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Podcast: John Walters joins show; previewing Week 4

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 20 September 2012 | 08.32

Cecil Hurt interview, Week 1 preview -- Aug. 30, 2012 
Stewart and Mallory discuss the games they're most looking forward to in Week 1. Cecil Hurt of the Tuscaloosa News previews Alabama as it gets set to face Michigan.
Listen Subscribe itunes ACC, Big East, Non-AQ preview -- Aug. 24, 2012 
Stewart and Mallory preview the ACC and Big East races. Non-AQ enthusiast Holly Anderson joins the show to preview the little guys. Plus: previewing the independents and answering your listener mail.
Listen Subscribe itunes Big 12 and SEC preview -- August 16, 2012 
Stewart and Mallory present another segment of their conference previews. This week is Champions Bowl week -- the Big 12 and the SEC conferences.
Listen Subscribe itunes Big Ten and Pac-12 preview -- August 8, 2012 
Stewart and Mallory present the first of several conference previews to come. Up today is the Rose Bowl Preview -- the Big Ten and the Pac-12 conferences.
Listen Subscribe itunes

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/podcasts/stewart_mandel/?xid=si_topstories
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Statement Time

Kansas State's Collin Klein is completing 72.9 percent of his passes through three games in 2012, a vast improvement from his 57.3 percent mark last year.

Peter G. Aiken/Getty Images

Years from now, when looking back at Kansas State's 2012 season, we might cite Sept. 8 as the day the Wildcats announced their intentions. That's when Kansas State hosted Miami in Manhattan, a Week 2 rematch of last year's 28-24 thriller. Kansas State was tabbed as a dark horse, Miami a rebuilding project.

Then came kickoff. Over the subsequent 60 minutes, Kansas State proceeded to have its way with the 'Canes. The final score was 52-13, but it didn't even feel that close. In a span of a few hours, the Wildcats turned heads from Stillwater to South Beach.

Kansas State may have arrived in Week 2, but it can really make a statement in Week 4 when it travels to Norman to take on No. 6 Oklahoma. Here's an inside look at the much-anticipated Big 12 matchup.

Why it matters

This is the first in a series of games that will determine the Big 12. It's a showdown between two of the nation's premier quarterbacks, the Wildcats' Collin Klein and the Sooners' Landry Jones. But most significantly, it's a telling glimpse at two of the league's unproven contenders. When the top-15 teams square off Saturday night, we'll get a sense for which squad could factor into the national picture late in the season.

Kansas State fans are tired of the dark horse label, and rightfully so. The Wildcats started 7-0 last year and returned the core of their 2011 roster. Klein and running back John Hubert were among the offensive standouts to come back, and each has thrived early in the season: Klein has 905 total yards and nine touchdowns through Week 3, while Hubert is averaging 6.9 yards per carry. K-State is outscoring opponents 138-43.

The Wildcats have also addressed several questions about their defense. In addition to stifling Miami -- they notched three turnovers and five sacks in the win -- they're allowing just 93 rushing yards per game, 19th in the FBS. Arthur Brown, a 6-foot-1, 231-pound senior linebacker, is playing like the top defensive player in the conference. Despite going down with an ankle injury in the first quarter last week against North Texas, he returned to rack up a career-high 13 tackles. He's been cleared to play this week against the Sooners.

On both sides of the ball, the talent is evident. But entering this week's game many doubters remain.

For starters, the Wildcats have been historically awful against Oklahoma. They've lost each of the past five meetings dating back to 2003, when a diminutive back named Darren Sproles shocked the Sooners in the Big 12 Championship. And Kansas State's 2011 pasting may have been the most painful of all. Watch the highlights of that 58-17 rout. You can almost feel Kansas State's undefeated dreams being trampled into the ground.

There's also the Wildcats' inexperience in the secondary. Though Nigel Malone and Ty Zimmerman are veterans, safety Jarard Milo and cornerback Allen Chapman had never started a game before this year. That could spell trouble against Heisman candidate Landry Jones, who threw for a school-record 505 yards in the teams' 2011 contest. After Kansas State cut the deficit to 17-14 early in the second quarter, Oklahoma rattled off 41 consecutive points. That'd be impressive against any team not named Savannah State.

But for all the history, here's something else to remember: These Sooners also have something to prove. Though they go in as favorites, they're far from a sure thing. Oklahoma struggled against UTEP -- it allowed 108 rushing yards in the third quarter alone -- before pulling away to clinch a 24-7 victory in Week 1. A follow-up demolition of FCS Florida A&M did little to showcase the Sooners' ultimate potential.

This is a statement game for Bill Snyder and Kansas State, but it's equally vital for Bob Stoops and Co. It's mid-September football at its finest: Two untested teams trying to live up to -- or in K-State's case, finally earn -- BCS-bowl billing.

Burning question

Has Collin Klein come into his own as a quarterback?

This question may raise some eyebrows given Klein's gaudy stats and status as a first-team All-Big 12 performer last year. But his maturation may be the key to this game -- not to mention the Wildcats' entire 2012 season.

Originally recruited as a quarterback, Klein was moved to wide receiver under then-coach Ron Prince. He always possessed the frame (6-5, 226 pounds) and athleticism of a blossoming star, but his throwing motion came under scrutiny; the Prince regime questioned whether he was better served at another position.

After moving back under center, Klein put most of those doubts to rest last year. Named the starter during the preseason, he recorded 1,918 passing yards and 1,141 rushing yards, accounting for 69.8 percent of Kansas State's total offense. But he still completed just 57.3 percent of his passes -- a sign that he had a ways to go in his development as a passer.

Given his playing style and his faith (he's outspoken about his Christianity), Klein also garnered comparisons to Tim Tebow. And it's not far off. During his junior campaign, Tebow amassed 3,419 total yards and 42 touchdowns. Last year, Klein collected 3,059 total yards and 40 scores.

But particularly this week, there's a caveat: Klein threw for a meager 58 yards last year against Oklahoma. For the Wildcats to stand a chance this time around, he'll need to fare significantly better. "I'm just gonna play the best that I can possibly play and take the opportunities when they come," said Klein. "Hopefully I won't miss any."

Like Kansas State, Klein is routinely overlooked. Despite upping his completion rate to 72.9 percent through three games, he's pegged as a dark horse Heisman candidate -- not of the caliber of Matt Barkley, Geno Smith or Landry Jones. He's an intriguing outsider. He's not yet elite.

Saturday is his chance to change that. Just like the Wildcats, Klein could prompt a major perception shift with a dominant outing against the Sooners.

Points of interest

Starting speed: Don't let the final scores deceive you. Though Kansas State and Oklahoma appeared to cruise through their cupcake slates, both dealt with far greater issues than an initial look would indicate. The Wildcats were tied with Missouri State before rattling off 35 fourth-quarter points, and they led North Texas by just one point in the third quarter before pulling away. The Sooners were even with UTEP at intermission before outscoring the Miners 17-0 in the second half. Both Big 12 squads will need to start faster Saturday.

Budding WRs: Outside of Oklahoma's Kenny Stills, no receivers in this matchup are established game-changers. But three may be poised to break out. Kansas State's Tramaine Thompson already has 211 yards and three touchdowns, while Justin Brown, a Penn State transfer, and freshman Trey Metoyer comprise big, downfield targets for the Sooners. All three should play pivotal roles from the opening kick.

Oklahoma's Belldozer package: In last year's matchup with Kansas State, the Sooners unveiled the Belldozer package, a short-yardage set in which 6-6, 254-pound backup quarterback Blake Bell serves as the primary ballcarrier. If it looked familiar to the Wildcats, it should have: Stoops modeled the package after Klein. No longer a surprise, and given the unit's practice experience against Klein, expect K-State's defense to be ready for it in this year's contest. "It definitely gives us a little bit more insight to know what we need to prepare for," said Brown.

Q&A

SI.com caught up with Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein before this weekend's trip to Norman.

SI: How much is last year's loss to Oklahoma on the team's mind this week?

CK: It's definitely something that we remember, but you got to get rid of the good and the bad in the past. We know that we didn't make some plays in some critical situations last year, and they did. We gotta learn from it and make sure it doesn't happen again.

SI: Is there a key to cracking the Sooners' defense?

CK: We're gonna need to do more than just one aspect to win. We can't turn the ball over. We can't really take any three-and-outs. We're gonna need to make some plays, throwing, catching. I know that sounds like everything, but you're gonna need to do more than one thing against a team like Oklahoma.

SI: How has wideout Tramaine Thompson developed as a junior?

CK: I always joke around -- and it's true -- but my favorite receiver is the open one. He's done a great job of getting himself open and really making some plays for us at some pretty critical times.

SI: After finishing with a 57.3 completion percentage in 2011, you're up to 72.9 percent through three games in 2012. What's sparked your improvement?

CK: I think it's a combination of a lot of work. We, meaning our receivers and myself, we threw a lot of balls over the summer. Working on little facets of the game, whether its footwork or watching film. Then it just comes down to making plays when it matters.

SI: Some in the media have likened you to Tim Tebow. What do you make of that comparison?

CK: I'm honored to be mentioned in the same sentence. I don't wanna speak for Tim, but the thing that's most important to both of us is our faith. I would say that's probably the biggest thing that we have in common. I really appreciate him and what he does.

The takeaway

Even with Klein leading the way, Kansas State doesn't have firepower Oklahoma does. When Jones, Stills and running back Damien Williams (259 rushing yards, five touchdowns so far) are clicking, the Sooners can become a nightmare to stop -- particularly for a defense that's yet to face a multifaceted attack.

"We understand that Landry Jones is a great quarterback," said Brown. "And he has a lot of great guys around him to complement him. We just have to do a better job at focusing on the things that we accomplish in order to make stops and be successful."

That's easier said than done. And it's even harder to do in Norman. The Sooners are 13-0 in home conference openers under Stoops, outscoring opponents by an average of 22.6 points. They're a remarkable 78-3 at Memorial Stadium since Stoops took over in 1999; that trend doesn't seem ready to change anytime soon.

But expect the Wildcats to make it close. And no matter what the outcome, look for Klein to add to his growing Heisman profile -- a résumé that could receive an outpouring of support if Kansas State finds a way to pull off an upset.

"We're gonna play hard for four quarters, and regardless of what happens, we'll go from there," said Klein. We're just trying to become the best that we can be. This is a great opportunity to continue that."

Prediction: Oklahoma 35, Kansas State 30

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/writers/ben_glicksman/09/20/kansas-state-oklahoma-week-4/index.html?xid=si_topstories
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Brady and Manning 'are getting old'

Thursday, September 20

Today's must-see content delivered straight to you.

Tarkenton: Brady, Manning 'are getting old'

On the upside, Fran Tarkenton said Tom Brady and Peyton Manning are "in the mix" of the NFL's greatest quarterbacks. But the former passing icon with the Minnesota Vikings says the two "are getting old" and showing it. "I saw Peyton do things Monday night against the Falcons that I've never seen him do," Tarkenton says of the 36-year-old Denver Broncos quarterback. "Brady hasn't looked like Brady in two years," he says of the 35-year-old New England Patriots quarterback. However, in his weekly video for TwinCities.com, Tarkenton lauds the new generation of quarterbacks, saying, "I think we've got more good young quarterbacks coming up than I've ever seen." That includes the Vikings' Christian Ponder. (Pioneer Press) Comment

Time to shut down Daniel Bard for 2012

Boston keeps going to the well that is Daniel Bard, and he continues to sink. Maybe the time has come to shut down [Bard]. The Red Sox reliever delivered his fifth consecutive miserable outing since being recalled from a three-month exile to the minors, allowing three runs on one hit and three walks and recording just one out in the sixth inning of [Wednesday] night's 13-3 rout by the Tampa Bay Rays. Bard has now allowed at least one earned run in all five of his outings since rejoining the Red Sox on Aug. 31. And with only 12 games remaining, the Red Sox and Bard may best be served by calling it a season. "He says he really wants to pitch," Sox manager Bobby Valentine said. (Boston Herald) Comment

Kiffin ditches press meeting in 28 seconds flat

In under half a minute, Lane Kiffin may have spoken volumes about the state of USC football in 2012. When asked about a player's participation in practice three days before USC plays Cal on Saturday, Kiffin adjourned his Wednesday press gathering in 28 seconds flat. ... The explanation might be as simple as the heat that he's feeling. The Trojans escaped bowl probation, but suddenly were ranked No. 1 nationally and expected to capture Heisman Trophies and BCS national championships. Watch one quarter of any Alabama or LSU game and you realize what a fantasy that was. And when injuries become termites that start chewing on a thin depth chart, the Trojans become vulnerable, especially on the road against an experienced defense. (Orange County Register) Comment

Brett Lawrie goes airborne to successfully throw out Casey McGehee, but the play didn't help the Blue Jays avoid being swept by the Yankees in their doubleheader yesterday. (Al Bello/Getty Images)

The U.S. Women's National Team sends off head coach Pia Sundhage in style, scoring six goals in their victory over Australia.

New York Giants travel to Charlotte to take on the Carolina Panthers, 8:20 p.m. ET

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/daily-jolt/09/20/September-20/index.html?xid=si_topstories
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Yankees sweep Jays, lead AL East

NEW YORK (AP) -- The chants of "Ich-i-ro" swelled in the eighth inning as the wiry batter with the slashing swing walked to home plate. With six hits already in this doubleheader, fans expected something special from the Japanese star.

Surprising even himself, Ichiro Suzuki delivered.

Suzuki had a go-ahead single in the eighth inning to help the New York Yankees complete a doubleheader sweep of the Toronto Blue Jays with a 2-1 win Wednesday night that ensured they remained atop the AL East.

The 10-time All-Star's performance helped New York win its fourth straight and helped them keep a half-game lead in the division over Baltimore, which beat Seattle 3-1 in 11 innings on Wednesday night.

"I haven't done anything different today so I don't know what the difference was," Suzuki said through a translator.

The 38-year-old Suzuki made a difficult catch with the bases loaded in the eighth inning of the opener to preserve a lead for Andy Pettitte in a 4-2 victory. He went 7 for 8 in the two games and stole four of New York's seven bases in the finale.

"I came in the middle of the season and I always wanted to contribute, wanted to help in this pennant race and today is a great day that I was able to help," said Suzuki, who was acquired in a trade from Seattle in late July. "I'm very sad the day is over."

He had three hits in the opener batting leadoff in place of Derek Jeter , who rested his sore ankle in the first game of the day-night doubleheader. Jeter started at shortstop for the first time in a week in the nightcap and got his 200th hit on Ricky Romero 's first pitch.

The single to center tied Jeter with Lou Gehrig for most 200-hit seasons for New York with eight.

Feeling nervous and out of sync at shortstop after the long layoff, Jeter was most impressed with Suzuki's day.

"That's tough to do," Jeter said. "Doubleheader. I don't think I've ever done that in a doubleheader. I've been on the other side of it maybe an 0 for 8."

Rafael Soriano closed both games, notching his 41st and 42nd saves, the first time he saved two in one day.

The Blue Jays, playing their first doubleheader against the Yankees since 1986, were without shortstop Yunel Escobar , who began a three-game suspension for wearing eye black displaying an anti-gay slur written in Spanish during a game last weekend against Boston.

Toronto dropped to 66-81, guaranteeing it will not have a winning record this season.

With the score 1-all, Curtis Granderson was walked by Steve Delabar (4-3) to open the eighth. He moved up on Jayson Nix 's sacrifice and stole third. With two outs, Suzuki guided an opposite field hit to left for the lead. Suzuki stole two bases in the inning.

"It was just an unbelievable day," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said.

Cody Eppley (1-2) got one out for his first win since April 27, 2011, for Texas against Toronto.

David Phelps followed Pettitte's sparkling five-inning return to the mound from a broken lower left leg by pitching into the seventh. He gave up one run and three hits.

Romero remained tied for the Blue Jays record with 13 straight losses and walked five to up his AL-leading total to 99. It was his third game in which he allowed one run and didn't win - two no-decisions.

"I had a good delivery," Romero said. "That's one of the things I battled myself all year."

Adeiny Hechavarria 's RBI single in the second after Phelps walked was just the 24th run Toronto has scored in Romero's last 13 starts.

In the bottom half, Chris Stewart drove in a run with a double to left that bounced over the wall and prevented Suzuki from scoring from first. Suzuki had singled and Nix was thrown out trying to score on a strong throw by center fielder Colby Rasmus . Romero had walked two to set up the tying run.

Romero was finished after allowing seven hits in six innings. He struck out five.

In the opener, Pettitte (4-3) gave up four hits in his first start since a hot shot off the bat of Cleveland's Casey Kotchman broke his left fibula on June 27.

"He gave us everything that we asked for," Girardi said.

Pettitte struggled a bit with his command, walking two, but kept the Blue Jays from hitting the ball hard with a biting breaking ball. He put runners on in each of his first four innings and had a runner on third in the second through fourth innings. But he got timely groundouts in the second, third - a double play - and fourth to avoid trouble. Then had a six-pitch fifth to earn the win.

"My arm feels great. My break area feels great. I'm a hundred percent," Pettitte said. "Just real happy with how my arm is feeling. More than anything it's my legs. I just got to get my legs back in shape."

With the 40-year-old lefty on a 75-pitch limit, Girardi mixed and matched liberally, using six relievers.

Clay Rapada , Derek Lowe , Joba Chamberlain and Boone Logan held Toronto scoreless through seven innings. Then Robertson gave up an RBI single to pinch-hitter Kelly Johnson and a run-scoring double to Omar Vziquel in the eighth.

Soriano relieved with two outs and runners on second and third. He walked Anthony Gose after a foul drive that landed about a foot foul down the left-field line. Rajai Davis followed with a sinking liner to left field that Suzuki caught, pulling the glove to his stomach to protect the ball.

"I'm glad I don't have a big belly because if I did it might've hit the belly and popped out," Suzuki said through a translator.

Toronto's 45-year-old Vizquel had two hits to move past Babe Ruth for 41st on the career list at 2,874.

NOTES: Suzuki is the first Yankee with seven hits in a day in 29 years, since Dave Winfield , according to STATS LLC.Robinson. ... Cano had an RBI double and Granderson a sacrifice fly in the opener ... Toronto's Henderson Alvarez (9-13) allowed five hits in seven innings and struck out a career-high seven. ... Toronto DH Edwin Encarnacion (sore right big toe) did not play in the either game. ... To make room for Pettitte on the 40-man roster, the Yankees recalled RHP Dellin Betances from the minors and placed him on the 60-day DL.

© 2012 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/baseball/mlb/gameflash/2012/09/19/43605/index.html#recap?xid=si_topstories
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Ben Reiter: Pettitte's return, adversity for A's, more Medlen magic

Andy Pettitte pitched five scoreless innings in his first start since suffering a broken ankle.

Jason Szenes/Getty Images

Rain on the East Coast led to a pair of doubleheaders on Wednesday, accelerating the day's playoff implications. The Dodgers split one of them, with the Nationals, delaying the first clinching celebration in Washington since 1933 and keeping L.A., despite its disappointing offense and a pitching staff that is without Clayton Kershaw, Chad Billingsley and Ted Lilly, within two games of the National League's second wild-card spot. The second double billing will be discussed below. Then there were the Orioles, doing what only the Orioles can.

Herewith, Five Cuts from the day at the races ...

1. The comebacker

You can, in part, credit the Blue Jays' Triple-A-caliber lineup for Andy Pettitte's successful comeback-within-a-comeback -- from, naturally, a comebacker, which broke his ankle 12 weeks ago. With Edwin Encarnacion nursing a sore toe in the dugout, Toronto started just one player, third baseman Brett Lawrie, who had a batting average better than .245 and an OPS better than .708. As it turned out, the Jays' most fearsome threat proved to be the 45-year-old Omar Vizquel, who went 2-for-4 to move past Babe Ruth into 41st place on the all-time hits list.

Even so, Pettitte's 75-pitch outing, in which he allowed four hits and two walks and struck out three in five scoreless innings, was important in ways less immediate than that it led to a 4-2 victory for the Yankees. Pettitte displayed little rustiness, as far as velocity or command. His fastball averaged around 88 miles-per-hour, and topped out at 90, which was virtually identical to his pattern in his first nine starts. Though he threw 46 of his 75 pitches for strikes, his control improved as the afternoon went on. He needed just seven pitches to get through his last inning, the fifth.

Best of all, of course, was that Pettitte made it through physically unscathed. There now seems little reason to believe that the 40-year-old won't again be what he used to be: the linchpin of a Yankees postseason rotation. The Yankees' chances of getting him to October improved even further in Wednesday's nightcap, thanks to one of their other long-toothers, the 38-year-old Ichiro Suzuki. He went 4-for-4 with four steals and an RBI, as the Yankees won again, 2-1.

2. Oblique mangled

A month ago, the Oakland A's appeared as if they might march into the playoffs with one of the best problems that any team can have: they had too many quality starting pitchers. Then, on Aug. 22, Bartolo Colon was suspended 50 games -- a ban that would extend 10 games into the postseason -- after a positive drug test. Then, on Sept. 5, Brandon McCarthy was struck in the head by a line drive, leading to the loss of his season and, nearly, of his life.

On Wednesday night, the A's rotation might have sustained its most significant blow, at least as related to its immediate fortunes. Brett Anderson returned from Tommy John surgery on Aug. 21, and he showed no symptoms of the hangover that can accompany that procedure, particularly as far as command. Through five starts -- in which he had gone 4-1 with 1.93 ERA -- he had walked just four batters. Last night against the Tigers, though, something clearly went awry in Anderson's third inning. After issuing an intentional walk to Miguel Cabrera, Anderson threw four straight balls to Prince Fielder, then two more to Delmon Young. Three pitches after that 10-ball sequence, Anderson was done for the night -- and possibly much longer. The team announced that he had strained a right oblique muscle.

Oblique injuries, for pitchers especially, are simply crippling, and are rarely quickly overcome. On average, they cost pitchers more than a month on the disabled list, but they can linger longer than that. Toronto's Brandon Morrow suffered one in early June, and did not return until late August.

Unless Anderson's strain proves to be very minor, the A's lost a crucial cog: their rotation's leader, and the pitcher who likely would have started a wild-card game. Though Anderson is just 24, he is the rotation's only veteran. The four remaining starters -- A.J. Griffin, Tom Milone, Jarrod Parker, Dan Straily -- are all rookies. No team in baseball history has ever started more than two rookies in a single postseason. Of course, of the 11 clubs that used two of them, seven won the World Series: the 1997 Marlins, 1982 Cardinals, 1980 Phillies, 1955 Dodgers, 1944 Cardinals, 1927 Yankees, and 1912 Red Sox.

3. Can't stop Medlen

If you were not yet a believer in the 5-foot-10, 190-pound phenomenon that is Kris Medlen, you were after Wednesday night. In eight stellar innings against the Marlins, the 26-year-old Braves righty allowed no runs on four hits and a walk. It was just the latest in a mind-bending string of lines that stretches back to the last day of July, when he made his first start of the season after beginning the year in the bullpen, where he worked his way back from Tommy John surgery. Here are Medlen's statistics in his 10 starts since then, which now must be considered a body of work too deep to be aberrant: 8-0, 0.76 ERA (that's six earned runs allowed in 70.2 innings), 9.2 strikeouts per nine innings and a WHIP of 0.82.

Medlen's dominance as a starter goes back farther than the last day of July, and to even before his surgery. The Braves have won 21 of his starts in a row, making him, according to STATS Inc., the surest thing since Whitey Ford, whose Yankees won 22 consecutive starts of his between 1950 and 1953. ("Whitey Ford? Pfft. Let's go. Come on. Don't even say it," Medlen told reporters after the game, continuing his winning streak).

So Medlen, then, is just the pitcher to start a game that you truly must win -- the type of game in which the Braves now seem more certain than ever to participate, and in fact host, on Oct. 5. They have only an outside shot at catching the Nationals, whose NL East lead is now five games, and they maintained a 6½ game lead on the Cardinals, their likely wild-card game opponent. (The Cards now have a two game lead on the Dodgers for the second spot, and seven of their 13 remaining games come against the hapless Astros and Cubs). Even though Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez said Wednesday that he was still consider using veteran Tim Hudson, that Medlen will be making his first ever start against St. Louis in that game seems close to a fait accompli.

4. (Dai)stay of Execution

Among the Red Sox's many problems this season has been their consistently poor efforts against the other members of the AL East. Against most of them, anyway. The Sox have a losing record versus the Blue Jays, Orioles and Yankees, with a combined mark of 16-29 (which translates to a .356 winning percentage, which only the Astros would covet).

Boston has hammered the fifth team in the division, the Rays. Entering Wednesday night, the Sox were 9-5 against the Rays, had outscored them 72-46, and had won the first two games of a four-game set in St. Petersburg. Perhaps they aren't entirely hell bent on avenging the events of last Sept. 28, though, as they did Tampa Bay a favor: they sent Daisuke Matuszaka to the mound.

Matsuzaka, has rarely encountered success against the Rays, even back when he was good (he was 2-7 against them in his career, with an ERA of 5.83), and that trend continued on Wednesday night. In three innings of work, he allowed five earned runs, on nine hits and a walk, to a team that had in September averaged just four runs per game. Tampa Bay, in a balanced effort that saw the awakening of the bats of slumping veterans Luke Scott (2-for-3, 1 RBI) and Carlos Pena (1-for-2, 1 HR, 3 RBIs), continued its onslaught after Matsuzaka departed, and won 13-3.

The effort worsened Matsuzaka's record to 1-7, and his ERA to 7.68, and it put the skids on a four-game losing streak that threatened to snuff out whatever flickers of life remain in the Rays' season. Even so, with just 13 games remaining, they are 5½ games behind in the race for the second wild-card spot -- with the Tigers and Angels in front of them. They'll need another September miracle (or, this season anyway, an early October miracle) to again reach the playoffs. At least they're scheduled to face Matsuzaka once more, next Tuesday.

5. Tonight, in Orioles magic

Joe Saunders matching Felix Hernandez pitch for pitch? Check.

Escaping a bases-loaded, two-out jam in the 11th, and then getting a two-run homer from Adam Jones in the 11th? Check.

Winning the game 4-2, ultimately, by thwarting an inexplicable two-out stolen base attempt, to improve their record in extra innings to an astounding 15-2? Check.

At some point, there won't be enough season left for the law of averages to catch up with this logic-defying club -- which now features baseball's top pitching prospect, Dylan Bundy, who was called up earlier Wednesday. At some point, we'll stop trying to explain it, and simply start to enjoy it.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/writers/ben_reiter/09/20/five-cuts/index.html?xid=si_topstories
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Sundhage exits in style; U.S. routs Aussies 6-2

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 22.42

Pia Sundhage (right) was named Woman of the Match after the U.S. women's victory, their 14th straight.

Doug Pensinger/Getty Images

COMMERCE CITY, Colo. (AP) -- Abby Wambach broke a tie early in the second half and Alex Morgan added two goals and two assists, helping the U.S. women's national soccer team beat Australia 6-2 on Wednesday night in an international friendly that was coach Pia Sundhage's farewell game.

Sundhage announced earlier this month she was stepping away after leading the squad to back-to-back Olympic gold medals. She will return home to coach the Swedish national team.

Heather O'Reilly, Shannon Boxx and Sydney Leroux also scored for the Americans, who move to 21-0-2 against Australia.

The Australians went ahead 2-1 late in the first half on Sarah Walsh's low shot past Hope Solo. A few minutes later, Morgan tied up the game.

Wambach deflected in the decisive goal in the 53rd minute when she simply stuck her foot out after Morgan unleashed a shot.

And with that, the team was on their way to sending Sundhage out in winning fashion.

Sundhage leaves after a highly successful five-year stint, going 91-6-10 in her time on the bench. Besides two Olympic gold medals, she also led the Americans to their first World Cup final in 12 years.

"She's built this game, helped elevate the game to a new level," said Solo, whose team won their 14th straight match. "So, there's not too much to be sad about. Of course, we're heartbroken that she's gone. But she's fulfilling her dreams and we're going to fulfill ours."

As a goodbye present, the team recently gave Sundhage a guitar that was signed by all the players in - surprise, surprise - the color of gold.

"It's the best present I ever got," she said.

They gave her quite a few memories along the way, too.

Sundhage's most poignant? That's easy: When the team roared back against Brazil in the quarterfinals of the 2011 World Cup. Wambach tied it at 2 with a magnificent, leaping header in the 122nd minute. The U.S. eventually captured the match 5-3 on penalty kicks.

"Better than a movie," Sundhage said. "That is the moment of my soccer life."

This final performance wasn't too bad, either.

Morgan's performance against the Australians gives her 61 points this year. It's the most for a national player in a calendar year since 2004, when Wambach accounted for 75 points.

Over Sundhage's career, she has made a habit of jotting down notes filled with emotions and tactics. Lately, she's been looking back at those details, to remember how special these players were to her.

The feeling was mutual.

Midfielder Carli Lloyd is convinced she might not be wearing the red, white and blue if not for Sundhage, who changed the way the team played after taking over. Sundhage emphasized midfield play even more, making Lloyd a vital component.

"When Pia first came on, she saw me play in previous tournaments and said to me, `I really like how you play and really believe in you,"' Lloyd recounted. "From then on, she preached playing in the midfield, playing possession. That's right up my alley."

Now, the big question is who replaces Sundhage?

U.S. soccer federation president Sunil Gulati recently said a search committee has been assembled - one that includes former U.S. team standout Mia Hamm - and a replacement could be selected possibly next month.

"Heard they have it down to double-digit (candidates)," Solo said. "But I don't know who it's going to come down to."

A new voice will take some getting used to for the players. They're used to Sundhage's fun-loving demeanor. She laughed with them. She played guitar for them.

After O'Reilly's early goal, the team went over to Sundhage on the bench and played air guitar for her.

"If you look at her statistics alone, she's done a fabulous job," Lloyd said. "But it's not only stats; it's the way she is as a person. She brings so much joy and pleasure. It's contagious, the way she has so much passion for the game."

Morgan earned her first cap while playing for Sundhage. Now, she's one of the most recognizable faces on the team and younger kids frequently show up in the stands wearing her jersey.

"Pia has done so much for us. We really appreciate everything," Morgan said. "It's not typical that you send off a coach like this - on such a high note and such a happy note."

This was definitely a night of celebration.

"I've been around good players for five years and they made me look good," Sundhage said. "I also think I'm a better coach than five years ago. Leaving a player like Christie Rampone, the best captain in the world, and Abby, it's very emotional."

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


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Jones' HR gives O's 15th straight extra-inning win

Looking to continue their recent success against the Seattle Mariners , the Baltimore Orioles appear to be facing Felix Hernandez at the right time.

The Orioles try to complete a series sweep with an eighth consecutive victory over the Mariners on Wednesday night at Safeco Field.

Chris Davis delivered a game-tying two-run single in the ninth inning and Taylor Teagarden 's tiebreaking base hit in the 18th helped lead Baltimore (84-64) to a third straight victory, 4-2 at Seattle on Tuesday. The win moved the Orioles into another first-place division tie with New York.

Baltimore owns a three-game lead over Los Angeles for the AL's final wild-card spot.

"You'd be real picky to not find something to be proud of during that game," Orioles manager Buck Showalter told the team's official website. "Just when I think they can't top something they've done, they do. The dugout was alive all game. It's a very focused, driven group of guys and it's fun to watch them."

While the Yankees play a split doubleheader with Toronto on Wednesday, the Orioles try to recover after essentially playing two games in one night without a break. Baltimore has won seven straight against the Mariners (70-79) since losing 6-3 in the teams' first meeting July 2 at Safeco. The Orioles also have a chance to win five in a row at Seattle for the first time since April 30, 1989-May 4, 1990.

To accomplish that feat, the Orioles likely need to get the best of Hernandez (13-8, 2.92 ERA), who is 0-3 with a 9.00 ERA since going 9-0 with a 1.40 ERA over his previous 14 starts. The right-hander has struggled mightily over his last two outings while allowing 13 runs and 21 hits in 8 2-3 innings.

He gave up seven of those runs in four innings of an 8-3 loss at Toronto on Thursday.

"I have to do something," said Hernandez, who is 2-3 with a 4.68 ERA since pitching a perfect game against Tampa Bay on Aug. 15. "The last three starts have been disappointing."

Hernandez is 0-1 with a 4.67 ERA in his last three starts against the Orioles since he allowed a run during a complete-game 4-1 home win over them April 21, 2010. He yielded four runs and struck out eight in 5 1-3 innings while not factoring in the decision of a 5-4 home loss to Baltimore on July 3.

Orioles All-Star catcher Matt Wieters went 0 for 7 with three strikeouts on Tuesday, but is 5 for 13 against Hernandez.

Baltimore leadoff hitter Nate McLouth is 6 for 11 in the series after going 1 for 8 in his previous two games versus Seattle.

Scheduled Baltimore starter Joe Saunders (2-2, 4.30) has not faced the Mariners since 2010 with the Los Angeles Angels , but is 8-1 with a 3.75 ERA in 14 starts against them. The left-hander is 7-0 with a 3.07 ERA in 11 starts since last losing to Seattle on Sept. 21, 2007.

Making his fifth start since Baltimore acquired him from Arizona on Aug. 26, Saunders gave up three runs in six innings of a 3-2 loss at Oakland on Friday.

Seattle catcher Miguel Olivo , who hit a two-run homer Tuesday, is 6 for 13 with a double and a homer against Saunders.

The Mariners, who were 0 for 17 with runners in scoring position Tuesday, have lost five in a row at home following a stretch where they won 18 of 22 at Safeco. They dropped six straight there June 9-15.

© 2012 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

20 Sep, 2012


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Royals solve Sale, White Sox

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Bruce Chen pitched into the seventh inning, Alex Gordon hit a two-run double and the Kansas City Royals beat the AL Central-leading White Sox 3-0 on Wednesday night to snap Chicago's five-game winning streak.

Billy Butler hit a sacrifice fly in the third inning, but that was it until Gordon connected off Chris Sale (17-7) with two outs in the seventh. Left fielder Dayan Viciedo couldn't make the catch at the wall, allowing Eric Hosmer and Alcides Escobar to give Kansas City a cushion.

Chen (11-12) scattered five hits and three walks over 6 2-3 innings to win for just the second time in six starts. The crafty left-hander escaped a bases-loaded, no-out jam in the fourth and got some help from reliever Kelvin Herrera to get out of trouble in the seventh.

Herrera pitched around two base runners in the eighth, and Greg Holland yielded a two-out double in the ninth before finishing for his 14th save in 17 chances.

Escobar finished with three hits for the Royals, who staved off official elimination for one more day. The White Sox (81-67) had their division lead over Detroit trimmed to two games.

The White Sox, 3-2 winners in the series opener, wound up going 1 for 12 with runners in scoring position, stranding four at third base, four more at second and three at first.

Chicago will be happy to stop playing the Royals and start rooting for them.

Kansas City improved to 8-2 in their last 10 meetings by evening the three-game series, and a win in the finale Thursday night would make the Royals 6-1 in the teams' last seven series.

They could become Chicago's biggest ally down the stretch, though. Kansas City plays seven of its final 13 games against second-place Detroit, beginning with a four-game series Monday.

Chicago certainly wasted plenty of opportunities against Chen, who kept finding ways to use his high-80s stuff to great effect. The White Sox put runners on base in each of the first three innings to no avail, and then loaded the bases with none out in the fourth.

Viciedo fouled out, Alexei Ramirez popped out and Tyler Flowers struck out to end the threat.

Meanwhile, the Royals scratched out a run in the third on a sacrifice fly by Butler, and then bore down behind Hosmer's leadoff double and Escobar's intentional walk in the seventh.

After a brief visit at the mound, Sale remained in the game to face Gordon, and he walloped a pitch to the wall in left. It appeared that Viciedo would have room to make the catch, but the ball fell onto the track for a double, allowing two runs to cross and giving Kansas City a 3-0 lead.

That was enough to give the 23-year-old Sale his third loss against Kansas City - he's only lost four other times this season. He's also just 2-5 over his last seven road starts.

NOTES: Alejandro De Aza matched a career high with four hits for Chicago. He was a homer shy of the cycle. ... LHP Francisco Liriano will pitch the series finale for Chicago against RHP Jeremy Guthrie . ... Both managers announced their weekend rotations. The White Sox will go with Jake Peavy , Jose Quintana and Gavin Floyd against the Angels, while the Royals will start Luis Mendoza , Will Smith and Jake Odorizzi against Cleveland. Odorizzi will be making his big league debut.

© 2012 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

20 Sep, 2012


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Orioles-Mariners

Looking to continue their recent success against the Seattle Mariners , the Baltimore Orioles appear to be facing Felix Hernandez at the right time.

The Orioles try to complete a series sweep with an eighth consecutive victory over the Mariners on Wednesday night at Safeco Field.

Chris Davis delivered a game-tying two-run single in the ninth inning and Taylor Teagarden 's tiebreaking base hit in the 18th helped lead Baltimore (84-64) to a third straight victory, 4-2 at Seattle on Tuesday. The win moved the Orioles into another first-place division tie with New York.

Baltimore owns a three-game lead over Los Angeles for the AL's final wild-card spot.

"You'd be real picky to not find something to be proud of during that game," Orioles manager Buck Showalter told the team's official website. "Just when I think they can't top something they've done, they do. The dugout was alive all game. It's a very focused, driven group of guys and it's fun to watch them."

While the Yankees play a split doubleheader with Toronto on Wednesday, the Orioles try to recover after essentially playing two games in one night without a break. Baltimore has won seven straight against the Mariners (70-79) since losing 6-3 in the teams' first meeting July 2 at Safeco. The Orioles also have a chance to win five in a row at Seattle for the first time since April 30, 1989-May 4, 1990.

To accomplish that feat, the Orioles likely need to get the best of Hernandez (13-8, 2.92 ERA), who is 0-3 with a 9.00 ERA since going 9-0 with a 1.40 ERA over his previous 14 starts. The right-hander has struggled mightily over his last two outings while allowing 13 runs and 21 hits in 8 2-3 innings.

He gave up seven of those runs in four innings of an 8-3 loss at Toronto on Thursday.

"I have to do something," said Hernandez, who is 2-3 with a 4.68 ERA since pitching a perfect game against Tampa Bay on Aug. 15. "The last three starts have been disappointing."

Hernandez is 0-1 with a 4.67 ERA in his last three starts against the Orioles since he allowed a run during a complete-game 4-1 home win over them April 21, 2010. He yielded four runs and struck out eight in 5 1-3 innings while not factoring in the decision of a 5-4 home loss to Baltimore on July 3.

Orioles All-Star catcher Matt Wieters went 0 for 7 with three strikeouts on Tuesday, but is 5 for 13 against Hernandez.

Baltimore leadoff hitter Nate McLouth is 6 for 11 in the series after going 1 for 8 in his previous two games versus Seattle.

Scheduled Baltimore starter Joe Saunders (2-2, 4.30) has not faced the Mariners since 2010 with the Los Angeles Angels , but is 8-1 with a 3.75 ERA in 14 starts against them. The left-hander is 7-0 with a 3.07 ERA in 11 starts since last losing to Seattle on Sept. 21, 2007.

Making his fifth start since Baltimore acquired him from Arizona on Aug. 26, Saunders gave up three runs in six innings of a 3-2 loss at Oakland on Friday.

Seattle catcher Miguel Olivo , who hit a two-run homer Tuesday, is 6 for 13 with a double and a homer against Saunders.

The Mariners, who were 0 for 17 with runners in scoring position Tuesday, have lost five in a row at home following a stretch where they won 18 of 22 at Safeco. They dropped six straight there June 9-15.

© 2012 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

20 Sep, 2012


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Braves win 21st straight game started by Medlen

MIAMI (AP) -- Kris Medlen and Chipper Jones found themselves linked in baseball's record books with Whitey Ford and Lou Gehrig .

More importantly to the Atlanta Braves , they just kept rolling along.

Medlen pitched eight innings of four-hit ball and the Braves won his start for the 21st straight time, beating the Miami Marlins 3-0 on Wednesday night. Jones went 1 for 4 in his final South Florida appearance, getting hit No. 2,721 to tie Gehrig for 58th on baseball's career list.

"That's the Iron Horse, man," Jones said. "Just really honored to have as many hits in my career as one of the greatest in the game. Now we've got to work on passing him."

Atlanta, closing in on securing at least an NL wild-card spot, has won 12 of its last 17 games. The Braves picked up a half-game on Washington in the NL East race, closing within five games after the Nationals split a doubleheader with the Los Angeles Dodgers .

The Marlins gave Jones a fly-fishing rod and a slew of accessories to commemorate his last game in Miami. They won't have to worry about him anymore, but Medlen might be a problem for years to come.

Medlen (9-1) lost the first two starts of his career in 2009. He hasn't taken a loss in any of his 26 starts since, with the Braves prevailing in the last 21 of those - making them the first team since the New York Yankees to have such a streak, according to STATS LLC. The Yankees won 22 straight times when Ford started from 1950 through 1953, a span interrupted by his service during the Korean War.

Medlen tried to dismiss any comparison with the Hall of Famer.

" Whitey Ford ? Pfft. Let's go. Come on. Don't even say it," Medlen said.

Medlen struck out six and walked one while lowering his ERA from 1.62 to 1.51. Rob Brantly doubled for Miami, which was shut out for the 16th time this season.

"Medlen threw the crap out of the ball," Marlins manager Ozzie Guillen said. "We pitched well, but Medlen pitched better. I think this kid is, `Wow.' He put on a show out there."

The first of Medlen's 10 starts this season was against Miami on July 31, when he allowed one run over five innings and the Braves picked up a 7-1 victory. Little did anyone know then how the next few weeks would go - he's now 8-0 with a 0.76 ERA as a starter, as opposed to his 2.48 ERA in 54 1-3 innings in 38 relief appearances to start the season.

Medlen threw 99 pitches Wednesday, 66 for strikes.

"I thought he was good. I thought he was really good," Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez said. "Commanded the strike zone, both sides of the plate. We played some good (defense) behind him. ... That's a byproduct of Medlen pounding the strike zone, getting the ball, throwing the ball over and keeping guys on their toes."

Atlanta also made sure he had the lead before even taking the mound. Michael Bourn led off the game with a double and scored two batters later on Jason Heyward 's sacrifice fly to center off Josh Johnson , whose woes continued.

Johnson (8-13) gave up five hits, three walks and three runs in six innings, striking out five. The Marlins have now lost seven of his last eight starts.

"First three innings it was all over the place, whether it was fouling balls off and getting deep into counts or getting a couple guys 0-2, 1-2 and then just letting them back in," Johnson said. "You can't do that."

Dan Uggla scored in the second after drawing his NL-leading 89th walk, stealing second and coming around on Jose Constanza 's single to center. The lead went to 3-0 in the third when Atlanta made Johnson pay for another walk - a leadoff pass to Martin Prado turned into a run on Freddie Freeman 's sacrifice fly.

Medlen worked his way out of a little trouble in the fifth. Donovan Solano singled and went to third when Medlen's one-out pickoff throw sailed past first base. But Medlen got Bryan Petersen to pop up into short center field - Uggla, the second baseman, had his throw home go up the third-base line, but Solano was held anyway - and then Gorkys Hernandez grounded to shortstop to end the inning.

Jones got an ovation from the crowd before his last at-bat in Miami, a groundout in the eighth. He tipped his helmet in acknowledgment, though his night wasn't totally perfect.

He apparently forgot how many outs there were in the third, getting tagged out on a 7-4-3 relay by the Marlins to end the inning.

"That happens with age," Guillen said.

NOTES: Jones has played more games (244) and collected more home runs (40), RBIs (165), hits (258), doubles (47) and walks (140) than any other opponent has against the Marlins. ... The Marlins and Braves both have Thursday off. Miami plans to pitch RHP Jacob Turner in New York on Friday against LHP Jonathon Niese , while Atlanta is expected to start RHP Tommy Hanson in Philadelphia on Friday against RHP Kyle Kendrick . ... Braves SS Paul Janish , who dislocated his left shoulder on Tuesday night, returned to Atlanta for evaluation. It's unknown if he could be back before the end of the regular season.

© 2012 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

20 Sep, 2012


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Kemp's homer puts Nationals' champagne on ice

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Matt Kemp scored a phantom run early, then hit a go-ahead homer in the ninth inning - right after Washington rallied with a six-run eighth - and the struggling Los Angeles Dodgers grabbed a 7-6 victory Wednesday night for a doubleheader split that prevented the Nationals from sewing up a playoff berth.

Kemp was credited with crossing home to give Los Angeles a 6-0 lead in the fourth, even though TV replays showed the inning's last out already had been recorded on third baseman Ryan Zimmerman 's head-over-heels, reaching tag of runner Adrian Gonzalez .

That extra run loomed large when the hosts - who had won the opener 3-1 thanks largely to Jordan Zimmermann 's six innings of one-run baseball - wound up sending 12 batters to the plate while scoring six runs in the eighth.

Michael Morse had a homer and a two-run single, and Washington chased Josh Beckett , who had allowed only two hits through seven innings.

The announced crowd of 26,931 was getting loud, perhaps anticipating a comeback and playoff-clinching victory, when Kemp drove an 0-2 pitch from closer Tyler Clippard (2-5) over the wall in center for his 19th homer.

Ronald Belisario (7-1) earned the win by getting the last two outs of the eighth inning. Brandon League picked up his third save with a hitless ninth.

Washington's victory in Game 1 was Los Angeles' ninth loss in 12 games - and lowered the host's magic number for securing at least a wild-card spot to one. But the Nationals must wait at least another day to be certain of making the playoffs for the first time since moving from Montreal in 2005.

Beckett wound up allowing four runs - three earned - and five hits, with all the scoring in the eighth. By then, the Nationals had sort of indicated a willingness to concede defeat, subbing out starters Jayson Werth , Zimmerman and Adam LaRoche - their Nos. 1-3-4 hitters.

While Beckett was terrific for a time, retiring 13 consecutive batters in one stretch, Nationals starter John Lannan struggled almost from the outset of Game 2.

Making his second start since taking over Stephen Strasburg 's slot in the rotation, Lannan looked little like the guy who entered the night 3-0 with a 2.41 ERA in the majors in 2012 - and much more like the guy who spent most of the year at Triple-A Syracuse.

He was charged with three runs in each of the third and fourth innings, hurt by singles, walks and a hit batter. In all, Lannan lasted only 3 2-3 innings, giving up eight hits. He departed with the bases loaded in the fourth, giving way to Chien-Ming Wang, who had been out with a hip injury and missed about 2 1/2 months.

Wang's first pitch in a major league game since June 30 missed the mark completely. The wild pitch skipped past catcher Jesus Flores , allowing a run to score. The batter, Hanley Ramirez , eventually sent a grounder to Zimmerman, who flipped over and reached out to barely tag out Gonzalez. The umpires ruled that Kemp, who was running home from third on the play, crossed the plate in time to make it 6-0 - but he had not.

Beckett faced the minimum number of hitters through five innings, allowing only one baserunner - LaRoche singled leading off the second - who was immediately erased by a double play.

Suddenly, though, the Nationals came through in the eighth. Morse led off with his 14th homer, and Steve Lombardozzi added a two-run shot. After Corey Brown reached on an error by Gonzalez, and pinch-hitter Mark DeRosa singled, Bryce Harper made it 6-4 with an infield single off reliever Randy Choate .

Belisario came in to face pinch-hitter Danny Espinosa , who played in Game 1 but was out of the lineup in Game 2 because of a recent left shoulder injury. Espinosa, who got a cortisone shot Monday so he could dull the pain of a bone bruise, smacked a single to left to load the bases.

One out later, Morse was up again, and he bounced a single past diving second baseman Mark Ellis to drive in two more runs and make it 6-all. After Belisario hit Ian Desmond with a pitch to load the bases again, he got Lombardozzi on a comebacker to end the inning.

Earlier in the day, as music blared in the Nationals' clubhouse between games, manager Davey Johnson insisted it didn't matter at all that his team had earned its 90th win and lowered its magic number for a wild-card berth.

"The only thing that's going to mean anything to me is when we clinch the pennant," Johnson said. "That's the only thing, the only number, I'm concerned with."

Nearing their first postseason appearance since arriving in Washington, the NL East-leading Nationals scratched out a victory in Game 1 thanks to two RBI groundouts and a sacrifice fly.

The Nationals' 90 victories are the most for a major league club in the nation's capital since 1933 - which also was the last time a D.C. team played beyond the regular season.

"We're really not thinking about that. Definitely, I'm not, anyway," said Kurt Suzuki , who drove in Washington's first run with a fly ball in the second inning. "We're thinking about winning the division."

Pitching on seven days' rest because of Monday's scheduled day off and Tuesday's rainout, Zimmermann (11-8) kept putting runners on base and working around it. He allowed six hits, walked four and hit a batter, but Ramirez's RBI single in the third produced the Dodgers' only run.

"I was a little out of sync" in the early going Wednesday, Zimmermann said. "The last three innings, I felt much better and was able to control everything."

Four relievers followed him, combining to allow three hits across four shutout innings. Sean Burnett got out of a potentially troublesome spot in the seventh by striking out Gonzalez with runners on the corners, and Clippard pitched the ninth for his 32nd save.

Two of Washington's runs in Game 1 came off Aaron Harang (9-10), who threw 4 2-3 innings and gave up seven hits.

"He was pretty good," Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said. "He got some big outs to keep us in it."

NOTES: Harper made a twisting, over-the-shoulder catch with his back to the infield on a drive to the deepest part of the park by Shane Victorino leading off the sixth inning in Game 2. ... Victorino stole two bases in Game 1 to raise his season total to 37, tying a career high.

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Down 6-0, Nationals rally to tie Dodgers

WASHINGTON (AP) -- - A mischievous grin stretched across Washington Nationals manager Davey Johnson's mug while discussing which pitcher might fill in a gap in the rotation after Tuesday night's scheduled game against the Los Angeles Dodgers was postponed by rain.

"I'm sure 'Stras' would volunteer," Johnson said, chuckling at his reference to the famously shut-down Stephen Strasburg . "He is right-handed. He has been chompin'."

For the first time since baseball returned to Washington in 2005, September pitching choices made by the Nationals' skipper really do matter. Despite coming off a three-game sweep by the Atlanta Braves , the Nationals own the best record in the majors at 89-57.

Indeed, Washington announced it will put tickets for potential postseason games on sale Friday. The team hasn't finished higher than third place since arriving from Montreal.

"We're close, but the thing is, we're going to do what we've been doing all year, and that's kind of keep our head down and worry about one game at a time. Especially late in the season like this, if you get ahead of yourself, you can get yourself in trouble," reliever Drew Storen said. "We've done a good job all year of not really getting caught up in all that stuff."

With Tuesday's rainout, the 76-71 Dodgers - who are second in a long line of teams fighting for the NL's second wild-card spot - and Nationals will play a single-admission doubleheader starting at 4 p.m. EDT on Wednesday. Johnson expected to use Tuesday's scheduled starter, right-hander Jordan Zimmermann , and left-hander John Lannan ; Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said Aaron Harang and Josh Beckett will be his pitchers.

Harang (9-9, 3.79 ERA) is 0-2 with a 4.71 ERA over his last four starts but 1-1 with a 2.19 ERA in his past four versus Washington, while Beckett - facing the Nats for the first time since 2005 - is 1-2 with a 3.38 ERA in four starts since joining the Dodgers.

Zimmermann (10-8, 3.01) has struggled over the last month, going 1-2 with a 6.03 ERA, and he'll get his first look at Los Angeles since 2009. Lannan (3-0, 2.41), meanwhile, is 4-0 with a 2.28 ERA in his last four starts in this series.

Looking further down the line, Johnson figures he'll need to plug someone into what would have been Zimmermann's next start, on Sunday at home against Milwaukee. He mentioned righties Craig Stammen and Chien-Ming Wang as possible fill-in starters.

"I just don't want any of my good, young pitchers to (come back) on short rest at this point. And I don't think 'Zim' has done it, and he's had a little bit of that inflammation there," Johnson said. "I think he could do it, and have no problem, but it's not something I'd like to do to any of those in the rotation, at this point."

There was good news on a couple of injured Nationals players, second baseman Danny Espinosa and left fielder Michael Morse .

Espinosa thought he might have a torn labrum in his aching left shoulder, but instead found out that it's a bone bruise in the socket. He got a cortisone shot Monday to relieve the pain and hopes to be able to play as soon as Wednesday.

"This is the best news that we could have gotten," Espinosa said. "If this was a rotator cuff tear or a labrum tear, it would have lingered the rest of the season. I would have had to have surgery in the offseason."

Morse was slated to start in the outfield and hit fifth if Tuesday's game had been played. He missed the past four games with a bothersome left wrist.

"It's another day to heal," Johnson said. "Mike was feeling pretty good. He was good to go. We were anxious to have him in the lineup."

The Dodgers got some potentially positive news as well. Closer Kenley Jansen , who has 25 saves, has been cleared to pitch again after being held out since late August because of an irregular heartbeat.

Reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw , meanwhile, was examined by a hip specialist who said the left-hander can continue to pitch without risking damage to his sore right hip.

The Dodgers, who plan to have Kershaw re-start a throwing program, aren't so certain about his status.

Asked whether Kershaw will pitch again this season, Mattingly replied: "Yeah, maybe. Sounds like there's a chance of it."

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20 Sep, 2012


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Stewart Mandel: Alabama-LSU national title rematch remains unlikely; more Mailbag

Though they're currently ranked Nos. 1 and 2 in the AP Poll, Alabama and LSU are unlikely to again play for the national title.

Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

The Mandel Initiative Podcast
John Walters joins the show to talk Notre Dame. Stewart and Mallory preview this weekend's big lineup of games.

Later in this column, we're going to take a trip down memory lane and revisit a prominent figure from Mailbags past. Hint: It's a lady.

In the meantime, looking back at more recent history, the first Mailbag mention last year of a possible Alabama-LSU rematch came on Oct. 18. I, of course, dismissed the notion as silly and presumptuous. Whoops. I should probably not repeat that mistake ... but c'mon. We haven't even reached Week 4!

Here we go again! Everyone has said two SEC teams will never be in the National Championship Game again. Being still early in the season, LSU and Alabama are head and shoulders above the rest of college football. If the game Nov. 3 in Tiger Stadium is close, what's the chance we possibly see a repeat of last year?
-- Derek, Baton Rouge

So with USC now out of the picture (sure they could bounce back, but let's be real, their lack of depth was exposed), are we doomed to another year of SEC oppression?
-- Adam Lienau, Not the South

News flash: USC was never the country's lone non-SEC team capable of winning a national championship. The reason it may seem that way is because several other viable contenders have yet to play their first meaningful game.

Oregon, overlooked all preseason amid the USC hype, has continued to fly under the radar thanks to three opening games against non-AQ opponents. This week the third-ranked Ducks face No. 22 Arizona, and if Chip Kelly's team hangs half a hundred on Rich Rodriguez's Wildcats (Oregon is averaging 54.0 points), I expect Oregon will become a standard part of the conversation. No. 4 Florida State plays a showcase game against Clemson this week. If it wins, people are going to start looking at the Seminoles' schedule and realizing just how few obstacles they have the rest of the way. No one's really seen No. 6 Oklahoma play yet, but they will against No. 15 Kansas State this weekend. In fact, it feels like the entire Big 12 has had a bye to this point. I'm eager to see No. 8 West Virginia and No. 12 Texas face tougher conference competition.

And as vulnerable as USC looked last weekend, I wouldn't rule the Trojans out just yet, either. They lost on the road to a team that went 23-3 over the last two years. It happens.

It's entirely possible Alabama and LSU are indeed the cream of the crop again. The Tide have outscored their first three opponents (including two preseason top-10 teams) 128-14, and a purportedly inexperienced defense has pitched consecutive shutouts. I'm certainly not picking against them anytime soon. Meanwhile, the Tigers have won their first three games by a margin of 145-31, but I'd like to see them play someone better than Washington, which has the look of a 6-6 team, before fully jumping on board. This week's opponent, Auburn, might not be any better.

That brings up a different point. One reason to feel confident in Alabama and LSU running the table outside of their head-to-head meeting is the rest of the SEC West, which doesn't look nearly as imposing as it did before the season. In fact, it's pretty darn bad. On the other hand, the East may produce a champion this year (possibly Georgia) with an actual chance of winning in Atlanta.

Finally, at the risk of looking stupid again, I'd be willing to bet three months of Andy Staples' barbeque expenses that voters will not allow another SEC rematch this year. There was too much backlash to last year's game, and even though it's not voters' fault the second game was lopsided (Alabama may well have beaten a different opponent by far more than 21 points), the dissatisfaction is still going to factor into their thought process this time. The people desperately want to see the SEC play someone else, and they're going to get their wish. I don't know who that team will be, but you might want to tune in this weekend for possible clues.

This Saturday, I would watch Florida State-Clemson, Oklahoma-Kansas State and Notre Dame-Michigan if they were televised in separate time slots. Instead, I will watch only one of those night games and none earlier in the day because there are none worth watching. Do the networks really garner better overall ratings by having such premier games go head-to-head at night rather than spreading them throughout the day?
-- Gary Swider, Sherman Oaks, Calif.

The migration of more big games to prime time began six years ago when ABC figured out it could draw better ratings on Saturday nights by showing college football instead of scripted dramas or second-rate reality shows. We had previously counted on the broadcast networks (ABC, CBS and NBC) to show the biggest games in the afternoon, with evening spots primarily reserved for ESPN's SEC and ACC broadcasts or Fox Sports Net's old late-night Pac-10 games. But with FOX joining the fray this year, yet another marquee game moves from 3:30 p.m. ET to 7:30 or 8 (like Kansas State-Oklahoma). Even NBC is even doing it now, with Michigan-Notre Dame this week.

The result, unfortunately, is that fans are now forced to pick and choose between high-profile matchups. Last year in Week 3, ABC garnered a very good 5.8 rating for its prime time game, Oklahoma-Florida State. A year earlier it notched a 4.7 for Texas-Texas Tech. This year it got just a 3.2 for Notre Dame-Michigan State. ESPN's Florida-Tennessee broadcast, which overlapped during the second half, produced a 3.1, and FOX's USC-Stanford showing netted a 2.5. Granted, there was a lot more buildup leading into that Oklahoma-Florida State game last year, but networks can usually count on Notre Dame to draw a big audience, especially against a top-10 team. However, if you combine the ratings for the head-to-head ABC and FOX games you get 5.7 -- almost identical to ABC's number last year.

On the bright side, the afternoon options should improve once teams get into conference play and there are multiple games of interest in each league. Unfortunately, though, the cluttered prime time lineup is here to stay.

Stewart, through three weeks, Ohio State's Braxton Miller has accounted for 988 yards, 12 touchdowns and only two interceptions. Through three weeks in 2007, Tim Tebow had 1,027 yards, 13 touchdowns and only one interception. Does Miller have any chance to repeat Tebow's feat of winning the Heisman as a sophomore playing for Urban Meyer? Or will the Buckeyes' lack of postseason eligibility take him out of the race?
-- Josh L., Columbus, Ohio

It's a good question. Miller is already starting to pop up in the top five of various Heisman watches -- but it's early. I certainly think he can continue putting up his current numbers over the course of the season (though probably not Tebow's 51 touchdowns in 2007), but as the year progresses, our attention will increasingly turn toward the BCS race, one in which the Buckeyes won't be involved. Will Miller get overlooked? It's possible. Last year, USC folks felt the Trojans' ineligibility cost Matt Barkley a trip to New York. Then again, Barkley and his team started slow and had to play catch-up. Miller is already gaining acclaim, and his team has yet to lose.

My guess is if Miller has a truly spectacular season, his team's postseason status won't affect him very much. Ohio State needs to win, and he needs to perform well in big games. Other than that, he plays for one of the most visible teams in the country, and the votes are tallied before the bowl games. And lest we forget, Tebow's team lost three regular-season games the year he won the Heisman. Florida was playing for the Capital One Bowl by late October, yet he still ran away with the trophy. Miller could do the same, but he'd have to truly distinguish himself. If, for example, Geno Smith keeps putting up the same gaudy numbers and West Virginia contends for the Big 12 title, the advantage goes to Smith.

Just when I thought you were going to ignore another classic, absolutely bizarre Holy War, you go and post something like this ... AND TOTALLY REDEEM YOURSELF.
-- Nick Driggs, Los Angeles

If I know Utah fans like I think I do, they'll invite me right in for tea and strumpets.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/writers/stewart_mandel/09/19/alabama-lsu-national-title-contenders/index.html?xid=si_topstories
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Chavez tested positive for marijuana

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (above) tested positive for a banned substance — reportedly marijuana — after Saturday's fight with Sergio Martinez in Las Vegas. (AP)

Former middleweight titleholder Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. tested positive for a banned substance following Saturday's unanimous-decision defeat to Sergio Martinez. Chavez's promoter, Top Rank, confirmed the positive test.

According to multiple reports, the banned substance was marijuana.

"Top Rank is reviewing the situation," Top Rank publicist Lee Samuels said in a statement. "Julio Cesar Chavez Jr will have the opportunity to explain this situation to the Nevada State Athletic Commission."

The positive test is the second for Chavez in Nevada. In 2009, Chavez tested positive for Furosemide, a known diuretic that helps with weight loss, after his win over Troy Rowland. Chavez was suspended for seven months and fined $10,000 by the commission. The official result was changed to a no-contest.

Last week, Chavez cited that positive test as one of the turning points of his career.

"I thought about it, and I said, 'What am I doing here? Do I need to be serious about this?'" Chavez said. "'Do I really want this? How much do I want it?'"

NSAC executive director told SI.com there is no mandatory suspension length for a second positive test. Kizer said any violation can result in a fine of up to 100 percent of the fighter's purse — Chavez was guaranteed $3 million against Martinez — and/or a one-year suspension.

The positive test is the latest act of immaturity from the 26-year old Chavez. Last January, Chavez was arrested for suspicion of DUI. He pleaded no contest and was sentenced to probation. Before teaming up with Hall of Fame trainer Freddie Roach, Chavez had a reputation for being lazy in the gym. Though he seemed to shed that reputation over the last year, in the weeks before the fight with Martinez, Chavez routinely skipped out on training sessions, often preferring to work out at home late at night rather than at the gym.

Roach said he will continue to work with Chavez but that "the first day he misses something, I'm going home."

– Chris Mannix

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://mma-boxing.si.com/2012/09/19/julio-cesar-chavez-jr-tests-positive-for-banned-substance-after-sergio-martinez-fight/?xid=si_topstories
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Blue Jays at Yankees

As one veteran has faltered of late, the New York Yankees are hoping another can deliver in his return.

Andy Pettitte makes his first start in nearly three months Wednesday when the Yankees open a three-game series with a day-night doubleheader against the visiting Toronto Blue Jays.

Owning a 10-game lead atop the AL East at one point, it could have been argued the Yankees (83-63) might not have missed the 40-year-old left-hander that much after he suffered a fractured ankle on a line drive off the bat of Cleveland's Casey Kotchman on June 27.

But with CC Sabathia losing three of his last four starts and New York now tied with Baltimore atop the division, Pettitte (3-3, 3.22 ERA) will be thrown right into the mix in the first game after throwing 55 pitches in a simulated game Sept. 11.

Manager Joe Girardi likely will limit Pettitte to 70 pitches, and Tuesday's rainout made the left-hander more antsy to get back on the mound.

"I ain't gonna lie to you, I'm tired of talking about it," he told the Yankees' website after the rainout was made official. "I just want to go out there and pitch, and hopefully give this team a chance to win that ballgame (Wednesday), and move forward from there.

"I'm just ready to get out there. It's all about mechanics out there and getting into a good rhythm, stuff like that, so I think all that's going to be fine."

Pettitte did not face the Blue Jays this year before getting hurt. He is 21-12 versus Toronto - his second-most victories against any team - but is only 6-7 in 19 home starts.

The Yankees seem to have found some solid footing of late, taking two of three from both Boston and Tampa Bay, capped by a 6-4 victory over the Rays on Sunday when Russell Martin 's three-run homer highlighted a five-run third.

The Blue Jays pushed Tuesday's scheduled starter Ricky Romero (8-14, 5.87) to the nightcap of this twinbill, opting to send Henderson Alvarez (9-12, 4.91) to face Pettitte. The right-hander is trying to match a season high by winning a third straight start, also accomplished April 29-May 10.

Alvarez has been given 13 runs of support in his previous two outings and limited Seattle to three runs and five hits in seven innings of an 8-3 win Thursday. He failed to register a decision in either of his two starts versus the Yankees this year, giving up six runs and 10 hits - three of them home runs - in 9 1-3 innings.

While Alvarez has had some issues against the Yankees, Romero has had plenty versus New York - and every opposing team for nearly three months.

The left-hander is 0-13 with a 7.91 ERA in 14 starts since beating Miami on June 22, and his losing streak has tied a club record established by Tom Underwood from Aug. 28, 1978-June 10, 1979. New York has made a significant contribution to Romero's stretch of misery, giving him three of those defeats by reaching him for 11 runs in 20 innings.

Romero's woes continued versus Seattle on Wednesday, when he allowed three runs and eight hits with four walks and was pulled after four-plus innings in a 3-2 defeat. Despite the ongoing futility, manager John Farrell refuses to give up on the pitcher who won 42 games his first three years in the majors.

"We're not abandoning Ricky Romero ," Farrell said. "We're going to continue to work with him, we're going to continue to finish this year on a positive note and that is our intent going forward."

Romero is trying to avoid becoming the first pitcher to lose 14 consecutive decisions as a starter in a single season since Mike Parrott did so with the Mariners in 1980, accomplishing that dubious feat in 15 starts spanning April 15-Sept. 13, 1980.

Curtis Granderson , whose next home run will make him the first Yankee outfielder to have back-to-back 40-homer seasons since Mickey Mantle in 1960-61, is 4 for 21 with one home run and eight strikeouts versus Romero. Jayson Nix , though, is 7 for 12 with a double.

With no off days until the end of the regular season, the rainout forced Girardi to shuffle his rotation, and he will use rookie David Phelps (4-4, 3.39) in the second game. The right-hander pitched two-thirds of an inning versus Tampa Bay Sunday in relief, giving up one hit and one walk, but got a win in his last start Sept. 12 by limiting Boston to one run in 5 2-3 innings of a 5-4 victory.

Phelps's lone outing versus Toronto came Aug. 27, when he yielded four runs and five hits in 6 1-3 innings of an 8-7, 11-inning loss.

The Blue Jays will be without shortstop Yunel Escobar after the team suspended him for three games Tuesday for wearing eye-black displaying a homophobic slur written in Spanish during Saturday's game against Boston.

© 2012 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/baseball/mlb/gameflash/2012/09/19/43605/index.html#boxscore?xid=si_topstories
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ABC to interview Sandusky abuse case's Victim 1

ABC will interview the young man whose sexual-abuse allegations launched the investigation against former Penn State assistant Jerry Sandusky.

AP

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) ABC will interview the young man whose 2009 allegations of sexual abuse led to the Penn State scandal and the criminal conviction of former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky.

Attorney Michael Boni, who represents the teenager known in court papers as Victim 1, said Wednesday that ABC landed the first interview with his client, who has a book coming out this fall.

It's unclear when the ABC interview would air. ABC didn't immediately return a phone message left Wednesday seeking comment. The New York Post was first to report the ABC exclusive.

Sandusky was convicted in June of dozens of criminal counts of sexual abuse of 10 boys on and off campus. At age 68, he awaits sentencing, which likely will send him to prison for the rest of his life.

Victim 1 and his mother reported Sandusky to the boy's high school and the Clinton County child protective agency in November 2009. Their complaint triggered a state investigation that last year resulted in criminal charges against Sandusky and against two university officials accused of failing to report suspected child abuse and of lying to a grand jury.

According to a lawsuit that Victim 1 filed against Penn State, he met Sandusky about eight years ago, when he was 11 and was a first-year participant in a camp sponsored by Sandusky's charity, The Second Mile. In his second year, he drew Sandusky's attention and accepted invitations to spend nights at the coach's State College home and to attend professional sports events, the lawsuit said.

Sandusky was accused of fondling the boy and performing oral sex on him multiple times over a period of several years.

Sandusky, who is jailed, didn't testify at trial but maintains his innocence. He has acknowledged he showered with boys but denied molesting them. His wife, Dottie Sandusky, testified that she never saw him doing anything inappropriate with boys he took to their home.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/football/ncaa/09/19/abc-sandusky-abuse-interview/index.html?xid=si_topstories
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NHL wipes out Sept. preseason games

Due to the lockout, NHL nets will remain in storage until October.

Danny Moloshok/Icon SMI

NEW YORK (AP) -- The NHL canceled its entire September preseason game schedule on Wednesday, the first on-ice casualty of the four-day lockout.

The league is wiping out all games through Sept. 30, a move it deems "necessary because of the absence of a collective bargaining agreement" with the players' association.

The NHL also said the 2012 Kraft Hockeyville preseason game, scheduled for Oct. 3 in Belleville, Ontario, has been postponed until 2013, bringing the total to 60 games called off on Wednesday.

The regular season is scheduled to begin on Oct. 11.

NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said the league has "no set policy on cancellations" of other games.

Also Wednesday, a person familiar with the plan says NHL employees at the league offices will switch to a four-day work week Oct. 1 because of the lockout.

The move will effectively cut salaries by 20 percent. The person spoke on condition of anonymity Wednesday because the NHL hadn't made the plan public.

HACKEL: Collateral damage mounting

The news was first reported by The Canadian Press.

The Florida Panthers and Ottawa Senators have let staff go because of the lockout, while several other teams have said they don't have any plans to do so as of now.

The league locked out its players at 12:01 a.m. Sunday, its fourth shutdown since 1992.

The preseason cancellations included a Washington Capitals game against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Sept. 26 in Baltimore.

Last year, in the inaugural Baltimore Hockey Classic, the Capitals hosted the Nashville Predators and drew a sold-out crowd.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/hockey/nhl/09/19/nhl.lockout-preseason-games-cancelled.ap/index.html?xid=si_topstories
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Giants' Nicks, Bradshaw won't play vs. Carolina

It's been anything but a healthy start to the season for Hakeem Nicks.

Richard A. Brightly/Icon SMI

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) The New York Giants will be without NFC offensive player of the week Hakeem Nicks for Thursday's game against the Carolina Panthers (1-1).

Nicks, a wide receiver, has a foot injury, adding to the list of absentees when the Super Bowl-champion Giants (1-1) play their first road game of the season. New York made the announcement late Wednesday afternoon after already labeling running back Ahmad Bradshaw, offensive tackle David Diehl and another receiver, Domenik Hixon, out as well.

Nicks did not practice this week, but hasn't practiced much since sitting out almost all of training camp while recovering from a broken foot suffered in May. In the initial injury report Wednesday, rookie defensive end Adewale Ojomo also was listed as out.

Bradshaw (neck), Diehl (knee) and Hixon (concussion) were hurt in Sunday's win over Tampa Bay and did not practice this week.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/football/nfl/09/19/ahmad-bradshaw-david-diehl.ap/index.html?xid=si_topstories
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