Category Archives: Sports

Mike Dunleavy: Lakers’ Gasol led the way

Pau Gasol’s play down the stretch was the key reason the Lakers were able to defeat the Boston Celtics in Game 7 of the NBA Finals. Mike Dunleavy, former coach and general manager of the Clippers, is The Times’ guest analyst on the NBA Finals. Dunleavy has coached four NBA teams — the Clippers, Lakers, Milwaukee Bucks and Portland Trail Blazers. He was NBA coach of the year in 1999 with Portland.

See the rest here:
Mike Dunleavy: Lakers’ Gasol led the way

Pau Gasol provides needed lift for Lakers

The power forward gives the team the physical and emotional boost it required to win title. The fire burned in Pau Gasol’s eyes with an unquenchable heat Thursday, its intensity too high for him to contain it.

See the article here:
Pau Gasol provides needed lift for Lakers

In the end, Lakers beat Celtics at their own grinding game

‘It was exactly the type of game we wanted,’ Boston Coach Doc Rivers says — except for the final score. Ugly, brutish basketball favored the boys from Boston.

See the original post:
In the end, Lakers beat Celtics at their own grinding game

Lakers’ defense, rebounding make the difference against Celtics

L.A. creates a 23-8 advantage in offensive rebounding to help key their Game 7 win and 16th NBA title. Last man gets the court.

Excerpt from:
Lakers’ defense, rebounding make the difference against Celtics

Lakers should win if Kobe Bryant matches Jerry West’s Game 7 totals

Text messages from press row… If Kobe Bryant matches Jerry West’s Game 7 output from 1969 (42 points, 13 rebounds, 12 assists), the Lakers should win Game 7 against the Celtics. Bryant’s NBA Finals career highs are 40, 12 and 10.

Go here to read the rest:
Lakers should win if Kobe Bryant matches Jerry West’s Game 7 totals

‘Jonah Hex’: Dead Man Walking, By Kurt Loder

The venerable comic-book cowboy comes to life … sort of. Josh Brolin in “Jonah Hex” Photo: Warner Bros. “Jonah Hex” is about as anti- as a hero can get. It’s not just his chewed-up cowboy hat, his bullet-riddled duster and his perma-surly disposition. It’s the melted skin running down one side of his face and the ugly hole torn in the flesh next to his mouth (which makes whiskey-drinking a messy enterprise, but not — as we see just before he shoots up a barroom full of bad guys — an impossible one). In cooking down 38 years’ worth of DC comics for “Jonah Hex,” the new movie, director Jimmy Hayward and his writers have produced a lumpy soup of western action and supernatural shenanigans, heavily spiced with narrative confusion. The story leaps back and forth in time, and while the picture is sometimes funny, possibly intentionally, at some points it’s anybody’s guess what’s going on. In playing Jonah, Josh Brolin is stuck with a character whose facial constriction reduces him to little more than a walking bad attitude — he’s like Clint Eastwood’s old Man with No Name in the Sergio Leone westerns but without the warmth. The time is just after the Civil War (at least when it’s not during the Civil War). We learn that Jonah was framed for the betrayal of his Confederate battle unit, which resulted in the death of his friend, Jeb Turnbull (Jeffrey Dean Morgan). Jeb’s demented father, Quentin (John Malkovich in full cuckoo mode), retaliated by killing Jonah’s wife and son, and disfiguring his face with a red-hot branding iron. Now (or sometimes now) Jonah roams the West as a bad-ass bounty hunter, his only love connection a beautiful whore named Lilah (Megan Fox). When Ulysses S. Grant (Aidan Quinn), president of the newly reunited States, learns that Turnbull is creating a “super-weapon” that will be a “nation-killer,” he recruits Jonah to stop him. Our battered hero is well-equipped to do so. After a close call with death some years back, Jonah was left with one foot in the spirit world; and so while he spends much of the movie being shot and beaten, he appears to be unkillable. He’s attended by a pack of hellhounds (“I wouldn’t try to pet ’em if I was you”) and has the useful gift of bringing dead men back to life with a touch of his hand. (“I’m sorry I killed you,” he tells one corpse, after raising him from the grave. Says the dead guy: “I’d better be getting back under ground.”) Jonah also has a taste for esoteric weaponry — saddle-mounted Gatling guns, dynamite-firing crossbow pistols — and a talent for dodging bullets by simply leaning back a bit to let them fly by (past our madly rolling eyes). The lovely Lilah is no slouch in the slick department, either: When she and Jonah are handcuffed to an overhead rod, the cuffs suddenly snap free, and she brandishes a lock pick. “My mama didn’t raise no fool,” she says. (To which we reply, “What the hell … ?”) Despite the picture’s wall-to-wall uproar — train-jackings, bullet storms, incessant detonations — there’s little excitement to it. The action is furious from the outset and remains at that level throughout, increasingly diluting its intended effect. And the dialogue, which I take to be satirical, never quite meshes with the film’s heavy violence. Like its half-dead protagonist, the movie never comes completely alive. Check out everything we’ve got on “Jonah Hex.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos Exclusive ‘Jonah Hex’ Clip MTV Rough Cut: Megan Fox In ‘Jonah Hex’ Related Photos ‘Jonah Hex’

Go here to see the original:
‘Jonah Hex’: Dead Man Walking, By Kurt Loder

Kristen Stewart Would ‘Definitely’ Want Role In ‘Wanted 2′

‘But I wouldn’t want to be in a mindless, blow-up movie,’ the star tells MTV News of action flick aspirations. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Kristen Stewart Photo: MTV News For the last few months, Kristen Stewart has been rumored to be the director’s pick to take over for Angelina Jolie as the female lead in a sequel to 2008’s ultraviolent “Wanted.” While the “Eclipse” star says she can’t confirm or deny the talk, she told MTV News it’s a project she wouldn’t pass on. “I mean, like, it’s weird to answer questions like this. The only two projects that I’m confirmed in now are ‘On the Road’ and ‘Breaking Dawn’ 1 and 2,” Stewart hedged. But would she be into the assassin role if she were, in fact, being considered for the part? “Yes. Definitely, as long as it was good and I mean, it’s really exciting to see [that could be an opportunity],” she admitted. ” ‘Wanted’ was a great movie, like, James McAvoy makes that movie different than most other action movies because he’s a real guy, and I feel like most action movies don’t have that. So if it had that [element], definitely. But I wouldn’t just want to be in a mindless, blow-up movie. I’m not into it.” Since we were on the topic of the Hollywood rumor mill, Stewart also addressed gossip that had her making her London stage debut soon. “People have been asking me that. That’s so weird. I don’t know where that came from,” she said. “I would love to. That’s also something that really intimidates me and I have no experience in it. But I would want to, definitely. I’m just not doing that right now.” Would you like to see Kristen in “Wanted 2”? Tell us in the comments! We’ll be

See the original post here:
Kristen Stewart Would ‘Definitely’ Want Role In ‘Wanted 2′

Andy Ripley obituary

Former England rugby international known as a maverick character in a monochrome side England’s current doleful, po-faced rugby tour of Australia would not have been to the liking of Andy Ripley, who has died aged 62 of prostate cancer. Ripley was the last of the great Corinthian sportsmen who played rugby union for fun. For him, the sport, which turned professional in 1995, was never about money. It was a means of self-expression. Ripley won 24 caps for England between 1972 and 1976, and scored two tries. As now, it was not a happy time for an England team constantly in the shadow of a great Wales side. In fact, England lurched between the sublime and the ridiculous. In the space of 18 months, they beat the three southern hemisphere giants: South Africa 18-9 in Johannesburg; New Zealand 16-10 in Auckland; and Australia 20-3 at Twickenham, with Ripley scoring one of the tries. But during his all too brief time in the England back row, the side always finished bottom of what was then the Five Nations championship. Ripley, the No8 in a back row of Peter Dixon and Tony Neary, was a distinctive figure on the pitch. A rangy athlete, with a long stride to match his flowing long hair, he was a maverick character in a monochrome side. Ripley played with an elan more associated with the Welsh side of that golden era, or the French team that in those days would run rings around the yeoman England side. It was on the 1974 Lions tour to South Africa that Ripley was able to give rein to his talents. The team that beat the Springboks was the greatest to leave these shores and, even then, Ripley had to play second fiddle to Mervyn Davies, the Wales No8, who played in all four Tests. Ripley, so often the insouciant Englishman, recently admitted that not making that Test team had left him “devastated”, while Davies has said that Ripley was his most difficult opponent. Born in Liverpool, Ripley had only taken up rugby at the age of 19 while at the University of East Anglia. He played his last game for England against Scotland in 1976 (inevitably England were beaten at Murrayfield), but he continued to play rugby for his club, Rosslyn Park, until the age of 41. In his international playing days, rugby union was an amateur game that received little attention, but somehow Ripley became even more famous as an ex-player. In 1978, this all-round athlete reached the semi-finals of the AAA championships in the 400m. Two years later, he won the BBC series Superstars, in which well-known sportsmen of the day competed in a number of disciplines. Typically, Ripley, in his working life a city gent with the United Bank of Kuwait, gave the £8,000 prize he won in the Superstars competition to the Rugby Football Union. “I reckoned that once I paid tax on it, I would be lucky to buy a second-hand Mini,” he said. More pertinently, Ripley knew that Twickenham would then frown upon a player in an amateur game making money from rugby-related earnings. Five years later, he published Ripley’s Rugby Rubbish (1985), a typically eccentric collection of musings and pictures with mocking captions. Ripley appeared on the BBC’s Wogan programme to plug his book, which he dismissed as a “load of twaddle” and again he gave the profits away, this time to the NSPCC. As he entered middle age, Ripley continued to excel at sport. He was a triathlete, became the world indoor veterans rowing champion and he almost qualified to row in the Boat Race. He continued his association with Rosslyn Park, the unfashionable south-west London club whose ground on the South Circular had barely changed since his playing days. When the English domestic game turned professional in 1996, Rosslyn Park stayed strictly amateur and Ripley pined for what was being lost. In an interview with the London Evening Standard, he railed against professionalism. “Friendship and loyalty have been smashed,” he said. “Rugby has lost its heroes. I want to have heroic figures out there. If they’re chasing a few quid like me I don’t like it. It devalues them. It means they are marionettes, puppets, manipulated by people with money.” He went on to admit he was a “nostalgic, sentimental old buffer”. As usual, though, the light tone hid a serious point. Life was to get more serious and in 2005 he was diagnosed with prostate cancer. Ripley remained characteristically good-humoured and became an ambassador for the Prostate Cancer Charity. He was recently made an OBE in the 2010 Birthday Honours. Jean-Pierre Rives, another rugby eccentric and contemporary of Ripley’s in the French back row, once said: “Rugby needs people like Andy. You can still meet people like him in the game, and that proves to me that rugby still has spirit.” Ripley is survived by his wife, Elizabeth, and three children. • Andrew George Ripley, rugby player and athlete, born 1 December 1947; died 17 June 2010 Rugby union Ian Malin guardian.co.uk

Follow this link:
Andy Ripley obituary

Slovenia 2-2 USA | World Cup 2010 Group C match report

A stirring second-half fightback kept USA’s hopes of progressing into the last 16 alive after the most thrilling match of the World Cup so far — but they will feel that they should have had all three points after a late winner was ruled out. Slovenia, the smallest country in this tournament, were two goals up at the break thanks to Valter Birsa and Zlatan Ljubijankic — and seemingly set fair to become the first team to automatically qualify for the last 16. But USA coach, Bob Bradley, shook things up at half-time and his side responded by dominating the second half and deservedly pulled level after goals from Landon Donovan and Michael Bradley. And it looked like they had grabbed the winner when Maurice Edu smashed home Donovan’s free-kick four minutes from time — only for the referee Koman Coulibaly to rule it out, apparently for offside. Slovenia made the better start and nearly went ahead in the ninth minute, when Milivoje Novakovic got the jump on Jay DeMerit only to fresh-air Birsa’s cross. A goal was not long in coming, however, as Birsa drifted in from the right, turned and — spotting Tim Howard off his line – curled a left-footed 25-yard shot high into the net. Moments later Samir Handanovic made a flying dive to clear Donovan’s swirling free-kick, but Slovenia were on top and Howard, who received a painkilling injection before the game, did well to collect a long free-kick from Robert Koren with lurking opponents around. For the first half-hour USA could not get into the game. Too many long passes drifted over the head of Jozy Altidore or, in the case of Oguchi Onyewu, to the opposition. Finally, though, the USA team got the ball on the ground and began to play. Handanovic did well to push away José Torres’s free-kick, while Miso Brecko had to be alert with Donovan lurking on the far post after fine interplay between Robbie Findley and Clint Dempsey. However, the USA’s dreams of reaching the knockout stage seemed to be in grave danger of being shot down when Two-nil when Ljubijankic coolly slotted home. It was clear the USA had to change things and the coach, Bob Bradley, did so at half-time, bringing Torres and Findley off, and Edu and Benny Feilhaber on. Immediately Donovan seized on a mistake, ran into the box and shot from close range. Handanovic seemed to flinch as the bullet went past his head and high into the back of the net. Suddenly the large US support was revitalised and the chants of “USA! USA!” were heard above out the tuneless lament of the vuvuzelas. The chances continued to come. Onyewu missed a free-kick by inches; Altidore breezed past Marko Suler only to hesitate on the edge of the box, allowing the Slovenian defender to recover before, a few minutes later, hitting a slapshot straight at Handanovic. The pressure was building and Slovenia resorted to increasingly desperate measures to break up USA’s rhythm. First Suler was booked for barging over Altidore outside the penalty box. Then, three minutes later, Andraz Kirm joined him in the book after a trip on Steve Cherundolo. And Bojan Jokic also saw yellow after going through Donovan. World Cup 2010 Group C Slovenia USA World Cup 2010 Sean Ingle guardian.co.uk

Read the original here:
Slovenia 2-2 USA | World Cup 2010 Group C match report

Danny Tickle signs new three-year contract with Hull

• 27-year-old had been linked with Huddersfield • Second-rower has scored 729 points in 99 appearances Hull’s goal-kicking forward Danny Tickle has ended speculation over his future by signing a new three-year contract. The 27-year-old former Halifax and Wigan second-rower was out of contract at the end of the season and, after stalling on his club’s offer, had been linked with a move to Huddersfield. “It is a decision I wanted to take some time over and it has been on my mind a lot recently,” said Tickle, who will make his 100th appearance for the club at Huddersfield on Sunday. “I had to consider what was best for me and my family. However, I made the decision easy for myself when I knew I wanted success because I feel that Hull is where I can achieve something. It is a club I love with some great people. The staff, the coaches and all the players are great and I have some really good friends here.” Tickle has scored 729 points in his 99 appearances so far and needs just 10 more to become the 14th highest scorer as well as the 12th highest goal scorer in the club’s history. Hull coach Richard Agar said: “I am delighted that we have secured the services of Danny on a longer-term deal. He plays a lot of games, a lot of minutes and is a top-line goalkicker for us and for those reasons he would be an integral part of any side.” Hull FC Super League Rugby league guardian.co.uk

See the rest here:
Danny Tickle signs new three-year contract with Hull