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Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Former NFL Player Dies at Age 39


Pio Sagapolutele, a former player for the Cleveland Browns, New England Patriots and New Orleans Saints, passed away after a massive stroke and heart attack Sunday. The Samoan-born defensive lineman was only 39 years old.

Sagapolutele was born in American Samoa, grew up in Hawaii, and attended San Diego State University before being selected by the Browns in the fourth round of the 1991 NFL Draft. He played 92 games in seven seasons, amassing seven career sacks and 89 solo tackles. He started at right defensive tackle in Super Bowl XXXI for Bill Parcells' Patriots. A bevy of injuries forced Sagapolutele to retire in 1999.

Off the field, Sagapolutele did some great work for underprivileged youth in both California and Hawaii -- running football camps for some children whose parents may not have been able to afford various summer football camps.

"I was able to attend a camp when I was young and it helped send me in the right direction," he says.

"I always remember the lessons I learned from my parents; treat people how you want to be treated," he says. "People deserve the right to feel special and I always try to find a way to make them feel like that."

Sagapolutele is survived by his wife and three children -- ages 13, 9 and 7.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Federer breaks Paris hoodoo


Paris - Roger Federer joined the legion of sporting legends on Sunday, his name sitting comfortably alongside Ali, Woods, Senna, Pele, Bradman, where just one name is enough to confer instant respect.

His victory over Robin Soderling took the universally-popular Swiss level with his great friend Pete Sampras as the winner of 14 majors.

But Federer also achieved something that eluded even Sampras as well as John McEnroe, Boris Becker and Stefan Edberg - a career Grand Slam, only the sixth man in history to achieve the feat.

The 27-year-old, with close to 50 million dollars earned from his superlative career, has not only taken the game to a new level, but also his approach to his trade, both on and off the court.

Gracious in both victory and defeat, respectful to the game's history and immensely media-friendly with his press conferences patiently carried out in English, French and Swiss-German, all delivered pitch-perfect.

When people are lost for words, occasionally they've been forced to adopt other means of recognising the great man - after his breakthrough 2003 Wimbledon triumph, the people of Gstaad honoured him by presenting him with a cow.

But when the young Federer, who announced himself as the Wimbledon junior champion in 1998 and the winner of the prestigious Orange Bowl, started out on his road to fame, he wasn't winning popularity contests.

"I used to bitch a lot at line calls. I used to carry on like an idiot," said Federer.

Slowly, steadily he matured under the guidance of respected coaches Peter Lundgren and Australian Peter Carter, whose eventual death in a car crash hit Federer hard, altering his perspective on life and career.

In 2001, in Milan, he won the first of his 59 titles before beating seven-time Wimbledon champion Sampras at the All England Club in a stunning last 16 triumph.

But one year later, the vulnerable, undeveloped side of Federer was still there for all to see when, tipped as the tournament favourite, he suffered a humiliating first round loss on Centre Court to Mario Ancic.

He set to work on improving all aspects of his game, with defence and consistency just as important as flamboyant attack.

"People used to tell me how easy I made it look, so I kind of felt I had to live up to this and play miracle shots, the crowd-pleasing stuff," he said.

"But I decided what I wanted was to win the match, not hit the best shot of the tournament. That was a big step for me mentally."

One year later, Federer beat Mark Philippoussis in the Wimbledon final for his first Grand Slam title, and he was on his way.

Four more Wimbledon trophies have followed, as have five US Opens and three Australian Open titles.

Until this year the French Open had always eluded him.

In three successive finals between 2006 and 2008, he came up short against Rafael Nadal.

Frustratingly, Nadal even took his beloved Wimbledon crown in a classic five-set 2008 final, hailed instantly as the greatest Grand Slam final of all time.

But Soderling's defeat of the great Spaniard turned Roland Garros 2009 upside down and Federer seized his chance.

"Roger deserves the Grand Slam more than I did," said Andre Agassi, the last man to complete the sweep here in 1999.

"He is extraordinarily talented, and the grace and the way he plays is very special to see. If it wasn't for a freak of nature from Majorca, he could have won this many times."

Federer Confronted During French Open Final



A crowd member has confronted Roger Federer on court during the final of the French Open. The man invaded the Roland Garros court in Paris during the fourth game of the second set and attempted to wrap a red flag around the Swiss star's head.

Federer pushed the intruder away as security guards rushed to apprehend him.

The man briefly evaded their chase by jumping over the net, before being wrestled to the ground and dragged off the clay court.

Federer confirmed he was ready to continue almost immediately and play resumed with the world number two appearing only mildly shaken.

The 27-year-old was leading Sweden's Robin Soderling by two games to one during the second set when the incident happened.

He had won the first set 6-1 as he attempts to win a world record-equalling fourteenth grand slam.

Victory will also see Federer become only the sixth player in the game's history to win all four men's slams.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Jimmy Rollins


Jimmy Rollins came through last night, and the Phillies won, and the same cause-and-effect relationship that had existed for the previous four wins lifted the team to another one, this time 4-3 over the Reds.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Federer knocks off Nadal


MADRID (AP) — Roger Federer beat top-ranked Rafael Nadal in a final for the first time in two years Sunday to claim the Madrid Open title 6-4, 6-4.

Second-ranked Federer broke a sluggish Nadal once in both sets before firing his sixth ace of the match to claim his 15th Masters Series title on the second match point. Federer also won here in 2006 when the event was played on indoor hard court.

It was only Federer's second victory over his top rival on clay with the other coming at the Hamburg final two years ago. The victory also ended Federer's five-match losing run to Nadal, a streak in which he lost at Roland Garros, Wimbledon and Australia.

"He was simply better than me," Nadal said.

Ibanez hits 3 homers as Phillies take 2 from Nats


WASHINGTON (AP)—Playing two after a 12-inning game the night before, the Philadelphia Phillies and Washington Nationals both needed some solid starting pitching.

The Phillies got it in both games, with an assist from a thunderstorm that shortened the second one. The Nationals didn’t come close either time and got swept.

Raul Ibanez(notes) hit three long home runs, and the Phillies again battered the National League’s worst pitching staff Saturday in 8-5 and 7-5 victories in a day-night doubleheader. Brett Myers(notes) cranked out seven innings in the afternoon, and emergency callup Andrew Carpenter(notes) pitched into the fifth in his first major league start in a nightcap called in the sixth due to rain.
“That second game, that’s what you call a good break,” said Phillies manager Charlie Manuel, citing the thin bullpen from the 10-6 extra-inning win on Friday night. “We’ll take it. That’s part of the game. It definitely helped us.”

Philadelphia also got a scoreless-inning save in Game 1 from closer Brad Lidge(notes), who had allowed at least one run in each of his six previous outings. Meanwhile, things got worse for the Nationals: Game 1 starter Scott Olsen(notes) is headed to the disabled list with a shoulder injury, and Game 2 starter Daniel Cabrera(notes) dropped to 0-5 with another miserable performance.

Federer vs Nadal Battle of surfaces Highlights

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