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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Del Rio Says No Surgery For Jones-Drew


JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)—Jaguars Pro Bowl running back Maurice Jones-Drew(notes) has not had knee surgery Jacksonville coach Jack Del Rio said Monday.

Del Rio squelched the surgery rumors put out by an Internet blog report which said Jones-Drew had the surgery.

“No,” he said. “No, has not happened, is not necessary. He’s working, rehabbing, strengthening and gearing up for the regular season.”

Because of the team’s short week, they beat Tampa on Saturday, Del Rio will give Jones-Drew, who has a sometimes balky left knee, more rest and he won’t play against Atlanta on Thursday.

“There’s always a fine line,” Del Rio said. “You want to work your guys, they need to be ready to go, they need to be playing at their best.”

Jones-Drew, who had 10 carries in the preseason last season, has only six carries for minus-two yards this preseason, but Del Rio said he’ll worry about the running back being in game shape later.

“I think in terms of ideal scenarios you’d like to have a little more active work going into it,” Del Rio said. “I think arriving to the regular season with him at full strength ready to take his turn, I think that’s most important rather than trying to decide whether or not he’s going to be able to carry it 30 or 35 carries.

A team spokesman said Jones-Drew declined to comment

Football player has million-dollar hair


You'd think that an All-Pro safety who missed 11 games in 2009 due to a knee injury would be most concerned about other body parts, but Pittsburgh Steelers superstar Troy Polamalu(notes) also has endorsements to consider. One of his endorsements is with the Head & Shoulders company, which makes sense when you consider Polamalu's famed three-foot-long hair. It's a tribute to his Samoan heritage, and it's not something he plans to cut anytime soon.

Once in a great while, a Steelers opponent will try to use Polamalu's hair against him in a game (as Kansas City Chiefs running back Larry Johnson(notes) did in 2006 as Polamalu returned an interception), and it's quite possible that the concern over such matters was the catalyst needed by Head & Shoulders to insure Polamalu's hair with Lloyd's of London for $1 million, which was reported by the Associated Press.

Then again, it could be a publicity stunt. Lloyd's is famous for unusual policies that can be turned into media gold; the company has insured Tina Turner's legs, Keith Richards' fingers, the legs of noted Riverdance ponce Michael Flatley, the bodies of several professional wrestlers (including Ric Flair -- Woo!), Jimmy Durante's nose, and Celine Dion's vocal cords (they're also talking with Virgin Galactic about insuring space travel, if that ever gets off the ground). Polamalu's hair isn't going anywhere, but it's a nice press haul for company and endorsee.

And if you want to ask Polamalu why his hair is insured ... well, just don't ask with your eyes. He can pick that up pretty well

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Clarett to learn UFL fate Monday

Clarett to learn UFL fate Monday

Jets cut WR Coles but may bring him back

Jets cut WR Coles but may bring him back

Deal with White Sox will end Mannywood era - MLB - Yahoo! Sports

Deal with White Sox will end Mannywood era - MLB - Yahoo! Sports: "Deal with White Sox will end Mannywood era"

Edgar the answer to lightweight puzzle


BOSTON – Mixed martial arts can be a lot like the weather in New England. If you don’t like who’s on top, wait a little while and it’s likely to change.

Frank Edgar established himself – for the time being – as one of the sport’s superstars with a one-sided mauling of former champion B.J. Penn in the main event of UFC 118 Saturday at TD Garden
Edgar lifted the lightweight title from Penn at UFC 112 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, via an agonizingly close decision. There was nothing controversial about Saturday’s outcome as Edgar battered Penn around the cage as if Penn, not boxer James Toney, were making his mixed martial arts debut.

Penn is one of the greats in the history of the sport, but Edgar has firmly established himself as one of the sport’s active greats. Forget the moronic notion that he should abandon the 155-pound division to compete in World Extreme Cagefighting as a 145-pounder. The next person who asks that should be institutionalized.

All three judges scored the bout 50-45, but even the shutout didn’t really indicate Edgar’s dominance. Edgar outlanded Penn 155-53, but it was even more telling over the final three rounds, when Edgar stepped on the gas pedal and Penn had no answer. In Rounds 3-5, Edgar outlanded Penn 119-23.

After manhandling Penn for 25 minutes Saturday, it was hard to do anything other than to say, “Wow.”

“He absolutely dominated B.J. Penn everywhere in the Octagon tonight,” Ultimate Fighting Championship president Dana White said. “On his feet, on the ground, wrestling. The first couple of times he took (Penn down), I couldn’t believe it. And not only did he take him down, he was going down hard. He put on an incredibly dominant performance tonight against a guy who has been the best in the world for a long time.”

Edgar has proven himself the equal of the four other men he shares a UFC championship belt with: heavyweight Brock Lesnar, light heavyweight Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, middleweight Anderson Silva and welterweight Georges St. Pierre.

He hasn’t gotten much respect, despite entering the fight with a 12-1 MMA record and a 7-1 UFC mark. He’s quietly gone about his business and has routinely put on some of the UFC’s most exciting fights and never complained when he wasn’t singled out.

He noted that most fighters compete with a chip on their shoulder, but the one on Edgar’s has to be the size of a boulder. He fights like he has something to prove every second of every match, though that’s usually because he does.

Penn once again failed to show for the postfight news conference, but he didn’t have to say much. The result of the fight said all that needed to be said.

“Frankie fought a great fight,” Penn said in the cage following his second consecutive loss and his third in his last five outings. “He’s the man. I have nothing bad to say.”

If he had, he would have looked stupid. Edgar was magnificent and, at 28, clearly getting better. He’ll get a chance to avenge his only loss, an April 2008 defeat at the hands of Gray Maynard, who earlier on Saturday routed Kenny Florian to set up the rematch.

Maynard manhandled Edgar in that fight, but Edgar has improved so much in the five fights he’s had since that Maynard won’t be facing anywhere near the same person.

“I believe in myself, my team believes in me and if it takes time for you guys [in the media] to believe in me, I know I’ll do that, too,” Edgar said.

He started quickly and ended strong. He outboxed Penn. He took Penn to the ground four times – though Penn has arguably the sport’s best takedown defense. And he seemed to even outgrapple the jiu-jitsu wizard on the ground. Anything a mixed martial artist would need to do, Edgar did on Saturday.

“He’s changed a lot,” Maynard said of Edgar. “Our fight was what, two and a half, three years ago. He has changed a great deal. He’s not the same fighter.”

Penn isn’t either. Two losses in a row and three in his last five don’t signal that he’s on the verge of being finished, but he’s got plenty of soul searching to do. There are times he appears like he’s among the handful of the greatest fighters who ever lived, but more recently, he looks lost.

White isn’t sure what to do with him and Penn, in the cage after the loss, conceded he has to go home and mull over his future.

There are no such problems with Edgar. If he gets by Maynard, there is George Sotiropoulos on the horizon, as well as a legion of other top contenders.

MMA is about as humbling a sport as golf. Fighters who are on top and look invincible one night often appear vulnerable and confused the next time out. It’s the nature of the beast.

Edgar is young and a pro for just under five years. He appears to be a guy still on the rise.

“I built on my confidence [from the first Penn fight],” Edgar said. “The first time I was in there, I had the confidence I could do what I needed to do, but I hadn’t done it before. After doing it and knowing I could do it going in a second time, that confidence added a lot to it.”

Maynard may be the guy who knocks Edgar off his lofty perch. Perhaps it will be Sotiropoulos or even Jose Aldo, the WEC featherweight champion who may eventually jump to lightweight.

Sooner or later, Edgar’s going to be throttled the way he throttled Penn. The person who is the one who ultimately does it remains a mystery.

But we already know this much about that guy: If he’s going to beat Frank Edgar and win the UFC lightweight championship, he’s going to be one damn good fighter

Tubby Toney cashes unearned check



BOSTON – The only proof that boxer James Toney trained with any reasonable effort for his Ultimate Fighting Championship debut is anecdotal – supposedly he dropped 40 pounds just to enter the Octagon at a bloated, bubbly 237.

The deck is stacked against any boxer trying to compete in mixed martial arts – just as it would be for an MMA fighter in a boxing match. It’s why almost no one even tries
But Toney agreed to match up with UFC legend Randy Couture anyway, then he embarrassed himself and his sport by hardly looking like he prepared for a fight that was billed as boxing vs. MMA, even if it was never going to prove anything.

Instead of some definitive statement we got a ridiculous result – Couture earning an easy victory by arm triangle submission at 3:31 of the first round. Toney is nicknamed “Lights Out.” On this night, he never bothered to turn them on.

“Toney lasted longer than I thought he would,” UFC president Dana White said, which isn’t saying much.

Toney is the current IBA heavyweight boxing champion, one of 11 belts he’s held in five weight classes in his impressive career. He had only one route to victory on Saturday night: Landing a perfectly timed punch. Couture, a former All-American wrestler, shot in for a takedown. Toney, who didn’t show up for the postfight news conference, never really threw – let alone land – a significant punch. He fought in what appeared to be a boxing stance, leaving himself completely prone to a wrestling takedown, suggesting he had no idea how to defend himself.

Less than 30 seconds into the fight, Couture employed a primitive single-leg takedown, shooting in low and grabbing Toney’s ankle. The boxer fell backward in a clumsy pile, too slow and top-heavy to do anything.

“It’s pretty easy to counter,” Couture said of the single leg, noting that’s why you rarely see it in MMA. “A good grappler or a good wrestler is going to step out of that.”

Toney is neither. Once on his back, he was finished. Couture delivered some punches and elbows and eventually squeezed his neck until Toney quit rather than lose consciousness. Toney threw perhaps just one punch, a harmless, from-his-back effort.

“I didn’t feel like he demonstrated any real solid skills once he hit his back and butt,” Couture said. “He had no idea.”

Indeed he didn’t, which is why this boxing vs. MMA exhibition was mostly a farce. A young, athletic boxer who actually showed up in great condition would likely lose. Toney literally had no chance with his strategy and preparation.

Couture deemed the experiment “silly,” although he noted it would be the same if he tried to box. “James would probably knock me out in the first round.”

Probably, but it’s also likely a professional such as Couture would at least show up in shape. Toney’s body lacked definition and his stomach hung over his shorts. In MMA, where speed is a must, low body fat is imperative. Toney claimed he trained for eight months for the fight, but it barely showed.

“I’m sure he was prepared as he could’ve been,” White said. “Anyone who knows James Toney the last few years, James isn’t the most physically fit boxer.

“From the day we signed the fight in my office, he lost a lot of weight.”

That’s nice if you’re filming an episode of “The Biggest Loser.” As fights go, it was a joke. Boxing promoter Gary Shaw, a longtime rival of White’s, said Toney looked “like a very old man, slurred his words, and was non-competitive.”

“James Toney had less than a zero percent chance unless Randy had a heart attack from hearing the bell ring,” Shaw said Saturday night.

Shaw went on to call the pay-per-view a “sham,” which isn’t really true. This fight may have been, but White went to great lengths to build a fairly stacked card around it (not all the fights delivered, but on paper they looked good). Toney-Couture wasn’t the main event of the five-fight pay-per-view; Frankie Edgar defended his lightweight title against B.J. Penn in the headliner.

“I didn’t try to sell this as, ‘Tune in, you’ll see the most spectacular war,’ ” White said. “Anything can happen in a fight. … We’re not after boxing.”

And while such a sideshow didn’t speak well for MMA, what does it say for the state of boxing, that a 42-year-old James Toney is someone’s heavyweight champion?

Arguing boxing vs. mixed martial arts is a waste of time anyway. The UFC was founded, in part, to solve the age-old debate of which fighting discipline was best. UFC 1 featured a tournament won by Royce Gracie, a master of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. That was 1993. By 2010, a fighter with a command of just one discipline – no matter what it is – rarely lasts. It’s about being well-rounded and dangerous against a number of styles.

“Ninety-nine times out of 100 or 100 out of a 100, the MMA guy is going to win,” White said.

It’s why fights like these never need to be made, a problem compounded when the boxer shows up out of shape, unprepared and with no discernable strategy to do anything other than pray for a miracle punch to land.

James Toney collected a check Saturday night. Would’ve been nice if he’d made an attempt to earn it.

Ouch: Bengals swallow $8 million in release of Antonio Bryant


When the Cincinnati Bengals signed Terrell Owens, it looked like a sign that they had major concerns about Antonio Bryant's(notes) ability to contribute in 2010.

As it turns out, they did. So much so, in fact, that they cut him today. They just straight up, outright axed Bryant, eating the $8 million in guaranteed money that they gave him back in March on a four-year, $28 million deal.

In the end, the Bengals gave Bryant that $8 million for 172 days of practicing. Poorly.

That's not a good return on investment for the Bengals. This is the kind of thing that gets people fired. Sure, everyone will whiff on a free agent or a draft pick once in a while, but when a guy gets heavy guaranteed dollars and he doesn't even stick on the roster through the preseason? That's a big one.

Even worse, it was a preventable screw-up. It's not like Bryant's production took a nosedive, or he got lazy after signing a big contract. It's not like he just never fit into the Bengals' system. He simply wasn't healthy.

His left knee is all gooned up, and as keen football observers are aware, knees are important for wide receivers. Some torn cartilage in there required surgery, but someone with the Bengals apparently decided that all was hunky-dory and healthy in the joint. They were either way, way, way too optimistic that Bryant would recover, or they just didn't investigate the injury thoroughly enough.

Either way, as an organization, you just can't have that kind of mistake. Especially when you're owned by a man who has a subheading labeled "Frugality" on his Wikipedia page.

Obviously, it turned out that Bryant's knee wasn't healthy. He never got on the field for a preseason game, and I guess the Bengals had seen enough to know that he wasn't going to be able to help them in the regular season, either. Letting him go after paying him $8 million for 172 days of light jogging is an indication that they were pretty damn certain of it, actually.

If you're curious, that comes out to $46,511.63 a day.

Don't hold anything against Bryant, though. I'm sure he was as optimistic and hopeful about his knee as anyone else, and it's not like he held a gun to Mike Brown's(notes) head and made him give him a contract. If a team's going to sign a guy, it's their responsibility to make sure all his limbs are functional first.

Bryant's a free agent now, able to negotiate with any team that's interested. It's hard to imagine anyone beating down his door, given what everyone knows now about the health of his knee. The silver lining, though, is that the Bengals have made him financially secure enough that, if he wants to, he can take a year off and concentrate on getting that knee healthy. Let's hope he comes back in 2011, stronger than ever.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Couture wins!

Couture wins by tap out

Friday, August 27, 2010

Carmelo Anthony on the block: What should the Bobcats trade to get him?

Carmelo Anthony on the block: What should the Bobcats trade to get him?

Anthony, Nuggets look ready to part ways


Big NBA star likely done in Denver ,Carmelo Anthony is almost certain to be traded after talks with the Nuggets turn sour

Carmelo Anthony(notes) wants out of Denver, and Worldwide Wes delivered that message to the Nuggets with all the delicacy of a jackhammer at Sunday morning services. Do yourself a favor and trade him, the agent told the organization weeks ago.
Denver was furnished with a short list of teams and told to get to work. Yes, this is how William Wesley and Leon Rose of CAA work now, thick with threats and ultimatums and a swagger suggesting that the sport belongs to them. After Anthony told owner-in-waiting Josh Kroenke that he still wanted out of Denver during a Sunday meeting, the Nuggets appear done trying to sell their All-Star forward on a contract extension
[Related: Carmelo weds former MTV host in New York City]

This wasn’t a productive, nor particularly pleasant, meeting and multiple sources said it could turn out to be the point of no return for Anthony and the organization. Sources insist it’s no longer a matter of if the Nuggets trade Anthony, but when, where and for whom he’s traded for.


“It’s almost a given they’re going to move him,” said a front-office executive who’s talked with the Nuggets and Anthony’s agents with CAA.

While Kroenke had several severe remedies in his back pocket if the agency didn’t back off its most strident demands, sources said Thursday night that the owner never had to go that far to get CAA to work with the Nuggets. Now agent Leon Rose and Wesley are more open-minded about potential trade destinations.

Anthony wants to leave Denver and get his three-year, $65 million contract extension now. This partnership is rounding third and rapidly reaching disrepair. Denver is willing to trade Anthony, J.R. Smith(notes) and Kenyon Martin(notes), and start over again, sources said.

The Nuggets made it clear to teams they want young players and draft picks for Anthony, league executives said. The New Jersey Nets and Los Angeles Clippers have emerged as the two most probable destinations for Anthony because they have assets that appeal to Denver. The geography works for Anthony because of his wife LaLa Vazquez’s entertainment career.


Golden State and Houston are contenders, too. What’s more, the Charlotte Bobcats are a sleeper because of Anthony’s Brand Jordan shoe deal and the team’s ability to give the Nuggets a salary-dump proposal.


Back in mid-July, the Kroenkes had to travel to New York for Anthony’s wedding to finally realize he no longer intended to sign their extension offer. The reception spiraled into an evening of Chris Paul(notes) and Anthony’s brother making toasts about a future partnership for Anthony and Paul in New York with the Knicks. With nothing to trade for Anthony, though, New York isn’t considered a strong contender in the eyes of Denver management.


Few can be as strong-minded and willful as Stan Kroenke, and it doesn’t matter the Nuggets will be turned over to his son Josh by the end of the year. Stan still will be looming over the franchise, and the billionaire has shown an old-school ability to carry through on his convictions once you’ve lost him as an ally.


With the way that CAA has tried to muscle and manipulate the market this summer, sources said Stan Kroenke, freshly approved as the St. Louis Rams owner, intends to look closely at whether the NBA should adopt a “franchise player” tag that teams could slap on superstars like the one the NFL uses. NBA owners are still far from seriously discussing that issue, but CAA’s manipulation of Anthony and Paul while under contract has become an increasingly sore subject within the league.

For now, the departure of Denver general manager Mark Warkentien and the increased influence of Kroenke adviser Bret Bearup means there won’t be much of a fight within the organization to stay the course with Anthony, sources said. Denver has hired Masai Ujiri as its new GM, but he doesn’t arrive with the authority to make major moves. Things have deteriorated too fast to believe Denver will turn back now. ‘Melo is on the market, and the bidding has begun

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Couture treats Toney like just another foe


Some people may want to look at Saturday night’s UFC 118 fight between Randy Couture and James Toney as representative of something far bigger than either individual.

They may see the fight as a battle between two sports: One, mixed martial arts, which lacks history but has exploded in popularity over the past few years; the other, boxing, which has been a huge part of the U.S. sports scene for a century and is clinging to relevance as the younger audience seems interested in it only for the one or two biggest fights per year

Whether or not MMA is having an adverse effect on boxing’s future, there is a natural rivalry between the two sports among promoters, fighters and fans.

` The Couture-Toney battle at UFC’s first event in Boston at the T.D. Garden features two aging gunslingers with a slew of world titles on their résumé in what is easily the highest-profile fight of its kind thus far in the sport’s history.

But while Toney, fans and media have tried to push the fight’s big-picture significance, Couture is mentally blocking out the noise.

“It’s just another fight,” said Couture, 47. “Everyone else may say something else. I’ve just got an opponent who presents some interesting problems.”

On paper, virtually every potential advantage favors Couture. They are fighting under rules that he has 13 years of experience in fighting and training for. They are in his venue, the cage. Couture knows how to maneuver in it while Toney’s experience in knowing how to trap people in corners and cutting off a boxing ring will have to be greatly adapted. Toney has never fought MMA. And a pro boxing stance is one of the worst possible stances when it comes to avoiding a takedown. Plus, while Couture has almost no chance to win if it becomes a boxing match, he has trained for more than a decade in boxing. Toney has trained only a few months in wrestling and submissions.

“I think that’s what a lot of boxers, I think in general, when they look at MMA, fail to understand,” he said. “With the takedowns and the punching and the boxing clinch work that takes place in mixed martial arts, you have to change your stance. You have to kind of change your fighting style a little bit in a pure boxing perspective.”

Because of that, Couture is going in as a 7-to-1 favorite. But it is a fight Couture can lose. The one variable that favors Toney is MMA’s four-ounce, fingerless gloves, which are significantly smaller than boxing gloves. If Toney, one of boxing’s hardest hitters, lands a good shot, it will be with more power, thus increasing the likelihood of the early knockout he’ll probably need if he has any chance to win.

You have to look no further than the last match of this type, on June 13, 2009, when former UFC heavyweight champion, 33-year-old Tim Sylvia met then 48-year-old Ray Mercer, who 18 years earlier held one of alphabet soup boxing world heavyweight title belts. Both men stood, went for a punch at the same time, Mercer’s landed first, and Sylvia was knocked out, in a fight that lasted all of nine seconds.

“Tim had good success in MMA as a stand-up fighter and made a mistake thinking he could stand with Ray Mercer, an Olympic gold medalist,” said Couture. “I’m under no such illusion.”

Couture sees the fight as kind of an extension of his start in the sport in 1997. When he broke in, he was a pure wrestler testing his skill in his sport against fighters from other disciplines, before MMA evolved into a sport where fighters trained at everything.

“When I was younger, the public thought the heavyweight boxing champion of the world was the baddest man on the planet,” he recalled. “Coming from a wrestling background, we thought differently. The majority of fights go to the ground. The skills you learn in boxing aren’t very helpful when you’re on your back. You talk to law enforcement officers about fighting, and they’ll tell you the last guy you wanted to encounter in a fight is a wrestler.”

Couture doesn’t expect any big surprises when it comes to how the fight will go. Toney needs to keep it standing long enough to connect with a good shot. If he’s taken down, he’s likely to be toast, unless he’s progressed quickly in his training.

“Conditioning is not going to be to his advantage,” Couture said.

The fight is at heavyweight. Couture’s weight in recent days has been hovering around 215-216 pounds, which is about the same as where he’d be if he was fighting in MMA as a light heavyweight, except without cutting water on the last day to make weight.

“At first, I was told we would do it at a 220-pound catchweight,” said Couture. “But his side said they didn’t want to be held to a weight limit, which was fine by me.”

This fight nearly happened in late 2006. Toney was making noise and was in at least preliminary talks with Zuffa about a boxer-vs.-MMA match.

This was during the period Couture had his brief retirement after losing to Chuck Liddell, before coming out of retirement to win his record fifth championship in the match that will likely end up defining his legacy. He was all for coming out of retirement to fight Toney, but negotiations fell through on the other end. The idea of the fight disappeared until Toney started pushing again about wanting to do an MMA fight late last year.

Couture brings an 18-10 record, a record Toney has made fun of in the buildup, acting like it shows how weak MMA is when a Hall of Famer has that kind of a record. Certainly that sounds unimpressive next to Toney’s boxing record of 72-6-3 with two no-contests. But Couture’s record is probably the single most misleading in the history of the sport, given that 18 of his 28 opponents were world champions during their career and 16 of the fights were title matches. Unlike a padded boxing record, aside from Couture’s first two fights and his most recent win in February over a past-his-prime Mark Coleman, every fight he’s had was against someone who was at or near top level at the time the fight took place, and his five UFC titles are a mark no other fighter has come close to.

If there is a significant number to question with Couture, it’s not his record, but his year of birth. He was seemingly on borrowed time from when he debuted 13 years ago as an older wrestler, but he defied age in a way nobody in the sport’s history has ever done, and likely few will ever do.

“I don’t know how much longer I’m going,” he said. “I’ve got three more fights. I’m looking for more movie parts. I’m making the transition from fighting to acting and the complete transition is probably going to happen sooner than later.”

Couture is one of the stars of the movie, “The Expendables,” the Sylvester Stallone action pic that has been No. 1 at the box office the past two weeks. There has been a saying in boxing about how fighters coming back from doing a movie usually show up flat. There are recent MMA examples, such as Quinton Jackson coming back rusty against Rashad Evans after doing “The A Team,” and even Cung Le getting tired in the third round of the first Scott Smith fight and getting knocked out.

“I don’t think it’s a factor,” said Couture, who, because of the proximity to the fight, has not been on the road in recent weeks promoting the movie. “This was my eighth movie and I‘ve never had a problem. I’ve had a 10-week training camp, two weeks longer than usual. I had my coaches and training partners with me on the set.”

Sounds like Strikeforce has some doubts about Bobby Lashley


It wasn't a great night for Bobby Lashley. Once again, he looked one-dimensional in his fight against Chad Griggs. He suffered a nasty cut under his left eye that didn't exactly motivate him to fight harder. Lashley also gassed out midway into second round. Worst of all, he his first loss in MMA was to a guy no one thought had a chance. After that performance, it will be pretty tough to sell Lashley in a fight against a big name opponent. It even sounded like Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker was going to need some convincing.

"We'll be talking to Bobby later. You know he's going to have to do some soul searching and really decide what he wants to do," said Coker. "But if he decides to fight, we'll have him back."

The MMA blogosphere reacted strongly to that statement. Was it an overreaction by the MMA pundits? We're not sure. It was a bold statement by Coker about a guy who had just lost his first fight. Lashley, 34, is still a good prospect but clearly has things he needs to work on. That certainly doesn't mean his career is without a future. Especially if we find out that he was dealing with some kind of serious ailment going into or during the fight.

Coker explained his stance on WJFK's MMA Nation radio show (5:25 mark).

"Mixed martial arts is sport where sometimes you're going to get hit, you're going to get hurt. It's not like pro wrestling," said Coker. " As he's working his way up he's going to come to a point where he says 'is this something I want to do?' You're working your way up and now you get a real clear picture of what mixed martial arts is and do you want to work through it and continue, or do you want to do something else?"

Coker may have questions about Lashley's dedication but he knows one thing, the Lashley hype machine needs to slow down.

"The thing that's not fair for Bobby is he has all these high expectations from all these people," Coker told host Luke Thomas. "People think he should be right in there with Fedor. I mean come on, let's be real, he's not at that level right now."

The PW Torch reported on what forced Lashley to the hospital after the fight.

Lashley was said to be "extremely dehydrated" after his fight against Chad Griggs on the "Showtime: Houston" fight card. At the hospital, Lashley was treated with multiple IV bags to pump fluids back into his system.

Coker said he still believes Lashley would continue his MMA career but was non-committal on a fight against fellow pro wrestler Dave Batista. Coker said on MMA Nation that Lashley had already reached out to Strikeforce and wants to fight immediately

Rondo withdraws from US team


Rondo withdraws from US team

Sorry, Cards fans -- Warner's not walking through that door


Sorry, Cards fans -- Warner's not walking through that door

Jets C Mangold gets 7 years, up to $55M

Jets C Mangold gets 7 years, up to $55M

NFL fines Ochocinco for tweets


NFL fines Ochocinco for tweets

First Down: JerMichael Finley poised to vie for top fantasy tight end

First Down: JerMichael Finley poised to vie for top fantasy tight end

First Down: Painful Fitzgerald owner screams could become common; Sidney Rice cooked

First Down: Painful Fitzgerald owner screams could become common; Sidney Rice cooked

RED SCENE AND RICE


Sidney Rice(notes) owners’ worst nightmare has finally been realized. Confirmed by the Associated Press, last year’s breakthrough receiver visited a specialist in Colorado on Monday who recommended surgery on his ailing hip, which he underwent Tuesday. Insiders believe he could return to the lineup by midseason, but it’s possible he may not contribute strong numbers until the fantasy playoffs.

Obviously Rice’s value falls off the continental shelf. He’s completely avoidable well into the 100s. His prolonged absence reiterates our belief drafting a top-flight pass catcher early is imperative. After Chad Ochocinco(notes), question marks are everywhere.

The gray gunslinger, Brett Favre(notes), also takes a value hit. Currently the No. 7 passer on the Noise’s board, he will be downgraded slightly. However, if Percy Harvin’s(notes) migraine issues continue to confound the young receiver, Favre’s Colt may remain in holster more than his investors would like. A TD total between 24-27 seems realistic

Among the Vikings leftovers, the BB Gun, Bernard Berrian(notes), will likely pack plenty of fantasy ammo over at least the first half of the season. Remember, he’s only two years removed from a 964-yard, seven-TD campaign. The expected increase in looks easily vaults his draft worth into the WR top 35. Recent acquisition Javon Walker(notes), who hasn't been fantasy relevant since 2006, is also a player of interest in deeper format

Brilliant receiver not so hot in Fantasy FB



Whether on the football, battle or dating fields, the buddy system is an integral male relationship. When functioning smoothly assignments are easily carried out. However, when a communication breakdown occurs crucial passes fall incomplete, Private Ryan doesn’t get saved and somebody wakes up next to ugly.

Owners who draft Larry Fitzgerald(notes) could experience fantasy’s version of the latter.

Survey cornerbacks currently in the league and the majority would likely claim Arizona’s ultra-talented receiver is the most difficult to contain. Equipped with terrific size, smarts, hands and agility, the four-time Pro Bowl selection lacks weaknesses. It’s no wonder why he’s dominated the league since leaving Pittsburgh in 2004. Over the past five seasons, he’s averaged a sensational 93 receptions, 1,258 yards and 10 touchdowns per year, an indisputable WR1 value in fantasy.

However, often a receiver is only good as his quarterback. Remember how deplorable Randy Moss(notes) was with the Raiders? How about T.O. last year in Buffalo? Simply put: If your buddy doesn’t pull his end of the load, you become a casualty.

Matt Leinart’s(notes) promotion from backup to starter places Fitzgerald in an unpalatable situation.

During his forgettable professional career, the former USC quarterback has tallied more significant achievements in hot tubs than on the field. He's become so insignificant that the very network that worshipped the ground he walked on while in college can’t even remember how to spell his name properly. The numbers verify Leinart’s dwindling popularity. In 29 games (16 starts), he’s completed a mere 57.1 percent of his passes, amassing an 14:20 TD:INT split.

Too laid-back and drift-minded, the 27-year-old has never attacked the starting gig with the zeal of Kurt Warner(notes). Though he’s been on the field only briefly this preseason, misreads and misfires are all too regular. Under his direction, the Cardinals’ first-team offense has looked horrifically stagnant. The running game, operating behind a transparent offensive line, has failed to launch. Constant pressure has collapsed the pocket. Passes have fluttered. Most troubling, disconnect between the passer and coaches over the team’s exhibition performance has surfaced. Adam Schefter’s report Monday that Leinart’s job is already jeopardy should come as no surprise. Derek Anderson(notes), who has accuracy issues of his own, could be thrust into first team duties by midseason, if not much earlier. Yahoo!'s own Michael Silver believes Leinart’s chances of maintaining the starting gig through Week 10 stand at 65-35. Entering the most pivotal point in his career, it appears the former first-rounder will fail epically, which could severely handicap Fitzgerald’s fantasy value.

Critics will cherry-pick past stats to prove Leinart is competent enough for Fitz to maintain elite status. After all, the pair have connected for at least nine receptions and 100-plus yards three times. However, their overall record is filled with several valleys. Over 14 games with the inconsistent QB behind center, Fitz has totaled 93 receptions, 1,062 yards and four touchdowns. Fine numbers in a PPR format, but when compared to last year’s receiver rankings in standard formats his 9.3 points per game output matched Steve Smith’s (Car), the 17th-highest mark at the position.

As we’ve discussed previously, proven receivers rarely fall short of meeting expectation. For instance, when compared to running backs their bust rate is dramatically lower. But occasional implosions do and will continue to occur. Because of the concerns mentioned above, Fitzgerald is in a very dangerous position. Owners who sink heavy coin into the target need to understand the risks involved. His knee isn’t a significant concern – he’s expected to be cleared for Week 1 – but it’s becoming increasingly possible he won’t return a top-20 investment (ADP: 17.1, WR6). Roddy White(notes), Brandon Marshall(notes) and Greg Jennings(notes), all going after the ‘Zona wideout, have fewer question marks attached.

For one of the virtual game’s most consistent producers, his “buddy” has turned fantasy standing from clear to muddy.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Tebow sits out preseason game against Lions


DENVER (AP)—The Denver Broncos are playing it safe with Tim Tebow’s(notes) bruised ribs, resting the rookie quarterback in their second preseason game against Detroit.

The University of Florida standout had plenty of company on the sideline as the Broncos were without 16 players, including Pro Bowl cornerback Champ Bailey(notes), linebacker D.J. Williams(notes) and wide receiver Brandon Stokley(notes)

Tebow missed two days of practice this week after bruising his ribs on the final play of an exhibition game against Cincinnati last weekend. Tebow was crushed on his left side as he scrambled into the end zone for a 7-yard TD.

Hours before kickoff Saturday night, Tebow sauntered onto the field and did some light stretching. He also threw passes before heading back into the locker room

Final NFL games as of 8/21/10

Score board
Baltimore 23
Washington 3

Final Box Score
Kansas City 15
Tampa Bay 20

Final Box Score
Half Miami 24
Jacksonville 12

Half St. Louis 19
Cleveland 17

Final Box Score
NY Jets 9
Carolina 3

8:14 4thHouston 20
New Orleans 38

4:03 4th Oakland 20
Chicago 14

6:57 3rd Dallas 7
San Diego 7

10:28 3rd Detroit 16
Denver 14

11:50 3rd Green Bay 14
Seattle 7

Buccaneers QB Freeman fractures tip of right thumb


TAMPA, Fla. (AP)—Tampa Bay quarterback Josh Freeman(notes) fractured the tip of the thumb on his throwing hand during the first quarter of Saturday night’s preseason game against the Kansas City Chiefs. The Buccaneers say he will be sidelined until at least the opening week of the regular season.

The second-year pro appeared to hit his hand as he followed through on a pass intended for tight end John Gilmore(notes) on second-and-5 from the Chiefs 13. He threw another incompletion on third down to end his team’s first offensive possession, then walked to the sideline holding his right thumb.

The Bucs announced that Freeman is expected return to practice by the opening week of the regular season and play in the Sept. 12 opener against Cleveland.

Freeman remained on the sideline flexing his right hand when backup Josh Johnson(notes) took over on the next drive. He had been expected to play 12 to 15 snaps

Roethlisberger solid in start vs. Giants

Roethlisberger solid in start vs. Giants

Broncos QB Orton inks contract extension

Broncos QB Orton inks contract extension

Seahawks interested in Chargers' Jackson

Seahawks interested in Chargers' Jackson

Owens has 43-yard catch in Bengals' win

Owens has 43-yard catch in Bengals' win

World's best-paid female athletes


The U.S. Open kicks off at the end of August, and the world’s best female tennis players will compete for the final Grand Slam title of the year. But the real action is off the court, as these women jockey for lucrative endorsement deals with apparel, shoe and racket companies.

Serena Williams may be the No. 1-ranked player, but she can not match the earnings power of Maria Sharapova. Thanks to a bevy of endorsements with blue chip companies like Nike, Sony, Ericsson and Tiffany, Sharapova pulled in $24.5 million over the past year, making her the highest-paid female athlete in the world. She earned $1 million from prize money, with the rest derived from endorsements and appearance fees
Sharapova’s breakthrough came in 2004, when she won her first Grand Slam title at Wimbledon. Her agents at IMG quickly capitalized on her success and good looks by inking deals with Canon, Colgate-Palmolive and Motorola.

Sharapova has struggled in recent years on the court with injuries, but has bounced back in 2010 with two tourney wins. She also signed a massive eight-year deal with Nike at the beginning of the year that could be worth as much as $70 million. The deal provides royalties from her own tennis line, as well as a line of bags and shoes through Nike subsidiary Cole Haan.

Our income figures cover June 2009 through June 2010 and include prize money, endorsements, appearance fees and exhibitions. Tennis players dominate the top 10, making up half the list, while golfers nab three spots. Our list of the highest-paid athletes in the world (male or female) included 30 percent born outside the U.S. This list of highest-paid women is even more international, with women from six different countries making the cut.

The economic downturn has forced companies to reevaluate their sponsorship agreements with athletes. Even mighty Nike reported last month that its future endorsement obligations had declined 10 percent from the previous year to $3.8 billion. When former No.1-ranked Serbian tennis player Jelena Jankovic was dropped by Reebok she turned to Chinese sportswear firm Anta. She signed a three-year deal at the start of 2009 that could be worth as much as $5 million total (most tennis deals have a bonus structure in place, based on tournament wins and end-of-year rankings). Jankovic earned $5.3 million over the past year, good for No. 8 on our list.

The Williams sisters grab the No. 2 and No. 3 slots on our earnings list. Serena made $20.2 million while Venus earned $15.4 million over the past year. Venus made her debut on the Tour in 1994, and 16 years later both sisters are going strong – currently ranked No. 1 (Serena) and No. 5 (Venus) on the WTA Tour. They are the all-time leaders in career prize money, with Serena at $32.7 million and Venus having made $27.3. The next highest is Lindsay Davenport at $22.2 million. They put some of that cash to use last August when they became minority owners of the National Football League’s Miami Dolphins.

Our No. 4-ranked female athlete is racing’s Danica Patrick, who pulled in $12 million. Patrick is the most popular driver in IndyCar. She has a lucrative deal with her team, Andretti Autosport, that allows her to share team revenues, a rarity in racing.

Patrick’s profile jumped this year when she started racing in NASCAR’s Nationwide Series for JR Motorsports, which is co-owned by Dale Earnhardt Jr. Patrick has struggled with the heavier stock cars with an average finish of 30.5 in her first six starts. Yet her sponsors – like GoDaddy.com, Peak Antifreeze and Tissot – have reaped the benefits of that added attention.

The one Olympian on our list is figure skater Kim Yu-Na, who made $9.7 million, ranking her fifth. The 2010 Olympic gold medalist has an impressive endorsement portfolio including Hyundai, Nike and Samsung Electronics.

Her sponsor, Kookmin Bank, reportedly took out insurance on the $1 million bonus it promised to Kim if she broke her world record score at the Vancouver Olympics. Like her tennis-playing competition for top-paid female athlete, she smashed it.

Knockout Sportsworld

Friday, August 20, 2010

Knockout Sportsworld

If you love MMA.This is a must see Show,It's on SPIKE TV check your local times

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Titans rookie Blount punches teammate at practice



A player on the other side of the line of scrimmage was once again on the receiving end of a punch from running back LeGarrette Blount(notes). This time, though, it was a member of Blount's own teamThe Tennessee Titans rookie running back took a swing at teammate Eric Bakhtiari(notes) after a testy practice on Wednesday night during which numerous Titans players scuffled with one another, according to The Tennessean. Blount was the ball carrier on one play and had his helmet ripped off as the action was whistled dead. He stormed away to the end zone while other players pushed and shoved, seemingly avoiding any conflict. But when Blount walked back to the scrum, defensive end Eric Bakhtiari whispered something in his ear, Blount gave him a shove and then punched him in the facemask, a scene very similar to what happened last September when he was at Oregon and he clocked Boise State linebacker Byron Hout after the game.

Blount immediately apologized to Titans coach Jeff Fisher, saying he promised to put this behind him. Fisher accepted the apology.

"I am not disappointed whatsoever," Fisher said. "His past is his past. [...] I have great confidence in the young man that he has learned from his mistake and is very competitive."

[Photos: See more of the Titans feisty rookie]

The running back went undrafted out of Oregon, likely because of concerns about his attitude. He had been suspended for the rest of the season following the punch, but was reinstated in November after missing eight games.

Blount feels like his past draws him unwanted attention. "Two plays in a row they pulled my helmet off intentionally, and then they did it again,'' he said. "They almost do it every day. They kept egging on and provoking till it got to a certain point.''

What Blount has to realize is that he's going to get provoked, especially by players on opposing teams. He has a history and other players will try to exploit it to draw a penalty on him. If the running back can't control his emotions when a teammate whispers something in his ear, what's he going to do when a member of a division rival does it, and likely says something much, much worse?

[Rewind: The punch that made Blount public enemy No. 1]

Wednesday had been the first day back at pratice for Blount, who was attending the funeral of his grandmother.

.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

NFL: Tebow Takes His Snaps

NFL: Tebow Takes His Snaps

Manning cut as Giants Cruz past Jets in new...

Manning cut as Giants Cruz past Jets in new...

Jets' Sanchez shows his maturity after early...

Jets' Sanchez shows his maturity after early...

Seahawks trade DE Jackson to Lions

Seahawks trade DE Jackson to Lions

Haynesworth sidelined after feeling ill

Haynesworth sidelined after feeling ill

Ex-NFL QB Garcia signs with UFL team

Ex-NFL QB Garcia signs with UFL team

Jets’ Ryan says Dungy ‘unfairly judged me’


CORTLAND, N.Y. (AP)—Rex Ryan wants Tony Dungy to know he’s more than just a foul-mouthed coach.

Dungy criticized the New York Jets coach earlier this week for his Rex-pletive-filled appearance on the premiere episode of HBO’s “Hard Knocks.”

“The thing is, I’ve been a big admirer of Tony Dungy, and I’m sure a lot of people are,” Ryan said Wednesday. “I felt that he unfairly judged me, and that was disappointing to me.”

Dungy, a devout Christian, told “The Dan Patrick Show” on Monday that NFL commissioner Roger Goodell should talk to Ryan about his excessive cursing because, “I just don’t think the league needs that.” Dungy, who won a Super Bowl with Indianapolis, is an NFL analyst for NBC.

Ryan said he called Dungy and left a message that included his telephone number, and anticipated hearing back from him.

“I’ve invited him to come to camp or any time to spend the day with me and the organization,” Ryan said. “I think maybe he’ll have a different take on it.”

Ryan said last week he only cared that he disappointed his mother, Doris, but apologized if he offended “more people than I usually offend.”

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said there is no chat planned between Goodell and Ryan.

“No, Rex’s mother delivered the message,” Aiello told The Associated Press.

Ryan was asked if he was surprised Dungy suggested that the commissioner get involved.

“I think I was more surprised that he judged me,” Ryan said.

Ryan was criticized by some fans and media for what they thought was an excessive use of profanity during the show, which first airs at 10 p.m. EDT on Wednesdays. The five-part “Hard Knocks” series chronicles the team through training camp.

In the premiere, Ryan is shown using profanity during a team meeting and while talking to players and coaches. HBO posts warnings to viewers about the language contained in the program, and replays have profanity bleeped out during the day.

He also reiterated Wednesday that he will always be himself—colorful language and all.

“I’m a good person,” Ryan said. “Just because somebody cusses or whatever doesn’t make them a bad person. Just because a guy doesn’t cuss doesn’t make him a good person. So, I’ll stand by my merits.”

Ryan said he had “no idea” if there would be less profanity in the second episode. Then he was informed that HBO’s preview indicated sharp-tongued special teams coordinator Mike Westhoff would be featured.

“Then,” he said with a grin, “there could be more.”

Eli Manning back on field, may miss game

Eli Manning back on field, may miss game

Favre comes back for 2nd season with Vikings


EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP)—The lure of playing in another Super Bowl brought Brett Favre(notes) back to the NFL—again.

Favre joined his Minnesota Vikings teammates at practice Wednesday. The three-time MVP wore a helmet, shoulder pads and red quarterback’s jersey as he worked out with Minnesota for the first time since getting battered by New Orleans as the Vikings lost the NFC championship game in January.

“As we were driving on that last drive it seemed like it was destiny—for us,” said Favre, whose interception in the final minute ended that march and the Vikings never got the ball in overtime. “I was so close, so close to getting these guys to the Super Bowl.
“I owe it to this organization to give it one more try.”

Not that coming back for a 20th season was a simple decision.

“I could make a case for both playing, not playing,” Favre said. “This is a very good football team, the chances here are much greater than other places. From that standpoint, it was always going to be easier (to return).

“Part of me said it was such a great year, it would be easy to say, ‘Hey can’t play any better, why even try?’ Then the other part is, ‘Guys are playing on a high level. Why don’t I go back out?’ The expectations are high here, as they should be.”

The expectations always are high for Favre, even at 40. He’s the NFL’s leader in nearly every significant passing category and the winningest regular-season quarterback ever.

After staying away from training camp, as he’s done for much of the past two summers, Favre was practicing less than 24 hours after the team sent Steve Hutchinson(notes), Jared Allen(notes) and Ryan Longwell(notes)—three of his closest friends—to Mississippi to bring him back. Favre underwent left ankle surgery on May 21 and just a few weeks ago texted several teammates and Vikings officials that he would not return because the recovery was slower than he expected.

He’s back now.

“There is nothing on me that’s 100 percent, there wasn’t anything that was 100 percent last year or the year before,” Favre said. “The surgery made me a little better.

“I have played 309 straight games, I can’t complain.”

Favre’s return to the field came on the one-year anniversary of the day he signed a two-year, $25 million contract with the Vikings.

In a scene nearly identical to his arrival last August, Favre took a private plane from Hattiesburg on Tuesday, was followed by news helicopters from a suburban airport to the team headquarters and was greeted by dozens of fans and media members upon his arrival.

“Helicopters acting like they are following O.J.,” tight end Visanthe Shiancoe(notes) tweeted. “Where is the bronco.”

The big difference between this year and last year? His signing with the Vikings—Green Bay’s bitter NFC North rival—was a stunner after he tormented Minnesota for so long as a member of the Packers.

This time around, virtually everyone expected the quarterback who flirts with quitting every summer to return. Favre’s latest dalliance centered on the ankle that was injured in New Orleans and needed surgery. This is the third straight year the Vikings have dealt with questions about Favre, so they weren’t convinced he was done.

Now it’s time to see if the old man can do it all again.

The gray-haired Favre turned in one of the best seasons in a terrific career last year, throwing 33 touchdowns and only seven interceptions to lead the Vikings to the NFC North title. He passed for 310 yards and a touchdown against the Saints in the Superdome, but also threw an interception at the end of regulation that cost them a chance at a winning field goal that would have put Minnesota in the Super Bowl for the first time in 33 years.

Now after being cajoled by Allen, Hutchinson and Longwell, Favre will have one more shot at redemption and a second Lombardi Trophy.

Even though it was expected that he would be back, the same excitement as last year surrounded his return on Tuesday. Fans clogged Viking Drive, and police tried to control traffic and keep youngsters and television cameras from spilling onto the street.

Last year, Childress picked up Favre from the airport. This year, Longwell was the chauffeur, and fans tried to mob his black BMW SUV as he pulled into the driveway at Winter Park.

“Brett Favre for President!!” receiver Bernard Berrian(notes) tweeted.

He’ll have to settle for quarterback for now.

Even though he will turn 41 in October, Favre doesn’t figure to need much time to get warmed up and ready for another season. He skipped all of training camp last year before unretiring and joining the Vikings. The three-time MVP then delivered a season even he didn’t expect.

He set career bests in completion percentage (68.4), quarterback rating (107.2) and fewest interceptions, while throwing for 4,202 yards. The Vikings (12-4) earned a first-round bye in the NFC playoffs, and Favre became the first 40-year-old QB to win a playoff game with a four-touchdown performance against the Dallas Cowboys.

One good omen for the Vikings in 2010: Favre ran—slowly—without a limp on Wednesday.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Brett Favre is back in Minnesota


EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP)—Brett Favre(notes) is back in the building.

The 40-year-old quarterback returned to Minnesota on Tuesday, arriving in a private jet trimmed in the Vikings’ purple and gold with three teammates who were sent to Hattiesburg, Miss., to bring him back for one more shot at a Super Bowl.

This time around, Favre got a ride to Vikings headquarters from kicker and close friend Ryan Longwell(notes)—last year, when he joined Minnesota, head coach Brad Childress was at the wheel. Longwell’s black BMW SUV was followed by three helicopters from local television stations and pulled into Vikings headquarters as dozens of fans cheered and photographers snapped pictures. At one point, Favre waved to the media and fans
“Brett Favre for President!!” receiver Bernard Berrian(notes) tweeted.

Favre’s website posted a message earlier saying “stay tuned for breaking news from the Minnesota Vikings today on Brett Favre’s possible return.”

Presumably, Favre did not make the trip just to tell the Vikings he was retiring, but the team has still not given an official confirmation that the star quarterback will play this year.

Favre will turn 41 in October and has flirted with retirement for years, while playing for the Green Bay Packers, the New York Jets and now the Vikings. He threw 33 touchdowns and seven interceptions last season to help Minnesota reach the NFC title game.

The three-time MVP had been thinking about hanging it up again this year after injuring his ankle in the NFC championship loss to New Orleans last January. He had surgery on his left ankle in June, and told teammates and some team officials earlier in August that it hadn’t healed enough for him to return for a 20th NFL season.

Yet no one in the organization fully bought into that—partly because they went through a similar ordeal in 2009.

Last year, Favre told the team on the eve of training camp that he was going to stay retired only to return the Tuesday after their first preseason game. The Vikings played their first exhibition game of 2010, a 28-7 win over the Rams, on Saturday.

Favre visited Dr. James Andrews in Florida last week to get a checkup on his ankle and the Vikings sent Longwell, Jared Allen(notes) and Steve Hutchinson(notes)—three of his closest friends on the team—to Mississippi to woo him one final time.

Favre proved last year that he didn’t need all that extra sweating in training camp, delivering one of his finest seasons and leading the Vikings to the brink of the Super Bowl.

He took a beating at the Superdome, yet still threw for 310 yards and a touchdown. But he also threw two interceptions, the last one in Saints territory at the end of regulation that cost the team a chance a game-winning field goal try

LeBron tells GQ he isn’t sure Gilbert ever cared


MIAMI (AP)—Adding a new layer to the rift between LeBron James(notes) and Dan Gilbert, the NBA’s two-time reigning MVP and new Miami Heat forward has told GQ magazine that he isn’t sure the Cleveland Cavaliers owner “ever cared” about him during their time together.

In an article released Tuesday, James spoke of how widespread criticism of his decision—and how he chose to make it a television event—is fueling him this offseason, plus reiterated how Ohio will always remain his home.

But perhaps his sharpest words were reserved for Gilbert, the owner who lashed out at him shortly after James announced that he would be joining the Heat
“I don’t think he ever cared about LeBron,” James is quoted as saying. “My mother always told me: ‘You will see the light of people when they hit adversity. You’ll get a good sense of their character.’ Me and my family have seen the character of that man.”

Gilbert did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

James made similar remarks on the night Miami signed him to a six-year contract, doing so while sitting alongside the other two legs of the Heat superstar triangle, Dwyane Wade(notes) and Chris Bosh(notes).

Gilbert was clearly scorned by James’ choice, firing off a now-infamous letter to Cleveland fans describing it all as “a shameful display of selfishness and betrayal.” He called James “narcissistic” and “self-promotional” and vowed the Cavaliers would win a championship before “the self-titled former king.”

Further, in an interview the same night with The Associated Press, Gilbert said he felt James quit on Cleveland during the 2009 and 2010 playoffs. Gilbert was ultimately fined $100,000 by the NBA for what commissioner David Stern said were comments that fell into the category of being “a little extreme.”

In the GQ article, James took exception to the “quitter” tag.

“Every night on the court I give my all, and if I’m not giving 100 percent, I criticize myself,” James said.

He added that he’s looking forward to seeing the Cavaliers as opponents this season.

“I do have motivation,” James told GQ. “A lot of motivation.”

Among other highlights from the article:

— James said he wouldn’t change any part of “The Decision,” the made-for-TV event in Greenwich, Conn. where he announced his playing plans to an audience of about 10 million viewers. The hourlong show made $2.5 million for Boys & Girls Clubs. “When I found out I had an opportunity to do that for those kids, it was a no-brainer,” James said.

— Despite his feuding with Gilbert, James thinks that if he could ever play for the Cavaliers again someday, it would be “a great story.”

— James explained he’s always had an uneasy relationship with Cleveland because he’s from Akron, a half-hour away. “It’s not far, but it is far,” James said. “And Clevelanders, because they were the bigger-city kids when we were growing up, looked down on us. … So we didn’t actually like Cleveland. We hated Cleveland growing up. There’s a lot of people in Cleveland we still hate to this day.”

Monday, August 16, 2010

MMA:30 Randy Couture - James Toney has had issues. Hope he doesn't this time

MMA:30 Randy Couture - James Toney has had issues. Hope he doesn't this time

Toney’s act proves too tempting to White


James Toney didn’t let the first sentence of the first question finish before erupting. After going 72-6-3 as a boxer, Toney makes his mixed martial arts debut when he fights Ultimate Fighting Championship Hall of Famer Randy Couture in a three-round heavyweight bout at UFC 118 on Aug. 28 at the TD Banknorth Garden in Boston.

When a reporter referred to Couture as a legend, Toney banged his palm on a table and began to shout
“Man, what kind of [expletive] sport is this if y’all call a guy barely over .500 a legend?” Toney said of Couture’s 18-10 record. “If this guy is a legend, what am I? I’m going to knock this [expletive’s] head off. I’ll hit him so hard his grandmother’s going to feel it. I come from boxing. Boxing ain’t no joke and your legend is about to find that out the hard way.”

Toney is one of the greatest boxers of his era, as well as in a league by himself in terms of trash talking. He loves to fight, and not just inside the ring. He never has seen a fight he didn’t want to take.

“See all these security guys around here,” said John Arthur, Toney’s conditioning coach and close confidante, nodding toward a group of burly men with biceps the size of grapefruits sitting nearby. “They’re not here to protect James. They’re here to protect the public. James is a fighter and if someone says something to him, he’s ready to fight all the time. He’d hurt somebody bad if he could. That’s how he is. He loves to fight.”

He’s fighting in MMA because UFC president Dana White is a huge boxing fan and was infatuated with the thought of adding Toney to his roster once Toney began bugging him for a fight last year. Toney has been unable to get a significant fight in boxing recently and decided to try to find one in MMA.

The UFC considered first matching him with the since-released Kimbo Slice, though Toney asked instead for heavyweight champion Brock Lesnar.

“He’s a big dude,” Toney said of Lesnar, “but all that means is he’ll make a bigger noise when he hits the floor after I knock his [butt] out.”

He has to wait for his chance at Lesnar, though. As it is, he’s positioning his fight with Couture as a battle of boxing vs. MMA, though it’s nothing of the sort.

Toney’s best days as a boxer are far behind him – his last win over a then top-10 opponent was in 2003 – but he’s world-class in a discipline in which not many others in MMA are.

He’ll wear four-ounce gloves after fighting much of his career wearing 10-ounce gloves. And though Toney is known more for his defense than his punching power, he can punch and will knock out anyone if he hits them on the chin wearing a four-ounce glove.

The likelihood of that happening, though, is extraordinarily low. Most likely, Couture will either kick Toney and knock his feet out from under him or he’ll use his wrestling skills to quickly take Toney to his mat. And despite rumors that he forced Strikeforce light heavyweight champion Muhammad Lawal to tap in sparring, once Toney’s on his back, he’s a short-timer against Couture.

But if Couture quickly takes him down and finishes him with a ground-and-pound, it won’t prove that MMA fighters as a group are more talented than boxers. Nor will it be meaningful if Toney happens to hit Couture on the chin with a haymaker and knock him out.

Toney is the kind of a guy who thinks he can beat anybody at anything. Put him in a game of 1-on-1 against Kobe Bryant and the 5-foot-10 heavyweight would start trashing Bryant’s skills and promising a victory. He’d probably try to convince you he’d outrun Usain Bolt in the 100 meters.

MMA and boxing are related but different sports, and being great in one is no guarantee of success in the other. A Toney win will no more be a win for boxing than a Couture win will be a line in the sand for MMA. This fight simply means a paycheck for both men.

Don’t take it seriously and it might turn out to be fun.

One of the most underappreciated, but significant, reasons for the UFC’s success has been Joe Silva’s astute matchmaking. Every fight Silva makes has a purpose. Unlike many promotions, which just put on undercard fights to kill time until the television broadcast begins, each of the matches that Silva makes carries meaning. There is a logical order of progression in his matchmaking.

There is no logic or natural progression in this fight. Toney is a boxer – an old boxer who, at almost 42, is just about finished – and he’s not going to be around for the long haul.

White insisted when he first signed Toney that he would never put on a “freak show fight.” This, though, is exactly what Couture-Toney has become.

“I’m the guy who said all the time I’d never do a freak show and now, here I am doing one,” White said. “But I put a really good card on around this so that no matter what happens, no one can complain.”

It will be an entertaining diversion and, if Toney wins, it guarantees the most rollicking post-fight news conference in UFC history.

These sports, though, are about as different as football and futbol.

An athlete who is great at one isn’t necessarily going to be great at another. That’s a given going in and nothing that happens between two 40-plus-year-old men Aug. 28 in Boston will change that

Bills to be without RBs Jackson, Lynch

Bills to be without RBs Jackson, Lynch

Cards WR Fitzgerald has sprained knee

Cards WR Fitzgerald has sprained knee

Giants' Manning gets 12 stitches on head

Giants' Manning gets 12 stitches on head

Panthers WR Smith activated off PUP list

Panthers WR Smith activated off PUP list

49ers sign Westbrook to 1-year deal

49ers sign Westbrook to 1-year deal

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Steroid-dealing pharmacist sentenced; prosecutor names Shane Carwin



An assistant U.S. attorney named former Ultimate Fighting Championship interim heavyweight champion Shane Carwin as one of seven athletes who was a customer of a pharmacist who was sentenced Friday in a Mobile, Ala., federal court to a four-year prison term for participating in a nationwide conspiracy to sell anabolic steroids.

According to AlabamaLive.com, assistant U.S. attorney Donna Dobbins named Carwin (pictured on the left in 2007) during the sentencing of Mobile resident J. Michael Bennett, a supervising pharmacist at Applied Pharmacy Services, as one of the athletes whose orders contained Bennett's signature or initials. The others are:

Kurt Angle, a former Olympic gold medal-winning wrestler and professional wrestler.

Bob Howard, a pro wrestler from Mobile who performed under the name "Hardcore" Bob Holly.

Toney Freeman, a professional bodybuilder nicknamed "The X-Man."

Quincy Taylor, a professional bodybuilder.

Dennis Newman, a professional bodybuilder.

Troy Zuccolotto, a professional bodybuilder.

In addition, the Mobile Press-Register reported that two professional baseball players, seven other professional wrestlers and six other professional bodybuilders are referenced by their initials only.

Neither Carwin nor his manager, Jason Genet, could be reached for comment.

Update I - Genet spoke with Fanhouse this afternoon and said Carwin had no comment but would be releasing a statement in the future.


Update II - UFC president Dana White told Yahoo! Sports' Kevin Iole that he was aware of the story but had no other information and declined further comment.


Applied Pharmacy Services was previously linked to baseball players Jose Canseco and Gary Matthews Jr. and boxer Evander Holyfield.

According to the Press-Register, court documents indicate that APS shipped more than 762,000 dosages of anabolic steroids to 17 doctors and clinics from April 4, 2004, until Aug. 30, 2006.

The U.S. Attorney's Office in Mobile contends that does not include many other doctors and clinics that they say participated in the conspiracy.

Those performance-enhancing drugs ended up in the hands of users ranging from professional athletes to teenagers looking to build body mass. Prosecutors cited 22 professional athletes who obtained steroids from Applied Pharmacy Services during the time Bennett worked there.

Dobbins told the paper that the steroids were powerful and weren't for human consumption.

"These steroids are for horses and cows, not for young people and humans," she said.

Prosecutor referenced the five convicted pharmacists as, "drugs dealers in lab coats" and said they were also selling drugs approved only for use in livestock.

Carwin last fought for the UFC in July at UFC 116. He challenged Brock Lesnar for the promotion's heavyweight title. He was signed by the UFC in January of 2008 after he rolled to an 8-0 record between October of 2005 and December of 2007. Here's Carwin's win over Justice Smith in June of 2006

Second fiddle Silva drops

Rankings: Flip-flop at the top


Anderson Silva’s memorable victory over Chael Sonnen at UFC 117 was the talk of the sporting world. In running his UFC record win streak to 12 with a fifth-round submission, Silva became the first defending champion in company history to win a title fight in the final frame after dropping each of the first four rounds.

But the finish wasn’t enough to keep Silva in the top spot in Yahoo! Sports poll. Four pollsters switched their first-place votes from Silva to Georges St. Pierre after the UFC middleweight champ absorbed a 22-minute beating from Sonnen, and that was enough to erase Silva’s thin lead and shift St. Pierre back into the top spot
The UFC welterweight champion was named first on 11 of 19 ballots (down from 20 participants in July) and claimed eight-second place votes for 182 points. Silva took the remaining eight firsts and a mix of second-, third- and fourth-place votes for a total of 171.

A few notes about this month’s results:

• Last month, Brock Lesnar moved WEC bantamweight champ Dominick Cruz out of the No. 10 spot by virtue of Lesnar’s win over Shane Carwin. This month, though, Cruz, who defends his title on Aug. 18 against Joe Benavidez, took back No. 10.

• Sonnen proved that you can win by losing. The Oregonian had never previously claimed a top-10 vote, but placed 15th with seven points after dominating Silva in four of the five rounds. Considering that his UFC 117 performance came after consecutive wins over Yushin Okami and Nate Marquardt, Sonnen has earned his spot as the world’s No. 2 middleweight (no disrespect to Vitor Belfort, who has not yet fought often enough at 185 to merit that tag).

• Where to rank Jon Fitch? He placed 12th this month with 26 points after defeating Thiago Alves on Aug. 7. Twenty-one of those points came from a third, a fourth and a fifth-place vote, but 13 pollsters didn’t name Fitch at all. On one hand, the only time Fitch ever fought a ranked fighter (St. Pierre), he suffered a 50-43 beatdown. On the other hand, he’s 21-1 in his past 22 fights. Barring unforeseen circumstances, with Fitch on the sideline waiting to see how St. Pierre’s December fight with Josh Koscheck pans out, he’s likely to remain on the outside looking in.

• Trivia note: This month marks the third anniversary of the Y! poll. The inaugural rankings: 1. Fedor Emelianenko; 2. Mauricio Rua; 3. Quinton Jackson; 4. Dan Henderson; 5. Anderson Silva; 6. St. Pierre; 7. Chuck Liddell; 8 (tie). Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira; 8 (tie) B.J. Penn; 10. Randy Couture. Emelianenko, St. Pierre and Silva are the only fighters to claim the top spot in that time; those three, plus Penn, are the only fighters who have remained in the top 10 without dropping out since 2007

Monday August 16, 2010







NY Giants 0-0 (Road: 0-0) 8:00pm ET

NY Jets 0-0 (Home: 0-0) TV: ESPN

Roethlisberger doesn’t get off Steelers bench


PITTSBURGH (AP)—Ben Roethlisberger(notes) couldn’t have had a much quieter return to Heinz Field.

Roethlisberger, wearing a Steelers uniform for the first time since drawing a six-game suspension for his off-field behavior, did not play in the first half of Pittsburgh’s exhibition game against Detroit on Saturday night.

Steelers coach Mike Tomlin almost never plays regulars with backups, so Roethlisberger was not expected to take the field in a game delayed 1 hour, 13 minutes by lightning and heavy rain during the second quarter.

Roethlisberger was accused of sexual assault, but not charged, following a March night of drinking in a Georgia bar.

There were no signs or other displays of anti-Roethlisberger sentiment inside the stadium

8 dead, 12 hurt at off-road race in Calif. desert - Yahoo! Sports

8 dead, 12 hurt at off-road race in Calif. desert - Yahoo! Sports: "8 dead, 12 hurt at off-road race in Calif. desert
By The Associated Press
46 minutes ago
LUCERNE VALLEY, Calif. – Authorities say a vehicle ran into a crowd and killed eight people during an off-road race in the Southern California desert.
San Bernardino County sheriff’s spokeswoman Cindy Bachman says one of the vehicles in the race called the California 200 plowed into the crowd Saturday night. She says 12 people were injured and many of the wounded were airlifted to hospitals.
The race was being held in Soggy Dry Lake Bed near the city of Lucerne Valley, 100 miles northeast of Los Angeles."

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