Showing posts with label after. Show all posts
Showing posts with label after. Show all posts

Monday, September 5, 2011

Tiger reinjures knee, withdraws from Players after nine holes

Monday, September 5, 2011
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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. ? The opening tee shot for Tiger Woods in Thursday's first round of the Players Championship sailed far left of the fairway.





  • Tiger Woods and caddie Steve Williams leave the course after nine holes during the first round of The Players Championship on Thursday in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.

    By Chris O'Meara, AP


    Tiger Woods and caddie Steve Williams leave the course after nine holes during the first round of The Players Championship on Thursday in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.



By Chris O'Meara, AP


Tiger Woods and caddie Steve Williams leave the course after nine holes during the first round of The Players Championship on Thursday in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.






It also reinjured his left knee.


Woods, who withdrew from The Players Championship last year in the last round with 12 holes to play because of a neck injury, shook the hands of playing partners Matt Kuchar and Martin Kaymer after play was completed on the ninth hole, saying he couldn't continue.


Woods, who was limping and said he had a hard time walking the front nine of the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, struggled from the outset and was 6 over par when he withdrew, citing multiple injuries to his left leg.


"I was just trying to draw that ball out there just a little bit. I pushed forward, and you know it just didn't feel good," Woods said about his first tee shot. "The knee acted up and then the Achilles' followed after that and then the calf started cramping up. Everything started getting tight, so it's just a whole chain reaction. This morning, I felt fine during warm-up, and then as I played, it progressively got worse.


"I'm having a hard time walking."


Woods injured his left knee, which has been through four operations, and his left Achilles' in the third round of the Masters while hitting a shot from an awkward lie off pine straw. He didn't practice for 28 days and first started hitting golf balls Monday. He played his first nine holes since the Masters on Tuesday.


Woods said his doctors gave him the OK to play.


"They said I could play. The more rest I get, the better it would be, obviously," Woods said. "Obviously, it's a big event. I want to come back for it and play, and unfortunately I wasn't able to finish."


Where he'll play next is anyone's guess now. He likely would have played in the Memorial in three weeks, then the U.S. Open two weeks after that.


"I don't know," what's next, with his knee and schedule, Woods said. "I just finished nine holes. Give me a few days to see what the docs say, and we'll take a look at it."


Woods' agent, Mark Steinberg, said Woods and his doctors are assessing what the next steps are and that an MRI may not be mandatory.


Woods looked nothing like the former world No. 1 he once was. He made bogey on the first, hit two balls into the water on the fourth to make triple bogey, made another bogey on the fifth and finished with yet another bogey on the ninth. He hit just one green and had just one birdie putt.


The 42 Woods shot on Thursday was not his worst nine-hole score as a professional. He has shot 43 four times, the most recent coming in last year's Wells Fargo Championship on the back-nine at Quail Hollow in the second round.


The withdrawal was Woods' fourth in his professional career — the past two Players Championships, the 2006 Northern Trust Open and the 1998 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Only the two WDs at The Players, however, has he walked out mid-round. He also withdrew from the 1995 U.S. Open as an amateur.


Woods had only played 17 rounds of golf on the Tour this season before Thursday. He also played four rounds in Dubai on the European Tour.


Woods said he was surprised the leg acted up.


"The treatment's been good. It's been getting better," he said. "It just wasn't enough. It's hard to put muscle pressure on it right now, so it's a bit of a struggle."


Swing coach Sean Foley, who began working with Woods at last year's PGA Championship, knew something was wrong when he caught up with his pupil on the eighth hole and noticed he was walking 20 yards behind playing partners Matt Kuchar and Martin Kaymer.


"It is what it is," Foley said. "People don't typically like that comment, but that's what we're dealing with. The guy has created a lot of speed for a long time, and he's an athlete and he's fit. If you went to a Tour de France race or if you went to the Olympics, there's not anyone competing who doesn't have an injury. You can't overuse your body that much and not have issues."


Foley said Woods' recent injuries have nothing to do with his new swing.


"Regardless of what people say, these are historical things," he said. "This doesn't come from any mechanical things we're working on or anything like that. It has nothing to do with him having his weight on the left side. At the end of the day, if it's been bothered before, it never truly ever heals. This comes from a guy who works hard and trains hard and is a perfectionist."


Good friend Mark O'Meara, who played with Woods in both practice rounds and had dinner with him Wednesday, said he was shocked when he learned that Woods pulled out.


"I just saw that he was 4 or 5 over through 6 holes, and I'm like, wait a minute, I just played with him yesterday morning and he played great on the back nine," said O'Meara, who shot 66 to move into contention. "Not great, but he was well on his way, in my opinion, knowing him as well as I do.


"I sent him a text this morning after I saw he withdrew just to check on him and let him know I was concerned for him, and he said he's just not doing so well, not feeling so well. I don't know how bad it is. Obviously it's pretty bad. But he needs to get that fixed, because you know, I know how much he loves the game, and I know how badly he wants to be competing, and the game needs him. I mean, he's great for this game."


A chronology of Woods' injuries:


May 12, 2011 — Withdraws after nine holes at The Players Championship after a 42, his worst nine-hole score at the TPC Sawgrass. Woods had a noticeable limp over the final hour. "The knee acted up, and then the Achilles followed after that, and then the calf started cramping up. Everything started getting tight," he said.


April 26, 2011 — Reveals he has a minor sprain of medial collateral ligaments in left knee and minor strain of his left Achilles, and he will miss the Wells Fargo Championship.


Dec. 11, 2010 — Has cortisone shot in his right ankle because of lingering soreness in his Achilles.


May 9, 2010 — Withdraws on the seventh hole of the final round at The Players Championship with what he fears is a bulging disk. He later says it was inflammation of a joint in his neck. He doesn't miss a start, returning a month later at the Memorial.


December 2008 — Ruptures his right Achilles' tendon.


June 24, 2008 — Eight days after winning the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines in a 19-hole playoff, has reconstructive surgery on the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee that also repairs cartilage damage. He misses the rest of the 2008 season and is out for eight months.


June 2008 — Is advised in the weeks before the U.S. Open that he has two stress fractures in his left tibia and should expect to be on crutches for three weeks and out of golf for three more.


April 15, 2008 — Two days after his runner-up finish at the Masters, has arthroscopic surgery on his left knee to repair cartilage damage. Decides against repairing ligament to avoid longer rehabilitation and to be able to play the other three majors. Misses Quail Hollow, The Players Championship and the Memorial.


July 2007 — Ruptures the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee when he takes a misstep while running on a golf course. He wins five of the last six tournaments he plays, including the U.S. PGA Championship.


Dec. 12, 2002 — Has surgery to remove fluid inside and around the anterior cruciate ligament. Misses the season-opening Mercedes Championship for the first time, and returns 10 weeks later to win the Buick Invitational.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




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Sunday, September 4, 2011

USC prepares to 'move on' after appeal of NCAA sanctions fails

Sunday, September 4, 2011
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LOS ANGELES ? University of Southern California officials responded with an odd mix of anger and relief when they learned their appeal to lessen NCAA sanctions had been denied.





  • Matt Barkley and USC won't be playing a bowl game after the NCAA denied its appeal of sanctions related to the Reggie Bush case.

    By Ezra Shaw, Getty Images


    Matt Barkley and USC won't be playing a bowl game after the NCAA denied its appeal of sanctions related to the Reggie Bush case.



By Ezra Shaw, Getty Images


Matt Barkley and USC won't be playing a bowl game after the NCAA denied its appeal of sanctions related to the Reggie Bush case.






USC's football and, to a lesser extent, basketball programs have been under a cloud for years, beginning with reports that Heisman Trophy-winning running back Reggie Bush and his family accepted improper benefits from would-be marketers in 2004 and 2005.


That episode is finally over, and the final tally is this: USC football, which played in seven consecutive Bowl Championship Series games from 2003-09 under former coach Pete Carroll, is ineligible for a bowl game for a second season (they served the first year of a two-season bowl ban in 2010) and will be docked the full 30-scholarship penalty — 10 a season for three years starting in 2012.


USC continues to claim the penalty does not fit the crime, that there was little evidence that anyone at the school knew of the Bush benefits.


Trojans athletics director Pat Haden said he is "gravely disappointed" and called the NCAA penalties "unjust."


USC President C.L. Max Nikias went further: "We are very concerned that the historical value of case precedent and the right to fair process in the NCAA adjudicative process, both in terms of the ability of an institution to defend itself or prove an abuse of discretion on appeal, have been substantially eroded."


If that sounds like pre-lawsuit saber-rattling, Haden put an end to talk that USC might sue the NCAA.


"We are not going to do that," Haden, a lawyer, said. "We have decided to kind of move on."


And move out from under the cloud. "It's great to have this behind us," Haden said.


The future could be difficult, though. USC coach Lane Kiffin, while the case was under appeal, signed a full complement of newcomers for 2011. But starting in 2012, USC will have to pare down to 75 scholarship players and face teams with 85, a disadvantage that will last for three seasons.


"I know Lane can bring in good players, and I know they will be well-coached," Haden said. "I know we'll have to be a little lucky. But there's no reason we shouldn't be competitive."


Kiffin said he's still getting a good reception from recruits.


"They understand the value of a USC degree and the opportunities afforded them by playing football here," Kiffin said.


USC had to be happy Thursday to hear their top 2012 prospect, 6-8, 280-pound offensive lineman Arik Armstead, whose older brother Armond is on the USC roster, is still committed.


"I'm sticking with USC," Armstead, also a basketball prospect, said. "Having only 15 scholarships the next three years doesn't mean that much to me … USC normally gets the top recruits, anyway."


Because of the bowl ban in effect for 2011, USC's seniors will be allowed to transfer without sitting out a year, but junior quarterback Matt Barkley hasn't heard of anyone planning to take that path.


"I could be wrong, but having talked to guys prior to this ruling, it doesn't look like that will happen," Barkley said.


The Trojans had a brief team meeting Thursday at which Kiffin, according to Barkley, told the players to "be smart" when it comes to posting reactions on Twitter or Facebook.


Barkley said all he had to do to put in perspective what USC considers an unfair penalty is think about the victims of the tornado in Missouri.


"Life isn't fair for them," he said, "but they're finding a way to fight on."





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Fiesta Bowl gets reprieve after BCS hands out $1 million fine

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The language was stern. The terms included a $1 million fine.





  • Duane Woods, chairman of the Fiesta Bowl board, is tasked with rebuilding the organization's credibility.

    By Gerald Herbert, AP


    Duane Woods, chairman of the Fiesta Bowl board, is tasked with rebuilding the organization's credibility.



By Gerald Herbert, AP


Duane Woods, chairman of the Fiesta Bowl board, is tasked with rebuilding the organization's credibility.






But the bottom line Wednesday, when the first of two critical verdicts was delivered on college football's scandal-plagued Fiesta Bowl, was that it will remain a part of the top-tier Bowl Championship Series.


Following recommendations from a special task force set up to assess the bowl and its future, the BCS levied the $1 million penalty and imposed new controls "designed to create stronger oversight and better management" of the game.


The action came a little more than two months after a scathing independent report that outlined grossly excessive spending by former Fiesta CEO John Junker and others and possibly illegally orchestrated political contributions. Junker was fired, and both the BCS and the NCAA committee that licenses bowls initiated inquiries.


    The NCAA said it would take the BCS' decision into account in determining whether to recertify the Arizona-based Fiesta. Its committee meets next week, and spokesman Bob Williams said a decision — on both the Fiesta and its sister game, the Insight Bowl— are expected in the near future.


    "The BCS task force actions regarding the Fiesta Bowl are serious and constructive steps in the right direction," Williams said.


    Said BCS executive director Bill Hancock: "They have a long way to go. They have to rebuild. They have to regain the trust of the community. We think these will reforms will head them in that direction."


    Had the Fiesta, itself, not taken corrective action including Junker's dismissal, reorganizing its board and changing some of its fiscal operations, the BCS' seven-man task force said in its report that it "almost certainly would have recommended the termination of the BCS Group's involvement with the Fiesta Bowl." Final action was left to the conference commissioners and university presidents who oversee the 13-year-old system.


    Beyond the fine — which will be funneled to charities benefiting youth in Arizona — they ordered the Fiesta to tighten oversight of its board of directors and undergo more stringent auditing.


    The bowl must remove any board members found to have engaged in the kind of "inappropriate conduct" detailed in the independent report. Future boards, the BCS said, should include two school presidents or other university administrators. And the bowl was told to consult with the BCS' presidential oversight committee in its selection of Junker's replacement as CEO.


    Duane Woods, who chairs the Fiesta's board of directions, called the terms "tough but fair," and said "we have learned some painful lessons."


    One of the BCS' chief critics was less accepting.


    "This rush to judgment was more about quickly moving past a bad headline during the offseason than addressing any misconduct," said Matthew Sanderson, co-founder of a Washington, D.C.-based, anti-BCS political action committee, Playoff PAC, that has filed an Internal Revenue Service complaint against the BCS-affiliated Fiesta, Sugar and Orange bowls.


    He reiterated a complaint that most members of the BCS task force that weighed the Fiesta's fate had been the beneficiaries of Fiesta-paid golf trips and other hospitality. "This was not a credible process," Sanderson said, noting that Arizona's attorney general also is continuing an investigation of Fiesta officials and its board.


    The Fiesta scandal has reverberated across football's bowl system, in part prompting NCAA President Mark Emmert to set up yet another special panel that will examine the process and criteria for licensing games. It's expected to come back by October with recommendations for tightening areas ranging from financial supervision to the suitability of sponsors.


    The BCS task force added a recommendation for stricter governance standards for all four of its bowls, employing an "independent expert" familiar with nonprofit organizations to draw them up. The games would be required to certify annual compliance.


    It stopped short, however, of subjecting the other three bowls to the same kind of in-depth audits that uncovered the Fiesta abuses.


    "There has not been any indication of any similar improprieties at the other bowls," Hancock said. "... It's unfair to paint innocent people with the same brush."





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    Sunday, May 8, 2011

    Tributes pour in after death of Seve Ballesteros

    Sunday, May 8, 2011
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    MADRID (AP) ? Tributes poured in from across the globe Saturday after five-time major winner Seve Ballesteros (FSY) died of brain cancer, with players moved to tears by the passing of the dashing Spaniard who transformed European golf and the Ryder Cup.



    Ballesteros died one day after his family said he had severely deteriorated in his recovery from multiple surgeries to remove a malignant brain tumor in 2008. He was 54.


    "His creativity and inventiveness on the golf course may never be surpassed," Tiger Woods wrote on Twitter. "His death came much too soon."


    George O'Grady, the chief executive of the European Tour, said Ballesteros was the inspiration behind the tour.


    "This is such a very sad day for all who love golf," O'Grady said on the tour website.


    "Seve's unique legacy must be the inspiration he has given to so many to watch, support, and play golf, and finally to fight a cruel illness with equal flair, passion, and fierce determination. We have all been so blessed to live in his era."


    The Spanish Open— site of Ballesteros' record 50th and last European Tour win in 1995 — planned to honor Ballesteros with a minute's silence during Saturday's third round, where former Ryder Cup partner Jose Maria Olazabal (FSY) broke into tears while practicing before his tee time.


    "I'm going to play because that's the greatest honor I could give Seve," Olazabal, who teamed with Ballesteros to form one of the Ryder Cup's greatest partnerships, told Spanish media. "He would have wanted the tournament to go ahead."


    Olazabal, a two-time Masters champion, recalled Ballesteros' "strength, his fighting spirit and passion for everything he did." He said he last met Ballesteros on April 16.


    "He wasn't well but he was lucid," Olazabal said. "We spoke about a lot of things and memories of the Ryder Cup. The best homage we can pay him is to continue playing but I don't think any of the homages we make will ever be sufficient enough after everything he's done for golf."


    Ballesteros' funeral will be held Wednesday in Pedrena, his native home in northern Spain, with family and close friends attending the subsequent wake. Three days of official mourning will be held in Cantabria, according to regional government head Miguel Angel Revilla.


    "It is such a sad day for Spain, Europe and the world of golf, which has lost one of its icons," said Colin Montgomerie, who knew Ballesteros well from the Ryder Cup. "But it is only right to celebrate his life. It was an honor to play for him and with him."


    Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero called Ballesteros a trailblazer.


    "Severiano marks a before and after point in Spanish sports — his example opened the way for the extraordinary moment which our country's sports is living through now," Zapatero said in a statement. "He knew how to symbolize the image of the new, democratic Spain."


    Spanish golf federation President Gonzaga Escauriaza said Ballesteros was a "unique, unrepeatable person."


    "We have to recognize we are where we are now, that golf is a popular sport ... in large part to Severiano Ballesteros," Escauriaza said. "We all owe him a lot."


    No. 1-ranked Lee Westwood (FSY) wrote on Twitter: "It's a sad day. Lost an inspiration, genius, roll model, hero and friend. Seve made European golf what it is today. RIP Seve."


    Three-time major winner Nick Price (FSY) said Ballesteros was "light years ahead" after seeing him for the first time when they were both 21, calling it a "mesmerizing" moment.


    The pair dueled at the 1988 British Open, with Ballesteros rallying from a two-stroke deficit to beat Price by two shots with a final round 65 for his last major win.


    "He did for European golf what Tiger Woods did for worldwide golf. The European Tour would not be where it is today if not for Seve Ballesteros," Price, whose brother died from the same ailment last year, said from a Champions Tour event in Alabama. "His allegiance to the European Tour was admirable. The guy, he was an icon, just an incredible golfer."


    Fanny Sunesson, the former caddie for Nick Faldo (FSY) during some of those Ryder Cups, was asked her recollections and began to cry. "The tears say it all," she said.


    Tom Lehman (FSY), the 1996 British Open champion, recalled Ballesteros' kindness.


    "Such a competitive guy, so I always appreciated that he took the time to say something nice," Lehman said. "As a competitor, he didn't have to do that, but he did."


    He also marveled at the Spaniard's attitude.


    "I think his body language was the strongest of anybody, maybe save Tiger in recent years," Lehman added. "I've always said that his body language said, 'Hey, I may have hit a really crappy shot right there, but if you miss this next one, you'll miss the greatest shot ever hit.' That's just the way he walked, the way he acted, the way he carried himself. He never seemed to ever doubt his ability. That's what makes a champion."


    Four-time Grand Slam tennis champion Manolo Santana, Spain's most celebrated athlete before Ballesteros burst onto the sporting scene, said the farmer's son did for golf what he did for tennis.


    "Seve was a tremendous sporting export for our country with his victories across the world," Santana said. "Seve was an incredible person."


    Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




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    Saturday, May 7, 2011

    Gary Williams bids farewell; Maryland plans to name court after coach

    Saturday, May 7, 2011
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