Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Richard Childress Reflects on Dale Earnhardt, Predicts an RCR Title

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WELCOME, N.C. -- Richard Childress knew the questions were coming. But that didn't make it any easier.

On Feb. 18, it will have been 10 years since his best friend, seven-time NASCAR champion Dale Earnhardt, was killed in the last corner of the last lap of the 2001 Daytona 500.

Earnhardt drove Childress' black No. 3 Chevy to six of his titles and most of his glory. But more than that, the two were like brothers -- best friends, hunting buddies, business partners.

So even before the NASCAR media descended upon the Richard Childress Racing headquarters about an hour north of Charlotte on this rainy, cold Tuesday afternoon, Childress had prepared himself for the inevitable questions as the sport solemnly marks 10 years since it lost its greatest star and Childress lost his greatest friend.

"I'm not dreading it, so to speak, but I know there's going to be a lot of questions that I know deserve answers and some of the answers I'm the only person that can give,'' Childress said during a nearly hour-long interview on NASCAR's annual preseason media tour.

"It (the accident) almost seems like yesterday because you're always still remembering and thinking of what's happened since that time. Ten years, it just doesn't seem like it.''

 

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Source: http://motorsports.fanhouse.com/2011/01/25/richard-childress-reflects-on-dale-earnhardt-and-predicts-an-rcr/

Casey Borer Robert Bortuzzo Francis Bouillon Marc-Andre Bourdon

Martin Kaymer Grows Lead to Five Strokes at Abu Dhabi Championship

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Martin KaymerABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Defending champion Martin Kaymer extended his lead at the Abu Dhabi Golf Championship to five strokes over Rory McIlroy after shooting a 6-under 66 in the third round on Saturday.

Kaymer, the 2010 PGA Championship winner, birdied three of his last four holes to total 18-under 198 at the Abu Dhabi Golf Club.

"The great thing is I've made only one bogey so far, and that was the first day," Kaymer said. "I played very consistently. I've made a lot of birdies the last three days."

McIlroy finished birdie-eagle for a 65 to move into second place.

David Lynn of England (67) is at 204, two strokes ahead of Race to Dubai leader Charl Schwartzel of South Africa (71) and Alexander Noren of Sweden (67).

U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell struggled with putting and finished with a 71. Paul Casey of England (67) made a hole-in-one at the 12th.

Four-time major winner Phil Mickelson was 3 under at the turn, only to make four bogeys on the back nine. He shot a 72 and trails the leader by 15 strokes. Top-ranked Lee Westwood had a 73 and is tied for 65th.

Kaymer beat McIlroy by two shots in last year's tournament, and the Northern Irishman is aware he faces a challenge on Sunday.

"Kaymer is very, very good on this golf course," McIlroy said. "He's always good when leading from the front as well, so I'm going to have a difficult time to try and catch him."

 

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Source: http://golf.fanhouse.com/2011/01/22/martin-kaymer-grows-lead-at-abu-dhabi/

Noah Welch Patrick Wellar Colin White Ian White

Devil Ball Golfcast 61: Of Mickelson's mind, worthless rankings and hungry gators

One month into the year, and we're already mired in controversy. Phil Mickelson laid up on 18 on Sunday at Torrey Pines, and while we discussed the strategy on Sunday, we kick around the greater question here: will coming so close to winning mess with Phil's mind? Maybe, maybe not.

We also debate the value (or lack thereof) of the world golf rankings. Do you even care? Plus, I take an unwarranted shot at student health center doctors. We finish by discussing the story of the gator ripping the guy's arm off that we ran last week. The horror!

As always, I'm joined by Shane Bacon, writer here and at Dogs That Chase Cars. (Follow Shane on Twitter right here, and while you're there, follow me too.) 

We welcome your thoughts, ideas and recommendations on the podcast. Hit me up at jay.busbee@yahoo.com. And if you've got a question or comment for us to kick around, call our Skype line at 678-389-9173 and leave your message. Click the little arrow below to play the podcast or right-click it to download, and hit the iTunes site linked below to subscribe. Follow us on Twitter at @jaybusbee and @shanebacon to get more frequent updates. Have at it!

Devil Ball Golfcast 61: Mickelson's mind, worthless rankings, hungry gators

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/golf/blog/golf_experts/post/Devil-Ball-Golfcast-61-Of-Mickelson-s-mind-wor?urn=golf-315236

Garnet Exelby Brian Fahey Justin Falk T.J. Fast

TCU Football Recruiting Capitalizes On 2011 Rose Bowl Success

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/ncaa-football/2011/2/1/1968118/tcu-football-recruiting-national-signing-day-2011

Mike Commodore Adam Comrie Tim Conboy Kevin Connauton

Will UFC 129 break attendance records?

The UFC announced that tickets will go on sale on Feb. 12 for their first Toronto event, UFC 129 at the Rogers Centre. Tickets will range from $50-800, and approximately 42,000 tickets will be available for sale. That's nearly double the attendance that the UFC has ever gotten for an event.

The deck is stacked for a big event. Canada's favorite son, Georges St. Pierre will fight Jake Shields on the main event. Jose Aldo will put his belt on the line against Mark Hominick, and Randy Couture, always a draw, will fight Lyoto Machida. Plus, it's the first time the UFC willl be in Toronto.

Canada is traditionally a boon for the UFC. Most recently, UFC 124 in Montreal broke the North American attendance record. With GSP as the main event fighter, they pulled in 23,152 attendees.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Will-UFC-129-break-attendance-records-?urn=mma-313411

Adam Mair Manny Malhotra Evgeni Malkin Brad Marchand

Pressing Questions: The Seattle Mariners


Ken Griffey Jr. took a lot of heat for reportedly taking a nap in the Mariners clubhouse in the middle of a game last May. But, while Griffey took his lumps and not long afterwards left Seattle (and his playing career) in a huff, truth is, much of the Seattle organization was guilty of sleeping on the job last season.

Before the season began, Seattle was a buzzy playoff pick and even those that could see the warts that the more optimistic prognosticators turned a blind eye to couldn't have fathomed the depths to which this team would fall in 2010.

This time around, coming off 101 losses and without the benefit of four months of Cliff Lee, all eyes are wide open. This is a team severely lacking in quality veteran talent, especially on offense, where it scored 74 fewer runs than any other team in baseball.AL Cy Young winner Felix Hernandez and the baseball ninja, Ichiro, are the silver lining. Chone Figgins and a few others (very few) also offer some potential for fantasy owners. But, with the team's limited spending in free agency this offseason, it's clear it is already looking ahead to 2012 and beyond, with 2011 being a proving ground for some of the younger players.

With that in mind, let's begin this Pressing Questions with Seattle's brightest hope for the future:

When should we expect star prospect Dustin Ackley to arrive, and what should we expect when he does?

You'd be hard-pressed to find Ackley outside the top five of any reputable list of current top minor league prospects. The Arizona Fall League MVP and former consolation prize in the Stephen Strasburg sweepstakes is one of the top pure-hitting prospects to come along in a long time. He's got a sweet stroke, is a contact machine and can drive the ball with authority. He also offers plus speed. Long-term, he's got the makings of being a perennial top-tier fantasy 2B. But you'll have to temper the enthusiasm for 2011. GM Jack Zduriencik has been hinting that Ackley will spend some time in Triple-A to start the season, and with the team a farfetched contender, there's simply no reason to start his service time clock. That issue typically becomes moot after the first two months of the season, meaning that a June arrival makes a lot of sense. When Ackley does arrive, he'll most certainly be worth a flyer given his pedigree and the certainty that the M's will be playing him every day. However, his power peak is a long ways off and his ability to make his fleet feet work for him on the base paths is still a work in progress. If you take that into consideration along with the likelihood that he'll be slotted at the bottom of one of the worst lineups in the league, you just can't be overly optimistic about Ackley's fantasy impact this season. In standard 12-team league setups, try to avoid making the flaunt-your-knowledge vanity pick on Ackley.

Is David Aardsma going to be ready for the start of the season after hip surgery?

Aardsma, he of 79 saves over the past two seasons, had hip surgery this offseason and it turned out that repairing his damaged hip labrum was more extensive than initially expected. He was supposed to be back in the mix after rehab at some point in the middle of the upcoming Cactus League play. But Zduriencik revealed early in the new year that the timetable was likely to be pushed back a couple weeks, seriously putting opening day availability in doubt. Setup man Brandon League is the assumed end-game replacement. He's a tough chore for hitters because of his high heat and ability to induce grounders, and he's likely to do an admirable job in the role while Aardsma is out. But make no mistake, Aardsma will get his job back the moment he's deemed fit to pitch because the Mariners are motivated to deal him, and they'll need to showcase him as much as possible early in the year to prove he's plenty healthy and still effective.

Was Mike Parrott (pictured) the worst pitcher of all time?

From a career standpoint, no. But you could make a strong case that his 1980 season with Seattle was the worst single-season pitching performance of all-time and, perhaps, the worst of all major sports. Parrott won his first start of 1980 (on opening day!), but then went on to lose 16 straight games. He finished the season with an ERA of 7.28 and a WHIP of 1.89 in 94 IP. He also lost his first two decisions of '81 to run his consecutive losses streak to 18 games.

Where there's Smoak will there be fire in 2011?

If there is a fantasy x-factor on Seattle, it's Justin Smoak. We know what the veterans bring to the table, and I've already explained why Dustin Ackley isn't likely to make his mark in fantasy this season. But Smoak, given his pedigree, is very capable of doing something pleasantly surprising. After flaming out in late July with a .198 batting average in a combined 86 games between Texas and Seattle, Smoak was sent down to Triple-A Tacoma, where he got his mechanics in check and started to show the kind of power (7 HRs in 35 games) that made him one of the top minor league prospects entering 2010. When he returned to Seattle in September, he remained in recovery mode, hitting .340 with 3 HRs in the final 14 games of the season.

Smoak had to deal with a lot in his rookie tour. Not only was he a 23-year-old facing MLB pitching for the first time, but he was dealt the added pressure of being the key piece of the Cliff Lee deal when he arrived in Seattle during the summer. In addition, he had to deal with a large amount of bad luck, as he had the seventh-best Line Drive% among all hitters with at least 390 plate appearances, yet finished with the 14th-lowest (.255) BABIP. He's a 20 HR/75 RBI consideration for the late rounds that, if luck is on his side, is capable of 25/90.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/fantasy/blog/roto_arcade/post/Pressing-Questions-The-Seattle-Mariners?urn=fantasy-312940

Anton Volchenkov Viatcheslav Voynov Steve Wagner Matt Walker

Andy Murray's frayed psyche shows he needs a better coaching team | Richard Williams

Distress signals throughout the Australian Open final showed that the Briton is not getting the help he needs

So now we know that not even a knock?up with David Cameron in the drawing room of No10 could inspire Andy Murray to the ultimate victory. More seriously, the dominant conclusion to emerge from his defeat in Melbourne today was that if he is ever going to win a grand slam tournament, he will probably need better help than he is getting.

To put it harshly, Murray gave less reason for optimism in defeat against Novak Djokovic today than he did exactly 12 months ago, while losing the final of the 2010 Australian Open to Roger Federer. Confronting the Swiss, he gave himself a glimpse of victory when he broke serve in the second set to go 4-2 up, capturing the break point with the shot of a lifetime. There were no such golden visions today, just a hard, sweaty struggle to retain a semblance of self?respect against an opponent manifestly superior on the day.

The careers of Murray and Djokovic, born a week apart in 1987, have run on parallel lines since they first encountered each other on a tennis court at the age of 13. The Serb, however, has proved more adept at turning talent and promise into achievement. Two years ago, when Djokovic was winning his first grand slam tournament in Australia, it could be suggested that some players mature faster than others. Now, however, they are both 23-years-old in a young man's sport, and no further excuses can be made.

Today Djokovic surmounted an even more daunting hurdle, which is to win again. After winning in 2008, he fell back. But he has worked hard to strengthen his game, and his single-minded demolition of Federer on Thursday showed that he is worthy of his place among the world's top three.

Before the final Djokovic had enjoyed the advantage of an extra 24 hours' rest, thanks to a flaw in the Australian tournament's structure, and Murray was certainly looking frayed as the match went into its third set. However, these competitors know the conditions, and they have nothing to do but prepare for them. And although Murray had to work hard to get the better of David Ferrer in a four-set semi-final, Djokovic's task at the same stage was to eliminate the great Federer.

An even bleaker light is cast on Murray's failure by the statistical nature of the defeat: his three grand slam finals have all been surrendered in straight sets. Against Federer at Flushing Meadow in 2008 the score was 6-2, 7-5, 6-2.

In Melbourne against the same opponent last year it was 6-3, 6-4, 7-6. By comparison, today's 6-4 6-2 6-3 hardly suggests a man moving inexorably towards a rendezvous with destiny.

Like Tim Henman, the man from Dunblane has done wonderfully well to emerge from the slough of despond that is British professional tennis. In both cases, their success was achieved through bypassing a sclerotic system. Unlike the worthy but limited Henman, however, Murray has the talent to prevail at the very top. What he needs is the tactical preparation and the mental strengthening necessary to take the final step ? and then not to be content with one victory but to go on and win again, as Djokovic has just done.

Coaches are clearly a problem for Murray. Since turning professional in 2005 he has worked with Pato Alvarez, Mark Petchey, Brad Gilbert, Miles Maclagan and Alex Corretja. The Spaniard, who had coached Murray during the clay-court season in 2008, replaced Maclagan last summer, on the understanding that there would eventually be a permanent replacement, but not before Australia this month.

This left Murray in the care of his mother, Judy, who leads the rest of a team comprising his friend and hitting partner Dani Vallverdu, his physio Andy Ireland and fitness trainer Jez Green. A second regular fitness trainer, Matt Little, was not around.

Murray does not enjoy travelling with just a professional coach. He has said that he prefers the company of people of his own age, with whom he can relax. But as his battle to stay in today's match reached its anticlimax in the third set, what use were they in hard, practical, professional terms? None of them could affect his inability to put more than 53% of his first serves into play, against Djokovic's 67%: a fatal handicap.

As his play grew more erratic, he cursed himself with increasing vehemence. At a crucial point in a match that was there to be saved, such passionate self-laceration represented a terribly debilitating waste of mental energy.

On the point of losing his third grand slam final, he should have been concentrating his attention not on the disappointment of the last point but on the possibility of the next, and on what he could do about it.

The world is full of tennis coaches, and somewhere out there must be one capable of providing the combination of discipline and encouragement necessary to focus the unruly instincts that undid Murray once again today. If necessary, they could take breakfast in separate rooms.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/blog/2011/jan/30/andy-murray-novak-djokovic-australian-open1

Kevin Montgomery John Moore Mike Moore Derek Morris