for the end.

For the squints:

  • The procedural anchor to "Change's" big character pay-off is an exceptionally silly one. An obnoxious child demands the pins be reset at his bowling birthday party, when his mother threatens him with the old "Do you know what happens to little boys at bowling alleys who don't behave?" (I have no idea. Please tell me.) Cue maggoty corpse reveal!
  • Booth and Brennan determine that the body's been there for 10 days or so and was most definitely the victim of a murder. But who he is? Oh, he's got his name sewn into his shirt. Awesome. It's Jeff Fowler of the "Thunderballs." [snicker]
  • Booth recognizes Thunderballs as Max Brennan's (Ryan O'Neal) team, which begs the question: How does Booth know the name of Brennan's dad's bowling team? And for that matter, how does anyone know the name of anyone's bowling team?
  • Max, suspiciously stuck in a wheelchair, meets Booth and Brennan at the Royal Diner to discuss his teammate's death. He had nothing to do with it. And he's in the wheelchair because of some poorly executed sexual shenanigans -- which is wat more disgusting than the maggots.
  • Due to the nutritiously secret nature of intramural bowlers -- and the open spots on the team -- Booth and Brennan go undercover as "Buck" and "Wanda," an engaged, '80s-haired couple that shares a love of bowling and Shark Week. (I'm guessing that last part.)
  • But the Thunderballs are not who you'd expect them to be. The remaining teammates consist of a not-so-sharp Latino gentleman and a little girl who could clearly headline an all-ginger remake of "Children of the Corn."
  • A butch lady hits on "Wanda," prompting a "Back off, Tina!" from Ginger Corn. This girl is growing on me.
  • Then there's a bowling montage set to -- wait for it -- "The Bowling Song" by Raffi -- as in Raffi Raffi. (It's not up to the caliber of recent song selections by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs or Fever Ray, but I always appreciate a literal accompaniment.)
  • At the lab, Angela (Michaela Conlin), Hodgins (T.J. Thyne) and Wendell (Michael Grant Terry) try to figure out the murder weapon, when they're cut short by Angela's water breaking -- all while I repeatedly scream, "A bowling ball!" at my television.
  • The bowling league czar and scorekeeper, known only as "Raven," briefly becomes a suspect when it's revealed that the late Jeff once super-glued his fingers to the inside of a bowling ball, which resulted in him accidentally catapulting his whole body down the lane -- an incident Sweets (John Francis Daley) conveniently finds on YouTube. [Editor's note: If anyone out there wants to make me a .GIF of that video, I'll be forever in your debt.]
  • Wendell and Cam (Tamara Taylor) are not so deft at operating the Angelatron. Though they realize the weapon is a bowling ball, their murder scenario doesn't play out on the monitor. Instead, archival footage of Dwight Eisenhower, Twitch from "So You Think You Can Dance," a CGI kitten playing with a scull and a the epilogue to some Jeffersonian sex tape flash across the screen. Hello!
  • By achieving a physically impossible 7-10 split, Booth inadvertently proves to Brennan that the lane is fixed -- only now it turns out the murderer isn't even a bowler. The weapon was actually the motorcycle helmet, leaving the shoe guy as the only suspect. Jeff's stinky feet drove him to murder.
  • This does not sit well with Ginger Corn. She attacks Shoe Guy, leading Brennan to say her child would never behave like that for the third time in as many scenes. Foreshadowing...

bones-change-game-emily-deschanel-baby.jpg
For the shippers:

  • Having exhausted the old method of sexing the baby out, Angela tries to induce labor with hot sauce. She says it's not spicy enough, to which Hodgins tries a bite. Physical comedy ensues.
  • At the suggestion of going undercover, Booth immediately says they'll do it as boyfriend and girlfriend. Max raises a brow, because Daddy Bones always knows when something's up -- even though he's missed most of his daughter's life.
  • Angela spends her labor video-chatting Cam and Wendell to remotely operate the Angelatron. The OBGYN doesn't like this -- or, probably, Angela calling her a "rotten old bat" -- but being the girlfriend of a gyno, Cam apparently now knows all lady-doctors and gets her to make an exception.
  • Hodgins and Angela have one of their most tender tender moments right before she gives birth, promising that they'll be amazing, happy parents even if the baby ends up being blind. And since creator Hart Hanson is not prone to bouts of arbitrary evil like, say, Joss Whedon, little Michael Staccato Vincent Hodgins is born with perfect vision -- and one of Billy Gibbons' muppety hats!
  • Angela and Brennan, who've had many a BFF moment in the episode, do not discuss the Booth question, as I imagined they would, leaving us with one final scene...
  • Booth and Brennan stroll past a row of townhouses, discussing the life-altering business that is having a child, when Brennan just comes out with it. She's pregnant. Booth is the father. His momentary shock melts into the dearest smile a man could possibly make -- to which Brennan replies with her own goofy grin.

So they finally went there. I've never been shy about my desire to see the partners hook up -- or my trust in the producers to let it happen on their own terms -- so I'm clearly pleased. That sentiment won't be shared by everyone, but I'm pretty sure I'm in the majority.

"Bones" has always thrived on the chemistry of its two leads. And I think the bigger threat to their dynamic, at this point, would be to keep prolonging the inevitable -- not giving into it. How they adjust to parenthood and presumable couplehood will clearly change everything, but -- and I say this with all due respect to the beginning of Season 6 -- it's a much more appealing change than having to suffer through one of them with romantically involved with a third party while the other looks on in pain.

My only regret? No kiss! Confirmation via conception is more than validating, but a little physical affection wouldn't have hurt. But maybe they're saving that for next season... Until then, feel free to take this composite of their glowing expressions in the final scene, fashion them into paper dolls, and have them make out at your whim all summer long.

bones-change-in-the-game-end-1.jpgAnd for good measure... the Brennanism of the week:

"This is Wanda the bowler at the bowling tournament, bowling." (If I could have this girl go undercover every week, I would.)

'Bones' Season 6 finale: Babies, bowling and a bombshell change the game

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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

If you recall BSO brought you this story a few months back (Kye Allums Becomes First Openly Transgender Player College Basketball).

At the time I wonder how it would work out once she/he released the information. It appears the pressure is too much as Allums has quit the George Washington Basketball team.

Transgender basketball player Kye Allums will no longer play for the George Washington women’s team.

The university says in a statement that Allums “has decided that it is in his best interest to no longer participate in intercollegiate athletics.”

Allums made international headlines when he announced in November that he preferred to known as a man. He said he was putting off hormone treatments and gender-changing surgery so that he could continue to play for the women’s team.

Allums had an awful year last season. Only played in eight games and suffered a couple of concussions. Now he/she can have the surgery and possibly play for a man’s team at some point.


Source :http://blacksportsonline.com/home/2011/05/george-washington-transgender-basketball-player-kye-allums-quits-team/

George Washington Transgender Basketball Player Kye Allums Quits Team

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