Archive for June, 2010

The French Wave the White Flag in South Africa

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

French president Nicolas Sarkozy is to hold a government meeting on Wednesday to discuss the country’s disastrous World Cup showing.

Sarkozy will also meet Thierry Henry, at the striker’s request on Thursday, as the inquest into the events of South Africa 2010 begins.

France went out in the group stage after a campaign marred by infighting.

Striker Nicolas Anelka was sent home after a row with boss Raymond Domenech, prompting the team to go on strike.

Prime Minister Francois Fillon, sports minister Roselyne Bachelot and junior sports minister Rama Yade will join Sarkozy to discuss how a country that won the World Cup in 1998 and reached the final in 2006 could manage just one point and a single goal at the 2010 edition.

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The Professor

“Those responsible for this disaster must accept the consequences, first the players, then the team management and after them the football federation,” Bachelot told Europe 1 radio on Wednesday.

France drew 0-0 with Uruguay in their first game, lost 2-0 to Mexico and were eliminated on Tuesday night after a 2-1 defeat to South Africa.

The French Football Federation have also promised to meet in July to discuss the campaign.

But captain Patrice Evra, who was dropped by Domenech for the South Africa match, says he will reveal details of what happened in the French camp before then.

“I promise to tell the truth about every minute of what I went through,” said Manchester United defender Evra. “French people need to know the truth because the France team belongs to them and nobody else.

“It’s time for us to apologise. It hurts even more because that could have been done on Monday. I could have done it as the team captain but the coach would not let me.”

Domenech and his players were lambasted in the French press on Wednesday.

Raymond Domenech

The end of the road for France

“The end of one world” was the headline in sports daily L’Equipe, which accused Domenech of “taking people for fools”.

Le Parisien carried a front-page headline over a photograph of Domenech saying: “Thank you and goodbye!”

Meanwhile, football’s governing body Fifa said it had not decided yet whether to take action against Domenech for refusing to shake the hand of South Africa coach Carlos Alberto Parreira following the match on Tuesday.

The Brazilian said he believed the snub related to comments he had made about France’s qualification for the tournament, which owed much to a handball by Henry in their play-off win over Ireland in November.

Batista To MMA? He is gonna get smoked by Lesnar

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Joe Barton Strikes Again…Shaking down the BCS

Monday, June 21st, 2010

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — One of the most powerful advocates of a college football playoff system believes the Big 12’s brush with death might eventually help doom the BCS.

It’s not going to happen right away, said Texas Rep. Joe Barton. But the promise of renewed television riches that persuaded the Big 12’s major football members to reject overtures from the Pac-10 has shone the spotlight on the huge financial jackpot awaiting a playoff.

“The reason the Big 12 stayed together is the commissioner was able to put together a deal that enabled Texas and Texas A&M to go from about $8 million-$12 million a year to around $20 million a year” apiece, the Republican said. “I don’t really have a dog in the hunt as to how the conferences ought to be aligned. But I do think this moves us toward a playoff because we now know where the money is.”

Big 12 blog

After Colorado announced it was going to the Pac-10 and Nebraska agreed to become the Big Ten’s 12th member, the Pac-10 made a bid for all Big 12 South schools except Baylor. As Pac-10 commissioner Larry Scott flew from campus to campus in Texas and Oklahoma making his pitch, the Big 12 teetered on the brink.

Momentum seemed to be building toward a handful of 16-team mega-conferences.

As the drama unfolded over several rumor-filled days, BCS haters took heart that a historic, tectonic shift in the collegiate landscape would naturally result in a championship tournament among four or five super leagues.

But after the Big 12 elected not to disband, only two other schools switched leagues, Boise State (Mountain West) and Utah (Pac-10.)

“I think what happened with the Big 12 staying together maybe postpones the creation of a playoff system,” said Barton, who has introduced anti-BCS legislation in Congress. “But it doesn’t eliminate it.”

BCS executive director Bill Hancock said he wasn’t worried.

“The fact is, the consensus of all of the schools in the 11 conferences support the BCS,” Hancock said. “There are some who have said they would rather do something else. But it’s a small percentage because the presidents of those schools know the BCS works. It does match the top two teams in a bowl game and it does preserve the importance of the regular season. And it does preserve the bowl system that so many people enjoy.

“I don’t see the universities changing their minds about a playoff or about the BCS system.”

Hancock refused to speculate on how long it might be before conference expansion again jumps into the headlines.

“The fact is, nobody knows. As of today, we have six automatic qualifying conferences.”

That number, however, could change in two years. The Mountain West, especially after adding two-time Fiesta Bowl winner Boise State, could gain an automatic BCS entry when the current four-year evaluation period ends after the 2011 regular season, though it lost Utah, which has won two BCS games.

“The official data won’t be compiled until after the four years, but intuitively looking at what they’ve done the last two years, we know the Mountain West is off to a good start,” Hancock said.

Another sign of the long-range health of the BCS is its new four-year, $495 million contract with ESPN. But Barton isn’t buying it.

“All those contracts have a kickout clause. They could go to a playoff and modify the contract,” he said.

Awaiting action by the House Energy and Commerce Committee is a bill that Barton introduced that would make it illegal to market something as a national football championship unless every eligible team was given a fair opportunity to win it.

“If we’ve learned anything through the basketball and baseball playoffs, it’s this: When you have a true playoff, the underdogs do stand up and bite every now and then,” Barton said. “It would be more fun and exciting and now we know for sure that it would also generate a lot more money.”

Artest — Screw Disneyland, I’m Going to Compton!

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Artest — Screw Disneyland, I’m Going to Compton!

Originally posted 33 minutes ago by TMZ Staff

After having the game of his life — and winning the NBA Championship – Los Angeles Lakers hero Ron Artestwasn’t in the mood to celebrate with Mickey Mouse last night .. telling us, “I’d rather go to Compton.”

0618_artest_tmz_video

If you missed the game last night, Ron played so well, that Phil Jackson called him the MVP of the night … and after the game, Ron was so excited – DUDE WORE HIS ENTIRE UNIFORM OUT TO DINNER with his family!

Congrats Ron — hope nobody set your car on fire on your way home!

The Cavs Are Done

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

And LeBron James, without saying or doing anything, isn’t helping.

Izzo, who spurned up to $30 million from Cleveland to stay at Michigan State, was owner Dan Gilbert’s No. 1 choice to replace Mike Brown as the Cavs’ coach, a position that might stay vacant until James, the superstar and free-agent-on-deck signs in Cleveland — or elsewhere.

Izzo’s decision Tuesday to remain with the Spartans has further muddled a complex situation for the Cavs, who are preparing for next week’s NBA draft and the July 1 opening of free agency without a coach or a front-running candidate and they have no idea of James’ plans.

Last week, general manager Chris Grant said the club’s mantra is patience during a search that is showing no signs of ending anytime soon.

“We’ll wait as long as we have to wait,” he said.

It was assumed if Izzo turned them down that the Cavs would initiate a possible fallback plan: Byron Scott. But other than a one-hour phone interview by Grant, the Cavs have not gone any deeper with Scott, the former New Orleans and New Jersey coach working as a TV analyst during the finals.

Gilbert and Grant are not commenting during the search, so it is not known if they intend to bring Scott in for a meeting.

Scott’s agent, Brian McInerney, deferred all comments to the team about its interest.

Scott would likely talk to Gilbert, but it’s doubtful he’ll commit to anyone before seeing how things progress between Phil Jackson and the Los Angeles Lakers after the season. Jackson, who will be 65 in September, may retire or he may not want to come back if owner Jerry Buss forces him to take a pay cut.

Scott won three championships as Magic Johnson’s backcourt partner on L.A.’s “Showtime” teams and has dreamed of coaching on Hollywood’s stage. Scott has a strong relationship with Kobe Bryant, whose endorsement could mean everything to Buss.

Gilbert has shown a willingness to go beyond his comfort zone to land his man, and an offer like the one he discussed with Izzo, a coach with no NBA experience, would certainly pique Scott’s interest.

It’s also possible the Cavs could make another run at Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski and former New York and Houston coach Jeff Van Gundy. But Krzyzewski recently said he’ll never leave the college game, and Van Gundy has made it known that he enjoys the TV broadcast booth and isn’t ready to rush back into coaching at the sake of family stability.

“I miss a lot of parts of coaching, not all parts, but a lot of them,” Van Gundy said during the Celtics-Lakers finals. “But that doesn’t mean it’s right timing when there are kids involved. So when people say that (he should be coaching), I think they forget that if you were single the decision might be one way, but if you have children involved it might be a different way.”

There are candidates to choose from. The bigger issue for the Cavs, though, remains James.

They can’t promise a potential coach that the two-time MVP will be on their roster after July 1, so it’s possible Gilbert will wait for a decision from James before hiring his next coach. It’s not ideal, but it may be Cleveland’s best and only option at this point.

Cleveland has had informal discussions with Milwaukee assistant Kelvin Sampson and former Atlanta coach Mike Woodson, both of whom could get interviews. But the Cavs only spoke with them as a safety net in case the whirlwind courtship with Izzo dissolved.

It did, and Izzo admitted the uncertainty about James’ future was a major factor.

Izzo didn’t speak directly with James, but got some needed information from people close to the All-Star.

“I felt comfortable with the things I needed to know,” Izzo said. “If LeBron would’ve stayed, that doesn’t mean that I would have been there. It was not the only factor. Was it a big factor? Sure it was.”

And for any other prospective Cavs coach, it still is.