Wednesday, June 6, 2012

FOXNews.com: Pirates continue series with Reds

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Pirates continue series with Reds
Jun 6th 2012, 15:00

Right-hander Brad Lincoln makes a second spot start of the season tonight and can move the Pittsburgh Pirates a step closer to first place when they visit Great American Ball Park for game two of a three-game series with the host Cincinnati Reds.

Pittsburgh entered Tuesday's opener tied with the St. Louis Cardinals and trailing the Reds by three games in the National League's Central Division, but the Pirates took a game off the Cincinnati advantage and took sole possession of the No. 2 slot with an 8-4 victory.

The Cardinals lost, 9-8, at Houston.

Clint Barmes went 3-for-4 with three RBI and Neil Walker hit a two-run homer for the Pirates, who also got a home run, triple and two runs scored from Alex Presley and a homer and two RBI from Casey McGehee while winning for the eighth time in 10 games.

A.J. Burnett (5-2) gave up three runs on five hits and struck out eight over five frames to win his fourth straight start. Joel Hanrahan stranded two runners in the ninth to pick up his 15th save of the year.

Joey Votto drove in two runs while Jay Bruce and Todd Frazier each drove in a run for the Reds, losers in three of their last five.

Homer Bailey (4-4) lasted just three innings after giving up six runs on eight hits.

It was Bailey's first loss to the Pirates in seven career decisions.

Pittsburgh's Lincoln, filling in for injured teammate Charlie Morton, hasn't started since allowing two runs on four hits in six innings of a 3-2 victory at Miami on May 14.

He's made 13 appearances in relief, recording a 0.45 ERA with 23 strikeouts and 12 hits in 20 innings. He hasn't allowed a run since the Miami start - a streak of six appearances and 5 2/3 innings - in which he's surrendered just one hit and walked one with seven strikeouts.

Lincoln has made 18 career starts, including one against Cincinnati last Sept. 24, when he allowed two runs while scattering six hits and four walks in five innings of a 4-3 win.

Overall, in four appearances against the Reds, he has a 3.52 earned run average across 7 2/3 innings.

Cincinnati counters with Dominican righty Johnny Cueto, who tries to snap a skid that's seen him lose three of four decisions since opening the year with four consecutive wins.

The 26-year-old was a 2-1 loser to the Pirates in his most recent start on May 30, when he allowed two runs on five hits in seven innings but was beaten by Burnett, who allowed a run on two hits in seven innings.

Cueto is 11-4 lifetime against Pittsburgh with a 2.55 ERA in 106 innings, allowing 83 hits, striking out 100 batters and allowing a .213 average.

He's 2-1 in four starts at home this spring.

The Pirates have won four of seven from the Reds this season.

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FOXNews.com: Panthers reward GM Tallon with extension

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Panthers reward GM Tallon with extension
Jun 6th 2012, 15:43

Sunrise, FL –  The Florida Panthers have rewarded executive vice president & general manager Dale Tallon with a multi-year contract extension.

Tallon made Kevin Dineen head coach in June of 2011 after the Panthers went 30-40-12 during the 2010-11 season.

Dineen guided the team to a 38-26-18 mark in 2011-12. The 94 points was the franchise's most since totaling 98 points in 1999-2000 (43-27-6-6). The Panthers also earned their first division title and the team's first playoff berth since 2000.

Tallon was selected as a finalist for the NHL's Executive of the Year that will be awarded in Las Vegas on June 20.

"I am very grateful to Cliff [Viner, team general partner] and all our partners for providing me the opportunity to sign an extension with the Panthers," said Tallon. "Through the hard work of our diligent hockey operations staff we have changed the environment and culture of our club, developing a new identity for the Florida Panthers. I am very proud of our coaching staff, players and support staff for all that we accomplished this season. We are driven each day to make our team better and to reach our ultimate goal of bringing a Stanley Cup championship to South Florida."

The 61-year-old Tallon has made many key hires during his time in Florida: assistant general manager Michael Santos (July 2010), assistant coaches Gord Murphy (July 2010) and Craig Ramsay (July 2011) and director of player development Brian Skrudland (July 2010).

He also completely revamped the Panthers lineup in the 2011 offseason, adding 10 players that would be mainstays on the Panthers roster in 2011-12. Tallon's most noteworthy moves came in trading for players including Brian Campbell and Kris Versteeg, before signing free agents Tomas Fleischmann, Jose Theodore, Sean Bergenheim, Ed Jovanovski, Scottie Upshall and multiple other players who broke through in 2011-12.

In addition, Tallon acquired veterans Mikael Samuelsson, Marco Sturm, Krys Barch, John Madden, Wojtek Wolski and Jerred Smithson this past season.

"We are very pleased to have agreed to a contract extension with Dale," Viner said. "Over the last two years, he has worked tirelessly to re-position our team and hockey operations department. Our team's success can be attributed directly to Dale's passion, leadership and the motivation that he has instilled in our organization. He has assembled a hockey management team and a roster of driven players that are focused on making the Florida Panthers a successful organization both on and off the ice."

Prior to joining the Panthers, Tallon had spent 33 years with the Blackhawks as a player, broadcaster and front office executive. He served as Chicago's assistant GM from 2003 to June, 2005 and then took over as the general manager and served in that role for four years.

Tallon spent the 2009-10 season as the senior advisor of hockey operations for the Blackhawks.

Vancouver made Tallon the second overall pick in the 1970 NHL Entry Draft and he wound up playing 10 seasons for the Canucks, Blackhawks and Penguins. During his career, he was a two-time All-Star and tallied 98 goals and 238 assists.

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FOXNews.com: Yankees eye another win over Rays

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Yankees eye another win over Rays
Jun 6th 2012, 14:58

The New York Yankees have a chance to move atop the American League East standings tonight when they play the second test of their three-game set with the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium.

New York climbed within a half game of the Rays and Baltimore Orioles in Tuesday's opener behind a tremendous effort from left-hander Andy Pettitte. The 39-year-old hurler piled up a season-high 10 strikeouts and Russell Martin belted a grand slam, as the Yankees rolled to a 7-0 win.

Nick Swisher added an RBI double for the Yankees, who capitalized on a throwing error by shortstop Elliot Johnson in the first inning that led to a pair of runs, and New York won for the fourth time in five games, moving a season-high six games over .500 (30-24).

Pettitte (3-2) allowed just two hits and walked two batters over 7 1/3 innings. The lefty moved to 17-6 lifetime against the Rays.

"For Andy, I think his stamina has been tremendous," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. "I expect Andy to keep it up. That's the only Andy I know."

James Shields (6-4) was tagged for seven hits and seven runs -- five earned -- over five innings, as the Rays lost for the fifth time in seven tries.

"Overall, we didn't play very good baseball all around," Shields said. "It's frustrating. We're not playing to our potential."

Tonight, New York will hand the ball to righty Ivan Nova, who has won his last two starts. Nova was not particularly sharp on Wednesday against Anaheim, as he allowed five runs and eight hits and walked three batters in 6 2/3 innings. His team put six runs on the board for him, though, and he improved to 6-2 to go along with a 5.60 ERA.

"I know at some point this year, I'm going to start pitching better, and I hope it's going to be soon," Nova said. "I still have a lot of confidence in myself and I know I can get out of bad situations."

Nova beat the Rays back on May 8 and is a perfect 3-0 lifetime against them with a 3.26 ERA in five starts.

Getting the call for the Rays, meanwhile, will be righty Alex Cobb, who will be trying to bounce back from his first loss of the season. After starting his year with consecutive wins, Cobb was defeated by the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday, as he allowed four runs and nine hits in five innings.

"Whenever you tie or go ahead, you want a quick inning to get the momentum staying in your favor and get the offense back going," Cobb said. "Unfortunately they got a little rally going there in the third, and I wasn't able to get the offense back on the field quick enough. Later in the game, it wound up costing us."

Cobb faced the Yankees once last season and did not get a decision, as he gave up just an earned run in six innings, despite walking four batters.

Tampa has won four of seven from the Yankees already this season.

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FOXNews.com: Sharapova, Kvitova will clash in French Open semis

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Sharapova, Kvitova will clash in French Open semis
Jun 6th 2012, 15:45

Paris, France –  Former top-ranked star Maria Sharapova and reigning Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova were Wednesday's quarterfinal winners at the 2012 French Open.

The second-seeded Sharapova routed 23rd seed Kaia Kanepi of Estonia 6-2, 6-3 in 74 minutes on Court Chatrier, while the fourth-seeded Czech lefthander Kvitova came from behind to stave off Kazakhstani qualifier Yaroslava Shvedova 3-6, 6-2, 6-4 on Court Lenglen.

The three-time major champion Sharapova and Kvitova will do battle in the semifinals Thursday on the famed red clay at Roland Garros. Kvitova captured her first career major title last year by beating Sharapova in the Wimbledon finale.

Sharapova piled up seven service breaks, compared to three for Kanepi on Day 11 in Paris.

The 25-year-old Russian, who needs a French Open title to complete a career Grand Slam, will appear in her second straight and third overall semi at Roland Garros. She has never reached the French final.

Sharapova was this year's Australian Open runner-up to current world No. 1 star Victoria Azarenka.

Kvitova trailed Shvedova 2-4 in the final set Wednesday before righting the ship with four straight game wins to close out their round-of-eight match. The powerful Czech converted on her second match point when Shvedova sent one final backhand wide of the court.

The 22-year-old Kvitova overcame the 24-year-old Shvedova in 1 hour, 53 minutes by swatting 24 more winners (38-14) than her Kazakhstani counterpart.

Shvedova, who toppled defending French Open champion Li Na here on Monday, was appearing in her second Roland Garros quarterfinal in three years (0-2).

Kvitova will now appear in her first-ever French Open and fourth career Grand Slam semifinal (1-2).

Sharapova and Kvitova will meet for a sixth time on Thursday, with the Russian leading their lifetime series, 3-2. Sharapova is 2-0 against the Czech slugger this year, with semifinal victories at the Aussie Open and on some clay in Stuttgart back in April. The two women will meet for the third time in the last four Slams.

Thursday's other semifinal will pit sixth-seeded U.S. Open champion Samantha Stosur against 21st-seeded Italian Sara Errani. The Aussie Stosur is a perfect 5-0 lifetime against the 25-year-old Errani, including a straight- set victory in Rome just last month.

Errani, who already owns three clay-court titles this season, beat a pair of former French Open champs in Ana Ivanovic (2008) and Svetlana Kuznetsova (2009) in the third and fourth round here, respectively.

The 28-year-old Stosur was the French Open runner-up two years ago.

This year's first-time French Open champ will pocket $1.5 million.

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FOXNews.com: IOC to offer YouTube coverage in 64 countries

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IOC to offer YouTube coverage in 64 countries
Jun 6th 2012, 13:41

LAUSANNE, Switzerland –  The IOC will provide live coverage of the London Olympics to 64 countries in Asia and Africa on YouTube.

The International Olympic Committee says it will live stream 2,200 hours of coverage on its YouTube channel.

The free coverage will include live sports events and highlights and can be accessed online or on smartphones and devices.

The coverage is aimed at countries where digital broadcast rights have not been sold by the IOC.

The countries include Afghanistan, Pakistan, Thailand and Singapore in Asia, and Angola, Ivory Coast, Ethiopia and Zambia in Africa.

The live stream will consist of English language commentary. It will include 10 live feeds from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. London time and a 24-hour broadcast of the Olympic News Channel.

___

Online: http://youtube.com/olympic

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FOXNews.com: Sharapova beats Kanepi, reaches 3rd French Open SF

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Sharapova beats Kanepi, reaches 3rd French Open SF
Jun 6th 2012, 13:26

PARIS –  Maria Sharapova reached the semifinals at the French Open, the only Grand Slam tournament she hasn't won, by beating 23rd-seeded Kaia Kanepi of Estonia 6-2, 6-3 on Wednesday.

The second-seeded Sharapova lost in the Roland Garros semifinals in 2007 and last year. She won Wimbledon in 2004, the U.S. Open in 2006 and the Australian Open in 2008.

Against Kanepi, Sharapova played much better than she did in her previous match, when she had 12 double-faults and was broken nine times. Still, there were issues Wednesday, including when Sharapova was broken trying to serve it out.

The Russian is expected to move up to No. 1 in the rankings, overtaking Victoria Azarenka, if she can reach her first French Open final.

Kanepi dropped to 0-4 in major quarterfinals.

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FOXNews.com: UK decides again to snub taekwondo star Cook

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UK decides again to snub taekwondo star Cook
Jun 6th 2012, 13:50

LONDON –  The British Olympic Association says taekwondo officials have again refused to nominate No. 1 ranked Aaron Cook for their Olympic team despite being ordered to reconsider.

Britain's taekwondo selection panel met Wednesday and included an independent observer from the BOA.

Last week, the sport's panel named Lutalo Muhammad to the Olympic team. BOA said it "could not ratify" the nomination of Muhammad, ranked 104.

Cook is the top-ranked fighter in his division. He fell out with taekwondo officials after abandoning the national training program last year.

Cook hired his own coaches, had a gym built in the backyard of his Manchester home and most recently won the European championships.

The refusal to name Cook sparked outrage among British Olympians. Some described the snub as a political decision.

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FOXNews.com: 'Plastic Brits' will learn UK anthem for Olympics

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'Plastic Brits' will learn UK anthem for Olympics
Jun 6th 2012, 12:59

LONDON –  American-raised hurdler Tiffany Porter was at the center of the so-called "Plastic Brits" debate after she was named Britain's captain for the indoor world championships in March.

Porter was asked at the championships in Istanbul, Turkey, if she knew the words to Britain's national anthem and was then prodded to sing it. She refused, saying she knew the words and that reciting it was unnecessary. She went on to win a silver medal in the 60-meter hurdles.

Porter was born and raised in the United States to a British mother and a Nigerian father. She's held a British passport since she was a baby and represented the United States as a junior before opting for Britain last year.

At the London Games that begin July 27, Porter will be one of eight foreign-born track athletes on the 90-member athletics team to compete for Britain.

"They know the words, or they will," said Britain's athletics team head coach Charles van Commenee. "I'm not going to rehearse everybody because we have 90 athletes, but people that matter ... let's say the relevant ones."

Van Commenee, who is Dutch, said he only knows the first two lines of his own national anthem.

Cuban-born triple jumper Yamile Aldama is another so-called Plastic Brit, who won a gold medal for Britain at the indoor championships.

Aldama is married to a Briton but previously chose to compete for Sudan because of complications in gaining British citizenship. She finally got her British passport two years ago.

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FOXNews.com: CUP: Long Weekend Starts Now

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CUP: Long Weekend Starts Now
Jun 6th 2012, 13:15

Kasey Kahne's Tweet said it all.

"Off to Pocono PA. The next five days is going to feel like a month I'm thinking," the Hendrick Motorsports driver Tweeted Tuesday night.

He is not alone in that sentiment. With a new track surface at Pocono Raceway, the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers will have four hours of testing today, five-and-a-half hours tomorrow and two hours, 55 minutes of practice on Friday. Add it all up and it's 12 hours and 25 minutes of running laps over three days at Pocono.

On top of that, 10 Sprint Cup regulars, including Kahne, will leave Pocono today to fly to rural Ohio and back for tonight's Prelude to the Dream dirt late model race at Tony Stewart's Eldora Speedway.

In truth, testing is only part of the reason for the Pocono marathon. As much as testing is important for the teams to be able to dial in their cars on the new surface, putting rubber down on the asphalt is critical. The more rubber that goes down on the 2.5-mile triangular track, the better the chance there will be two racing grooves and not just one. And that will be critical to ensuring a good, competitive race on Sunday.

"Pocono is kind of a catch-22 when it comes to the repave because, if you think about it, Turn 3 already was repaved," said Ryan Newman, driver of the No. 39 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet. "We ran where the grip was, so only two-thirds of the track is going to be really new to us. It's going to be interesting. The track is so unique, and that to me makes it fun. It's one of my favorite racetracks. But the new repave will provide some different challenges, I am sure. I guess we will have a couple of extra days to try and figure it out."

Joey Logano, who participated in the Pocono tire test in April, said the track started to pick up a second groove during the test. He's optimistic that will continue this week.

"I think once the track widens out, the race will get better and all that," said Logano. "I think the track is going to be a lot different from practice to the race. I think a lot of things are going to change for us between that time. But everyone is going to have plenty of practice out there with the couple of test days that we've got. So we'll have plenty of time out there to really tune our cars and try to make it as best we can."

Without question, the fresh track surface will raise speeds, but it remains to see how the quality of racing will be. That won't be known until Sunday.

"Speed doesn't always translate to great racing," said former driver Kyle Petty, now an analyst for SPEED and TNT. "Some of the best races in the world are run at Martinsville when you run 80 or 90 miles an hour. Just because you run 200 plus (mph) doesn't mean it's a great race. But I do believe it opens up the whole track to try different grooves and experiment."

"From my perspective, the newly surfaced racetracks are typically not the better races," said Newman. "The older, more worn-out racetracks provide much better racing – side-by-side, multiple grooves. The tire combination that goes along with it has much more fall-off which, in turn, I think leads to better racing. The cars are going to have to handle a 40-lap run with just three-tenths of (a second per lap) fall-off. The old racetracks have three seconds of fall-off. That, to me, is just better all the way around for the fans."

For his part, Logano is a bit more hopeful about Sunday.

"I think when you get 43 cars out there, I think you'll really be able to see the track widen out a little bit," he said. "... Goodyear is going to bring a good tire, we'll have a lot of grip and the track will widen out."

Tom Jensen is the Editor in Chief of SPEED.com, Senior NASCAR Editor at RACER and a contributing Editor for TruckSeries.com. You can follow him online at twitter.com/tomjensen100.

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FOXNews.com: SPENCER: It’s About Time

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SPENCER: It's About Time
Jun 6th 2012, 13:15

Anyone could have seen it coming a mile away. Anyone but Kurt Busch.

Kurt had the world by the "you-know-whats," but he took it and everyone around him for granted and has all but thrown it all away.

Dover was the straw that broke the camel's back, and NASCAR finally had to firmly address his behavior. Because Kurt can't seem to help himself, NASCAR stepped in and suspended him from this weekend's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Pocono, a sanction that in my opinion was painfully overdue.

Some may say I'm biased against Kurt because he and I have a previous history together. Yes, I punched him a few years ago and I truly regret it. It was wrong and I am embarrassed by it to this day. I was suspended for one race for my actions, and it killed me to sit out that race. But guess what? I learned my lesson and became a better person off the track as a result.

That's where the disconnect with Kurt seems to be, though. He got fired from Roush Fenway Racing after winning a championship, and then was let go by Penske Racing, all because of his behavior. He also has had several run-ins with NASCAR media members. Yet in all this, he has failed to learn from past mistakes, and continues to repeat the same aggressive, disrespectful behavior.

I'm blown away by his attitude and actions. You cannot treat another human being the way Kurt does. He treats everyone, media especially, as if they're dirt under his feet. His condescending, nasty attitude is an embarrassment to NASCAR. Furthermore, his complete lack of respect for the sport is appalling. No one with any respect for the sport talks to their crew chiefs, crew members and car owners the way Kurt has over the years. You shouldn't talk to a dog the way Kurt speaks to others.

And in all these incidents I've seen no true remorse. Nothing he has said or done the past couple of years has convinced me he is apologetic for his actions. Maybe watching the No. 51 Chevrolet go around Pocono without him will spark a little remorse. But you would have thought that would have been the case when he watched the No. 97 car go around with him and then the No. 22. But losing those rides didn't seem to faze Kurt.

For the second time in his career, the race will go on without Kurt this weekend, and maybe, just maybe, that will start to eat at him a little. I hope it does. I hope it devastates and breaks Kurt to the point that he will seek out and implement a complete overhaul in his life, one that produces a better, kinder and more caring individual.

I wish absolutely no ill will on Kurt. I was pulling for the guy when he teamed up with James Finch for the 2012 season because I knew it probably was his final chance to salvage his career, one that held such promise of a bright future. Few in the garage area can drive a car like he can. He's brilliant behind the wheel when he's happy and focused, yet he is throwing his career down the drain simply because he cannot control himself – something we teach our children to do at a young age.

But yet guys like Roush, Penske and Finch find themselves spending race weekends watching their driver break out in perpetual temper tantrums, both in and out of the car. No one should have to put up with that, and unfortunately for Kurt, I don't know if anyone will anymore.

His meeting with Finch next week will be a pivotal moment in Kurt's career. I drove for Finch and won races with him, and he's a great guy. But he's also not going to let a brat in a helmet humiliate him by continuing to berate his crew and the media who cover him. Finch has a lot to consider at this point, but it's a shame he even has to contemplate firing Kurt. The marriage of Kurt and Finch looked great at first and made for a great story. But I think fielding a car for him has become much more of a burden than Finch ever imagined.

At the same time, Kurt acts like driving a race car has become a burden, and that should never be the case. It is an honor to compete in NASCAR, but if you cannot treat your fellow competitors, crew members and members of the media in a respectable manner, you do not deserve to race. He's a hell of a driver, but until he gets his temper under control, he has no business in a race car.

Sitting out this weekend is the best thing that could have happened to Kurt. The question, though, will be whether he realizes that or not. If he doesn't, I think Kurt Busch has run his last race in NASCAR.

Jimmy Spencer calls it like he sees it on NASCAR Race Hub on SPEED. He retired from driving with two NASCAR Sprint Cup, 12 NASCAR Nationwide and one NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory, putting him in an elite group of drivers who have logged wins in all three of NASCAR's premier divisions. In 478 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts, Spencer amassed 28 top-five and 80 top-10 finishes. He won back-to-back NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championships in 1986 and 1987 on the heels of 15 victories, becoming the first driver ever to earn consecutive titles in the series. He earned the nickname "Mr. Excitement" for his flamboyant and aggressive driving style early in his racing career.

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FOXNews.com: Track athletes to learn UK anthem for Olympics

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Track athletes to learn UK anthem for Olympics
Jun 6th 2012, 13:01

LONDON –  Foreign-born track athletes competing for Britain at the London Olympics are learning the words to "God Save the Queen" to silence critics questioning the loyalty of athletes who previously represented other countries.

"They know the words, or they will," said Britain's track and field coach Charles van Commenee on Wednesday. "I'm not going to rehearse everybody because we have 90 athletes, but people that matter ... let's say the relevant ones."

Van Commenee, who is Dutch, said he only knows the first two lines of his own national anthem.

American-raised hurdler Tiffany Porter was at the center of the so-called "Plastic Brits" debate after she was selected Britain's captain for the indoor world championships in March.

Porter was asked at the championships in Istanbul, Turkey, if she knew the words to Britain's national anthem and was prodded to sing it. She refused, saying she knew the words and that reciting it was unnecessary. She went on to win a silver medal in the 60-meter hurdles.

Porter was born and raised in the United States to a British mother and a Nigerian father. She's held a British passport since she was a baby and represented the United States as a junior before opting for Britain last year.

At the London Games that begin July 27, Porter will be one of eight foreign-born track athletes on the 90-member athletics team to compete for Britain.

Cuban-born triple jumper Yamile Aldama won a gold medal for Britain at the indoor championships.

Aldama is married to a Briton but previously chose to compete for Sudan because of complications in gaining British citizenship. She finally got her British passport two years ago.

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FOXNews.com: Uruguay go second in FIFA world rankings

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Uruguay go second in FIFA world rankings
Jun 6th 2012, 09:51

Uruguay have moved above Germany to become the second-highest ranked team behind world and European champions Spain in the latest FIFA rankings published on Wednesday.

Germany, who together with fourth-ranked Netherlands, Denmark (9th) and Portugal (10th) are all in a tough Group B at Euro 2012 which starts on Friday, have slipped to third.

Argentina climbed two places to seventh while Brazil (5th) and England (6th) also moved up one spot.

Portugal were the big fallers, plummeting from fifth following a dismal start to the year in which they have failed to win in three matches, scoring just one goal.

Rankings (last month's positions in brackets)

1. (1) Spain

2. (3) Uruguay

3. (2) Germany

4. (4) Netherlands

5. (6) Brazil

6. (7) England

7. (9) Argentina

8. (8) Croatia

9. (10) Denmark

10. (5) Portugal

(Reporting by Tom Pilcher, Editing by Ken Ferris)

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FOXNews.com: Jury selection off to fast start in Sandusky sex abuse trial

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Jury selection off to fast start in Sandusky sex abuse trial
Jun 6th 2012, 11:17

BELLEFONTE, Pennsylvania (Reuters) - Jury selection resumes Wednesday in the child sex abuse trial of former Penn State University assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, a day after nine jurors were picked in a fast-paced first day of naming a panel.

Five men and four women, all white, were chosen on Tuesday as jury selection began in Centre County Court, putting Judge John Cleland's goal of starting trial on Monday well within reach.

Sandusky, a former Penn State assistant football coach, faces 52 counts of molesting 10 boys over a 15-year period. He has pleaded not guilty and faces more than 500 years in prison if convicted on all counts.

Prosecutors have accused Sandusky, 68, of meeting the boys through a charity he founded, and have claimed that some of the assaults occurred at Penn State facilities.

The explosive allegations shook the school, prompted the firing of legendary football coach Joe Paterno and university President Graham Spanier, and put an unprecedented focus on sexual predation.

Paterno, the winningest coach in major U.S. college football history, died of lung cancer in January, just over two months after his firing. Potential jurors were told his wife Sue and son Jay may be called as witnesses in the trial.

Twelve jurors and four alternates will be selected. The nine chosen include a retired bus driver, a Penn State student, a high school teacher, an engineer and a Wal-Mart employee.

Experts had predicted a prolonged selection process from a 220-member pool, given the close-knit ties of the area's small towns and farms and Penn State's role as the biggest local employer.

"WE'RE IN RURAL PENNSYLVANIA"

Underscoring the web of relationships, one of the jurors is a woman who said she has had contact with the father of a key prosecution witness, former graduate assistant coach Mike McQueary, according to a reporter covering the proceedings on a pool basis.

The juror's husband worked as a doctor at a medical practice managed by McQueary's father, John McQueary. The younger McQueary has alleged he saw Sandusky raping a boy in a shower in a Penn State locker room in 2001 and told his father about it.

Sandusky's attorney, Joe Amendola, had moved to strike the woman as a juror, but Cleland overruled his objection.

"We're in Centre County. We're in rural Pennsylvania," Cleland said. "There are these (connections) that cannot be avoided."

Cleland told potential jurors that he would not sequester them once the trial begins. He said he expected the trial to run until the end of the month.

All press except for pool reporters have been banned from jury selection in Bellefonte, a town of 6,200 residents about 10 miles northeast of State College, the site of Penn State's main campus.

The case has drawn intense media attention, with about two dozen television trucks drawn up outside the Greek Revival courthouse in Bellefonte's 19th-century downtown and reporters crowding the courthouse lawn.

(Editing by Dan Burns and Lisa Shumaker)

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FOXNews.com: Column: Kurt Busch needs more than a weekend off

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Column: Kurt Busch needs more than a weekend off
Jun 6th 2012, 08:20

Kurt Busch is the Charlie Sheen of NASCAR.

Both have made a wreck of their careers.

The latest outrage from Busch got him barred from the trip to Pocono this weekend, giving him plenty of time to cut his grass, or clean out the garage, or fix that broken faucet. But the most worthwhile project on his to-do list should be figuring out how to stay on the track once he gets back on it.

In case you missed it — which would've been hard, since the whole thing was captured on video — NASCAR's mercurial former champion had another of his all-too-familiar meltdowns, this time when asked a relatively benign question by a respected motorsports reporter who's been around the garage for years. Busch answered with a none-too-subtle threat, and the governing body responded with what passes for a harsh penalty by its usually lenient standards.

Hey, Kurt, why don't you sit this one out, came the word from NASCAR headquarters.

In fact, we insist on it.

"Actions detrimental to stock car racing ... violation of probation ... verbal abuse to a media member."

Well, that about covers it.

At least give NASCAR credit for doling out a one-race suspension, since they are usually the kings of vague probationary periods that don't amount to much of anything. But, since Busch already was on probation for behavior even more bizarre, the stock car suits should've leveled an even harsher sanction.

A half-dozen races would've been more appropriate, giving Busch a good chunk of the summer to consider what a jerk he's been, time and time again.

Busch responded with a pseudo-apology through a public relations firm, but it may not be enough to save a job that was supposed to be nothing more than a fallback position to begin with. Not even halfway through their first season together, Phoenix Racing owner James Finch has just about had enough of the 2004 Cup champion — and, really, no one can blame the boss.

According to Finch, Busch's fiery impatience on the track has already caused him to wreck 14 cars this season, three of them beyond repair. For a low-budget team like Phoenix, that's inexcusable. But it's his behavior beyond the actual racing that is the biggest concern.

Busch, for all his talent, has simply become too much of a loose cannon for anyone to put up with. He can't seem to get out of his own way.

"Here's the deal: Quit wrecking the cars, get a good finish, be nice to people," Finch told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on Tuesday. "That's not real hard to do."

For Busch, it apparently is.

Once the suspension is done, Finch said he'll let Busch hang around on a race-by-race basis. But this partnership feels like it's sucking on its last breath, which leaves one of the sport's most talented drivers facing the very real possibility that he'll soon be without a job, right when he should be in the prime of his career.

Busch is just 33 years old, with a resume that already includes 24 wins, 15 poles and 170 top-10 finishes.

But his act seems a lot older.

"Hopefully if we can get Kurt's mind right, we can win some races," Finch said. "If we can't get his mind right so we can race into the future, then I'll go do something else. It's just that simple."

Whether this is the wake-up call that Busch finally heeds is anyone's guess.

But there's little reason to believe he's going to change his ways. He certainly didn't after breaking up with one of the biggest names in motorsports, Roger Penske, after last season. Busch called it a mutual decision, but it had all the makings of an owner dismissing a malcontent employee. The Captain runs a tight ship, and that philosophy was constantly at odds with Busch's hair-trigger temper.

Last season alone, he unleashed a rage-fueled rant on his team radio that drew widespread attention, sparred with two reporters in Richmond, and finally was caught on camera verbally abusing an ESPN reporter during the season finale in Miami.

NASCAR levied a $50,000 fine after the Miami video was posted on YouTube. Penske pulled the plug about a week later. Busch insisted he was ready to go because he needed "to put the fun back into racing."

Apparently it never occurred to Busch that none of the major teams would want someone with his baggage, no matter how good he is. He had to settle for a ride with Phoenix Racing, which simply doesn't have the money to run with the big boys. Busch figured he'd bide his time for one season with Phoenix, then land one of the plum jobs opening up in 2013.

Well, it's not much fun essentially going from the Yankees to the Royals, racing for a team that has little chance of winning each week. Through 13 races, he hasn't finished higher than ninth. He's led only six laps. He's mired at 26th in the standings, which has raised Busch's frustration level to new highs.

Or lows, we should say.

Last month, a flat tire caused Busch to wreck late in the Sprint Cup race at Darlington. After going to the pits for repairs, he did a burnout through Ryan Newman's box while crew members were over the wall — an extremely reckless move that could have left someone seriously injured. Afterward, Busch ran into Newman's car on pit road and got into it with several of the angry crewmen.

That led Newman to speculate Busch has a "chemical imbalance," which seems as good an explanation as any. NASCAR put him on probation, which was still in effect at the time of his verbal smackdown to a reporter after last Saturday's Nationwide race at Dover.

Busch is supposedly seeing a sports psychologist to deal with his anger issues, but it's clearly not working.

He needs a thorough checkup to determine why he can't keep it together.

Maybe that's what he can do this weekend.

He's certainly got the time.

___

Paul Newberry is a national writer for The Associated Press. Write to him at pnewberry(at)ap.org or www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

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FOXNews.com: Djokovic, Federer go 5 to advance at French Open

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Djokovic, Federer go 5 to advance at French Open
Jun 6th 2012, 08:05

PARIS –  Sometimes, when everything's on the line, it's easier to play like there's nothing to lose.

Novak Djokovic knows that drill.

Four times on a gray, drippy Tuesday at Roland Garros, Djokovic got ready to serve on the red clay and listened to the French fans cheer against him, knowing they were one point away from watching their beloved countryman, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, take down the top player in tennis.

On all four of those match points, Djokovic summoned something — not simply a great shot but the fortitude to hit it — to keep himself in the match.

A tightrope walker if ever there were one, the top-seeded Djokovic stole away with a 6-1, 5-7, 5-7, 7-6 (6), 6-1 victory. His hopes for the "Novak Slam" intact.

He also got his refresher course on how precarious these things can be.

"I mean, if he would win, he would deserve the win, no doubt," Djokovic said. "But that's sport. The one that mentally pushes more in some moments and obviously gets a bit lucky, gets the win. That's how it goes."

Djokovic will play No. 3 Roger Federer in the semifinals, a rematch from last year, which also marks the last time Djokovic lost a Grand Slam match.

On Tuesday, Federer overcame a two-set deficit for the seventh time in his career, rallying for a 3-6, 6-7 (4), 6-2, 6-0, 6-3 win over No. 9 Juan Martin del Potro.

"You just try to push further and it's not easy," Federer said of the art of his comeback.

Eight months ago, Federer was on the cusp of knocking Djokovic out of another tournament — the U.S. Open — serving with two match points and the crowd cheering him on.

Back then, Djokovic clenched his jaw and gave the smallest of smiles. Then, he unleashed on a wide serve of Federer's for a clean winner. Saved the next point, as well, and a few days later, ended up a U.S. Open champion — joining five players, including Andy Roddick, Pete Sampras and Martina Navratilova, as the only ones to win America's championship after facing match point at some point during the two weeks.

Asked to explain it back then, Djokovic said: "In big matches, the winner is decided by small margins, a couple points. I guess the winner is the one who believes in victory more."

His reasoning wasn't all that different this time around.

"There is not really any rational explanation or word that can describe what you're supposed to do when you're match points down or you're very close to lose the match," Djokovic said. "I guess it's trying to be mentally tough and believing in your shots."

Earlier in the day, the women's matches were routine compared to what the men did.

No. 6 Samantha Stosur defeated No. 15 Dominika Cibulkova 6-4, 6-1 and No. 21 Sara Errani made her first Grand Slam semifinal with a 6-3, 7-6 (2) victory over 10th-seeded Angelique Kerber. Asked whether she's surprised Errani made it this far, Stosur replied: "No, not necessarily."

On Wednesday, the rest of the quarterfinals take place: No. 2 Maria Sharapova vs. No. 23 Kaia Kanepi, No. 4 Petra Kvitova vs. 142nd-ranked qualifier Yaroslava Shvedova, No. 4 Andy Murray vs. No. 6 David Ferrer and No. 2 Rafael Nadal vs. No. 12 Nicolas Almagro.

On paper, Nadal still looks like the man to beat — a six-time winner at Roland Garros who has dropped only 19 games to his first four opponents, while Federer and Djokovic have played a combined 19 sets between them over their last two matches.

Of course, on paper, Djokovic was all but done on Tuesday. But twice while serving down 5-4, then twice again while serving down 6-5, he made the shots to save the match. The fifth set was academic and the thousands of fans who had been yelling "Tsonga, Tsonga, Tsonga," quietly filed out before the match was over.

When Djokovic converted his only match point — a backhand winner down the line past his exhausted opponent — he let out a guttural scream, bent backward and shook his fists over and over.

Tsonga slumped in his chair and draped a towel over his head.

So close.

"You want to break your racket. You want to shout. You want to cry," he said. "You want to laugh and say, 'Oh, come on, that's a joke. How could I lose this match?'"

But yes, that just happened.

"I don't want to be wise now and say, 'OK, I know how to play when I'm match points down,'" Djokovic said. "Because as I said, there is no explanation. I'm just going for the shots."

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FOXNews.com: Olympic flame crosses Irish border, tours Dublin

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Olympic flame crosses Irish border, tours Dublin
Jun 6th 2012, 08:57

DUBLIN –  The Olympic flame arrived in Dublin on a cross-border peace mission Wednesday to celebrate Northern Ireland reconciliation and strong British-Irish ties.

A high-speed convoy sped the symbol of the London Games to the Irish capital after a dawn ceremony at the border between the Republic of Ireland and the British territory of Northern Ireland.

There, two Olympic medal-winning boxers and former teammates — one a British Protestant from Belfast, the other an Irish Catholic from Dublin — embraced and held aloft their two torches. Belfast bantamweight Wayne McCullough, who won silver in Barcelona in 1992, lit the torch held by Michael Carruth, who won gold as a bantamweight 20 years ago. Then McCullough kissed his old friend on his bald head to laughs and cheers from a few hundred locals from both sides of the border.

Ireland's head of state, President Michael D. Higgins, officially welcomed the flame's arrival in Dublin at the Irish Olympic headquarters in the suburban fishing port of Howth. Several thousand spectators packed the harbor.

After another high-speed transit past rush-hour traffic along Dublin Bay, the flame took a panoramic tour on a newly opened walkway atop Croke Park, the 82,000-seat cathedral for Ireland's native sports of Gaelic football and hurling. Henry Shefflin, a 33-year-old former captain of Ireland's most dominant hurling team, Kilkenny, walked alone along the wind-swept concourse 132 feet (44 meters) above the ground.

Wednesday's events mark the high point of the torch's five-day tour of Northern Ireland and Dublin. A major street party is planned for Dublin's central park, Stephen's Green, following the torch's two-hour circuit of the capital. Another is planned that night in front of Belfast City Hall.

North of the border, police say they are deploying reinforcements to ensure that Irish Republican Army splinter groups do not disrupt the flame's evening procession through Belfast, 103 miles (165 kilometers) north.

On Sunday, IRA supporters jostling with police at a security barrier forced the torch to divert its course in Northern Ireland's second-largest city, Londonderry. That five-minute disruption has been the only trouble so far for the Olympic cavalcade. The event has highlighted how relatively calm Northern Ireland has become after a four-decade conflict that claimed 3,700 lives and five years of a stable Catholic-Protestant government.

Several small IRA factions do continue to oppose the 2005 decision of the major group, the Provisional IRA, to renounce violence and disarm, and have tried to make their presence felt during the Olympic visit.

On Wednesday shortly after midnight a grenade was thrown at a police vehicle on the outskirts of Catholic west Belfast after officers responded to reports of a house vandalism. Two civilian cars absorbed the brunt of the blast, and nobody was injured. The attack happened nowhere near the route of the Belfast torch relay.

On Saturday another grenade hit a police vehicle in a Catholic part of Londonderry as officers searched a home. That vehicle suffered heavy damage but no officers were hurt.

The flame is scheduled to leave Northern Ireland late Thursday for Scotland. More than 8,000 torchbearers are carrying the flame throughout the United Kingdom, and the British islands of Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man, in advance of the July 27-Aug. 12 London Games.

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FOXNews.com: Sandusky jurors include Penn State senior, ex-prof

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Sandusky jurors include Penn State senior, ex-prof
Jun 6th 2012, 07:06

BELLEFONTE, Pa. –  Most of the men and women who may render a verdict in Jerry Sandusky's child sexual abuse case have been chosen, and their ranks reflect the strong role Penn State plays in its surrounding community.

Nine of the 12 main members of the jury were selected Tuesday, and they include a rising senior at the college, a retired soil sciences professor with 37 years at the university, a man with bachelor's and master's degrees from the school and a woman who's been a football season ticket holder since the 1970s.

Others selected included a 24-year-old man with plans to attend an auto technician school, a mother of two who works in retail, a retired school bus driver, an engineer with no Penn State ties and a property management firm employee.

The main jury already includes five men and four women. The other three main jurors and four alternates could be chosen as early as Wednesday, with opening statements scheduled for Monday. The judge said the case could last several weeks.

Sandusky, 68, a former assistant football coach, is fighting 52 criminal charges for alleged abuse of 10 boys over 15 years. He has repeatedly denied the allegations. He faces potential penalties that could result in an effective life prison sentence.

More than 600 jury duty summonses were sent out to residents in Centre County, the home of Penn State University's main campus.

In questioning 40 prospective jurors, about half said they or immediate family members worked at Penn State or were university retirees. One woman rented apartments to college students. Four knew Sandusky and two knew his wife.

Sandusky's lawyer won the right to have jurors chosen from the local community, and prosecutors had concerns that Centre County might prove to be nearly synonymous with Penn State.

Sandusky had helped build the football team's reputation as a defensive powerhouse known as "Linebacker U." His arrest toppled Joe Paterno from the head coaching position just months before his death from cancer, and some of the alleged attacks on children are said to have occurred inside university showers.

One of the very first jurors to be seated wasn't just a season ticketholder since the 1970s: She said John McQueary — a possible trial witness and the father of a key witness — once worked with her husband.

When Sandusky's lawyer sought to have her removed for cause, Judge John Cleland signaled he would need more grounds.

"We're in Centre County. We're in rural Pennsylvania," Cleland said, noting that such connections "can't be avoided."

Sandusky attorney Joe Amendola opted not to use one of his eight challenges, and she joined the panel. Amendola did strike parents with children who are roughly junior high school age, similar to the ages for the alleged victims.

All the jurors will have to say under oath they can be impartial.

Prospective jurors learned that Paterno's widow, Sue, and their son and former quarterbacks' coach, Jay, were among the potential defense witnesses, about which a family spokesman declined comment. Members of Sandusky's family also were on a list read to prospective jurors, along with assistant coach Mike McQueary and his father.

Mike McQueary, on leave from the team, has said he saw Sandusky naked in a team shower with a young boy more than a decade ago and reported it to Paterno. Mike McQueary is also on the prosecution's list, along with young men who have accused Sandusky of abusing them.

Among those who were struck from the jury pool were a nurse who said people make up stories all the time — prosecutors used a challenge for her — as well as a man who had volunteered for the charity Sandusky founded, The Second Mile.

Also struck were a mother of 10 who said she has made up her mind, a Penn State fan and township manager who said news coverage of the case has been destructive to her community, a woman who taught Sandusky's son in third grade before the Sanduskys adopted him, and a '94 alumnus who knows the Sanduskys.

By the end of Tuesday's jury selection, both the defense and the prosecution had used five of their allotted eight strikes.

Cleland told the more than 220 potential jurors he would not sequester them, meaning they can spend nights at home during the trial that is expected to last several weeks.

While about a dozen TV news trucks and more than 50 reporters waited outside the courthouse for updates, Cleland urged the jury pool to avoid news accounts or social media postings.

"No one in the world will know as much about this trial as the people sitting in the jury box," Cleland told them.

Sandusky attended jury selection, and laughed at some of Cleland's humorous remarks to potential jurors. But when Cleland told the pool the nature of the charge, Sandusky put his head down.

Prosecutors have claimed that Sandusky groomed boys he met through The Second Mile, the charity he founded for at-risk youth in 1977, then attacked them, in some cases in his own home or inside university athletic facilities.

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