Wednesday, June 6, 2012

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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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