Monday, January 31, 2011

Abe Wagner KOs Tim Sylvia in 32 Seconds at Titan FC

Former UFC heavyweight champion Tim Sylvia is done as a relevant mixed martial artist.

In a result reminiscent of his embarrassing knockout loss to the boxer Ray Mercer, Sylvia showed up overweight and out of shape on Friday night for his bout with Abe Wagner on the Titan FC 16 card in Kansas City, and the result was Wagner battering him around the cage for 32 seconds before Sylvia fell face-first to the canvas, and the referee waved off the fight, awarding Wagner a quick TKO.

It was an indecisive stoppage by ref Jason Herzog, but not a bad stoppage: Sylvia didn't seem to know where he was when he crumpled to the canvas, and he wasn't intelligently defending himself.

Sylvia, who weighed in at 311 pounds on Friday, falls to 28-7. He was once among the sport's truly elite fighters, but that was a long time ago. Sylvia no longer takes his conditioning seriously, and although he did enter Friday night on a four-fight winning streak, he's just never been the same fighter since losing three straight fights to Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Fedor Emelianenko and Mercer in 2008 and 2009.

Wagner improves to 8-3.

"I thought I'd have a big speed advantage over him," Wagner said. "I wanted to put the pressure on him, and I knew if I got inside his jab I'd be money."

Wagner was money, and Sylvia was a guy just collecting a check. He'll struggle to collect many more checks in his MMA career: You can't keep fooling the fans forever.

The most noteworthy result on the undercard came when Jason High choked out Rudy Bears with a guillotine just 51 seconds into the first round. It was a very impressive showing from High, who's now on a four-fight winning streak.

Prior to that Aaron Derrow choked out the heavily favored Rich Clementi, sinking in a triangle choke and squeezing it tight around Clementi's neck, causing Clementi to pass out three and a half minutes into the third round. It was scary to see Clementi out cold after the referee stopped the fight, although Clementi got up and walked out of the cage without incident.

The undercard also featured Drew McFedries stepping into the cage for the first time since the UFC cut him in 2009 and beating Gary Tapusoa by third-round TKO.

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Bellator Adds Nazareno Malegarie, Featherweight With MMA's Best Record

  • Michael David Smith
  • Lead Blogger
The fighter with the best record in mixed martial arts is heading to Bellator and ready to enter the promotion's Season 4 featherweight tournament.

Nazareno Malegarie, who has built up a 19-0 record while fighting for Brazilian promotions, is now ready to fight in the United States, Bellator announced Monday.

"I'm just very excited to finally have the chance to show fans in the United States what I'm capable of," Malegarie said in a statement. "Signing with Bellator was very important for me, and I'm ready to prove myself."

According to Sherdog, Malegarie's 19-0 record is the best among active fighters. There are 25 active fighters with undefeated records and at least 10 fights, but most are known to only the hardest of hard-core fans. The handful of well-known fighters with undefeated records include the 17-0 Strikeforce lightweight Lyle Beerbohm and the 12-0 UFC light heavyweight Ryan Bader.

Malegarie hasn't faced particularly tough opposition, so his 19-0 record is somewhat suspect: Four of his last seven fights have come against opponents with losing records.

But the Bellator featherweight tournament won't be easy for Malegarie. The other seven participants (Patricio "Pitbull" Freire, Wilson Reis, Daniel Straus, Georgi Karakhanyan, Zac George, Kenny Foster and Eric Larkin) would all be a step up in competition for him. If Malegarie can get through that gauntlet, he'd face Bellator featherweight champion Joe Warren. So by the end of 2011, no one can say Malegarie hasn't faced anyone of note.

And if Malegarie is still undefeated at the end of 2011, he'll have to be considered one of the truly elite featherweights in the sport.

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Mike Tomlin: Maurkice Pouncey Not Ruled Out of Super Bowl Yet

January 31 2011 Last updated at 05:40 PM ET

Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey hasn't been ruled out of the Super Bowl just yet.FORT WORTH, Texas -- It was hardly an inspirational sight, the shot of inured Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey hobbling off the Steelers' team plane on crutches. And with various reports over the past couple of days indicating that Pouncey won't play in the Super Bowl on Sunday, it looked especially bleak. But Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said Monday that the Steelers have been treating Pouncey's high ankle sprain aggressively, and that he wasn't ready to rule his rookie center out just yet.

"He's not on a running clock, in my mind, until Wednesday," Tomlin said. "So we're going to continue to be as aggressive as we can and give him every opportunity to get into this football game."

If Pouncey can't go, he would be replaced by backup center Doug Legursky, who filled in and did a solid job against the Jets after Pouncey was injured early in the AFC championship game. Legursky's challenge would be to contain red-hot Packers nose tackle B.J. Raji and help anchor an offensive line that has played most of the season with two backups at the tackle spots.

"I don't think it's going to affect us at all, personally," left tackle Flozell Adams said. "We have a lot of guys on this team and on this offensive line that can step up if one of the starters goes down. I have no doubt that Doug is as good as, if not better than Pouncey."

Tomlin was asked about reports that Pouncey had a fracture in the ankle in addition to the sprain, and he said that was certainly possible but that the sprain was the injury that needs to improve in order for Pouncey to have a chance to play.


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POLL: Which striker picked up in Re-Entry process will score the most goals?

With the Crew's signing of Jeff Cunningham on Friday and the earlier signing of Juan Pablo �ngel by the LA Galaxy, the total number of strikers who have found new homes through the Re-Entry process has risen to four.

Joining Cunningham and �ngel are the D.C. United pair of Joseph Ngwenya and Josh Wolff. Combined, the quartet of strikers has 273 goals in the regular season.

So which of the four will score the most goals for his new club in 2011?

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Bubba Watson Edges Phil Mickelson to Win at Torrey Pines

Bubba WatsonSAN DIEGO -- With a 5-under final-round 67 Sunday at Torrey Pines, Bubba Watson won the Farmers Insurance Open -- his second PGA Tour title -- by one shot over Phil Mickelson and put the PGA Tour on notice.

He's serious.

"It just shows that I can do it," Watson said. "I did it twice now. I'm only like 50 behind Phil and 80 behind Tiger, so they better watch out."

Watson, no malice intended, is seen by many as something of a golf goof ball. The 32-year-old self-taught player from the little Florida Panhandle town of Bagdad, likes to post Internet videos featuring trick shots and comedy. One of his favorites is a wedge shot from out of a tiny loving cup, over a swimming pool and into a sand pail.

He also has posted a "Happy Birthday" tribute to Ellen DeGeneres, and, last December at the Shark Shootout, dressed as Santa Claus to sign autographs after finishing play.

"Well, I think I'm funny. But I still have fun with the game, I still have fun with my life," he says. "But for me to just go through the motions or for me to be good at what I do, I needed to take stuff serious.

"So on the golf course, my 30 seconds before I hit and 30 seconds while I'm hitting, I've got to be serious. The rest, who cares. So, you know, it's growing on me. This is my sixth year on Tour, so I'm getting used to all the attention, all the ropes, all the media, all the people. Just getting used to it, so it's becoming more natural now for me."

The odd thing about that is despite Watson's lighter side, most of his public exposure has come with tears.

Last year, after making the Travelers his first PGA Tour victory, Watson broke down, acknowledging his father, Gerry, who was home in Pensacola, Fla., losing a battle to cancer. In September, while Bubba was in Wales playing his first Ryder Cup, he was calling home ever day during Gerry's final weeks.

"More than likely, I am never going to be in the military," Watson said of playing for the U.S.. "So this is a chance to be like my dad."

"I did it twice now. I'm only like 50 behind Phil and 80 behind Tiger, so they better watch out."
-- Bubba Watson
Finally, the former Green Beret, who served in Vietnam, and later taught his son to play the game, died in October.

Sunday's 16-under finish and victory, Watson's first since his dad's death, again brought emotion.

"It means a lot," Watson said of the victory. "You know, everyone is special. We do not know if we are going to have them or not. So I'm probably going to cry all day, just like I did last time."

The long-hitting left-hander was 13 under on the par-5s for the week, birdieing all four on Sunday. He led the field in greens in regulation -- 59 of 72. He also led the field in driving distance, averaging 308 yards.

And he made clutch putts on the last two holes, a 10-footer to save par at No. 17 and a 12-footer for birdie at 18 that secured the victory over a charging Mickelson.

"Well, what I believe in life as a Christian, I believe that, yes, he's up there he's watching and he's cheering me on," Watson said of his father. "It's my sister's birthday today, so it was nice for our family that I won on my sister's birthday. So, yeah, I thought about him a little bit.

"I thought about him after I made the putt on 18. I looked up to the sky, but at the same time I knew that Phil Mickelson's a great wedge player, so I can't get too emotional yet."

Mickelson, a hometown favorite who has won the event three times, was one shot behind as he went to the par-5 finishing hole, just before Watson sank what would be the winning putt.

Watson's birdie left Mickelson needing to hole a 72-yard wedge shot for eagle to tie.

Mickelson had his caddie, Jim "Bones" Mackay, tend the flag. His shot landed about four feet behind the hole, but stopped well short of spinning back and into the hole. Mickelson closed with a 69.

"Bubba played some terrific golf," Mickelson said. "I really felt like starting out with the wind and the difficult conditions that if I shot something in the 60s, I thought that would be enough. I did what I thought would be enough, and it just wasn't.

"Bubba played too good. Made some great shots after great shots. I saw and made putt after putt. It was a wonderful round for him."

Seriously, folks.

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Andy Gray Fired Over Sexist Comments

January 25 2011 Last updated at 12:59 PM ET

LONDON (AP) -- One of British soccer's leading television commentators was fired Tuesday, a day after being taken off the air and temporarily suspended for making sexist remarks about a female match official.

Andy Gray, the face of Sky Sports' soccer coverage for the past two decades, was dismissed by the broadcaster after "new evidence of unacceptable and offensive behavior" that took place off-air last month.

The former Scotland striker and broadcast colleague Richard Keys had been reprimanded and removed from duty Monday for making derogatory comments about lineswoman Sian Massey, former referee Wendy Toms and West Ham executive Karren Brady.

"Andy Gray's contract has been terminated for unacceptable behavior," Sky Sports managing director Barney Francis said Tuesday. "We have no hesitation in taking this action after becoming aware of new information today."

Francis was referring to footage that appears to show Gray making a suggestive comment and gesture toward Sky Sports colleague Charlotte Jackson in the studio.

The 55-year-old Gray was broadcasting the Premier League match between Wolverhampton and Liverpool on Saturday when he and Keys make disparaging remarks about Massey, who was officiating the game.

Gray questioned whether Massey knew the offside rule, a barometer of basic soccer knowledge, and made an abusive reference to Toms, saying she had been "hopeless" as a lineswoman.

The remarks were leaked to a Sunday newspaper. More footage that compromised Gray and another member of Sky Sports' commentary team-Andy Burton-was also passed to the media. Burton was taken off the air Tuesday.

Burton was talking to Gray off-air on the touchline at Molineux before the kickoff on Saturday and said: "Apparently a female lino today, bit of a looker."

In another remark on Massey's appearance, Burton added that another member of the Sky Sports crew said Massey was "all right," adding: "Now, I don't know if I should trust his judgment on that?"

Gray then said: "No, I wouldn't. I definitely wouldn't ... I can see her from here," before swearing and adding: "What do women know about the offside rule?"

Gray didn't publicly apologized for his remarks, unlike Keys, who telephoned Massey on Monday.

The 25-year-old Massey has been withdrawn as a lineswoman for Tuesday's fourth-tier league match between Crewe and Bradford, the Professional Game Match Officials organization said Tuesday.

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Shaun White Wins Fourth Straight Winter X Games Superpipe Title

ASPEN, Colo. (AP) -- Shaun White captured his fourth straight superpipe crown at the Winter X Games, holding off Scotty Lago by performing his signature trick, a difficult and dangerous maneuver only few can do.

White, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, cemented the win on his second run Sunday night, pulling out the Double McTwist 1260 in which he launches himself high above the pipe, then does two head-over-heels flips and 3 1/2 rotations.

That was good enough to overtake Lago, who led after the first run despite competing with a broken jaw. Louie Vito was third.

All three were members of the Olympic snowboarding team in Vancouver, with White winning gold and Lago winding up with bronze.

White was looking quite stylish, wearing a black leather jacket and skin-tight pants. His snowboarding was just as cutting edge as White demonstrated why he's the undisputed king of the pipe, even if he was battling a cold.

Before Sunday, White never really had to pull out the McTwist to come from behind and secure a win.

Usually, he's only brought it out for victory laps.

But the trick was spot-on when he needed it most.

"I saw Lago just destroying it," White told the ESPN broadcast. "I figured it was all or nothing. I knew I needed to stick the best run and went for it."

With the victory in hand, White leisurely traversed the pipe on his final lap, spraying snow at the bottom.

White has now captured 11 gold medals in his Winter X career and proved he hasn't lost some of his snowboarding prowess.

Earlier in the week, the legend of White took a little ding when he washed out of the slopestyle competition, failing to qualify for the finals Sunday afternoon.

White won the slopestyle event in 2009 at Winter X, but his game slipped as he focused on the pipe in the lead-up to the Vancouver Games.

A young group of riders led by 18-year-old Sebastien Toutant has surpassed him, showing White just how much catching up he has to do in the event that tests a rider's ability to handle a variety of terrain by rolling over rails, jumps and other obstacles.

"I'm sure if he practices more, Shaun White will be able to do good in slopestyle as well," said Toutant, who edged fellow Canadian Mark McMorris in the finals. "When he learns all those double corks, he's going to be able to put it down every run. I can't wait for him to get back on slopestyle. He's a rock star."

White, of Carlsbad, Calif., looked at the superpipe as an opportunity to redeem himself.

"Going into slopestyle, I wasn't holding the biggest cards," White said. "After living and learning, I'm so fired up for next year."

This may provide even more motivation: There's a strong probability the International Olympic Committee will add the snowboarding slopestyle event- along with skiing slopestyle and skiing halfpipe-to the program for the 2014 Sochi Winter Games.

White has some polishing to do.

"I'm probably at the bottom of the barrel in slopestyle, trying to catch up with where they're at," White conceded.

It's strange to see White so vulnerable on a snowboard, so human.

"I don't think he's ever been far behind in anything in snowboarding," said Kevin Pearce, who's serving as an analyst as he recovers from a traumatic brain injury he sustained just over a year ago while practicing in the halfpipe. "I think that's exciting for him, because he's never had anything to work on. He's unstoppable in the pipe."

That was definitely the case Sunday, once he warmed up. He turned in a businesslike effort on his first trip down.

Then, he went big, pumping his fist after landing the McTwist, a move he secretly perfected last year in the backcountry near Silverton, Colo., on a course created just for him.

In other finals on the last day of Winter X:

- Snowmobiler Tucker Hibbert, of Goodridge, Minn., won his fifth straight crown in SnoCross.

- Rookie Enni Rukajarvi of Finland captured the women's snowboard slopestyle final.

- Despite both crashing on the final jump and sliding across the finish line, Canada's Kelsey Serwa ended the reign of France's Ophelie David in women's skier X. Serwa bruised her tailbone and scraped her nose in the win, while David didn't seek medical treatment.

- John Teller, of Mammoth Lakes, Calif., held off defending champion Chris Del Bosco in men's skier X, while Casey Puckett, of Aspen, ended up with the bronze.

"I had the best seat in the house," said the 38-year old Puckett, who recently helped form the American Ski Cross Association to support riders such as Teller. "I was watching Teller and Del Bosco go at it and really I was waiting to see if they made a mistake so that I could capitalize on it. But they had a good race."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

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Stuart Scott, ESPN Personality, Has Cancerous Tissue Removed

January 28 2011 Last updated at 03:01 PM ET

ESPN anchor Stuart Scott will undergo chemotherapy treatments after his doctors discovered cancerous tissue, the channel reported Friday.

Scott, who anchors NFL and NBA shows, as well as SportsCenter, will undergo preventative treatments, including chemotherapy, and will miss some on-air time, though he will attempt to maintain a regular schedule.

In a statement issued through ESPN, Scott said, "There are 28 million cancer survivors. You know what that means? We've got a strong army!! Once again, I join the fight and like 3 years ago, I plan to beat this thing. Can't tell you you how much I appreciate everyone's well wishes and support. I'll be back at work soon ... probably sooner than you think. I am blessed to have the invaluable support of a great team of doctors, my loving family, genuine friends and my ESPN family."

Scott underwent an emergency appendectomy in 2007, at which time a malignancy was discovered. Scott had chemotherapy at that time, and it is not known if this current discovery is connected to his previous illness.

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Titans Still Hoping to Trade Vince Young

January 30 2011 Last updated at 02:04 PM ET

Vince YoungThe Tennessee Titans are going to do what they can to trade quarterback Vince Young.

The question is: Can they pull it off?

Young, who the Titans announced earlier this month will not return next season, is due a $4.25 million roster bonus 10 days after the start of the new league year, a clock that will begin ticking when a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA) is signed, ESPN's Adam Schefter has reported.

It previously had been thought that Young was due the bonus March 10, which led many to believe the Titans had to deal or cut Young by that date.

Because the bonus is tied to the CBA, it gives the Titans a more flexible window to address the Young situation.

If Young is traded, his new team must assume his contract or be willing to restructure it. Schefter wrote that while the Titans can release Young as of February 7, they have no plans to do so now.

The Titans also are in the process of finding a replacement for coach Jeff Fisher, who left the team Thursday after 18 seasons.

The club is expected to interview offensive line coach Mike Munchak on Monday, and are expected to interview linebackers coach Dave McGinnis and offensive coordinator Mike Heimerdinger.

Schefter reported that Titans executive vice president Steve Underwood, general manager Mike Reinfeldt and owner Bud Adams are making the final decision.


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US players to be considered domestic for Canadian teams

NEW YORK ? The 2011 MLS season will see the league?s two Canadian clubs operate on a more even playing field compared to their US-based counterparts.

The league announced on Friday that players considered domestic players in the United States will also be considered domestic players in Canada.

?We want to make sure the MLS teams from Canada are competitive with other MLS teams and, at the same time, we want to make sure we?re creating the best environment for domestic players to develop in Canada,? MLS executive vice president of player relations and competition Todd Durbin told MLSsoccer.com.

?The backbone of the league has been and will continue to be the US domestic players, and that is a very large pool upon which our teams can draw from. If the Canadian teams are limited in their ability to draw from that pool, there?s a possibility that it could impact them competitively on the field.?

With the freedom to select players from the pool of US and Canadian domestic players, the Vancouver Whitecaps, Toronto FC and future Canadian clubs will also be required to maintain a minimum of three Canadian players on their roster. Montreal is set to join the league in 2012.

The rule sets the first ever domestic-player minimum for MLS clubs in league history. Durbin expects Canadian teams to regularly exceed this number.

?You could in theory have a team with no Canadian domestics on it,? Durbin said. ?That is clearly not our goal and it?s not the goal of Vancouver or Toronto, who are committed to developing players.?

In order to monitor the impact on the development of Canadian players, MLS has partnered with the Canadian Soccer Association (CSA) in setting up a task force that will continually evaluate the rule, which expires after the 2015 season.

?MLS and the CSA will be working together to ensure that there?s optimal player development opportunities for players in Canada,? Durbin said. ?We?ll also be reviewing the number of Canadian players on each MLS roster with the idea of balancing the need for MLS teams to be competitive and our collective commitment to developing players in Canada.?

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Abe Wagner KOs Tim Sylvia in 32 Seconds at Titan FC

Former UFC heavyweight champion Tim Sylvia is done as a relevant mixed martial artist.

In a result reminiscent of his embarrassing knockout loss to the boxer Ray Mercer, Sylvia showed up overweight and out of shape on Friday night for his bout with Abe Wagner on the Titan FC 16 card in Kansas City, and the result was Wagner battering him around the cage for 32 seconds before Sylvia fell face-first to the canvas, and the referee waved off the fight, awarding Wagner a quick TKO.

It was an indecisive stoppage by ref Jason Herzog, but not a bad stoppage: Sylvia didn't seem to know where he was when he crumpled to the canvas, and he wasn't intelligently defending himself.

Sylvia, who weighed in at 311 pounds on Friday, falls to 28-7. He was once among the sport's truly elite fighters, but that was a long time ago. Sylvia no longer takes his conditioning seriously, and although he did enter Friday night on a four-fight winning streak, he's just never been the same fighter since losing three straight fights to Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Fedor Emelianenko and Mercer in 2008 and 2009.

Wagner improves to 8-3.

"I thought I'd have a big speed advantage over him," Wagner said. "I wanted to put the pressure on him, and I knew if I got inside his jab I'd be money."

Wagner was money, and Sylvia was a guy just collecting a check. He'll struggle to collect many more checks in his MMA career: You can't keep fooling the fans forever.

The most noteworthy result on the undercard came when Jason High choked out Rudy Bears with a guillotine just 51 seconds into the first round. It was a very impressive showing from High, who's now on a four-fight winning streak.

Prior to that Aaron Derrow choked out the heavily favored Rich Clementi, sinking in a triangle choke and squeezing it tight around Clementi's neck, causing Clementi to pass out three and a half minutes into the third round. It was scary to see Clementi out cold after the referee stopped the fight, although Clementi got up and walked out of the cage without incident.

The undercard also featured Drew McFedries stepping into the cage for the first time since the UFC cut him in 2009 and beating Gary Tapusoa by third-round TKO.

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Sunday, January 30, 2011

Houston Dynamo switch to Eastern Conference

NEW YORK ? The Eastern Conference just added a little Texas twang for the 2011 MLS season.

League officials on Friday announced the highly awaited plans for conference realignment with the inclusion of expansion sides Portland and Vancouver, and the Houston Dynamo will make the shift from the Western Conference to the Eastern Conference.

Both conferences will carry nine teams for the 2011 season, and teams will play each other twice as part of the league?s new balanced 34-game schedule.

Houston were realigned because they were the franchise furthest east in the Western Conference, roughly 100 miles east of in-state rivals FC Dallas.

?With the addition of Portland and Vancouver in 2011, MLS wanted to have two conferences of nine teams each,? MLS President Mark Abbott said. ?The most logical solution was for the Houston Dynamo ? the easternmost club in the 2010 Western Conference ? to move to the Eastern Conference.?

The move adds some hard-earned MLS hardware to the already proven Eastern Conference, as the two-time MLS Cup winning Dynamo make the change. The Dynamo won back-to-back MLS Cups in 2006 and 2007 and had reached the postseason each of the past four seasons before missing the playoffs in 2010.

With Houston now in the East, the Conference now boasts the winners of three MLS Cups since 2005 (Houston in 2006 and 2007, Columbus in 2008). The Western Conference has won the last two (Colorado and Real Salt Lake).

The Portland Timbers and Vancouver Whitecaps will both join the Western Conference, where they?ll compete with the regional rival Seattle Sounders and the rest of the conference.

The Dynamo open the season on March 19 at home against the Philadelphia Union.

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Tracy Morgan Brings TNT Pregame Show to Halt With 'Salute' to Sarah Palin

January 27 2011 Last updated at 08:48 PM ET

Someone said something shocking on a TNT NBA studio show Thursday night. No shock there, not with Charles Barkley as one of the analysts.

Except, the stunning statement didn't happen in a studio, but rather on the floor of Madison Square Garden. And it wasn't said by Barkley, but by comedian Tracy Morgan, who made the startling declaration that former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin was attractive.

Really, really attractive.

Here's the set-up: Barkley, Kenny Smith and Ernie Johnson were conducting business at MSG in advance of the Miami Heat-New York Knicks game, which TNT televised. The trio were discussing the pending NBA All-Star Game and Thursday's announcement of the Eastern and Western Conference starters, when Morgan, who stars in the NBC sitcom "30 Rock" happened by their makeshift set.

Barkley and Smith asked Morgan whom he thought merited inclusion on the All-Star roster. Then Morgan was asked to choose between Palin and Tina Fey, who created "30 Rock," and has impersonated Palin on "SNL."

That's when Morgan said that Palin, the former Republican vice presidential nominee was "good masturbation material." It may have marked one of the few times that the normally loquacious Barkley has ever been speechless.

TNT, however, recovered quickly, issuing a statement from spokesman Jeff Pomeroy that read: "It's unfortunate Mr. Morgan showed a lack of judgment on our air with his inappropriate comments."

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Americans Abroad: Clint Dempsey, Jonathan Spector Keep Scoring Goals

clint dempsey jonathan spector u.s. soccerSeveral Americans abroad found net this weekend, a few settled in with new clubs, and one even did both. But amid it all, Clint Dempsey continued to set the gold standard for Yanks abroad.

The Fulham midfielder scored both goals in the Cottagers' 2-0 home win over Stoke City on Saturday, bringing his English Premier League total to eight on the season -- five more than Fulham's second-leading scorer.

The crafty Texan scored the opener in the 33rd minute when, in vintage Dempsey fashion, he launched a goal-crashing run to beat his man to the ball and slide Andy Johnson's cross into the roof of the net (photo).

Dempsey then buried Stoke shortly after halftime, using a deceptively deft touch at the top of the penalty area to evade Ryan Shawcross, who responded by wrestling the American to the turf. The referee pointed to the spot and showed Shawcross red, and Dempsey subsequently buried the 56th-minute penalty kick.

It was a crucial win that improved Fulham to 5-7-11 and pushed the London outfit four points free of the relegation zone.

Here are the highlights:

NOTABLE OUTINGS

While Dempsey is unsurprisingly pacing Americans abroad in the goal column, it would be hard to imagine a more unlikely runner-up in that category.

Two months ago, Jonathan Spector had never notched a professional goal. After scoring against compatriot Tim Howard in West Ham's 2-2 draw with Everton at Goodison Park on Saturday, he now has four tallies to his name.

In the 26th minute, Howard charged from goal to challenge Luis Boa Morte, who laid the ball back for Spector to fire into the gaping net. It was Spector's first EPL goal after he notched two in the League Cup and one in FA Cup play.

Although West Ham remains in the EPL cellar at 4-11-9, the club is just two points away from escaping the bottom three. Everton is now 5-6-12.

Here's Spector's strike:

It was the newest member of the Americans abroad club, former Los Angeles Galaxy striker Edson Buddle, who set the goal-scoring mood Friday.

Playing his first match with FC Ingolstadt of the German second tier, Buddle volleyed a point-blank shot home in the 76th minute of his goal-starved side's 1-1 draw with visiting Duisburg. Ingolstadt has scored 20 goals in 19 games en route to a 3-12-4 mark, so the relegation-threatened club is surely hoping there is more where that came from with Buddle.

A level up, Ricardo Clark fared better during his second match at center back for Eintracht Frankfurt, avoiding the poor positioning that cost him last week while providing 90 steady minutes during his side's 1-0 loss at Hamburg. Frankfurt still sits comfortably in the middle of the Bundesliga at 8-9-2.

One player no longer roaming the pitches of Germany is Jermaine Jones, who enjoyed a fine start to his loan from Schalke 04 to Blackburn Rovers, going the distance in a 2-0 home win over West Bromwich Albion.

He was lucky to avoid conceding a penalty, however, when he took down Peter Odemwingie in the second half. Although replays showed the foul occurring inside the penalty area, Jones and Blackburn (8-11-4) got off the hook with a free kick just outside.

News that Brad Friedel has declared bankruptcy due to debt amassed by his nonprofit soccer academy in Ohio didn't seem to faze the veteran goalkeeper, who picked up his fifth clean sheet of the season for Aston Villa (and first since October) during a crucial 1-0 win over Manchester City at Villa Park. At 6-10-7, the Villans are now thee points clear of the relegation zone.

In the Netherlands, Oguchi Onyewu's 0-to-60 ascent from no playing time with AC Milan to minutes galore with FC Twente continued as he made his third start in eight days (including a friendly) in a 2-1 win at FC Groningen. Twente (13-3-4) is one point back of league leader PSV Eindhoven.

And an American remarkably won at Estadio Azteca, the impenetrable fortress of Mexican soccer, as Jonathan Bornstein played 55 minutes of Tigres UANL's 2-1 triumph over Club Am�rica. Tigres is 2-0-1 in the young Clausura campaign.

BUSINESS AS USUAL

Maurice Edu reassumed his place in the starting 11 for Rangers after coming off the bench in his last two appearances, which were his first since suffering a November leg injury. It wasn't all good news, though, as Rangers fell, 1-0, on the road to Hearts.

Edu went 75 minutes in the defeat, which dropped Rangers to 15-3-2, five points behind leader Celtic, but with two games in hand.

In Bundesliga action, Steve Cherundolo played the full 90 as Hannover 96 lost, 1-0, at home to Schalke. Hannover is 11-7-1, currently in line for a Champions League qualifying berth.

Brad Guzan made his fourth start for Hull City in the English second tier as the Tigers and Reading played to a 1-1 stalemate. Although he did make four saves, Guzan was also called for a penalty kick that led to Reading's late equalizer.

DISAPPOINTING DEVELOPMENTS

Despite being a fixture of Borussia M�nchengladbach's starting lineup all fall, Michael Bradley has apparently fallen out of favor for the struggling Bundesliga club. He came off the bench for the second straight match, this time entering as an 86th minute substitute as M�nchengladbach dropped a 3-1 result at home to Bayer Leverkusen.

With M�nchengladbach seemingly destined for relegation at 3-12-4, Bradley's demotion may further fuel transfer rumors, even though the January window is nearing its end.

Bradley is not the only U.S. central midfielder who has lost his grasp on a starting job. Jos� Torres, who started alongside Bradley against Slovenia in the World Cup, continues to struggle for playing time in Mexico with Pachuca.

He was an unused substitute during Los Tuzos' 1-1 draw with Santos. U.S. striker Herculez Gomez, meanwhile, came on in the 86th minute for Pachuca.

boxing gyms

Jim O'Brien Fired by Pacers

January 30 2011 Last updated at 02:00 PM ET

Jim O'Brien has been fired by the Pacers.

Team president Larry Bird announced the firing Sunday, saying: "This isn't all on Jim. All of us share in the responsibility for where we're at and where we need to go."

Assistant coach Frank Vogel will take over the team on an interim basis.

O'Brien and the Pacers sport a 17-27 record, ranking 10th in the East. The team is also reeling of late, losing their past eight games.

The reported firing comes just one week after Bird told FanHouse's Chris Tomasson that O'Brien's job was safe for the remainder of the season. The Star

O'Brien was 121-169 in four seasons with the Pacers. Despite the poor output, the Pacers' best player in his coaching days was Danny Granger ? an All-Star talent, but more help was clearly needed as players such Roy Hibbert and Darren Collison continue to struggle.

Vogel has been a scout for the Los Angeles Lakers and Washington Wizards, and also served as an assistant coach for O'Brien in Philadelphia and Boston.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

sports list

Mets Searching for 'Strategic Partners' With Madoff Lawsuit Ongoing

January 28 2011 Last updated at 01:10 PM ET

Fred WilponThe New York Mets announced that they are looking for "strategic partners" as they continue to feel the financial pressure of a lawsuit brought against Sterling Equities -- Fred Wilpon's real estate investment firm, which also owns and operates the Mets -- by the trustee of victims of Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme.

In a conference call with the media, Fred and son Jeff said they are looking to sell up to 25 percent of the team, perhaps to multiple stakeholders. Citi Field and SNY, which are also owned by Sterling, will not be part of any deal, however.

"At the outset I want to emphasize what we are discussing today has not or will not affect the Mets day-to-day operations and control," Fred Wilpon told reporters. "Let me stress, at the end of the day we may or may not do anything."

We have known for quite some time that the Wilpon family was connected to Madoff, who defrauded investors of billions of dollars before he was arrested in 2008. We have also known since late 2010 that the Wilpons were being sued by that trustee, Irving Picard, a sign that the family actually profited as a byproduct of Madoff's scheme.

What hasn't been clear until now is just how that lawsuit will effect the day-to-day operations of the Mets, and the team's admission that it is looking for investors is the first public sign that the impact could be significant.

Picard, according to a New York Times report released after the team's announcement is seeking as much as $1 billion in the lawsuit.

"I think (Wilpon) has a very serious problem," a source with knowledge of the Madoff case told the Times. "If that's true, he might have to sell the Mets."

The Mets, of course, insist it will not come to that.

"To address the air of uncertainty created by this lawsuit, and to provide additional assurance that the New York Mets will continue to have the necessary resources to fully compete and win, we are looking at a number of potential options including the addition of one or more strategic partners," the team's statement read. "To explore this, we have retained Steve Greenberg, a managing director at Allen & Company, as our advisor [sic].

"Regardless of the outcome of this exploration, Sterling will remain the principal ownership group of the Mets and continue to control and manage the team's operations. The Mets have been a major part of our families for more than 30 years and that is not going to change."

Greenberg, the Mets' adviser, also discussed the search with reporters and stressed the open-ended nature of talks as well as the draw of the team, characterizing the expected interest level in minority stakes as "robust."

"We'll see how it plays out," he said.

"The Yankees, from the beginning of time, have had minority partners."

extreme sports list

Joe Morgan Looking Forward to Life After 'Sunday Night Baseball'

January 28 2011 Last updated at 01:10 PM ET

For the better part of his life, Joe Morgan has spent his summer Sundays at the ballpark.

For two decades, starting when he was out of high school, it was as a player. Since 1990, it's been as a broadcaster.

Now that's over. With ESPN declining to offer Morgan and his longtime compatriot in the "Sunday Night Baseball" broadcast booth, Jon Miller, contracts for 2011, Morgan is entering a new phase of his life.

He's accepted the offer of Walt Jocketty to join the Cincinnati Reds as a front office adviser. Morgan, whose Hall of Fame career was launched when he helped form Cincinnati's Big Red Machine in the 1970s, has long had a locker in Cincinnati even after his retirement.

Morgan said he will for the first time have some time this summer for himself and for his family. And for golf.

"I've been doing this since I was 18, every summer," Morgan said on a stop in Seattle Wednesday. "I've never had a summer with any time off. I've already got a trip arranged to St. Andrews (Scotland, considered by many the home of golf). I'm looking forward to that.

"I'm also looking forward to working with just one team. This will be a different experience for me."

Morgan, a 10-time All-Star and two-time MVP as second baseman for the Reds, has traveled the country many times over as a baseball analyst the last two decades for ESPN.

All that time getting in and out of airplanes and never being in the same place for more than a couple of days has taken its toll.

"I will miss the broadcasting," Morgan said. "But I won't miss the travel, all that getting on airplanes. It will be great to get away from so much travel."

And what will he be doing for the Reds?

"We're still talking about that," Morgan said. "However it turns out, it'll be good."

Jeff Fletcher
John Hickey | Twitter: @JHickey3

John is a National Baseball Writer for AOL FanHouse. He covered the Seattle Mariners from 2000-2009 for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, and seattlepostglobe.org and the Oakland A's for two decades at the Oakland Tribune and The Daily Review (Hayward, CA). He is a multiple Associated Press Sports Editors award winner for his baseball coverage. A member of the Baseball Writers Association of America, he is a Hall of Fame voter.

nba history

Phil Mickelson Stabilizes on, Off Course


SAN DIEGO -- After 19 PGA Tour seasons, 46 professional victories, four major championships, more than $60 million in career earnings and a public image that can pull more heart stings than Hallmark, Phil Mickelson should be a whole lot easier to figure.

But then he wouldn't be Phil.

Few -- in any -- people in golf have ever done unpredictability bigger and better than Mickelson. Start with the fact that he's a natural right-hander who plays golf lefty.

Over the years, Mickelson has lost events he should have won, and won others in which he probably should not have even been in contention. He has been heroic, steady and good. He has been his own worst enemy. He has been lampooned for talking too much about things he should not and applauded for insight and opinions on important issues inside the game. He has gambled and won, gambled and lost.

Several years ago a national advertising campaign centered around Mickelson asked, "What will Phil do next?" It still lives as the most spot-on overview of the man's professional career.

And that brings us to this week's Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines.

What Phil so far has done this week is follow an opening-day 67 with a second-round 69 on Friday, putting him 8 under, three shots back of leader Bill Haas (67-66).

Mickelson, who began play off the 10th tee of the North course, finished with birdies on Nos. 8 and 9.

But the question still persists: what's next?

Mickelson has turned 40. He is coming off a season that had so much early promise but stalled badly. He won his third Masters in April and was poised to take over the world No. 1 ranking he has yet to hold.

But Phil never won again in 2010. Instead, in June, he announced a case of psoriatic arthritis that was making it difficult to walk and swing.

Medication, according to Mickelson, has brought the malady under control, but for how long and how well? Is Phil still a thrill or destined to go downhill?

" I'm hoping to make 2011 what I thought 2010 was going to be."
-- Phil Mickelson
Nobody knows. Mickelson, of course, has his opinion.

"I'm hoping to make 2011 what I thought 2010 was going to be," he said at Torrey Pines.

Positive energy should not be the problem. Wife, Amy, waging a so-far successful battle against breast cancer, is on hand this week, walking in her husband's gallery for the first time since the 2009 Masters before she was aware of the disease.

"It sure is fun to see her out here smiling and having fun," he said.

As an extra bonus, Mickelson's mother, Mary -- also diagnosed with breast cancer, just six weeks after Amy -- likewise is at the course and doing well.

"Yeah. I would say the last three, four, five months have been very good," Phil said. "We're in a much better place. We're all excited about 2011."

All the same, we are talking about Phil Mickelson. And, medication or not, there are no known reports of psoriatic arthritis working as a springboard to an athlete's best days.

"I think at the time I wasn't really sure how it was affecting me," Mickelson said. "I didn't really see it from the outside looking in. But now that I've got a treatment program where my symptoms are managed and I'm able to resume my normal activities. I see now how much strength it deteriorated by my inability to lift the same amount of weights or what have you. I think maybe it did, but it's hard to say.

"It really doesn't matter because we're at this point now where I feel like I'm ready for the year. I'm back to where I expect to be performance-wise, and so there's no point really dwelling on it."

The year is early, but so far, so good.

Playing in his hometown, on courses he walked as a kid, and surrounded by friends and family, Mickelson has looked energized and at peace this week.

"What I have felt heading into this year is that I'm 40-years old and I've been playing this game a long time, and I no longer need to go about changes in my game," he said.

"I feel this is a year where I don't have to have any change. It's a year of refinement. Developing touch, developing shot-making and getting into the nuances of hitting great shots and not having to worry about technique, and it's a good feeling."

Figure that.

dunking basketball games

Golf Still Needs Tiger Woods, but Ben Crane Provides Much-Needed Laughs


SAN DIEGO -- Tiger Woods wasn't at Torrey Pines golf course Tuesday, thankfully. Allowed me and the real golf writers more time with my new pal, Ben Crane.

Crane won the PGA event here last January, then said he won because he hadn't expected to win. Many golfers are full of hooey like that. But come to find, Crane has a gift for goofy.

Clowning with friends, he recently acted a loon in two videos that became YouTube hits. The pale and bald former Oregon Duck's 90-second bursts of silly prompted more fan feedback than his three PGA wins in nine years.

"It's been an amazing response," he said.

Desperate for material since their meal ticket Tiger's gone so long without winning, the New York Times guy and three other golf writers crowded Crane here Tuesday for word on his next flick. "We're going to launch another one maybe next month," he said, like we were all at Sundance.

In the first video, he spoofs a golfer's workout routine, the best part Crane frantically swinging a foam stick called a "sludge wand."

Think Stephen Colbert or John Cleese after two Italian espressos.

Golf's mental side drives video two.

"I have sensors in my hand, and I'm constantly receiving vibrations from the course's crust," Crane says, Zen-like.

Comedy is delivery and timing, and a famous actor told Crane he has it.

"George Clooney came up to me at my friend's 50th birthday," he said, explaining how the nonsense began.

Clooney urged Crane to further indulge his silly side after seeing his funny ode to the birthday honoree, a mutual friend. "He came up to me three times at the party and said, 'Look, that was awesome.' "

Branching out, Crane is teaming up with golfer Rickie Fowler for his next video.

If Tiger hasn't won by then, golf writers may be pressed to add film criticism to their repertoires. Another reason I'm rooting for Tiger this weekend is because if his drought goes much longer, golf will be painfully desperate for attention. The Cutler Syndrome will play out, Love III Tweeting barbs about Singh, and extra-bored golf announcers saying "golf shot" 50 times an hour instead of 30.

Crane, too, has my support this week because I had his support at Torrey a month ago.

Wanting to feel better about their golf skills, three golf writers let me play in their group on media day, and who shows up on the third hole but Crane. The man hollered like a cabbie as my tee shot flew on a par-3 -- "Be the right one, be the right one!" Shocked that it'd been hit flush, the ball sailed over the green.

Somehow I birdied the next hole, and rather than faint, Crane pumped his arms as he sped down the cart path. "Greaaat shot!"

Ben CraneBut he won't hear me yell for him, because I won't, no, can't, watch him. Our guy Ben plays too slowly for anyone not sedated to watch. Even his fellow pros find his pace excruciating. He's only 34 but diddles between shots like an arthritic grandfather.

When playing only for fun, he doesn't dawdle. And he's not always sun-dial slow in pro rounds, saying 2010 was his best year partly because he did less mulling between swings. Wanting more for my new friend, I told him to be true to his school. Oregon football coach Chip Kelly, I reminded him, feels the need for speed.

"If Chip Kelly keeps it up, we're going to have to go quick between shots," he conceded.

He winced at the mention of Oregon, saying last month's loss to Auburn is still fresh. Reminding us he's a golfer not a gridder, he blamed the defeat on slick sod planted not long before the game.

"We were the fastest team maybe college football has ever seen," he said, and I assume Ben was out golfing when Pete Carroll's best USC teams played. "It was somewhat taken away by the field. So, I'm hanging my hat on the fact that if we'd played that game on turf, or a faster surface, we would have beaten them by two touchdowns."

Funny as a sludge wand, our guy Ben.

Tom Krasovic
Tom Krasovic | Twitter: @tomkrasovic | E-mail: passtk@aol.com

Tom is a Senior Writer for FanHouse. He served as a Padres beat reporter for the San Diego Union-Tribune and a Chargers beat reporter for the San Diego Union, where he previously worked as national college basketball columnist and a San Diego State beat reporter. He also worked for Aviation Week & Space Technology, the Los Angeles Times and newspapers in Ventura County (Ca.) and Ohio. He is a member of the BBWAA and is a Hall of Fame voter.

champs sports

Don King: Boxing Could Learn a Lot from the UFC

  • Michael David Smith
  • Lead Blogger
The UFC overtaking boxing as the No. 1 pay-per-view draw in sports over the last few years has led to a number of boxing promoters taking shots at the UFC. But the most famous promoter in boxing thinks thinks it's time to learn from the UFC.

In a live chat with FanHouse readers, Don King said that UFC has been smart about putting good fights on basic cable to attract fans who will become pay-per-view customers while boxing has declined on basic cable and completely disappeared from over-the-air television.

"Unfortunately the television networks are not broadcasting the fighters and that has been a major disappointment," King said. "Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta have done a great job with the UFC and people like what they do."

King also said the UFC has developed a fan base of people who feel like they're a part of if it, while too many boxing fans have become turned off by the perception that the best fights just won't get made.

"I think the UFC has done magnificent because they bring people together," King said. "That's what I am really very appreciative of. I think they can complement boxing. I have no problem with them. The more the merrier."

King also said he doesn't think there's any reason not to enjoy both boxing and mixed martial arts, and he said he disagrees with those who think the growth of the UFC is a threat to the future of boxing.

"Both sports go together -- no reason not to be a fan of both sports," King said. Bringing people together is what it's all about. I'm a promoter of the people, for the people and by the people. Boxing will be here yesterday today and tomorrow."

basketball games horse

Zdeno Chara, Alex Ovechkin Shine in NHL SuperSkills Competition

January 29 2011 Last updated at 08:59 PM ET

Zdeno Chara
RALEIGH, N.C. -- Team Staal dominated Saturday's NHL SuperSkills, an event highlighted by Boston Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara's fourth consecutive victory in the hardest shot competition with a record-setting volley of 105.9 mph and another win by Washington Capitals forward Alex Ovechkin in the breakaway challenge.

Team Staal earned a 33-22 victory -- winning five of the six events -- over Team Lidstrom at RBC Center, a prelude to Sunday's NHL All-Star Game.

Chara defeated Nashville's Shea Weber, who had an impressive shot of his own that was clocked at 103.4 mph.

"It was tough," Chara said. "The guys were shooting really, really hard. They really pushed me."

Ovechkin, who broke a few sticks during the hardest shot challenge and tripped over a camera cord during the exhibition, said he was "surprised" the fans voted him the winner. He was chosen ahead of Montreal rookie defenseman P.K. Subban in the text message poll.

"Subban did a great job, but I would have voted for Corey Perry," Ovechkin said.

Fastest skater
Michael Grabner (Team Staal), New York Islanders, 14.238 seconds def. Taylor Hall (Team Lidstrom), Edmonton, 14.715.

Breakaway challenge (Fans voted via text message)
1. Alex Ovechkin (Team Staal), Washington , 38.5%
2. P.K. Subban (Team Staal), Washington, 21.3%
3. Loui Eriksson (Team Lidstrom), Dallas, 13.4%

Accuracy shooting
Daniel Sedin (Team Staal), Vancouver, def. Patrick Kane (Team Lidstrom), Chicago, in finals with time of 8.9 seconds.

Skills challenge relay
Team Lidstrom (2:09) def. Team Staal (2:18)

Hardest shot
1. Zdeno Chara (Team Staal), Boston, 105.9 mph
2. Shea Weber (Team Lidstrom), Nashville, 104.8

Elimination shoot out
Corey Perrry (Team Staal), Anaheim, 3-for-3

pictures of basketball

New NASL Holds Fast to Ambitious Second Division Vision

nasl mlsThe North American Soccer League is undaunted.

On Tuesday, the new eight-team circuit unveiled its 2011 schedule, with games set to begin April 9. On Wednesday, an expansion club set to enter the league in 2012, the San Antonio Scorpions, announced its partnership with Nike.

It's full steam ahead for the NASL, even though the road ahead may be blocked. Last week, the U.S. Soccer Federation withdrew its provisional approval of the new league's second division status. Without that sanctioning, there will be no 2011 season and no second division soccer in the United States.

Conversations with sources connected to the decision indicated that the federation was troubled by either the financial health of NASL backer Traffic Sports, by a delay in the posting of the $750,000 annual performance bond by one or more clubs, or perhaps both.

The NASL has no intention of playing at any other level, however. It's D2 or bust, and time is running short. League CEO Aaron Davidson told FanHouse that the NASL already has amended its application and resubmitted it to US Soccer for approval.

"It's a temporary setback," Davidson said. "I don't want to to diminish the weight and importance of the Federation. They are absolutely a necessary piece of making this league work. But I think what happened in the last few days is just another sign of the growing pains you face when you're trying to grow the sport."

For two decades, U.S. Soccer adopted a laissez faire attitude toward the base of the American soccer pyramid. The United Soccer Leagues, now based in Tampa, organized the divisions operating below MLS as it saw fit. But the highly-centralized, franchise model it employed didn't sit well with some investors. While USL kept minor league soccer alive, it did so in an environment that Davidson likened to the "wild west." Clubs came and went with alarming regularity, and no USL league ever looked the same from one year to the next.

A decade ago, in what was Major League Soccer's last year prior to contraction, the country's second division (then called the A-League), boasted 21 clubs. That was nine fewer than 1999, but certainly more than enough for a minor league.

Just two of those 21 teams plan to play second division soccer in 2011. One, the Atlanta Silverbacks, has been on hiatus since 2008. The other, the Montreal Impact, will be playing in MLS next year.

The others? There are the success stories in Seattle, Portland and Vancouver. But for each of those, there are several signs of the constant flux that has bedeviled the country's minor leagues. Four 2001 A-League teams now play amateur ball in the Premier Development League. Seven are defunct.

Led by Traffic, several USL owners broke ranks last year, seeking greater autonomy and more control over their clubs. They also felt restrained by a league office that spent little on marketing and showed scant concern for the effect the repeated club upheaval might have on the sport's health in individual markets.

U.S. Soccer forced the factions to play together in 2010 in a federation-run second division (the Puerto Rico Islanders defeated the Carolina RailHawks in the all-NASL finals, above). This year, finally exhausted by the infighting and longing for some kind of stability, the USSF issued a series of standards that a prospective second division league must meet. They are high.

Here are a few:

-- Each club must post an annual $750,000 performance bond to ensure that it completes the season, and three-quarters of a second-division league's clubs must play in a market of at least 750,000 people.

-- Each club must have a principal owner who holds at least 35% and has an individual net worth of at least $20million.

-- Each stadium must seat at least 5,000 people (In 2009, the last year USL was in sole control of the second division, average attendance was 4,680).

-- The League must have eight clubs in the first year, with two of the four continental U.S. time zones represented. By the third year, 10 teams must be playing, and by the sixth, 12 clubs must be spread across at least three time zones.

Onerous, to be sure. But Davidson told FanHouse that high standards are what the NASL had asked for, what they still intend to meet and what is necessary to ensure the survival of second division soccer in the U.S.

"To stabilize the second division and build a reputable league, you have to respect yourself and demand of yourself what you demand of others," he said.

"If we had a league that resembled itself year in and year out, the second and third divisions, at least in recent history, have never ended and started with the same teams. How the heck do your fans and the media follow something like that? Are the (USSF) standards fair? It's sort of what we asked for. We kept complaining (while in USL) that this league had no standards. Look below us now. There are no concrete standards to speak of."

Below the NASL is the newly reconstituted USL Pro, comprising 15 clubs that seem to be just fine with keeping their ambitions and finances in check. Maintaining the tradition of change that Davidson mentioned, just six of the 15 markets featured USL pro soccer last season.

FanHouse understands that some of those clubs are agitated as well, however. They chose third division soccer in order to limit expenses, but now, with four of the new clubs in the Caribbean and another in Los Angeles (1,900 miles from its closest rival), travel costs will rise significantly. It's not difficult to imagine a 2012 third division schedule that looks different from the one set to begin April 2.

Davidson hopes to leave that all behind. The annual budget for a USL Pro club will be $0.5-$1million. The NASL expects its teams to spend $2-$3 million each year. The NASL expects to be positioned for the day that promotion and relegation arrive in the U.S., he said. The NASL expects to market its players to clubs abroad. It wants to be regarded as a league far closer to MLS than to the level below, and it wants to "help mature the game in this country," according to Davidson.

NASL owners believe it's truly worthwhile to meet the federations exacting standards.

"We wanted higher standards. We have to comply," Davidson said. "We have to educate people in our markets about the difference between the second and third division. We're willing to live up to those standards, whether it's for now or later. If we were to drop to third division, we're right next to the league we tried to separate ourselves from, which has no standards. We need to live up to standards if we're going to recruit more San Antonios, more new markets for 2013 we haven't announced."

(Davidson also said that both the Vancouver Whitecaps and Montreal Impact want to field NASL teams).

But why all the trouble? Why is it worth spending all that money over what, in the end, is a matter of perception? Even if the NASL secures sanctioning, and its teams have bigger stadiums and bigger budgets and don't fold as often, its teams still will be playing in a closed system that offers none of the incentives found in other minor leagues in the US and around the world.

In other U.S. sports, players move between tiers based upon affiliations between major and minor league clubs. In most other countries, the clubs themselves are promoted or relegated based on performance. Only American minor league soccer is cut off from the levels below and above.

So if there's no promotion and relegation for either players or teams, why does it matter what "division" you're in? Why are Davidson and Co. spending all this money for a label?

For starters, the NASL's future depends on it.

"Several teams have signed agreements and sponsorships contingent on second division status," Davidson told FanHouse. "We have sold expansion teams based on second division status. It's a problem to take a step back. That's why we were very unwavering in our press release (following U.S. Soccer's sanction withdrawal). We will not apply for anything less than second division."

And the reason "second division" can command higher franchise fees and more lucrative sponsorships in a closed system?

Davidson believes promotion and relegation is coming. It won't be soon, but it's likely inevitable. For it to function properly, obviously, there would have to be a functioning, stable level of play below MLS.

"We will see promotion and relegation in this country," he said, arguing that younger fans who have access to dozens of leagues around the world on TV and the internet and who know the clubs backwards and forwards thanks to video games will demand that the American game "go a little toward the purist side."

"Our country is not an island in an of itself for soccer, like other sports," he said. "We're not sheltered from soccer around the world."

In the meantime, both the game and his league will benefit if there is a "clear demarcation" between divisions two and three, Davidson argued, even if that demarcation merely is a matter of perception for the foreseeable future.

"Is a major investor more likely to take me seriously if the expansion fee is in the seven figures or the low five-six figures, or I want to give one away," he asked. "All our teams own the league, govern the league. We hire our own commissioner, unlike the USL. We hire our own people ... We all our putting up our guarantees, jointly and severally. If any one of our teams defaults at more than $750,000 on their debts, the rest of the letters get tapped pro rata. We wanted a league that's all for one and one for all."

That financial foundation will offer stability. Perhaps NASL clubs will develop sufficient roots to prompt the "financially based" promotion that allowed Seattle, Vancouver and Portland to join MLS. Either way, the continuity will provide a breeding ground for the next generation of players, coaches, front office staff and marketers, Davidson argued.

Player development is one of Traffic's core businesses. The company acquires contracts and markets them around the world (sometimes it doesn't work out). Davidson claimed the MLS reserve division, scheduled to relaunch this year, is an "imperfect" solution, since games will be infrequent, anonymous and won't count in a genuine league table. He said MLS was forced to go that route because the old USL setup was unreliable.

Now, NASL can step in, developing players for MLS or for leagues abroad. At least that's the idea.

"We see the potential of athletes and infrastructure in this country to develop players, and we want to contribute to that. We think the second division level is where we can help the most," Davidson said.

Traffic is propping up the league. It owns all of Miami FC, soon to be renamed the Strikers, and majority shares in the Carolina RailHawks (which apparently is also set for a rebrand) and Atlanta Silverbacks. The NSC Minnesota Stars are league owned, meaning Traffic has a stake in it as well.

There is precedence for this, of course. Look no further then Phil Anschutz, who's bankrolled teams in seven different cities at one point or another. Traffic doesn't have the best reputation in certain American soccer circles, however, and U.S. Soccer isn't going to make it easy.

But Davidson is okay with that. He and his partners have their vision, and they believe the high standards will be what sets them apart. He said he's hoping that the NASL's resubmitted application earns federation approval at the organization's annual general meeting in two weeks.

"If you want to change things, you have to get them right from the beginning," he said. "Implementing these standards today gives us a much better chance of success."

olympic sports wikipedia

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Kevin Love Makes All-Star Bid With 'Numb#rs'

January 28 2011 Last updated at 12:28 PM ET

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The Minnesota Timberwolves hope that the key to the Western Conference coaches' All-Star vote is through their noses.

Introducing "Numb#rs," the new fragrance by Kevin Love.

On the same day the NBA announced the starters for the All-Star game next month, the Wolves' public relations department unveiled its campaign to convince the coaches to vote their star into the game as a reserve.

A box was mailed to all Western Conference coaches that includes a bottle of "Numb#rs" cologne, a DVD with a 30-second commercial for the product that spoofs an ultra-serious fragrance ad, an advertisement that includes Love and a local model dressed to the nines and a list of his accomplishments on the back, and a bottle of face lotion just for good measure.

"It's all in good fun," Love said on Thursday after practice. "You never try to take yourself too seriously. If you can have fun with yourself it's a good part of your life."

The commercial is filmed in black-and-white, depicting Love entering a night club wearing sunglasses, a suit and a scarf. He takes off his glasses and glances at team mascot Crunch, who is surrounded by Timberwolves dancers and hoists a glass in Love's direction.

"Who has the numbers?" Love asks. "You tell me."

Spot on.

The team also set up a website -- www.612AllStar.com -- where fans can see the whole package. The area code for Minneapolis is 612.

So does the fragrance smell like sweat?

"Yeah but it's good sweat," Love said with a smile. "Good-smelling sweat."

Coach Kurt Rambis was asked if he helped Love with the acting. Rambis had a few bit parts in movies and television shows in the past when he was working with the Los Angeles Lakers.

"He doesn't want to learn acting from me," Rambis said with a chuckle. "It just goes to show you even a bad actor can get a job."

In recent years, the Timberwolves have come up with some of the most creative and funny ideas to promote their players, more out of necessity than anything else. The team has struggled mightily on the court, making it difficult for some of its high-performing players to get recognized across the league.

The Wolves sent GPS machines to coaches two years ago as part of former center Al Jefferson's "road map to Phoenix" for the All-Star game. Jefferson didn't make that team and injured his knee just before the break.


Mr. Love Miracle Glass Cleaner

They also put together an infomercial on Love's "Miracle Glass Cleaner" as they pushed to get Love the rookie of the year award three years ago. That didn't work either, but this latest project may have the best chance at success yet, because Love has been selling himself all season.

Love is averaging 21.6 points and 15.7 rebounds per game, the first player to average at least 20 points and 15 boards in a game since Moses Malone in 1982-83.

His 15.7 rebounds per game are 2.4 more than the second-leading rebounder, Orlando's Dwight Howard, averages in a game and he had 31 points and 31 rebounds against the Knicks in November, the first 30-30 since Malone in 1982.

"There's no doubt he's an All-Star," Rambis said.

The biggest obstacle in front of Love's first All-Star game is the Timberwolves' record. Their 10 victories are tied with Sacramento for fewest in the West and their 35 losses are more than any team in the league except for the Cavaliers (8-37).

"I feel like I've done the best I could to show I'm an All-Star type talent, but I know that wins come at a premium in this league and a lot of coaches are going to look at that," Love said. "But hopefully maybe they can get past that this year and make an exception."

Rambis can't vote for Love because coaches cannot vote for players on their own team. Who knows? Maybe guys such as Rick Carlisle, Phil Jackson and Jerry Sloan will be swayed by the gift. Well, maybe not Sloan.

"I know they want to see the guys who can do the windmills and the behind the back passes and throw it off the backboard and dunk it," Love said. "But I still think there should be room for players that have a throwback game or play below the rim as well, play the right way."

-- By: Jon Krawczynski

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

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Accidental Collisions Cause Major Rise in NHL Concussions

January 29 2011 Last updated at 09:07 PM ET


RALEIGH, N.C. -- There has been a threefold increase in games lost due to concussions suffered through accidental collisions in the NHL this season, an alarming trend commissioner Gary Bettman noted before the NHL SuperSkills competition at RBC Center on Saturday.

"The ideal number of concussions would be zero," Bettman said. "Our objective would be to come as close as possible to get that result without changing the fundamentals of our game. We are doing whatever possible to limit the amount of concussions."

Concussions suffered in fights and through hits delivered to the body where a player's head then strikes the glass, boards or ice have also increased this season. Bettman refused to disclose the specific numbers.

He added that the number of concussions from blindside hits to the head was down, largely due to the rule implemented last March that barred such collisions. Hits to the head deemed legal under NHL rules have also resulted in fewer man games lost, according to Bettman.

The All-Star weekend lacks arguably its biggest star in Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby, who was forced to skip Sunday's game as he recovers from a concussion likely suffered in a collision with Washington Capitals forward David Steckel in the Winter Classic on Jan. 1. Steckel was not penalized either during the game or by the league in the aftermath of that hit.

"As all hockey fans, I'm unhappy with the fact we have players who are not at the All-Star Game because of concussions," Bettman said. "I don't like the fact any players miss game because of concussions."

The league's general managers will meet in March and could propose changes in rules to further protect players.

Bettman also covered franchises in flux, including:

-- Phoenix Coyotes: Bettman said the league has had the right to pursue "other opportunities" in Phoenix, but the NHL isn't doing that yet. Those alternatives could include moving the franchise -- with the Canadian cities of Hamilton, Quebec City or Winnipeg being the likely frontrunners -- although Bettman refused to discuss that possibility.

-- Dallas Stars: Bettman said there are a half dozen interested parties looking to purchase the club from current owner Tom Hicks. The NHL, unlike in the Coyotes' situation, is not in control of the team, according to Bettman.

-- Buffalo Sabres: The NHL's executive committee interviewed Terry Pegula, the Pennsylvania businessman interested in purchasing the team, this weekend. No votes have been taken to approve the sale.

-- Atlanta Thrashers: Representatives for Atlanta Spirit, the name of the ownership group that controls the Thrashers, filed a lawsuit last week against a law firm that it alleges botched a previous attempt to sell the team. Bettman said the filing "was another step in the journey for ownership to sort things out."

-- St. Louis Blues: Dave Checketts, the Blues' principal owner, has sought to find new investors for the club. Bettman said the move "was not unusual."

Bettman said there had been no decisions made on who will host next season's two outdoor games, the Winter Classic and Heritage Classic. He also said there have been no decisions made in terms of where the league will start its regular season.

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