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Archive for May, 2011

Ibanez’s sac fly ends Phils-Reds standoff in 19th

© 2011 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

Originally Published On: sportsillustrated.cnn.com – Original Article Here

Conrad’s blast in 11th sends Braves past Pirates

© 2011 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

Originally Published On: sportsillustrated.cnn.com – Original Article Here

Tampa Bay beat Boston to force Game Seven in East


TAMPA, Florida |
Wed May 25, 2011 11:53pm EDT

TAMPA, Florida (Reuters) – The Tampa Bay Lightning struck three successive power-play goals on the way to a 5-4 win over the Boston Bruins Wednesday, setting up a Game Seven in the Eastern Conference finals.

The power-play triple brought the Lightning back from a 2-1 first-period deficit, and Tampa Bay held off the Bruins to level the best-of-seven series 3-3 and set up a decider on Friday in Boston.

The winner of that game will advance to the Stanley Cup finals against the Vancouver Canucks, who claimed the Western Conference title in five games over the San Jose Sharks.

Teddy Purcell and Martin St. Louis each scored twice for the Lightning, while David Krejci had a hat-trick for the Bruins.

The Lightning struck just 36 seconds into the game when Purcell snapped a shot past netminder Tim Thomas off a faceoff won by Vincent Lecavalier.

The Bruins roared back, taking a 2-1 lead on goals by Milan Lucic at 7:09 and Krejci, who wristed the puck past Tampa Bay goalie Dwayne Roloson at 16:30 off Daniel Paille’s pass.

Boston dominated the remainder of the period and Tampa Bay, who scored on their first shot of the game, went the last 12:31 without a single shot on goal.

However, Tampa Bay caught fire in the second period after a power-play attack that had produced just two goals in their last 18 chances suddenly came to life.

“The last couple of games we’ve been a little tight,” said St. Louis. “Tonight we just let loose. There’s no tomorrow, don’t think too much. We got some big goals.”

Second-period power-play goals from St. Louis and Purcell put Tampa Bay ahead 3-2. Steven Stamkos scored again with the man advantage 34 seconds into the third period to pad the Lightning’s lead to 4-2.

“Obviously it was a difference maker. They scored three goals on the power-play. That dictated the game,” said Bruins coach Claude Julien.

Boston battled back, Krejci’s power-play goal at 9:46 brought the Bruins to 4-3.

St. Louis countered with a goal on a beautiful two-on-one feed from Steve Downie to restore the two-goal cushion, but Krejci came right back to make it a one-goal game again, completing his hat-trick by stuffing the puck past Roloson at 13:28.

The Bruins put tremendous pressure on the Lightning in the final minutes, but Tampa Bay held on to set up the decider on Friday.

(Writing by Larry Fine in New York, Editing by Peter Rutherford)

© 2011 REUTERS (www.reuters.com)

Originally Published On: www.reuters.com – Original Article Here

Mets Take a Big Hit With Wright’s Stress Fracture

Except for a freak incident in 2009 when a pitcher’s wayward fastball struck him in the head, David Wright had been untouched by the rash of injuries that had helped torpedo the Mets’ pennant hopes in recent years. His good fortune ran out Monday.

[SPRTS_METS1]

Associated Press

David Wright fields a grounder in a game against the Astros May 14.

A magnetic resonance imaging test at Manhattan’s Hospital for Special Surgery showed that Wright, the Mets’ third baseman and the most durable infielder in team history, has a stress fracture in his lower back. At the Mets’ request, Wright will seek a second opinion from another back specialist at the hospital. If the subsequent examination confirms what general manager Sandy Alderson called the initial “tentative diagnosis,” the team will put Wright on the 15-day disabled list.

The Mets expect that Wright will not need surgery; according to Alderson, a rest period of 10 days to two weeks should be enough to get Wright back to full health. “We’re not talking about something long term,” Alderson said.

Wright apparently injured his back while diving to tag the Houston Astros’ Carlos Lee on a play at third base during an April 19 game at Citi Field, yet he had sat out only one of the Mets’ first 40 games. He was not in the starting lineup Monday for the team’s scheduled game against the Florida Marlins. Manager Terry Collins had utility man Willie Harris playing third base and batting second.

“As corny as it sounds, you want to be out there with your teammates,” Wright said. “It’s disappointing and it’s frustrating, but having played through this, I’m not scared by any means. Hopefully, we’ll get this thing knocked out in two weeks and be right back at it.”

Wright’s stress fracture is the latest blow to a franchise that since the start of the 2008 season has seemed to be perpetually shuttling players to and from the disabled list. Already this season, the Mets have been without their most accomplished starting pitcher, Johan Santana, who is still recovering from shoulder surgery, and have seen several of their most important players spend time on the DL, including outfielders Angel Pagan and Jason Bay, first baseman Ike Davis and pitcher Chris Young.

“Obviously, we’ve had huge dents in the armor,” Collins said, “and this is a big dent.”

The Mets had wanted Wright to undergo an MRI last month when he first hurt his back, but he told the team he had been feeling better and was reluctant to leave the lineup. He had been taking anti-inflammatory medication to control the pain and did not expect the examination on Monday to reveal anything as serious as a stress fracture.

“I was preparing for Josh Johnson and the Marlins tonight, and coming out of that, my head was spinning,” he said. “I think ‘shocked’ is a good word for it.”

A career .302 hitter, Wright is batting just .226 with six home runs this year. He would not attribute his slow start to the injury, though Collins did say Wright’s swing had gotten “long” and theorized that the injury had affected Wright’s ability to rotate his torso.

Wright, 28, had started at least 142 games in each of his previous six seasons and at least 153 games in five of those seasons. No Mets infielder has started as many games over so long a continuous length of time. Wright’s only previous stint on the disabled list came in 2009, when a pitch from San Francisco’s Matt Cain hit him in the batting helmet, causing him to miss two weeks of action.

“He is without question the face of this team,” Collins said, “and his presence in the lineup is something we need, and we’re going to ask other guys to pick it up.”

Write to Mike Sielski at mike.sielski@wsj.com

© 2011 Wall Street Journal (www.wsj.com)

Originally Published On: online.wsj.com – Original Article Here

Mavs Eliminate Lakers, Sweep Jackson To Retirement

Story By: by The Associated Press

Phil Jackson walked off the court with a tight smile, shaking hands and accepting congratulations like he has after so many series-ending playoff games.

Never like this, though.

His team didn’t win; they were crushed. Swept, too.

And he wasn’t just heading to the offseason — he’s calling it a career, ending the most successful run by any coach in NBA history.

Jason Terry and the Dallas Mavericks ended Jackson’s tenure, and the Lakers’ reign as two-time champions, with a 122-86 victory Sunday. After two tight finishes and another game that was relatively close, the Mavs turned this one into a rout in the second quarter.

With Terry leading the way, Dallas hit a barrage of 3-pointers to go ahead by 24 points at halftime. When he made 3s on consecutive possessions early in the third quarter, Los Angeles knew it wasn’t going to come back in this game or the series.

Things got ugly early in the fourth quarter, with vicious, frustration-fueled cheap shots by Lamar Odom and Andrew Bynum getting them ejected 45 seconds apart. But at game’s end, Dallas coaches, players and team owner Mark Cuban lined up to bid farewell to the Zen Master.

“It’s been a wonderful run,” Jackson said.

The 65-year-old Jackson has retired before, but he insists it’s for good this time. While he goes out with the sour taste of his first sweep in 21 postseasons, and his second-widest margin of defeat, it can’t override all the sweet days.

A Hall of Famer since 2007, he leaves with a record 11 titles, and only 10 series losses. Take away Red Auerbach, who won nine championships, and Jackson won more titles than any two coaches combined. He won six championships with Michael Jordan, three with Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal, and the last two with Bryant leading the way.

He had to be talked into coming back this year. The lure of chasing a 12th title, bundled neatly as four three-peats, did it, but he knew it would be tough with a team worn down by three straight years of reaching the finals.

“(That) puts a lot of strain on the basketball club from all angles: personalities, spiritually, physically, emotionally, and getting charged up for game after game and assault after assault when you go in and play a team,” Jackson said. “It was a challenge bigger than we could beat this year.”

Four of Jackson’s five kids flew to Dallas for this game, in case it was the end. On Saturday, Jackson called that “a drag that I don’t need,” but by Sunday afternoon he was probably happy to have them around. They sat near the Lakers bench, wearing yellow hats with Roman numerals marking his 10th and 11th championships.

Then there was his extended family — his coaches and players, especially Bryant.

“I grew up under him,” Bryant said. “The way I approach things, the way I think about things — not only basketball, life in general — comes from him. It’s a little weird for me to think of what next year is going to be like.”

Assistant Brian Shaw, a former Lakers player, is considered a front-runner to take over. The bigger decisions for general manager Mitch Kupchak will be how to surround Bryant. He may want a younger point guard than Derek Fisher, who turns 37 before next season, and he may consider breaking up his tandem of 7-footers, Bynum and Pau Gasol.

“We all know they always come back and get themselves back in the race,” Jackson said. “The Lakers are going to survive.”

For Dirk Nowitzki and the Mavs, clearing this hurdle sets them up for a chance to redeem themselves for flopping during the 2006 NBA finals and for flaming out in every postseason since. That’s why when this game ended, confetti didn’t fall; the organization’s bigger goal is reaching the finals and winning its first championship.

They’re halfway there, having won a franchise-record six straight playoff games, a streak that began right after they blew a 23-point lead in Game 4 of their first-round series against Portland.

“The job is not finished,” Terry said.

Dallas will host either Oklahoma City or Memphis in the conference finals. The Grizzlies lead the Thunder 2-1 going into Game 4 on Monday night. The next round likely won’t start before next Sunday, a layoff that could pay huge dividends for a roster filled with players in their 30s.

Then again, they might want to keep playing the way they’re going.

Terry tied a playoff record with nine 3-pointers, and the club matched NBA postseason marks with 11 3s in the first half and 20 for the game. Dallas made 63 percent of its shots from behind the arc (20 of 32) and 60 percent of its field goals (44 of 73).

“I don’t think I’ve seen a team play to that level in a series in a game like they played this afternoon,” Jackson said. “You’d like to have an opportunity to challenge, but we didn’t.”

Terry made 11 of 14 shots for 32 points. J.J. Barea set a career playoff-best with 22 points and Peja Stojakovic added 21 points. All three of those guys come off the bench.

“We’ve been doing it by committee all year long,” said Nowitzki, who scored 17 points, his fewest this postseason. “There are a lot of guys who can make plays and make shots when it counts.”

Nowitzki was still in during the fourth quarter and took the blindside blow that led to Odom’s ejection. Then Barea took a Bynum elbow to the ‘M’ on his Mavericks jersey while up in the air after releasing the ball for a layup. Fans threw things toward the court and officials scrambled to keep the peace. Bynum took off his jersey and was escorted to the locker room by Ron Artest, of all people. Artest was suspended from Game 3 because of his shot on Barea in the closing seconds of Game 2.

“I wasn’t happy with the way our players exited the game, on Lamar and Andrew’s part,” Jackson said. “It was unnecessary, but I know they were frustrated.”

The Lakers blew big, late leads in Games 1 and 3, and came in talking about cleaning up their fourth-quarter performance. They never got that far.

The second quarter proved to be one of the most spectacular in Mavericks history, thanks mostly to Terry.

He was 5 of 6 from behind the arc that period, and the team was 7 of 8 — despite Jackson’s repeated demands that his players run at them to try forcing them to dribble up for 2-pointers instead of 3s. The Mavericks had a run of 13-2 early in the quarter and 10-1 spurt at the end.

Bryant couldn’t bail his club out. He made only 1 of 5 shots in the period and had two turnovers. His only basket came after shoving Barea away from him; the pesky little point guard got even right away, driving straight to the rim for a layup.

Bryant finished 7 of 18 for 17 points. Shannon Brown was Los Angeles’ next-best scorer with 15. Pau Gasol’s lost postseason continued, too; he had 10 points and eight rebounds.

NOTES: The only other team to make 20 3s in a playoff game was Seattle in 1996. … Rex Chapman, Vince Carter and Ray Allen are the others who’ve made nine 3s in a playoff game. … Dallas became the eighth team to make 11 3s in one half of a playoff game. Chicago did it to Indiana earlier this postseason. … Teams trailing 0-3 are now 0-99 in NBA playoff history. The Lakers are the 60th to get swept. … Before the game, Jackson was told the league was fining him $35,000 for comments he made Saturday that were critical of officials. “That’s not fun having a feeling like I’ve been chased down the freeway by them,” Jackson said. “But as Richard Nixon says, ‘You won’t be able to kick this guy around any more.’”

Originally Published On: www.npr.org – Original Article Here



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