2012年7月16日星期一

For the Worst Scandal, the Worst Punishment

Jessica Danielle is the creator of the Player Perspective sports blog.
July 16, 2012
One of the ugliest marks on the N.C.A.A. is its eagerness to deliver harsh punishments to student athletes while ignoring egregious offenses committed by the adults in charge. In fact, the adults who run the N.C.A.A. have made a habit of either ignoring their own rules, hiding behind civil and criminal cases as reasons not to hand down harsh penalties, or enforcing rules unevenly and only when convenient.
It’s too late for the N.C.A.A. to stop Jerry Sandusky and his enablers at Penn State University. But it’s not too late for it to set a new standard for how it enforces its rules and determines who gets to participate in collegiate sports.
Over the years, student athletes have been dismissed or suspended from programs for such dastardly deeds as accepting too much money for a summer job or selling their own jerseys. Schools have engaged in violations like providing perks or committing academic fraud. Penalties have varied.
In the 80s, the N.C.A.A. shut down Southern Methodist University’s football program for a year because the school helped pay under the table.
But Penn State’s abetting of a sexual predator case is more serious than any previous college offense and consequently deserves the harshest penalty in N.C.A.A. history.
Some argue that a suspension of the football program would be unfair because those who concealed the crimes are gone and the repercussions could eliminate Penn State football and harm other sports there.
But, unfortunately, any penalty the N.C.A.A. levies at any school harms folks who played no role in the violations. So that fact should not preclude the N.C.A.A. from handing out a penalty that fits — a suspension of at least 2 to 5 years.

Cubs' Dempster, Garza enhance their trade value

By The Sports Xchange | The SportsXchange
It was showcase central all weekend at Wrigley Field.

On Saturday, Chicago Cubs right-handed pitcher Ryan Dempster showed off his wares for the scouts in attendance by picking up the win in a 4-1 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks. It was Matt Garza's turn Sunday, and he worked seven scoreless innings in a 3-1 Chicago victory.

The Cubs are in full "seller" mode as the July 31 non-waiver trading deadline fast approaches, and the names of Dempster and Garza will be front and center in all of the talks, real and imagined.

Dempster, the elder statesman of the Cubs, said he tries not to let the talk bother him. He can refuse a trade because he's played at least 10 years in the majors, at least the past five with the same club, but he has indicated he'd go in the right deal.

"I'm well aware of things going on and rumors and things like that," the 35-year-old veteran said. "But I'm a member of the Chicago Cubs, and I'm trying to do my best job for this team and for my teammates and to go out there and be ready every fifth day to give them my best effort."

Garza has been traded twice before, and he has not let past rumors bother him. He reiterated Sunday that he and his family like Chicago but that whether he's traded is out of his control.

General manager Jed Hoyer met with reporters over the weekend and said the phones have been ringing more since the All-Star break ended. Although the Cubs figure to get back a haul of good prospects if they move Dempster and/or Garza, Hoyer said he doesn't enjoy being a seller.

"It's not a position you want to be in," Hoyer said. "Certainly there are ways you can improve the organization by being in that situation, but it's frustrating because that means your record isn't that good. It also means the players that are being asked about are good players, and neither one is a positive. When you are in this situation, you think you have to do the best thing you can for the organization, and you hope you aren't in this position very often."

Breaking Bad Returns: What Does Walter White Deserve?

Frank Ockenfels/AMC
Frank Ockenfels/AMC
Walter White (Bryan Cranston)
Breaking Bad‘s fourth season, last year, had Walter White declaring “I am the one who knocks,” but it wasn’t until the final episode, as Walt engineered the death of Gus Fring, that he actually became that guy. Season five quickly makes clear that Walt’s troubles are not exactly over: he’s still a target of the law (including his brother-in-law) as the crystal-meth kingpin Heisenberg, and he’s still a non-natural-born killer in a deadly profession. But he’s also confident, victorious, imperious, almost serenely cocky.
I don’t know how this will all end. (It won’t, in any event, until the second half of the season next year.) It’s no spoiler, however, to assume that it will not end well–if for no other reason that any form of “ending well” for the morally depraved Walt would not exactly be ending well on the cosmic scale.
But how badly should it end?
This will be the biggest endgame for a TV antihero/villain since The Sopranos and The Shield in 2007, and back then, fans debated like members of a jury what would be the proper just deserts for Tony Soprano and Vic Mackey. (Then, in Tony’s case, disputed exactly what happened to him.)
Mackey’s fate–he wriggled out of jail one last time, but in a way that left him disgraced, alone and pushing papers in anonymity forever—was in its way as controversial as Tony’s. Many fans wanted him in prison, or dead, or killed in prison. Creator Shawn Ryan argued that it was a dire punishment for Vic to have to live with the aftermath of his corrupt choices for the rest of a pathetic, diminished life.
What would be justice for Walter White? You could make an even stronger case that death would be a kind of undeservedly heroic exit for him, a redemption, a return to the status quo ante—after all, we met him as an innocent man, a dying man, before he beat lung cancer. At one low point—season three’s “the Fly,” he not only wished for death but pinpointed the precise moment that it would have been right, with his nest egg secure, his family provided for, having seen his baby daughter come into the world.
Walt has always been about his family—at least his justifications have always been—so I have to think that his ultimate punishment would be losing them. Not for them all to die (I’m not that callous; then again, I don’t know what’s coming, so never say never). But to be caught out by Hank, say—or to be responsible for Hank’s death and then caught out?—to have his son and someday his daughter know what he actually was, would mean losing the very core of his identity.
Breaking Bad, after all, has been the process of Walt taking on one identity as a man after another: Mr. White, Heisenberg, The One Who Knocks and now The King. One of those identities has been The Provider—as Gus once told him in a defining conversation, Walt needs above all to be a man, and “a man provides.” To know that he hasn’t provided, that he has in fact taken away his family’s belief in his goodness forever, to know that he is The Depriver: that seems to be to me the worst kind of punishment for Walt, and if I have to guess where this show is going, that would be it.
But as I said, I don’t know any better than you do, and I’ll be watching eagerly to find out. I’ll be in this space Monday morning, reviewing Sunday night’s return episode. In the meantime, what sentence would you pass on Walter White?
 

Not going for gold: Britain's non-Olympic sports

Published: Monday July 16, 2012 MYT 2:16:00 PM


LONDON - At the same time as athletes from around the world are taking part in the London Olympics, millions of Britons will be indulging in popular summer sports that you won't see at the Games.
Cheese-rolling, caber-tossing, bowls, golf and cricket have little in common except for their origins in Britain's parks and village greens - and the fact that they are excluded from Olympian glory.
On a typical rainy British summer afternoon members of the Finchley Bowls Club in north London emerge from the clubhouse, around five miles from the park where the Olympic Games will be held.
"We play in all weathers, including rain," says Ron Raymond, the club president. "We play if there's a cloudburst. We only stop if the grass is waterlogged, and that's because we don't want to damage the green."
Just down the road in this leafy enclave, which former premier Margaret Thatcher once represented in parliament, is the Finchley Cricket Club. Finchley Golf Club is a similar distance in the other direction.
Bowls, cricket and golf are just three of a wide array of non-Olympic sports that are popular here.
In London there are more than a dozen places for playing croquet - the deceptively genteel but in reality viciously competitive game in which players knock balls through hoops with a mallet.
Then there's polo, which also involves hitting a ball with a mallet, except on horseback. The rules of the game and its original headquarters in Britain, where it was imported from India, were in Hurlingham, southwest London.
Across town from Hurlingham is Lord's, the spiritual home of cricket.
On a summer weekend in most English country villages, the type with thatched cottages and with handpumped ale in the pub, the thwack of leather on willow from a cricket match can be heard somewhere nearby.
Cricket last made a brief Olympic appearance 112 years ago - and the closest it will get in 2012 is when Lord's hosts the Olympic archery competition.
Earlier this year the International Cricket Council, the sport's world governing body, said it was considering a bid to have cricket's shorter Twenty20 form return to the Olympics.
"We have never had a format that would lend itself to playing in the Olympics until Twenty20 came to the fore," ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat said.
The ICC was officially recognised as a federation by the International Olympic Committee in 2010, meaning the ICC can bid to join the 2020 Games.
Bowls, meanwhile, is played at the Commonwealth Games, where Rob Weale of Wales and Natalie Melmore of England won the men's and women's singles titles respectively in New Delhi in 2010.
In Scotland, dozens of Highland Games meetings from May to August feature specialities such as caber tossing - the throwing of a huge wooden log - and tug of war.
Highland Games meetings share a similarity to the Olympics in that they are multi-sports events, although they also feature dancing and classes for playing the bagpipes.
"Highland Games have a long history and there's still a lot of interest all over the world," said Ian Grieve, secretary of the Scottish Highland Games association which represents 60 events in towns and villages across Scotland.
"I would like to think that holding the Olympic Games in Britain might have a positive impact for Highland Games though so far I haven't seen any evidence of it," he told AFP.
"We definitely get a positive spin off when the Open Golf is held in Scotland. Overall, I can't say we have seen a positive or negative effect."
English regions have their own local sports too, often big enough to run their own leagues. Quoits, which involves throwing hoops over posts sticking up from the ground, is especially popular in northeastern England.
Even more curious events include cheese rolling in Gloucestershire, southwest England, in which competitors chase a giant round of Double Gloucester cheese down a steep hill, risking injury.
The Wall Game, meanwhile, is played only at Prime Minister David Cameron's old boarding school, the elite Eton College.
And when it's raining, Britons can step up to the oche for a game of darts, play snooker or they take on the players from the pub's dominoes team.
Back in Finchley, none of the bowlers are bitter about their sport's non-Olympic status, adding that they are looking forward to the Games.
"I'll certainly be watching, selectively," says Ron Raymond. "I like basketball and then there's the gymnastics, especially the floor exercises. You have to admire the hours of work they put in to be able to do it so well." - AFP

2012年7月15日星期日

2012 Nike Outpost in Mammoth



The Nike Outpost in Mammoth Re-Opens For The Summer of 2012

By Rich Gonzalez
Editor, DyeStatCal/ESPNHS
(July 14, 2012) - Despite concerns that have come in from the local running community, it appears that the recent bankruptcy filing by the city of Mammoth Lakes will have no effect on the annual migration boon to the famed altitude-training locale.
"From what I gather, it'll be business as usual," said Scott Lash, a Pacer for Nike L.A. who'll be co-hosting at the popular "Nike Outpost" cabin this summer. "It seems like the city is pressing forward without cutting key corners."
Summertime is always a particularly busy time in the otherwise sparsely populated resort town located roughly 300 miles north of Los Angeles. That's when legions of pro, collegiate and high school runners and teams converge on the locale for quality altitude training as a precursor to their upcoming cross-country seasons.
Lash said the city aims to continue expanding its reputation as a leading running hub.
"I met with the Director of Tourism there and it's clear they are trying to define (Mammoth Lakes) as the global altitude destination (for runners)" said Lash. "They want to welcome competitive runners year-round for their training, make it even more conducive to team training, build altitude houses and more."
The Nike Outpost will be among the central gathering points for most runners, located at 126 Old Mammoth Road, Suite #101. Open every Monday through Saturday from July 16th to August 24th, it will house various running parties and Olympic viewing parties nightly at 7:30 p.m. during the Olympic Games.
"We want to provide a 'safe house' for runners," said Lash. "All schools will still do their own thing. We just want to supplement their needs in any helpful way we can. They can borrow a new pair of shoes, borrow a watch, borrow foam rollers to aid while stretching, whatever we can do to help."
Coaches can also schedule a 'college night', where individuals such as Nike's Tim Ramirez and Brendan Gregg can share their own experiences on how to make college destination decisions, what to expect at the next level, and so on.
Other options and activities at the Nike Outpost include the use of the popular Photo Booth machine, ping-pong tables, and more.
Details and RSVP links appear below.

USA Midwest wins Nike Global Challenge

by Jim Halley on Jul. 15, 2012, under USA Today Sports
Source: USA TODAY
Led by James Young’s 29 points and 10 rebounds, USA Midwest defeated Canada 100-86 Sunday to win the Nike Global Challenge.
The event came during the first of three, five-day evaluation periods this month for Division I men’s coaches, 37 of whom attended at least a portion of the three-day tournament. Included in that number were all the coaches from the 2012 Final Four.
However, none of was able to be around to see every game Sunday. The evaluation period officially ended at 5 p.m. ET, which came with about 39 seconds left in the Midwest’s win.
Tournament organizers alerted the coaches to the deadline, leading to a quick exodus of those still around, including Kentucky’s John Calipari.
The win helped make up for an embarrassing loss this month when Canada defeated Team USA in the under-19 International Federation of American Football World Championship in Austin.
“We wanted to represent the United States,” said Midwest coach David Boyd of Milton, Ga. “Even though these kids from Canada have played a lot together, we took a lot of pride in that we played hard and got after them and made up for our lack of being together with effort.”
Young, a 6-6 forward from Troy, Mich., chosen MVP among the three U.S. teams, was familiar with the Canadian players because most play for U.S. high schools and on the U.S. summer club circuit.
“I’ve played these guys a bunch of times,” Young said. “I played them in EYBL (Nike Elite Youth Basketball League) and they beat us, so I felt like we had to get revenge.”
Unlike the Canadian team, many of whose players also play for the AAU team CIA Bounce, Team Midwest had to come together quickly. The squad practiced 45 minutes Thursday before its first game in a tournament that included eight teams from six countries.
“Off the court, we hung out with each other to bind together,” Young said.
“I wanted to win this game for my country,” said Hall (Little Rock) center Bobby Portis, who had 18 points and 10 rebounds. “Our intensity in our defense helped us get the lead and then we started playing together more.”
USA Midwest players had a scary moment with less than a minute left when Nick King of Memphis East fell face first. The game was stopped for several minutes as King, bleeding from his nose, was wheeled out on a stretcher. An update on the condition of King, who had 23 points and 10 rebounds, was not immediately available.
Ranked the No. 1 player in the 2014 class by Rivals.com, 6-7 Andrew Wiggins led Canada with 24 points and said after the game that he thought Canada could win the 2016 Olympics in basketball.
Wiggins played last season for Huntington (W.Va.) Prep. His father, former NBA and Florida State player Mitchell Wiggins, is an American. But his mother, Marita Payne-Wiggins, won two silver medals on Canadian track relays in the 1984 Olympics.
Though Canada is producing more good basketball players, most of the top ones still are honing their skills part of the year south of the 49th parallel.
“That’s an ongoing debate in our country,” said Team Canada coach Roy Rana. “We do have some quality programs and some great coaches. I think there was a little bit of a flood that began when Tristan Thompson (now with the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers) and Cory Joseph (with the San Antonio Spurs), and those guys found it was the thing to do.
“I think we’re seeing more kids who will choose to stay home. If you’re Andrew Wiggins, it may make sense to go to the United States, but if you’re just a solid talent, maybe it makes more sense to stay close to your family and home.”
USA West took third place in the tournament, defeating Brazil 88-63 on Sunday as Nigel Williams-Goss of Findlay Prep (Henderson, Nev.) had 18 points and six assists.
Wiggins and Trey Lyles of Canada were named co-MVPs of the International teams. Lyles was born in Saskatchewan but played for Indianapolis Tech last season.
The rest of the U.S. all-tournament team included Porter, Theo Pinson of Wesleyan Christian (Greensboro, N.C.), Troy Williams of Oak Hill Academy (Mouth of Wilson, Va.), Williams-Goss and Sindarius Thornwell of Oak Hill.
Copyright © 2012 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.

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