Monday, February 28, 2011

Getting Air on a Massive Fiik Street Surfer Electric Skateboard

Making a name for himself infront of the right people

GrindTV NEWSWIRE via Maloof Money Cup- Today, a new world record was set. Aldrin Garcia landed a 45" high ollie in the finals of the Maloof High Ollie Challenge claiming the $10,000 cash prize and unseating Danny Wainwright who has held the world record of 44.5 inches since 2000. Garcia also beat out pros including Torey Pudwill, Levi Brown, Luis Tolentino, Steve Nesser, Austyn Gillette and Anthony Schultz.

Held at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center as part of the new Ride Unltd...

Source: http://www.grindtv.com/skate/video/getting_air_on_a_massive_fiik_street_surfer_electric_skateboard/

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We May Be Down for the Count, but Pro Wrestling Will Always Keep Kicking Out

Some of the greatest memories in my life involve pro wrestling. I'm not ashamed to admit Hulk Hogan was one of my childhood role models, and that when he lost to Ultimate Warrior at WrestleMania VI, I probably cried harder than I ever have. Heck, I'm getting misty just thinking about it. Pro wrestling will always hold a special place in my heart, no matter how old I get.

Being able to cover pro wrestling at FanHouse was truly a labor of love, and an opportunity I will always be grateful for, as short-lived of a venture as it may have been. Working with talented writers Brian Fritz and Brandon Stroud has been an absolute pleasure, and I really hope to get the chance to do so again.

I vehemently believe pro wrestling is worth covering more, despite what the naysayers may think about it, because people will always love it with a passion.

With that in mind, I've asked Brian and Brandon to answer a series of selected questions for our last post here at Pro Wrestling FanHouse. Thank you all for reading, and please keep supporting the cause.

-- Tom Herrera

What do you love most about pro wrestling?

Brandon Stroud: Jumbo Tsuruta. I don't know, I think I've watched and written about wrestling too much to rank the things I love against one another. As a fan since my birth over seventy years ago, I've loved the fellowship it gave me with my parents. They had me when they were 20-year-old wrestling fans. My mother was carried around the ring by Andre the Giant when she was young. My dad had kayfabe ruined for him during a run-in with the Andersons at an ice cream shop. It gave me something to talk about with them, something to love with them that had nothing to do with family, life, or what I was supposed to be doing.


Samoa Joe vs. Kenta Kobashi
As a teenager, I loved the rebellious excitement. I loved being stared at for wearing an nWo shirt to school, only to have wrestling get super popular a year later and have those same staring kids come to me for information about pro wrestling. I loved trading tapes, finding out about new things, finding Hayabusa, finding Toryumon, finding Jody Fleisch, loving him, then wishing I could lose him again. I loved being a part of the audience of Ring of Honor when Samoa Joe was smacking Kenta Kobashi across the face, and I loved how that evolved into the sincere joy of watching a man in a stuffed dragon suit have his tail put in an STF at CHIKARA.

As a wrestling school student and later as a writer, I learned to love the people, these flawed, desperate people who somehow found a way to love an unlovable monster that tears apart your dreams and builds them back up again in ways you weren't expecting. I learned that the characters were people, and that the people were bad, and that sometimes badness is what makes you a person.

The thing I love most about pro wrestling is that it exists, and that I get to know more about it than anybody could possibly need to.

Brian Fritz: If you ask a professional wrestler why they do what they do, most will tell you it's for the pop. That moment when he/she first walks out and the crowd goes wild, jumping to their feet and roaring with excitement. Or when they hit their signature move to everyone's delight and scores the victory.

I'm a wrestling fan for that same reason: the pop. But my moment is different. It's not when someone gets a win and their hand is held high. Or when a huge surprise is revealed out of nowhere and it leaves everyone with their mouth gaping open in shock.

My moment is when I'm watching a great match and as the competitors go back and forth, trading shots minute after minute with onlookers on the edge of their seats. The match builds to a crescendo and then someone hits that big move or pulls something out of nowhere. "That's it!" screams the announcer as everyone counts in unison for the pin.

"1-2-OHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!" He kicked out! He kicked out!"

Those few precious seconds is what it's all about.

Wrestling is about making people believe and taking you on a roller coaster ride of emotions. When it is at its best, the audience reacts because it cares. It cares who wins and loses. It cares when the bad guy does something dastardly, then stands there and soaks in the showering of boos. It cares when the good guy earns his revenge and finally gets the upper hand.

It's all about getting people to care and then reacting by either cheering or booing. And that one moment, where people are fully invested, their eyes glued to the action, waiting in anticipation of what will happen. The place is buzzing as it has all built to this one moment. The crowd is at a fever pitch and believes this one is in the books. But it's not.

This match must continue.

That is wrestling and that is why I am still a fan to this day, more than 25 years from when I first started watching.

What is your favorite pro wrestling memory?

Brandon Stroud: I have two memories that I hold above the others.

The first was Joe vs. Kobashi in New York City. I mentioned it earlier, but it was a transformative experience. It was a dub of a dub of a dub of a Japanese show on a VHS tape coming to life in front of me, running headlong into this exciting new possibility for live, esoteric, niche pro wrestling. It was a five-star match, and if it never got a single star it would've meant as much. I remember sitting beside my friends with our heads down after the match, trying to process how happy that'd just made us, and why. We still haven't figured it out, and that's the best thing I could imagine.

The second is that horrible, failed wrestling convention in San Francisco. I got to hug Molly Holly, I got to make bro fists with Harley Race, I got to hear the least reputable history of the Great Muta ever from Virgil. But the moment I hold closest to me is meeting "Rowdy" Roddy Piper. I watched him take the time to greet everyone, talk to them, treat them like they were special. We'd been through this awful ripoff, but he made it all make sense. He kissed a handicapped kid on the forehead. When I got up to him, I said, "Mr. Piper, let me ask you a question. What's the secret?" His answer will stay with me for the rest of my life.

Oh, and my third favorite memory is eating a literal bucket of chicken wings at WWF New York. And you wonder why I'm a vegan.

Brian Fritz: My dad was never a big sports fan like me but I remember as a teenager watching TV with him on a Saturday night as we bumped into the National Wrestling Alliance on Superstation WTBS and we took in the action. The first match I remember seeing was probably a week later when I called for my dad to come out of the garage because Tully Blanchard was defending his NWA Television Title against Brad Armstrong. After a 10-minute time limit draw, Blanchard narrowly escaped with his championship and I was hooked.

I've been lucky enough to see so many great moments since then. All the way from The Four Horsemen to the nWo, the Attitude Era and everything in between. Unbelievable stars like Ric Flair, Ricky Steamboat, Terry Funk, Dusty Rhodes, "Macho Man" Randy Savage, The Rock, "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, Rob Van Dam and Jerry Lynn.

I remember back in 1989 which I consider one of the best years ever in wrestling because of the "Nature Boy" Ric Flair. He began the year as a heel, feuding with then-champion Ricky Steamboat who he finally defeated to win back the World Championship. But after that, he became the good guy as he was enraged in a bitter feud with the returning Terry Funk, which climaxed to an "I Quit" match between the two foes at the Clash of the Champions where Flair won and made The Funker shake his hand. That is my favorite feud of all time. Watching these two men talk smack and then furiously fight in and out of the ring was incredible.

But the greatest match I ever saw live -- and probably the greatest match I've seen period -- was at WrestleMania XXV in Houston, Texas, when The Undertaker and Shawn Michaels squared off for the first time on that stage. This was the 30-minute equivalent to Beethoven's Symphony, a work of art to be cherished forever between two of the greatest stars in wrestling history.

What do you have to say to the haters who label pro wrestling "fake?"

Brandon Stroud: It is fake, and I'm sick of explaining it to you. Go watch high school amateur wrestling, and never once consider how "gay" it looks.

Brian Fritz: Sure, pro wrestling isn't a traditional sport. But those people who step between the ropes are true athletes and entertainers, just like in mainstream sports.

That's why so many athletes from other sports are wrestling fans. They appreciate the talent it takes to get in the ring and perform, from the athleticism to the ability to withstand the bumps and bruises and grind it out on a weekly basis.

While a wrestler might not be able to run the 40 in under 4.5 seconds or make a diving catch over the middle, I want to see how many football players land a picture-perfect moonsault or trade a quick succession of pinfalls using basic wrestling moves.

So many athletes are wrestling fans because they respect that. Just look at Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers who often made a championship-belt-around-the-waist gesture whenever his team scored this past season. Or the wrestling belt on his shoulder while holding the Lombardi Trophy.

Pro wrestling is scripted entertainment but there is nothing fake about the skill involved for a match. And there is nothing fake about the excitement wrestling fans get out of watching a good wrestling product.

Any farewell message to the readers who enjoyed Pro Wrestling FanHouse?

Brandon Stroud: Don't give up on wrestling writing. It can be good. It can be real journalism, whether it's about something "real" or not. The people doing this are interesting, and their stories should be told with at least a tiny bit of respect, and not just in RF video shoots where someone tells them to talk about their suicide attempt. If you treat the people in the wrestling industry better than you do right now -- and that includes the writers, promoters, program girls, whatever -- it will get better. The definition of "better" will vary, but trust me, it's the one thing I know for sure.

And don't give up on wrestling. It sucks right now, but it's always sucked. Steamboat/Savage at WrestleMania III was the epic peak of the genre, sure, but that show also featured a Brutus Beefcake tag and a Hercules-centric double countout. Wrestling is always, always bad, and there is always something wonderful to be found amongst the badness.

Thank you for letting me write about wrestling for a living, even if it didn't last very long. I wanted it to last forever, but I never really thought it would last a day.

Brian Fritz: I would like to thank everyone who supported the effort we put forward here at FanHouse in covering wrestling. It was my pleasure in covering it the way we did with a straightforward approach and taking it seriously but having fun along the way. All the stories, all the behind-the-scenes interviews with wrestlers, and all the shows along the way. I hope you enjoyed it as much as I did in writing those stories for the site.

It was just over a year ago when I had inquired about a position at FanHouse, hoping that there would be interest in covering wrestling and I could be a part of that. I got the call from Tom Herrera and we talked for nearly two hours that first time. Just a few days later, the wrestling section was a go with me as a part of it.

Tom and I had never talked before then but he believed in my previous work and me being a part of the new wrestling section at FanHouse. And for that, I thank you Tom. It was his vision that pro wrestling was covered on FanHouse and helped the section grow to the level that it did. I've learned a lot over this past year and it's been my pleasure having Tom as my editor and now as a friend. I just hope we can do it again sometime in the near future.

I also have to mention Brandon Stroud who was the yin to my yang here. I did the day-to-day stories while he focused on show recaps and reviews with his witty humor and sometimes strange tangents. I don't know how you came up with some of that stuff or what you were thinking but it was damn entertaining.

For anyone interested, you can still listen to my weekly "Between The Ropes" wrestling show which has been on the radio now for more than 12 years. Without giving a blatant plug to where you can find it, just do a Google search and I guarantee it will come up.

And on that note, I bid you adieu ... Brian Fritz, reporting for FanHouse. It's been my pleasure.




(You can contact Brian Fritz at btrfritz AT gmail.com and on Twitter @BrianFritz. Brandon Stroud can be reached at infernaldinosaur AT gmail.com and on Twitter @MrBrandonStroud.)

Source: http://www.fanhouse.com/2011/02/28/we-may-be-down-for-the-count-but-pro-wrestling-will-always-keep/

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Carl Edwards Grabs Pole for Phoenix Race

AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP) -- Phoenix International Raceway is filled with bumps and cracks and has patches on top of patches trying to hold it together for one last race.

It may be falling apart, but one thing it has never lost is speed.

Carl Edwards had the fastest lap on one of the fastest days ever at Phoenix, setting the last in a slew of track records on Saturday during the final qualifying session before the surface undergoes a makeover.

"This track is great," Edwards said. "I talked to (track president Bryan) Sperber earlier and I think the question I asked him seems a lot of people have asked was: 'Why would you even mess with this?"

Raceway officials don't have a lot of choice with the track nearly crumbling.

It's at least going out with flourish.

On a cloudy, relatively cool day in the desert, 15 drivers eclipsed the old qualifying record of 136.389 mph, set by Edwards on his way to winning at Phoenix last fall.

Coming off a second-place finish at the Daytona 500, Edwards had the fastest of them all, running a lap of 137.279 mph to barely edge Kurt Busch on the final qualifying session before the track's repaving project starts.

Kasey Kahne qualified third and Kyle Busch will start next to him for Sunday's 500-mile race around the crack-filled mile oval.

"It's the same track I've been coming to since 1995," said Kevin Harvick, who qualified 17th. "It makes me almost want to cry that they're going to tear it all up.

The track is just a few days away from the start of a $10 million repaving project that's supposed to be done before the fall NASCAR Chase race.

Maybe they should leave it alone with all the records falling this weekend.

Clint Bowyer got it started in the trucks on Friday, setting a record in qualifying, and Kyle Busch did the same thing in Nationwide on Saturday morning.

Denny Hamlin didn't take long to set the record for Sprint Cup cars, knocking off the mark before the session was even a quarter of the way through.

A few drivers later, Brad Keselowski knocked Hamlin off, bettering his record by two-tenths of a second. Kasey Kahne took that mark down a few more drivers later, lopping nearly seventh-tenths off Keselowski's record. Edwards had the record-topping run late in the session, finishing 0.167 ahead of Kurt Busch, one of the last drivers to qualify.

"I was expecting ninth or tenth just with the way the lap felt, but I came over and they said we were second place," said Kurt Busch, who had the fastest time in Friday's practice session. "I was relieved to hear that."

Daytona 500 winner Trevor Bayne was one of the few drivers who couldn't generate much speed on the record-setting day. The 20-year-old wrecked after his brakes locked up on the first lap of Friday's opening practice session and ended up qualifying 33rd in his backup car.

"I know I needed more," Bayne said. "I just didn't have enough grip. I couldn't get much more out of the tire out there. I think it's going to be good on the long run, but for the qualifying it just wasn't there. We'll get it -- plus I'm learning, too."

Edwards had a breakthrough his last time at Phoenix in November, ending a 70-race winless streak by saving just enough fuel to cross the checkers and circle back for his patented celebratory backflip in front of the grandstand.

Edwards said at the time he hoped the win would jump-start his career again. He won at Homestead the following week, opened this season with a second at Daytona - he was unable to get around Bayne at the end - and will start up front again this weekend for one last go-round before PIR gets its makeover.

"I love this race track," Edwards said. "I know all the drivers love to drive on it. It's really fun to drive."On a cloudy, relatively cool day in the desert, 15 drivers eclipsed the old qualifying record of 136.389 mph, set by Edwards on his way to winning at Phoenix last fall.

Coming off a second-place finish at the Daytona 500, Edwards had the fastest of 'em all, running a lap of 137.279 mph to barely edge Kurt Busch on the final qualifying session before the track's repaving project starts.

Kasey Kahne qualified third and Kyle Busch will start next to him for Sunday's 500-mile race around the crack-filled mile oval.

"It's the same track I've been coming to since 1995," said Kevin Harvick, who qualified 17th. "It makes me almost want to cry that they're going to tear it all up.

The track is just a few days away from the start of a $10 million repaving project that's supposed to be done before the fall NASCAR Chase race.

Maybe they should leave it alone with all the records falling this weekend.

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

Source: http://motorsports.fanhouse.com/2011/02/26/carl-edwards-grabs-pole-for-phoenix-race/

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Tiger Woods Knocked Out in First Round of Match Play

Tiger Woods MARANA, Ariz. (AP) -- The slow road back for Tiger Woods took another detour Wednesday when he followed a clutch birdie with a shocking shot into the desert and lost to Thomas Bjorn in the first round of the Match Play Championship.

It was only the second time that Woods, the No. 3 seed, had been eliminated in the first round.

But this was stunning even to Woods.

Moments after he made an 8-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole to extend the match, he hit a 3-wood so far to the right that it landed in a desert bush. It took two shots just to get it back onto the grass. After badly missing an 18-foot bogey putt, he conceded to Bjorn.

"I blew it," Woods said.

Twice he had simple chips on the back nine and failed to convert them into birdies, losing his lead on the 13th and falling behind on the 15th. He missed a 10-foot birdie on the 17th that he figured he should make "every time."

And then came No. 1, the first extra hole.

"It's easy to put the ball in the fairway and I couldn't even do that," Woods said, so visibly upset that he was stumbling over his words.

The other top seeds didn't have that much trouble.

Top-ranked Lee Westwood never trailed in his 3-and-2 victory over Henrik Stenson, while PGA champion Martin Kaymer had the shortest match of the opening round, a 7-and-6 win over 19-year-old Seung-yul Noh of South Korea.

Phil Mickelson, the No. 4 seed who only decided to play this World Golf Championship two weeks ago, won 6-and-5 over Brendan Jones.

Woods had some company in going home early.

The Americans had four of the top 10 seeds at Dove Mountain, and Mickelson is the only one left. Matteo Manassero, the 17-year-old Italian, became the youngest winner in this tournament with a 2-and-1 victory over eighth-seeded Steve Stricker, while Jim Furyk (No. 10) continued his struggles in losing to Ryan Palmer, who was making his Match Play debut.

Coming off the worst season of his career, most of that from the crisis in his personal life, Woods does not appear to be making any progress. Through three tournaments this year, he has failed to crack the top 20.

Woods keeps talking about needing more repetition as he works on a new swing, although he is not playing more tournaments. Asked if he might add the Honda Classic, Woods replied, "Probably now is not the time to ask me right now."

He next is likely to play the Cadillac Championship at Doral in two weeks, with Bay Hill two weeks after that. One possibility is the Transitions Championship outside Tampa, Fla., which is the week between Doral and Bay Hill.

It was the second time Bjorn has beaten Woods head-to-head, although not in this format. Ten years ago, they went 72 holes together in the Dubai Desert Classic, with Woods putting his shot into the water on the last hole to make double bogey.

Bjorn was gracious in victory, saying that Woods is not playing "his absolute best right now." although he still saw some good swings.

Others piled on.

When asked about the youth movement in golf, especially after Manassero won his match, Rory McIlroy said all the young players feel they are good enough to compete with the likes of Woods, Mickelson, Stricker and Furyk.

"I mean, I don't think Tiger and Phil have got any ... well, yeah, I mean I don't think Phil has gotten any worse," McIlroy said after his 4-and-2 win over Jonathan Byrd. "Tiger isn't as dominant as he used to be, and Phil won the Masters last year."

Then came a tweet from Hank Haney, the swing coach from whom Woods split a year ago in May.

"For all the talk of Tiger's poor driving the last 6 years I have never seen him drive it out of play with a match or tournament on the line," Haney said on Twitter.

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

Source: http://golf.fanhouse.com/2011/02/23/tiger-woods-knocked-out-in-first-round-of-match-play/

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Puker - Official Trailer

Making a name for himself infront of the right people

GrindTV NEWSWIRE via Maloof Money Cup- Today, a new world record was set. Aldrin Garcia landed a 45" high ollie in the finals of the Maloof High Ollie Challenge claiming the $10,000 cash prize and unseating Danny Wainwright who has held the world record of 44.5 inches since 2000. Garcia also beat out pros including Torey Pudwill, Levi Brown, Luis Tolentino, Steve Nesser, Austyn Gillette and Anthony Schultz.

Held at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center as part of the new Ride Unltd...

Source: http://www.grindtv.com/skate/video/puker_official_trailer/

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Charlie Davies Comes Full Circle in Long Road to Recovery

charlie daviesWASHINGTON, DC -- Charlie Davies was offered a tryout by D.C. United because the club was atop Major League Soccer's allocation priority list.

The expansion franchises in Portland (Kenny Cooper) and Vancouver (Jay DeMerit) had made their choices, and United was next in line thanks to its wooden spoon performance in 2010.

On the surface, it's that simple. It's in the rules.

But Davies, who credits religion for some of the strength required to overcome the horrific litany of injuries suffered in that 2009 car accident, might argue that greater forces are at play.

It was in the Washington area, of course, where the crash occurred -- two nights before the national team's World Cup qualifier against Costa Rica and about four miles from RFK Stadium, where Davies was introduced as United's newest player on Wednesday.

It was in Washington where he made the choices that would change his life -- breaking curfew and getting into an SUV with a drunk driver. It was in Washington where he nearly lost it all, and where the questions began about whether Davies had the temperament and commitment to match his considerable talent.

He wants to rebuild his career and his life. "It's not just to get back to where I was," he said at his unveiling. "The goal is to be better than what I was before, and achieve all the goals I had before as a player."

To get there, he'll have to start from the beginning. Davies will have to go back to the place where the road forked sixteen months ago, and build a new foundation. Both on the field and off.

According to his new coach, Ben Olsen, he's off to an excellent start.

"When we started to look into the possibility of Charlie, those boxes were checked for me. Character, all those intangibles that we want at this club from our players, I knew were there," Olsen said.

"We didn't know where he was on the playing side. That we had to look at. Bringing in Charlie in preseason, he proved to us he's on his way back to being the Charlie of old ... There's still some rust. (from) being off that long and going through some of the things that he went through. So, now our job -- it's a job we're looking forward to -- is kind of dusting that rust off and getting him back to the form that we saw several years ago."

Davies trained with United in Florida and played in scrimmages against the under-20 national teams from Canada and Trinidad. He scored three goals, and he said Wednesday that he he's "really not too far off" the form that catapulted him into the World Cup dreams of American soccer fans back in the summer of 2009.

And there's no reason to doubt him. United wouldn't waste its allocation advantage or its money (about $180,000 plus incentives, according to The Washington Post's Steven Goff) on a role player. (D.C.'s one-year loan deal with Sochaux includes an option to purchase Davies' contract outright at the end of the season. United GM Dave Kasper told FanHouse that Davies would be a designated player in 2012).

"Of course I was prepared to say 'no'. This is a big piece for us. If it's not a good piece, it's not going to look good on me. We feel very very comfortable with where Charlie's at," Olsen told FanHouse.

The remaining questions about Davies can be answered only through his commitment and behavior over time. And to his significant credit, he is eager to answer them and excited to do it in Washington. He shied away from nothing on Wednesday, discussing the responsibility he bears for what happened and promising that there's far more to his recovery than what he'll show on the field.

"Every day I wake up I'm reminded of the accident as far as the scars all over my body," he said (see photo below). "I think my work ethic, my frame of mind, have really helped me overcome all obstacles I've had to get through. Playing in D.C. is going to be special for me. But it's also going to be the place I get back on my feet and show the world I'm back."

He understands that being "back" is about more than scoring goals. There was an undercurrent throughout much of Wednesday's event that was unspoken yet unmistakable. (Well, unspoken by all but the Associated Press, which asked Davies flat out if he planned on breaking any more curfews). Davies' questionable judgment was not limited to that fateful night in the fall of 2009. He tangled publicly with both Sochaux and national team coach Bob Bradley and had a run-in with French traffic cops last fall.

He understands that fans might be monitoring his growth as a person -- "If you go through what I did, you learn a lot about yourself," he said -- as well as his recovery and potential as a player.

"You can do as much as you can. That means a lot to me," he told FanHouse about the public's perception of Davies the man.

"You score goals, you create goals, people think you're god, you know? But for me, being here, I want to do more. I want to help people. I want to help kids. I want to really do a lot for the community, especially being here. I think I can help out a lot of kids, sharing my story. I think it'll move a lot of people and hopefully change a lot of lives."

Olsen, who's a legend with the United faithful thanks to his passion, humility and commitment, offered a heartfelt endorsement of Davies. He's convinced Davies possesses the qualities that will help United rebound from the worst season in club history.

"I know Charlie. I've been his teammate (with the national team). I've had a lot of experience with him as of late and I think he's a kid that yeah, made some mistakes. But so have I. So has everybody, and for anybody to judge him right now is a little unfair," the coach told FanHouse.

"I think he's a great kid and we're lucky to have him. I think he's a good teammate as far as being a guy who represents the team well. The guys love him already. He fits in with every guy on the team. He's not a guy who sits at one table. He goes to each table in the lunch room at a different time. He's a team guy in every way and it's something that think is very important for our group right now."

Davies may love to blend in. He may long to feel connected with his teammates, to be one of the guys and "be friends with everyone." But this season, he will stand out. He'll be treated differently. Every performance will be scrutinized, and he'll deal with the pressure from those impatient for him to succeed and those who may be looking for a sign that he won't.

"I'm definitely ready for games to be closely watched and my performance, especially under a microscope," he said. "Yes there were other opportunities for me in Europe, but like I said from the beginning, I need to be in the best situation. The best environment for me is here with D.C. United."

A strange twist, that the best environment may be in the city where it all went wrong. But Davies appears to grasp and embrace the notion that recovery and redemption can only be complete if you're willing to retrace your steps. He now has that opportunity, and like a loose ball in the penalty area, the once and future speedster intends to pounce on it.

Source: http://soccer.fanhouse.com/2011/02/18/charlie-davies-ready-to-finish-his-recovery-in/

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Match Play Presents Early Intrigue, Often Unfulfilling Final Rounds


This week's WGC Accenture Match Play Championship in Marana, Ariz., could be something really special.

Or it might not.

That's the tricky thing about match play. When competition begins Wednesday with 64 of the top ranked players in the world, there will be all sorts of intriguing possibilities. A few times over the years, promise has even delivered. In 2000, Darren Clarke beat Tiger Woods in the final. Woods won in 2003 by taking down David Toms in the final and won again in 2004 over Davis Love III. Woods defeated Stewart Cink in 2008. Even last year, although an all-England final, Ian Poulter's victory over Paul Casey had its viewing strengths.

But then there was 2001 when Steve Stricker beat Pierre Fulke in the Sunday final. Or 2007 when Henrik Stenson beat Geoff Ogilvy. And who doesn't remember Kevin Sutherland's 1-up decision over Scott McCarron in 2002?

Because players are eliminated as the week wears on, it is always possible that by the time Sunday's final match arrives, there is the possibility of a "Who's He?" taking on "Who Cares?"

That makes match play events fascinating in that much of the intrigue often occurs early in the week, and the final days can drag.

FORMAT

The top 64 players on the World Rankings after the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am qualified. Among those eligible, only Japan's Toru Taniguchi is missing, because of a neck injury. He was replaced by Stenson.

Wednesday will have 32 matches, and by Friday only 16 players will remain.

The quarterfinals will take place on Saturday, and the semifinals will go off Sunday morning. An 18-hole final will be played Sunday afternoon, along with a match to determine third and fourth place.

EARLY FUN

There's no shortage of potential upset matches. Englishman and World No. 1 Lee Westwood comes out of the blocks against Sweden's Stenson. Two No. 1 seeds have been eliminated in the event's 13-year history. Peter O'Malley beat Tiger Woods 2 & 1 in 2002 and last year Steve Stricker went down to defeat in the hands of Ross McGowan.

Poulter, the defending champion, will open with Stewart Cink. Two-time camp Geoff Ogilvy will face Padraig Harrington; Tiger meets Thomas Bjorn; Phil Mickelson starts with Brenden Jones; Stricker meets 17-year-old Italian Matteo Manassero, Luke Donald plays Charley Hoffman, Louis Oosthuizen draw Bo Van Pelt, Rory McIlroy goes against Jonathan Byrd, and Bubba Watson meets Bill Haas.

THE COURSE

The Ritz Carlton Golf Club at Dove Mountain was designed by Jack Nicklaus and opened in November of 2008. The resort offers 27 holes with tournament play scheduled for the Saguaro and Tortolita nines. The third nine, the Wild Burro, is Nicklaus' favorite of the three, but it was judged fan-unfriendly.

The course will be a par 72 and measure 7,849 yards but at an elevation of 3,500 feet. The greens and fairways are large.

FLASHBACK

Poulter didn't just beat United Kingdom countryman and close friend Paul Casey for the 2010 Accenture Match Play Championship, he became golf significant, advancing from his past role as an occasional background distraction to legitimate attraction.

And while the well-played 4 & 2 decision over Casey that went 34 holes may not have been a jolly-good attention getter in the colonies, at the least it provides something for golf to talk about other than Tiger Woods -- who earlier in the week make his first public appearance after an offseason of issues.

The victory was Poulter's first on American soil in addition to being his first World Golf Championship title. It also moved him to No. 5 on the World Golf Rankings, a career high.

"Feels just amazing," Poulter said. "Five or six years of hard work, coming over to change my residency, to be living in America, to finally win over here just means everything.

"I moved my family across. It's just so pleasing to be able to finally say now I'm a winner on the PGA Tour."

Casey, who needed one hole early Sunday to eliminate Camilo Villegas in 24-hole semifinal match that had was halted Saturday night by darkness, went 1 up with a birdie on the second hole, but never led again.

Poulter birdied the next hole to square the match and took the lead on No. 8. From there, he was 2 up after 18, 4 up through 26, and after Casey closed within two, came back with a birdie on the 33rd hole, hitting the day's best shot, to slam the door.

After missing the fairway badly to the right on the short par-4 and with mud caked on his ball, Poulter hit wedge to two feet for birdie.

"Probably one of the toughest shots I had," he said. "The ball had a lot of mud on it. It was quite a bare lie, because it was quite close to where the drain was. I hit that shot absolutely perfect."

BY THE NUMBERS

14: Years tournament has been played at four different courses.

9 & 8: Largest margin of victory in tournament history, by Tiger Woods over Stephen Ames, in 2006 opening round.

38: Holes played in longest championship match -- Jeff Maggert and Andrew Magee in 1999.

23: Players entered under age 30.

16: Wins in 33 career starts by Tiger Woods in WGC events.

AND OUR WINNER IS ...

Graeme McDowell.

What's the biggest stage in match play? That's right, the Ryder Cup.

Who played better the entire week of last year's European victory?

Graeme McDowell.

Source: http://golf.fanhouse.com/2011/02/22/match-play-presents-early-intrigue-often-unfulfilling-final-rou/

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Brian Ebersole Looks Back on Long, Strange Journey to UFC

  • Ariel Helwani
  • Video Reporter and Writer
SYDNEY -- MMA Fighting spoke to newcomer Brian Ebersole at the UFC 127 open workouts about his long road to the UFC, what took him so long to fight for the organization, fighting Chris Lytle on short notice and much more.

Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2011/02/21/brian-ebersole-looks-back-on-long-strange-journey-to-ufc/

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Clay Matthews Led the NFL in Untouched Sacks

February 27 2011 Last updated at 01:48 PM ET

Clay Matthews
Clay Matthews is one of the best pass rushers in the league, so you would think that no matter where he is, offenses would want to make sure that he's always accounted for by their pass protection scheme.

So it might surprise you to learn that Matthews led the league in unblocked sacks last year. There were four different sacks when Matthews was able to come through completely untouched to bring down the quarterback. Initially I believed that this was a credit to Dom Capers' scheme, which managed to confuse defenses enough to let the Packers' best pass rusher come free, but in checking back over my notes it's more of a credit to Matthews' ability to read a play on the fly.

Twice Matthews came on a delayed blitz where the offensive line did not account for him because it appeared he was not rushing. It's difficult to say if these were designed delayed blitzes or simply plays where Matthews was able to rush late because he was either asked to spy (one of the sacks was of Michael Vick) or because his assigned man in coverage stayed in to block.

On two other plays, Matthews was left unblocked by the design of the play -- a play action rollout in his direction. When that happens, the play is designed for the play action fake to draw the outside linebacker inside by having him chase the supposed ball carrier. But Matthews read the plays from the start, resulting in two very easy sacks of two very surprised quarterbacks.

Looking at the rest of the 20 players who had two or more unblocked sacks, you see a lot of names you may expect to see.

Player Team Unblocked Sacks Player Team Unblocked
Sacks
Clay Matthews Packers 4 Desmond Bishop Packers 2
Drew Coleman Jets 3 James Ihedigbo Jets 2
Jonathan Vilma Saints 3 Joey Porter Cardinals 2
Wil Witherspoon Titans 3 Mario Haggan Broncos 2
London Fletcher Redskins 2.5 Nate Allen Eagles 2
Clark Haggans Cardinals 2 Patrick Willis 49ers 2
Cameron Wake Dolphins 2 Roman Harper Saints 2
Bryan Scott Bills 2 Shaun Phillips Chargers 2
Antoine Winfield Vikings 2 Tamba Hali Chiefs 2
Daryl Smith Jaguars 2 Tyvon Branch Raiders 2

Cornerbacks and safeties who can time their blitzes well are generally some of the most successful at coming through untouched. Drew Coleman (three sacks) and James Idedigo (two sacks) are a good reminder that Rex Ryan's defense does a good job of causing confusion.

Titans' linebacker Wil Witherspoon's name is notable here because he's much more a coverage linebacker than a pass rusher. The stats here reflect that -- his three sacks last year all came when he through untouched as part of a blitz. The story was very similar with Saints linebacker Jonathan Vilma. His four sacks last year all came on blitzes where he was left relatively free to pick up an easy sack (on one of them a running back got enough of him to avoid it being called an unblocked sack.

Source: http://nfl.fanhouse.com/2011/02/27/clay-matthews-led-the-nfl-in-untouched-sacks/

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Tiger Woods Falls Short With 3-Over Final Round in Dubai

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Tiger Woods stumbled in a bid for his first victory in 15 months Sunday, leaving Alvaro Quiros to win the Dubai Desert Classic with a wild round that included a hole-in-one and triple bogey.

The 70th-ranked Quiros shot a 68 to finish at 11-under 277, one stroke ahead of Anders Hansen of Denmark (70) and James Kingston of South Africa (67).

Woods had a 75 to end tied for 20th at 4-under 284.

"There were quite a few positives this week but a couple of glaring examples of what I need to work on," Woods said.

He entered the round one stroke off the lead, but for the second straight day he started with two bogeys in his first three holes. He managed to claw a shot back when his approach on the sixth ended up a few feet from the pin. However, Woods offset two birdies with two bogeys on the back nine and then double bogeyed the 18th.

"All my old feels (for the clubs) are out the window when the winds blow," he said. "That's the thing when you are making change. It's fine when the wind is not blowing. But when you have to hit a shot when the wind blows ... the new swing patterns get exposed."

Woods had trouble for much of the day with errant drives, and his putting -- which he credited with helping him shoot a 66 Friday -- also was shaky, leading to several missed birdie chances. He also showed flashes of anger, at one point yelling at photographers for disturbing his shot.

Woods, who won in Dubai in 2006 and 2008, is now in the longest victory drought of his career. His last title came at the Australian Masters in November 2009.

Coming into Sunday, it was still anyone's tournament and Woods was among the top players who seemed poised for victory. Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy was tied at the top with Hansen, and a resurgent Sergio Garcia of Spain was tied with Woods and five others a shot back. Twenty players, including Kingston, were within three shots of the lead and many of them made runs Sunday.

Quiros struck early with an eagle on No. 2 and two birdies on the next three holes to take a three-shot lead. But just as dramatically, he fell back into a tie with Hansen and several others at 8 under when he triple bogeyed the eighth hole -- hitting an unplayable drive and then a second shot into a tree.

The Spaniard recovered quickly with a birdie on nine and then a dramatic hole-in-one on the 11th, hitting a wedge 145 yards that landed on the green and rolled into the cup to give him the lead.

But Hansen went back up by a stroke after he eagled the 13th and Quiros had a bogey on No. 14. Quiros regained the lead with a birdie on No. 16 and Hansen's bogey on 15. The Dane could have tied down the stretch, but missed several birdie putts, including a 30-footer on the 18th.

"It was incredible for you guys, outside but for me it was a difficult situation," Quiros said of his fifth European Tour victory. "The beginning of the day was perfect, but after the eighth hole I was shaken."

The hole-in-one restored his confidence.

"It was the perfect shot. Once a year, it happens," he said. "It was a big point in the round. After the 10th hole, I was second or third with some of the other guys and then after the hole-in-one I was the leader."

The 70th-ranked Hansen, who had his best finish since taking second at last year's Singapore Open, was left to rue his missed chances.

"Obviously, a little disappointed," he said. "I gave myself a chance after leading and got myself out of it early but brought myself back in it. Thought I played nicely but Alvaro played great."

Woods was not alone among the big names on the star-studded leaderboard to falter down the stretch.

Garcia, who lost the lead Saturday after two bogeys and a double bogey, had similar problems Sunday. He briefly tied for the lead after a birdie on the opening hole, but fell back with a bogey on the fifth and ended his chances on the ninth with a triple bogey after his ball ended up in the water. The Spaniard shot a 75 to finish with Woods among the group of eight tied for 20th.

McIlroy lost the lead early after opening with a bogey. He pulled two shots back with birdies on the third and 10th, but trailing by three shots, he fell back down the leaderboard after three consecutive bogeys on the back nine to finish with a 74 and in a tie for 10th.

Top-ranked Lee Westwood quietly made a run, moving to 8 under with four holes to play. But then he had a double-bogey on 17 when his ball got stuck in a tree and ended with a bogey on 18 to shoot 72 and finish in a tie for 15th at 5 under.

"That will piss you off pretty quickly, won't it, sticking it up a palm tree when you think you have a chance of winning," Westwood said.

But Westwood took several positives away from a weekend during which he initially struggled with distance and control and only started making his putts Sunday. It was an improvement over Qatar, where he missed the cut, and the Abu Dhabi Championship, where he finished 64th.

"Positives are I had a chance to win," Westwood said. "First long putt I've made all week was on the 14th. I haven't played my best, and had a chance with two holes to play to post a total that would have been probably half decent, I guess 10 under, if I could have birdied the last two holes. Plenty to take out of it."

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

Source: http://golf.fanhouse.com/2011/02/13/tiger-woods-falls-short-with-3-over-final-round-in-dubai/

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Bisping Denies Spitting on Cornerman, Rivera's Team Wants Suspension

  • Mike Chiappetta
  • MMA Writer
Michael Bisping vs. Jorge RiveraIn the immediate seconds following the conclusion of an emotionally charged fight between Michael Bisping and Jorge Rivera, Bisping walked to the Octagon corner nearest to Rivera's team and spit. That much is clear. But the two sides disagree on what exactly he was aiming at, and whether he hit it.

Rivera's team says that the spit was directed -- and hit -- boxing coach Matt Phinney. Bisping denies it.

"No, not at all. I was spitting on the floor to let him know what I thought of him," Bisping told MMA Fighting's Ariel Helwani in a UFC 127 post-fight interview. "I apologized for that, and I never want to act like that."



The bad blood between the two stemmed from a series of videos Rivera did leading up to the fight which mocked Bisping. In the videos, Phinney portrayed Bisping.

During a break in the fight following a Bisping intentional foul, Bisping also directed a middle finger towards Phinney.

According to Rivera's management team, that wasn't the worst of it. After completing his second-round TKO win, Bisping walked towards Rivera's corner and spat at them. But while Bisping denies directing it at anyone, Rivera's team says he did indeed hit a cornerman.

"Bisping's conduct after he was awarded the TKO is not acceptable," Rivera's manager Lex McMahon told MMA Fighting in an email. "Taunting and spitting at and on Jorge's coach Matt Phinney is the deplorable conduct of a schoolyard bully. And like all bullies, Mr. Bisping needs to be punished. In this instance, it would be appropriate if Bisping is fined and suspended by the commission and/or the UFC."

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UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Jon Fitch strikes BJ Penn at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

Daniel Herbertson, FanHouse

Daniel Herbertson, FanHouse

Tiequan Zhang submits Jason Reinhardt at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Tiequan Zhang celebrates his submission win over Jason Reinhardt at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Tiequan Zhang celebrates his submission win over Jason Reinhardt at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Mark Hunt punches Chris Tuchscherer at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Mark Hunt drills Chris Tuchscherer at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Mark Hunt drills Chris Tuchscherer at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Chris Tuchscherer leaves the Octagon bloody at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Curt Warburton ground and pounds Maciej Jewtuszko at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos

Curt Warburton ground and pounds Maciej Jewtuszko at UFC 127 on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at the Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia.

UFC 127 Fight Night Photos


McMahon said Rivera's videos were "marketing and gamesmanship designed to take Bisping out of his game."

Bisping admitted to losing his cool and apologized for his conduct, but took offense at Team Rivera's suggestion that he should be suspended.

"It doesn't surprise me really," he said. "It's just one classless move after another."

Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2011/02/27/bisping-denies-spitting-on-cornermen-riveras-team-wants-suspen/

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Teal Bunbury: A Striker For The Next Generation

teal bunbury u.s. soccerIt was a modern phenomenon befitting a very modern player.

Within minutes of converting a penalty kick against Chile in the U.S. national team's Jan. 22 friendly outside Los Angeles, Teal Bunbury had gone viral.

He had his composure from 12 yards and Telefutura announcer Pablo Ram�rez to thank. Bunbury, normally rather reserved, celebrated his first international goal with a little dance near the corner flag.

That's when Ram�rez' impromptu Black Eyed Peas-inspired call transformed a mundane penalty into an iconic moment, a forgettable friendly into a celebration and "Boonbooree" into both a trending topic and a t-shirt.

The player was among the last to find out about it.

"One of my buddies sent me a text and let me know about it," he told FanHouse about the "Boonbooree" call. "A couple of days days after the game I went online and listened to it for the first time. It was kind of shocking."

Ram�rez sealed the game's place in American soccer lore, but Bunbury did an awful lot to bring it to life. It was lurching along at a dreary pace when U.S. coach Bob Bradley inserted both the Sporting Kansas City forward and the New York Red Bulls' Juan Agudelo at the hour mark.

The pair (combined age, 38) added an obvious spark, attacking fast and fearlessly. Chile was on its heels, and Agudelo earned the penalty when he was brought down following a give-and-go with Alejandro Bedoya. Bunbury, sensing his moment had arrived, convinced the player he considered "my little brother throughout the whole camp" to relinquish his claim on the kick.

"Eventually he let me take it," Bunbury said.

What followed vaulted the 20-year-old into the country's soccer conversation, both the kind limited to 140 feverish characters and the more thoughtful part addressing the future of the American striker. Currently, the only reliable American goal scorer is playing for Italy, and while Jozy Altidore remains in the picture, the position remains up for grabs.

That prospect undoubtedly fueled the "Boonbooree" excitement. U.S. fans are hungry for a forward who can make things happen, and Bunbury appears to have that knack. It's a knack resulting from a combination of factors that leave him almost perfectly positioned to make an impact on the modern game. Bunbury is, in his own way, an embodiment of the growth of American soccer. He is a player for the next generation.

It starts with his roots. Although Bunbury's example is extreme, it's part of a growing and auspicious trend. Not everyone will be fortunate enough to be raised by a pro, but more and more American players will grow up surrounded by family, friends and coaches who know the game. Partly because of its increased popularity, partly because of our shrinking world and partly because those who grew up with soccer in the 1970s and early '80s now are having kids of their own, the number of players with early and knowledgeable soccer influences is surging.

"The landscape of youth soccer has changed dramatically in the last 10 years. It's not pockets of the United States. It's really consistent throughout the country," Sporting Kansas City coach Peter Vermes told this website.

Eleven years ago, Vermes was a teammate of Alex Bunbury on the Kansas City side that won the 2000 MLS Cup. The elder Bunbury was born in Guyana and moved to Quebec as a child. By the time Teal came along in 1990, his father was a four-year veteran of the Canadian national team. Alex would play professionally in England, Portugal and the U.S. His son would grow up with a love, appreciation and affinity for the sport, and with a father who pushed him to excel.

"It felt like every little thing I did in training he would critique," Bunbury told The Shin Guardian in January. "Obviously my teammates were there but it seemed like he was always singling me out for everything. If I had one bad touch he was on my case ... which isn't a bad thing though. It prepared me for my career."

Bunbury is a modern player in body, as well as at his foundation. He is not the kid of a dozen years ago, who settled for the soccer team because he was too small for football. At 6-feet-2, 175 pounds, he is big yet lean, strong enough to hold off defenders and win the ball, but quick and skillful enough to run at the opposition and create.

"He's sort of at the next level. In some respect, this guy's the prototypical wide receiver," Vermes told FanHouse. "You start talking about certain guys just because of their body makeup, and he has a lot of qualities that are very interesting for that (forward) position -- his size, his speed, the technical ability."

Bunbury scored 17 goals in his second and final season at the University of Akron, and tallied five in his rookie campaign in Kansas City last year (his first MLS goal is below). Vermes can use him in a variety of attacking positions, both leading the line and playing behind the strikers.

His transition from club and high school ball to Akron, from Akron to MLS and from MLS to the national team has appeared almost seamless. Bunbury even felt comfortable during a practice stint with English Premier League club Stoke City in December, scoring in a reserve team match.

The modern player is confident yet humble. He's comfortable with a ball and can anticipate the demands of each subsequent level. He has the skill, the long-term vision and the temperament to succeed.

"You attribute that to his professionalism at a very young age," Vermes said. "He's an extremely mature kid. He has a great work ethic. He comes to training every day to be the best, and it's just inside him. He's always realistic. Sometimes, athletes -- we've all been there -- what happens is you wind up being a little bit unrealistic, a little delusional when you do a little self evaluation.

"He's not that way at all. He's 100 percent a very good evaluator of his performance. That really helps his development. He can move on and build and work on certain aspects of his game. You can talk about it and he'll pay attention. You can spend time after practice working on different aspects.

"Because of that you can really indoctrinate yourself not only into a team, but into another level because people are willing to work with you and give you the benefit of the opportunities that are out there. He's just taking advantage of it."

Bunbury said the biggest jump was from college to Kansas City. "The speed of play was my biggest thing to adjust to, but granted, I think I adjusted to it quickly," he told FanHouse.

As far as getting comfortable with the national team, he credited Bradley's candor and renowned attention to detail for helping him plot his path.

"He's very meticulous. He's really clear on details and things like that," Bunbury said. "He's just always really, the few times I've been in camps and stuff, just trying to keep me grounded, give me things to work on. I still have a lot to learn and he's always trying to focus on different things to help me improve my game as much as possible."

Such as?

"He just wanted me personally to work on my opening runs, giving myself an extra yard from the defender and get the ball facing the goal, was his biggest thing, He wanted me to work on just keeping my head up and just staying focused."

Staying focused, at least on the big picture, has never been an issue. Bunbury has always had his sights set on a pro career, on success at the highest level. Players of his generation, whether they're the son of an international or not, will be exposed to the game at a young age -- the game beyond drink boxes and orange slices.

They'll have grown up with professional coaching in the youth and college ranks and a viable and competitive domestic league. They'll be monitored by an ambitious and well-organized national team program (or two) committed to player identification, and they'll benefit from the trailblazers who ensured that the American player will be considered and respected abroad.

It's the start of a virtuous circle that, hopefully, will produce players more athletic and more mature than their predecessors, and more moments like the one at the Home Depot Center.

That road also will have forks, and those options present a different kind of pressure. New clubs will come calling, and many players will be eligible for more than one passport.

Bunbury's first foray into the headlines came last November, when he accepted Bradley's invitation to join the senior side for the friendly against South Africa. Born in Hamilton, Ontario, Bunbury had followed in his father's footsteps and played for Canada's under-17 and under-20 teams.

Then Bradley called, and offered him the chance to make his own name for a team that had qualified for six consecutive World Cups.

According to Vermes, it was not a very tough decision.

"I felt as if he was leaning toward the United States, and at the same time he also wanted to respect the fact this his dad played for Canada," the coach told FanHouse. "He realized that he's got to live his own professional career, and I think he realized that a lot of the things he wants to achieve can lie with the United states team. It wasn't a selfish thing on his part at all. He just wanted to give himself the opportunity to play in the best competition he could."

Those offended by Bunbury's switch may have missed to important elements. The first was that Teal left Canada at the age of two, when his father signed with West Ham. When he returned to North America eight years later, the family settled in Minnesota. It was there that Bunbury went to high school. It was there where he began to feel American.

The second was that by playing for his adopted country, he did follow in his father's footsteps. Alex sought greater opportunity in Canada, and his son would do the same in the U.S.

"He's got my back 100 percent no matter what decision I would have made. He's happy with whatever decision I make. It was the right one, and I wanted to make it. He didn't want to pressure me," Bunbury said.

He addressed it like an adult. He addressed it with mature perspective.

"The fans and the media kind of blow it out of proportion and get carried away with it. Ultimately it's the player's decision on his future," he told FanHouse, shortly after the conclusion of the European transfer window featured scenes of Liverpool fans burning their Fernando Torres jerseys.

Torres was purchased for millions from Atl�tico Madrid and sold for millions to Chelsea. Bunbury argued that in the business of modern soccer, loyalty is far more nuanced.

"Obviously every player is going to try and stay as loyal as possible, but when it comes down to it you have to provide for your family and do what's best for you in your professional career. But that's the day and age we're in now and people are just exploiting things differently," he said.

"People are entitled to their opinions and their decisions. I guess I have to deal with it. I'm very honored and blessed with the decision I made and the opportunities I've been given, and I'm going to just continue to do what I can to make myself a better person on and off the field. I can't really please everybody."

Bunbury wants to play in Europe. It's been a dream of his since he followed his father there. But he knows that will come if he makes good on his commitment to Kansas City. It's a club that, thanks to a new stadium and rising profile, will provide a legitimate platform for him to showcase his abilities.

It's a city where he's already been embraced. A Sporting spokesman said that Bunbury has never refused a media request and has, along with good friend Kei Kamara, set an admirable standard for his interaction with fans on Twitter.

Those fans responded with their designs for the "Boonbooree" t-shirt that the club has been selling on its website. In about two weeks, Bunbury had progressed from national team camp hopeful to meme to fashion statement. It's a modern story about a player equipped to shape it. It's a story that's just beginning.

"I'm a bit more reserved, but I think it's good, bringing more attention to Sporting Kansas City, having a little contest with the shirt," he said. "I'm grateful and very humbled by it. I'm not a guy to go out and promote myself and things like that. I'm very honored that people have taken the time."

At this rate, Bunbury will continue to attract attention. There certainly is no guarantee of success, as the news that he may have dislocated his elbow in a Tuesday scrimmage attests. But there is no question that he possesses the tools required. He is at the vanguard of what could be a profound change in the way American soccer players are forged and followed.

"For right now I'm really happy with where I'm at," he said. "But I'm always looking forward."

Source: http://soccer.fanhouse.com/2011/02/15/teal-bunbury-a-striker-for-the-next-generation/

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

Match Play Presents Early Intrigue, Often Unfulfilling Final Rounds


This week's WGC Accenture Match Play Championship in Marana, Ariz., could be something really special.

Or it might not.

That's the tricky thing about match play. When competition begins Wednesday with 64 of the top ranked players in the world, there will be all sorts of intriguing possibilities. A few times over the years, promise has even delivered. In 2000, Darren Clarke beat Tiger Woods in the final. Woods won in 2003 by taking down David Toms in the final and won again in 2004 over Davis Love III. Woods defeated Stewart Cink in 2008. Even last year, although an all-England final, Ian Poulter's victory over Paul Casey had its viewing strengths.

But then there was 2001 when Steve Stricker beat Pierre Fulke in the Sunday final. Or 2007 when Henrik Stenson beat Geoff Ogilvy. And who doesn't remember Kevin Sutherland's 1-up decision over Scott McCarron in 2002?

Because players are eliminated as the week wears on, it is always possible that by the time Sunday's final match arrives, there is the possibility of a "Who's He?" taking on "Who Cares?"

That makes match play events fascinating in that much of the intrigue often occurs early in the week, and the final days can drag.

FORMAT

The top 64 players on the World Rankings after the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am qualified. Among those eligible, only Japan's Toru Taniguchi is missing, because of a neck injury. He was replaced by Stenson.

Wednesday will have 32 matches, and by Friday only 16 players will remain.

The quarterfinals will take place on Saturday, and the semifinals will go off Sunday morning. An 18-hole final will be played Sunday afternoon, along with a match to determine third and fourth place.

EARLY FUN

There's no shortage of potential upset matches. Englishman and World No. 1 Lee Westwood comes out of the blocks against Sweden's Stenson. Two No. 1 seeds have been eliminated in the event's 13-year history. Peter O'Malley beat Tiger Woods 2 & 1 in 2002 and last year Steve Stricker went down to defeat in the hands of Ross McGowan.

Poulter, the defending champion, will open with Stewart Cink. Two-time camp Geoff Ogilvy will face Padraig Harrington; Tiger meets Thomas Bjorn; Phil Mickelson starts with Brenden Jones; Stricker meets 17-year-old Italian Matteo Manassero, Luke Donald plays Charley Hoffman, Louis Oosthuizen draw Bo Van Pelt, Rory McIlroy goes against Jonathan Byrd, and Bubba Watson meets Bill Haas.

THE COURSE

The Ritz Carlton Golf Club at Dove Mountain was designed by Jack Nicklaus and opened in November of 2008. The resort offers 27 holes with tournament play scheduled for the Saguaro and Tortolita nines. The third nine, the Wild Burro, is Nicklaus' favorite of the three, but it was judged fan-unfriendly.

The course will be a par 72 and measure 7,849 yards but at an elevation of 3,500 feet. The greens and fairways are large.

FLASHBACK

Poulter didn't just beat United Kingdom countryman and close friend Paul Casey for the 2010 Accenture Match Play Championship, he became golf significant, advancing from his past role as an occasional background distraction to legitimate attraction.

And while the well-played 4 & 2 decision over Casey that went 34 holes may not have been a jolly-good attention getter in the colonies, at the least it provides something for golf to talk about other than Tiger Woods -- who earlier in the week make his first public appearance after an offseason of issues.

The victory was Poulter's first on American soil in addition to being his first World Golf Championship title. It also moved him to No. 5 on the World Golf Rankings, a career high.

"Feels just amazing," Poulter said. "Five or six years of hard work, coming over to change my residency, to be living in America, to finally win over here just means everything.

"I moved my family across. It's just so pleasing to be able to finally say now I'm a winner on the PGA Tour."

Casey, who needed one hole early Sunday to eliminate Camilo Villegas in 24-hole semifinal match that had was halted Saturday night by darkness, went 1 up with a birdie on the second hole, but never led again.

Poulter birdied the next hole to square the match and took the lead on No. 8. From there, he was 2 up after 18, 4 up through 26, and after Casey closed within two, came back with a birdie on the 33rd hole, hitting the day's best shot, to slam the door.

After missing the fairway badly to the right on the short par-4 and with mud caked on his ball, Poulter hit wedge to two feet for birdie.

"Probably one of the toughest shots I had," he said. "The ball had a lot of mud on it. It was quite a bare lie, because it was quite close to where the drain was. I hit that shot absolutely perfect."

BY THE NUMBERS

14: Years tournament has been played at four different courses.

9 & 8: Largest margin of victory in tournament history, by Tiger Woods over Stephen Ames, in 2006 opening round.

38: Holes played in longest championship match -- Jeff Maggert and Andrew Magee in 1999.

23: Players entered under age 30.

16: Wins in 33 career starts by Tiger Woods in WGC events.

AND OUR WINNER IS ...

Graeme McDowell.

What's the biggest stage in match play? That's right, the Ryder Cup.

Who played better the entire week of last year's European victory?

Graeme McDowell.

Source: http://golf.fanhouse.com/2011/02/22/match-play-presents-early-intrigue-often-unfulfilling-final-rou/

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In Honor of Tadanari Lee, A History of International Championship Winning Goals

Liverpool fans burned a Fernando Torres jersey on Monday night, furious that the striker their club pried from his hometown team in Madrid for tens of millions of pounds left Merseyside after three-plus seasons for Chelsea's tens of millions of pounds.

Torres probably didn't grow up dreaming of playing for the Reds or the Blues. His favorite team was Atl�tico, and he played at his boyhood club for a dozen years. Those ties were loosened only when Rafael Ben�tez came calling in 2007.

Liverpool fans may be angry, but Torres was never really theirs to begin with.

The final day of the European transfer window was yet another reminder that club soccer is a business first. Players are motivated largely by the trappings of the pro game -- the money, the titles, endorsements and prestige. That's not a criticism. It's the nature of the beast.

If it's inspiration, loyalty, permanence and passion that you're looking for, turn toward the international game. For the most part, national teams feature players wearing a shirt they've yearned to put on since they could walk. The money clearly is secondary, and they strive not for the next big contract, but for national glory, history, friends and family.

The soccer may not always be as good, and there's still a bit of recruitment here and there, but it's far more pure than what's on offer at the club level (except perhaps at Barcelona, which combines the best of both). Win a championship with your national team, and you're not a mercenary who earned his keep. You're a legend.

Last weekend, a relatively unknown, 25-year-old Japanese player named Tadanari Lee (photo) attained that status. The Sanfrecce Hiroshima forward, playing in just his second international match, scored the Asian Cup winner on a thunderous overtime volley against Australia.

The juxtaposition between Lee's singular transcendent moment and the near absurdity of the transfer window left us interested in tracking down similar goals. The goals that secured at title that the scorer dreamed of winning in the shirt he was wearing, the goals that brought glory to both the player and a nation.

Our definition of such a goal will be based on Lee's -- it broke a tie in the competition's deciding game and proved to be the final tally in a match concluding with a one-goal margin. A true winner.

These goals are milestones in the history of the sport, yet many were new to us. We think they're worth watching and celebrating, so have compiled many of them here. So, in honor of Lee, Torres and as a reminder of how meaningful soccer can be, here's a one-stop repository of the biggest goals ever scored:

WORLD CUP

The earliest goal we could find (sorry, Angelo Schiavio) occurred more than 60 years ago and doesn't look like much, but it still has plenty of meaning. As Brazil 2014 approaches, the nightmare of the Maracanazo will be brought up again and again. Here's Uruguay's Alcides Ghiggia, scoring the goal that won the game, 2-1, and the 1950 World Cup for La Celeste in Rio de Janeiro.

Four years later, the favorites went down again. A Hungarian team that blasted Germany, 8-3, in the first round probably figured it was on its way again when it took a 2-0 lead in the final. But the Germans, as they would prove for the next half century, don't go down easily. Helmut Rahn scored the 84th-minute winner to cement "The Miracle of Bern."

Germany won its second World Cup in 1974, again coming from behind against a favorite who became famous for playing beautiful, but ultimately losing soccer. Johannes Neeskens gave the Netherlands an early lead, but the Germans won the trophy on Gerd Muller's 43rd-minute strike.

The Germans recovered from yet another deficit in the 1986 final, but they couldn't stop Diego Maradona. His 83rd-minute pass split the defense and Jorge Burruchaga provided the deft finishing touch, breaking a 2-2 deadlock as Argentina won its second World Cup.

The only goal on this list that came from the penalty spot was the decider in a dour 1990 final in Rome. Argentina goalkeeper Sergio Goycochea already had guided his side through two shootouts, but he couldn't stop Andreas Brehme's 85th-minute effort. Germany was champion for a third time.

And of course, Andr�s Iniesta rescued the 2010 final in Johannesburg and brought Spain a deserved first World Cup title (FanHouse was there -- you can read the story from Soccer City here.)

CONCACAF GOLD CUP

Luis Hern�ndez gives lifts Mexico to 1-0 win over the United States and the 1998 Gold Cup title -- its third straight -- with this header just before halftime in Los Angeles.

Daniel Osorno salvages regional pride, and gives Mexico Gold Cup No. 4, with this golden goal against guest Brazil in 2003.



Benny Feilhaber
scores American soccer's goal of the decade as the U.S. comes from behind to defeat Mexico, 2-1, in the 2007 final at Soldier Field.

EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP

The Soviet Union won UEFA's first championship for national teams in 1960, defeating Yugoslavia, 2-1, in Paris. Viktor Ponedelnik headed in the overtime winner in a final between two countries that no longer exist.

A sharp, 84th-minute header from Marcelino Mart�nez lifted Spain to a 2-1 triumph over the Soviets in the 1964 final in Madrid.

Germany won its second European championship when Horst Hrubesch beat the Belgians in the 88th minute of the 1980 final in Rome.

Oliver Bierhoff introduced the world to the finality of the golden goal when his deflected shot confused Czech goalie Petr Kouba in the 1996 final at Wembley Stadium. Germany hasn't won a title since.

Four years later in Rotterdam, world champion France mounted an incredible comeback against Italy that was settled with David Trezeguet's overtime blast. Italy would get its revenge in Berlin six years later, when Trezeguet's shootout miss gave the Azzurri their fourth World Cup.

Greece ground out three stunning 1-0 upsets on its way to the 2004 title in Portugal. Angelos Charisteas scored the goal that defeated the hosts in the final.

Fernando Torres did the honors in 2008, leading Spain to a 1-0 win over Germany in Vienna and ending his country's 44-year trophy drought.

COPA AM�RICA

Uruguay defeated Chile, 1-0, in the 1987 final thanks to Pablo Bengoechea's rebound goal in the 56th minute. Chile has failed to make any of the nine finals since.

Rom�rio gives us a taste of things to come with the only goal of the 1989 final (against Uruguay at the Maracan� -- small revenge). It was Brazil's first Copa title in 40 years.

Argentina's most recent Copa Am�rica came all the way back in 1993, and it came thanks to Gabriel Batistuta. His well-taken 74th-minute goal was his second of the Guayaquil final and was enough to defeat Mexico, 2-1.

Mexico was the victim again in 2001 as Iv�n C�rdoba headed Colombia to the only major title in its history.

ASIAN CUP

Takuya Takagi brought Japan the first of its four continental championships with his first-half strike against Saudi Arabia in the 1992 final in Hiroshima.

Title No. 2 for the Blue Samurai came eight years later in Beirut. This time it was Shigeyoshi Mochizuki who bested the Saudis.

Perhaps the most improbable championship in the history of international soccer, Iraq's 2007 Asian Cup triumph was secured by Younis Mahmoud's 72nd-minute header in Jakarta.

AFRICAN NATIONS CUP

Nigeria was the villain of the piece in 1994. One year after Zambia's national team was wiped out in a plane crash on the way to a World Cup qualifier, the Chipolopolo embarked on an inspiring Nations Cup run in Tunisia. Emmanuel Amuneke, however, ended Zambia's hopes with his second goal of the final just after halftime.

Tunisia won its first and only championship in 2004 when Ziad Jaziri converted this second-half rebound against rival Morocco.

Shocking defending from Cameroon gave Mohamed Aboutrika the opportunity to break a scoreless tie in the 2008 final in Accra. Egypt won its second straight title.

This classy 85th-minute finish from Mohamed Nagy, known as Gedo, lifted Egypt to a 1-0 win over Ghana in Luanda, its third straight African championship and seventh overall.

Source: http://soccer.fanhouse.com/2011/02/02/in-honor-of-tadanari-lee-a-history-of-international-championshi/

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