WTA S-Hertogenbosch – Women’s Saturday Preview

WTA S-Hertogenbosch – Women’s Saturday Preview
Written by Diana on 18 June 2011. Jelena Dokic vs. Roberta Vinci Australian star Jelena Dokic shot to superstardom as a Serbian on the green grass of Wimbledon 12 years ago. Former World No.4 Jelena Dokic takes on Roberta Vinci for her second WTA singles title of the 2011 season in the final of the Unicef Open, a WTA International event being played here in s-Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands. Australian Jelena Dokic’s attempts of returning to the winner’s circle finally found the touch of reality when she claimed the title in Kuala Lumpur at the Malaysian Open. Dokic, who had a magical run in 2010 Australian Open as a wild card, patiently competed at various ITF an WTA tournaments in the span of 12 months before finding title winning form in the South East Asian city. After knocking out Italian No.2 Flavia Pennetta in the second round, Dokic scored a comprehensive win over Kim Clijsters’ conquerer Romina Oprandi in the semifinals yesterday. Dokic’s opponent, Italian Roberta Vinci is currently ranked No.31 in the world. Vinci entered Roland Garros with a confidence boosting win at the Barcelona Ladies Open, her second title in the Spanish city after her success in 2009. In the previous rounds, Brianti took out big names like Dominika Cibulkova and Yanina Wickmayer which is a testimonial of her solid form. This is a first meeting between both players an is extremely likely to favour Dokic since the Australian has loads of experience on the surface and is playing great tennis this season.

Tags: , , , ,

Related posts

By the Numbers: Kansas double-dips with Chicago standalone (NASCAR.com)

By the Numbers: Kansas double-dips with Chicago standalone (NASCAR.com)
Kansas Speedway is a 1.5-mile D-shaped oval with 15 degrees banking in the turns. The frontstretch is 2,685 feet with 10.4 degrees banking; the backstretch is 2,207 feet with 5 degrees banking. CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES | O’Reilly Auto Parts 250 (2 p.m. ET Saturday) | Tickets 3 — Consecutive poles at Kansas for Ron Hornaday. The record for the most consecutive poles at a track is four, by Mike Skinner at Texas. Hornaday also has four consecutive top-10 finishes at Kansas; he hasn’t finished worse than fourth in the past three races and has led more than half of the laps during that span (238 of 466). Skinner, not entered in this week’s race, has six consecutive top-10s at Kansas. 3—First-time winners at Kansas: Ricky Hendrick (2001), Jon Wood (’03) and Erik Darnell (’07). Hendrick is the only rookie to win at Kansas; his crew chief was Lance McGrew. 8—Races at Kansas won from a top-five starting position. The only other two races were won from the 10th starting position. There has been one race won from the pole—Ron Hornaday in 2008. 10 — Different winners in as many races at Kansas: Ricky Hendrick (2001), Mike Bliss (’02), Jon Wood (’03), Carl Edwards (’04), Todd Bodine (’05), Terry Cook (’06), Erik Darnell (’07), Ron Hornaday (’08), Mike Skinner (’09), Johnny Sauter (’10). Very Interesting 400 — Races in the Truck Series when the green waves at Kansas. Truck Series at 400 Top 10 Races (as voted upon by media members) 1. 193 Feb. 14, 2003 Rick Crawford breaks a 120-race winless streak in a three-wide photo finish with Travis Kvapil and Robert Pressley to open the 2003 season at Daytona. 2. 11 July 15, 1995 First photo finish is recorded at Colorado National Speedway. Television replays were used to determine that Butch Miller beat Mike Skinner by the depth of the paint on his front bumper cover. The race pre-dated the use of electronic scoring, so no official margin of victory was available. 3. 1 Feb. 5, 1995 First race, first finish of less than a 10th of a second (0.09) by Mike Skinner over Terry Labonte. 4. 352-356 June 20-July 24, 2009 Ron Hornaday wins a series-record five consecutive races—only third NASCAR national-series driver to do so—at Milwaukee, Memphis, Kentucky, Indianapolis and Nashville. 5. 389 Oct. 30, 2010 Kyle Busch beats Aric Almirola and Johnny Sauter by .002 seconds in a three-wide battle to the finish line producing the closest finish in series history since the introduction of electronic timing and scoring. 6. 366 Nov. 13, 2009 A fourth-place finish at Phoenix gives Ron Hornaday a 215-point advantage over Matt Crafton and a record-breaking fourth series title. 7. 342 Nov. 14, 2008 Johnny Benson finishes seventh at season-ending race at Homestead with Ron Hornaday in eighth. Benson wins the championship over Hornaday by a mere seven points. 8. 123 Feb. 18, 2000 Daytona is added to the series schedule in 2000. The race produces several spectacular accidents, 31 lead changes and Mike Wallace’s slingshot pass of Andy Houston on the final lap to seal the victory. 9. 217 Nov. 14, 2003 Carl Edwards lands a seat in a Roush Fenway Racing Ford and won twice to capture the 2003 rookie of the year honors. 10. 243 Feb. 18, 2005 The 2005 season begins with Jimmy Spencer in Victory Lane at Daytona—only to be replaced by Bobby Hamilton, who drafts past Spencer a split-second before the race was ended under caution. * Truck Series to mark its 400th start at Kansas SPRINT CUP SERIES | STP 400 (1 p.m. ET Sunday) | Tickets 4 — Consecutive top-five finishes at Kansas for Greg Biffle, who hasn’t finished worse than third, including two wins, during that span. Biffle has led the most laps (323) at Kansas and his 8.1 average finish (nine starts) is the best of any driver with at least five starts. 4—Consecutive top-five finishes at Kansas for Jeff Gordon, who leads all drivers with seven top-fives (including wins in the first two races) and eight top-10s. 4 — Consecutive top-10 finishes at Kansas for Jimmie Johnson, including a win from the pole in 2008. Johnson leads all drivers with three poles at Kansas; he has started fourth or better in six of his nine races there. 32 — Place of finish for Denny Hamlin in his Cup debut, at Kansas in October 2005. Hamlin is set to make his 200th series start this week. Hamlin has one top-10 (fifth in 2009) and has led two laps in his six starts at Kansas. Very Interesting 210 — Laps led at Kansas by Matt Kenseth, third among all drivers. He is one of three drivers (Greg Biffle and Jimmie Johnson) to lead in at least six races at Kansas. However, his average finish is 20.6, with as many finishes in the 30s (four—all in odd-numbered years) as top-10s (three in even-numbered years, including a fifth in 2008 and seventh in ’10). * Fantasy Preview: Favorites might not be enough | Preview Show Chicagoland Speedway is a 1.5-mile D-shaped oval with 18 degrees banking in the turns. The frontstretch is 2,400 feet with 11 degrees banking; the backstretch is 1,700 feet with 5 degrees banking. NATIONWIDE SERIES | STP 300 (8 p.m. ET Saturday) | Tickets 1—Drivers entered in this week’s race who have a series win at Chicagoland—Kevin Harvick is a two-time winner (2005, ’07). 2 — Best place of finish at Chicagoland for Roush Fenway Racing drivers: Carl Edwards (2006) and Matt Kenseth (’07). Chicagoland is one of only three active tracks (Daytona and Watkins Glen) at which RFR has yet to win. 3—Consecutive races in which the driver leading the most laps at Chicagoland has won the race: Kyle Busch (101 laps) in 2008; Joey Logano (96) in ’09; and Busch (110) in ’10. Neither driver is entered in this week’s race. 7—Times in the 10 races at Chicagoland the eventual winner did not lead for the first time until Lap 95 or later. Very Interesting 3 — Best starting position of a Chicagoland winner: Bobby Hamilton Jr. (2003) and Joey Logano (’09). Chicagoland is the only active track that has never been won from the front row. * Nationwide Series: Complete Coverage Powered by Racing Recall

Tags: , , , ,

Related posts

The 10-man rotation, starring Lang Whitaker

The 10-man rotation, starring Lang Whitaker
A look around the league and the web that covers it. It’s also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren’t always listed in order of importance. That’s for you, dear reader, to figure out. C: SLAM. Happy trails to Lang Whitaker, who is stepping aside as full-time editor at SLAM. PF: NBA.com. San Antonio’s defense is falling off badly. SF: The Onion. My favorite announcer. Too bad he (or, this version of “Brian Davis”) doesn’t exist. SG: The Point Forward. Is Vince Carter a Hall of Famer? Whoa, boy. PG: BrewHoop. Dan Sinclair is yelling intelligent things at specific Bucks. 6th: McSweeney’s. Intramural basketball teams for English majors. 7th: Daily Thunder. The Thunder are growing. 8th: Indy Cornrows. Chris Mullin’s healthy few years in Indy solidified his Hall of Fame status. 9th: The Basketball Jones. Stop laughing, Will Ferrell. 10th: Magic Basketball. Dwight Howard, frustrated perfectionist. Got a link or tip for Ball Don’t Lie? Holler at me at KD_BDL_ED (at) yahoo.com, or follow me on Twitter.

Create-a-Caption: ‘Forward … touch … side … together’
See? You’re dancing, Jameer Nelson! Look down at your feet and how beautifully they’re moving. It’s just that simple when you’ve got a teacher who cares, like Dwight Howard. (Well, a teacher who cares and has watched the Winter Ball dance sequence from “Angus” like a billion times. That probably goes without saying, though.) Best caption wins a very, very ’90s soundtrack (NOTE: not really). Good luck. In our last adventure: Three cheers for Delonte West! Winner, Waynehead: “As a matter of fact, I did put deodorant on today.” Runner-up, DMD 312: “I’m the best, mayne. I did it.” Second runner-up, Algrady6: “I don’t have two guns, a shotgun in a guitar case and a machete this time. I’m innocent.”

Video: “The Incredible Hump” for Most Improved Player, for your consideration
As the internet has become more of a platform for NBA teams, the league’s dog days of late March and early April have increasingly become a time for the less successful teams around the league to pimp their players for postseason awards. Last year, the Minnesota Timberwolves put out the most creative campaign with “Brewer’s Blend,” a coffee-themed set of ads and mugs for swingman Corey Brewer, because, I don’t know, he energized the team in addition to having a name that made the connection pretty easy. Then again, maybe Brewer turned out to be decaf, because the Wolves traded him with few reservations before February’s deadline.This season has been relatively light on these sorts of campaigns so far — perhaps as a way to save money in advance of the coming lockout — but the New Jersey Nets have now entered the fray with “The Incredible Hump,” a webpage and video clip that attempt to sing the praises of forward (and Kim Kardashian paramour) Kris Humphries for this season’s Most Improved Player honors. Humphries is strong, and his name starts with “Hu,” so I suppose that means he is easily comparable to the Incredible Hulk. On the other hand, he seems like an honorable sportsman on the court, not an angry brute, and the Nets went ahead and mixed metaphors here by using Digital Underground’s classic “Humpty Dance” as music. Pick one next time, guys. This would have worked perfectly fine — or maybe even better — if Humphries had dressed up like Shock G in the guise of “Humpty Hump.”Apart from its aesthetics, the MIP campaign itself is an odd gambit. For one thing, the award’s criteria are even more nebulous than those of the MVP — should MIP go to a good player who becomes a star, or a decent player who becomes a good one, or are both those considerations misguided because they typically correspond to increases in minutes played rather than per-minute averages? What, exactly, defines improvement? Humphries has seen his PPG and RPG averages rise considerably, but he also has seen his minutes jump from 17.7 to 27.9 per game. Are his stats really that surprising? On top of that, Humphries is an unlikely candidate for MIP just because the honor typically goes to a player who sees a drastic jump in his scoring average. If you look through the 25 previous winners, you’ll notice that nearly all of them won because they became more prolific scorers. Humphries is notable as one of only eight players to average a double-double this season, but other candidates have seen their numbers rise with far more fanfare.So, if Humphries is an unlikely MIP winner, why exactly would the Nets sing his praises? In the most basic sense, it’s likely to give his success an increased profile, which is a nice thing to do for someone who’s been one of the franchise’s lone on-court bright spots this season. However, Humphries is set to become a free agent this summer, and any increase in his profile will likely be attended by a sizable increase in salary, too. While it’s nice to commend one of your team’s players for a job well done, it’s also a risky move to act like he’s deserving of a major award when winning that trophy would provide justification for a major increase in salary. Humphries has been valuable to the Nets this season, but has he been good enough to warrant a big deal? In future negotiations, can’t Humphries and his agent now state that he should have won MIP and should be paid accordingly? The Nets, by their actions, seem to think he’s deserving.These aren’t reasons not to make an internet campaign for a deserving player, but it’s important to note that these actions have consequences beyond giving a valued member of the team a nice bit of publicity. When Rockets point guard Aaron Brooks won MIP last season, he looked like a big part of Houston’s future plans. In February, he was unceremoniously traded to the Suns to help clear the way for the red-hot Kyle Lowry. Would all teams be so willing to dump a player who had so recently won serious publicity for the team? Awards are nice, but they can often lock teams into sticking with players who may not deserve so much trust.(Video via TBJ)

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

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…

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Related posts