понедельник, 8 октября 2012 г.

Ex-Gopher beats long odds with help of a tall partner.(SPORTS)(Patrick Reusse) - Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)

Byline: Patrick Reusse; Staff Writer

Heidi Olhausen and Kate Callahan were freshmen for the University of Minnesota volleyball team in the fall of 1992. They had been teammates at Lakeville High, and now they were roommates in an aging dorm room at the university.

'You should see the room,' Callahan said. 'There are pretzels all over the floor. Our clothes are in piles everywhere. People come in the room and they scream.'

Later in this conversation, Olhausen and Callahan were offering a strong endorsement for the good looks of Cameron Green, a volleyball player from Redondo Beach, Calif.

Callahan had lived in Redondo Beach until 1990 and went to a prom with Green. Olhausen had met him at the U.S. junior volleyball summer camp.

Asked whether this fond recollection of Green meant things were 'dull socially' at the university, the two first-semester collegians laughed, and Callahan said:

'We didn't put all those pretzels on the floor ourselves, you know.'

This week, Heidi was asked whether Callahan still was around. She offered an enthused 'yes' and said: 'Kate married a California guy, and they moved back here two years ago. She just had a baby. She's so much fun. It's great having her back.'

Heidi found her husband at Gopherville - Trevor Winter, the 7-foot basketball player from the bustling burg of Slayton, Minn. They were married in the summer of 1997, after Trevor's final, memorable basketball season with the Gophers.

The honeymoon took place in Spain, with Trevor playing for a team in Pamplona and Heidi playing briefly for a team in Bilbao.

There were other teams and basketball camps for Winter, including a turn with the Timberwolves in 1998-99. He spent time stashed on the injured list and played in one game.

Daughter Macy was born in the winter of 2001. Trevor had an invitation to Cleveland's training camp. In September, Heidi did some unexpected bleeding and went to an emergency room. There was not much alarm, and she was told to go in for a checkup.

Cancer. The cells were connected to the pregnancy - a form of cancer that's ultra-rare.

'The cancer had spread to a lung, where I had a 4-inch tumor, to my bladder, to an eye ... a lot of places,' Heidi said. 'They don't tell you that you're going to die. They say, `It's going to be difficult.' '

Trevor was due in Cleveland's NBA camp when Heidi was early in her chemotherapy treatments. 'He had to go,' she said. 'Someone needed to pay the bills. That was our livelihood.'

Heidi and Macy lived with her folks for a month. Trevor broke his wrist with the Cavaliers. He came home. His father-in-law helped hook up Trevor with a job as a pharmaceutical salesman for Pfizer.

Heidi's oncologist was Cheryl Bailey at Abbott-Northwestern. The brand of poison she ordered to attack the cancer took Heidi's hair.

'Eyebrows and all,' she said. 'Trevor would shave my head and say, `This looks so great.' He could get a laugh out of me with that. In this situation, there are days when one person is higher than the other. We had to take care of each other.

'Trevor and I both come from very religious families. We leaned on our faith. Instead of waking up every day, wondering, `Why me?' I was able to look at it as, `Why not me?' '

The poison administered at Abbott-Northwestern did more than take Heidi's hair. After six months, it killed the cancer.

'Cheryl Bailey is the best,' Heidi said. 'I would not have made it through without her knowledge, her advice, her encouragement.'

Heidi said that Winter, the world's tallest pharmaceutical salesman, greatly enjoys his non-basketball profession.

'Trevor played basketball because he was 7 feet tall and he was expected to,' she said. 'He enjoyed the experiences, the relationships, but the game ... Trevor was happy to quit.'

The Winters were told to wait for two years before Heidi tried to undertake another pregnancy. 'After that, we went by our faith; if it was supposed to happen, it would,' she said.

It happened. Heidi is now eight months pregnant. 'Big as a house,' she said.

As for the past connection between pregnancy and cancer, she said: 'Of course, it's in my thoughts, but it was such a rare occurrence ... and they tell us the odds of it happening again are as remote with this baby as they were when I was having Macy.'

Heidi was a standout hitter on the Gophers volleyball team that reached the NCAA's final 16 in 1993. When women's athletic director Chris Voelz fired coach Stephanie Schleuder a year later, Heidi pulled no punches in publicly criticizing Voelz.

Olhausen's career ended in 1995 - the lost season between the departure of the personable, competent Schleuder and the dynamic, high-priced Mike Hebert.

'I don't know Hebert at all, but it's pretty incredible what he has done with the program,' Heidi said. 'The game itself - I watch on television and I'm amazed, it has changed so much.

'The players up front are so tall and athletic. I was tall at 5-11 a decade ago. Now, I would be a shrimp.'

Heidi paused. 'We're hoping Macy will hold up the volleyball end of things for us,' she said. 'She should have the height, with Trevor as her daddy.'

Then, Heidi Winter laughed ... laughed as though she was again a college kid exchanging quips with her pal Callahan.

воскресенье, 7 октября 2012 г.

the high five; Some websites devoted to tall bikes:.(SPORTS) - Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)

1 Rat Bikes

Chicago has its own gearheads.

www.rat-patrol.org

2 Zinn Cycles

Cyclists big and tall take notice. www.zinncycles.com

3 Wikipedia

Primer, good links.

en.wikipedia.org/ tall-bike

4 The Winking Circle

Eccentric all the way.

www.thewinking

circle.com

5 Technorati

Search tall bikes. Enough said.

www.technorati.com

суббота, 6 октября 2012 г.

WOLFF IS BIG-TIME PLAYER DIMINUTIVE WATERTOWN POINT GUARD STANDS TALL ON COURT.(Sports) - The Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI)

Hey. If you're looking for Jessie Wolff, you won't find her here.

Not here, either.

Keep going.

A little more.

Here she is.

To find Jessie Wolff you have to look down, way down. The senior point guard for the Watertown girls basketball team is just 5-foot-2. On the basketball court, however, she stands out like a 7-footer.

``It doesn't really matter how tall you are,'' Wolff said. ``The thing of it is, when you're playing you don't really know that you're that small. After I've been playing good all game long I'm kind of like, `How tall am I?' ''

Wolff has been told she is too small her entire basketball-playing life. Opposing players have overlooked her. Coaches have overlooked her. Big-time colleges have overlooked her.

She wears the chip on her shoulder like a badge of honor. It serves as a constant reminder of what everyone thinks of her and her undersized team -- Watertown doesn't have a player on its roster who is taller than 5-11. But most of all, it serves as motivation.

``Jessie's so small that when coaches see her size, it's just hard to believe that she can play,'' Goslings coach Steve Jacobson said.

So go ahead and be like everyone else. When the Goslings (17-7) take on third-ranked Kettle Moraine (22-1) in the quarterfinals of the WIAA state tournament at 6:35 tonight at the UW Field House, look past Wolff and her teammates.

She dares you.

``We've been so overlooked this whole season and we have a good team,'' Wolff said. ``No one was expecting Watertown to come to Madison. We kind of proved a lot to a lot of people.''

Thanks largely -- pun intended -- to Wolff. In the sectional final Saturday against heavily favored No. 4 Madison West, Wolff went head-to-head with University of Wisconsin recruit Candas Smith. When the dust settled, Wolff and the Goslings were on top, 62-58.

``That's the kind of game I live to play for,'' said Wolff, who lit up the Regents for 32 points. ``It was the opportunity of a lifetime. (Smith is) a great player. You know, I've always thought of myself as a decent player and I've just never gotten the exposure or the hype as some of the bigger, better-known players. It was a chance for me to prove that I can play with the best of them.''

On the court, Wolff is lightning quick and has no fear. She will rain jumpers from behind the three-point line or kill you with dribble penetration.

``I love going into the lane,'' she said with a wry smile.

But for a time this season, Wolff wasn't dribbling anywhere. During the Goslings' game against West Bend West in December, Wolff suffered a high ankle sprain. She spent two weeks in a hard cast and watched from the sidelines as Watertown went 2-2 without her.

In the long run, however, the injury made Wolff and Watertown better. Not only did Wolff learn that she doesn't have to do it all for the Goslings, she realized how good she has it.

``I kind of learned that every game you have to go out and play as if it might be your last game,'' Wolff said.

Wolff is a three-sport star for the Goslings. She was the Little Ten Conference player of the year in tennis, the likely choice for that honor in basketball and a three-time all-conference performer in soccer. Her athletic and academic talents -- Jacobson said she has a 4.0 grade-point average -- have attracted schools like Minnesota, Miami (Ohio) and UW-Milwaukee.

But Wolff has some unfinished business to take care of first.

пятница, 5 октября 2012 г.

WARRIORS STRONG INSIDE; WESTHILL COUNTS ON POINTS FROM TALL OLSZEWSKI.(Sports)(Column) - The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Byline: M.F. Piraino Staff writer

At 6-foot-2, senior Lisa Olszewski presents a big problem in the paint for Westhill opponents.

Although the Warriors have the Onondaga League scoring leader in Carly Cooper, Westhill coach Sue Ludwig believes Olszewski is at the center of Westhill's success.

'When Lisa struggles, it's more of a struggle for us,' Ludwig said. 'We go basically as she goes.'

Olszewski has been up to the challenge this season as the Warriors come into 2007 with a 5-0 Liberty Conference record (7-2 overall) before playing Bishop Ludden on Wednesday. She is averaging 14.2 points per game compared to 12.2 last year.

As Ludwig pointed out, Olszewski's impact is evident this season. The Warriors are 6-0 when Olszewski scores in double figures and 1-2 when she does not. Westhill's losses were to Class AA schools Oswego and Fayetteville-Manlius.

With the graduation of Section III scoring queen Carlee Cassidy, Ludwig put in a few more offensive options this year with Olszewski as a large target down low.

'Last year, we stood around and watched Carlee too much,' Ludwig said. 'We're trying to spread the ball around more. Everyone on this team is capable of scoring.'

New Hartford junior closes in on 1,000

Nicole Karam, New Hartford's leading scorer, needs just seven points Friday at Clinton to reach 1,000 for her career.

The 5-9 junior guard, who is averaging 17 ppg, enters the Tri-Valley League game with 993 points. Karam will become the fifth female in school history to score 1,000 career points.

'She is probably one of our best players ever and we've had some good ones in the last eight years,' New Hartford coach Mike Callan said. 'She has such quickness and strength plus a willingness to work hard. She's a very dedicated athlete.'

Karam is one of four starters averaging double figures this season for the revitalized Spartans (7-3), who endured their first losing season in six years last winter at 7-14.

Two Liberty teams cope with injuries

Solvay's Carrie Smith, the team's leading scorer and rebounder, has missed three and a half games this season with a right-shoulder injury. The 6-1 center is treating the injury with physical therapy, Solvay coach Shawn Mitchell said.

'I don't like to talk about injuries because everyone has them,' Mitchell said. 'But we are a different team without Smith on the floor.'

Mitchell added that Smith's value goes beyond her play in the paint.

'Unlike some 6-foot-1 players, she can shoot a 17-foot jump shot,' he said. 'She has a knack for the game defensively and she doesn't get into foul trouble.'

There's no question having Smith in the lineup makes a huge difference. The Bearcats are 6-1 when she plays and 1-3 without her.

Some good news for the Bearcats (3-3, 7-4): Chelsey Chavez-Egan is healthy after a foot injury last month. The Bearcats travel Friday to league-leading Westhill.

Cazenovia is also playing without its leading scorer, Kiley Evans. The 5-9 Evans has been sidelined with a stress fracture in her right foot since Dec. 9. She provided 14.6 points per game for the Lakers (3-3, 5-5).

'It's always a blow when you lose your leading scorer,' Cazenovia coach Paul Harney said. 'But the good thing is that it forces our other kids to step up.'

Evans, a three-sport athlete at Cazenovia, said the foot started bothering her after cross country season. She has missed the last five games to allow her foot to heal. Evans hopes to be back in the lineup this month. The Lakers host Marcellus on Friday.

Phoenix's Tupper returns to the court

At Phoenix, junior Julia Tupper is back in action after missing the first four games of the season because of a broken left leg. Tupper, a key inside player for the Firebirds (2-4, 4-5), injured her leg in soccer.

Tupper scored 14 points in her season debut Dec. 13 against East Syracuse-Minoa. She is averaging 10.4 ppg.

'She is such an important player for us,' Phoenix coach Steve Storie said. 'She is our best rebounder and one of our best scorers.'

Besides Tupper, senior forward Lindsay Harris also came off the injured list Dec. 13. Harris was out after injuring her knee during cross country.

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO

File photo/Jim Commentucci, 2006

ACC MEASURES UP AS NO. 1 CONFERENCE DUNCAN, DEAN MAY BE GONE, BUT LEAGUE STILL STANDS TALL.(Sports) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: David Droschak Associated Press

RALEIGH, N.C. -- No Dean. No Duncan. No problem for the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Most conferences would be worried about losing one of the game's greatest coaches and one of its best players. Not the ACC, which is fighting back the only way it knows how - with talent.

``The conference and the game are always bigger than any one individual, however in Dean's case, that one individual has given an incredible amount to the game,'' Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said of Dean Smith, who retired last month after 36 seasons and an NCAA-record 879 wins at North Carolina.

About 90 miles down Tobacco Road, Wake Forest is dealing with the loss of Tim Duncan, the consensus college player of the year and No. 1 NBA draft pick who scored 2,117 points, grabbed 1,570 rebounds and blocked 481 shots in his college career.

``Tim Duncan is gone. We had made peace with that back in the spring,'' Wake Forest coach Dave Odom said. ``At that time we said to our team there is no one person in this country at the collegiate level or the high school level that can come in and replace Tim Duncan. Given that fact, we said the only thing left for us is to try to replace him as a team.

``We are going to ask for 10 percent more from everybody else. If we can do that then that is the best chance for us to replace a player of his magnitude.''

Duncan's loss is only the beginning of Odom's worries, considering senior forwards Ricky Peral and Sean Allen also departed. The program with the most ACC wins (42) over the past three seasons is now behind Duke, North Carolina, Clemson, Maryland and North Carolina State in preseason predictions.

Those clubs share one big advantage - experience.

Each has four starters returning except N.C. State, which returns three and a renewed excitement under second-year coach Herb Sendek. Florida State also returns four starters for first-year coach Steve Robinson.

A league that lost Jerry Stackhouse, Rasheed Wallace, Joe Smith, Stephon Marbury and Jeff McInnis early to the NBA in the past three seasons has suddenly been restocked with talent. The ACC is now looking for its 10th Final Four appearance in the past 11 seasons.

``I don't think there is a team in our league that somebody outside of the league would say, `Boy, I would really like to play them, that's a sure win,''' Maryland coach Gary Williams said. ``That's a pretty good indication of the strength of the league. If you are not ready to play you are going to lose a league game this year. It's as simple as that.''

Duke and North Carolina are considered 1a and 1b this season with Clemson not far behind.

The Blue Devils, who took a whopping 714 three-point attempts last season, return shooting ace Trajan Langdon, point guard Steve Wojciechowski and forwards Roshown McLeod and Chris Carrawell. Ricky Price is also expected back Dec. 21 from academic suspension.

Krzyzewski, entering his 18th season with 473 wins, also landed a four-man recruiting class considered the best in the country.

But major changes are beginning in Durham.

``Our menu on offense was pretty one-dimensional - the three-point shot and drive and kick and get fouled,'' Krzyzewski said. ``I would hope we could attack people in a few more different ways this year. Defensively, we want to quicken the tempo.''

At North Carolina, 30-year assistant Bill Guthridge takes over for Smith and will try to return the Tar Heels to the Final Four, where the team went cold from the field and lost to eventual national champion Arizona.

Most around the league believe the new-look Tar Heels will be just like the old Tar Heels - a major force in the ACC.

``I'll notice, but it was never Dean Smith. He never made it Dean Smith,'' Virginia coach Jeff Jones said. ``It was North Carolina. It will be obvious to everyone in the building that he's not there, but his imprint on the Carolina style and everything that North Carolina does will be there and I would assume it would always be there.

``North Carolina is still going to have a very good coach on its bench and still have a very good team.''

Preseason ACC player of the year Antawn Jamison leads a talented and diverse group that includes Vince Carter, Shammond Williams, Ademola Okulaja and point guard Ed Cota, last year's ACC rookie of the year. But depth, unlike at Duke, could be a major problem for the Tar Heels, who went to 23 straight NCAA tournaments under Smith.

``The only significant change I've made is that our staff meetings start at 8:30 in the morning instead of 10:30,'' Guthridge said. ``I'm a morning person, Dean was the night person.''

четверг, 4 октября 2012 г.

Little boxers stand tall.(Sports) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: WILLIAM KATES Associated Press

CANASTOTA - It was the little guys who made it big Thursday in the International Boxing Hall of Fame class of 2005.

Headlining this year's group of 15 inductees were two-time featherweight champion Bobby 'Schoolboy' Chacon; two-time junior welterweight champion Duilio Loi of Italy; Ireland's popular featherweight champion Barry McGuigan; and junior middleweight champion 'Terrible' Terry Norris.

Non-boxers to be enshrined included matchmaker Don Fraser and writer Bert Sugar, said Boxing Hall of Fame Executive Director Edward Brophy.

This year's induction ceremony will be held June 12.

The four boxers - all who fought in classes below 154 pounds - were chosen by a panel of boxing writers and historians as representatives of the modern era, which runs from 1943 on. Five other fighters were selected from the Old-Timer and Pioneer categories, while six people were chosen in the Non-Participant and Observer classes, including Fraser and Sugar.

McGuigan, a small-town Irishman, became a national hero in the early 1980s by winning both the British and European featherweight titles as a young professional.

McGuigan was known for his stamina, determination and durable chin. In June 1985, he dropped aging Panamanian legend Eusebio Pedroza in the seventh round and won a grueling 15-round decision to claim the WBA featherweight title.

McGuigan was successful in two title defenses before he was dethroned in 1986 by unheralded Steve Cruz in a toe-to-toe 15-round fight in 125-degree heat in Las Vegas, a match that ended with a delirious, dehydrated McGuigan being rushed to the hospital.

It was two years before McGuigan boxed again. After four unremarkable comeback victories, McGuigan quit boxing in 1989, finishing with a 32-3 career record that included 28 knockouts.

Loi, too, was one of his country's most popular fighters as he compiled a 115-3-8 record during a 15-year career that saw him reign twice as world junior welterweight champion between 1960-62.

Regarded as a fine all-around boxer with a tremendous left hand, Loi also was European lightweight champion for four years. He won the world title with a hard-fought decision over Carlos Ortiz before 65,000 fans in Milan.

Chacon held WBC crowns as a featherweight from 1974-75 and as a super featherweight from 1982-1983. The California-born Chacon attempted to win a third world title in 1984, but was stopped by WBA lightweight champion Ray 'Boom Boom' Mancini.

With an explosive punching style, 'Schoolboy' Chacon knocked out 23 of his first 25 professional opponents. He finished with 59-7-1 career mark, with 47 KOs.

Texan Terry Norris was a star schoolboy baseball player who turned from the diamond to the ring and amassed an amazing 291-4 amateur record before turning professional in 1986.

Norris won the WBC junior middleweight belt in 1989 with a sensational one-round knockout of John Mugabi then put together a string of 10 successful title defens es, including a victory over Sugar Ray Leonard. He was upset by Simon Brown in his 11th title defense but won the crown back in a rematch.

In 1995, Norris unified the WBC and IBF belts with a 12-round decision over Paul Vaden. With a tremendous left hook, Norris compiled a career record of 47-9, with 31 KOs.

Fraser and Sugar were honored for their contributions outside the ring.

Fraser, 77, has been a fixture of the West Coast fight scene for more than five decades, promoting fights for a number of Hall of Famers, now including Chacon. Fraser's many bouts included the 1973 Muhammad Ali-Ken Norton rematch.

Sugar, 67, has written more than 80 books and hundreds of articles on boxing over more than 30 years.

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO

среда, 3 октября 2012 г.

IN THE TINY CBA, PATS STAND TALL.(Sports) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

ALBANY -- If you've been down to the Washington Avenue Armory lately, you'd think the only two teams in the Continental Basketball Association are the Albany Patroons and the East Kentucky Miners.

The Miners and the Patroons played each other three times in the past four nights at the Armory. Before that, they played each other twice in Kentucky and, at the end of this week, the Patroons will be back in the Bluegrass State for two more games with the Miners.

And, if the Miners and the Patroons were the only two teams in the CBA, the Patroons would win the league title.

The Patroons beat East Kentucky 98-90 Saturday night at the Armory, the fourth time in five tries Albany has beaten the Miners.

'This was a big challenge for us tonight,' said Patroons coach Derrick Rowland. 'The schedule we have had lately is unheard of.'

He's right. Saturday's game was the Patroons seventh in the past 11 days. And it's not going to get any easier.

Starting Monday, the Patroons are scheduled to play six games in seven days. On Monday and Tuesday the Pats play here against former coach Micheal Ray Richardson and the Lawton Fort Sill Cavalry. Then it's back to East Kentucky for two games Thursday and Friday and then to Cleveland to play a pair against the ABA Rockers.

'I've got to talk to somebody about that,' Rowland said.

But it's doubtful he'll be able to get the Cleveland games off the schedule because the Rockers are scheduled to come to Albany later this month.

'Like I've said before, this is the CBA and you press on,' Rowland said. 'I never had anything like this when I was playing. I just take my hat off to these guys. We didn't have much gas tonight, but we gutted it out.'

The Patroons got double-doubles from Harvey Thomas (30 points, 11 rebounds) and Gabe Freeman (19-11) in winning for the fifth straight game. Albany took five of seven standings points and improved to 12-6 in the CBA. East Kentucky is 7-7.

Rowland said his team has been so whipped recently that he hasn't been able to have full practices. He didn't have a shootaround on Saturday and won't practice today. His main goal right now is to conserve as much energy as possible.

The Miners trailed by just three points on several occasions in the fourth quarter but the Patroons, fatigue or not, made a play.

Tim Wilkin can be reached at 454-5415 or by e-mail at twilkin@timesunion.com

PULLOUT:

Patroons 98

вторник, 2 октября 2012 г.

SHORT LEGS HELP RPI STAND TALL.(Sports) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: Brian Ettkin

SCHENECTADY - The RPI media guide lists running back Nick Costa as 5-foot-6.

RPI fibs.

A reporter eyeballing Costa for the first time suggests his true height is about 5-foot-4.

'I won't deny it,' Costa said. 'It doesn't bother me.'

Why should it? Has size ever mattered less than when Costa rushed for 156 yards in 13 attempts in the first half to help carry RPI to a 20-14 win over archrival Union and earn a space in the NCAA Division III football tournament bracket?

Costa makes undersized NFL running backs such as Warrick Dunn and Kevin Faulk look like Bigfoot and Goliath, and Costa isn't even the Engineers' shortest player. That would be fellow freshman running back Bob Munier, whom RPI lists at 5-foot-5, which means the truth is probably being stretched along with his height.

One RPI assistant coach calls them the Munchkins.

Lollipop Guild members can play.

When it prepared for RPI, Costa wasn't among Union's biggest concerns. Costa had rushed for only 217 yards and 3.9 yards per carry before Saturday. But starting in place of injured Isaac Williams, Costa scored on a 59-yard run and also broke off runs of 32 and 25 yards. (He finished with 160 yards in 15 carries despite spraining his foot, Costa said, early in the third quarter and not returning.)

It was a breakout game for a player who didn't play organized football until he was a freshman at Iona Prep High School (where he rushed for more than 80 yards in a game only twice as a senior). After Costa absorbed a hit that broke his jaw and ended his junior season, 'I felt that was the end of his football career,' said Anthony Costa, Nick's father.

Nick was a gifted sprinter who would become a high school track and field All-American in the 1,600-meter sprint medley as a senior. But Anthony always worried his son might injure his legs playing football.

Or worse.

But his son came back.

And when Anthony told his son before his RPI football career began, 'You're going in as a freshman. There are over 100 kids (on the team). Don't expect to play,' his son possessed too much confidence and drive to believe him.

'You know what, before the season's over Dad, I will be on the field, and I will be playing,' Nick replied.

Good thing, too.

The Engineers didn't play their 'A' game Saturday.

The star quarterback, Jimmy Robertson (who went to the same high school as Costa), was intercepted in the end zone twice in the first half. The Engineers were only 2-for-12 on third- and fourth-down conversions. They took a 20-7 lead with 7:12 to play, yet the Dutchmen had a chance to score a winning touchdown on their final drive.

But the Engineers' defense, which limited Union to 3.3 yards per play, stiffened, John Tesiero's interception with 1:26 remaining sealed triumph after Costa, behind his elephants up front, had dashed for big plays.

'We had to have them,' RPI coach Joe King said. 'We had some people banged up on offense that are big-play people for us ... so somebody has to step up.'

It was the guy so short, when he crouches behind his offensive line, he seemingly vanishes, the little big man rising above.

понедельник, 1 октября 2012 г.

JOHNSON IS EAGER TO STAND TALL AGAIN.(Sports)(Column) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: Sam Adams, Rocky Mountain News

TUCSON -- Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Randy Johnson says baseball's 'Big Unit' feels like a healthy unit in 2004.

That's not good news for National League batters.

Johnson expects to rebound from a knee injury in 2003 that hampered his ability to be the dominant pitcher fans have come to know over the years. He made his spring-training debut Monday against the Colorado Rockies with three innings of work under the hot sun at Hi Corbett Field.

The Rockies' Luis Gonzalez and Vinny Castilla hit doubles off Johnson in the first inning, and catcher Charles Johnson sent a Johnson fastball over the fence for a long solo home run in the second inning. But 'Unit' also struck out three of the 13 Rockies batters he faced.

Johnson even argued pitch location with home plate umpire Casey Moser - during a third-inning at-bat in which Johnson produced an opposite-field single off Rockies starter Scott Elarton.

Afterward, Johnson was upbeat about his performance in an otherwise meaningless spring game. He has reasons to be fired up - in particular, wanting to prove his 6-8 record last season was merely an injury-induced fluke, not the sign of a soon-to-be 41-year-old pitcher on the decline.

Going into his 17th season in the majors, Johnson has recorded 3,871 strikeouts - 129 shy of becoming the fourth pitcher in history to reach 4,000 strikeouts. His career 3.10 earned-run average ranks 16th all time, and he has won 230 games - making him one of only 54 pitchers in history to record at least 230 victories.

'Being competitive,' Johnson said, keeps him motivated. 'Going out there and continuing to do what I do, and what I like to think that I can do - at the same level that I've always been doing it at.

'It's easier said than done. Obviously, over time, eventually you're not going to be able to pitch at the same level. As a professional athlete, it depends on what you want to continue doing. Do you want to continue staying on top of the game, on top of your game? That's what I want to do, and I think I can now that I'm healthy.'

Only Nolan Ryan (5,714), Steve Carlton (4,136) and Roger

Clemens (4,099) have totaled more career strikeouts than Johnson, who broke into the majors with the Montreal Expos in 1988.

'It's just something that over time accumulates,' Johnson said. 'One thing that needs to be realized is, I'm getting ready to go into my (17th) major league season. I've been on the disabled list three times in my career.

'For a power pitcher, that's a lot to say. That's why I've been able to accumulate that many strikeouts because I've been healthy and been out there. It's like anybody else - if you're a home run hitter, you have to be healthy to hit home runs. Longevity is important.

'I've never wanted to cheat myself or my teammates. Now that I've had success, I want to maintain it. Any athlete in any sport who has a great deal of pride in what he does will want to continue doing what he does - and do it at the level he's known for doing it at. That's what drives me.'

LINE DRIVES: Sure, it's only spring training. But going into Monday's game against Arizona, the Rockies ranked last among all major league teams in batting this spring with a .192 team average. On the flip side, the Rockies' team ERA of 3.00 before Monday's game tied them with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays for fourth-best in the majors this spring . . . The Diamondbacks' Johnson is one of seven prominent athletes being portrayed as competitors in different sports for Nike's 'What if' ad campaign. In his spot, Johnson portrays a professional bowler. 'It was either that or be a horse jockey,' he said. 'I figured it probably would be better to be a bowler than riding a horse.' Then, Johnson - who is known for 300-strikeout seasons, not rolling 300 games - paused and said, 'I'm just kidding. I enjoyed doing it. I've been given the opportunity a few times over my career to do some funny things like that, and I enjoy it. I'm not a bowler. I have bowled, but that was the role given to me.' . . . Straight from the bartender's shot glass: Some new 'What if' roles for Nike to consider - San Diego Padres pitcher David Wells as an NHL goal-tender, Houston Rockets center Yao Ming as an NFL receiver and boxer Mike Tyson as a NASCAR driver . . . The list of baseball alumni for Yavapai College (in Prescott, Ariz.) includes Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling and former Cherry Creek High School athlete Donzell McDonald. Three

воскресенье, 30 сентября 2012 г.

on the court, he stands tall.(Sports) - The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)

Byline: RICH RADFORD

By Rich Radford

The Virginian-Pilot

NORFOLK

Darius James wears size-10 shoes and buys dress shirts with 16 -inch necks - and they're still loose on him.

If he walked through your office, you might figure he was the new intern looking for the copier.

A Division I basketball player? Please.

'I've ordered a couple pair of size 10s for our team managers before,' said Blaine Taylor, the Old Dominion men's basketball coach. 'But not for someone on our roster.'

James won't just be on ODU's roster today when the Monarchs play host to Virginia Commonwealth at the Constant Center. He'll be on the court, probably for much of the regionally televised game that begins shortly after 4 p.m.

When James played at Tallwood High in Virginia Beach, his nickname was 'Prince.' Now that the 6-foot, 165-pounder is playing for ODU, maybe his teammates should borrow from Leonard Wibberley's 1950s novel and call him 'The Mouse that Roared.'

In the past month, James has shown anyone who was watching that little guys can play, too. During an eight-game span, the lefthanded freshman point guard has averaged 12.1 points and 2.9 assists.

If that doesn't catch your attention, how about his 3.9 rebounds per game during that stretch? He grabbed six against James Madison on Wednesday night - and that's not his best. He had seven a month ago at Winthrop.

'It's not like I just got small,' James said. 'I've been small all my life. I've had to learn to work with what I have.'

His teammates stopped measuring him with a yardstick and a scale long ago.

'In my opinion, he's the top freshman guard in the conference,' ODU junior forward Jonathan Adams said.

Hofstra coach Tom Pecora remembers having a player similar to James.

'I was so dumb (that) I didn't start Loren Stokes until the middle of December of his freshman year,' Pecora said. 'He was reed thin. I was worried whether he'd be able to hold his own.'

Stokes twice was the runner-up for Player of the Year in the Colonial Athletic Association and finally earned the honor last season.

Oddly, James still practices with his reversible jersey showing light blue, the second-team's color.

'That's what I came out wearing at the first practice this season,' he said. 'And I'm not going dark blue until coach tells me to.'

James might have been a first-team All-Tidewater selection last season, but recruiters weren't knocking down his door. Other than ODU, he had a late scholarship offer from Appalachian State.

That was it.

'Me and Denzel Bowles are good friends and, when we were juniors, he was getting recruited by Wichita State and Texas A&M,' James said. 'I was getting Virginia Wesleyan and Mount Olive. He's 6-9. I'm 6-foot. Pretty easy to figure why the big schools were recruiting him and not me.'

Bowles, who played at Kempsville High, ended up at Texas A&M after being named second-team All-Tidewater. The Monarchs waited until late May to tell James they had a scholarship for him.

'Darius grew on us,' Taylor said. 'He had a real clear look in his eye and a belief in his ability. He just wanted to have a chance. I sensed that, if we took him, we'd have a loyal competitor.'

Taylor would have played James more in November but says he 'needed to let the smoke clear.'

'The questions about what type of competitor he'd be couldn't be answered in a game or two,' Taylor said. 'It's a lot easier to find players than it is to find competitors. The little guys in this game have a tendency to develop a chip on their shoulder, an 'I'll-show-you' mentality.'

James has that. He remembers not too long ago being passed over during pick-up games at Kempsville Recreation Center in Virginia Beach.

'They'd think I was too small,' he said. 'I'd be over on the sidelines waiting my turn thinking, 'I'm not just going to school you when I get out there; I'm going throw a pass between your legs and embarrass you.''

Taylor has stopped thinking about James in terms of size and has started thinking about him in terms of results.

'There are kids who keep count in everything they do - and those are the ones you want,' Taylor said. 'It's a real advantage to have that type kid at the point guard position. It permeates through the rest of the team.

'Darius wants to win so bad that, if we have a free throw shooting competition and he finishes second, we have to take his shoe laces away from him to keep him from hanging himself. He couldn't care less that he beat the other 11 guys.'

Rich Radford, (757) 446-2463, rich.radford@pilotonline.com VCU at odu men

When 4 p.m.

Where Constant Center, Norfolk

Records VCU 12-4, 5-1 CAA; ODU 9-9, 4-2

TV CSN

Radio 94.1 FM

About the Rams VCU has lost its past three trips to the Constant Center, including a 79-63 outcome last season. VCU is paced by the dynamic Eric Maynor (17.8 ppg, 5.1 apg), who last season earned a reputation as a clutch player when he hit winning shots against George Mason in the CAA championship game, then did it again against Duke in the first round of the NCAA tournament. Jamal Shuler is averaging 14.9 ppg. Michael Anderson from Landstown High is averaging 7.2 ppg and 5.2 rpg. The Rams have played only four true road games this season, going 2-2. VCU is tied with Delaware atop the league standings.

About the Monarchs ODU is tied for third in the CAA standings and can move into a tie for second - or better - with a win. The Monarchs are led by 6-10 sophomore Gerald Lee (13.2 ppg, 6.3 rpg). Senior guards Brandon Johnson and Brian Henderson each average 9 ppg. ODU is coming off a 79-52 home victory against James Madison; it was the Monarchs' second-highest point output of the season.

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L. Todd Spencer [bar] The Virginian-Pilot

ODU's Darius James reacts after passing over JMU's Heiden Ratner on Wednesday. James is averaging 12.1 points over his last eight games. Bill Tiernan [bar] The Virginian-Pilot file photo

суббота, 29 сентября 2012 г.

UCONN STAR STANDS TALL.(SPORTS) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: CHUCK SCHOFFNER Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- A veteran player and a rookie coach have earned the top awards in women's basketball from The Associated Press.

The Player of the Year is Connecticut senior Jennifer Rizzotti, whose leadership and hustle have kept the Huskies in the running for a second consecutive national championship.

Angie Lee, who engineered a dramatic turnaround at Iowa in her first season as a head coach, was named the national Coach of the Year.

Both awards were based on voting by Associated Press member newspapers nationwide.

Rizzotti's importance to Connecticut lies more in results than numbers.

The 5-foot-5 guard, a first-team All-American, averages a modest 10.8 points a game, but her team is 34-3 with 20 successive victories. She also averages 5.8 assists and three steals a game, and she has three times as many steals and assists as turnovers.

Relying heavily on six sophomores and two freshmen, Iowa won the Big Ten championship and reached the semifinals of the NCAA Mideast Regional. The 27 victories matched the second-best total in school history, but Lee takes none of the credit.

``I guess it's just another compliment to the team and assistant coaches,'' she said. ``I truly believe that. They did a great job all year.''

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пятница, 28 сентября 2012 г.

MAVERICKS' COACH STANDS TALL.(Sports) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: David Aldridge {FACTBOX} Avery Johnson, at a glance - In 16-year playing career, Johnson averaged 8.4 points, 5.5 assists and 1.7 rebounds in 1,054 games. Played in 90 playoff games, starting 73, with averages of 10.5 points, 6.2 assists and 1.13 steals per game. Member of San Antonio Spurs 1999 championship team. He and Calvin Murphy only players under 6 feet in height to play at least 1,000 NBA games. Coaching statistics Reg. season Playoffs '04-05 Dallas 16-2 6-7 '05-06 Dallas 60-22 13-5 Totals 76-24 19-12

DALLAS - At every turn, Avery Johnson has been too short, too shot-challenged, too high-pitched, too young, too inexperienced, maybe too country, too SWAC for some to fit comfortably into the Armani world of the NBA. But he's still here, having willed himself through 16 seasons as a player without much of a jumper, without much vertical lift, without much of anything.

Except brains and toughness and character.

'Well, I think for me, you've got to, first of all, have credibility,' Johnson said the other day. 'You know, in this situation, everybody feels that I got this job so suddenly. But this is my 18th year in the NBA, so whether it's as a player or a coach or combined, you know, this is 18 years in basketball, after playing a thousand and something games, when I wasn't necessarily invited to the party, all right? I had to kind of come in through the back door.'

A 5-foot-10 fist of a player out of Southern University of the Southwestern Athletic Conference, Johnson bounced from team to team throughout most of the 1990s, a whiz of a passer who was always found wanting because he couldn't make an open shot. While he worked on that, he challenged his team mates at every turn.

'Me and Sean (Elliott), if we let our guy past us, he'd say, `Come on, guys, you're better than that,' ' recalled Heat guard Derek Anderson, who played with Johnson in San Antonio in 2000.

Johnson hit the biggest shot in Spurs history - appropriately, a jumper that clinched San Antonio's first championship in 1999. And now that the coaching title is official, as it has been for the past 14 months, the 41-year-old Johnson looks like he's straight out of central casting: the coach as dictator. A shouter. A friend to his players when he wants to be, a jerk to them when he needs to be. And a coaching savant.

I don't care what talent you've been given; when you win 95 of your first 131 games, and you get your team to the NBA Finals in your first full season, you know what you're doing.

'We made it to the finals, and it's a tribute to him, obviously,' Mavericks all-star forward Dirk Nowtizki said. 'Every time he's hard on you, it's not the person, we all know that. He's got great relationships with his players, but he's just a very emotional guy. And he can get heated, but it's nothing personal.'

'I think when you've played in the league, you've still got to be able to communicate and teach,' Johnson said, 'because your playing career can only get you so far.'

Give former coach Don Nelson and owner Mark Cuban credit, for they both quickly centered on Johnson as Nelson's heir apparent three years ago, after their first choice, Sidney Moncrief, left the Mavericks' bench to return to his car dealerships.

And the Mavericks have taken on the personality of their coach. They aren't pretty any more.

'My relationship with (my players) is very important,' Johnson said. 'But I'm not a player's coach.'

David Aldridge writes for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

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четверг, 27 сентября 2012 г.

MATTHEWS, DOWNEY STAND TALL.(Sports) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: Pete Dougherty Staff writer

Just how much talent this Siena College basketball team has is open to debate each time it plays. The experience factor, though, is a non-issue.

When other avenues are closed, Siena can ride the road of experience to victory, as it did Wednesday night to defeat Central Michigan 65-52 in a non-conference game at the Alumni Recreation Center.

Marc Brown, one of three senior starters, had 22 points, six rebounds and five assists. He finally got some help from center Steve Downey (10 points, five rebounds), another senior, who scored in double figures for only the second time in his last nine games.

Throw in Lee Matthews, a 6-foot-7 sophomore who has played more career games (52) than many juniors, and Siena (15-8) can win a game even when starters Bruce Schroeder and Tom Huerter score four points between them.

'I was pleased with how well Lee and Steven played,' Siena coach Mike Deane said. 'Steven had a couple of mental lapses, but when a team is playing against us with 6-6 inside people, they can undress you a couple of times, but over 40 minutes our size and strength was very effective.'

Matthews contributed 18 points, his highest career total against a DivisionI opponent, nine rebounds and a court presence that belies his sophomore status.

'If you say, 'Coach, who beat you today,' because you know Marc Brown can beat you, it was Matthews,' Central Michigan's Charlie Coles said. 'Where did he come from?'

Central Michigan (10-10) wondered that several times in the final five minutes, when Matthews made two steals, connected on his last five foul shots, and rejected two successive 3-point attempts.

Matthews' instincts have improved as much as his jumper.

'I just try to play the game and react to what's happening on the floor,' Matthews said.

'His play was extraordinary,' Brown said.

This was far from an easy home victory for Siena, which has lost just twice on campus the past four season. The crowd of 2,722 was the season's lowest except for a January game played during a snowstorm. Those who attended were no match for Coles, who had the perfect response to the fans' obscene chant that has been directed at many a visiting coach.

'They tried to get on me,' Coles said, 'but I'm the best in the country at taking people out of the game, because I agree with them. When they said (bleep), I said, 'Who ... me?''

But Siena was able to ride other factors to keep the ARC's reputation afloat. Siena's shooting generally is sharper at home - statistically, the Saints' field-goal percentage is 3.5percent higher at home, their free- throw percentage 6.7percent higher - and that helped.

Siena made three straight shots to take a 52-41 lead with 6:27 to play. Then, as the Chippewas chipped away, Siena made 11 of 14 free throws in a six-minute stretch, maintaining its lead despite not scoring a field goal in that span.

Coles, as entertaining in a postgame press conference as he was on the sidelines, pointed to a play much earlier, with 11:17 remaining, as key. With two seconds left on a shot clock, Brown launched a 22-foot shot that found net.

'The biggest play of the game, you can't guess what it was,' Coles said. 'Marc Brown's three. Why didn't we stay on him? Three seconds on the clock! (Darian) McKinney had him, and went back. Excuse me, I didn't mean that, but, oh, God, why didn't we stay on him?'

Another key point came early in the first half, after Central took an 8-2 lead. The Chippewas went scoreless on 14 straight possessions (six turnovers, eight missed shots), enabling Siena to jump on top, 20-8.

The closest Central Michigan got after that was three points, right before Brown's 3-pointer.

'They really struggled for a long period of time against the matchup (zone) to get any kind of open shot,' Deane said. 'We got them to stand around for a long period of time. They finally made the adjustment, and wewent to man-to-man.'

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среда, 26 сентября 2012 г.

BUTCH, APPLETON WEST STAND TALL.(SPORTS) - The Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI)

Byline: Jesse Osborne Wisconsin State Journal

As Greg Stiemsma headed to the bench with 3 minutes left in the third quarter Friday, the victim of his fifth foul, the UW Field House crowd rose to pay respects to the Randolph center.

The 6-foot-11 Stiemsma and Appleton West's 6-11 center Brian Butch had just engaged in perhaps the most anticipated 21 minutes of prep basketball in recent memory. The UW recruits -- Butch arrives next season and Stiemsma in 2004 -- displayed the talent that has led to national notoriety.

Butch finished with 27 points, 11 rebounds and four blocked shots, while Stiemsma had 22 points, eight rebounds and two blocked shots. Almost an afterthought, Butch's Terrors (6-1) claimed a 64-45 win over the Rockets (4-2) as part of the Badger Classic.

Displaying an improved shooting range -- he knocked down three baseline jumpers of intermediate length and a 3-pointer as part of a 10-for-11 shooting performance that included three dunks -- Stiemsma caught Butch off guard on his way to a 20-point first half.

'I should have known it,' Butch said. 'Coming into a big game, everyone wants to see (a) him vs. me type thing. I should have known the younger guy wanted it and (would) try to take it over.'

For Stiemsma, who has not had to be a go-to scorer over the past two seasons, it was more a matter of pride against Butch.

'It was a great opportunity and it just happened to be a breakout game,' Stiemsma said.

With Stiemsma out, Randolph managed to cut the lead to 47-39 at the end of the third quarter, but Butch had six points in the fourth quarter -- the same total as the Rockets -- and he got the most important statistic of all -- a win.

'I don't know if (Stiemsma's) going to say anything about how he dunked it all the time,' Butch said. 'But, experience wins over youth in this matchup.'

* Madison Edgewood 54, Mayville 52: Mayville's Mike Toellner was the star of the game but the Crusaders made sure his performance wasn't enough.

'I thought we played pretty solid in the second half,' Edgewood coach Chris Zwettler said. 'We got a lot of guys involved and its pretty common for us to have nine, 10, 11 guys scoring and that's what our strength's going to be (this year).'

Toellner finished with 28 points, including 17 points in the second half.

Edgewood junior Craig Meier had 11 of his team-high 13 in the second half and senior Robert Grady added all 12 of his points in the last two quarters.

'It was nice to see Grady hit a couple 3-pointers back to back, and then it becomes contagious,' said Zwettler, whose team outscored Mayville 22-11 in the third quarter. 'We need more of that and more of those type of quarters.'

It was the Crusaders' fourth game in the past eight days.

вторник, 25 сентября 2012 г.

Boston's youngsters stand tall.(Sports) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: HOWARD ULMAN Associated Press

Red Sox 7

Devil Rays 4

BOSTON - The liner kept sinking as center fielder Adam Stern charged in. Catch it and Boston wins. Miss and let it get by him and all three runners could score to tie the game.

'I don't think there was anyone breathing in that dugout when he dove for the ball,' Kevin Youkilis said.

Stern, a defensive replacement in the eighth inning, hit the grass and raised his glove with a piece of the baseball visible at the edge of the pocket. His diving catch ended a 7-4 win Tuesday over the Tampa Bay Devil Rays and came ahead of his likely departure to the minors this week.

'I snow-coned it. I was like, `It keeps dying on me.' I was wondering what the heck was going on,' Stern said. 'That's the way I play sometimes. I take some chances to make some big plays.'

With Manny Ramirez just starting to break out of a long slump and the Red Sox bats quiet for most of the season, they've had to rely on pitching, defense and young players like Youkilis, whose two-run double in the eighth broke a 4-4 tie, and Stern.

Mike Timlin (2-0) won despite allowing two runs in the eighth. Jonathan Papelbon loaded the bases on a single and his first two walks of the season but got his seventh save in seven chances, breaking the Red Sox record for saves by a rookie in one month set by Jeff Gray in 1990. Ruddy Lugo (0-1) took the loss.

Youkilis, who shuttled between Boston and Triple-A Pawtucket the last two seasons, is now the starting first baseman.

'I'm not a role player anymore where I'm playing every seven days,' he said. 'I've got to do something each day to contribute to a win.'

Stern is expected to be sent to Pawtucket as soon as Thursday. The Red Sox had to keep him all last season or offer him back to Atlanta because they chose him from the Braves in the Rule 5 draft. At that time, he hadn't played above Double-A. Because he didn't have enough time on the active roster last year, he has to spend the first 17 days this season with the Red Sox before they can send him down so he can play regularly.

'Whatever they want to do with me, that's cool,' Stern said.

He stuck around long enough to grab Damon Hollins' low drive.

'I was hoping it got by him somehow, but that is what great defenders do,' Hollins said.

With the score tied at 4, Mike Lowell started the bottom of the eighth with a double, his sixth in seven games, and pinch-hitter Trot Nixon walked. Stern forced Lowell at third and Alex Gonzalez struck out.

понедельник, 24 сентября 2012 г.

KNIGHTS' GUARDS SHOOT TALL.(SPORTS) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: BUZZ GRAY Staff writer

ALBANY -- Shut down the two big guns inside and the College of Saint Rose will still find a way to beat you. On Wednesday, it was two pesky guards doing the most damage for the Golden Knights as they turned back always troublesome Adelphi.

Matt Fryer and Mike Perno combined for 30 points to provide the foundation of St. Rose's 71-62 triumph in a key New York Collegiate Athletic Conference basketball game.

``I knew they were going to play off me,'' said Fryer, the 5-8 sophomore guard. ``I think they put their worst defender on me. I was just driving by him.''

Fryer hit on 7-of-7 shots in the first half, many of them layups, and then added two more points in the second half for 16 points, easily his best output since joining the team.

``I thought he showed a lot of poise,'' coach Brian Beaury said after the Golden Knights, the No. 7 ranked Division II team in the country, survived the loss of center Damon Reed to fouls.

Reed, a pre-season All-American, was held to just eight points before fouling out with 1:16 remaining. Forward Nate Connolly, another inside tower of power, managed just 12, well below his average.

``They (Adelphi) did a good job on Damon,'' Beaury said of the Panthers' defense.

Eventually, though, the Knights (3-1, 3-0) adjusted by letting their guards carry the offensive load.

``We were getting open off of screens,'' said Perno who buried back-to-back 3-pointers late in the second half as St. Rose pulled away.

A 10-2 run broke open what had been a 44-44 tie. After that, the Knights applied suffocating defense to bottle up the Panthers (3-2, 1-1). Adelphi was held without a field goal for four minutes during a stretch of the second half. It was especially significant since Reed was sitting on the bench for four minutes with four fouls.

Joining Perno and Fryer on the attack was Steve Sgambelluri, another deadeye guard. His pair of 3-pointers in the second half helped make the Panthers pay for their smothering of Reed. ST. ROSE 71, ADELPHI 62 ADELPHI (62)

Kellman 2-5 1-2 5, Williams 1-8 1-2 3, Edwards 3-8 0-1, 6, McCormack 7-17 2-5 19, Graig 5-14 2-3 13, Laul 0-0 2-2 2, Williams 2-4 2-2 4, Nelson 3-5 1-2 8. Totals 23-64 11-20 62. ST. ROSE (71)

Connolly 4-10 4-4 12, Reed 3-7 2-4 8, Perno 3-7 5-6 14, Fryer 8-11 0-1 16, Sgambelluri 3-12 0-1 8, Organ 1-2 0-0 2, Doran 2-6 0-0 5, DeVries 3-6 0-2 6. Totals 27-72 11-19 71.

воскресенье, 23 сентября 2012 г.

Big Mike walked tall.(Sports) - Post (South Africa)

DURING the cash strapped days of the Federation Professional League (FPL), one manager's secret to signing up players was a neatly gift-wrapped package containing a soap dish and towel set.

Mike Royeppen revealed this, and his other shenanigans as a professional soccer club manager, to POST last week.

Mike who was big in size and walked on to the field with an imposing gait is nowadays wheelchair-bound following the amputation of his right leg in January last year, due to his high blood sugar condition.

He turned 65 on Monday, and spends his retirement days in a flat he recently bought in Paradise Valley absorbing the breathtaking views and playing with his grandson Jiaan, 2, whom he describes as being 'my life'.

Born in Mayville, Mike played soccer as a central defender for amateur clubs and also excelled in swimming and water polo. He joined South African Breweries where his job was to promote the company's products.

Mike takes up the story: 'Theatre personality Ronnie Govender also worked at SAB. During those days he served on the executive of the FPL and was a soccer reporter for the Leader newspaper.

'In 1979 Ronnie introduced me to Zazi Khuzwayo who was the owner of NPSL team African Wanderers and encouraged me to get involved with soccer administration. My job at SAB required me to be public-friendly and I decided taking up the position as manager would assist me in my work.

'I worked with coach Jim-my Kerr, who was an England and Durban United player. My first change room session with the club was literally a baptism for me. We were all made to stand in line and a bucket of water with a concoction of green herbs was used to brush us down. As the muti man approached me, I attempted to move back when Jimmy quickly shoved me and made me stand straight to accept the brushing. He later told me that if I did not accept the blessing, I would have been kicked out of the club.

'Zazi was heavily involved in the ANC and he was assassinated at the end of my first year with the club. FPL executive member Jasper Vurden then approached me and asked me to take up the managerial post at Manning Rangers.'

Rangers were going through a rough patch and had finished the previous season rock bottom. One of Mike's stipulations before taking on the job was that there would be no interference from club directors while he was the manager.

Mike was a strict disciplinarian regarding punctuality and fitness training, and he managed to change the fortunes of the club within a few months, taking Rangers to a second-on-the-log finish that season.

'If I found that a player was lagging behind in training, I would call him aside and make him run 20 times up and down the Currie's stadium stands. If he failed to accomplish this, I would not hesitate to tell him to pack his bags and leave the team.

'The secret to a winning team is to get the right players for the job and this was where Don (Mudaly, Berea's manager) and I almost came to blows on many occasions. There was a fierce rivalry between us to sign on players.

'The clubs in the Fed did not have money to throw around and I resorted to giving a cellophane gift-wrapped soap dish and towel set, a few hundred rands from my own pocket and a pair of boots to tie up the deal.

'Once both Don and I were after a player from Wentworth I only remember as China. As I approached the player's house, I saw Don's car parked in the yard. I then drove further down the road and kept watch until he left the house. I then drove in and my gift worked like a charm. I got China.

'Another time Don got the upper hand on me. We were both after the signatures of the dynamic Cape duo of Keith America and Calvin Petersen. Don must have heard that I was booked to fly to Cape Town on a Saturday. He flew down on that Friday, and beat me to the draw.

'Then I beat him to sign on brothers Mark and Tony Buckley (uncles to Bafana Bafana's Delron) and the battle between us continued. Walking through the Currie's tunnel before we played each other would always draw menacing glares between the two of us.

'Sometimes our battles ended up in the boardroom. Don once protested a match result citing late registration of players. I always used Merewent FA official Sammy Sayed as my negotiator. He was brilliant at getting out of tight situations and I often won my cases.'

After a two-year stay with Rangers, Mike resigned to take up the post of PRO for the Federation Professional League where he said he was privileged to have worked with 'great administrators' like Ashwin Trikamjee, Sithia 'SK' Chetty and Gaff Osman.

After a two-year stint with the FPL executive, he was enticed to manage the Tongaat Crusaders team, but that did not last long because the 'strictly off limits' deal he always insisted he had with club directors was breached and he moved to Berea where he took over from Don, who had moved to Rangers - and the battle resumed.

Mike, who would smoke a packet of cigarettes during the 90-minute course of the game was so passionate about his soccer that he was admitted to hospital with a suspected heart attack after his team lost to Cape Town Spurs in 1981.

He enjoyed a healthy and productive relationship with the press, singling out current POST Editor Brijlall Ram-guthee, who was a sports reporter then, for keeping public interest in the game alive.

Brij said of Mike whom he had nicknamed 'Sir Alf' after England supremo Sir Alf Ramsay: 'He was one of those managers who brought a lot of razor sharp tension to the game. He had the ability to spring surprises and one could feel the passion oozing out of his frame.'

Through his work Mike also secured a R15 000 Hansa Pilsener Cup sponsorship and said: 'My bosses who were big on sponsoring different codes of sport were shocked when I showed them the breakdown of the money, saying that this was the first time they saw only 10% of the amount going towards administrative costs with the winning teams sharing the balance.'

Mike was an extrovert and he then turned his attention toward running nightclubs and was co-owner of the once popular Club Lipstick.

He said he was responsible for introducing the supper club concept to Durban when, together with Cape Town singer Vivienne Kinsley, he hosted the province's first Sunday supper club at the Himalaya Hotel in 1975.

Today both he and Don are the best of chums who hug each other whenever they meet.

Mike, who was twice named manager of the season with Manning Rangers (1981) and with Tongaat Crusaders (1988) said his prosthetic limb had arrived and he would want to start walking again as his doctors warned that he was in danger of losing the second limb.

'I want to walk one last time before I lose the other leg,' said Mike.

He lives with his wife Needha and has two daughters Yolisha and Srenika and son Shaun, who is currently the PRO of amateur club Savells. Mike has three grandchildren whom he dotes over.

n THE SA Fed Legends will hold a fund-raising dinner and dance at the Coastlands Convention Centre on September 8. Monies raised will go to the Legends' various projects they intend undertaking to improve the lives of all former players, administrators and officials of the FPL and its predecessor, the SASL.

Members of the Legends are already involved with coaching clinics for school children. After a classy launch held in April this year, high standards have been set and to book your place at this event will cost you R250 per couple. Call PRO Jasper Vurden on 083 298 1757.

Standing tall.(Sports) - The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)

Byline: PAUL WHITE

BY Paul White

THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT

When he joined an undersized Tallwood High School basketball team three years ago, the then 6-foot-3 Kelly Beidler stood out simply by standing up.

'I'm thinking, 'OK, we've finally got some height,' ' Lions coach Matt Myint said.

It didn't take long for Myint to notice quite a bit more. In the Lions' first scrimmage, Beidler accepted a pass, drove the baseline and threw down a thunderous dunk.

'This kid's going to be good,' Myint told one of his assistants.

For most of the days since, this information remained pretty much a Beach District secret. But after the Lions' remarkable run last week, the word is officially out across Hampton Roads - Beidler isn't just good, he's the best player on the best team in the Eastern Region.

The Lions' claim to that title didn't come by much - their tournament victories over Maury, Bethel and Booker T. Washington came by a combined four points.

Beidler's performance was much more clear-cut, although it can't be measured in mere numbers. His stats were fine: Beidler averaged 16 points in the three games for a team that typically scores in the 40s.

Then again, Beidler wasn't counting.

'I mean, it feels good to get 30,' said Beidler, who has signed to play at Mount St. Mary's. 'But I'll take 16 any day if it means the Eastern Region title.'

It was the range of Beidler's contributions that set him apart. Against Bethel, Beidler handled the ball from the top of the key, forcing 6-7 Jamel McLean and 6-8 Duke Crews out of the paint. If they laid back, Beidler hit 3-pointers. When they matched up with him, Beidler put it on the floor and attacked the rim.

On defense, he rebounded and blocked shots, the expected contributions of a player who earned Beach District Defensive Player of the Year honors in addition to the overall Player of the Year award. Yet he also displayed enough quickness to check smaller players on the perimeter. Then there were the intangibles. When the Lions fell behind the Bookers by three points late in the fourth quarter, it was Beidler huddling the players together during a timeout, encouraging his teammates to rally.

When sophomore A.J. Boggs missed the first of two free throws with four seconds left in that game, it was Beidler offering reassurance.

'I just slapped his hand and said, 'I know you're going to make this,' ' said Beidler, who then watched with glee as Boggs drained the game-winner.

He even stood up to Booker T. Washington's Myles Holley early in the third quarter, going jaw-to-jaw with the Bookers' star forward and sending a message to his team that the Lions would not be intimidated.

'We didn't want to initiate anything,' Myint said. 'But we weren't going to back down.'

According to Beidler, his on-court versatility comes naturally. In middle school, he played guard before a late growth spurt, a position in which he developed his ball-handling and shooting skills.

The leadership traits had to be developed. Even as recently as last season, Myint said he continually had to warn Beidler against slumped shoulders and hang-dog expressions when problems arose on the court.

'Coach stayed on me, and I worked harder,' said Beidler, who was second-team All-Beach as a junior. 'After summer league I knew we could do something big, and all season long we've pretty much proved it.'

суббота, 22 сентября 2012 г.

HE STOOD TALL.(Sports) - Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Randy Johnson arrived in Seattle as a 6-foot-10 baseball curiousity. He soon became a giant in the game with a fearsome fastball and his ``Mr. Snappy'' slider, and helped save baseball in Seattle.

1989

Langston, Langston, Langston. Randy Johnson's Mariner arrival was far overshadowed by the departure of the Mariner pitching ace on May 25, 1989. The deal was this: Seattle sent Mark Langston and a player to be named later (pitcher Mike Campbell) to Montreal for Johnson, fellow starting pitcher Brian Holman and reliever Gene Harris. Johnson was with Class AAA Indianapolis at the time of the trade, having been sent out after an 0-4 start with the Expos.

``They're young and crude and we're going to have to live with some mistakes for a while.''

- May 26, 1989, Mariner manager Jim Lefebvre, sizing up his three new pitchers.

1990

No hits, no runs, no regrets. Nearly a year after the deal, Langston finally was a forgotten man as Johnson fired the first Mariner no-hitter on June 2, beating Detroit 2-0 at the Kingdome. The 6-foot-10 lefty struck out eight and walked six. To perserve the masterpiece, there were four tough plays, two flyouts and two groundouts, all handled flawlessly by his teammates, including one by second-year centerfielder Ken Griffey Jr.

``I went for it then. I started to rear back and let it fly. My thinking was if it's going to happen, it's going to happen. I'm a fastball pitcher, and I'm going down throwing fastballs. I'm not going to lose this on anything but my best pitch.''

- June 2, 1990, Johnson, regarding his eighth- and ninth-inning mindset.

1991

Almost straight A's. Fourteen months after his no-hitter, Johnson had a near-miss, losing another gem in the ninth inning against Oakland at the Kingdome. Mike Gallego, the A's No. 8 hitter, spoiled his effort with no outs and a runner on base, ramming a single cleanly to left between third baseman Edgar Martinez and shortstop Omar Vizquel.

``He was a like a shark smelling blood. He kept coming. He didn't get tired, he got stronger. The ball just exploded on us. I'm glad he threw me a nice fastball instead of one of his nasty sliders. I knew I couldn't hit his slider.''

- Aug. 13, 1991, Gallego describing his frustration against Johnson.

1992

Bulls-eye. Johnson was coming off arthroscopic surgery on his right knee in the offseason, when he took a Mike Greenwell liner off his left elbow in a game against Boston at the Kingdome. The ball struck him flush on the joint and left him writhing on the ground. Johnson's injury was described as a bruise, but he would pitch only once, and briefly, over the next month. He wound up on the Mariner DL for the first time. This would be the first of several health setbacks for the pitcher over the next five seasons.

``I really don't have too much to say to any of you.''

- May 31, 1992, a sore and agitated Johnson after his hospital visit.

1993

The hair was longer, the fastball faster. This was the coming-of-age year for Johnson, who matched Langston's club record for pitching victories (19) and surpassed Langston's strikeout standard (308) by 46. Johnson did everything. He made John Kruk look silly at the All-Star Game in Baltimore. He narrowly missed a pair of no-hitters against Kansas City and Oakland, losing them in the eighth and ninth innings, respectively. Against Oakland, he also was perfect through 71/3 innings, with Kevin Seitzer's one-out walk spoiling the effort. Johnson pitched in relief for the first time, after closer Norm Charlton was lost to an arm injury, and picked up his first big-league save.

``I'm not a perfect pitcher and this probably is about as close as I'll ever get to a perfect game. I did pitch one in high school.''

- May 16, 1993, Johnson after flirting with perfection.

1994

It was good while it lasted for the Big Unit. In a strike-shortened campaign, Johnson had a season within a season, throwing three consecutive shutouts. He stopped Oakland 1-0 on a four-hitter, defeated Minnesota 12-0 permitting just two hits and beat Toronto 2-0 with a six-hitter. He would finish with 29 consecutive scoreless innings, then second in club history to Langston's 34. The opener seemed to mirror the frustrations of the season. Nothing got finished. Johnson took a no-hitter into the eighth inning at Cleveland, had it broken up by Sandy Alomar, and the Mariners lost the game in extra innings.

``I don't like to compare myself to anyone. When I start pitching like other people, then I get away from me. I think it's important to have your own identity. He's Mark. I'm me.''

- May 25, 1994, Johnson when compared to Langston.

1995

There was none better. Johnson turned it up a notch and was rewarded with the Cy Young award. He captured 18 of 20 regular-season pitching decisions, and the club won 27 of 31 games he started. He threw a three-hitter at California to win a one-game playoff, helping propel the Mariners to their first AL West Division championship. He was the first Mariner pitcher to start the All-Star game. He also set a major-league record for the most strikeouts per innings pitched with 12.35, breaking Nolan Ryan's mark of 11.48 set in 1987 with Houston. But showing wear, he missed an August start with shoulder inflammation and had a second arthroscopic surgery on his right knee in the offseason.

``I take pride in trying to be a pitcher, someone who goes out there and thinks and has a strategy, keeping batters off balance. You can't do that continually throwing 90-mile-an-hour fastballs. They can hit that. A thrower is someone who just rears back and throws. I used to be that.''

- Nov. 14, 1995, Johnson after winning the Cy Young award.

1996

It was the Big Unit, unplugged. After enjoying ultimate rewards, everything came crashing down around Johnson. On April 26, he was forced to leave a game at Milwaukee with lower back pain, pitching just 32/3 innings. Briefly returning to the mound and finding more discomfort, he went on the 60-day disabled list on May 13, diagnosed with an irritated nerve in his lower back. He would pitch two innings at Class A Everett on a rehab assignment and return to the Mariners on Aug. 6, but his back would bottom out. He was returned to the DL on Aug. 27 and had back surgery for a herniated disk in Los Angeles a month later. He appeared in only 14 games.

``I don't see any reason why he can't perform as well in baseball as he has in the past.''

- Sept. 12, 1996, Dr. Robert Watkins, discussing Johnson's back surgery.

1997

Back surgery produced a new and improved Randy Johnson. Starting slowly and working his way into shape, he became the Mariners' first 20-game winner, capturing 20 of 24 decisions. He had a pair of 19-strikeout games against Oakland and Chicago, and took a no-hitter into the eighth inning against Detroit. He ran off a string of 31 consecutive scoreless innings. However, he was not without physical pain, injuring the middle finger on his throwing hand and missing a month of starts. And there was unavoidable emotional pain, with Johnson losing twice to Baltimore in the postseason.

``He's human. I didn't think it would come down to them beating him twice. I didn't think they could do it.''

- Oct. 5, 1997, Jay Buhner on Johnson against the Orioles.

1998

Borrowed time. Johnson was living on it after the Mariners announced in the offseason that the pitcher, a $6 million man in the last year of his contract, would not be offered an extension. He was shopped to the New York Yankees, Los Angeles Dodgers, Cleveland Indians and Toronto Blue Jays, but no deal was struck. Johnson reported to spring camp clearly unhappy despite pronouncements otherwise, and it showed as the season started. He nearly went winless in April. Next his temper flared in a game against Cleveland and resulted in his ejection and three-game suspension. Kenny Lofton had reacted negatively to a wayward pitch and got another that spun him around, emptying the benches. He wrestled with teammate David Segui in the clubhouse over a loud stereo, blaming his situation. Johnson had one more brush with a no-hitter against Minnesota, coming within five outs of the gem before Brent Gates, a former teammate, singled.

``I'm upbeat and ready to go. I'm probably in better shape than I've ever been.''

- Feb. 15, 1998, Johnson arriving at spring camp.

Mariner pitching all-time top five

WINS

Johnson 130

Langston 74

Moore 66

Hanson 56

Young 45

LOSSES

Moore 96

Johnson 74

Beattie 72

Langston 67

Young 66

ERA (300 IP)

Jackson 3.38

Johnson 3.42

Reed 3.49

B. Clark 3.66

Hanson 3.69

GAMES

Jackson 335

Johnson 274

Ayala 274

Vande Berg 272

Swift 253

STARTS

Johnson 266

Moore 217

Langston 173

Beattie 147

Abbott 246

COMPLETE GAMES

Moore 56

Johnson 51

Langston 41

Beattie 30

Abbott 28

SHUTOUTS

Johnson 19

Langston 9

Moore 9

Bannister 7

Beattie 6

SAVES

Schooler 98

Charlton 66

Ayala 56

Caudill 52

Rawley 36

INNINGS

Johnson 1,838.1

Moore 1,457.0

Langston 1,197.2

Hanson 967.1

Beattie 944.2

WALKS

Johnson 884

Langston 575

Moore 535

Beattie 369

Young 365

STRIKEOUTS

Johnson 2,162

Langston 1,078

Moore 937

Hanson 740

Young 597

Johnson's top 10 games

1. June 2, 1990.

Threw Mariners' first no-hitter, beat Detroit 2-0.

2. May 16, 1993.

Lost perfect game in 8th, on Kevin Seitzer's one-out walk, and no-hitter in 9th, on Lance Blankenship's one-out single; finished with one-hitter in 7-0 win over Oakland.

3. Aug. 14, 1991.

Lost no-hitter in 9th on no-out single by Mike Gallego; finished 1-hitter in 4-0 win over Oakland.

4. Oct. 2, 1995.

Clinched AL West Division title with 3-hitter in 9-1 win over California in playoff game.

5. Aug. 8, 1997.

Struck out 19 with 5-hitter in 5-0 win over Chicago.

6. June 24, 1997.

Struck out 19 in 4-1 loss to Oakland.

7. Sept. 16, 1993.

Lost no-hitter in 8th on Brian McRae's one-out double, beat Kansas City 14-1 with 2-hitter.

8. June 8, 1997.

Lost no-hitter in 8th on Phil Nevin's one-out single, beat Detroit 2-0 (Finished with 1-hitter in 8 innings.)

9. April 4, 1994.

Lost no-hitter in 8th on Sandy Alomar's no-out single; took no-decision in 4-3, 11-inning loss to Cleveland.

10. Oct. 8, 1995.

пятница, 21 сентября 2012 г.

Walk tall, Dunc.(Sport) - The Mirror (London, England)

Joe Royle last night challenged Duncan Ferguson, saying: 'You've built the legend, now live up to it.'

The Everton boss axed his pounds 4million striker for the first time in his stop-start Goodison career on Saturday because he is not yet fully fit after a two-month lay-off.

Ferguson wasn't happy and vented his feelings with an angry finger-pointing after coming on as a sub and scoring as Sunderland won 3-1.

But Royle believes Ferguson's reputation is bigger than his achievements at Everton. Fergie has missed 48 of 107 matches since arriving from Rangers two years ago, and Royle is now demanding an uninterrupted run.

He said: 'Duncan has become a legend in some ways before he has become a player. And he's not become a player simply because he's not played often enough.

'He has games and spells when he looks unstoppable. But he has other times when I look at him and I think: `Dunc, let's get going'.

четверг, 20 сентября 2012 г.

FOOTBALL: ESTONIA TALL-ENT.(Sport) - The Mirror (London, England)

ESTONIA have called up 12 players from national champions Flora Tallinn for next week's friendly with Scotland.

Estonian boss Arno Pijpers has relied heavily on Flora after including an entire team and a sub from the club. He said: 'Scotland are a proud football nation and will provide a very big test for my players.'

5-1 RIVER FOREST STAR STANDS TALL IN SPORTS, MUSIC - Post-Tribune (IN)

PHOTOJulio Concepcion, a 5-foot-1 all-around athlete at River Forest High School, stands beside 5-9 football teammate John Daniels. (Post-Tribune photo)

THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED VERSION.TV -- 7 p.m., (SC) (WTBS)

Julio Concepcion is so small he cannot be overlooked. At 5-foot-1, 132 pounds, the River Forest High School senior is immediately recognized before a performance, and immediately respected during it, whether it be on the the baseball field, the wrestling mat, on center stage with the jazz band, or on the football field.

Yes, even on the high school varsity football field.

Concepcion started at defensive back last fall for the Ingots' sectional championship football team. He wrestled in the winter, and is hitting .372 while batting lead-off for the baseball team.

The center fielder was the team's most valuable player last year when he hit .348 and earned a spot on the All-Northwest Hoosier Conference team.

When he is not proving that size is not the most important factor in high school athletics, he is searching his insides for answers to vague questions, and telling the world what he learns through the alto saxophone that has won him honors in state competition.

'Look at all those handicapped people out there, look at (California Angels' pitcher Jim Abbott, born with one hand), look at how he does things with his disability, and all those handicapped people out there, they're my idols.

'You don't have to be big, it's not really your physical capabilities, it's your mind, it's how bad you want to do it. If you want to do it you can do it, it's all in your head. Everything's in your head.'

Concepcion not only presents probably the smallest strike zone in Northwest Indiana, but he also knows what to do with a pitch that is there for the taking.

'He's always had the ability to hit,' said baseball coach Kirk Whiting, who said Concepcion's only glaring weakness is arm strength. 'He's been working on switch-hitting. He has an excellent eye, usually makes contact, doesn't strike out much which, with his size, makes him susceptible to walks.'

'In baseball, my size is a real good advantage. I'm pretty quick, so that makes up for my height.

'All you see are those real tall long skinny guys, and those big powerful guys, but I'm short and kind of cocky, so I just go out and I know I'm going to hit that ball.

'I just know I'm going to hit it, and I have that kind of confidence in me.

'In the outfield, it's my speed that keeps up with me. I might not have those long legs, but I'll get there.'

Small baseball players are not that uncommon. Former Kansas City Royals shortstop Freddie Patek, a two-time All-Star, was 5-5. Former Cincinnati Reds star Joe Morgan was 5-7, 150 pounds, yet hit 268 home runs over his 22-year career.

But football? Even at the Class 2A level, Concepcion was surrounded by giants.

'Julio was probably the best pure tackler on the team,' said Whiting, who is also an assistant football coach. 'Early in the season, people thought they could stick their biggest receiver on him and try to throw over him, but Julio countered that with his quickness and knowledge. And he loves to hit people.'

'In football, I was the smallest guy on the team. I had to make up for what I didn't have. I sometimes had a 6-1, 6-2 receiver on me, so I had to back up and give him a little room so he didn't beat me out in the long run.

'What made up for it was my speed and my judgment. And I had to hit him low. I just wrapped my arms around his legs and BOOM! He's down and I just made up for it. I love football.'

Concepcion, the oldest of five children and an honor roll student, credits hours of practice and help from his coaches and teachers for helping him to achieve so much. And they, in return, receive something from him.

'Julio is very warm, personable, and very communicative,' said Weldon Slater, Concepcion's music teacher at River Forest.

'Some people play notes per se; Julio has a way of communicating with the saxophone. It's the sign of a real performer. If he's having a good day, his music is bright and exciting, and if he's having a bad day, or didn't get enough sleep or whatever, he plays more melancholy.'

At a recent Jazz Fest at River Forest, which included bands from Chesterton, Crown Point, and LaVille high schools, Concepcion was recognized as the most outstanding overall performer and the most outstanding soloist, which Slater said was the first time in 11 years that one student earned both honors.

A representative from Vandercook School of Music in Chicago has offered a scholarship. Concepcion is apparently leaning that way.

'I use music to express my feelings, to let out my fears, to let out my anger. I use music in a lot of ways. It calms me down when I'm really hyper.

'It's something you express, it's not something you can explain. You can feel it. If you can feel it, it sounds something real good.'

In less than a month, Concepcion will graduate from high school. He realizes he will need his dogged determination for a much bigger endeavor that never ends after high school.

'Sometimes, I have to come to reality and say, 'Hey, your years are your high school years and when you get out of there, you're going to be out in the real world, and you have to work on your studying. Set your life.

'In a way, I'm scared to meet it, but I can't because then it'll turn on me. If I go out and meet the real world, and go after the real world, then I'm going to do something.

'I'm going to miss baseball a lot, and I'll never forget football. I want to play football (in college), but I know I can't. But it is something everybody will remember, that 5-foot-1 guy on defense.'

To see him make a vicious tackle or smack a line drive into the gap in right field elicits cheers from all who love the underdog. Strangers shake their heads in disbelief of how that 'little guy' keeps up with the big kids.

среда, 19 сентября 2012 г.

Football: Reid's tall order.(Sport) - The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland)

SUNDERLAND manager Peter Reid will again turn to big striker Niall Quinn in his hour of need in the match with Fulham at the Stadium of Light.

The Black Cats have lost three of their last four matches including a home FA Cup defeat by First Division West Brom, and have slipped into the bottom half of the FA Barclaycard Premiership.

Pressure is mounting on Reid to turn the tide and with a home derby against Middlesbrough to follow the visit of Jean Tigana's side, he is desperate for a maximum six-point haul.

But with goals at a premium and the failure to find a replacement for pounds 3.5million misfit Lilian Laslandes, who has joined Cologne until the end of the season on loan, he is banking on tall veteran Quinn to ease the pressure on Kevin Phillips in the short-term.

'Defensively - apart from a mad 15 minutes at Ipswich - we have basically been very sound,' said Reid.

''But scoring goals is a different matter. Kevin Phillips has had a great season, but there is too much onus on him to get goals.'

Meanwhile, Fulham's pounds 11.5million striker Steve Marlet has pledged to battle through his sixth match in 21 days as two of the bluntest strikeforces in the country go head-to-head at the Stadium of Light.

The ninth-place Cottagers have mustered just 22 goals in 21 league matches this season, while their hosts Sunderland have fared even worse in front of goal, with only 18 strikes from 22 games.

LOOKING FORWARD, BOEHEIM SEEKS TALL GUY.(Sports) - The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)

Byline: Mike Waters Staff writer

After receiving two early commitments from perimeter players, Syracuse University basketball coaches appear to be thinking big.

Big in terms of stature and ranking.

In May, Demetris Nichols, a 6-foot-7 small forward from St. Andrew's School in Barrington, R.I., decided to attend Syracuse. Earlier this month, Louie McCroskey, a 6-4 guard at St. Raymond's High School in the Bronx, followed suit.

Now Syracuse's wish list is down to three frontcourt players. All three are at least 6-8; all three are ranked among the top 75 players in the class of 2003; and all three have scheduled official visits to SU.

They are:

Chris Taft, a 6-9, 230-pound forward/center at Xaverian High School in Brooklyn;

Terrence Roberts, a 6-8, 205-pound forward from St. Anthony High School in Jersey City, N.J.; and

Courtney Sims, a 6-11, 225-pound center from Noble & Greenough School in Dedham, Mass.

Bob Hurley, Roberts' coach at St. Anthony, said Roberts will visit the SU campus on the weekend of Sept. 13. Hurley also said Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim will visit the Roberts' home on Sept. 8. The Syracuse visits are the first Roberts has scheduled.

'You reward people for their effort,' Hurley said Tuesday. 'Syracuse's coaches started recruiting Terrence the earliest, and they've spent the most time on him. They deserved the opportunity to schedule a visit that fit best for them.'

Hurley said Roberts is trying to trim his list of schools to five. High school recruits can take up to five expense-paid campus trips. In addition to Syracuse, Roberts is considering Florida, Maryland, Virginia, Villanova, Connecticut, St. John's, Rutgers and Seton Hall.

'I think we'll get down to five very soon,' Hurley said. 'We want him to visit the schools he's interested in. I'd like him to use as many as he needs. So many kids are committing so early now, they blow the opportunity to visit the campus.'

Roberts averaged 10.1 points and 8.0 rebounds as a junior, but his scoring was limited on a guard-oriented team that finished second in the nation with a 29-1 record. Three guards off St. Anthony's team will be at Division I schools this winter - Elijah Ingram (St. John's), Donald Copeland (Seton Hall) and Dwayne Lee (St. Joseph's).

HoopScoop editor Clark Francis ranks Roberts as the 35th-best player in the class of 2003.

Taft said he will visit the SU campus Sept. 6-8.

'It's the first one I've set up,' Taft said Tuesday. 'I'm still waiting to schedule my other four.'

Taft said he also plans to visit North Carolina, Maryland and Pittsburgh. His fifth visit could go to either Villanova, Miami or Indiana.

Taft, who averaged 18 points and 10 rebounds per game as a junior, ranked No. 43 among this year's seniors, according to HoopScoop. Taft said the important factors in his decision are academics and his relationship with the coach and players.

Sims is considering Boston College, Providence, Maryland, Michigan, Connecticut and Memphis along with Syracuse. He is ranked No. 68 by HoopScoop and plans to visit Syracuse Sept. 13.

He's already taken an unofficial visit to Boston College. In addition to his trip to Syracuse, Sims has scheduled official visits to Michigan and Maryland in September.

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO

File photo/Dennis Nett, 2002

CHRIS TAFT is one of three players - all 6-foot-8 or taller - on Syracuse's wish list. Color

File photo/Dennis Nett, 2002

CLIPPERS NOTEBOOK: WHY THE MISSES? ANSWER IS TALL TALE.(SPORTS) - Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)

Byline: Randy Hill

Lamond Murray, the Clippers' 6-foot-7 forward, shot just 37 percent from the floor in his team's first six games.

Several of his rim-busters have been delivered while fading away, a difficult maneuver that makes a bit of sense when Murray's small-forward foes are measured. The four primary defenders he's faced are 6-foot-11 Cliff Robinson of Phoenix, Minnesota's 7-foot Kevin Garnett, 6-11 Toni Kukoc of Chicago and Vancouver's 6-9 Shareef Abdul-Rahim.

``That's how the league is,'' said Murray of matching up the oxymoron of big small forwards. ``In those cases, you have to use your quickness. I've been getting some good looks, but having to shoot over the taller (players) does bother you a little bit.''

Murray figures to have some trajectory relief over the next several games. He started at shooting guard against Dallas on Saturday and the expected matchup was 6-7 Mavericks guard Michael Finley. He also figured to be isolated with Dallas' small forward, Cedric Ceballos, who is a more reasonable 6-7.

On this week's schedule is Monday's matchup with 6-7 Bryon Russell of Utah and a pair of showdowns with 6-7 Kobe Bryant of the Lakers.

Going gets tougher: The Clippers managed to lose their first six games to teams that check in with a combined record of 15-18 through Friday's action.

Saturday's foe, the mighty Dallas Mavericks, began their third game in four nights with a gaudy mark of 1-8. The Clippers, by the way, defeated the Mavericks in three of their four meetings last season.

And now, the bad news: The Clippers' next four opponents have a combined record of 22-12.

Familiar faces: With two of the Clippers' point guards calling UCLA alma mater, the appearance of Maverick Robert Pack added a bit of instant rivalry. Pack, Dallas' backup point guard, played at USC and had many heroic moments in the good ol' Sports Arena.

Starting ahead of Pack is Steve Nash, who also went to SC - Santa Clara.

Nash, who signed a six-year, $33 million contract before the start of the season, made only 17 of his first 61 field-goal attempts in a Mavericks uniform. In his last three games, Nash has rallied to make 17 of 26 shots.

CAPTION(S):

2 Photos

PHOTO (1) MURRAY

A GROWING TREND AREA FOOTBALL TEAMS ARE SPORTING TALL TALENT.(SPORTS)(PREP PROFILE)(Column) - The Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI)

Byline: Rob Hernandez

It's not having a 6-foot-9 quarterback that concerns Southwestern football coach Craig Smith. It's having a 6-9 quarterback with size 19 shoes.

'I'm afraid he's going to keep growing and grow himself out of football,' Smith said of junior Jeff Skemp, the trigger man in the Wildcats' spread offense. 'He's really into basketball.'

Skemp is symbolic of a new trend in prep football players this season: The really tall ones.

Randolph has a 6-foot-11 tight end in Greg Stiemsma. Jefferson has a 7-foot kicker and punter in Kerry Gibson. Wisconsin Dells has a 6-7 quarterback in Jimmy Capelle. Sauk Prairie has a 6-7 safety in Richie Peters.

You might recognize the names. All five have a lot at stake this winter on the basketball court with the most notable being Stiemsma, a junior who led the Rockets to the WIAA Division 4 state basketball title last year and has already committed to play at the University of Wisconsin when he graduates in 2004.

Playing football may subject them to physical risk, but Skemp said there is something to be gained by playing a fall sport.

'You sit around during the football season and you're that much further behind,' he said. 'You're not in as good a shape. Your competitive level is down.'

At 205 pounds, Skemp would like to get his weight up. More importantly, the big guy would like to improve his foot speed and coordination and become a faster, stronger basketball player.

'Last year, my aunt came up with a nickname for me -- Mo -- because she said I was slower than molasses,' Skemp said. 'I told her that when you've got size 19 shoes, it's hard to get those things up and down the floor.'

Check that

The Northern Badger Conference cross country meet has been moved from Prairie du Sac to Reedsburg due to a schedule conflict at Lake Wisconsin Country Club. ... Waunakee beat West Bend East in the fifth-place game Saturday at the Spartan Invitational boys soccer tournament, not the seventh-place game as reported.

Where are they now?

Iowa State sophomore Tony Yelk (Poynette) is averaging 45.1 yards on 17 punts for 15th-ranked Iowa State (5-1). He is also handling kickoffs and long field goals for the Cyclones, who are idle until Oct.12 when they play host to Texas Tech at 6 p.m. in a nationally televised game on WTBS. ... St. Cloud State women's soccer player Ashley Rounds (Madison East) scored the winning goal in a 2-1 win Sept. 25 over Southwest (Minn.) State, and the freshman had two goals Sept. 22 in a 4-1 win over Minnesota State-Moorhead. She is third on the team in scoring with three goals and one assist. ... Carroll College freshman men's soccer player Chris Smith (Lake Mills) is third on the team in scoring with two goals and two assists for the Pioneers (4-3). Another Lake Mills product, Shelley Nelson, has made the women's soccer team at Cardinal Stritch University in Mequon.

Ready ... break