Saturday, May 23, 2009

Bangalore shock Chennai

The Bangalore Royal Challengers booked their place in the IPL final with a six-wicket win over Chennai in Johannesburg.

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The Super Kings went into the play-off as favourites and the way Matthew Hayden began, it seemed as if they’d set Bangalore a formidable target. But while Hayden and his fellow batsmen got starts, nobody played the innings required to stretch their opponents.

Proteas Jacques Kallis and Roelof van der Merwe perished early in the Bangalore run-chase, but Manish Pandey and Rahul Dravid clubbed in with a 72-run partnership. It was a partnership that allowed Bangalore to cruise to a comfortable win.

The Royal Challengers will now meet the Deccan Chargers in Sunday’s final in Johannesburg.

Chennai Super Kings - 146-5 in 20 overs
Parthiv Patel 36, MS Dhoni 28, Albie Morkel 20*.
Bangalore Royal Challengers - 149-4 in 18.5 overs
Manish Pandey 48, Rahul Dravid 44.
Bangalore won by six wickets.

Davis Cup forfeit against India costs Australia $10K

RAINED OUT: File photo of a rain-soaked tennis court being cleaned during the Chennai Open tennis tournament.

Davis Cup forfeit against India costs Australia $10K

Australia avoided a ban but were fined $10,000 by the world governing tennis body on Friday for forfeiting their zonal Davis Cup tie against India this month because of security concerns. "The ITF's Davis Cup Committee decided that Australia would not be suspended from the 2010 competition or relegated from Asia/Oceania Zone Group I," the International Tennis Federation said in a statement. [2244 hrs IST]

Bangalore to face Deccan in IPL final

Lusty hitting by Virat Kohli (24 not out) and Ross Taylor (17 not out) powered Royal Challengers Bangalore to a six-wicket victory over Chennai Super Kings and into the final of the Indian Premier League.

The duo hit a couple of sixes each towards the end to set up title clash with Deccan Chargers after youngster Manish Pandey (48 off 35 balls) and experienced Rahul Dravid (44 off 39) set the tone with a 72-run partnership for the third wicket.

Chasing 147 for victory, Bangalore, who finished second from bottom last year, put themselves in all sorts of trouble as Jacques Kallis (9) and Roelf van der Merwe (2) were back into the pavilion with just 22 on board.

But Pandey picked up from where he left off in the last match. The 19-year-old, who scored an unbeaten 114 against Deccan Chargers -- the first century by an Indian player in the IPL -- timed his shots to perfection as Royal Challengers gradually picked up steam.

Sachin worried about 'fatigued' Viru, Gauti

India has the wherewithal to defend the Twenty20 World Cup in England but openers Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir will have to overcome the fatigue factor if the team is to achieve the goal, reckons Sachin Tendulkar.

Tendulkar was impressed with the way the Indian youngsters performed in the ongoing Twenty20 tournament in South Africa but the Mumbai Indian captain also pointed out that both Sehwag and Gambhir have not been consistent enough.

"I think, individually the boys are doing well. Look at Rohit Sharma, Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina, MS (Dhoni). In the bowling department Zaheer was doing well before he got injured and RP Singh has come up by leaps and bounds. Only our opening combination of Gautam Gambhir and Virender Sehwag haven't fired," Tendulkar said.

"I think the key would be how soon they can shed off the fatigue factor. They have been playing back to back for a long time now and it would difficult to keep up the tempo," Tendulkar told ESPN’s website.

Now, Lalit Modi wants two IPLs every year

With the Indian Premier League proving a smashing hit in its adopted home in South Africa, the organisers of the Twenty20 razzmatazz are mulling a second and shorter version of the event in the same calendar year at an overseas location.

IPL Commissioner Lalit Modi told 'The Daily Telegraph' that the success of the second IPL has prompted the organisers to explore untapped territories like United States and Canada and the League's Governing Council would discuss the issue after the tournament ends in Johannesburg on Sunday.

"The potential is huge," Modi said.

"We have turned the challenges and adversities in moving to South Africa into an opportunity. It is fans who determine if you are successful or not and they have come out in force here. It has shown that the tournament can be in any region, in any country. This opens up many different opportunities for us," Modi was quoted as saying by the daily.

Rohit Sharma named best under-23 player of IPL

Deccan Chargers' batsman Rohit Sharma has been named as the best Under-23 player of the second Indian Premier League which concludes in Johannesburg on Sunday. Rohit was selected unanimously for the award, which carries a cash prize of Rs 10 lakh, by former India captains Sunil Gavaskar, Ravi Shastri and MAK Pataudi, the adjudicators of the award.

The 22-year-old right-hander from Mumbai won the award by virtue of the 333 runs he scored in the league stages of the Twenty20 tournament at an average of 27.75 and a strike rate of 119. Apart from his brilliance with the bat, Rohit also shone with the ball, having taken 11 wickets at an average of 11.45, including a hat-trick.

"It is a great honour to be named the Under-23 Success of the League. I've been pleased with my form in South Africa, it has been a fantastic competition and I have really enjoyed it," an elated Rohit said.

This is my best T20 knock ever: Gilchrist

Much before hitting his "best ever Twenty20 knock" to power Deccan Chargers into the Indian Premier League finals, Adam Gilchrist knew his side would win by six wickets and had written this prediction on a piece of paper on the morning of the semifinals.

Adam gilchrist'I had a feeling in the morning that we would win by six wickets.'

"I had a feeling in the morning that we would win by six wickets. I always back my instincts so I just took out a paper and wrote this. I am quite amazed that it came true," Gilchrist, who smashed a hurricane 35-ball 85 to single-handedly take the match away from Delhi Daredevils on Friday night, told the IPL's official website.

"It is what invokes in us an urge to do better on the field. The beauty is that it makes the performance, whatever that may be, rewarding," the Australian added.

Deccan Chargers finished at the bottom of the table last season but Gilchrist turned it around brilliantly for them this year, leading from the front with some scintillating batting.

Tigers win fifth straight, 5-3 over Rangers

Justin Verlander

DETROIT (AP) — Justin Verlander allowed three hits in six innings and the Detroit Tigers, despite hitting into a triple play, won their fifth straight game, 5-3 over the Texas Rangers on Wednesday night.

Wilkin Ramirez, making his major league debut, broke a 1-1 tie with a homer in the sixth inning.

Verlander (6-3) gave up one run and walked two to improve to 4-0 with a 1.02 ERA in his last five starts. He did fall short of becoming the first pitcher in Tigers history to strike out 10 or more batters in four straight starts, finishing with eight.

Gerald Laird lined into a triple play, the Rangers' first since 2002, in the fourth.

Matt Harrison (4-3) took the loss, allowing five runs and nine hits in five-plus innings.

Three Detroit relievers finished, with Fernando Rodney pitching the ninth for his seventh save in as many opportunities.

The Tigers took a 1-0 lead on Ryan Raburn's second-inning homer, and threatened in the fourth when Brandon Inge led off the inning with a double and Raburn walked.

The runners broke on a 1-0 pitch to Laird and he lined out to second baseman Ian Kinsler, who flipped to Elvis Andrus. The shortstop stepped on the base, doubling off Inge, then tagged Raburn.

It was the third triple play in the majors this season.

The Rangers didn't have a hit through four innings, but Verlander struggled in the fifth. He needed 41 pitches to get through the inning, allowing his only run on three singles and a walk. David Murphy bounced out to end the inning with the bases loaded.

Ramirez, who had struck out in his first two at-bats, hit a 433-foot homer into the shrubs above the fence in center field. After Miguel Cabrera singled, Inge made it 4-1 with his 11th homer.

The Tigers added a run in the inning on a wild pitch by Jason Jennings. The Rangers cut the deficit to 5-2 in the seventh when Nelson Cruz homered on Brandon Lyon's first pitch.

Jones promotes water safety

HOUSTON (AP) — Cullen Jones sternly barked orders to the nearly half a dozen children wading in the pool.

"Kick," he said to a young girl in the flowered swimsuit. "Harder. Come on, you can do it."

The group of elementary-age children got a treat Wednesday as the Olympic gold medalist gave them a swim lesson to launch a six-city event called 'Make a Splash with Cullen Jones.'

The initiative, which is sponsored by the USA Swimming Foundation and ConocoPhillips, is aimed at reducing drownings among minority youth by promoting the availability of low or no-cost swimming lessons.

Jones is the perfect spokesman for the program after becoming the first African American to break a world record in swimming in an Olympic contested event in 2006. His success continued last summer in Beijing when he won a gold medal with the U.S. 400-meter freestyle relay team.

His involvement in the cause isn't for publicity; he only learned to swim after almost drowning at age 5. The incident at a water park that left him unconscious and requiring CPR spurred his family to get him swim lessons which turned into a career in the sport.

Drowning is the second-leading cause of death for children ages 14 and under in the United States. The problem is most serious among African-Americans ages 5-14 who are more than three times more likely to drown than white children of the same age range.

"Almost being part of the statistic, it hits kind of close to home," Jones said. "I've just taken the torch and really tried to run with it to help diversity in swimming."

On Wednesday, Jones spent more than half an hour teaching the 8-to-10-year-olds swimming basics including how to breathe underwater and the proper way to kick. There was splashing and laughing, but Jones made sure the four girls and one boy understood the importance of learning to swim and using care near the water.

"I have a lot of friends who don't know how to swim," said 8-year-old Citizen Broome. "Now I'll tell them I learned about swimming from someone in the Olympics and they should learn so they can be safe."

Members of the Houston Fire Department, who are often the first responders to drownings, attended the event to lend their support. Assistant fire chief Adrian Trevino said 32 children drowned in the Houston area last year. He's encouraged by any program that teaches water safety, especially with summer right around the corner.

"This is phenomenal for the Houston community to have somebody of Cullen's stature and everything that he has done for this sport to come over and promote water safety and swimming," Trevino said. "It just brings out more awareness so we can teach more of our kids to swim."

Studies have shown that six in 10 black children don't know how to swim. Jones knows changing that means taking on years of stereotypes and educating parents on the importance of water safety so they'll teach their children.

"It's not going to be something that's going to happen overnight because I'm working against generations of a stigma," Jones said. "The parents might not necessarily see it as being a big life skill that the children need to learn."

"The biggest thing that I can tell them is: 'Your kids love the water, your kids love to be at the beach ... your kids love to ride in the car, but you would never put them in the car without a safety belt. But you're doing essentially the same thing by letting them go to the beach and play around the water, but not knowing how to swim.' Anything can happen."

Along with his community work, Jones continues to train and is preparing for this summer's world championships in Rome. He joined Olympic teammate Michael Phelps at the Charlotte Ultraswim last weekend.

"I'm definitely shooting for the worlds," Jones said. "I swam against Michael this past weekend and it went really well. I switched up my stroke a little bit to more of a straight arm stroke and I'm really excited for worlds."


Harang, Phillips lead Reds over Phillies 5-1

Aaron Harang

CINCINNATI (AP) — Aaron Harang limited the NL's highest-scoring lineup to a solo homer Wednesday night, and Brandon Phillips drove in three runs, leading the Cincinnati Reds to a 5-1 victory that ended the Philadelphia Phillies' winning streak at five games.

Harang (4-4) has alternated losses and wins all season. He helped the Reds snap a four-game losing streak that was their longest of the season.

Philadelphia averages 5.7 runs per game, the best in the league, but managed only Raul Ibanez's 14th homer in Harang's seven innings.

Jamie Moyer (3-4) remained winless in four May starts. Ryan Hanigan hit a solo homer, and Phillips and Jay Bruce had run-scoring singles off the left-hander. Leadoff hitter Willy Taveras had a pair of singles, ending an 0-for-19 slump that was the worst of his career.

Phillips broke the game open with a two-run triple in the seventh off Chad Durbin, his second triple in two games.

The Phillies opened their 10-game trip by sweeping a four-game series in Washington and winning their first in Cincinnati. They were batting .282 on the road, but couldn't do much against the Reds' top starter. Harang allowed four hits and a pair of walks while matching his season high with nine strikeouts.

Philadelphia didn't get a hit over the last five innings, with the last 10 batters going out in order.

The 46-year-old Moyer has played for seven teams, but hadn't pitched in Cincinnati since May 4, 1991, when the Reds were defending World Series champions playing at Riverfront Stadium. His first appearance at Great American Ball Park was better than his recent outings, but not good enough to bust his May slump.

Cincinnati scored a run in each of the first three innings off Moyer, who is 0-3 with a no-decision in May. He has given up 22 runs and 31 hits in 18 1-3 innings during the month. Hanigan's first homer of the season was the seventh off Moyer in May.

 Gilchrist rampaging innings takes Deccan Chargers to the finals

Adam Gilchrist, set the centurion stadium ablaze, with his whirlwind innings of eighty five runs in meer thirty five balls, to leave Delhi bowlers gasping for breath and also to propel his team to the final,s in this edition of IPL.

Earlier Delhi batted first but only, to lose their two openers Gautham Gammbhir and David Warner, without any iota of trouble to scorers, in the first over of Ryan Harris. Virender Shewag and Dilshan came to the rescue of Delhidare devils, where they played fluently without bothered about the loss of their openers and romped their team to eighty two valuable runs at the strategy break.

But Virender Shewag went to pavilion after trying to fiddle, with the staright delivery of Andrew Symonds and got out at the wrong time, just when it looked like he is well set, for a big score.

Even though other batsmen, who followed like Ab De villers, Dinesh Kaarthick got going with boundaries, they were restrained by some good combined bolwing, by likes of Andrew Symonds, Ryan Harris and Harmeet Singh.

Dilshan carried his rampant form, as well as confidence in this innings, where he made a valuable sixty five runs in fifty one balls and knitted the innings, to take Delh,i to a respectable total of one hundred and fifty runs , which Delhi could have taken given their horrible opening start.

Adam Gilchrist and Hershelle Gibbs came, to the middle, with clear – cut target; it was Gilchrist day in the centurion right from the first over, where he clouted Dirk Nannes first over for five consecutive boundaries and in the process enervated all the Delhi blwers about impending Deccan storm.

Gilchirst was in such a rampant form that he emulated the IPL fastest fifty records held by Yusuf Pathan and made sure that he overshadowed the loss of Gibbs for duck and he did the most of the Deccan Chargers scoring, where he made eighty five runs in their first hundred runs.

It was a bad day for Virender Shewag in the office, where he almost went to oblivion about his bolwer by name Rajat Bhtaia, who scripted a match winning spell against this very same team in the league matches and he brought himself on within power plays and gifted three huge consecutive sixes to his opposition captain.

Even though Amit Mishra bowled well for Delhi Daredevils in the end, to take the three wickets the damage has been already done and Delhi suffered a humiliating six wicket loss and also an abrupt end to their IPl dream.

IPL Auction 2 Live: Chennai bought Flintoff

Chennai Super kings bought England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff while Bangalore Royal Challengers captured Kevin Pietersen. JP Duminy of South Africa as expected became a surprise pack and was bought by Mumbai Indians. Both Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff are now most expensive players in IPL. They have overthrown Indian Captain MS Dhoni as the most expensive players.


Indian Premier League auction was held today in Goa and 8 franchisees are participating in the auction for the 17 slots. England players are getting lot of attention due to their vast experience in the Twenty20 cricket. All these contracts are valid for 2 years.

South African all-rounder Tyron Henderson surprised everyone by getting Rs 3.18 crore in the auction. Rajasthan Royals won the bid facing stiff competition from Hyderabad Deccan Chargers.


Bangladesh fast bowler Mashrafe Mortaza is another surprise pack. Mortaza was picked by Kolkata IPL after intense bidding war with Mohali IPL for 2.9 crore. Kolkata and Mohali fought intensely during auction for this lower order hitter and strike bowler. 12 times his base price - Unbelievable!

Master Duck

From April 9 to 12, the was filled with crowd fans as they witness some of the most unforgettable shots in golf.
These big time memories could only come from big time tournaments, and the crowd was not disappointed by what they saw in the 2009 Masters Tournament. The golf course was not only filled with the crowd, but also with the biggest names in golf. Some of the stars that were present are Retief Goosen, Padraig Harrington, Vijay Singh, Trevor Immelman, Michael Campbell, and Angel Cabrera. They were joined by 90 other players in the course. This $ 7.5 million golf tournament was held in Augusta, Georgia. The big budget could only mean big winnings as the tournament promised $ 1, 350, 000 for the champion.
And who won the 73rd Masters Cup? Well, it’s another great April for the Latin American country of Argentina as one of its patriots bagged the title. The accuracy of the Argentine Angel Cabrera wowed the crowd and impressed the commentators in the whole of the four-day tournament. The 40-year old crowd favorite was heavily applauded as he walked to ceremonially claim his title. Nicknamed “El Pato” (The Duck) because he waddles as he walks, this golfer is not new to being a victor. He already won the US Open in the year 2007 at Oakmont.
His appeal to the crowd was among the greatest in the tournament. A jolly and passionate guy, he always got support from the crowd when he needed it most. He owes his great performance to the amazing life that he has. He actually began his golf career at 10, not as a player because he came from a poor family. He worked at the Córdoba Country Club as a caddy and became a good golfer by playing with other caddies.

Carl Froch devastates Jemain Taylor

Connecticut, April 27, 2009- Nicknamed “The Cobra”, Carl Froch made a dramatic and stunning performance by concluding the 12th and final round by overpowering his opponent, Jermain Taylor, the former middleweight champion. “The Cobra” proves his winning ability by giving Taylor, the crowd’s favorite, crushing blows that catapulted him to victory. Taylor’s comeback to the boxing spotlight was supposedly his fight to regain back his prestige. Affectionately called “Bad Intentions” by boxing enthusiasts, Taylor was the betters’ top pick until Froch made it all clear that he’ll remain the king in this weight division.

As for “The Cobra, Carl Froch has a remarkable fighting record to back him up. With 25 wins (20 of which by knockouts, and 0 losses, that’s no way for boxing critics to underestimate this pound-for-pound fighter from Nottingham, UK. Defending his title as WBC’s super-middleweight champion, it wasn’t an easy task though. Many critics argued that the fight would surely belong to Taylor, the 30-year old boxer from Arkansas. This wasn’t the case, however. He did well good enough to put all his critics ‘doubts to rest.

He did a fine job just as he grabbed his sought-after title from Jean Pascal December last year. It was a spectacular match to behold giving fans and critics alike the kind of fight they were looking for. Pascal ended up lying on the canvass in the third round of the match after amassing devastating blows from the Briton.

“The Cobra” really seemed to have stung Taylor with all those clean-cut punches and counterpunches landing hard on his face. By scoring big over Taylor (it was a TKO), talks are circling around about Froch’s next bout. Rematch with Taylor is not far from possibility. Taylor hungers for a nice hard-winning comeback and kicking back Froch to his UK hometown might be a good idea. All he needs to do is go back to the ring and walk his talk.

Mark Andrew Spitz

Mark Andrew Spitz (born 10 February 1950) is a retired American swimmer. He won seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games, an achievement surpassed only by Michael Phelps who won eight golds at the 2008 Olympics. Between 1968 and 1972, Spitz won nine Olympic golds plus a silver and a bronze, five Pan American golds, 31 US Amateur Athletic Union titles and eight US National Collegiate Athletic Association titles. During those years, he set 33 world records. He was named World Swimmer of the Year in 1969, 1971 and 1972.

Spitz was born in Modesto, California, the first of three children of Arnold and Lenore Smith Spitz, an American father and Puerto Rican mother, who were Jewish. When he was two years old, Spitz’s family moved to Hawaii where he swam at Waikiki Beach every day. “You should have seen that little boy dash into the ocean. He’d run like he was trying to commit suicide.” Lenore Spitz told a reporter for TIME (April 12, 1968). At age six his family returned to Sacramento, California, and he began to compete at his local swim club. At age nine, he was training at Arden Hills Swim Club in Sacramento with Sherm Chavoor, the swimming coach who mentored him and six other Olympic medal winners.

Before he was 10, Spitz held 17 national age-group records, and one world record. At 14, his family moved to Santa Clara so Spitz could train with George F. Haines of the Santa Clara Swim Club. From 1964 to 1968 Mark trained with Haines at SCSC and Santa Clara High School. During his four years there, Mark held national high school records in every stroke and in every distance[citation needed]. It was a remarkable and unprecedented achievement. In 1966, at 16, he won the 100 meter butterfly at the National AAU Championships, the first of his 24 AAU titles. The following year, 1967 Mark set his first world record at a small California meet, in the 400 meter freestyle, with a time of 4:10.60, and emerged on the world swimming stage.

Family life

When Spitz returned from the Olympics, he began dating the daughter of one of his father’s business acquaintances after seeing her picture. Suzy was a tougher sell. “She was disinterested,” Spitz says. Less than a year after Munich, Spitz and Suzy Weiner, a UCLA theater student and part-time model, were married on May 6, 1973. They were married in a traditional Jewish service at the Beverly Hills Hotel. They have two sons, Matthew (born October 1981) and Justin (born September 1991).

Schooling

From 1964 to 1968 Mark attended the Santa Clara High School. After graduating he went on to Indiana University.

At Indiana University from 1968-72, he was a pre-dental student and member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. Time Magazine asked him if he wanted to return to dental school after the Olympics. “I always wanted to be a dentist from the time I was in high school, and I was accepted to dental school in the spring of 1972. I was planning to go, but after the Olympics there were other opportunities. I did some television and speaking engagements, and things just went from there.”

Mark Spitz is frequently erroneously referred to as a dentist. According to the Indiana University School of Dentistry, Mark Spitz was planning on attending in the fall of 1972, but instead he moved to California. In 2006, Spitz sued Procter & Gamble as they failed to receive permission to include him in a promotional ‘History of Dentistry’ poster for Crest. He was quoted in the Chicago Tribune in June, 2004 saying, “I’m probably the most famous dentist who never became a dentist in the world.”

Stark Fast but Escalante is Furious

April 26, 2009, Staten Island- Gary Stark was very slick with his remarkable speed and incredible footwork. Quick punches might have earned him victory that night. Unfortunately, these abilities simply didn’t work for him as Antonio Escalante drilled him with hard-hitting blows from every direction. The Mexican fighter was also pretty quick catching Stark off-guard on several occasions in the ring. He threw many of his punches deep into Stark’s body wearing the New Yorker down. Stark attempted to counter the shots he was getting from NABO Junior Featherweight champion. Escalante did receive some of those clean shots from Stark’s right fist. Tension in the atmosphere furthered and the pressure accelerated. Stark’s performance was highly commendable with his quick dodges. Breaking through this slick boxer’s defense proved to be difficult. Obviously, Escalante tried to break his way in.
As the match progressed with increasing thrill, a battering hook from Escalante’s left solidly landed on Stark’s jaw sending the exalted crowd into frenzy. That fatal blow sent him dropping into the ring corner looking extremely terrible. After the referee’s count of six, Stark could barely stand up but he decided, anyway, to continue to the fight. He was clearly on defense while Escalante was advancing towards him. The intensity of the fight was even made more intense with all the foul words that Stark was throwing at the Mexican.

Escalante decided to go full blast this time furiously pursuing his prey in the ring. The crowed was in awe as the Mexican fighter made sure he’ll get Stark this time. Escalante devastated him with a series of right-left combination. The punches were tremendously accurate. The clean shots proved to be fatal finally putting the slick Stark flat into the mat. The referee declared it victory by knockout.

WHEN SHOULD KIDS START SPORTS?

It's not easy to determine how early to start children in organized sports. Children of the same age vary considerably in their physical and psychological maturation, and there is no practical method of measuring maturity. Assuming the child has shown interest, five or six is the generally accepted earliest starting age for organized team sports. At the early ages participation should be limited to sports that involve a lot of physical activity and encourage the development of major motor muscles.

Children in grades 1 - 4 can benefit most from games that are modified to meet their needs and abilities. Play and fun are more important to this age group than highly structured sports that emphasize the outcome rather than the process. Parents and coaches are usually the ones concerned about winning and losing. When helping your child select a sport, keep balance in mind. Encourage your children to try many sports and activities when young and not to think of specializing or playing competitively until they reach middle school. Make sure a balance also occurs between adult organized activities and free playtime. Children need time to just be kids and to play with other kids without a set of rules or adult involvement.

The most important decisions to make, are which youth sports organizations and which coaches are best for your child. Make sure that you take the time to find out about the league, its leaders and coaches. Better yet, get involved and volunteer to coach. Participating in sports is a healthy way, both physically and socially, for your children to channel their youthful energy in a positive direction. Make sure your children's first experience encourages them to begin a lifelong interest in physical activities and good health.

There are many other options besides team sports available to a child who wants to participate in sports. Parents should also encourage their children to become involved in individual and lifetime sports such as bowling, golf, swimming, tennis, gymnastics and martial arts. You can find information about these sports by visiting the facilities or through the yellow pages of the phone book.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni plays a captain's knock of 76 to rescue India to 237 for nine against Sri Lanka in third one day show off

India’s top order batsmen failed again. But Dhoni came to the rescue of the Indian team. Dhoni's crucial partnerships with Suresh Raina and Rohit Sharma, India were able to get past the 200-run mark after electing to bat.

India though handled their new nemesis Ajantha Mendis (3/56) well and scored runs off the mystery bowler comfortably but for his last two overs when Mendis almost got a hat-trick.

Dhoni, en route to his 23rd one-day half-century, shared a 54-run stand with Raina (53) for the fifth wicket and then weaved a crucial 67-run partnership for the sixth wicket with Sharma (32).

Higdon Saves Falkirk and Sends Inverness Caledonian Thistle Down

Falkirk saved their SPL skin and sent their hosts Inverness Caledonian Thistle down after supersub Michael Higdon scored the only goal in a fraught relegation battle at the Caledonian Stadium.

The Bairns started the day two points adrift at the bottom, and were beginning to look desperate for the win they required as Higdon was introduced after 65 minutes.

But within 180 seconds, Higdon had prodded home a Jackie McNamara cross to send the traveling support wild.

Inverness were, by then, a man down, after Ross Tokeley was sent off just before the interval for a last-man challenge on Steve Lovell.

With so much at stake it was a tense first period, although Richie Foran should have given the hosts the lead after 12 minutes only to be denied by a magnificent save from Dani Mallo.

Caley enjoyed the better chances of the half but were reduced to 10 men just before the break when Tokely was dismissed.

Despite their numerical disadvantage, Inverness made the better start to the second half and Bairns striker Finnigan breathed a sigh of relief when his defensive header from an Ian Black free-kick went over his own crossbar.

Falkirk manager John Hughes made his first change after 53 minutes, withdrawing Arnau Riera, who was having a quiet game, and bringing on Mark Stewart.

And the substitute almost made an immediate impact when he lobbed Michael Fraser with a first-time volley but the retreating Duncan headed the ball off the line to safety.

Inverness were sitting deeper and deeper in their own half and Higdon was introduced for Lovell after 65 minutes in attempt to prise open the stubborn home defence.

And this change did make the difference. McNamara exploded down the right and played a pinpoint cross into the path of Higdon and the substitute prodded the ball past the helpless Fraser to the delight of the vocal traveling support.

Jenson Button on Monaco Pole As Lewis Hamilton Hits the Wall

Jenson Button put himself in the perfect position from which to win his fifth race of the season when he took pole position for tomorrow's Monaco grand prix with a last-minute lap of 1min 14.902 sec during today's final qualifying session.

Next to his Brawn-Mercedes on the front row will be the Ferrari of Kimi Raikkonen, with the second Brawn of Rubens Barrichello and the Red Bull-Renault of Sebastian Vettel behind them. Felipe Massa's Ferrari and Nico Rosberg are on the third row, ahead of Heikki Kovalainen's McLaren-Mercedes and Mark Webber's Red Bull.

Of the 55 editions of the race held since the second world war, 22 have been won by the driver starting from pole position. The forecast is for fine weather in the principality tomorrow, reducing the risk of the sort of chaos that can produce a surprise result on this tight street circuit.

Button's challengers are unlikely to include Lewis Hamilton, who found his way past an all-Ferrari front row to win his first Monaco GP with a brilliant display last year but crashed out of today's first session. He had just clocked the fastest first-sector time when he lost control under heavy braking for the sharp right-hander at Mirabeau, sliding wide and clouting the barrier with his left rear wheel.

The red flag came out to call a temporary halt to the session while marshals removed the McLaren-Mercedes and Hamilton walked back to the pits, resigned to a place on the eighth row of the grid for tomorrow's race. To compound his frustration, the car had been looking like a candidate for its best result of the season on a circuit where its mechanical grip is not compromised by its aerodynamic deficiencies.

Others who failed to make it past the first session included the entire BMW and Toyota teams, with Nick Heifeld and Robert Kubica an ignominious 17th and 18th in the German cars and Jarno Trulli and Timo Glock an even worse 19th and 20th for the Japanese manufacturer.

Trulli, normally an outstanding performer in qualifying and a winner of this race from pole position five years ago, claimed to have been baulked by a Renault. For the BMWs, however, there was no excuse. Those who were watching the morning's untimed session out by the entry to the swimming pool complex could not fail to notice how twitchy the white cars looked as they changed direction through the fast left-right flick, a place in which the Brawns looked almost unnaturally stable.

"It's not going to be easy," Button said afterwards, looking forward to starting as favorite to win for the first time in the place where he has lived for the past eight years. "But it's a great feeling to be on pole here."

Heineken Cup Final: Leicester v Leinster - Live!

The three big questions ahead of today's European Rugby Cup final:1. Can Leicester win their third Heineken Cup?2. Can Leinster land their first, shaking off their image as serial chokers?3. How on earth are the folk at Sky Sports going to abbreviate the two team names in their score box at the corner of the screen? Eh?

Kick off is at: 5pm. Is it called kick off in rugby? I don't know. (This may alert you to the fact that I will be winging it this afternoon.)

Leicester: G Murphy (captain); S Hamilton, A Erinle, D Hipkiss, A Tuilagi; S Vesty, J Dupuy; M Ayerza, G Chuter, M Castrogiovanni, T Croft, B Kay, C Newby, B Woods, J Crane.Replacements: B Kayser, J White, L Deacon, L Moody, H Ellis, M Smith, J Murphy.

Leinster: I Nacewa; S Horgan, B O'Driscoll, G D'Arcy, L Fitzgerald; J Sexton, C Whitaker; C Healy, B Jackman, S Wright, L Cullen (captain), M O'Kelly, R Elsom, S Jennings, J Heaslip.Replacements: J Fogarty, R McCormack, D Toner, S O'Brien, S Keogh, R Kearney, G Dempsey.

Mosley and Di Montezemolo Hint at Formula One Budget Cap Compromise

A three-hour meeting between the grand prix teams and the FIA, the sport's governing body, yesterday ended with the future of formula one still in the balance. The teams are now united in their opposition to Max Mosley's plan for a £40m budget cap but the FIA's president said: "We had a good constructive meeting and there will be ongoing discussions. I'm always confident there'll be agreement."

Mosley's summary did not appear to match the mood of John Howett and Mario Theissen, the team principals of Toyota and BMW respectively, who left the meeting with set expressions and refused to say a word. However, Luca di Montezemolo, the president of Ferrari, was upbeat and said there would be further meetings today between the teams and then with Mosley."It was a long and constructive meeting," said Di Montezemolo, who returned to Italy last night."What we want is that formula one stays as formula one, and that it doesn't become something ­different and go towards constant changes which confuse the public and all the ­others. What we want is stability and that we work over the next two years to arrive at a way of further reducing costs."

Earlier, representatives of the 10 teams – the Formula One Teams Association (Fota) – emerged from their own 2½-hour meeting apparently in full agreement for the first time.

"As always there's been a very good meeting," Di Montezemolo said. "We are all together and we will be in position to go to the chairman of FIA saying in a very constructive, but very clear way, the position of Fota." Asked if he was confident regarding the future, he commented: "We will see. What is important is that our view of the future is absolutely in common."

Di Montezemolo confirmed this was the teams' final proposal. There seemed to be a willingness on both sides to compromise, though, after the talks with Mosley. Ferrari, Renault, Red Bull and Toyota had threatened to quit formula one if Mosley did not backtrack on plans to introduce a £40m budget cap in 2010. Williams, Force India and Brawn, previously in favor of the cap, appeared to have agreed with objections which also opposed Mosley's unilateral methods.

"We made some progress," said Ross Brawn, the team principal of Brawn GP, after the meeting with Mosley. "It is encouraging. We've got some way to go, but I think we went forwards, not backwards." An unofficial source hinted the continuing discussions will be about the budget cap and the areas it should cover.

The political manoeuvring will be put on hold this afternoon for arguably the most important hour of track activity in the entire season, never mind during the Monaco grand prix weekend. With pole position meaning more here than at any other track thanks to the confined nature of the street circuit, the importance of qualifying will be raised even higher than usual, particularly in a year when hundredths of a second separate the excellent from the really good. Or, in the case of Monte Carlo, the lucky drivers from those fuming over their perceived misfortune.

Finding a clear lap is just as important as executing a fast one. Gesticulations from the cockpit, more common at Monaco than anywhere else, are the first indication that, according to the irate driver, a sure-fire certain pole position has been spoiled by a slower driver either not paying enough attention to his mirrors or being unable to get out of the way even if he had wanted to.

And, assuming a clear lap opens up, the trick is to drive like never before during the next 75 seconds. The challenge is just as awesome as the surroundings which drivers have no time to appreciate as they slot at speed between the crash barriers, kerbs and walls lining the shortest track on the calendar. "You are balanced on a knife edge all the way," said Brawn's championship leader, Jenson Button.

Sammy Lee Says Rafael Benítez Can Bring Premier League Title to Anfield

Liverpool's assistant manager, Sammy Lee, believes there will be no repeat of the mistakes that undermined Gérard Houllier's tenure at Anfield when Rafael Benítez develops his team from a position of strength this summer.

Barring an unlikely set of results on Sunday, Liverpool will secure second place in the Premier League for the first time since Houllier followed his cup treble-winning campaign of 2001 with the runners-up spot in 2002. That pre-season, however, marked the point when Liverpool's gradual progression under the Frenchman slipped into reverse. Houllier declined the option to turn Nicolas Anelka's loan stay into a permanent deal and squandered £20m on El-Hadji Diouf, Bruno Cheyrou and Salif Diao instead, three catastrophic transfer failures that ultimately cost the manager his job.

Benítez will also seek to fine-tune rather than overhaul his squad this summer in an attempt to turn Liverpool into champions, and Lee is adamant the club's improvement will be maintained. "I'm totally convinced Rafa is the man for the job and that's not because I'm in situ with him," the assistant manager said. "I'm convinced he is the man to oversee what we need to do to go that extra bit to get what the club and fans want and need."

Lee added: "I was aware of what went on in 2002. That's why the clichés come in – there's no way we can afford to take anything for granted. I don't like to dwell on the past but we're aware of what happened. Although there's been an improvement we know there needs to be more. We have never made any false promises. We've always tried to remain grounded. We know what our ambitions are and I don't think that there's any conceit in wanting to win trophies and be the best, otherwise what would be the point?"

Liverpool's assistant manager took Friday's press conference as Benítez was engaged in "other commitments", and the Spaniard was therefore unable to answer questions on the uncertainty surrounding Xabi Alonso's future at Anfield. However, he later stated on the club's website: "It's very clear, Xabi has three years left and we do not want to sell him." Whether that resolve will withstand a lucrative offer from Real Madrid for the Spain midfielder remains to be seen.

Benítez must sell to satisfy all his transfer needs this summer and while he would be interested in signing Carlos Tevez, despite rejecting the chance to do so on several previous occasions, the Liverpool manager simply cannot afford the Manchester United forward at present. Gareth Barry and Glen Johnson are targets within his means, while Benítez would also pursue a deal for Valencia winger David Silva should he raise the funds. "We have some money, not big money," the Liverpool manager said. "But for me now it is not about how much, but how good they are for us."

Both Benítez and Lee refused to reveal whether Sami Hyypia would start against Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday, only confirming that the club's outstanding servant would be in the squad for his final game, and the assistant manager admitted there is disappointment at this season's trophyless campaign. "There certainly has been an improvement but it's not enough of an improvement as we don't have any trophies," said Lee. "No one at the club is 100% happy with the season, as every season we want to win something."

Matthew Hayden Sees Cricket Heed Ipl's Example

Matthew Hayden, enjoying huge success in the Indian Premier League, which reaches its climax in South Africa this weekend, has called on the game's governing body to take note of the success of Twenty20 cricket and make future international programs reflect this.

"The market dictates in what form a product moves forward and we've seen in cricket that Twenty20 is the answer to this," Hayden says.

The 37-year-old Australian, who retired from international cricket earlier this year, has been in commanding form in the second IPL tournament, which was transferred to South Africa because of security fears in India during the general election. He is comfortably the competition's top scorer with an aggregate of 546 runs in 11 matches helping his team, the Chennai Super Kings, reach the semi-finals, having finished second to the Delhi Daredevils in the league.

"The international program is designed in such a way as to keep athletes busy to the point of exhaustion," Hayden, who struck 30 centuries in his 15-year Test career, says, adding that his success in the 2009 IPL has a lot to do with the fact that he is no longer under the intense pressure that the authorities placed on players with the hectic international schedule.

"There's no question that from my point of view I've been able to relax and enjoy the tournament," he says. "I can be fresh and ready to go without the jetlag of a busy international schedule."

He describes the crowds in South Africa as phenomenal, including the one last night for the Super Kings' final league match against the Kings XI Punjab. "I never played in front of a bigger crowd at Kingsmead in one-day internationals for Australia versus South Africa. It shows the extent of the patronage not only for this competition but for Twenty20 cricket in general."

Tennis

Tennis is a sport played between two players (singles) or between two teams of two players each (doubles). Each player uses a strung racquet to strike a hollow rubber ball covered with felt (most of the time Optic Yellow,[1] but can be any color or even two-tone) over a net into the opponent's court.

The modern game of tennis originated in the United Kingdom in the late 19th century as "lawn tennis" and had heavy connections to the ancient game of real tennis. After its creation, tennis spread throughout the upper-class English-speaking population before spreading around the world. Tennis is an Olympic sport and is played at all levels of society at all ages. The sport can be played by anyone who can hold a racket, including people in wheelchairs. In the United States, there is a collegiate circuit organized by the National Collegiate Athletics Association.

Except for the adoption of the tiebreaker in the 1970s, the rules of tennis have changed very little since the 1890s. A recent addition to professional tennis has been the adoption of "instant replay" technology coupled with a point challenge system, which allows a player to challenge the official call of a point.

Along with its millions of players, millions of people worldwide follow tennis as a spectator sport, especially the four Grand Slam tournaments (sometimes referred to as the "majors"): the Australian Open, the French Open, Wimbledon, and the US Open.

Foot ball

Football is the word given to a number of similar team sports, all of which involve (to varying degrees) kicking a ball with the foot in an attempt to score a goal. The most popular of these sports worldwide is association football, more commonly known as just "football" or "soccer". The English language word "football" is also applied to "gridiron football" (a name associated with the North American sports, especially American football and Canadian football), Australian football, Gaelic football, rugby football (rugby league and rugby union), and related games. Each of these codes (specific sets of rules, or the games defined by them) is referred to as "football".

These games involve:

  • Two teams of usually between 11 and 18 players; some variations that have fewer players (five or more per team) are also popular
  • a clearly defined area in which to play the game;
  • scoring goals and/or points, by moving the ball to an opposing team's end of the field and either into a goal area, or over a line;
  • goals and/or points resulting from players putting the ball between two goalposts
  • the goal and/or line being defended by the opposing team;
  • players being required to move the ball—depending on the code—by kicking, carrying and/or hand passing the ball; and
  • players using only their body to move the ball.

In most codes, there are rules restricting the movement of players offside, and players scoring a goal must put the ball either under or over a crossbar between the goalposts. Other features common to several football codes include: points being mostly scored by players carrying the ball across the goal line and; players receiving a free kick after they take a mark/make a fair catch.

Peoples from around the world have played games which involved kicking and/or carrying a ball, since ancient times. However, most of the modern codes of football have their origins in England.

Cricket

Cricket is a bat-and-ball team sport that is first documented as being played in southern England in the 16th century. By the end of the 18th century, cricket had developed to the point where it had become the national sport of England. The expansion of the British Empire led to cricket being played overseas and by the mid-19th century the first international matches were being held. Today, the sport is played in more than 100 countries.[1]

The rules of the game are known as the Laws of Cricket.[2] These are maintained by the International Cricket Council (ICC), the governing body of cricket, and the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the club that has been the guardian of the Laws since it was founded in 1787.

A cricket match is played on a cricket field at the centre of which is a pitch. The match is contested between two teams of eleven players each.[3]

In cricket, one team bats, trying to score as many runs as possible without being dismissed ("out") while the other team bowls and fields, trying to dismiss the other team’s batsmen and limit any runs being scored. When the batting team has used all its available overs or has no remaining batsmen, the roles become reversed and it is now the fielding team’s turn to bat and try to outscore the opposition.

There are several variations in the length of a game of cricket. In professional cricket this ranges from a limit of 20 overs per side (Limited Overs Cricket) to a game played over 5 days (Test cricket). Depending on the length of the game being played, there are different rules that govern how a game is won, lost, drawn or tied.

sports

Sport is an activity that is governed by a set of rules or customs and often engaged in competitively. Sports commonly refer to activities where the physical capabilities of the competitor are the sole or primary determinant of the outcome (winning or losing), but the term is also used to include activities such as mind sports (a common name for some card games and board games with little to no element of chance) and motor sports where mental acuity or equipment quality are major factors. Sport is commonly defined as an organized, competitive and skillful physical activity requiring commitment and fair play. Some view sports as differing from games based on the fact that there are usually higher levels of organization and profit (not always monetary) involved in sports. Accurate records are kept and updated for most sports at the highest levels, while failures and accomplishments are widely announced in sport news.

The term sports is sometimes extended to encompass all competitive activities in which offense and defense are played, regardless of the level of physical activity. Both games of skill and motor sport exhibit many of the characteristics of physical sports, such as skill, sportsmanship, and at the highest levels, even professional sponsorship associated with physical sports.

Sports that are subjectively judged are distinct from other judged activities such as beauty pageants and bodybuilding shows, because in the former the activity performed is the primary focus of evaluation, rather than the physical attributes of the contestant as in the latter (although "presentation" or "presence" may also be judged in both activities).

Sports are most often played just for fun or for the simple fact that people need exercise to stay in good physical condition.

Although they do not always succeed, sports participants are expected to display good sportsmanship, standards of conduct such as being respectful of opponents and officials, and congratulating the winner when losing.

Poor Jimmy Anderson

This has to be one of the funniest quotes in a while (taken from Cricinfo's quotes page). Folks, here we have James Anderson professing ignorance about why Fidel Edwards subjects him to a "barrage of bouncers and verbals whenever he comes to bat":
I'm not sure what I've done. I don't have a clue. He just seems to crank up every time I come in, and I get a few words.
This is so plaintively said that one might be tempted, as the un-ironic reproduction (presumably) of this quote shows, to take Anderson seriously, and wonder why, indeed, does Fidel bother our poor Jimmy so. But of course, all one has to do is to remember that Mike Atherton memorably said about the same Jimmy, on observing one of his periodic outbursts directed at batsmen, that he'd be a rich young man if he got paid by the word.

Lesson for Jimmy: when you bowl, your actions are observable, not just to the batsman facing you, but to his team-mates sitting in the pavilion (oh, I don't know how, maybe because they were watching television, and even managed to see the slow-motion replays of your snarls and curled lip?) and they might just be inclined to take up cudgels and let you have a little taste of your own medicine.

Anderson is an unbearably petulant little ninny when he bowls; my only regret in this Edwards episode, which sadly, I appear to have missed, is that Fidel didn't manage to knock some sense into that pretty little head, preferably with a ringing-in-the-ears-inducing knock on the helmet.