Tour Report: Garcia has colorful round (PGA Tour)

Tour Report: Garcia has colorful round (PGA Tour)
By Brian Wacker, PGATOUR.COM PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — If there’s one thing Sergio Garcia is, it’s entertaining. At least his scorecard was on Saturday. On a breezy morning at TPC Sawgrass, Garcia made seven pars, eight birdies, two bogeys and one double bogey in a round of 68 (click here to replay) that moved him at least to the peripherary of contention at 4 under with one round to go in THE PLAYERS Championship. “I don’t know,” Garcia said when asked how he quickly turned his day around following a double bogey on the par-5 second and bogey on the par-4 fourth. “I guess if I had all the answers, I would have tried to play the front a little better.” After a birdie on the ninth to make the turn in 1 over, he certainly played the back nine well. Garcia made birdies at the 10th, 11th, 13th, 15th and 16th. He played his last 10 holes in 6 under. ”The beautiful thing about this course is that if you play well, and you hit your spots, you can shoot a good number,” said Garcia, who won here in 2008 after finishing second a year earlier. In all, he has five finishes in the top 15 here. “The same way that you’re a little bit off and you start hitting shots the wrong way, you can post a lot of big numbers.” Whether Garcia can win his second PLAYERS Championship might depend on more than his score, however. The Spaniard tweaked his knee prior to his third round and was headed to the trailer to have it looked at. ”That’s the most thing that I’m concerned about at the moment,” he said. “It [feels] like a needle underneath the knee. Hopefully it will feel good [Sunday].”

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Aaron’s 499 (Yahoo! Sports)

Aaron’s 499 (Yahoo! Sports)
Who Will Win? Harvick Kevin Harvick: This is a total crapshoot, so why not go with an RCR Chevy? Harvick is one of the strongest drivers at NASCAR’s longest track and should be a fixture near the front all day. Unless of course, he’s taken out in “The Big One.” – Nick Bromberg Tony Stewart: After getting a potential win taken because of a water bottle, it’s fair to say Smoke heads to Talladega a bit angry. And an angry Smoke is a motivated Smoke, and a motivated Smoke usually gets what he wants which, in this case, will be a third victory of the season. – Jay Hart Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Oh, why not? Dude is running second in points, he’s got the entire grandstand behind him and Talladega is a wait-till-the-last-lap crapshoot anyway. Junior is running well enough to get up front and smart enough to stay up front. Is this, at last, the weekend it all comes together?. – Jay Busbee Top storyline • The storyline of the weekend may not happen Sunday, but Saturday when Danica Patrick will likely be a factor in the Nationwide race. If she wins – which is entirely possible – it would trump all else, including a Junior win Sunday. – Jay Hart • Qualifying will be crucial. We’re all just itching for some wreckage, aren’t we? Talladega, like Daytona this year, could give us some opening-laps carnage, which means that it’s essential to qualify well and stay ahead of most of the pack. There’ll be at least one big name caught up early this weekend the way Jimmie Johnson was at Daytona, bet on it. – Jay Busbee • If you thought Richmond had high expectations, then Talladega’s are even higher. The new restrictor plate package brought the pack back at Daytona, but the 500 wasn’t the most thrilling as plate races go. How many crashes and lead changes will it take to satiate the cries for excitement? No matter how exciting Talladega is, will we even find that satiation point? – Nick Bromberg From The Source Carl Edwards: “We don’t have any points to give up so we will go with a different attitude I am sure than my teammates. That is one race that scares our team because we don’t want to be 15th in points right now. We want to be up there marching toward the top five.”

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Courtney Lee says a Rockets teammate hit him, which Kevin McHale denies

Courtney Lee says a Rockets teammate hit him, which Kevin McHale denies
Courtney Lee and Kevin McHale discuss fight mechanics (Joe Murphy/ Getty). NBA practices are supposed to get players ready to play games, but they can also become pretty intense affairs. It’s not a big surprise: put a dozen or so competitive athletes in a basketball context and they’re likely to mix it up a bit. There’s no use in injuring a player in practice, though, and players are expected to rein in their physicality to avoid causing harm to teammates. Unfortunately, Houston Rockets guard Courtney Lee suffered a swollen eye during Wednesday’s practice and claimed someone had elbowed him. Head coach Kevin McHale had other ideas. From Jonathan Feigen for the Houston Chronicle: Just minutes after Wednesday’s practice ended, the swelling above Courtney Lee’s right eye was already obvious — the result, he said, of a wayward elbow. “Somebody got me,” Lee said. “I don’t know who did it, but I will find out. Hopefully, it doesn’t swell up too much to where I can’t see.” Lee said he was knocked out for a moment. No one identified the owner of the elbow that hit him, but coach Kevin McHale said Lee won’t find a culprit. “He hit his head on the floor,” McHale said. “No one elbowed him in the eye. Believe me, no one is hitting anyone.” There is no witness to corroborate either account, but it seems a little unlikely that Lee would say he was elbowed if he was not. We can only guess at what happened, of course, and it doesn’t look like we’ll find out the whole story any time soon. Nevertheless, here are five guesses as to why Lee and McHale can’t agree on what happened: 1. McHale elbowed Lee in the eye after he asked why anyone would consider Joe Smith important enough to sign illegally. 2. Contrary to general manager Daryl Morey’s reputation for statistical analysis, the Rockets decide a game’s playing time by engaging in MMA tournaments during practice. 3. Lee and Chandler Parsons got into an argument about which of their names sounds more like a lacrosse player, and eventually things got out of hand. 4. Lee and Goran Dragic were reenacting scenes from the “Three Stooges” trailer and got a little too physical. 5. Lee fell on the floor and inadvertently elbowed himself in the eye, which when you think about it is quite physically impressive.

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Rookie salary scale at issue in talks (AP)

Rookie salary scale at issue in talks (AP)
HONOLULU (AP)—Chicago Bulls star Derrick Rose(notes) has established himself among the elite NBA players in just three seasons. His salary, however, doesn’t come anywhere near the top in the league, let alone his own team. Because of rookie salary scale restrictions, the league’s reigning MVP earns about $5.5 million a season—far less than other NBA stars. The scale is on the table between the league and players’ association during its extended labor dispute that could result in more games being canceled and might wipe out the season. Rose, in Hawaii this week visiting military personnel as part of the Hoops for Troops USO Tour, will undoubtedly earn a lot more when he becomes a free agent at the end of his four-year, $22.5 million contract, depending on the new agreement, of course. “I wish it was back like where it was in the old days where there wasn’t a cap,” Rose told The Associated Press on Tuesday. “Back in the day, they were giving guys coming out of college with multimillion-dollar contracts, so why stop it now? The game is growing. There’s no need to stop it.” The union would like players to get out from the rookie salary scale quicker than five years. On Monday, union executive director Billy Hunter mentioned Rose and Rookie of the Year Blake Griffin(notes) during an hour-long podcast with ESPN.com as examples of players who are underpaid because there are still locked into their scale figures. The league said it has proposed a new bonus pool for top-performing rookie scale players who earn league honors as such as MVP or are on the All-NBA first, second or third teams. Rose said the labor strife is about getting an agreement that’s fair. “Greed is not on our side,” Rose said. “We’re not greedy. … What they’re trying to do to us is dead wrong.” The sides met for three days with a federal mediator before talks broke down Thursday after players said owners insisted they commit to a 50-50 split of revenues before any further discussions about the salary cap system could continue. Though staffs from the sides have met since, no full bargaining sessions have been held and the NBA is expected to announce soon that more games will be canceled. “I know that everybody is waiting for us to play, but it has to be on the right terms.” Rose said. Rose has been waiting and spending most of his time training in Los Angeles with other NBA players, including Atlanta Hawks center Al Horford(notes), who also is in Hawaii. “We owe it to ourselves and others like the guys who are coming up to have a good deal,” Horford said. “I felt like in the past, the players have given up a lot to the owners and I just feel like it’s excessive that way they’re trying to do it … At the end of the day, if you look at who’s asking for money and all that, it’s the owners. They’re the ones that want to make all the drastic changes to all these things that haven’t really been an issue.” Rose, who turned 23 this month, is the youngest MVP in NBA history and joined Michael Jordan as the only Bulls player to earn the honor. “The most difficult part is, every day you wake up and you see games canceled,” he said. “The fans are fiending for it. I know we’re itching to play. And I know that it’ll hurt the game because our fans are loyal and for us not to be playing, I think it’ll hurt them more.” He is coming off a season where he averaged 25 points and 7.7 assists, while leading the Bulls to a league-high 62 wins and the Eastern Conference finals. The Miami Heat overwhelmed the top-seeded Bulls by dominating the fourth quarters, with LeBron James(notes) containing the Bulls’ point guard. Rose said he couldn’t wait to get back on the court to silence some of his critics and test some of the things he’s been working on since the playoffs, such as conditioning, isolation skills, going against bigger players and learning how to get fouled. “I put a lot of work into my game. I take my basketball life very serious. That’s just my life,” he said. “For people to still talk negative about you, I think that’s just life, period. You just go with it. But I feed off of it.” As far as his first trip to the islands, Rose said he was humbled by his welcome and meeting the troops. Rose and Horford are joined by Atlanta’s Joe Johnson(notes), Charlotte’s D.J. Augustin(notes), Sacramento’s Tyreke Evans(notes), New Jersey’s Brook Lopez(notes), Phoenix’s Robin Lopez(notes), Washington’s JaVale McGee(notes) and Miami’s Mike Miller(notes). They are scheduled to visit military families, hold clinics and play games at an Army, Navy and Marine Corps bases. Earlier this week, they met with some soldiers wounded in action. “They’re around my age and younger than I am,” Rose said. “Just seeing that they’re fighting for us, I just let them know we’re not taking them for granted.”

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Gilbert Arenas is either joking, blind, or bad with numbers

Gilbert Arenas is either joking, blind, or bad with numbers
Of course, Gilbert Arenas is joking when he tells fellow Magic guard J.J. Redick that those two are “the two best white shooters in the NBA.” He has to be joking, especially with that 3-point percentage of his.The Orlando Sentinel’s Zach McCann caught the funny, and Tweeted about it:So silly. There are so many better white shooters to pick from. Matt Bonner, for one, is making nearly 50 percent of his 3-point attempts this year, while Redick is making only 45 percent. And there are so many other white guys that are shooting better than Gilbert Arenas this year, like Luke Ridnour, or even Kevin Love, who is making 45 percent of his threes. Sure, Gilbert could whip all of them in a game to 21, but in terms of shooting? Arenas, making under 39 percent of his 3-pointers this year, just doesn’t measure up.There’s just no way that Gilbert Arenas and J.J. Redick — about as good a backup backcourt duo as we’ve ever seen in this league — are the two best white shooters in the NBA. They’re two very good scorers who could put the Magic over the top this year, but they (and Gilbert, especially) are far from the two best white shooters this league has to offer.Also, Gilbert Arenas isn’t white.

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NASCAR Gambling – Ford 400 at Homestead Motor Speedway

NASCAR gambling – Ford 400 at Homestead Motor Speedway

It’s the final race of the NASCAR season and Jimmie Johnson has pretty much secured his third straight NASCAR Cup. It’s an amazing feat. I’m not sure anybody else has ever done that. Of course
the rules changed recently which allowed Johnson to coast through the regular season
just enough to get into the Chase
where he knew that his crew and his cars would outrun everybody….

Betting Stats for NASCAR from Martinsville Virginia

Never on the NASCAR circuit has there been a driver as dominant as Richard Petty
who won 200 races over the course of his long career. Well
fifteen of those wins took place at Martinsville Speedway
which makes him the all-time winner there. At the moment
it can be said that a trio of drivers share dominance at the “paper clip.” Between them
Jimmie Johnson
Denny Hamlin and Jeff…

NASCAR Power Rankings – Hamlin and Harvick Appear to be Legitimate NASCAR

Denny Hamlin won his 3rd race of 2010 when he took home the trophy for the Showtime Southern 500 this past Saturday.  Hamlin was one of the favorites in the NASCAR sportsbook to win the Showtime Southern 500 and proved
once again
that an injury (this time to his knee) wasn’t going to hamper his driving ability. With the victory
Hamlin moved up a spot to 6th in the Sprint Cup…

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