Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Ex-NBA player Crittenton still wanted for murder (AP)

ATLANTA – Javaris Crittenton was wanted on a murder charge as police searched on Saturday for the former NBA player in Atlanta and Los Angeles.

Crittenton has been charged in the fatal shooting of 22-year Jullian Jones, a mother of four who was gunned down Aug. 19 on an Atlanta street.

A spokesman with the Atlanta police said Crittenton was not in custody. Calls to the FBI and U.S. Marshal's office weren't immediately returned.

Three of Crittenton's neighbors in Fayetteville said SWAT members executed a search warrant last week on his residence.

The neighbors declined to give their names to The Associated Press during interviews near Crittenton's home in an affluent cul-de-sac 17 miles south of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.

No one answered the door at Crittenton's residence, a three-story brick home with a manicured lawn and a small backyard.

Crittenton, who spent the 2006-07 season at Georgia Tech and played in 113 NBA games, allegedly killed Jones with shots fired from a dark-colored SUV, police said.

According to Atlanta police spokesman Carlos Campos, investigators don't believe Jones was the intended target. His motive, Campos said, appeared to be retaliation for an April robbery in which Crittenton was a victim.

Messages left for an agent who has represented Crittenton weren't immediately returned Friday or Saturday.

Crittenton, who averaged 5.3 points and 1.8 assists in his career, last played in the NBA during 2008-09. He was sidelined by an ankle injury the following season, during which he and teammate Gilbert Arenas were suspended for a gun-related incident in the Wizards' locker room.

Two days after a dispute stemming from a card game on a team flight, Arenas brought four guns to the locker room and set them in front of Crittenton's locker with a sign telling him to "PICK 1." Crittenton then took out his own gun.

Crittenton pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor gun charge on Jan. 25, 2010, and received probation.

After the Wizards declined to re-sign him, he signed a non-guaranteed contract with Charlotte before last season. The Bobcats waived him Oct. 15, and he then played five games in China for the Zhejiang Guangsha Lions, averaging 25.8 points. He also played 20 games for the NBDL's Dakota Wizards, averaging 14.3 points.

Crittenton was drafted 19th overall by the Los Angeles Lakers in 2007. He played little with Los Angeles and was traded to Memphis in his rookie year, then to Washington in December 2008.

NBA spokesman Tim Frank wrote in an e-mail to the AP that Crittenton is no longer under contract with Dakota.

"Beyond that I have nothing to add," Frank said.

____(equals)

Associated Press writer Ray Henry and AP sports writer Jim O'Connell contributed to this report.


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Doha bids to host 2020 Summer Olympics in autumn (AP)

DOHA, Qatar – Doha will bid to host the 2020 Olympics in autumn.

The International Olympic Committee agreed to the Qatari city's request for a Sept. 20-Oct. 20 time frame to avoid the summer heat, when temperatures can exceed 104 degrees.

Qatari Olympic Committee President Sheik Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani said Friday he wanted to "personally thank" the IOC and its President Jacques Rogge for their help.

"To simply have a chance to enter the bidding process is a step closer to realizing something very special for our nation," he said.

Doha will compete with bids from Rome, Madrid, Tokyo and Istanbul. The deadline for cities to express their interest is Sept. 1. The IOC will elect the 2020 host city on Sept. 7, 2013.

Dubai, South Africa and the United States have announced they will not enter a bid.

Qatar has already won the right to host the first soccer World Cup in the Middle East in 2022. The event will be held in June, and the desert country has proposed air-conditioned stadiums to beat the heat.

Doha also bid for the 2016 Olympics, but failed to make the short list. The games were awarded to Rio de Janeiro.

"We have listened and learned from our 2016 attempt to bid for the Games," said Sheikh Saoud bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, Secretary General of the QOC.

"We know that it is imperative that we guarantee ideal conditions for athletes, support staff, technicians and spectators, and ensure events are scheduled appropriately for all stakeholders and that is what we will do."

The Olympics are usually held in August. However, the event has been held later in the year. The 1964 Games in Tokyo and 1968 Mexico City Olympics took place in October, while the 1988 Seoul Games began Sept. 17.


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Fan falls on stairwell at Rangers Ballpark (AP)

ARLINGTON, Texas – A male fan fell on a stairwell near the home plate gate while leaving Rangers Ballpark.

After Texas' 8-4 loss to the Los Angeles Angels on Saturday night, the team said in a statement that it was monitoring reports of the man's condition. The adult fan got immediate attention at the stadium before being taken to a hospital, the team said.

Rangers spokesman John Blake said the team had no other information.

At Rangers Ballpark on July 7, Brownwood firefighter Shannon Stone died after tumbling over a railing and falling about 20 feet to concrete behind the left-field wall after reaching out to catch a baseball tossed his way.


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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Africans quick off the mark in Europe (AFP)

PARIS (AFP) – Senegalese Papiss Cisse was among the scorers as African goal poachers wasted no time making their mark when the French and German league seasons kicked off at the weekend.

Cisse, who struck 22 goals in 32 matches last season for Freiburg, was on target just after half-time and Congolese Cedrick Makiadi added a second before promoted Augsburg hit back at home to force a 2-2 draw.

FRANCE

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (St Etienne)

Bordeaux's French international goalkeeper Cedric Carrasso was reduced to the role of spectator when an apparently innocuous shot from the right by Gabon striker Aubameyang dropped under the crossbar and in as St Etienne came away 2-1 winners.

Younes Belhanda (Montpellier), Alain Traore (Auxerre)

Moroccan midfielder Belhanda opened the scoring for Montpellier after 36 minutes in a 3-1 win over Auxerre with his free kick slipping through the gloves of rookie Burgundy goalkeeper Donovan Leon. Burkina Faso playmaker Alain Traore equalised for Auxerre just before half-time with a stunning shot, only for the visitors to concede two late goals.

Abdoulrazak Boukari/Kader Mangane (Rennes)

Togolese midfielder Abdoulrazak Boukari scored the third goal in Rennes' 5-1 rout of newcomers Dijon which put the Brittany side top of the early table. Boukari, who netted after 50 minutes, also helped set up the opening goal when his cross allowed Colombian Victor Hugo Montano to score after 34 minutes. Franco-Senegalese defender Kader Mangane struck Rennes' fourth with a 75th-minute header.

GERMANY

Papiss Cisse and Cedrick Makiadi (Freiburg)

Senegal striker Cisse picked up where he left off last season with the opening goal as Freiburg drew 2-2 at Augsburg. The 26-year-old, who scored 22 goals in 32 games last season, opened the scoring on 48 minutes and Democratic Republic of Congo midfielder Makiadi added the second on 55 minutes with a header.

Sami Allagui (Mainz 05)

Tunisia striker Allagui scored the first goal in his side's 2-0 win over last season's runners-up Bayer Leverkusen by capitalising on a huge blunder in the Leverkusen defence on 32 minutes. Leverkusen defender Stefan Reinartz back-passed to goalkeeper Fabian Giefer, who completely mistimed his clearance, only succeeding in rolling the ball towards Allagui, who smashed home from a tight angle.

Isaac Vorsah and Chinedu Obasi (Hoffenheim)

Ghana centre-back Vorsah and Nigerian right-winger Obasi played the full 90 minutes as Hoffenheim lost their opening game 2-1 at Hanover 96. Obasi picked up a yellow card for a foul on Sergio Pinto as goals by ex-Germany striker Jan Schlaudraff and Norway's Mohammed Abdellaoue gave Hanover victory.

ITALY

Kevin-Prince Boateng (AC Milan)

Ghana midfielder Boateng scored the winner in faraway Beijing as AC Milan came from behind to defeat city rivals Inter 2-1 and win a record sixth Italian Super Cup. Alexandre Pato raced on to a through ball and when his shot struck a post, Boateng slid to score off the rebound.


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Brazil's Silva knocks out Okami at UFC 134 (AP)

RIO DE JANEIRO – After another dominant victory, Anderson Silva went celebrating around the octagon. His opponent went straight to the hospital.

Silva beat Yushin Okami by knockout at 2:04 of the second round, winning his 15th straight fight and successfully defending his middleweight title at UFC 134 on Saturday night.

Silva sent Okami to the ground with a right-handed shot to the jaw, then pounded him with strikes to the head to force the fight to be stopped.

After several hits to the head, it took awhile for Okami to get up. He left the octagon on his own feet, but organizers later said he had to be taken to a local hospital for precautionary reasons and would undergo a series of medical exams.

Silva's opponents have been getting beat up like Okami did more often than not recently.

The 36-year-old Brazilian, touted as the MMA's best pound-for-pound fighter, improved to 29-4 (14-0 in UFC), while Okami fell to 27-6 (10-3).

Silva's last loss had been against Okami in 2006, when the Brazilian dominated the bout but was disqualified after an illegal kick.

Silva has defended his title a record nine times and is the longest-reigning champion in UFC history.

"I'm so happy," Silva said. "I've trained so hard for this.

"It was awesome to do this here in Brazil, in front of the Brazilian fans," he said.

The Ultimate Fighting Championship made a much-anticipated return to Brazil, the country where mixed martial arts came to life in the early 1990s. There hadn't been a UFC event in Brazil since 1998, when the sport was not nearly as popular as it is now.

Silva, a striker known as "The Spider," struggled to get to Okami in the first of the five-round fight, but he came out attacking in the second and dominated.

He struck a right-handed shot with 4:17 left to send Okami to the ground for the first time. The Japanese fighter recovered, but not after the second charge by Silva in front of more than 15,000 fans who packed the HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro.

The 30-year-old Okami had won six of his last seven fights.

He wasn't the only one to lose to a Brazilian on Saturday as local fighters won four of the five fights on the main card.

In the light heavyweight division, Brazilian Mauricio "Shogun" Rua knocked out American Forrest Griffin in the first round with a series of strikes to the head. Rua had lost to Griffin in his UFC debut in 2007, and the crowd celebrated the victory by chanting, "Shogun is back, Shogun is back."

In the heavyweights, home-crowd favorite Minotauro Nogueira defeated American Brendan Schaub by knockout despite not having fought in 18 months because of a series of injuries, giving Brazil its first win of the night in the main card. The emotional victory gave the 35-year-old Nogueira a 37-6-1 record.

Bulgaria's Stanislav Nedkov made his UFC debut by defeating Brazil's Luiz Cane by knockout in a light heavyweight fight to improve his record to 12-0, while Brazil's Edson Barboza reached 9-0 by beating England's Ross Pearson with a split decision in the lightweight division.

Some of the celebrities at the event Saturday included retired soccer star Ronaldo, whose sports marketing agency manages Silva's career.

The fans constantly chanted during the fights, and even some soccer-stadium songs made their way into the fights.

UFC President Dana White has already said he plans to return to Brazil soon and increase the number of events in the country of 190 million people. There is even talk of a possible fight at a soccer stadium, which could attract a crowd of nearly 100,000 fans.

"We might be here every weekend now," White joked after the fights. "This event was successful even before it even happened.

"I've been doing events all over the world over the years and Brazil wins for the loudest crowd ever. The place was packed from the first fight. It was incredible."

___

Follow Tales Azzoni at http://twitter.com/tazzoni


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Chargers win; Cards' Kolb, Fitz hit on 80-yarder (AP)

GLENDALE, Ariz. – Kevin Kolb was the new guy in town, offering a glimpse of what he expects to bring to the Arizona Cardinals. Philip Rivers overcame an early mistake to put on the prolific show that is always expected of him.

In the end, both coaches came away mostly satisfied with their teams' performance in the San Diego Chargers' 34-31 preseason victory Saturday night.

Arizona led nearly the entire game before backup Billy Volek threw a 14-yard touchdown pass to Bryan Walters with 3 seconds to play to give San Diego the victory. Volek led the Chargers' reserves 90 yards in 12 plays to win it.

"It was a wild game," San Diego coach Norv Turner said. "We gave up a couple of big plays early, the interception return, we dug our selves in a hole. I like the way our guys handled it on the sideline and I liked the way they responded getting it to a one touchdown game at the half. The young guys at the end of the game I like the way they finished the game and found a way to win the game."

Kolb and Larry Fitzgerald, in a play called at the line of scrimmage, connected on an 80-yarder for the quarterback's first touchdown pass with his new team.

Rivers completed 18 of 28 passes for 198 yards and two touchdowns for the Chargers as both teams played their first units well into the third quarter. Chargers tight end Antonio Gates, in his first game since Dec. 5, caught two passes for 18 yards, including a 13-yarder for a touchdown.

Kolb was 11 of 20 for 205 yards with no interceptions. He completed 9 of 12 after starting the game 2 for 8. Fitzgerald caught three passes for 108 yards.

Patrick Peterson, Arizona's top draft pick, intercepted Rivers' pass and returned it 34 yards for a touchdown, and Andre Roberts scored on a 34-yard reverse for the Cardinals before the backups took over.

Arizona led 24-20 when the starters' night ended with about five minutes left in the third quarter.

"We missed some things," Cardinals coach Ken Whisenhunt said. "There's some things that we'll learn from this tape. But I was very pleased, obviously, in moving the ball and makings some plays."

Gates was happy, to say the least, to get back in action after being sidelined by plantar fasciitis, a painful foot condition.

"It was good, man," he said. "It was like riding a bike again. There's still a lot of rust, but I think the best thing is just going out there getting the repetitions and see how I feel being in a live game."

Ryan Matthews rushed for 69 yards on 10 carries, 48 of them in one run for San Diego. Beanie Wells had 63 yards on 10 attempts for the Cardinals.

The Cardinals struck for two big touchdown plays in a span of 2:38 in the first quarter. First, Kolb lofted a long pass up the middle that Fitzgerald gathered in before outrunning defenders to the end zone. It was the longest TD catch for Fitzgerald as a pro, although it doesn't count as a career best because it came in a preseason game.

Kolb hadn't directed a touchdown drive, let alone thrown a scoring pass, in his first two preseason games since being acquired by Arizona in a trade with Philadelphia.

"The touchdown was a unique play," Kolb said. "We actually made that adjustment at the line. Obviously, those coaches were pretty pleased with us communicating like that. I've said the sky's the limit for our offense, because the more that I can take on and be able to communicate with those guys, the better we're going to be.

"I think you can see whenever we execute and we don't kill ourselves how many times we can put drives together and go put it in the end zone."

Kolb had been to University of Phoenix Stadium only once before, as a reserve when the Eagles lost to the Cardinals for the NFC championship in the 2008 season.

Peterson stepped in front of Gates to pick off Rivers' pass and zigged his way past would-be tacklers put the Cardinals up 17-3 with 2:14 left in the opening period.

"I was screaming all the way to the end zone," said the rookie cornerback, the fifth selection overall, who had entered a short time earlier when cornerback Greg Toler left with a sprained left knee.

Rivers came back on the next series to direct a seven-play, 80-yard scoring drive. He was 5 for 5 for 81 yards on the series, culminated by the 13-yard TD pass to a wide open Gates.

"Throwing an interception for a touchdown is not good, but that is football and you have to be able to bounce back," Rivers said. "I thought for the most part we did. We came right back and answered with two scores but there a lot of errors and I can improve. "

Arizona turned to deception for its third touchdown. After Kolb completed passes of 19, 12 and 9 yards, Roberts took a pitch from Wells on a reverse and raced 34 yards for the score to make it 24-10. The Chargers got on the board again late in the half, going 70 yards in 10 plays, with Rivers tossing 3 yards to Malcom Floyd for a touchdown with 24 seconds left.


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Povetkin beats Chagaev for vacant WBA heavy title (AP)

ERFURT, Germany – Alexander Povetkin of Russia defeated Ruslan Chagaev by unanimous decision Saturday to claim the vacant WBA heavyweight title.

The title was Wladimir Klitschko's following the Ukrainian's victory over David Haye by unanimous decision in Hamburg last month, but was declared vacant when the WBA elevated Klitschko to "super champion" status.

Povetkin, the 2004 Olympic heavyweight champion, remains undefeated after 22 fights (15 KOs), and becomes the mandatory challenger for Klitschko.

"I don't want to think about Klitschko," said Teddy Atlas, Povetkin's American trainer. "I want to think about Povetkin and this title ... we'll think about Klitschko some other time."

Povetkin won on the judges' cards 116-112, 117-113, 117-113.

Chagaev, of Uzbekistan, held the WBA title from 2007-09. His record fell to 27-2 (17 KOs), with one draw.

"I'm sorry, today was not my day. But that's boxing, that's sport," Chagaev said. "He's a good boxer, a real world champion now."

Chagaev, 32, recovered from a poor start to rattle Povetkin in the sixth round, catching him cleanly with left and right hooks to leave the 31-year-old unsteady on his feet.

Atlas called on Povetkin to fight for the honor of his father, who died last year, and the Russian regained the upper hand in the ninth as Chagaev appeared to tire.

"My father always hoped and wanted for me to be a world champion," Povetkin said.

"It was a very hard fight. It was very hard to fight him. I have a lot of respect for him. He's a very difficult and patient boxer."


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Bryzgalov wants to deliver Stanley Cup to Philly (AP)

VOORHEES, N.J. – Ilya Bryzgalov already has a fan club. Wearing his Flyers jersey and cap, he finished a news conference and left to mingle with autograph seekers and picture snappers waiting for the All-Star goaltender at the bottom of the stairs.

On his way back up, a woman hollered, "You look fabulous!"

An orange crush has already developed and Bryzgalov hasn't even played a game yet.

The Flyers sure think he looked great in that No. 30 orange sweater as they showed off the goalie for the first time since he was acquired in June from Phoenix. Bryzgalov was an instant hit with the fans Thursday — and he'll be an even bigger one if he can become the netminder that brings the Stanley Cup back to Philadelphia for the first time since 1975.

"This is a team with rich history," Bryzgalov said. "The highest goal is to win the Cup. That's what this game is all about. That's all that matters."

Bryzgalov participated in a light workout with Danny Briere and a handful of teammates as the offseason winds down and the Sept. 17 start date for training camp looms. He knows the Flyers are counting on him to be as durable and successful as he was his last few seasons with Phoenix. Bryzgalov was a Vezina Trophy finalist in 2009-10, and went 36-20-10 with a 2.48 goals-against average and seven shutouts last season.

His contract demands made him expendable and the Flyers pounced. They acquired his rights, then signed him to a $51 million, nine-year deal to kick off a summer of change. Mike Richards, Jeff Carter and Dan Carcillo were among the veterans jettisoned out of town to make room for Bryzgalov and a slew of new, young players.

Bryzgalov understands expectations are Stanley Cup or bust.

"I never put the pressure on myself," he said. "I know my job. I know what I have to do."

Bryzgalov quickly endeared himself in Philadelphia with a humorous Twitter feed that found the city's newest citizen asking where he should live. As rain pounded the building and tried to drown out his press conference, Bryzgalov quipped that Philadelphia reminded him of Russia.

He could add some needed levity to a locker room during a grueling season.

Asked how the media turnout was compared to Phoenix, he joked about it.

"There's much more of you here," he said, "and you look better."

He coughed as pulled on his jersey and cracked, "I've got to quit smoking."

Bryzgalov then, seriously, amended the statement by saying he doesn't drink.

That had to make coach Peter Laviolette pleased. Laviolette instituted a "Dry Island," the name of a pledge in which he asked his players to stop drinking for a month. Richards and Carter repeatedly declined to take part in the pledge over the past two years — and were traded the same day.

The 31-year-old Bryzgalov hit on all the usual points from any introductory press conference: Philadelphia is a "top-notch" organization, he's ready to play 70 games if that number is needed to win a Cup, and he doesn't expect much of a tough transition to a new team and conference.

"Philly is a great place to play hockey," Bryzgalov said.

It's not a bad place for history buffs, either. Bryzgalov flashed a new helmet with the team logo and "We The People," airbrushed on top, Benjamin Franklin on the side, and the landmark Philadelphia Museum of Art also makes an appearance.

The Flyers can't wait to find out how all the pieces fit.

General manager Paul Holmgren said defenseman Chris Pronger should be ready for the start of the season. On Friday, Pronger visits the doctor who performed his offseason back surgery and expects to receive clearance to participate in training camp. Holmgren doesn't know if Pronger will play at all during the preseason.

"I know," Holmgren said, "it's been kind of a whirlwind of a summer around here."


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Monday, August 29, 2011

Shalala: Scandal 'has been quite painful for me' (AP)

CORAL GABLES, Fla. – Miami President Donna Shalala says she is "deeply troubled" by the extra-benefits scandal that could damage the university's athletic department for years to come.

Shalala's comments were published as a letter to the editor in Sunday's editions of The Miami Herald.

Shalala said the past two weeks "have been quite painful for me." She adds that the NCAA is taking the lead in the joint investigation into allegations made by former booster Nevin Shapiro. The convicted Ponzi scheme architect told Yahoo Sports that he provided cash, cars, gifts and sex to Miami athletes and recruits from 2002 through 2010.

The NCAA is expected to decide this week if eight football players who have been declared ineligible by the university should be reinstated.


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Viviani wins Stage 5 of US Pro Cycling Challenge (AP)

BRECKENRIDGE, Colo. – Elia Viviani of Italy claimed his second straight sprint stage while American Levi Leipheimer retained his overall lead Saturday after the fifth stage of the USA Pro Cycling Challenge.

Viviani, 22, a second-year pro who rides for the Italian Liquigas team, bolted ahead of Italian teammate Daniel Oss and won the 105.8-mile road race from Steamboat Springs to Breckenridge in 4 hours, 4 minutes and 31 seconds.

Jaime Castaneda (EPM-UNE) of Colombia was second, with Oss third, both in the same time as the winner.

"The final situation was perfect for us," said Viviani, the former track cyclist who again used an ideal final draft from Oss to ride to victory. "It was a good attack and I went at the best moment."

Leipheimer (RadioShack), the Montana native who lives in Santa Rosa, Calif., retained an 11-second margin over Christian Vande Velde (HTC-Highroad) of Lemont, Ill.

"You can't win a bike race without a team and the RadioShack team rode smart and strong," said Leipheimer, who took his first race lead winning stage 1 and regained it with his narrow individual time trial win in stage 3 over Vande Velde. "We were smart and calm and we were able to keep it together and let the break go."

Vande Velde (Garmin-Cervelo) finished 10th in the stage also among the large main field the finished together. Tejay Van Garderen (HTC-Highroad) of Bozeman, Mont., also finished in the main field and is third overall, trailing by 17 seconds.

Leipheimer, 37, who last week won the Tour of Utah and in June claimed the Tour of Switzerland, the biggest title is his 15th season, will now only need to ride in the protection of his teammates in Sunday's finale, the 70.9-mile Golden to Denver road race.

"I don't want to think about that now," said Leipheimer, a four-time top-10 overall Tour de France finisher. "I want to stay positive and keep doing what we are doing. We've done a great job so far, and we have to keep that momentum one more day."

Cadel Evans (BMC) of Australia, the reigning Tour de France titlist, finished 31st in the stage and remained seventh overall, trailing by 1:18.

Former two-time Tour of Italy winner Ivan Basso (Liquigas) of Italy, three-time Tour de France runner-up Andy Schleck of Luxembourg, Dutch riders Laurens Ten Dam (Rabobank) and American Tom Peterson assumed lead group early in the stage and built nearly a 5-minute advantage.

But Basso was the highest-place rider in the overall standings in the foursome beginning day, trailing by nearly 5 1/2 minutes.

The main field was content let the leaders remain at the front until steadily absorbing the quartet and finally entering the final last half-mile of the race as one group.


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Monfils hopes to turn magic into more success (AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Flamboyant leaps and an athletic frame that allows him to scramble after balls for spectacular shots in rallies have made Gael Monfils one of the best entertainers in tennis.

Thus far that has not translated into Grand Slam success for the 24-year-old Frenchman, who came away a loser to Czech Radek Stepanek 6-4, 6-4 in Sunday's ATP Washington Classic final, falling to 3-11 in ATP title matches.

But seventh-ranked Monfils, whose longest Grand Slam run was the 2008 French Open whee he reached the semi-finals, says a greater belief in his style of play rather than deeper focus is what will propel him into his first Grand Slam final.

"Have confidence in myself. Have a stronger belief," Monfils said. "I'm a believer but to reach the top I have to believe more, endure more. When I do two hours of practice, I need to add 30 minutes more.

"I need to feel something inside to go further. I think I show too much respect to my opponent. Maybe I can be more selfish. If I do that, I believe I can reach the finals."

Monfils split with Australian coach Roger Rasheed last month following three years together, saying at Washington that he was unhappy and that he and Rasheed had different goals.

Patrick Chamagne, who had been Monfils' fitness coach, is now his main coach as he heads into ATP Masters Series events at Montreal and Cincinnati ahead of the start of the US Open later this month.

"I think he can handle it," Monfils said. "I can trust in him."

That coaching comfort zone comes as critics say Monfils needs to be less of a showman on court and adopt a more tactical and focused approach in order to maximize his potential.

But Monfils also says he loves the role of entertainer, drawing roars and applause from crowds with amazing efforts on particular points.

"I want to show my passion to the people," Monfils said. "I'm pretty natural on the court. Always I remember what my parents told me. 'It's a gift to be on the tennis court.' Since I was three years old I keep it like this.

"I love playing games with my friends and trying tricky stuff. I try two percent (of those tricks) on the court. I like to try crazy stuff so I do it in a match."

The trick is turning flair into victory more often. Monfils gives a nod to such needs, but says he only needs fine tuning despite having lost a Washington final to a rival who was 2-5 against him, one he beat two weeks before on clay.

"My game is not far to be ready for big challenges against the big players," Monfils said. "I need to get back to work, be more aggressive, be more comfortable about small details, make my serve percentage a little higher.

"Physically I'm happy with where I am. Now I need to work to be stable and hopefully I can make a final."


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Double-amputee sprinter reaches world 400 semis (AP)

DAEGU, South Korea – The double-amputee sprinter known as the "Blade Runner" is steadily stealing Usain Bolt's stage at the world championships.

Bounding along on his carbon-fiber blades, Oscar Pistorius is proving he indeed belongs on the same track at major meets as able-bodied athletes.

On Sunday, in his opening heat of the 400 meters, the South African finished third in 45.39 seconds to advance to the following day's semifinals.

Although Bolt clearly remains the face of track, the 24-year-old Pistorius is demonstrating there's room for more. He never before has competed for a major title and might not even make it to Tuesday's final, but his story remains an inspiration to many.

Not to mention a contentious topic for others, who think the blades give Pistorius an unfair advantage.

For Pistorius, this was simply a chance to compete against the best. He fought off nerves and tracked Femi Ogunode of Qatar down the back stretch with an impressive burst.

"A big sense of relief," Pistorius said. "This is a platform where you work extremely hard to get here. Once you get here, you don't want to let it slide."

It's been quite a path to reach this point for Pistorius.

The International Association of Athletics Federations had banned the multi-Paralympic gold medalist from able-bodied competitions, saying the blades he wears gave him an edge.

In 2008, Pistorius was cleared to compete by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. But he failed to qualify for that year's Beijing Olympics and then again for the 2009 worlds in Berlin.

Stronger, leaner and more confident, this has been a breakout season for Pistorius. In one of his last races before Daegu, he earned the "A" standard with his best-ever time of 45.07 to earn a place at the worlds.

"Phenomenal race," Pistorius remembered. "Never had a race where every aspect went extremely well."

A place in the final might require an even better performance. After all, defending champion LaShawn Merritt hardly looked like he broke a sweat as he cruised to a 44.35 in his heat, the fastest time in 2011.

Pistorius' blades have been the source of curiosity and controversy, with some wondering if the technology actually aids the runner. Merritt tried to diffuse that notion.

"I'm not really sure what's going on with the technology," said Merritt, the Olympic gold medalist who competed in just his second race since returning from a 21-month doping ban. "I haven't seen a story on it or went that deep into what the technology is. I just see his times, and that he's slowly getting better. So I can tell he's been working."

Belgian semifinalist Jonathan Borlee said the IAAF could be left in an awkward position should Pistorius make it into the final.

"In that case I think, yeah, it will be a problem for IAAF, for (the) federation who will say, 'Oh it's not fair,'" Borlee said.

Others competitors use the presence of Pistorius as a challenge, not wanting to get beat by him. Chris Brown of the Bahamas powered down the home stretch to win the heat involving Pistorius.

"With him being inside the race, automatically everybody steps up," Brown said. "No one wants to get beat by him. Me definitely, I don't want to get beat him."

Pistorius was born without fibulas and had both legs amputated just below the knee when he was only 11 months old. He uses prosthetic blades made of the carbon-fiber material to compete, leading to his nickname and constant questions.

Pistorius' manager, Peet Van Zyl, dismisses such assertions that it provides him a benefit.

"We're going to focus on running," Van Zyl said. "That's it, that's our focus."

Some believe the blades could present a danger if they hit someone. So despite allowing him to compete, the IAAF said it made an agreement with the South African federation that Pistorius would only be allowed to run the leadoff leg of the 4x400 relay, which is still in lanes before the event turns into a pack race.

"I think that's a good decision" Borlee said. "For security, I think it's much better to have him in the first leg because, you know, if you get hit by his blades we can have serious injuries."

With the qualifying standards for the 2012 London Games expected to be similar, Pistorius could very well become the first amputee sprinter in track and field at the Olympics.

That would truly make him a trailblazer, and the mention of that made him almost squirm.

"There are Paralympic athletes that do exactly what I do every day, train just as hard," Pistorius said. "I'm very proud to be part of that movement. The Paralympics have taught me a lot.

"I really don't feel like a pioneer, but I'm very honored to be in the position I'm in."

___

AP Sports Writers John Leicester and Raf Casert contributed to this story.


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Bolt false starts and is eliminated from 100 final (AP)

DAEGU, South Korea – Usain Bolt again did the unbelievable when it mattered most in the 100 meters.

This time, no gold medal or world record, but a false start and straight elimination from the world championships in a race he has regally reigned over for three years.

In a stunning few seconds, Bolt's showboating turned into real-life despair when he jumped the gun and was led away from the track before Jamaican teammate Yohan Blake won gold ahead of American rival Walter Dix.

"Looking for tears?" Bolt asked. "Not going to happen. I'm OK."

While everyone had been wondering what Bolt would do to his world record of 9.58 seconds, it was Blake who won his first 100 title with a slow time of 9.92, the only racer to break 10 seconds in the final.

Dix took silver in 10.08 and Kim Collins of Saint Kitts and Nevis was third in 10.09.

"I didn't really think they were going to kick him out," Dix said. "How can you kick Usain out of the race?"

Even as the final went ahead, Bolt was the center of attention, and for once in his golden career he was not play-acting.

Instead of beating the clock, he beat the starting gun.

Three steps into in his race after the starting gun, Bolt's face turned into a primal scream. And in one instinctive move he started pulling off his Jamaica shirt, needing no one to tell him he had made the biggest error in his career.

He was shown the red card and led to the sideline.

He gritted his teeth in self disgust, and threw up his arms in desperation. Hands over his head, he walked away before slamming the blue stadium wall.

All dreams of a third golden triple in as many major championships were gone, and he had no one to blame but himself. One year ahead of the London Olympics, the world championships showed him as human instead of an infallible sporting superstar.

At the 2008 Olympics, he performed beyond expectations by getting three sprint gold medals and as many world records. One year later at the world championships in Berlin, he did the same with three more titles. Only because his Jamaican 4x100 relay team ran the second fastest race in history was he denied another three world records.

So by now, even with a slower season, no one knew what to expect — except it would be another victory on Sunday.

Instead, they saw Bolt do what the 25-year-old Jamaican had never done at a major meet — he lost the cool which made him famous.

Bolt's error will again raise questions about the rule change in 2010 that cut out the allowance for one false start. In the semifinals, world indoor sprint champion Dwain Chambers was also eliminated because of false start.


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Wie tied for lead in Canadian Women's Open (AP)

MIRABEL, Quebec – Defending champion Michelle Wie shot a 4-under 68 on Saturday in the Canadian Women's Open for a share of the third-round lead with Ai Miyazato and Tiffany Joh.

The winner last year at St. Charles in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Wie is trying to become the first player to win the national championship two years in a row since Pat Bradley in 1985-86.

Joh had a 65, and Miyazato shot a 71 to match Wie at 12-under 204 at Hillsdale Golf Club.

Angela Stanford (66) and Brittany Lincicome (69) were a stroke back, and Cristie Kerr (69), Jiyai Shin (69), Na Yeon Choi (69), Becky Morgan (70) and Song-Hee Kim (71) followed at 10 under.

There was some doubt that the final round can be completed before Hurricane Irene hits the area Sunday.

"It's something everyone's going to play under," Wie said. "I'm kind of expecting the worst. But whether conditions are good or bad you still have to play well and there are still players to beat and things you have to do. I don't think it really makes that much difference."

In a bid to beat the storm, starting times were moved up 90 minutes to 7 a.m., the players were grouped in threesomes instead of twosomes and will go off both the first and 10th tees. If the fourth round can't be completed, a three-way playoff will be held among the 54-hole leaders.

"It's a pretty quick turnaround, but I kind of like it," Wie said. "It gives me less time to think about things."

Joh had the best round of the day.

"It's really exciting for me because coming into this year I had conditional status and I didn't even know how many events I was going to play," Joh said. "Just having a chance to contend at one, that's what dreams are made of. I just really excited. I'm going in with no expectations because I've never been in this position anywhere. Whoever I'm paired with, I'm sure I'm going to learn loads from them."

Miyazato is ready for anything.

"Either way, we need to finish the tournament," she said. "So I'll just try to play my style of golf no matter what happens. I grew up in an area that was windy, so I actually like playing in windy conditions, but if it rains it will definitely be difficult. But because I'm used to those situations, I don't think there will be any problem keeping my tempo."

Maude-Aimee Leblanc was the low Canadian at 8 under after a 67.

"Coming into the tournament, I liked the way I was playing and hitting the ball, so I felt I had as good a chance as anyone," said Leblanc, from Sherbrooke.

Jocelyne Bourassa (1973 La Canadienne) is the only Canadian to win an LPGA Tour event in Canada.


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Sunday, August 28, 2011

Vettel wins Belgian Grand Prix to widen F1 lead (AP)

SPA, Belgium – Defending Formula One champion Sebastian Vettel won the Belgian Grand Prix on Sunday to strengthen his overall lead with seven races remaining.

Vettel started from pole position to win his seventh race of the season and 17th of his career. The German led Red Bull to a 1-2 finish, with Mark Webber finishing close behind.

McLaren's Jenson Button began in the 13th starting position but caught Fernando Alonso near the end to take third place.

Lewis Hamilton's slim title hopes took a further blow when he crashed his McLaren early in the race.


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Drivers wish Patrick well in new endeavor (AP)

SONOMA, Calif. – Ryan Hunter-Reay wished Danica Patrick well and believes his Andretti Autosport teammate will do fine as she makes the jump to the NASCAR circuit.

Hunter-Reay also said Thursday that having Patrick race in IndyCar for the past seven years provided a marketing boost but that he is confident the series will do well even without one of its most recognizable drivers.

"I don't think IndyCar's growth and health rises and falls with Danica," Hunter-Reay told The Associated Press. "Certainly Danica has a massive following, and rightfully so. She's respected by all of the drivers here.

"But if we're relying on Danica for the health of the series, we've got bigger problems on our hands, which is not the case."

Patrick announced Thursday that she is leaving open-wheel competition to race a full Nationwide season and a part-time Sprint Cup schedule in 2012.

The move had been expected for some time and didn't catch many drivers by surprise. Patrick has spent the past two seasons running a split series between IndyCar and the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

Speaking before Friday's practice session at Infineon Raceway, Patrick didn't rule out possibly returning to IndyCar to race in the Indianapolis 500.

"I've said I love Indy and I'd like to keep doing it but we're not clear on what's possible for that in the future," Patrick said. "It's something we're keeping in mind to try for."

A day after making her decision to leave the IndyCar series public, Patrick looked and sounded very relaxed. She repeatedly flashed her familiar smile and joked with reporters during a 30-minute interview session.

"Mostly I'm just relieved that it's out there and I can talk about it," Patrick said. "The truth's out there. I don't feel trapped behind the secrets and the deals behind the curtains that nobody can really know about yet. I just had to really think about what was going to make me the happiest where I wanted to race."

Hunter-Reay, whose controversial win Aug. 14 at New Hampshire was upheld by an appeals panel earlier this week, pointed to changes IndyCar is making for his optimistic outlook. IndyCars will have a newer, lighter chassis in 2012, while Chevrolet and Lotus are joining Honda in producing the 2.2 V-6 engines the cars will use.

"Our product is on the track racing," Hunter-Reay said. "Next year with the new cars, and GM, Honda and Lotus going head to head, we've got a lot of momentum."

Will Power, second in points behind Dario Franchitti, agreed.

"At the end of the day IndyCar is what made Danica," Power said. "She does bring a lot of publicity now but it's IndyCar that originally got her into this position. The decision to go to NASCAR wasn't a surprise at all. She was offered more money to go there, so it's as simple as that."

Patrick has had mixed success since her arrival on the IndyCar circuit as a virtual unknown in 2005.

That same year Patrick became the first woman to lead at the Indy 500 — she finished fourth — then won her first IndyCar race in 2008. Her best season came the following year when Patrick finished fifth overall.

Heading into this weekend's Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, Patrick is 12th in points.

Franchitti, who clocked the fastest time during Friday's qualifying at Infineon Raceway, has been a longtime friend of Patrick's. Like most drivers, he had been expecting her to make the switch to NASCAR for a while.

"Her results (in IndyCar) had not been what she had hoped and I could see her getting frustrated because of that," Franchitti said. "She's gone a direction she feels is better for her, and good for her. I'll miss having her around as a friend at the track.

"Certainly in the Nationwide Series I think she'll do a very good job there. I'll be watching with interest."

Patrick, who emphatically denied that she was making the move because of the money, doesn't think IndyCar will suffer much without her.

"The car count is up and the competition level is definitely up," she said. "(IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard) has brought some fresh ideas and approaches to the IndyCar series, and as I've said over the last few years things are really on the up and up. It doesn't change how I feel and what I want to do ... but I think IndyCar is still going up."


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AP source: Big 12 expects A&M's departure (AP)

Big 12 officials expect Texas A&M to announce within the next week that it plans to leave the conference.

A person with knowledge of what was discussed during a conference call of the Big 12 board of directors Saturday told The Associated Press that Texas A&M officials talked about their anticipated departure.

"No major surprises," said the person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the talks. "A&M didn't say they were leaving, but certainly gave every indication that's what they plan on doing."

As for the timing of such a move, that person said, "it would not be a surprise that it would happen sometime this week" and likely the only thing that could keep that from happening would be if the 12-team SEC determines it is not ready to add any more teams at this point.

The Aggies have publicly expressed interest in joining the SEC and on Thursday formally informed Big 12 Commissioner Dan Beebe in a letter from school President R. Bowen Loftin that Texas A&M was exploring all of its options.

Among items discussed during Saturday's call was how much money Texas A&M would forfeit for leaving the conference and likely negotiations of that amount, which could be $20 million or more.

SEC presidents and chancellors met two weeks ago and reaffirmed their "satisfaction with the present 12 institutional alignment." But they also acknowledged the possibility of future expansion and discussed criteria for that.

If Texas A&M leaves the Big 12, the move could trigger another shakeup across college sport. Texas last year considered offers to join the Big Ten and the Pac-10 before deciding to stay in the Big 12. Nebraska (Big Ten) and Colorado (Pac-12) left the Big 12 in July.

Texas A&M would have to settle its membership with the Big 12 before it could apply for membership into the Southeastern Conference.

"The Big 12 Conference members have been and will continue to conduct meetings related to the situation with Texas A&M and conference membership," Beebe said in a statement Saturday. "There will be public statements as appropriate and necessary if and when action is taken."

It was unclear if Texas A&M would be able to move to the SEC as early as the 2012-13 school year. The Aggies will certainly play their Big 12 schedules in football and other sports for the upcoming season, as Colorado and Nebraska did a year go before their departures from the league.

The person who spoke on condition of anonymity said the other nine Big 12 members again reaffirmed the desire to keep the conference intact.

"Obviously now, I think there is a little more urgency to think about if A&M leaves, who's No. 10, or who's 11 and 12 as well," that person said.

SMU athletic director Steve Orsini said Thursday that he has had informal talks with Big 12 officials for some time to inform them of the school's improvements and growth. He said it has been SMU's goal to join a BCS conference since it wasn't included in the Southwest Conference's merger with the Big 8 that formed the Big 12 in 1996.

Texas A&M opens its season next Sunday at home against SMU.


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Keselowski grabs 3rd win of season at Bristol (AP)

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Brad Keselowski was a long shot, at best, to race for the NASCAR championship this season.

Then he turned it up a notch and became a legitimate contender to make the 12-driver Chase for the Sprint Cup championship field.

Now, he's the hottest driver in NASCAR and is forcing everyone to consider him a serious threat to unseat five-time defending champion Jimmie Johnson.

Keselowski picked up his third win of the season — second since breaking his ankle in an Aug. 3 crash — and took a huge step toward making the Chase.

"I don't know what more to say about Brad and the (Penske Racing) team," said four-time champion Jeff Gordon. "They're strong, and you put them in position at the end of the race, they're going to pull off the wins. They're, to me, as strong of a team out there right now."

It's an amazing turnaround for Keselowski and his No. 2 Penske Racing team.

He was ranked 21st in points four races ago, when his struggling team went to a test session to work on road course improvement. But Keselowski was in a nasty accident during that session that left him with a broken ankle.

It's hardly slowed him.

Since the accident, Keselowski won at Pocono, finished second at Watkins Glen, third at Michigan and now has the Bristol victory.

Although he's walked gingerly in the month since the crash, he hopped up and down in excitement as he climbed from his Dodge.

"An awesome car, an awesome team!" he yelled. "Tony Stewart, Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt won this race. It's a race of champions. There are races that pay more, that are races that might have a little more prestige, but this is the coolest damn one of them all."

But Keselowski regretted all the post-race celebratory jumps about an hour after the race.

"Stupid is as stupid does," he said. "Last 100 laps I was certainly starting to feel it. But you know, I don't think anybody wants to hear me whine. Every once in a while I do and they tell me just to shut up anyway, and it hasn't been very productive. It obviously has felt better. I wish I wouldn't have jumped off the damned car."

The win moved Keselowski up one more spot to 11th in the standings, and he's jumped 10 spots over the last four races. He's currently in position to claim the first wild card spot, and could clinch his berth next week at Atlanta by virtue of his three wins.

What's the secret of his turnaround?

"A team that just starts to click and believes in each other," Keselowski said. "We've just made good adjustments to our cars over the last few months. We made good adjustments to our car today and we find ourselves in Victory Lane. I can't believe it, I really can't."

Other Chase hopefuls didn't fare so well.

Dale Earnhardt Jr., Stewart and Clint Bowyer began the race ranked ninth, 10th and 11th, but because none has a victory, they could get bumped out of the Chase depending on how the wild cards develop. Earnhardt wasn't a factor Saturday night and finished 16th, Bowyer struggled the entire race and was 26th and Stewart had a miserable weekend — he qualified last in the 43-car field, was quickly lapped and finished four laps down in 28th.

It was no better for Paul Menard, who could earn a wild card spot based on his victory at Indianapolis. But he struggled, ran into the back of Denny Hamlin as they tried to avoid an accident in front of them, and wound up 30th.

At the front of the field, Martin Truex Jr. finished second and Gordon was third despite leading a race-high 206 laps. Five-time defending NASCAR champion Johnson was fourth and was followed by Jamie McMurray and Kenseth, who led 110 laps.

Hamlin, clinging to one of the wild cards, rallied to finish seventh despite Menard running into the back of his car to cause serious damage. He jumped one spot in the standings to 13th and is currently holding the second wild card because of his one win this season.

"We did what we had to do," Hamlin said. "I wish I could race harder, but at this point we have to have solid finishes. If we just handle business the next couple weeks then we'll be OK."

Ryan Newman was eighth and was followed by Edwards and Marcos Ambrose.

Kyle Busch, who on Friday picked up his record 50th Nationwide Series victory and was looking for his third consecutive win at Bristol in the Cup race, finished 14th after bringing out the final caution of the race with 87 laps to go when a tire issue sent him into the wall.

The finish also cost him in the standings: Busch is now tied with Johnson for the Sprint Cup Series points lead.

"Kind of disappointing day," Busch said. "We just never could get the car to where it would feel like it had in the past."

___

Follow Jenna Fryer on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JennaFryer.


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Jacory Harris expects to play in Miami's opener (AP)

CORAL GABLES, Fla. – Seeming upbeat as usual, Miami quarterback Jacory Harris did not hesitate when asked about the fast-approaching start of the Hurricanes' season.

"I expect to play," Harris said. "Yes, sir."

The NCAA will decide soon if that becomes reality.

Harris and many other Miami players implicated by the extra-benefits scandal that threatens to negatively impact the program for years spoke out for the first time Saturday about the mess. None provided any specifics about the claims that former booster and imprisoned Ponzi scheme architect Nevin Shapiro made to Yahoo Sports, alleging that he provided extra benefits to Hurricane players and recruits from 2002-10.

But many, like Harris, expressed some sense of optimism that they may be cleared in time to play Sept. 5, when Miami opens at Maryland.

_"These people, they know what to do," defensive lineman Marcus Forston said.

_"I'm very hopeful," wide receiver Travis Benjamin said.

_"We know we're all we've got right now, this team," safety Ray Ray Armstrong said.

_"My spirits are high. I'm the same person. I'm not letting it affect me," linebacker Sean Spence said.

They are among 12 current players known to be under investigation by the university, and presumably the NCAA, for their involvement with Shapiro. A person with knowledge of the process has told The Associated Press that eight players — Harris, Spence and Benjamin among them — have been declared ineligible by the university, which then turned the matter over to the NCAA and asked that a reinstatement process be expedited.

The school has confirmed that they asked the NCAA for rulings on Thursday. The school has not confirmed how many players are ineligible, nor any of the names involved. On Saturday, Miami coach Al Golden — while not discussing any players specifically — seemed to suggest much of the university's investigation revolves around incidents that happened long ago.

"I was sad for the guys, because I think we all as individuals, we hope to grow, we hope to mature, we hope to learn from mistakes," Golden said. "These guys are no different. If what has been alleged, if there ends up being some truth to it and they do have to serve some penalties, it's three years ago. So not only are they different than they were last year, now we have to go back three years. That's why I feel bad for them."

Besides Harris, Forston, Spence, Benjamin and Armstrong, the other current players who were named by Shapiro in the Yahoo Sports article were Vaughn Telemaque, Aldarius Johnson, Olivier Vernon, Marcus Robinson, Adewale Ojomo, Dyron Dye and JoJo Nicholas.

Miami President Donna Shalala said several days ago that the school was trying to determine the eligibility status of 15 student-athletes. She did not specify names or how many were football players.

"Sometimes life's not fair," Miami center Tyler Horn said. "But I'm not worried about it. I'm focused on what I can control, and that's football."

Independent of the scandal, this Miami camp began with one giant question: Would Harris or Stephen Morris play quarterback?

As of Saturday, if that's been decided, no one is letting the secret out.

Both played well at times last year, and Golden has said even during this camp that the two are alternating with the first-string. Offensive coordinator Jedd Fisch said Saturday that even he doesn't yet know who will start.

"I have no idea what coach Golden and his staff are going to be doing in terms of the depth chart," Morris said.

Added Harris: "We're just taking it day-by-day, going out there every day, giving it our all, having fun. Whatever the depth chart says come whenever we have to release it, I think by Tuesday, then that's what it is and that's what's going into Maryland."

Harris' teammates said Saturday they're impressed with the way he's handled the cloud hanging over his senior season.

"Jacory's Jacory," Morris said. "He's a happy guy all the time. Always smiling, always got a joke to say. He's just a great guy. ... All the situations that's going outside of this program, he's putting that behind him and is just focusing on football, focusing on this team."

Harris entertained questions for much of the allotted half-hour at the team's media day Saturday, doing so with typically the largest crowd of reporters gathered around him. He cracked a few one-liners, made fun of some teammates as they walked past, things he would have done under typical circumstances.

If he's frightened for his future, it wasn't showing.

"It's just a little bump in the road," Harris said. "It's something that we've got to get through. Whatever happens happens. At the end of the day, you've still got to weather the storm and fight through it. That's pretty much what we're doing as a team. We're going to fight through it and we're going to come out on top."

___

Follow Tim Reynolds on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ByTimReynolds


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Saturday, August 27, 2011

Ogando does fine, Texas loses after he leaves

CHICAGO (AP) — The Texas Rangers were totally satisfied with starter Alexi Ogando's performance Saturday night.

"He took us where we needed to go," Rangers manager Ron Washington said.

Ogando worked seven full innings, gave up six hits and two earned runs while striking out five in his longest effort of 2011. Reliever Koji Uehara then gave up Alex Rios' RBI double in the eighth and the Chicago White Sox beat Texas 3-2 to end a three-game losing streak.

Brent Lillibridge came in to pinch-run after Paul Konerko's one-out single in the eighth. Rios hit a full-count pitch from Uehara (1-3) down the left-field line for the tiebreaking run.

"I felt like the first two innings I made good pitches but they got lucky hits," Ogando said. "They were not hard-hit balls, they just got good breaks."

Ian Kinsler homered twice for the Rangers. The AL West leaders had two runners on in the eighth, but Nelson Cruz flied out to end the inning.

Rios was showered by boos when he entered in the first inning after White Sox right fielder Carlos Quentin injured his left shoulder making a diving catch.

Rios overcame a tough start. In the bottom of the first, he came up with runners at the corners and struck out. He had just two hits in his last 27 at-bats before the big hit and had become one of the main targets of frustrated White Sox fans.

"I've never lost my confidence. It's something that athletes can't do. It will bring you down," Rios said. "I'm just trying my best and I'm not going to quit. Even if I'm at my lowest point, I'm not going to quit. I'm ready to battle."

Quentin tumbled to make the catch on Craig Gentry's shallow flyball, but came up favoring his shoulder and was immediately removed from the game. X-rays came back negative and he will be examined further on Sunday.

"It's not broken. That's what I was worried about," White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. "Carlos is a big kid. When you put all the weight in just one spot, you're going to be sore for a little while."

Kinsler drove the second pitch of the game down the left-field line, waiting to see if it stayed fair before he trotted around the bases. It was his sixth leadoff homer of the season and 19th of his career.

He homered again in the third on a 1-2 pitch after fouling off six pitches. He has three multihomer games on the year, 10 overall.

Kinsler finished with three hits to break out of a prolonged slump. He came into the game hitting .189 (18 for 95) over his last 22 games.

The two solo shots were all that White Sox starter John Danks gave up. He pitched seven strong innings, scattering seven hits. He struck out five and didn't issue any walks.

"(Kinsler) and I are close, played a lot together in the minor leagues," said Danks, a native Texan who came up in the Rangers' farm system. "We keep in touch, I'll have to talk to him tonight, for sure."

Danks gave up a one-out double to Cruz in the fourth, but Cruz was caught attempting to steal third to end the threat.

Ogando tossed a shutout against the White Sox on May 23 in Texas and hadn't allowed a run against them in 11 career innings until Alexei Ramirez's two-out single in the first.

Juan Pierre followed with a two-out single in the second to put the White Sox up 2-1. Even with the loss, the Rangers have won seven of nine games on their current road trip and 10 of 13 overall.

Jesse Crain (8-3) put two runners on in the eighth but got Cruz to fly out to right field to end the threat.

Sergio Santos worked the ninth for his 26th save in 30 chances.

NOTES: Washington was reluctant to give SS Elvis Andrus the day off Saturday. "All these guys have been grinding. They all need a day off and I can't give it to them," Washington said. "So I decided today was a good day to do Elvis." Andrus ended up pinch-hitting in the ninth and striking out. ... Texas sends LHP Derek Holland (11-4, 4.23 ERA) to the mound for the series finale on Sunday. Holland is 5-0 with a 2.63 ERA in his last eight starts and is tied for the AL lead with four shutouts. Gavin Floyd (10-10, 4.66) will throw for the White Sox. Floyd struck out seven of the first nine batters he faced in his last start, but then allowed five runs over the next 2 2-3 innings in a no-decision.


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Altuve's inside-the-park HR helps Astros win

HOUSTON (AP) — Rookie Jose Altuve and J.D. Martinez are giving the Houston Astros a good look at their future.

Altuve hit an inside-the-park drive for his first major league home run, a leadoff shot that sent the Astros over the San Francisco Giants 7-5 Saturday night.

Altuve had three hits and Martinez homered, doubled and drove in four runs as the Astros matched a season high with their fourth straight win.

"It's nice to see everyone do well, not just us," Martinez said. "I feel that the guys are starting to jell together and see what everyone can do. What they bring to the table and what their role on the team is. It's nice to see us putting everything together and winning games."

Rookie Jordan Lyles (2-7) gave up two runs, both of them unearned, in five innings. Mark Melancon got two outs for his 13th save.

"I can't say enough about them," Lyles said of his fellow rookies. "The night that Altuve and J.D. had. The monster shot that J.D. had. It's a little bit easier when they put up big innings like that."

Astros manager Brad Mills said Lyles did a good job of pitching around the seven hits he allowed.

Madison Bumgarner (7-12) was tagged for seven runs and 11 hits in 6 2-3 innings.

"I felt like it was a battle the whole night trying to get the ball where it's supposed to go," Bumgarner said. "I was trying to fight through it and make pitches. They did a good job tonight of hitting the ball."

"Just one of those days," he said. "You don't really have anything working. Just have to find a way to get through it. It stinks that I gave up that many runs, especially with our offense scoring five runs."

Aubrey Huff homered and Cody Ross and Pablo Sandoval each drove in two runs for the Giants, who have lost three in a row and 16 of 22.

Altuve opened the bottom of the first with a drive off the wall in left-center field. Ross came over from center field to track down the ball and relayed to shortstop Mike Fontenot, whose throw to the plate was high and wide.

Third base coach Dave Clark put up a stop sign, but Altuve ran through it and scored.

"As soon as I hit it, I knew it was in the gap," Altuve said. "I just kept running hard. I saw that the center fielder didn't know where the ball was. I just kept running. As I was close to third base, I tried to look up, but Sandoval was blocking me, so I couldn't see. When I realized there was a sign, it was too late."

The home run was the first inside-the-parker for the Astros at Minute Maid Park since Adam Everett on Aug. 6, 2003. The last Houston player to hit an inside-the-park shot for his first career homer was pitcher Butch Henry on May 8, 1992, at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh.

Tony Campana of the Cubs was the last player whose first big league home run was inside the park. He did it Aug. 5 against Cincinnati.

The Astros scored four times in the third for a 5-0 lead. Martinez hit a double that drove in Lyles and Altuve, who had both singled. Later in the inning, an error by Bumgarner set up Jimmy Paredes' RBI single and Clint Barmes' sacrifice fly.

Ross cut it to 5-2 with a two-out, two-run single in the fourth. Huff hit a solo homer in the seventh.

Martinez extended the lead to 7-3 with his fifth homer, a two-run shot that chased Bumgarner.

Melancon relieved in the ninth and gave up Sandoval's two-run double before getting two groundouts to end it.

NOTES: Giants OF Carlos Beltran, on the 15-day disabled list retroactive to Aug. 8 with a strained right hand, took batting practice from the right side and hit from both sides in the batting cage before the game. ... Houston recalled LHP Wesley Wright from Triple-A Oklahoma City and optioned RHP Jeff Fulchino to Triple-A Oklahoma City. ... Houston wore jerseys with "Los Astros" across the front for the first time in team history. ... RHP Henry Sosa (0-2) gets the start in the series finale Sunday against the Giants. San Francisco announced LHP Dan Runzler (1-2) as its starter. It would be Runzler's first start of the season. Giants manager Bruce Bochy said LHP Jonathan Sanchez, who has a left ankle sprain, would not start after reporting soreness in his ankle after throwing off a flat surface Friday. ... Bill Doran was the last Astros player to lead off a game with an inside-the-park home run, doing it on April 22, 1987, against Atlanta in the Astrodome.


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Friday, August 26, 2011

At Miami, there's 1 big question: 'How?'

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — A sports bar is packed with Hurricanes boosters, most of whom are wearing their team's orange and green colors. They spontaneously break into chanting their unofficial anthem, "It's great ... to be ... a Mi-a-mi Hurr-i-cane!"

As they sing, the sight of Nevin Shapiro running into an Orange Bowl end zone and getting chased off by a security guard pops onto nearby televisions.

Groans rise from the crowd.

For Miami football and its fans, there's just no getting away from The Scandal. The sports bar scene happened at a long-scheduled gathering in Palm Beach County, where Hurricanes fans tried generating enthusiasm for the new season. A few days ago, that would have been easy. Considering this get-together came two days after Yahoo Sports published its report that Shapiro — the mastermind of a $930 million Ponzi scheme — provided money, sex, cars and gifts to 72 players over a nine-year period ending in 2010, it's nearly impossible.

The NCAA is investigating what happened. There's plenty to sift through. How did this happen? Who let this happen? Why did Shapiro have such access? Did anyone check his background? And perhaps most important, how did these secrets, if true, remain secrets for so many years?

Simple questions, lacking simple answers.

"It was one guy with a lot of money," said former Miami quarterback Steve Walsh, who led the Hurricanes to the 1987 national title and is now a high school coach in West Palm Beach, Fla. "And it wasn't his, so he was going to spend it freely. That's the other part of it. It's so difficult for an athlete. If some guy wants to buy you drinks, 'Sure!' You're not going to say, 'Who are you?' And now the guy's sitting in prison. In there, he can allege all he wants."

Shapiro is serving a 20-year sentence for his crimes, with federal officials saying he is scheduled to be released in 2027. He already is serving his penalty. It could be months before Miami knows what penalty, if any, it will face for having a rogue booster first try to befriend, then bring down, dozens of Hurricanes over the span of nearly a decade.

"That's my school," said Maria Elena Perez, Shapiro's attorney. "I didn't want any of this to happen to my school."

The current Hurricanes implicated by Shapiro in the Yahoo Sports story are quarterback Jacory Harris, safeties Vaughn Telemaque and Ray Ray Armstrong, receivers Travis Benjamin and Aldarius Johnson, defensive linemen Marcus Forston, Olivier Vernon, Marcus Robinson and Adewale Ojomo, tight end Dyron Dye, defensive back JoJo Nicholas and linebacker Sean Spence.

They have not spoken publicly about the matter. Their teammates who are talking say they don't have the answer to that fundamental question — "How?" — either.

"It came out of nowhere," center Tyler Horn said. "I can't control it. And if I can't control it, there's no need to be worrying about it."

___

Miami's Hurricane Club has nine levels of giving, and each step up the ladder means better gifts and greater access to the athletic department. The top levels ($30,000 or more) provide just about anything a fan would want — sideline passes, VIP passes, exclusive reception invitations, even interacting with a student-athlete.

Shapiro promised plenty, including a $150,000 pledge for a student-athlete lounge that was supposed to bear his name. He made other donations as well, including $50,000 to men's basketball.

Things like that endeared him to Miami, a private school of more than 9,000 undergraduates and an endowment in the neighborhood of $600 million, although the athletic department has long said it lacks the deep pockets of many schools it competes against. Shapiro became a highly valued donor. When he wanted something like seeing practice, typically someone would at least listen.

"The way it would work is, someone from the Hurricane Club or whatever would walk him to the field and tell the security guards and the coaches who he was and why he was there," said an athletic department employee, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigations by both the NCAA and the university. "It didn't happen a lot. One day, I was out there and saw the guy trying to get into a huddle. Never saw that before by anyone."

That incident happened while Larry Coker coached the Hurricanes.

When asked about Shapiro on Friday, Coker told The Associated Press he knew about the former booster during his time at Miami but never interacted with him. He didn't elaborate further.

"He's a bad person," Coker said.

Coker's successor had the same sentiment.

When Randy Shannon took over as coach, Shapiro's access to practice stopped. Shannon played at Miami in the 1980s and told confidants that he had seen people like Shapiro around the program before, warning assistant coaches that if he ever learned they interacted with the booster, he would fire them personally.

"Randy told everyone, players and coaches," said a former football assistant coach, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he expects to be interviewed by the NCAA. "Deal with him at your own risk. He told me personally, 'The guy's poison. Bad news. Trouble.' And we listened. So then the guy started trying to reach out to players directly more and more. They would come to us and complain that they'd go bowling and he'd show up. It was a running joke around here. We'd ask, 'See your stalker last night?'"

Shannon, who was fired by Miami in November, declined comment when reached by The Associated Press. Another member of his staff, also speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed that Shannon was not an ally of Shapiro.

"Randy hated the guy," the second coach said.

But, according to Shapiro, some players hung out with him anyway — a thrill for someone who has described himself as a lifelong Hurricanes fan. He was even featured in 1992 by The Miami Herald, which detailed his antics as he sat in the stands watching Miami play rival Florida State in a particularly close game not decided until the final moments. He screamed, "We are the gods of college football!"

Whether he still feels that way is anyone's guess. This much is clear: He's gone from fan to pariah in a hurry.

"We've overcome many, many obstacles over the years," said former Miami player and longtime radio analyst Don Bailey Jr. "And we've proved five times, when people tell us something is impossible, it's only their opinion."

Until the scandal broke Tuesday, when Shapiro's accusations were detailed by Yahoo Sports, some around the Hurricanes never knew who the short, brash, aggressive man was. Others knew his name, but didn't know what he looked like until seeing images and videos that popped up in recent days. Many players denied knowing him whatsoever, even after they were accused by Shapiro of taking his money and gifts.

"I don't know about everybody else. I can only speak for myself," said one of those implicated, Houston Texans receiver Andre Johnson. "I don't really know what it is he alluded to."

Shapiro's lifestyle began unraveling a couple years ago, when the money started running dry and investors began thinking they'd been had. He never paid for the lounge. He stopped paying for his tickets. He even asked for the $50,000 he donated to the men's basketball program back.

By then, the damage was done. Shapiro's claws were deeply within the Hurricanes.

"It makes me sick," said former Miami athletic director Kirby Hocutt, who now holds the same job at Texas Tech. "It makes me sick. I gave my being and every waking moment I had for three years to that program. So, yeah, it's sad. It's disappointing."

Hocutt became aware that Shapiro was making threats more than a year ago. While the university said it looked into those claims, it appeared few, if any, took him seriously.

"It was allegations that a convicted felon was making from prison," Hocutt said. "And we could not find any credible information. ... We didn't know what allegations he was making, how significant or insignificant they were. But from July or August (of 2010) through last Thursday, which was my understanding when the NCAA notified Miami, there was not another word about this spoken. It was a rogue booster and convicted felon saying things. There were more important things to focus on."

Hocutt hired Al Golden as Miami's football coach in December. Golden said he was unaware of the Shapiro story and threats until the Yahoo Sports piece was published, meaning he was not told of the looming problem during the interview process.

"There was no reason to," Hocutt said.

All the reasons they couldn't find then are staring them squarely in the face now, in the form of Shapiro's allegations. Miami joined a growing list of schools with major football programs to be investigated by the NCAA for rule-breaking in the past 18 months. Others include Southern California, Ohio State, Auburn, Oregon, Michigan, North Carolina, Georgia Tech and LSU.

And one of the principals involved in the USC matter, Reggie Bush — who lost his Heisman and saw his team stripped of a Bowl Championship Series title — even says something needs to change.

"Obviously a lot of things going on right now are terrible, moreso for the college players," said Bush, now with the Miami Dolphins. "It's tough when you can take a college player's career and dream away from him at the snap of a finger. Something needs to be done."

___

What remains baffling to many people, including some at Miami, is that when Shapiro was a big-wheel donor, anyone with a computer could have found that his background was not pristine.

Miami-Dade County court records show that not only was Shapiro guilty of felony aggravated battery against a club owner Peter Honerkamp in 1995, but ordered to pay $7,340 in a related civil case and serve 18 months' probation. Honerkamp said Shapiro suckerpunched him during a dispute about cover charges and nearly lost sight in one eye.

Shapiro's stepfather, Richard Adam, was indicted in Florida in the 1990s for allegedly helping operate a loan scheme that resulted in clients losing somewhere around $5 million in fees — a case with some obvious similarity to what Shapiro did years later, though on a much larger scale. After spending years in a Canadian prison while fighting extradition to the United States, Adam eventually reached a plea deal on a conspiracy charge.

Adam's lawyer at the time: Maria Elena Perez, who now represents his stepson.

"We all thought he was spending his father's money at first," said the Miami athletic department employee, referring to Shapiro. "That's what he said."

Shapiro had a yacht, a multimillion-dollar home, fancy cars, jewelry, all the toys suggesting success. He sat courtside at Miami Heat games, even getting to be around Shaquille O'Neal and Dwyane Wade in some social situations.

That, too, seemed to all be a facade. Shapiro promised to buy more than $700,000 worth of tickets from the Heat. He never paid.

"It's very unfortunate," Wade said when asked about the Miami situation and Shapiro's involvement with the Hurricanes. "I wish the best for Miami. I'm a big supporter of the university."

Wade said nothing surprises him anymore when it comes to scandals, and Jack Hulse would agree.

Hulse, who now lives in Indiana and still lists a second address in Sarasota, Fla., lost nearly $500,000 in Shapiro's scheme, thinking he invested in a grocery-distribution business. Instead, federal prosecutors said Hulse's money — and tens of millions more, including about $1 million from former Wisconsin football coach Barry Alvarez (a close friend of Miami President Donna Shalala) and his family — went toward paying off at least $5 million in illegal gambling debts and a lavish lifestyle filled with excess.

"Nevin Shapiro used other people's money to live a fantasy life built on false promises to unsuspecting victims," said U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman.

Hulse could not agree more.

"I met him one time at a birthday party," Hulse said. "He just kind of seemed like he was full of himself. Somebody pulled me in and introduced me and that was basically it. He introduced himself and he wasn't somebody I would be particularly thrilled to be around. A little cocky guy."

Hulse doesn't expect to ever recover his money through the forced bankruptcy proceedings, or the court order that Shapiro repay his victims nearly $83 million.

"Pennies on the dollar," Hulse said. "If that."

___

At the booster event, Walsh grabs the microphone and starts telling a story about the end of the 1985 season.

It's a few days before the Sugar Bowl, and he and some Miami teammates are in a New Orleans bar. Someone offered to buy the Hurricanes some drinks and they accepted, never thinking twice about checking out who the man was.

"We didn't care," Walsh says. These were the big, bad Jimmy Johnson Hurricanes, after all. A team full of swagger that had just closed the regular season by embarrassing Notre Dame 58-7 and was beginning a run of what would become an NCAA-record 58 straight wins at home.

So on some of the things Shapiro alleges — the most minor claims — Walsh almost apologetically can understand how difficult it would be for anyone to turn the freebies down.

"I've never met Nevin Shapiro," Walsh says, before adding, tongue in cheek, "he never bought me dinner, never bought me drinks. I'm jealous."

A few people laugh.

"But in all seriousness," Walsh continues, "you look at the source. The guy made a living, almost a billion-dollar living, by telling lies. ... If the money went from his account to a player's account, we've got problems. If the money went from his account to a player who signed with his agent, Miami's got problems. That all remains to come out. Some people don't have the best intentions. They want to be closer to the program and will do anything to get closer."

And in this case, no one at Miami pieced together the entire Nevin Shapiro story in time to avoid maybe the biggest mess in program history.

___

AP Sports Writers Betsy Blaney, Tom Canavan, Steven Wine, Paul Weber, Chris Duncan, Michael Marot and Rick Gano contributed to this report.

___

Follow Tim Reynolds on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ByTimReynolds


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Pirates' Tabata signs 6-year, $14M contract

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Jose Tabata grew up listening to his father regale him with tales of Hall of Famer Roberto Clemente.

The stories gave Tabata an appreciation for Clemente's outstanding play on the field and his ideals off it. He hoped to one day be given a chance to follow in Clemente's footsteps out in right field.

The 23-year-old Venezuelan have plenty of time to do it now.

Tabata signed a six-year, $14.75 million contract extension through 2016 on Sunday with three club options that could keep him in Pittsburgh through 2019. Tabata, acquired in a trade deadline deal with the New York Yankees in 2008, is considered one of the cornerstones for the Pirates, who have already surpassed last year's 57-win total with six weeks to go in the season.

"He's one of the staples we need to have in place to be a championship organization to win the NL Central in the future," said Pirates manager Clint Hurdle.

The contract includes club options of $6.5 million in 2017, $7.5 million in 2018 and $8.5 million in 2019, a potentially hefty investment for one of baseball's more budget-conscious teams.

Yet general manager Neal Huntington thinks the signing could be a steal if Tabata continues to improve. He began Sunday batting .267 with four homers and 17 RBI during an injury plagued season that's included a lengthy trip to the disabled list with a quad injury.

"We feel like we've just begun to scratch the surface of his potential," Huntington said. "It's our job to help him grow."

The team doesn't normally negotiate during the season, but Huntington pointed to Tabata's willingness to remain in Pittsburgh as a major reason behind the signing.

"The Pittsburgh Pirates gave me an opportunity to play in the big leagues," Tabata said. "I don't want to talk about the money but I can say it's good because I can take care of my family. I like Pittsburgh. I like the city. I like the people. I want to stay here for a long time."

The agreement caps a week of somewhat lavish spending by Pittsburgh. The team ponied up $13 million to sign top overall pick, pitcher Gerrit Cole, and second-round selection Josh Bell on Monday.

Hurdle called the week "a positive development" about the club's commitment to winning following nearly two decades of losing and praised the front office for sticking to the plan it laid out when Hurdle agreed become the manager last winter.

"They have done nothing but back up with action everything we've talked about," Hurdle said.

Tabata, third baseman Pedro Alvarez, second baseman Neil Walker and All-Star center fielder Andrew McCutchen comprise the team's core. Tabata is the first to sign an extension. Walker and McCutchen are committed to Pittsburgh through 2015 with Alvarez through 2016.

The club is hoping to extend Walker and McCutchen. While Walker — a Pittsburgh native — is considered a slam dunk, things could be significantly more difficult with McCutchen, who is quickly becoming one of the best at his position in the game.

"Andrew McCutchen is certainly a great young player in the making," Huntington said. "We hope to keep him here many, many years into the future. But if we're not able to find a common ground, we've still got many years left with Andrew."


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Fowler, Rockies rally late, beat Dodgers in 13

DENVER (AP) — Dexter Fowler made the most of another chance.

Fowler atoned for a crucial mistake by hitting an RBI single with two outs in the 13th inning Saturday that gave the Colorado Rockies a 7-6 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Fowler misplayed a line drive by Trent Oeltjen into an inside-the-park homer in the 12th that gave Los Angeles a 6-4 lead.

But after Colorado tied it again, Mark Ellis hit a two-out double in the 13th and Fowler lined a single inside third base off Blake Hawksworth (2-4).

"I figured he probably wasn't going to go in, so I was looking for the ball out, away," Fowler said. "That's what he gave me."

After his botched play in the 12th, Fowler led off the bottom half with a walk. After getting to third when Troy Tulowitzki singled to right, Fowler scored when Todd Helton doubled on the 15th pitch from closer Javy Guerra. Helton, who earlier homered on his 38th birthday, helped set up a tying grounder by pinch-hitter Eliezer Alfonzo.

"I can't tell you I've seen a better at-bat than Todd Helton took," manager Jim Tracy said. "Obviously, it's the at-bat of the season. It's not surprising that it's that guy."

Helton fouled off eight two-strike pitches from Guerra before he lined a double to right field. Helton, who said he was trying repeatedly to hit a home run, said the key to the at-bat was "basically finally getting a strike to hit. I chased a lot of balls out of the zone, fouled them off. (I was) able to get something down a little bit and put the bat head on it..."

As for maintaining his concentration and focus during that long confrontation, Helton said, "I guess you focus on the process instead of what could happen, just focus on taking the right swing and getting the right pitch."

Aaron Miles opened the Dodgers 12th with his second home run in 349 at-bats. He connected off Matt Reynolds after four previous Rockies relievers had combined to limit the Dodgers to one hit in five scoreless innings.

Oeltjen came up with two outs and hit a sinking liner that got past Fowler. The homer was the second for Oeltjen, who beat shortstop Troy Tulowitzki's relay throw with a headfirst slide across home plate. It was the Dodgers' first inside-the-park homer since May 6, 2008, when Blake DeWitt hit one against the New York Mets, but Fowler was able to gain redemption with his game-winning hit.

"You run for a ball, go to catch the ball," Fowler said, "and I didn't even have to dive for it and it cuts on you. Hey, you're like, 'Oh man, what do you do?' Whatever happened, happened. That's in the past and you just got to move on from there."

J.C. Romero (1-0) pitched the 13th for the Rockies, who won the 5-hour, 7-minute marathon to improve to 2-6 in extra-inning games. For Guerra, it was his first career blown save after converting his first 10 opportunities, a stumble due in large part to Helton.

"I think it was his best against mine," Guerra said. "Today was his day and he got me."

After Helton's hit, the Rockies tied the game with one out when Alfonzo grounded to third baseman Miles, and Tulowitzki scored.

"I wasn't set up (to throw home)," Miles said. "It would've been a sidearm throw, and with Tulowitzki running right away I don't think I would have gotten him. We were playing for the tie there anyway."

The Rockies loaded the bases in the 11th with one out but failed to score.

Eric Young Jr. stole a career-high three bases for Colorado, scored twice and drove in a run. The Rockies survived a shaky start from Esmil Rogers, who gave up a career-high 12 hits in six innings.

Dodgers starter Ted Lilly gave up three hits and three runs in 4 2-3 innings. He was forced to leave because of stiffness in the right side of his neck.

Young walked in the first, stole two bases and scored on Carlos Gonzalez's groundout. Helton led off the second with his 14th home run.

Young walked in the third, stole second with two out, advanced to third on a wild pitch and scored on a single by Gonzalez.

The Rockies made it 4-all in the seventh when Chris Iannetta led off with a double against Josh Lindblom and later scored on Young's single. Young was later picked off and caught stealing in a rundown that required six throws. Tracy removed Young from the game after that play because of calf tightness.

NOTES: Alex White will start Tuesday and make his Rockies debut against the Astros, and struggling Jason Hammel will move to the bullpen. Aaron Cook, who had been scheduled to start Tuesday, will instead start Wednesday. White was one of four players acquired from the Indians in the trade-deadline deal for Ubaldo Jimenez. ... Helton homered for the fifth time on his birthday, having also done it in 1998, 2000, 2002 and 2004. ...Dodgers CF Matt Kemp extended his hitting streak to 10 games. ... Dodgers reliever Kenley Jansen (cardiac arrhythmia) is scheduled make his first rehab appearance Sunday for high Class A Rancho Cucamonga. The Dodgers expect him to return to their bullpen Friday. ...Rockies INF Ty Wigginton is 2-for-22 after going hitless in three at-bats. ... Dodgers RF Andre Ethier, who had an ingrown toe nail removed and didn't play Friday, pinch-hit in the seventh, struck out and stayed in the game. ... Kevin Millwood, who has allowed five home runs in 13 innings in his first two starts for the Rockies, start against the Dodgers for the first time since May 8, 2002, while with the Braves. Chad Billingsley, who has a 7.88 ERA in seven games at Coors Field, will start for the Dodgers.


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Marlins still can't figure out Padres

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Eighty-year-old Jack McKeon has seen plenty in his 53 years in professional baseball. But the Florida Marlins manager has had enough.

After the San Diego Padres routed the Marlins 14-1 on Saturday night to hand the club it's 14th loss in 16 games, McKeon was not happy.

The Padres scored four runs in the first inning in a pattern that has become too familiar to the Marlins.

Florida has allowed 12 first-inning runs in its last four games. In their six games against the Padres this season, the Marlins have allowed 16 first-inning runs.

"It's tough. It's getting embarrassing," McKeon said. "Before we get out of the second inning, we're behind three or four runs. It's getting kind of old."

Nick Hundley homered and doubled twice in going 4 for 4, Orlando Hudson homered and drove in four runs, and San Diego took advantage of the Marlins again.

The Padres beat Florida for the sixth straight time this season while outscoring them 44-11 in that span.

"(San Diego) isn't a very good hitting club, but they kick the hell out of us every time we see them," McKeon said. "It's either our pitchers aren't that good or something."

Hudson connected for a three-run shot in the first inning off Clay Henley (1-5). One pitch later, Kyle Blanks homered into the second deck of the brick Western Metals Supply Co. building in the left field.

Hundley's two-run drive came in the sixth. San Diego finished with 16 hits, eight of them for extra bases.

"I felt like I was making some good pitches," Hensley said. "But any pitch that was remotely up, they hit. Any mistake that I made, I didn't get away with."

Aaron Harang (12-3) combined with two relievers for his third win in four starts. Harang gave up three hits, including Jose Lopez's homer in the sixth, in six innings. The righty walked five walked and struck out six.

Cameron Maybin had three hits for the Padres and Blanks, Will Venable and Logan Forsythe each drove in two runs. Hundley scored three times.

Since returning from the disabled list on Aug. 12, Hundley has hit safely in seven of eight games while batting .536 (15 of 28) with four doubles, three triples, two home runs and five RBIs.

Hensley, winless in six starts, allowed a season-high seven runs on seven hits in 3 2-3 innings.

Omar Infante returned for Florida after missing 14 games with a fractured right middle finger. He went hitless in four at-bats.

NOTES: The Padres have beaten Florida 14 of 18 times overall dating to August 2009. ... The Marlins have allowed 97 first-inning runs, tops in the majors. ... Hundley's home run was the 1,000th hit in Petco Park since it opened in 2004. ... Hensley made his major league debut with San Diego in 2005 and pitched four seasons with the Padres. ... In Sunday's series finale, Marlins right-hander Anibal Sanchez (7-6, 3.97 ERA) will try for his second straight win after snapping a career-high 11-start winless streak in his last outing. He will be opposed by Padres' lefty Corey Luebke (5-6, 2.99), who has held left-handed batters to the third-lowest batting average in the majors at .147 (17 for 116).


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Djokovic quits with sore shoulder in Cincy final

MASON, Ohio (AP) — Novak Djokovic's remarkable winning streak ended with a big grimace, one that puts a new spin on the U.S. Open.

The world's top-ranked player was forced to retire in the second set Sunday because of a sore right shoulder, giving Andy Murray the championship at the Western & Southern Open.

It was the Serb's first bad moment in his nearly flawless season. Djokovic had won 16 consecutive matches since his only loss of the season, in the semifinals against Roger Federer on June 3 at Roland Garros. The winning streak has taken a toll.

Djokovic talked about feeling exhausted in Cincinnati, coming off his record fifth Masters series title in Montreal last week. He said his serving shoulder had bothered him for about the last 10 days, but he'd been able to manage the soreness and keep winning.

On Sunday, he couldn't go on.

"There is no good loss, that's for sure," said Djokovic, now 57-2 on the season. "The good thing is there's a week, eight days to the start of the Open.

"I'm confident I can recover and be ready for the U.S. Open."

He was completely off his game against the fourth-seeded Murray, won the first set 6-4 and was ahead 3-0 in the second when Djokovic decided just before the rain came that he couldn't continue. Djokovic got his shoulder treated after he lost the first set, grimacing at one point.

With his serve registering only in double-digits and his forehand limited by the pain, Djokovic realized he couldn't compete. He said he would have retired even if the rain had temporarily stopped the match.

"I could have maybe played another couple of games, but what for?" he said. "I cannot beat a player like Murray today with one stroke."

It was Murray's second title this season. The 24-year-old Scotsman also won at the Queen's Club. He lost his other final match to Djokovic at the Australian Open.

Djokovic felt worn-down heading into the final, the strain of all those recent matches catching up with him. He said his loathing for losing was pulling him through matches.

It wasn't enough on Sunday.

Djokovic was off his game at the outset, repeatedly hitting forehands, backhands and volleys everywhere but in the court. Murray broke his serve to open the match and won 10 of the first 12 points.

Could Djokovic win another one while running on fumes and playing with a bum shoulder?

By the end of the first set, he knew the answer.

"I was generally exhausted playing many matches, but the exhaustion is not the reason," Djokovic said. "The reason is shoulder pain. I just could not serve."

Murray was more rested, though not by choice. He lost in the opening round at Montreal a week ago, giving him unwanted time to relax and work on his game. The break seemed to help — he didn't lose a set all week in Cincinnati.

With the crowd behind him, Djokovic got back into the match by breaking Murray to tie the first set at 3. Murray broke him right back, ending a long baseline rally by coming to the net for a put-away volley. Djokovic walked around the court with a blank expression, his mouth open.

His demeanor said he was in trouble.

Djokovic made 20 unforced errors in the first set, which ended when he dumped a routine forehand into the net. Djokovic squatted in disappointment, then went to his chair and took a timeout to have a trainer stretch his right arm and shoulder.

When the trainer pushed on the side of his rotator cuff with his thumb, Djokovic grimaced.

Murray broke him again to start the second set, an indication the shoulder wasn't going to get better. Djokovic started protecting the shoulder on his follow through.

When Murray left him with an easy volley into an open court, Djokovic couldn't get anything on his overhead return, smacking it weakly toward the net. That point gave Murray a 3-0 lead and forced Djokovic to accept that he wasn't going to get a chance to keep his winning streak going.

The health of his shoulder will become an overriding question heading into the U.S. Open, which starts on Aug. 29. Rafael Nadal is the defending champion, and he's also got some physical issues — burned fingertips on his right hand that bothered him in Cincinnati.


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