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Sports Briefing | Pro Basketball: Suns End Spurs’ Home Streak

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 28 Februari 2013 | 15.03

Off the Dribble

Keep up with the latest news, on the court and off, with The Times's basketball blog.

Wesley Johnson hit a 3-pointer to force overtime, and the Phoenix Suns beat San Antonio, 105-101, to snap the Spurs' 18-game home winning streak.

¶ Monta Ellis sank an off-balance 3-pointer just before the final buzzer to give the visiting Milwaukee Bucks a 110-107 victory over the Houston Rockets. Ellis scored 27 points and handed out 13 assists.

¶ Zach Randolph scored 22 points and Marc Gasol added 21 as the host Memphis Grizzlies rallied from a 25-point deficit to match the biggest comeback in franchise history and beat the Dallas Mavericks, 90-84, for their eighth straight win.

¶ Russell Westbrook scored 29 points, Kevin Durant recorded his third career triple-double and the Oklahoma City Thunder finished a perfect three-game homestand by routing the short-handed New Orleans Hornets, 119-74. Durant had 18 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists.


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Sports Briefing | Womens Basketball: Chamique Holdsclaw Is Indicted on Aggravated Assault Charge

Off the Dribble

Keep up with the latest news, on the court and off, with The Times's basketball blog.

The former W.N.B.A. player and Olympic gold medalist Chamique Holdsclaw is being indicted on charges of aggravated assault, criminal damage and possession of a firearm in the commission of a felony. She was arrested last November after an argument with a former Tulsa Shock player, Jennifer Lacy, who told the police she was Holdsclaw's ex-girlfriend. The police said Holdsclaw broke the windows to Lacy's car and shot at it. No one was injured.


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Sports Briefing | Cross-Country Skiing: Petter Northug Wins 15-Kilometer Individual Freestyle at Cross-Country World Championships

Petter Northug of Norway won the 15-kilometer individual freestyle at the cross-country skiing world championships in Val di Fiemme, Italy. It was his eighth world title, after he won three gold medals at each of the previous two championships and one in 2007.


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Sports Briefing | Tennis: Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic Advance in Dubai Championships

Straight Sets

The latest news and analysis from all of the 2011 major tournaments.

The defending champion Roger Federer and top-seeded Novak Djokovic are on course to face each other in the Dubai Championships final after each moved into the quarterfinals with straight-set victories. They were joined by Juan Martín del Potro and Tomas Berdych.


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Bats: Guido, One of the Brewers’ Racing Sausages, Goes Missing

1:06 a.m. | Updated The costume has been found, according to The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

If anyone spots a 7-foot Italian sausage wandering around Milwaukee, please alert the Cedarburg, Wis., police, because they have been looking for him for more than a week.

Guido, one of the Milwaukee Brewers' famous racing sausages — previously best known for getting clocked right in the casing by Randall Simon in a race in 2007 — was apparently stolen from the local winter festival on Feb. 16. The felonious Guido impersonator was then seen later in several Milwaukee bars, signing autographs.

A description of the crime, courtesy of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

The 7-foot-long weenie was lying unused in a backroom at the Milwaukee Curling Club's new Cedarburg location during a fundraiser on Feb. 16 with beer-tasting and curling, and a witness saw the sausage walk out of the south door about 7:45 p.m., Cedarburg police Detective Jeff Vahsholtz said Wednesday. The Italian walked into TJ Ryan's in Cedarburg an hour later and also made an appearance around midnight at The Roadhouse Bar and Grill.

A 7-foot sausage wearing a chef's hat and a bowtie would not seem terribly difficult to track down, but the Cedarburg police have not had any luck finding the $3,000 costume, which is owned by Klement's sausage company.

"We thought it was funny at the time," Vahsholtz told The Journal Sentinel. "Now we're just hoping someone returns it."

Mustard Girl All American Mustards has offered a reward of a year's supply of mustard to anyone who recovers the costume. For Brewers' fans sake, let's hope it's before the team's opener, which would not be the same if Brett Wurst the bratwurst, Stosh the Polish sausage, Frankie Furter the hot dog and the Cinco the chorizo had to race without Guido the Italian.


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Goal: Benitez Rips Chelsea Fans and Board

It lacked the fist-pounding, mouth-frothing, expletive-tossing rage that would have made it the stuff of YouTube legend, but the rant delivered Wednesday by the soon-to-be-former Chelsea Manager Rafael Benitez after the Blues' 2-0 F.A. Cup win at Middlesborough was still something to behold.

What set Benitez off? It might be easier to list what didn't, though fans traveling all the way to Middlesbrough to sing "We don't care about Rafa" and pine once again for Frank Lampard was probably the last straw. (The Telegraph helpfully transcribed Benitez's takedown.)

Benitez's main target was Chelsea's fans, some of whom have ridden him mercilessly from his first day in the job …

"They are not doing any favors for the team when they are singing and wasting time preparing banners.

"I will leave at the end of the season, so they don't need to waste time with me."

… but he took time to needle Chelsea's board, which he believes hamstrung him by making him a placeholder …

"It's because someone made a mistake. They put my title: 'interim manager.'

"I am the manager and I will be managing the team I like to manage — players and no names."

Or will he?

Roman Abramovich is currently sweeping everything on Rafa Benitez's desk into a large cardboard box.

— Iain Macintosh (@iainmacintosh) 27 Feb 13

Benitez pointed out that he is not new to this business, that he has won trophies in Spain, England and Italy, including the Champions League (with Liverpool, a reminder that ought to go over great with his critics). But he took pains to make clear that he was hired because the previous coach had been fired after getting the team eliminated from the Champions League, and that it was his job to get them back in by finishing in the top four in the Premier League this season.

Chelsea is currently fourth, two points ahead of Arsenal. (Lost amid the reaction to the tirade about the fans was the fact that Chelsea's win over Middlesbrough means it will face Manchester United in the F.A. Cup quarterfinals.)

"Every game they continue singing and they continue preparing banners, they are wasting time. What they have to do is support the team.

"If we cannot achieve what we expect to achieve, that is to be in the top four and be in the Champions League for next year, I will leave; they will stay in the Europa League.

"They have to take responsibility too. If they put players under pressure, they don't create a good atmosphere at Stamford Bridge, they have to realise they are making a big mistake because the rest of the fans would like to see the team in the Champions League next year.

"It would be much better for everyone to have a good atmosphere and supporting the team, backing the players, and that's it."

Barely taking a breath between sentences, he added the painful truth later:

"It's a team in transition – they don't realise. In the past, we had Drogba, Essien, Kalou, these players, it was a very strong squad, players with experience in the Premier League.

"Now we have a group of players with talent, really good players with talent, but they need time. It's a time of transition.

"But they don't realise it was a time of transition when I came here. The team was not in the Champions League, the team has lost some trophies, so I am trying to do my best and I will try to do my best until the end, until the last minute."

Corner kick: Does Benitez have a point? Does it matter? Abramovich has fired coaches for less, and everyone knows it's only a matter of time before Benitez, too, is tossed into the recycling pile.


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Sports Briefing | Horse racing: Horse Racing Hall of Fame Finalists Are Announced

Calvin Borel, a three-time Kentucky Derby winner, and Chris Antley, who died of a drug overdose in 2000, were among the finalists announced for election to the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame. The other finalists are jockeys Garrett Gomez, Craig Perret and Alex Solis; the trainer Gary Jones; the champion filly Ashado; the star sprinter Housebuster; the former horse of the year Invasor; and the grass-racing star Lure.


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Bruins 4, Islanders 1: Bruins Beat Islanders for 16th Time in 20 Meetings

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 27 Februari 2013 | 15.03

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College Basketball — Miami a Surprise Contender

David Santiago/El Nuevo Herald, via Associated Press

Under Coach Jim Larranaga, in his second season, the previously unheralded Hurricanes are leading the Atlantic Coast Conference.

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — Jim Larranaga always has a plan. He plans by the day, week, month and year. If anyone wonders how he stays so organized, Larranaga walks behind his desk here at BankUnited Center and opens two large cabinets, which house more than two decades' worth of Franklin Covey daily planners: thick, three-ring monstrosities the size of dictionaries.

Larranaga, the men's basketball coach at Miami, keeps track of everything in those binders. His goals. His team's statistics. His thoughts and observations. He also jots down what he expects to happen, and that includes the Hurricanes' remarkable rise this season. Larranaga was so confident in his team that he showed up at a board of trustees meeting last October and delivered a message.

"I told them this could be the best year in school history," he said this week.

It was a low bar. Long known for the success — and various suspected extracurriculars — of its football program, Miami has an unexceptional basketball past, with six trips to the N.C.A.A. tournament and a lone appearance in the Round of 16 back in 2000. Yet in just his second season, Larranaga, 63, has built the team into an improbable contender, much as he did at George Mason, which he coached to the Final Four in 2006.

The Hurricanes (22-4, 13-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) are ranked No. 5 entering Wednesday's game against Virginia Tech, and their home games regularly sell out. Fans stormed the court Jan. 23 after a 27-point victory over Duke, then ranked No. 1. The Heat stars LeBron James and Dwyane Wade have made courtside cameos. And students, who line up for tickets on a patch of real estate known as Larranaga's Lawn, wear T-shirts that feature Larranaga's face on the front along with the slogan "40 Minutes of L" — a play on the slightly more profane catchphrase of the high-octane teams at Arkansas in the 1990s.

"I thought it was hilarious," the assistant Michael Huger said, adding: "People think because of Coach's age, he can't do this, he can't do that. Can't? That's not even in his vocabulary. He's healthy, he moves well, he communicates well, and his mind is sharp as a tack."

Miami had won 14 straight games before last Saturday's loss at Wake Forest, a breakdown that was still fresh on Larranaga's mind this week. On Monday, he kept a box score in his pocket and cited what his team did wrong: "Everything." Larranaga wants Miami to limit opponents to 40 percent shooting over all and 30 percent from beyond the 3-point line. Wake Forest shot 54.2 percent over all, 58.3 percent from long range.

In coping this week, Larranaga said he was relying on one of his favorite books, "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People," by Stephen R. Covey. Citing the need for rest — part of Habit No. 7 — Larranaga did not have his players practice on Sunday and barred them from speaking with reporters until after Wednesday's game. "The thing we can't afford to do is allow our priorities to change," Larranaga said.

There are times when Larranaga, who grew up in the Bronx, would seem right at home at a TED conference, exchanging innovative management ideas. Part coach and part management guru, he has always been fascinated by numbers and strategy, dating to his college days at Providence, where he started as a math major before switching to economics. (Economics, he said, was more practical.) As a basketball coach, he believes in the data-crunching wizardry of Ken Pomeroy, whose semi-eponymous basketball statistics Web site, KenPom.com, has been an invaluable resource for Larranaga for years.

Of particular interest are his team's offensive and defensive efficiency ratings, which are based on points per possession. According to Pomeroy, the Hurricanes rank 6th in defensive efficiency and 39th in offensive efficiency. Defense, Larranaga said, is the foundation. Scoring points? "That keeps your players happy," he said.

On defense, he wants to limit his opponents to 12 points per position. In other words, if the starting point guard scores 9 points and his backup hits a 3-pointer, the limit has been reached. That also means opponents should average no more than 60 points a game. This season, opponents are averaging 59.2 points and 38.4 percent shooting. Larranaga's players get a dose of his man-to-man principles every day.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: February 26, 2013

An earlier version of a photo caption in this story misstated the name of the Miami Hurricanes' conference. They play in the Atlantic Coast Conference.


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No. 1 Indiana Is Upended by Struggling Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana was starting to settle in again at No. 1 after weeks of shuffling at the top of the national rankings in this wildly unpredictable season of college basketball.

Trevor Mbakwe and Minnesota stepped forward, flexed their muscles and did their best to push the Hoosiers out.

Mbakwe had 21 points and 12 rebounds to help the Gophers take down top-ranked Indiana 77-73 on Tuesday night, the seventh time the No. 1 team in The Associated Press' poll has lost a game this season.

"We're trying to do big things so we have to learn from this mistake, but we have to dust it off real fast," Hoosiers star Victor Oladipo said.

Andre Hollins added 16 points for the Gophers (19-9, 7-8 Big Ten), who outrebounded Cody Zeller and the Hoosiers by a whopping 44-30 and solidified their slipping NCAA tournament bid with an emphatic performance against the Big Ten leader. The fans swarmed the court as the last second ticked off, the first time that's happened here in years.

"We weren't physical enough on the glass. That's the bottom line," Indiana coach Tom Crean said.

Zeller was held to nine points with four turnovers for the Hoosiers (24-4, 12-3), who have held the No. 1 ranking for 10 of 17 polls this season including the last four. Oladipo scored 16 points, but 14 of the 17 points by Jordan Hulls came before halftime.

"Cody's certainly capable of a lot," Crean said, "and I think he'll bounce back just fine."

Mbakwe, a sixth-year senior, posted his conference-leading seventh double-double. At 24 years old, he was a man among boys in many ways in this game, dominating both ends of the court when the Gophers needed him most. Minnesota had 23 offensive rebounds.

"We did need to play with a sense of urgency, play with a little edge," Gophers coach Tubby Smith said. "I think Trevor set that tone for us."

Elliott Eliason, who played every bit as well as Zeller, the slender sophomore in the post on the other side, scored seven straight points for Minnesota to tie the game at 46 shortly after Oladipo's reverse layup had given the Hoosiers a 44-36 edge, their biggest of the game.

Hollins, who missed eight of his first nine shots, scraped off a high screen by Eliason to pull up for a 3-pointer and give the Gophers a 51-48 lead. Mbakwe got a rebound to keep a key possession alive then grabbed another board to set up his off-balance bank shot to make it 56-53 in favor of Minnesota.

"I didn't feel I was playing up to my potential lately. I just wanted to come out and be aggressive," Mbakwe said.

Mbakwe was called for a loudly questioned blocking foul, his fourth, with 4:39 remaining on Zeller's fast-break layup and free throw that put the Hoosiers up 59-58. But Austin Hollins answered with a pump-fake layup that drew a foul for a three-point play and a two-point advantage for the Gophers.

The Hoosiers didn't lead again, and Joe Coleman's fast-break dunk with 2:35 left gave Minnesota a 68-61 cushion, enough of one to withstand a couple of 3-pointers by Christian Watford and one by Hulls in the closing minutes.

Mbakwe, who played for Crean when they were at Marquette in 2007-08, has had some of his better games against the Hoosiers.

This was his best.

He gave the Gophers and their home crowd a double-shot of energy early with 10 points in the first 6½ minutes, plus a jarring block of Zeller's inside shot that knocked the 7-footer to the court.

"He's a high-level, high-energy, tough guy who plays the game at a desperate level," Crean said. "Obviously I'm biased, but there's no shame in that."

Zeller, Indiana's leading scorer and the second-best shooter in the Big Ten behind Oladipo, was 0 for 4 from the field in the first half with two turnovers, two fouls and two points. The Gophers scored only three points in the last 7 minutes of the half, but they trailed only 34-30.

The Hoosiers are still in position for their first outright Big Ten regular season championship since 1993, with a one-game edge in the loss column over Michigan State, Michigan and Wisconsin. With home games against Iowa and Ohio State, Indiana could still clinch the title before the finale at Michigan on March 10.

For now, though, the Hoosiers have to regroup and re-establish their inside game after the trampling in the paint they endured here.

"They were relentless on the glass. We just didn't do a great job of boxing them out," Oladipo said.

The Gophers were back on their uniquely raised home court, trying desperately to boost spirits that have sagged under the weight of eight losses in their previous 11 games. Smith even had the team meet with a sports psychologist. They hadn't topped 58 points in their previous five games. After being ranked in 11 straight polls, the Gophers didn't get one vote this week.

They'll get a few in the next one.

"We've had a lot of people supporting them, encouraging them. I think they knew how important the game was, but I sensed a very calm, matter-of-fact group of guys," Smith said, adding: "They're very confident about who they are."

___


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Stringer Wins 900th as Rutgers Tops South Florida

Mel Evans/Associated Press

C. Vivian Stringer became the fourth women's college basketball coach to reach 900 wins.

PISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP) — C. Vivian Stringer fought back tears as her Rutgers women's basketball players celebrated their coach's entrance to the exclusive 900 win club, then let out a sigh of relief.

As it turned out, the fifth time was the charm for Stringer, who became the fourth women's college basketball coach to reach 900 wins as Rutgers cruised past South Florida 68-56 on Tuesday night.

Stringer, a Hall of Famer in her 42nd season as head coach, reached the milestone thanks to Erica Wheeler, who scored 24 points to help the Scarlet Knights (15-12, 6-8 Big East) snap a four-game losing streak.

"I think it's beyond words," said Stringer, whose record stands at 900-330. "I'm happy that it's over. I can hardly breathe. It's over and now I can just coach and smile, and get back to what I love to do because it's never been about numbers.

"If it's something special for all the generations of players and coaches that I've been a part of, then, yeah, I'm happy. But I'm looking forward to more."

Stringer joined Pat Summitt, Jody Conradt and Sylvia Hatchell, who reached the mark on Feb. 7. Only three Division I men's coaches have reached 900 victories -- Mike Krzyzewski, Bob Knight and Jim Boeheim.

"I am fortunate to call Vivian my friend and could not be happier that she has reached the 900-win milestone in her career. I have great respect and admiration for Vivian and consider her one of the great pioneers of our game," Summitt said in a statement. "She has had an incredible journey, and I hope she adds many more to her 'W' column!"

As the game ended, a crowd of 1,304 at the Rutgers Athletic Center saluted Stringer with chants of "900" and "C.V.S." and Scarlet Knights Athletics Director Tim Pernetti was among the first to greet her with a framed No. 900 jersey. Rutgers' cheerleaders unfurled a banner that read "Congratulations Coach Stringer - 900 wins," and her players took turns hugging their emotional coach at midcourt.

"When I look back on my life, this team, probably this year, best reflects what 900 has been," said Stringer, the first coach in men's or women's basketball to take three different schools to the Final Four, including Rutgers in 2000 and '07. "It helped me to remember that it was never easy. But unless you really have a passion, unless you really know how fortunate you are not to have had a lot of major injuries to a lot of players, which is what happened to this team, and unless you remember how fortunate you are to be able to get to those special places."

Rutgers had lost four straight games since beating Cincinnati for Stringer's 899th career victory.

"It's more than a game, it's about a preparation for life," said Stringer, who is in her 18th season at Rutgers. "It's about understanding that when things are rough you may get knocked down and there may be doubters but you'll still rise."

Betnijah Laney added 20 points, nine rebounds and four assists for the Scarlet Knights, who secured a much-needed win to enhance their NCAA tournament resume. Rutgers, which entered the game 10th in the Big East standings, is in danger of missing the NCAA tournament after 10 straight appearances.

"Everything will take care of itself," Stringer said, dismissing a question related to her postseason fate. "This was a major win, and it's important to win down the (stretch) as it is right now."

Laney and Wheeler had six points apiece and Syessence Davis made a 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer as the Scarlet Knights used a 17-6 closing run to go into intermission with a 35-24 advantage.

Rachel Hollivay scored six of her eight points after the break for Rutgers, which didn't allow South Florida (19-8, 8-6) within eight points in the second half.

"It's almost a little heartbreaking because she gives her heart out when she coaches," Wheeler said. "So to not get her that 900th win as soon as we needed to, I cried a couple times at night. It was important tonight to definitely get her that win."

The Bulls, who saw their three-game winning streak snapped, were led by Courtney Williams' 15 points.


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Jets 4, Rangers 3: Rangers Fall to Winnipeg Jets at the Garden

Jason Szenes for The New York Times

The Jets' Grant Clitsome slid to block a shot by Taylor Pyatt in the first period of the Rangers' loss, their fourth straight.

Even a wild third-period rally could not save the injury-ravaged Rangers from losing their fourth straight game Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden.

The Rangers trailed the Winnipeg Jets by scores of 2-0, 3-1 and 4-2 and finally fell, 4-3. They were plagued by errors from their regulars and the fill-ins for Rick Nash, Ryan McDonagh, Michael Del Zotto and Arron Asham, all of whom did not play.

"Everybody has injuries — sometimes it kind of galvanizes you," Coach John Tortorella said before the game. "Hopefully, it'll make our structure stronger."

It did not. The Rangers started the evening in 10th place in the Eastern Conference and fell to 11th, overtaken by the Jets.

Ryan Callahan played an inspiring game, blocking shots, taking seven shots and going plus-2. His goal at 9 minutes 28 seconds of the second period snapped a team scoring drought of 102:53.

In a second-period sequence, he thwarted a Winnipeg attack by blocking two shots and throwing a body check, all while playing without a stick, eliciting a standing ovation.

"I was just trying to block shots," Callahan said. "It had nothing to do with trying to spark a team. It's just the way we have to play, and that's what you have to do to try and get wins."

But Callahan was the only Ranger who played well.

Even Henrik Lundqvist (28 saves) had a problematic night, flubbing Evander Kane's shot halfway through the third period, 20 seconds after Taylor Pyatt had brought the Rangers within 3-2.

Less than a minute after Kane's goal, the Rangers got it back when Anton Stralman made the score 4-3. But the Rangers could not beat Winnipeg goalie Ondrej Pavelec in the final desperate minutes.

"I've gone over it a couple of times, and I've tried to find out a reason why," Lundqvist said. "It doesn't matter. I need to stop it."

The loss marked the first time the Rangers fell to the Jets since the team moved to Winnipeg last season from Atlanta. The last time the Rangers were beaten by a team called the Winnipeg Jets was on Nov. 17, 1995.

The consequences of the Rangers' injury-depleted lineup were most visible on the goal that gave Winnipeg a 3-1 lead at 14:48 of the second period. The Rangers were trapped in their own zone and completely without structure for a long stretch.

On the ice were defensemen Matt Gilroy and Stu Bickel, and forwards Jeff Halpern, Chris Kreider and Brandon Mashinter. Gilroy and Bickel often do not dress for games, and Kreider and Mashinter have been back and forth between the Rangers and their A.H.L. affiliate in Connecticut.

"Chris and Mash, there is a bit of a struggle there a couple of times, but this is what happens when you have some injuries," Tortorella said. "You have the kids. You get really worried that you put them in a spot they are just not ready for yet."

The Rangers played a fourth straight game without Nash, who entered the game as their leading scorer. He is out with an unspecified injury that is believed to be a concussion. Nash practiced in the morning for the first time in nine days and dodged reporters' questions about whether he had a concussion.

"It's a bunch of things," Nash said.

McDonagh was hurt in Saturday's loss at Montreal. The Rangers listed him with a head injury that is believed to be a concussion.

Del Zotto was out for a second straight game with what the Rangers termed a lower-body injury. Like Nash, he practiced in the morning, but was scratched from the lineup.

Asham, the pugnacious fourth-line wing, missed a third straight game. He told reporters last week that he had back spasms.

Kane scored twice for Winnipeg, as did the former Ranger Olli Jokinen. He is famous in Rangers lore for being stopped on the last shootout attempt in the season finale at Philadelphia in 2010, a miss that cost the Rangers a playoff berth and gave it to the Flyers.

In the Rangers' current losing streak, all four defeats have come against Canadian teams. On Thursday they hope to get a reprieve with a game against Tampa Bay at the Garden.


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Slap Shot: Gagne Returns to the Flyers

The Philadelphia Flyers have reacquired forward Simon Gagne from the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for a conditional 2013 draft pick.

Gagne, 32, has played in only 11 games with the Kings this season picking up five assists. He was a healthy scratch in the last four games for Los Angeles. Gagne is in the final year of a two-year, $7 million contract and carries a $3.5 million cap hit.

In a conference call, Gagne said that the trade "was definitely something that was in my mind that the last couple days and I talked to my agent, I think it was three days ago. The situation here, you could tell, was not going to get better.

"I didn't have a chance to ask Dean to try to trade me, they just did it on their own and it just shows you the class those guys have," Gagne adding, referring to Kings General Manager Dean Lombardi.

Gagne was a first-round pick of the Flyers in 1998. He spent 10 seasons in Philadelphia, posting posted 259 goals and 265 assists in 665 games. He is fourth on the Flyers career scoring list.

The Flyers dealt Gagne to Tampa Bay during the 2010 off-season after Philadelphia's run to the Stanley Cup final.

"It's always a shock first of all getting traded, but when they told me the place I was going," he said, adding "it's where everything started. I'm going back to a place that I'm really familiar to and I'm really excited to go back to Philly."

The draft pick the Kings get in return is conditional on whether Philadelphia makes the playoffs. The Kings get a third-round pick if the Flyers make the playoffs and a fourth if they miss the postseason.

Gagne is scheduled to take a red-eye from Los Angeles to Philadelphia on Tuesday night and be in the Flyers lineup Wednesday when Philadelphia hosts the Washington Capitals.

Ryder Returns to Montreal The Montreal Canadiens also reacquired a former draft pick, getting Michael Ryder from the Dallas Stars in exchange for Erik Cole. Montreal will also receive a 2013 third-round pick.

Ryder had 6 goals and 14 points with the Stars this season. Ryder, who was taken by the Canadiens in the eighth round selection in 1998, played 314 games in Montreal over four seasons, scoring 99 goals and 207 points. Ryder signed as a free agent with the Boston Bruins in summer 2008. He is in the final year of a two-year, $7 million contract.

"He was shocked, but it's a place where he's been and where he's had success," Canadiens General Manager Marc Bergevin said in a statement. "He loves the city of Montreal. I told him we're extremely happy to have him. He brings an asset to our team that I felt we could use; he's already had success this year and last year in Dallas. He was surprised but happy."

After scoring 35 goals in 82 games last season, Cole, 32, has struggled this season collecting only three goals and three assists in 19 games with Montreal.

Cole, who has a no-trade clause, was approached by Bergevin to waive it in order for the deal to take place. He has two years remaining on his current deal with an annual cap hit of $4.5 million.


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Nets 101, Hornets 97: Nets’ Brook Lopez Finds Spark Against His Brother

Gerald Herbert/Associated Press

Brook Lopez attempts to block a shot by Hornets guard Eric Gordon. Lopez finished with 20 points, 7 rebounds, 5 assists and 4 blocks in the Nets' win.

NEW ORLEANS — The Nets have been trying to rekindle some of the fire in Brook Lopez, their All-Star center, for two weeks now, as his production and dependability have inexplicably slumped.

Maybe he needed to find some new motivation or take a closer look at himself in the mirror. On Tuesday, in a sense, he got both, when he lined up for the tip against the New Orleans Hornets and their center, Robin Lopez, his twin brother.

What better way to get the blood boiling again?

The next 48 minutes proceeded with a lot of elbow jabs, eye rolls and smirks, but Brook Lopez ultimately had the upper hand. He finished with 20 points, 7 rebounds, 5 assists and 4 blocks to help the Nets get past the Hornets, 101-97, at New Orleans Arena.

It was not easy, or pretty, or particularly encouraging for the Nets, who watched their 22-point first-half lead get whittled down in the second half.

But with 2 minutes 16 seconds left, and the Nets leading by 4, Brook Lopez hit a leaning jump shot that served as perhaps the biggest shot of a night that featured several clutch baskets for the Nets.

"A lot of people had to play well to get us a win," Nets Coach P. J. Carlesimo said. "And still there wasn't a lot of margin at the end."

Deron Williams finished with 33 points and 8 assists, including 11 points in the fourth. It was a valiant performance in the absence of Joe Johnson, who is normally the Nets' go-to guy in crunch time. But Johnson missed his third straight game with a heel injury, so Williams filled the void.

"It felt good to get going, especially down the stretch, and be able to close out a game," Williams said. "That's something I've kind of struggled with this year."

Lopez also keyed the Nets down the stretch, which is noteworthy, considering he had been replaced in the fourth quarter of the last three close games by Andray Blatche, the Nets' backup center. On Tuesday, after sitting for the first seven minutes of the quarter, Lopez scored 6 points, including two key free throws and the runner that pushed the Nets' lead to 6.

It came after he had just missed a layup. But Keith Bogans got the offensive rebound, swung the ball out to Williams, who got it back to Lopez at the top of the paint. Lopez drove and delivered.

"It was big," Lopez said. "D-Will just made the right call. He called the play, we executed it right."

Bogans said of his rebound: "I just kind of snuck in there, and the ball was right in my face."

For most of the game, Lopez seemed focused on one-upping his brother.

It was not the first time the two have gone head-to-head, but both have significantly developed their games since they were first-round picks out of Stanford in 2008. Brook Lopez was named to his first All-Star game this season, while Robin Lopez has started every game for the Hornets.

"He's always very physical and it's enjoyable," Brook Lopez said. "I don't know how many other people get to experience something like this in the world. It's always a good time."

The Nets had no difficulty offensively early. They built a 22-point lead in the first half while shooting 62.5 percent from the field and 6 of 8 from 3-point range. But they came out of halftime sluggish, and the Hornets, hustling after loose balls and attacking the rim, trimmed the lead to 73-65 heading into the fourth quarter.

New Orleans continued to dial up the defensive intensity, cutting the lead to 4 with five minutes left, but they could not get past the hump. Bogans hit three 3-pointers from the corner in the fourth, helping the Nets preserve their margin, before Williams and Lopez gave the Nets just enough in the final minutes to seal the win.

The Hornets committed only eight turnovers, outscored the Nets, 44-30, in the paint, and shot 52.3 percent in the second half, giving the Nets, without their most clutch player, a legitimate scare.

"They just wouldn't go away," Williams said. "They just kept hitting shot after shot."


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Woodson Sees Free Throws as a Key to Knicks’ Victory

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 26 Februari 2013 | 15.03

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Off the Dribble: The Baffling Benching of Lopez

When the final minutes arrived Sunday night and the Nets' offense went to pieces, it was easy point to the absence of Joe Johnson, their dynamic, do-everything shooting guard. Johnson was resting a sore heel, robbing the Nets of their No. 2 scorer.

More vexing was the absence of the No. 1 scorer.

Brook Lopez spent the fourth quarter on the bench — for the third time in four games — while his teammates sputtered to a 76-72 loss to the Memphis Grizzlies. Of all the moves made by P.J. Carlesimo since his ascension to head coach, none are more puzzling than his sudden lack of faith in Lopez to close out games.

Lopez is the Nets' most reliable offensive option, averaging 18.7 points and shooting 51.1 percent from the field. He has been their defensive anchor, averaging 2.1 blocks. Those statistics propelled Lopez to his first All-Star Game this month. The benchings have all come since then.

Lopez has looked a little wobbly since returning from Houston, which sometimes happens to young players after making their All-Star debuts. The weekend is chaotic. Still, if the Nets have learned anything this season, it is that Lopez is every bit as critical to their success as their veteran stars, Johnson and Deron Williams.

With Johnson out the last two games, Lopez's role perhaps should have increased. Yet Lopez never left the bench in the fourth quarter Sunday, or in the fourth quarter of Friday's loss to Houston.

Carlesimo acknowledged his error Monday, telling reporters: "I created the situation, and it's not a good situation. I worry about it that I need to address it, and I worry about it that I need to watch what I do going forward."

The only thing Carlesimo did not seem worried about was Lopez's frame of mind, and maybe that is part of the problem.

Lopez is a star without ego, which is great for team chemistry but not so great for a team's offense. The dominant big men — Patrick Ewing, Shaquille O'Neal, Dwight Howard — demand the crunchtime  minutes and the ball. Lopez seems all too content to cede his fourth-quarter minutes to Andray Blatche.

"I have complete faith in him when he's in the game," Lopez said last Tuesday, when Blatche played the final quarter in his place in an overtime win over Milwaukee. It is a refrain Lopez has repeated many times this season.

Blatche was a nice pickup last summer, and a useful backup. But Lopez is the steadier and more productive player, and less prone to untimely gaffes.

According to statistics at NBA.com, Lopez has an on-court rating of plus 2, meaning the Nets outscore opponents by an average of 2 points per 100 possessions when he is playing. Only Johnson, at plus 3, has a higher net on-court rating. Blatche is at minus 1.8.

Conversely, the Nets are outscored by 2.9 points per 100 possessions when Lopez sits. They are nearly 1 point per 100 possessions better when Blatche is on the bench.

Nor has Lopez proved to be any sort of liability late in games. He is shooting 51.8 percent in fourth quarters and actually converts his free throws at a higher rate in the fourth (79 percent) than he does in any other quarter.

Lopez has shown a dip since the All-Star Game, shooting just 41 percent over the last four games (though he shot well against Houston, going 13 for 21, and scoring 27).

This might not be as much about Lopez, however, as it is about the quest to make sense of the Nets' rotation. Avery Johnson never quite figured it out before he was fired as the coach Dec. 27, and Carlesimo has struggled to find the best combinations in the course of a game. MarShon Brooks and Mirza Teletovic have wandered in and out of the rotation, and Reggie Evans has overtaken Kris Humphries in the starting lineup.

But too many of the Nets' role players have been erratic this season, including Blatche, Gerald Wallace and C.J. Watson, forcing Carlesimo to rely more heavily on units that feature his three stars. Leaning on Lopez should be his easiest decision.


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Sports Briefing | Tennis: Roger Federer Rallies to Beat Malek Jaziri at Dubai Championships

Straight Sets

The latest news and analysis from all of the 2011 major tournaments.

Roger Federer needed three sets to beat a Tunisian wild card, Malek Jaziri, 5-7, 6-0, 6-2, and reach the second round of the Dubai Championships in the United Arab Emirates.

Federer was playing the 128th-ranked Jaziri for the first time. Jaziri broke serve to go ahead, 6-5, in the first set and closed it out with a backhand down the line. Federer dominated after that, racing through the second set in 23 minutes and breaking Jaziri twice in the third.


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Sports Briefing | College Basketball: Marquette’s Win Over Syracuse Tightens Big East Race

Davante Gardner scored a career-high 26 points and No. 22 Marquette beat No. 12 Syracuse, 74-71, on Monday to tighten the race at the top of the Big East. Host Marquette (20-7, 11-4) moved into second place, a half-game behind No. 7 Georgetown and a half-game ahead of No. 10 Louisville. Syracuse (22-6, 10-5), which has lost three of five, dropped into a tie for fourth with No. 21 Notre Dame.

The Quad

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¶ Indiana was No. 1 in the Associated Press men's basketball top 25 for the fourth straight week Monday, and Gonzaga moved to No. 2, the highest spot in its history. The Hoosiers, who have been ranked No. 1 for a total of 10 weeks this season, received all but one first-place vote from a 65-member national news media panel. Louisiana Tech moved into the rankings for the first time since a 13-week run in 1984-85 that was its only appearance in the poll. Louisiana Tech, which is 25th, was led back then to a ranking as high as No. 7 by Karl Malone.

¶ St. Louis, which beat Butler and Virginia Commonwealth last week, was 18th, the Billikens' first appearance in the poll since a one-week stay last season.


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Sports Briefing | Soccer: Diego Maradona Returns to Italy to Battle Tax Charges

Diego Maradona returned to Italy in a bid to clear his name in a tax evasion case. Maradona landed in Rome dressed in black and wearing dark glasses before heading straight to Naples, where he will hold a news conference Tuesday morning.

Goal

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His Italian debts of more than $50 million stem from what the authorities said were unpaid taxes during the time he played for Napoli from 1984 to '91, a period in which he helped the club win its only two Serie A titles. Dozens of supporters turned up to greet Maradona with songs about him from his playing days.

¶ UEFA charged the Italian club Lazio over racist abuse by its fans for the fourth time in the Europa League this season.

¶ Prosecutors in Rome opened an inquiry into an Arab sheik's bid to buy part of the Roma football club. Roma announced a preliminary deal for Sheik Adnan Adel Aref al Qaddumi al Shtewi to enter its ownership group last week. Since then, trading of Roma shares on the Milan stock exchange has fluctuated greatly, causing several suspensions. (AP)


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Blackhawks Defeat Oilers

CHICAGO (AP) — Marian Hossa skated along the boards, pumping his right arm as the United Center roared its approval.

Go ahead and give two more points to the streaking Chicago Blackhawks.

Hossa scored 1:44 into overtime and the Blackhawks beat the Edmonton Oilers 3-2 on Monday night to stretch their NHL-record opening points streak to 19 games.

Patrick Sharp set up the winning goal with a quick turn along the boards and a drive to the goal that led to two stops by Nikolai Khabibulin. Hossa picked up the second rebound and was again stuffed by Khabibulin before he poked it in for his ninth goal of the season.

"It is a great feeling, obviously," Hossa said. "It doesn't matter who's scoring and lately we have a lot of different guys scoring. We try to enjoy the streak, keep playing a simple game and try to find a way to win."

Patrick Kane and Viktor Stalberg also scored for Chicago (16-0-3), which has won six straight and nine of 10. Ray Emery made 17 saves to remain unbeaten in eight starts this season.

The Blackhawks have earned 35 of 38 possible points so far this season.

"It was a great third period," Chicago coach Joel Quenneville said. "We had the puck in overtime, too. Great pay by Sharpie going to the net, great patience and presence with Hossa to finish."

Nail Yakupov and Jeff Petry had the goals for Edmonton, which carried a 2-1 lead into the third period but couldn't hold on for its fourth consecutive victory over the Blackhawks. Khabibulin had 31 stops in the opener of the Oilers' franchise-record, nine-game road trip.

"Of course you feel pain, having the lead going into the third period," Edmonton coach Ralph Krueger said. "It's definitely something you dream and believe you can close it. But they are an amazingly powerful team. They are very strong on the puck and they never, never let up, at all."

Edmonton grabbed the lead for the last time in the second, taking advantage when Brandon Saad was sent off for high sticking. Yakupov, the No. 1 overall pick in last year's draft, one-timed a pass from Sam Gagner into the right side of the net at 14:17 for his fourth power-play goal and sixth overall.

Chicago looked listless for much of the second, but rebounded quickly in the third. Michal Rozsival was behind the net when he sent a pass in front to Stalberg, who poked the puck into the mouth of goal as Khabibulin went to his knees to try for the stop.

The call on the ice was no goal, but replays showed the puck crossed the line before Khabibulin could make the play and Stalberg was awarded his fifth goal of the season after a short review.

The pace picked up after the tying goal, and each team had a couple of solid chances to move in front. Yakupov shot off the post on one power-play opportunity, and Khabibulin stopped Hossa on a short-handed chance.

"I think for us it would have been a big statement game if we were able to break the streak," Gagner said. "But at the same time, once we didn't do that, we wanted to find a way to get it in overtime and were unable to do that as well. So it was unfortunate we kind of squandered the lead there."

Edmonton moved in front in the first period after Duncan Keith lost his footing and coughed up the puck deep in Chicago's end. Lennart Petrell picked it up and skated in all alone on Emery, who stopped his backhand attempt. The rebound went out to Petry, who sent it over the prone goalie at 4:28.

Just over a minute later, Kane skated to the middle of the ice and beat Khabibulin with a slick backhander for his 10th goal of the season. It was his first goal since Feb. 10 at Nashville, ending a six-game drought.

"We keep finding ways to win," said Sharp, who picked up his 400th career point on the assist in overtime. "That's important at any time of the year. Those one-goal games, we're on the right side of them. We were thankful to pull it out today."

NOTES: Chicago closed out a 6-0-1 homestand. ... Edmonton F Taylor Hall served the second of a two-game suspension for his hit on Minnesota's Cal Clutterbuck on Thursday. ... Blackhawks C Dave Bolland missed his second straight game with an upper-body injury. Chicago also scratched D Sheldon Brookbank and LW Brandon Bollig for the second straight night. ... Ds Ryan Whitney and Theo Peckham were the other scratches for the Oilers. ... The Blackhawks improved to 10-0-3 in one-goal games.

___


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After Bale’s Latest Strike, Only Praise Fills the Air

Glyn Kirk/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Tottenham's Gareth Bale upended by West Ham defender Joey O'Brien.

LONDON — This was not just another edgy contest between two long-established London rivals, Tottenham and West Ham. Instead, Monday night's encounter was preceded by a stern warning from West Ham's owners that harsh sanctions would be imposed on any of the club's supporters who resorted to the anti-Semitic behavior that a group of West Ham fans had apparently engaged in the last time the teams met, in November.

Those dire words then gave way to a pregame tribute in which West Ham, playing at home, honored the 20th anniversary of the death of one of the club's most beloved players: Bobby Moore, who starred for West Ham and was the captain of the England team that won the 1966 World Cup.

And then, finally, came the game itself, played without any blatant ugliness in the stands and decided when Gareth Bale, perhaps emerging as the player of the year in the Premier League, launched still another long-range shot that found the goal. This one, a 25-yard left-footed strike that was his fourth game-winner in five games, came in the final minutes, and gave Spurs a 3-2 victory that moved them past Chelsea and into third place in the league.

Afterward, there was instant praise for Bale from both coaches, though the most vivid comments came from the one whose team had lost, West Ham's Sam Allardyce.

"At the moment, there is nobody doing more for a football team than Bale is for Tottenham," Allardyce said of the 23-year-old Bale, a Welshman with a lethal left foot. "Every goal he seems to be hitting is from outside the box."

That the game ended with all the talk centered on soccer was a clear improvement on the aftermath of the first meeting this season between the clubs, played at Tottenham's White Hart Lane stadium on Nov. 25 and won by Spurs, 3-1.

It was during that game that a number of West Ham fans, taking aim at Tottenham's historic links to London's Jewish community, were believed to have made chants referring to Hitler, hissing noises made to evoke concentration camp gas chambers and still other chants praising an attack on Tottenham fans that had occurred a week earlier in Italy and that also appeared to have anti-Semitic overtones.

That led to much consternation afterward, assorted investigations by the English authorities and a decision by West Ham to bar one fan believed to have been involved in the provocations.

Still, trouble persisted, although in this instance, outside England. Last week, a group of about 150 Spurs fans who had traveled to France for a Europa League game against Olympique Lyon were the target of an attack in a bar by a gang wearing masks. Several Spurs fans needed treatment at a hospital.

On Friday, the co-chairmen of West Ham — David Gold, who is of Jewish heritage, and David Sullivan — issued a statement specifically directed at Monday's game.

"We have made it very clear that we will not tolerate any form of discriminatory behavior and, one by one, we will root out those fans that do not deserve to represent this great club of ours," the owners wrote. "We must be clear that we will pursue the harshest sanctions against any individual who goes against what we stand for as a club."

Allardyce even weighed in on the topic in his column in the match-day magazine. "It goes without saying that we need your support this evening," he wrote. "A few mindless idiots let our great club down when we played at White Hart Lane in November and something similar just cannot be allowed to happen again."

What did happen was a competitive, back-and-forth game in which Tottenham, playing without its American star, Clint Dempsey, found itself trailing by 2-1 deep in the second half, stymied by the excellent work of West Ham's Finnish goalkeeper, Jussi Jaaskelainen.

But after Tottenham's Gylfi Sigurdsson capitalized on confusion in the West Ham defense to tie the score at 2-2, Bale, who had scored Tottenham's opening goal in the 13th minute, went to work. He sent a scorching 25-yard shot into the top corner of the goal in the 90th minute to break the tie and extend Tottenham's unbeaten streak in the Premier League to 11 games.

Bale has 15 goals in the league this season and 23 over all, and lately, has scored just about every goal that Tottenham has managed to produce. He is pure trouble, but the good kind, the type that worries opponents instead of nervous club officials.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: February 26, 2013

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly reported the score of the Nov. 25 game between Tottenham and West Ham. The Spurs won 3-1, not 2-1.


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Michael J. Maye, 82, Dies; Scrappy Leader of Firefighters’ Union

Written By Unknown on Senin, 25 Februari 2013 | 15.03

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N.H.L. Roundup: Blackhawks Shut Out Blue Jackets to Remain Unbeaten

Corey Crawford made 28 saves and Andrew Shaw scored the only goal as the Chicago Blackhawks stretched their N.H.L.-record, season-opening point streak to 18 games with a 1-0 victory over the visiting Columbus Blue Jackets on Sunday night.

Crawford, who had been out with an upper-body injury since Feb. 12, posted his second shutout this season, and Shaw provided all the offense in the second period for the Blackhawks (15-0-3), who have not lost in regulation this season and have earned 33 of 36 possible points.

The Blackhawks also are 9-0-3 in games decided by one goal.

"We're playing the score," Chicago Coach Joel Quenneville said. "We're playing to win. Being on the right side of pucks in a game like today was a good test for us."

HURRICANES 4, ISLANDERS 2 Defenseman Bobby Sanguinetti's first N.H.L. goal broke a tie in the third period, and Carolina scored four straight goals to end a three-game losing streak.

Sanguinetti, the Rangers' first-round pick in 2006, snapped off a shot over the glove hand of goalie Kevin Poulin, who was making his first start after being recalled from Bridgeport in the American Hockey League. Poulin, 22, replaced Rick DiPietro, who was demoted after an 0-3 start.

Sanguinetti, 24, who has battled injuries throughout his career, spent most of last season with Charlotte of the A.H.L.

John Tavares, who scored his league-leading 13th goal, and Matt Moulson had given the Islanders a 2-0 lead in the first period, but the Staal brothers, Eric and Jordan, scored 45 seconds apart late in the second period to tie the score.

The Islanders are a league-worst 2-7 at home.

"I don't know why we play differently at home," Islanders Coach Jack Capuano said. "I can't understand why we were so flat in the third period."

BRUINS 4, PANTHERS 1 Zdeno Chara and Milan Lucic scored in the first period, and Tuukka Rask stopped 34 shots as Boston won its third straight, at Florida.

The Bruins (11-2-2), who are experiencing their best start since the 1976-77 season, have killed 21 straight penalties over six games, including a four-minute power play at the end of the second period and the beginning of the third.

RED WINGS 8, CANUCKS 3 Damien Brunner had two goals and two assists, and Joakim Andersson scored twice as Detroit walloped Vancouver at home.

Roberto Luongo, who made 20 saves, lost in regulation for the first time this season.

PENGUINS 5, LIGHTNING 3 Sidney Crosby had two goals and an assist as host Pittsburgh took sole possession of first place in the Atlantic Division with a victory against Tampa Bay despite being without the injured Evgeni Malkin, who was out with concussionlike symptoms.

DUCKS 4, AVALANCHE 3 Ryan Getzlaf scored the tying goal in the third period and set up Corey Perry's second of the game 4 minutes 14 seconds into the overtime session as host Anaheim posted its sixth straight victory and 10th in 11 games.

Teemu Selanne scored his 668th goal, tying Luc Robitaille for 11th place on the N.H.L. career list. It was also his 250th power-play goal, breaking a tie with Phil Esposito for third place.

FLAMES 5, COYOTES 4 Jarome Iginla scored twice, and host Calgary beat Phoenix with two goals in the final two minutes.

After Iginla's second goal tied the score with 1:23 remaining, Curtis Glencross notched the winning goal 23 seconds later.


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Sports Briefing | Soccer: David Beckham Lifts Paris St.-Germain Over Marseille

Goal

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David Beckham celebrated his Paris St.-Germain debut by helping to create the second goal as first-place P.S.G. beat Marseille, 2-0, in Paris.

Beckham came off the bench in the 76th minute of a tight match and, in stoppage time, his flick with the outside of his foot released his fellow substitute Jerémy Ménéz down the left, and the subsequent cross was converted by striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

¶ Manchester City kept alive its slim Premier League title hopes, beating Chelsea, 2-0, on second-half goals by Yaya Touré and Carlos Tévez. Goalkeeper Joe Hart sparked City's crucial win at home by saving a penalty kick from Frank Lampard in the 52nd minute.

¶ Mario Balotelli of A.C. Milan was subjected to racial taunts by fans of one of his former clubs, Inter Milan, but he kept his composure and held a finger to his mouth to signal for quiet in the second half of a 1-1 tie.


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Sports Briefing | Winter Sports: Tina Maze Wins Super-Combined and Secures Overall World Cup Title

Tina Maze of Slovenia clinched her first overall World Cup title Sunday, winning the super-combined in Meribel, France, for her eighth victory this season with nine races to go.

Maze led the downhill section and coasted home in the slalom after Maria Höfl-Riesch crashed out of contention. She also tied a season record with her 18th top-three finish.

Maze has 1,844 points and is all but certain to smash the season record — for men or women — of 2,000 held by Hermann Maier.

"It's really special because it's so difficult to win," Maze said. "For me it's special to continue this level of skiing."

She is also seeking to become only the third woman to win all five discipline races in one season and needs only a downhill win to do so.

Höfl-Riesch is second in the overall standings but is 958 points behind.

¶ Alexis Pinturault of France used a daring second run to win a World Cup giant slalom in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, as his closest German challengers faltered.

Pinturault was second after the first heat, behind the hometown favorite Felix Neureuther and ahead of Fritz Dopfer. But Dopfer crashed out in the second run and Neureuther made a mistake that dropped him down in the standings.

The World Cup leader Marcel Hirscher of Austria and the world champion Ted Ligety of the United States took second and third.

¶ Kikkan Randall and Jessica Diggins gave the United States its first gold medal in a cross-country skiing world championships, with a victory in the women's team sprint in Val di Fiemme, Italy.

¶ Andi Langenhan of Germany won the final luge World Cup meet of the season, in Sochi, Russia, and Felix Loch of Germany, the current world and Olympic champion, clinched the overall title.


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Sports Briefing | Running: Mo Farah Wins Rock ’n’ Roll New Orleans Half Marathon

The double Olympic champion Mo Farah edged Gebre Gebremariam of Ethiopia in a finishing sprint to win the Rock 'n' Roll New Orleans Half Marathon.

Farah, Britain's gold medalist in the 5,000 and 10,000 meters at the London Olympics, won in an event-record 1 hour 59 seconds.

Merest Defar of Ethiopia, who won the women's 5,000 at London, captured her division in 1:07:25.


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Bats: Feliciano Sidelined While Doctors Determine Heart Issue

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. — Pedro Feliciano will be sidelined for two weeks while doctors determine the cause of some irregularity in his heart, Mets General Manager Sandy Alderson said Sunday.

Feliciano said Saturday that doctors told him he had a hole in his heart, and Manager Terry Collins said the condition was potentially very serious. But Alderson said no official diagnosis could be made until Feliciano could be observed over the next two weeks while wearing a heart monitor.

"With respect to his comment that he has a hole in his heart, I don't think that's clear at this point," Alderson said. "What we need to do is wait over the next couple of weeks until there's a final diagnosis."

Feliciano was asked again Sunday about how doctors had characterized the issue.

"They said in the test that I had little holes, like outside the heart," he said. "But I feel nothing."

He said he did not know what condition he might potentially have.

"Feliciano's Condition," he joked. "Who knows? I just want to pitch man."

Feliciano, a 36-year-old left-hander, was signed this winter to a minor league deal. After dealing with shoulder problems the past two seasons, Feliciano said he was frustrated to be losing more time.

"I hope when I come back I pitch good and surprise everybody and make the team," he said.


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Sports Briefing | Horse Racing: Upset at a Derby Prep Race

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 24 Februari 2013 | 15.03

Orb came from well off the pace to beat the heavily favored Violence and win the Grade II Fountain of Youth Stakes, a major Kentucky Derby prep race in Hallandale Beach, Fla. ¶ Ive Struck a Nerve, who went off at odds of 135-to-1, edged out Code West in a photo finish in the Grade II Risen Star Stakes in New Orleans in the final prep for the Louisiana Derby.


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Curt Schilling Sock Sold at Auction

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Canadiens 3, Rangers 0: Canadiens Shut Out Rangers to Stay Hot

MONTREAL (AP) — Carey Price made 17 saves, helping the Montreal Canadiens beat the slumping Rangers, 3-0, on Saturday night.

The linemates Erik Cole, Alex Galchenyuk and Lars Eller each had a goal and an assist for the Canadiens, who bounced back from a loss Thursday to the Islanders and won for the sixth time in seven games. Montreal also regained the top spot in the Eastern Conference.

Price, who earned his second shutout of the season, defeated the Rangers for the second time in five days. Montreal won, 3-1, on Tuesday at Madison Square Garden.

Martin Biron, in his third start of the season, stopped 15 shots for the Rangers, who have lost three straight and four of five.

After a scoreless first period in which the teams combined for nine shots, the action picked up in the second.

Cole scored for the first time in 10 games when beat Biron at 1 minute 20 seconds for his third goal of the season. After a point shot from Montreal defenseman Raphael Diaz, the puck went to Cole, who wristed a shot from the left circle inside the far post.

The Canadiens took a 2-0 lead at 13:36 when Galchenyuk drove to the Rangers' net and took a shot that deflected off Rangers defenseman Dan Girardi and went in.

Quick puck movement on a late power play helped set up the Canadiens' third goal. Defenseman P. K. Subban passed the puck from the point to Galchenyuk behind the goal line, and Galchenyuk sent it to Eller, who scored at 19:34.

Rangers defenseman Ryan McDonagh left the game in the second period after being boarded by Max Pacioretty. He did not return. Girardi was helped off the ice in the third.

Notes

Canadiens wing Brendan Gallagher returned to the lineup after missing three games because of a concussion. His teammate Rene Bourque missed the game with flulike symptoms. ... The Rangers were without the injured forwards Rick Nash, Arron Asham and Darroll Powe and defenseman Michael Del Zotto. ... Rangers forward Christian Thomas, son of the former player Steve Thomas, made his N.H.L. debut.


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Men’s Basketball Roundup: Wake Forest Ends Miami’s Run in the A.C.C.

C. J. Harris made five 3-pointers and scored 23 points as host Wake Forest beat No. 2 Miami, 80-65, on Saturday, ending the Hurricanes' 14-game winning streak and sending them to their first Atlantic Coast Conference loss this season.

"Over all, we weren't prepared before the game, and they came out and punched us in the mouth," Miami guard Shane Larkin said.

Durand Scott had all 17 of his points in the second half for the Hurricanes (22-4, 13-1), the last team in the six Bowl Championship Series conferences to suffer its first league loss. It was the best start to A.C.C. play since Duke went 16-0 in 1998-99.

On Saturday, the Demon Deacons (12-14, 5-9) shot 54 percent and reeled off 12 straight points in the second half to pull away. Their smallest lead over the final nine minutes was 11 points.

"Who would have ever thought Wake Forest beating Miami at home would have been a court-rushing scene?" Larkin said.

GONZAGA 81, SAN DIEGO 50 Kevin Pangos scored 18 points, and No. 3 Gonzaga (27-2, 14-0 West Coast Conference) beat visiting San Diego (13-16, 6-8).

The Bulldogs clinched at least a tie for the W.C.C. regular-season title, their 12th league title in 13 seasons. And with Miami's loss, the Bulldogs, who have set a team record for regular-season wins, put themselves in position to rise to second in the Associated Press poll. Gonzaga has never been ranked that high.

FLORIDA 71, ARKANSAS 54 Mike Rosario scored 15 points to pace a balanced attack that helped No. 5 Florida (22-4, 12-2 Southeastern Conference) beat visiting Arkansas (17-10, 8-6). However, the freshman Michael Frazier II, one of the Gators' top reserves, sustained a concussion in the second half. He will be sidelined indefinitely.

KANSAS 74, T.C.U. 48 Jeff Withey scored 18 points, and No. 9 Kansas (23-4, 11-3 Big 12) routed visiting Texas Christian (10-17, 1-13) to avenge a stunning loss to the Horned Frogs on Feb. 6.

Kansas, which has won three in a row since its three-game losing streak, gave Coach Bill Self his 499th win. The Jayhawks put on a show for about 200 former players, coaches and staff members on hand to celebrate the program's 115th anniversary.

The 9 first-half points scored by T.C.U. were the fewest in any half in the last 15 years of Big 12 games, and the fewest allowed in a half by Kansas since Cornell scored 9 on Jan. 2, 1996.

LOUISVILLE 79, SETON HALL 61 Gorgui Dieng scored a career-high 23 points to help No. 10 Louisville (22-5, 10-4 Big East) pull away from visiting Seton Hall (13-15, 2-13). Dieng was 10 of 11 from the field as the Cardinals won their third in a row to move into a three-way tie for second in the Big East.

ARIZONA 73, WASHINGTON ST. 56 Kevin Parrom matched his career best with five 3-pointers — in six tries — in scoring a season-high 19 points to lead No. 12 Arizona (23-4, 11-4 Pacific-12) past visiting Washington State (11-17, 2-13). The Wildcats were ahead by as many as 21 points early in the second half.

KANSAS ST. 81, TEXAS 69 Rodney McGruder scored 20 points, and No. 13 Kansas State stayed in the race for its first regular-season conference championship since 1977 with a victory at Texas (12-15, 4-10 Big 12). Four players scored in double figures for the Wildcats (22-5, 11-3), who are tied for first in the Big 12 with Kansas.

OKLAHOMA STATE 73, WEST VIRGINIA 57 Le'Bryan Nash and Markel Brown each scored 16 points to lead five Oklahoma State players in double figures, and the No. 14 Cowboys (20-6, 10-4 Big 12) overcame a terrible start to win at West Virginia (13-14, 6-8). The Mountaineers shot 30 percent for the game.

VILLANOVA 60, MARQUETTE 56 Darrun Hilliard scored 22 points to lead Villanova to a home win over No. 17 Marquette (19-7, 10-4 Big East). The Wildcats (18-10, 9-6) beat a top-25 conference opponent for the third time this season.

OREGON 77, STANFORD 66 Johnathan Loyd had season highs of 15 points and 9 assists to lead No. 23 Oregon to a home victory over Stanford (16-12, 7-8 Pac-12).

Carlos Emory had 19 points for the Ducks (22-6, 11-4), who gave Coach Dana Altman his 600th career win and kept themselves tied with Arizona atop the league standings.

V.C.U. 75, XAVIER 71 Troy Daniels scored 19 points, and No. 24 Virginia Commonwealth (22-6, 10-3 Atlantic 10) overcame a 17-point deficit in the second half for a victory at Xavier (15-11, 8-5).

V.C.U. forced 22 turnovers — 12 of them in the second half during the big comeback. Daniels set a team record for 3-pointers in a season while leading the comeback.


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East Roundup: UConn Survives DePaul Scare

Shabazz Napier scored 28 points, and Ryan Boatright and Omar Calhoun added 17 apiece as visiting Connecticut overcame a halftime deficit to beat DePaul, 81-69, on Saturday night.

The Huskies (19-7, 9-5 Big East) trailed by 3 points at the break and were down by 1 early in the second half when they scored 13 straight, sending the Blue Demons (11-16, 2-12) to their 11th loss in 12 games.

PROVIDENCE 76, RUTGERS 72 Guard Bryce Cotton scored 22 points, including two foul shots with five seconds left, as visiting Providence (15-12, 7-8 Big East) beat Rutgers (13-13, 4-10).

ALBANY 58, FAIRFIELD 50 Sam Rowley and John Puk scored 13 points apiece as Albany (20-9) pulled away from host Fairfield (17-12), reaching 20 wins for the first time since 2006-7.

UMASS 76, DAYTON 66 Cady Lalanne scored a career-high 22 points and tied a career best with 14 rebounds as host Massachusetts (17-9, 7-6 Atlantic 10) ended a three-game losing streak. Dayton (14-12, 4-8) remained winless through six conference road games.

RICHMOND 72, FORDHAM 55 Visiting Richmond (16-11, 6-6 Atlantic 10) got hot in the second half, shooting 55.6 percent, and easily handled Fordham (6-22, 2-11), which has lost eight straight.

PRINCETON 72, CORNELL 53 Ian Hummer scored 23 points and grabbed 7 rebounds to lead Princeton (14-9, 7-2 Ivy League) to a win at Cornell (13-14, 5-5).

COLUMBIA 58, PENN 41 Grant Mullins scored 18 points to lead Columbia (11-13, 3-7 Ivy League) over Pennsylvania (7-19, 4-5) in a game featuring atrocious second-half shooting by both teams.

The teams combined for six baskets in the second half. Columbia made 2 of 20 shots and Penn 4 of 24.

VERMONT 87, CANISIUS 79 Ethan O'Day scored a career-high 22 points, and Vermont (18-9) made 27 of 31 free throws in a home victory over Canisius (17-11).

ARMY 72, AMERICAN 58 Ella Ellis scored 15 points to lead Army (14-13, 7-5 Patriot League) over host American University (10-17, 5-7).

INDIANA ST. 65, IONA 64 Dawon Cummings's layup with four seconds left led Indiana State (17-11) over visiting Iona (15-13).


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Goal: Skill on Saturday: Berba’s Blast

He has often been called languid and uninterested, a man with a passing resemblance to Count Dracula.

Yet through a passage from CSKA Sofia in his native Bulgaria, to Bayer Leverkusen in Germany to the shores of England with Tottenham to Manchester United and now to Fulham, no one has ever called Dimitar Berbatov unskilled.

On Saturday at Craven Cottage in London, Berbatov scored his eighth goal of the season in the Premier League, the game's only goal in a win against Stoke City.

It was not a tap-in. Instead it was a splinter of individual brilliance — a stunning right-footed volley from the top-right corner of the penalty area that rocketed into the near, top corner of the goal as the Stoke goalkeeper Asmir Begovic watched, stunned.

Or perhaps you prefer this one by Rafael for Manchester United against Queens Park Rangers.

The Fulham match also marked the debut of the American midfielder Brek Shea, who completed a transfer last month from Dallas of Major League Soccer. Shea entered for the injured Matthew Etherington in the 24th minute.

Did you see Berba's goal? Is there anyone in the Premier League (or anywhere else) with skill as exquisite as the Bulgarian?

Follow Jack Bell on Twitter.


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How Come Martin Brodeur Is Still So Good?

Richard Burbridge for The New York Times

Martin Brodeur, the 40-year-old goalie for the New Jersey Devils.

The best hockey player in the New York area right now is also one of the greatest hockey players ever, and he's a Methuselah, a 40-year-old in a sport where pro careers typically last five or six years. Martin Brodeur, now in his 20th season with the New Jersey Devils, has played so well for so long that even hockey people have tended to take him a little for granted. He's hardly an unknown, but he would be more fussed over and wondered at if he didn't play in Newark and if his position were not the lowly, unglamorous one of goalie.

Denis Brodeur

Brodeur in 1977 at age 5, during a minor-hockey practice in St-Léonard, Quebec.

"Playing goal is not fun," Ken Dryden, the Hall of Fame goalie for the Montreal Canadiens, wrote in a memoir. "It is a grim, humorless position, largely uncreative, requiring little physical movement, giving little physical pleasure in return." While his teammates zip around, the goalie lumbers, weighed down by his cumbrous equipment, and he spends the whole game by himself, down at one end of the rink, within easy earshot of heckling fans, in front of a red light that flashes on whenever he fails and lets a goal slip by. He has flurries of activity, but a lot of the time he just watches and worries. There's very little he can do to win a game, and mostly he hopes only not to lose it.

In hockey mythology, it's an article of faith that all goalies are a little flaky. You have to be a bit nuts, the theory goes, to want to play the position in the first place — to stand in front of the net while people sling hard rubber discs at you at more than 100 miles an hour — and only certain personality types can withstand the strain. The annals of the game are full of memorable head cases. Glenn Hall, a goalie during the '50s and '60s for the Red Wings and the Blackhawks, used to throw up before every game. Gary Smith, a goalie from the same era, insisted on removing all his gear and taking a shower between periods.

The loopiest goalie of all was Gilles Gratton, who bounced around in the minors in the '70s before ending his career with the St. Louis Blues and the New York Rangers. Gratton liked to skate in the nude sometimes, wearing just his goalie mask, and refused to play if the stars did not line up properly. He believed that in a previous life he was an executioner who stoned people to death, and that he was fated to become a goalie — someone on the receiving end of a stoning, so to speak — as punishment.

Brodeur, who has been the Devils' starting goalie since 1993, the backbone of the team's three successful Stanley Cup campaigns, is the exception to this tradition of brooding and eccentricity. He's probably the most well adjusted, happiest-seeming person I have ever met, so normal that it's a little eerie. Jokey and gregarious, he doesn't even mind talking to the media, though like a lot of hockey players he speaks to the press in breathless run-on sentences, like someone dashing across thin ice, fearful that if he stops, he'll fall through.

Chico Resch, the former Devils goalie who is now a broadcaster for the team, cautioned me last summer about taking Brodeur at face value. "There's more to Marty than meets the eye," he said — meaning his competitiveness, I think. And Brodeur admitted that he's not always as unruffled as he seems. "You come in from a bad period and start breaking the sticks — I'm not going to say it never happened," he told me, smiling. "I know there is a lot of pressure on a goalie, a lot of responsibilities, but if you add on to yourself more than you need to, it makes it harder to deal with the adversity." Hockey people say that Brodeur's particular strength is his ability to bounce back from a bad goal or a bad game and not let it gnaw at him. Hockey was locked out for the first half of this season, and during the Devils' truncated training camp last month, you could see that he hates to be scored on even in practice, rapping his stick or ducking his head in disgust after letting one in. But the cloud passes in an instant, and then he's bouncing on his skates and looking for more pucks to swat away. Lou Lamoriello, the Devils' general manager, says, "Marty's mental toughness, his ability to overcome a bad game, is just phenomenal."

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: February 24, 2013

An article on Page 42 this weekend about the New Jersey Devils goalie Martin Brodeur misspells the given name of a former goaltender who competed during the '50s and '60s. He is Glenn Hall, not Glen. The article also misidentifies the team for which goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere played when he was named the M.V.P.in the Stanley Cup playoffs in 2003. It was with the Anaheim Mighty Ducks, not the Colorado Avalanche. And the article misidentifies the team that drafted the goalie Trevor Kidd. He went to the Calgary Flames, not to the Vancouver Canucks.


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Rockets 106, Nets 96: Jeremy Lin and the Rockets Defeat the Nets

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 23 Februari 2013 | 15.03

Jason Szenes for The New York Times

The Nets' Mirza Teletovic on a loose ball with the Rockets' Jeremy Lin, left.

Nets Coach P. J. Carlesimo so respected the Rockets' James Harden and Jeremy Lin that before Friday's game, he compared trying to stop them to the fable of the Little Dutch Boy. As the story goes, the boy discovered a leak in a dike and used his finger to plug the hole. In Carlesimo's analogy, his Nets were the boy, and the Rockets were the unrelenting North Sea.

The Rockets pushed the ball all night at Barclays Center, with their dribblers, screeners and shooters blending well. Their lead swelled to 15 early in the fourth quarter, but the Nets came back, cutting the deficit to 3 before falling, 106-96.

Lin was back in New York, about one year after the birth of Linsanity, with his high-octane team. The Rockets, according to the NBA.com advanced statistics tool, play at the N.B.A.'s fastest pace; e the Nets play at the slowest.

The Nets (33-23) were also trying to keep up without Joe Johnson, who missed the game with a sore left heel, and with a hobbled Deron Williams, who missed 12 of his 17 shots.

For a while, they did.

The Nets trailed, 77-75, as the third quarter wound down. But then Harden hit two 3-pointers, and his teammates sank two more 3-pointers to start the fourth, and the Houston lead quickly swelled to 15.

Brook Lopez led the Nets with 27 points, and he was effective from all over the court, but it was Mirza Teletovic's clutch jumpers, with help from C. J. Watson, that gave the Nets new hope.

Teletovic scored 9 points and Watson added 5 as the Nets made a 19-7 fourth-quarter run.

The crowd was roaring when the Rockets' Carlos Delfino launched a 3-pointer from the left wing. The ball swished, and the crowd deflated. Delfino hit another shot, Harden added a 3-pointer, and the game was effectively over.

"The way we played in the second half is the way we need to play the whole game," Keith Bogans said. "We fought. We played defense. We got stops. Just that little stretch at the end, we didn't make any shots."

Delfino hit six 3-pointers, Harden hit four, and each scored 22 points. With the way the Rockets ran and passed so unselfishly, it was sometimes hard to determine which Rocket had scored — Harden, Lin, Delfino or Chandler Parsons.

The crowd clearly noticed, though, when Lin had the ball. His first shot clanged off the rim, and the fans groaned. When he bounced a pass between a defender's legs, they oohed. And when he made a hanging layup, they aahed.  

He was not spectacular, with 9 points and 6 assists, but he had Harden and Delfino to hit the big shots — the kind of shots the Nets have been getting this season from Johnson.

Johnson reported soreness in his heel after scoring just 8 points in 38 minutes Wednesday. The injury was not considered serious, and General Manager Billy King said Johnson would probably be ready to play Sunday against the Memphis Grizzlies.

 But King indicated the Nets would become more aware of Johnson's playing time. Entering Friday, only Kobe Bryant and Kevin Durant had played more minutes than Johnson this season.

 King said he was content having not made a deal at the trade deadline, because playoff games are generally played at a slower pace, which should benefit the Nets. "I think I like our depth, I like our size, I like our playoff experience with some of our guys," King said.

 REBOUNDS

 At Friday's shootaround, Deron Williams said he had received three rounds of cortisone shots in his ankles since training camp. The latest came Thursday, and Williams said he expected to have another round before the playoffs.  


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Raptors 100, Knicks 98: Rudy Gay Lifts Raptors Over Knicks

Chris Young/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press

The Raptors' Rudy Gay driving between the Knicks' Raymond Felton, left, and Jason Kidd.

TORONTO — Coach Mike Woodson and the Knicks walked the walk of sorrow in the final seconds of their game with the Toronto Raptors on Friday night.

Woodson entered the locker room before his players did. He went straight to a monitor to look at the final minutes of the game. He said he needed an answer as to why the Knicks fell just short against the Raptors, 100-98, for their fourth straight loss.

Did the Knicks lose because of their lack of effort or their defense? Or did they rely too much on Carmelo Anthony? None of those, Woodson thought.

Watching the final two minutes again, Woodson saw how the Knicks did not attack the Raptors on offense. He noticed how Anthony and others forced up long jumpers.

"I thought our shot selection was awful," Woodson said. "We were in the penalty, and we settled. Sometimes the 3s are appetizing. We've made them this year like that, but going back looking at the tape, the last two minutes, we had opportunities to take the ball to the rim and make plays, and they were blowing the whistle."

The Knicks (32-20) missed four 3-pointers in the final two minutes. On one possession, Anthony could possibly have given the Knicks the lead by driving to the basket. Instead he made a crosscourt pass to Raymond Felton, who missed a 3-pointer.

After the game, Anthony watched a replay and understood why Woodson thought it was not his best option. "I think my play was definitely a play I should have took advantage of and drove to the basket," he said.

The Raptors (23-33) also took tough shots in the final minutes. And they won the game in large part because Kyle Lowry made the most challenging shot in the game.

When the Raptors needed a basket and the Knicks needed a stop, it was Lowry who swished a difficult runner over Tyson Chandler to put the Raptors up by 97-95 with 28 seconds left. It was Lowry's only basket of the fourth quarter, and the Raptors led for good.

The Knicks allowed Lowry to get a one-on-one match up with Chandler, a much slower defender. Chandler, the reigning defensive player of the year, stayed with Lowry to contest the shot. Good defense, but better offense.

"Tyson did a great job; it's just Kyle made a great shot," Felton said of the play. "He shot a running floater over a 7-foot-1 guy. My hat goes off to Kyle hitting a tough shot. I don't think we can play that any better as a team."

Chandler had his chance to tie the score with 21 seconds left. Woodson drew up the play for Anthony. But Anthony passed to Chandler, who was fouled cutting to the basket. "Tyson had a clear lane," Anthony said. "If they wouldn't have grabbed him, it would have been a wide-open dunk."

Instead, Chandler missed the first of his two free throws.

"I did everything I normally do in a free-throw routine," Chandler said. "It was the same thing I did in the second one, but the first was just a little long."

Rudy Gay extended the Raptors' lead to 99-96 when he calmly made two free throws.

For much of the night, the game was a battle between stars, Anthony and Gay. Each led his team with 32 points.  

The Knicks had said this game was about pride, after they were embarrassed by the Indiana Pacers two nights earlier.

In that game, the Knicks failed to show much effort on offense or any intensity on defense and were severely punished for their lapses. The Pacers humiliated the Knicks, scoring 74 points in the first half en route to an easy win.

The Knicks called Friday's game a must win. But they walked to the locker room with another loss.

"Sometimes you can't explain it," Felton said of the team's slump. "I feel like we played hard. Sometimes the ball just don't go your way. That's what happened down the stretch: They hit shots, and we didn't."

 

REBOUNDS

Kenyon Martin, whom the Knicks have agreed to sign to a 10-day contract, had his physical in New York. The Knicks also have to wait for Ronnie Brewer, whom they traded to Oklahoma City, to pass his physical with the Thunder. The Knicks will have three options after the 10 days are over: they can sign Martin to a second 10-day contact, sign him for the remainder of the season or release him.


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