Friday, July 24, 2009

The Skinny:


Outside of LeBron James and Kobe Bryant, no player in the NBA may be more exciting than Orlando’s Dwight Howard. I haven’t watched the Slam Dunk competition in I don’t know how many years, but I was tuned into last year’s competition based solely on the performance of Howard. He did some amazing things with the ball and along with James could be the new face of the NBA.

Prior to Howard’s arrival in O-Town the team was struggling. They finished seventh in the Atlantic division and as a result were able to take Howard with the No. 1 pick. Within three years he had the team back in the playoffs despite a sub-.500 record which just goes to show that the East is a very weak conference.

Last season the Magic won the Southeast Division with a 52-30 record and won their first playoff series since the 1995-96 campaign as they beat Toronto, 4-1, in the first round. Their record was their best since that 95-96 campaign when they lost to the Bulls in the conference finals and was 31 wins better than the year before Howard was drafted. They were subsequently tossed from the playoffs by Detroit, 4-1.

Andrew Flintoff's retirement could afford a glimpse into cricket's future


The world's best players may follow Andrew Flintoff's example, retire early from Tests and focus on Twenty20 competitions

Andrew Flintoff announced his retirement from Test cricket this week and that could lead to other players following suit. Photograph: Hamish Blair/Getty Images

We can quibble about the timing of Andrew Flintoff's retirement announcement, but not with the reasoning behind it.

There is only so much rehab a man can do, only so many injections before a pin-cushioned body threatens to rebel for good. Occasionally the mind goes first, which was the case with Nasser Hussain, but more often, especially for those whose game is based less upon finesse than driving a reluctant torso to the limit, the natural urge to listen to the body is overwhelming.

On the day Flintoff announced his retirement I bumped into Simon Halliday, the England centre who retired from international rugby in 1992. "I just knew when it was time to go," he said. "England had just won two Five Nations Championships and played in the World Cup final. There was a tour of South Africa coming up and the management urged me to keep going. But I knew my body could not do it." However sophisticated the medics, it is easier to find the truth from inside the body than without.

So there is no question of Flintoff shunning the hard graft in a dereliction of his national service. He has done his bit. And maybe, just maybe, he will become one of the most formidable one-day cricketers in the world once he recovers from his Ashes labours.

But Flintoff's decision to forsake Test cricket for the one-day game is the latest and brightest signal of the shape of things to come. Until the last couple of years the accepted course among cricketers has been to give up the one-day game to prolong their Test careers. This route was taken by so many prominent players: Shane Warne, Steve Waugh, Michael Vaughan, Hussain and, for a while, Steve Harmison.

Formula One Grand Prix Race Circuits


Most of the currently used circuits are specially constructed for competition. The only real street circuit is the Circuit de Monaco, used for the Monaco Grand Prix, though a street race in London has been discussed. Some of the other circuits are also completely or partially laid out on public roads, such as those of Spa-Francorchamps or Montreal. The glamour and history of the Monaco race are the primary reasons the circuit is still in use, since it does not meet the strict safety requirements imposed on other tracks. Three times World champion Nelson Piquet famously described racing in Monaco as "flying with a helicopter in your living room."

Circuit design to protect the safety of drivers is becoming increasingly sophisticated. Where in the 1950s a driver was lucky to find a strategically placed strawbale to absorb his impact, modern Formula One circuits feature gravel traps and tyre barriers to reduce risk of injury in crashes. This is an ongoing task - after the deaths of Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger during the 1994 season, the FIA mandated further changes to circuits. These were mostly aimed at better matching how fast a car is travelling when an accident occurs with the runoff space available for it to decelerate and at improving the ability of barriers to safely absorb the energy of a crash.

A typical circuit usually features a stretch of straight road on which the starting grid is situated. The pit lane, where the drivers stop for fuel and tyres during the race, and where the constructors work on the cars before the race, is normally located next to the starting grid. The layout of the rest of the circuit varies widely. Some of the curves on circuits have become well known on their own, such as the high-speed Eau Rouge at Spa-Francorchamps.

2010 fifa WORLD cuP

05/07/09 20:30Cairo EgyptEgypt3:0 (0:0)RwandaRwanda
21/06/09 19:00Bamako MaliMali3:1 (1:1)BeninBenin
21/06/09 17:00Conakry GuineaGuinea2:1 (2:0)MalawiMalawi
20/06/09 20:30Omdurman SudanSudan0:2 (0:1)GhanaGhana
20/06/09 19:10Rades TunisiaTunisia0:0NigeriaNigeria
20/06/09 18:00Rabat MoroccoMorocco0:0TogoTogo
20/06/09 18:00Ouagadougou Burkina FasoBurkina Faso2:3 (1:1)Côte d'IvoireCôte d'Ivoire
20/06/09 16:00Nairobi KenyaKenya2:1 (1:0)MozambiqueMozambique
20/06/09 14:00Chililabombwe ZambiaZambia0:2 (0:1)AlgeriaAlgeria
17/06/09 21:00Riyadh Saudi ArabiaSaudi Arabia0:0Korea DPRKorea DPR
17/06/09 20:20Melbourne AustraliaAustralia2:1 (0:1)JapanJapan
17/06/09 20:00Seoul Korea RepublicKorea Republic1:1 (0:0)IranIran
17/06/09 19:30Manama BahrainBahrain1:0 (0:0)UzbekistanUzbekistan
10/06/09 21:50Recife BrazilBrazil2:1 (1:1)ParaguayParaguay
10/06/09 21:00Santiago De Chile ChileChile4:0 (1:0)BoliviaBolivia
10/06/09 20:30Puerto Ordaz VenezuelaVenezuela2:2 (1:0)UruguayUruguay
10/06/09 20:30Helsinki FinlandFinland0:3 (0:1)RussiaRussia
10/06/09 19:00Gothenburg SwedenSweden4:0 (1:0)MaltaMalta
10/06/09 18:00Medellin ColombiaColombia1:0 (1:0)PeruPeru
10/06/09 16:00Quito EcuadorEcuador2:0 (0:0)ArgentinaArgentina
Fixtures
12/08/09 15:00Mexico City MexicoMexico-USAUSA
12/08/09 17:00Torshavn Faroe IslandsFaroe Islands-FranceFrance
12/08/09 19:00Oslo NorwayNorway-ScotlandScotland
12/08/09 19:30Port Of Spain Trinidad and TobagoTrinidad and Tobago-El SalvadorEl Salvador
12/08/09 19:30San Pedro Sula HondurasHonduras-Costa RicaCosta Rica
12/08/09 20:45Maribor SloveniaSlovenia-San MarinoSan Marino
12/08/09 21:00Baku AzerbaijanAzerbaijan-GermanyGermany
12/08/09 21:15Minsk BelarusBelarus-CroatiaCroatia
05/09/09TBA ArgentinaArgentina-BrazilBrazil
05/09/09TBA ChileChile-VenezuelaVenezuela
05/09/09TBA ColombiaColombia-EcuadorEcuador
05/09/09TBA ParaguayParaguay-BoliviaBolivia
05/09/09TBA PeruPeru-UruguayUruguay
05/09/09 20:00Budapest HungaryHungary-SwedenSweden
05/09/09 22:00Manama BahrainBahrain-Saudi ArabiaSaudi Arabia