Monday, December 27, 2010

Boxing News 2010: Sergio Martinez is the fighter of the year

ATLANTIC CITY, NJ - OCTOBER 18:  Kelly Pavlik ...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
During the jubilant celebration inside the ring after Sergio Martinez knocked Paul Williams into another dimension, trainer Gabriel Sarmiento placed a gold-colored crown on his pupil's head.

One of the members of Martinez's team had bought the prop more or less as a gag, but it was certainly a fitting symbol for what Martinez had done, not only on that November night at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, N.J., but during a year in which he blazed his way to becoming king of the middleweight division and earning his place among the top fighters in the world, pound for pound.

Martinez -- known as "Maravilla" -- won the middleweight championship by slicing up Kelly Pavlik to win a clear decision and drilled Williams in their much-anticipated rematch to cement his status as the 2010 ESPN.com fighter of the year.

Martinez, 35, had ended 2009 by going toe-to-toe with Williams in a sensational, all-action fight, but he lost a disputed majority decision. While a rematch was what boxing fans and media asked for, their promoters wanted them go to their separate ways for at least one fight until the inevitable sequel would take place.

When a fight between Williams and Pavlik could not be made -- yet again -- Martinez, who held a junior middleweight title, happily accepted the opportunity to challenge for the middleweight championship. That title means a lot in Martinez's home country of Argentina, which produced Carlos Monzon, one of the greatest middleweight champions in history and Martinez's boxing idol.

Martinez (46-2-2, 25 KOs) and Pavlik met April 17 at Boardwalk Hall and it was clear from the outset that even though Pavlik was the bigger man, it was going to be a tough fight. Martinez easily won the opening rounds with his superior boxing ability. But after Pavlik came on strong in the middle rounds, including scoring a seventh-round knockdown, Martinez turned it up a notch. He dominated down the stretch, opening a bad cut over Pavlik's right eye in the ninth round and sweeping the rest of the fight to claim the title in an outstanding performance.



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Sunday, December 26, 2010

NBA News 2010: NBA Prospect Jonas Valanciunas

BC Lietuvos Rytas squad lineupImage via Wikipedia
The first time Jonas Valanciunas showed his face on the international level, he was nothing more than skin and bones – a raw, timid 16-year-old star struck by the bright lights of Madison Square Garden at the Jordan Brand Classic international game in April, 2008.

All the physical tools in the world wouldn't mean anything if he didn't have the will to use them, though. Fortunately for Valanciunas, he's an incredibly intense competitor, a boundlessly energetic player who never stops working for a moment and whose presence is constantly felt on the court.

He runs the floor extremely well, is quick off his feet and has no qualms whatsoever about throwing his body around in the paint. Not one to just stand around and wait for opportunities to come to him, Valanciunas wants to be productive all the time, which is a big reason he's been able to earn playing time in such a demanding environment this season, despite his obvious immaturity.

“I don't have very good skills right now, many good moves, so I have to fight,” he tells us.

Essentially an afterthought in Lietuvos Rytas' offense, Valanciunas satisfies his hunger for touches through his work on the offensive glass. The largest portion of his offense (27%) comes from this area according to Synergy Sports Technology, a testament to his length, quickness, timing, hands, activity level and instincts. He pulls down over five offensive rebounds for every 40 minutes he's on the floor, and watching him play, it's not difficult to tell why.

As attractive a skill as his offensive rebounding might be, Valanciunas' most important source of scoring comes from his ability to finish plays created for him by teammates around the basket. He takes special pride in his ability to operate as a pick-and-roll finisher -- “That's my basketball,” he said. This is a skill that should translate to the NBA immediately.



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Thursday, December 23, 2010

NBA News 2010: Lakers perimeter defense to challenge Heat

DSC02142Image by bridgetds via Flickr
At times, Ron Artest feels bored on the court.

He says playing on team with scorers such as Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom can cause him to lose interest on the offensive end. It's the life of the forwards Artest and Matt Barnes, the Los Angeles Lakers' two defensive stoppers. While the Miami Heat's superstars are arguably their best defenders, the Lakers will counter in Saturday's game with a pair of players whose priority is defense.

Tough defense.

"It's kind of cool because I get the chance to still be effective on the court rather than just be a scorer," Artest said. "But it's also kind of boring. I'm such a good defender but sometimes I'm not scoring and scoring is fun, especially when you can score."

He and Barnes, the backup small forward, will spend the bulk of the game defending Heat star LeBron James. The two have earned reputations as being aggressive defenders throughout their careers. Artest has twice made the NBA's All-Defensive first-team, with many feeling he was snubbed last year.

"It's just as exciting on defense because when I get stops and steals, it's kind of an adrenaline rush," Artest said. "I know that I'm doing things on the court that no one else is doing on the court."

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/miami-heat/fl-heat-lakers-1224-20101223-5,0,4828786.story


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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

NBA News 2010: Redefining the Heat’s end game

BOSTON, MA - OCTOBER 26: LeBron James #6 of th...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Until the balls started bouncing this season, the expectation was the Heat’s crunch-time, closing lineup would feature Chris Bosh at center, Udonis Haslem at power forward, with Mike Miller, LeBron James and Dwyane Wade at the perimeter spots.

For now, figure on dual closing lineups, ones that feature Bosh, Wade, James and Miller (once he’s all the way back) with either a defensive component at center, such as Joel Anthony, or a defensive component at point guard, such as Mario Chalmers.

The shame is that either might not be good enough to play closing minutes for a championship contender.

http://blogs.sun-sentinel.com/sports_basketball_heat/2010/12/redefining-the-heats-end-game.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+sports/MiamiHeatweblog+(Miami+Heat+|+Sun-Sentinel+Blogs)


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NBA News 2010: Five players earning $5M or less to watch on Xmas

LOS ANGELES, CA - JUNE 17:  (L-R) Derek Fisher...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol, Lamar Odom, Andrew Bynum, LeBron James, Chris Bosh, Dwyane Wade. When the Heat and Lakers take the floor Saturday afternoon at Staples Center, these will be the rock stars. The guys most likely to suck up camera time, be the focus of fancy graphics packages, and so on. They're also the guys for whom Christmas comes not just on Dec. 25, but every time a paycheck lands in their bank accounts. (Unless, of course, they insist on being handed a giant sack of cash on payday. Which, at least once, would actually be pretty cool.)

Don't confuse money with influence. Each team's roster sports players in, at least by NBA standards, a different category financially, but could still make a major impact on the result of Saturday's game. Below are five guys, each earning $5 million or less, able to make or break all the work done by the headliners:

LAKERS

Matt Barnes ($1,765,000)

Shannon Brown ($2,149,200)

HEAT

Mike Miller ($5 million)

James Jones ($1,146,337)

Joel Anthony ($3.3 million)

http://espn.go.com/blog/los-angeles/lakers/post/_/id/13788/bargain-hunting-five-players-earning-5-mil-or-less-to-watch-on-x-mas#more


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Monday, December 20, 2010

NBA News 2010: No. 1 Yet Again

ORLANDO, FL - JUNE 11:  Andrew Bynum #17 of th...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
I was surprised by the initial surprise that greeted the Lakers' willingness to participate in the three-way trade that landed Terrence Williams in Houston and armed New Jersey with two more future first-round picks for its trade pursuit of Carmelo Anthony. The champs, frankly, had lots of good reasons for joining in.

The top three?

1. Joe Smith is a veteran big man who -- unlike the outgoing Sasha Vujacic -- has generally been revered by teammates, even though he's never produced at the level expected when Golden State made him the No. 1 overall pick in the 1995 draft. Lakers coach Phil Jackson has been openly fretful about the early-season load Pau Gasol has been shouldering with Andrew Bynum (knee) sidelined until this week and with Theo Ratliff (knee) out. Add it up and L.A. has a clear need for someone like Smith, who as a bonus can probably tell them more about the Celtics' Kevin Garnett (his close friend from their 'Sota days) than just about anyone.

2. With a salary-cap number of $854,389, Smith costs $4.6 million less than Vujacic in payroll terms this season. That means his arrival reduces the Lakers' luxury-tax bill by that same $4.6 million.

3. The parameters of the three-team swap also created a $5.5 million trade exception for the Lakers, which they aren't likely to use between now and the Feb. 24 trade deadline but is sure nice to have if circumstances change and a roster need arises. (We'll have to see how valuable such trade exceptions are -- or if they even exist -- in the next labor agreement.)

http://espn.go.com/nba/dailydime/_/page/dime-101217-19/latest-melo-drama


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Sunday, December 19, 2010

NBA News 2010: Nash stays afloat in Suns’ sea of change

Steve Nash of the Phoenix Suns of the National...Image via Wikipedia
Less than seven months after the Phoenix Suns came within two wins of reaching the NBA Finals, the franchise’s roster has been overturned so thoroughly that only six players from that title-contending team remain. Even the general manager has left town, not to mention the All-Star forward.

And after the Suns completed a six-player trade with the Orlando Magic on Saturday – exchanging Jason Richardson, Hedo Turkoglu and Earl Clark for Vince Carter, Marcin Gortat and Mickael Pietrus – one question hung over the desert:

Will Steve Nash become the next to go?

The answer, according to the Suns, is no.

“We have no intention of trading Steve,” Suns coach Alvin Gentry told Yahoo! Sports. “The guy is one of the top point guards in the league. I don’t know why we’d consider trading him. The chances of that happening are slim and none.”

Nash’s agent, Bill Duffy, also said Suns owner Robert Sarver told him the team doesn’t have any intention of dealing its All-Star point guard. Nash has one year left on his contract after this season at a reasonable $11.7 million.

“He’s a treasure to the fans there,” Duffy said. “He’s revered there. There is enough of a relationship between Steve Nash and the Suns that if something were to transpire we’d be sure Steve would be involved in the process. Sarver has called me to tell me that nothing is going on with Steve.

“He’s everything. He’s the identity of the organization.”



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Saturday, December 18, 2010

NBA News 2010: Under-the-radar Lakers certain to ‘rise at the right time’

The Los Angeles Lakers playing a home game aga...Image via Wikipedia
“I don’t know if they sometimes get disinterested,” Raptors coach Jay Triano said Saturday of the two-time defending NBA champions. “They know that a game in November or December isn’t going to mean as much as a game in April. But Phil (Jackson, the Los Angeles coach) has a way of making these guys believe and rise at the right time.”

“I think with what the Lakers have done, winning championships and everything, people think they’re going to do it again but I think a lot of people now are paying attention to the younger teams like Oklahoma City, Miami, New York,” said DeRozan. “There’s a lot of young teams that people are excited to watch besides the Lakers.

“People don’t worry about the Lakers until the playoffs come, you know. That’s what matters and I think they know that as well. You can’t miss out on watching these young teams these days.”

Yes, the Heat, Thunder and Knicks are all good stories.

The Lakers are a good team.

“I think they’re pretty darn good,” said Triano. “They have a little bit of everything, their bench got stronger than it was a year ago, I think (Pau) Gasol is playing well, Kobe is playing well, other guys are finding where they fit.

http://www.thestar.com/sports/basketball/nba/article/909304--under-the-radar-lakers-certain-to-rise-at-the-right-time


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NBA News 2010: Kobe Bryant, L.A. Lakers: 8 Reasons Why They're Still Favorites Out West

Kobe Bryant defended by Courtney LeeImage via Wikipedia
1) Health Issues Have Given Laker Opponents a Head Start
2) Their Major Opponents Pt. 1 (San Antonio Spurs)
3) Their Major Opponents Pt. 2 (Dallas Mavericks)
4) Their Major Opponents Pt. 3 (The Rest Of The West)
5) Their Division
6) Kobe Bryant
7) Coaching Advantage
8) Opportunity

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/547062-kobe-bryant-la-lakers-8-reasons-why-theyre-still-favorites-out-west


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NBA News 2010: Magic blockbuster

CLEVELAND - MAY 22: Hedo Turkoglu #15 of the O...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Orlando Magic

Entering the season, some of the biggest question marks for the Orlando Magic were shot creation and perimeter scoring. After a 16-9 start to the year, in which the Magic's offense ranked 14th in offensive efficiency, an inconvenient truth had been realized -- Vince Carter and Rashard Lewis weren't cutting it anymore.

Insert Gilbert Arenas, Hedo Turkoglu and Jason Richardson into the equation. The expectation, when it comes down to it, is that Arenas, Turkoglu and Richardson address some glaring weaknesses for Orlando. The shot creation and perimeter scoring is there; now the Magic have to address their lack of frontcourt depth and size with the purge of Lewis and Marcin Gortat. Needless to say, it's likely that Magic president Otis Smith isn't done shaking up the roster. Will the changes be enough to overtake the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference? That remains to be seen. Van Gundy has a lot of work to do to assimilate Arenas, Turkoglu, and Richardson into Orlando's schemes collectively. Then there's the issue of figuring out whether or not the Magic sacrificed too much defense with these trades. The next couple of months should be real interesting.


Phoenix Suns

The Phoenix Suns accomplished two major goals in Saturday’s trade with the Orlando Magic by adding much-needed quality size in Marcin Gortat and dumping the long-term contract of a piece that didn’t fit the system in Hedo Turkoglu. That’s certainly worth the lateral swap of Jason Richardson for Vince Carter at the 2-guard spot and losing a seldom-used project in Earl Clark, especially when the Suns get a 2011 first-rounder to boot.


Washington Wizards

But for Grunfeld, the exchange was all about his personal perfect storm. Moving on past the Gilbert Arenas saga? Check. Save a little money? Check to the tune of at least $24 million. Get a player presumed to be a better fit with John Wall as a stretch four who can open up the court? Check, theoretically.

http://espn.go.com/blog/TrueHoop/post/_/id/22934/truehoop-views-on-magic-blockbuster


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Friday, December 17, 2010

NBA News 2010: Magic discussing deal for Arenas

Gilbert Arenas playing with the Washington WizardsImage via Wikipedia
Orlando and Washington are engaged in serious discussions for a trade that would send Gilbert Arenas(notes) to the Magic, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

Arenas has privately told people for days that he believes a deal will soon send him to Orlando, where he’ll be reunited with Magic general manager Otis Smith, a friend and mentor from Arenas’ days with the Golden State Warriors. Sources said Orlando has escalated its pursuit of a deal in recent days. After losing five of their past six games, the Magic have shown more urgency to find a perimeter scorer who can help them stay a viable contender in the Eastern Conference.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=AjqknrPybS3az94mCbCrgdG8vLYF?slug=aw-magictradetalks121710


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Thursday, December 16, 2010

NBA News 2010: For Smith, trade is a dream come true

Joe Smith playing with the Cleveland CavaliersImage via Wikipedia
The text message was short and to the point.

"Call me ASAP," Joe Smith's agent wrote.

The news was better than expected.

"You've been traded to the Lakers," Smith's agent told him.

Smith has been smiling since he got the news the Lakers agreed to acquire him from the New Jersey Nets on Tuesday. The trade became official Wednesday and Smith took his physical and joined his new teammates Thursday.

"At this point in my career, this is probably a great move because this team has won two in a row and has a chance to win a third one," he said. "Hopefully, I can be a part of it and try to bring whatever I can to the table to help us succeed."

The Lakers will be Smith's 12th team in an NBA career that's in its 16th season. He didn't even try to name his former clubs and said, "I've lost count." The 35-year-old forward is a former No. 1 overall pick by Golden State in 1995.

Despite his vast NBA experience, Smith has not played deep into the playoffs. He was with Cleveland when it lost to Boston in the second round in 2008, but that's as far as he has gone.

He has never been with a team like the Lakers, who are trying for a three-peat. He admitted he had all but given up the idea of playing for a championship contender, "but I was still hopeful that something could happen where I could end up in a place like this."

Mission accomplished.



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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

NBA News 2010: Draft Prospect Kyrie Irving

Harrison Barnes and Kyrie Irving at the 2010 N...Image via Wikipedia
If there is such a thing as a freshman playing flawless basketball right now, Kyrie Irving would qualify for that outlandish statement.

Productive, efficient, unselfish, exciting—there's really no shortage of ways to describe the way Irving has performed thus far. He's managed to take a NCAA Tournament championship team—ranked as the best offense in college basketball—and make them even better, acting as their main facilitator, shot-maker and go-to guy. Dominant when needed, but still deferential enough to keep all of Duke's many other options happy (thus far), Irving has fit in as seamlessly as possible, making the transition to the NCAA-level look effortless.

Irving is scoring at a terrific rate thus far, nearly 22 points per-40 minutes pace adjusted, but is doing so without the luxury of taking very many shots. He's accomplished that feat by converting efficiently inside the arc (59%), hitting his 3-pointers at a blistering 45% clip, and getting to the free throw line over 8-times per-40. There really isn't much more you can ask for besides that, especially considering that he's only eight games into his college career.



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Sunday, December 5, 2010

NBA News 2010: NBA Prospect Harrison Barnes

Harrison Barnes, 6-8, 209 pounds, 7-0 ½ wingspan, Class of 2010

Considering his status as the number one recruit in the country according to both Scout.com and ESPN (#2 on Rivals after Brandon Knight), Barnes is long overdue for a write-up on this site, despite the fact that he’s two years away from being draft eligible.

Showing prototypical physical tools for an NBA wing player, including excellent size, length and a frame that will fill out nicely in time, Barnes passes the look test and then some on first glance. Maybe not as freakish an athlete as some former #1 overall recruits, Barnes is still no slouch in that category, showing excellent fluidity and overall mobility, to compliment his excellent scoring tools.

Still an improving ball-handler, Barnes is already able to get to where he needs to on the floor thanks to the shiftiness he shows with the ball, combined with his long strides and ability to change directions quickly. He did a good job creating shots for himself in the mid-range area, and was able to convert some extremely difficult shots thanks to his excellent touch. From the perimeter he has a nice stroke and clearly possesses 3-point range, but he seemed to get a bit streaky from time to time.

Not afraid of contact in the least bit, Barnes showed no qualms about utilizing his size inside the paint by posting up the very highly touted Dashaun Thomas time after time. He was incredibly active on the offensive glass as well, making an absolute living by being the first player going after loose balls, showing an impressive work ethic in the process.



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NBA News 2010: NBA Prospect Perry Jones

A diagram of a basketball court with FIBA (top...Image via Wikipedia
Simply put, no prospect in the 2010 high school class displays more NBA potential than Baylor commit Perry Jones (#12 Scout, #6 Rivals, #3 ESPN). Right off the bat, Jones wows you with his terrific physical attributes—standing 6-10 or 6-11, with a great frame, long arms and incredible athleticism. Jones runs the floor like a deer, explodes off the ground as if he has a personal trampoline at his disposal, and is extremely fluid and reactive to everything that goes on around him.

Skill-wise, there is quite a bit to like here as well. We regularly saw Jones grab a rebound and then handle the ball up-court himself, often weaving in and out of traffic before dishing off a perfectly timed no-look pass right into the path of a teammate streaking towards the basket. He also has a very nice jump-shot, showing streaky range out to the 3-point line, but with the type of touch and mechanics that lead you to believe that he can develop this part of his game into a real weapon in time.

When attacking the rim in the half-court, Jones displays an excellent first step and is capable of getting to the basket in two long strides, sometimes mixing in some very nice spins and pivot moves, often starting off a sharp crossover. Once he’s inside the paint, he finishes with the greatest of ease, typically in highlight reel fashion. Jones is certain to be a fixture many a highlight reel, as he has slamdunk contest-caliber leaping ability. His teammates regularly just throw lobs in the general direction of the rim, knowing that Jones will find a way to go get the ball and hammer it home.

In terms of weaknesses, there are a few you could point towards. One would be his complete lack of a back to the basket game, something you’d like to see him develop considering the quickness and nifty footwork he displays. He needs to get stronger in the lower body first, and probably quite a bit tougher in the paint as well.



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NBA News 2010: NBA Prospect Iman Shumpert

MEMPHIS, TN - NOVEMBER 20:  Greivis Vasquez #2...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Shumpert is the most important returning player on an underachieving Georgia Tech squad that made the NCAA tournament with a 7-9 record in the ACC. This could be the year that the former McDonald's All-American finally has his breakout season.

Shumpert looks the part of an NBA guard. He's a physical and athletic specimen, standing 6-4 with an excellent frame and an incredibly long wingspan. He's a smooth, fluid athlete for whom everything comes easily for. He shows very good quickness, a powerful first step and the explosiveness needed to play above the rim.

His offensive game lacks a great deal of polish at the moment. He's not a prolific scorer – at 12.5 points per-40 minutes, pace adjusted – and he doesn't have the efficiency to compensate. He converts just 38.5% of his field goals, rarely gets to the free throw line and struggles in particular inside the arc, where he converts a paltry 42% of his 2-point attempts.

Shumpert does an excellent job pushing the ball up the floor and getting his team out in transition, but he lacks the skill-level and the decision making ability to be overly effective once he gets into the opposing team's half of the court. He tends to settle for the first shot that becomes available to him, resulting in dozens of possessions that end with a contested pull-up jumper early in the shot clock, before any of his teammates have had the opportunity to touch the ball. He doesn't seem to know what his weaknesses are at the moment. He tends to play with the confidence of a guy who shot 58.5% from the field last season, not 38.5%.

One of the things that makes Shumpert attractive as an NBA prospect is the fact that, at 6-4, he sees such heavy minutes at the point guard position for Georgia Tech. He shows flashes of excellent court vision, at times threading the needle impressively between defenders with a highlight reel-caliber bullet pass or an alley-oop lob. He can also create for others off the dribble a bit, especially in drive-and-dish situations and occasionally on the pick-and-roll.

Shumpert is clearly not a natural playmaker, though, as his team's half-court offense very often looks disjointed. 27% of his possessions end with a turnover, which ranks him in the top 10 in the NCAA on a per-possession basis in that category. That's down from his freshman season, though, when he ranked in the top five in turnovers per possession.

Defensively is where teams are likely to be most intrigued by Shumpert's potential, as he has the physical tools to defend at least two and possibly three positions in the NBA with his excellent size and gigantic wingspan. A menace in the passing lanes, Shumpert has the footspeed and length to switch on every screen and absolutely smother opponents on the perimeter, and he had some incredibly impressive possessions last season already against some of the top offensive players in college basketball, such as Evan Turner, Greivis Vasquez, James Anderson and many others.

http://www.draftexpress.com/profile/Iman-Shumpert-5156/


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Saturday, December 4, 2010

Boxing News 2010: Donaire stops Sidorenko in 4th

Nonito Donaire pic by McBride61Image via Wikipedia
NAHEIM, Calif. -- Nonito Donaire stopped Wladimir Sidorenko at 1:48 of the fourth round of a scheduled 12-round bantamweight fight Saturday at the Honda Center.

Donaire (25-1, 17 knockouts) earned the right to challenge for Fernando Montiel's 118-pound titles on Feb. 19.

The Filipino-American dominated Sidorenko (22-2-2, 7 KOs) from the beginning, putting the Ukrainian down three times with overwhelming power shots.

Donaire hurt Sidorenko with a left hook midway through the first round and then put him down with a left hook-straight right combination. Sidorenko, his face covered in blood from a possible broken nose, went down from another left hook in the third round.

http://www.ringtv.com/blog/2575/donaire_stops_sidorenko_in_4th/


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Friday, December 3, 2010

NBA News 2010: Pulling Evans out of season-long slump top issue for Kings

LAS VEGAS - OCTOBER 13:  Tyreke Evans #13 of t...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
SACRAMENTO -- Forget DeMarcus Cousins. This is a fun little show he's got going, lighting his rookie season on fire in plain view. But he is not the biggest problem for the stalled Kings. Cousins has already been kicked out of practice and fined in separate incidents, has already fouled his way to a reduced role of 23.3 minutes a game, has already been ripped by people around the league for an attitude some predict will keep him from stardom. None of it is surprising.

Tyreke Evans is the pressing issue.

His approach is great, unlike Cousins' attention-stealing immaturity, but his health is not. Neither is his shot. Evans spent an offseason breaking down and reconstructing his jumper, one of the few glaring holes in an arsenal filled with positives. But he's at 40.1 percent from the field after 16 games. His mindset is as scattershot as his shot.

"I'm frustrated because I know I can do better," Evans said. "It's just tough. I'm just trying to figure things out."

Evans has regressed from his Rookie of the Year season in 2009-10, and so have the Kings. Without his health, without a roster change to reduce the offensive burden, with an increasing level of angst -- he could be like this all season.

"His attitude's great," coach Paul Westphal said. "He's a team player all the way. He tries to do anything he can to help his team win. I think probably as much as anything -- and I don't know if he would admit this or not -- his body hasn't always responded the way he expected it to and it's made him a little hesitant. That's my best observation."

"He doesn't seem as consistently quick so far," Westphal said. "He's shown flashes. [Saturday against the Bulls] particularly, the first half he looked like himself. But he's had more off games this year already than he probably had all of last year. I think he's probably questioning himself a little bit more.



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Boxing News 2010: Martinez-Cotto under discussion

LAS VEGAS - JULY 26:  Miguel Cotto gets an eig...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
"We had an honest-to-goodness conversation about the fight," DiBella said. "Bob knows we can easily make the fight. He will be meeting with Cotto's people this week and presenting them with various options. Cotto has already proven his mettle time and again, but to do a fight like this, he will get nothing but props from people."

Martinez is willing to drop down to 155 pounds and put his middleweight championship at stake against Cotto (35-2, 28 KOs), who won a junior middleweight belt in June by stopping Yuri Foreman in the ninth round at Yankee Stadium -- one fight after Manny Pacquiao knocked Cotto out in the 12th round to take his welterweight belt.

"Cotto is an elite fighter, and this is a very good fight for boxing," said Martinez, who is already back in the gym doing some light training after the win over Williams. "It's a big Latino fight. I will fight him at 155. I would love to fight Cotto. I have a lot of respect for him."

Said DiBella: "Cotto wouldn't be risking his 154-pound belt and would be getting a shot at the middleweight title. If Cotto loses, he goes back and defends his title in other big fights, like against Antonio Margarito [in a rematch] or Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. If Cotto beats Martinez, it's a huge accomplishment. If he didn't win, he's still 154-[pound] champion and the Chavez and Margarito bouts are still there for him. It's like the Martinez fight is a free pass. Like he gets two bites at the apple."

DiBella said he and Martinez (46-2-2, 25 KOs) respect Cotto as "a true warrior, so if Martinez has to struggle a little bit to make 155, so be it. It might be a little bit uncomfortable, but he's not that far removed from fighting at junior middleweight. You know it would be a big fight."

http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/boxing/columns/story?columnist=rafael_dan&id=5878407


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Boxing News 2010: Who is next for Pacquiao?

LAS VEGAS - DECEMBER 06:  Manny Pacquiao (R) o...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
The front runners for Pacquiao’s next opponent are Mosley and Berto. There’s no way they’ll fight each other. Mosley is near the end. If he’s going to get wiped out he wants it to be against a great fighter in the biggest fight of the year, not against a young, still-largely unproven beltholder such as Berto.

My guess is that Mosley will get the Pacquiao fight. He’s the best known of Pac’s potential opponents for next year (and no, I’m not including the troubled Mr. Mayweather) and the perception is that he presents the least amount of risk at this stage of his career. Arum believes he can sell a Pacquiao-Mosley fight to the general public and Sugar Shane has endeared himself to the old promoter now that he’s distanced himself from Golden Boy Promotions.

Marquez was always a long shot to get a third bout with Pacquiao, and I’m kind of glad. I don’t care that he weighed 145 pounds on fight night vs. Katsidis. The fact that he made 134 pounds the day before tells me that extra poundage he put on was just water weight -- not muscle. Marquez is not a welterweight. Period. Marquez is an old, small lightweight. Don’t even call him a junior welterweight. There isn’t a world-class junior welterweight alive who can make 134 pounds without killing himself. Pacquiao would kill himself making 134 pounds. Pacquiao would have to seriously dry out to make 140 pounds. We should all forget about Pacquiao-Marquez III unless Manny decides he wants to go against Freddie Roach and Arum and agree to weigh-in between 140 and 142 pounds. Even then, he’ll have a distinct size and strength advantage over Marquez. I think JMM has given fans enough thrills in hard, grueling fights. I don’t want to see him take any more serious punishment. That’s what a Pacquiao fight equals, in my not-so-humble opinion, punishment.

http://www.ringtv.com/blog/2572/dougies_friday_mailbag/


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Monday, November 29, 2010

Boxing News 2010: Manny Pacquiao's Next Fight: Why Juan Manuel Marquez Is Not It

"He's too fast..."Image by sjsharktank via Flickr
The fight everyone wants to see is Pacquiao vs Maywether. One thing I am willing to bet on is that this will not be Pacquiao's next fight. Mayweather needs to fight someone as a tune up match before Pacquiao. Someone he can fight with no real risk of a loss. Maybe Mayweather takes KJ Noons up on his challenge.

In the meantime who will Pacquiao fight?  Some say Marquez should be Pacquiao's next fight. In fact, Oscar De La Hoya tweeted after the fight with Katsidis, "Great fights now let's rally for a Marquez paquiao fight," from his official verified twitter account. The fact is that Manny Pacquiao has one win and one draw over Marquez. The draw was due to the fact that one judge had it 115-110 for Marquez, another 115-110 for Pacquiao and Judge Burt Clements sealed the draw with a 113-113 score, but he admitted making a mistake. He should have had the first round 10-6 for Pacquiao instead of 10-7 because Pacquiao had knocked Marquez down 3 times in the first round. Pacquiao would have won, had Clements added the third knockdown to the scorecard for round 1.

So Pacquiao has really beat Marquez twice. Why would he fight him again. Die hard Marquez fans that say Pacquiao is ducking Marquez or Pacquiao is afraid of Marquez, are really just kidding themselves. They refuse to come to grips with the reality that Marquez is past his prime and Pacquiao is peaking in his. Marquez has less of a chance this time because has not only improved tremendously but is bigger and stronger since they last fought. So why would he think he can win? Maybe he just wants one last huge payday. Maybe he wants to be in the spotlight one last time. Or is that Marquez possibly has delusions of grandeur. Who knows. What I wanted to know is how can he realistically be in the pound for pound discussion when you have a new era of talent and he has lost to Pacquiao twice. Doesn't someone who hasn't lost to Pacquiao twice deserve a shot?



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Sunday, November 28, 2010

Boxing News 2010: Juan Manuel Marquez wants rematch

LAS VEGAS - MAY 02:  Manny Pacquiao of the Phi...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Juan Manuel Marquez didn't waste any time after defending his lightweight title before setting his sights on Round 3 with Manny Pacquiao.

Marquez stopped Michael Katsidis in the ninth round Saturday night at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, winning an all-action battle and certain candidate for Fight of the Year. Moments later, he turned his attention to settling the score with the man considered the best in the world.

"Obviously, Pacquiao is my priority. I'll go up to 140 [pounds], it's no problem," Marquez said through a translator. "Stop making excuses, Manny. Fight me."

The two have met twice before, and both of the bouts were thrilling. They fought to a 12-round draw in 2004, and Pacquiao won a close split decision in March 2008.

Pacquiao, who has discussed retiring in three years, said at a news conference Monday in Manila that he's willing to fight Marquez again but that the match would probably not excite fans. He sounded doubtful himself, saying "I would not watch Pacquiao vs. Marquez."

Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum said in a phone interview with The Associated Press on Sunday that a third fight with Marquez is a distinct possibility, although just like everyone else, he's waiting to see whether Floyd Mayweather Jr. steps into the ring against Pacquiao in what could be the richest fight in boxing history.

"If we do a deal with Marquez, and it'd be a money deal, they can come and represent Marquez at press conferences and that kind of stuff, but they wouldn't have anything to do with the promotion, nor would Lou," Arum said. "They would in effect be signing the fighter to us, because at this point, Manny doesn't have to do co-promotions with anybody."

http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/boxing/news/story?id=5860025


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Monday, November 22, 2010

NBA News 2010: Thibodeau saw Kobe Bryant's potential

Kobe Bryant, Lakers shooting guard, stands rea...Image via Wikipedia
LOS ANGELES -- It was about 16 years ago in Saint Joseph's gym in Philadelphia, where a talented high school player first met an assistant coach for the Philadelphia 76ers.

"He was crucial. He was with me when I was 16 or 17 years old," Bryant said Sunday night at Staples Center, after leading the Lakers to a 117-89 win over the Golden State Warriors. "Just doing drills and just working on ballhandling and just teaching me the game. He was there from Day 1."

Bryant generated a national buzz while at Lower Merion High School in a Philadelphia suburb. He scrimmaged against NBA players at the invitation of former 76ers coach John Lucas, who was friends with Kobe's father Joe "Jellybean" Bryant, a former player and coach. The Charlotte Hornets drafted Bryant out of high school in 1996 and traded him to the Lakers for Vlade Divac.

"You could just tell [that Bryant was special]. The way he would study everything. [It was] amazing for a high school kid."

The pair grew close fairly quickly. Thibodeau spent extra time drilling Bryant whenever he could, and he could tell almost from the outset that Bryant had the chance to be special. Bryant had a quality that most players his age don't exhibit.

"His drive," Thibodeau said. "He was so driven.

"He was a high school kid, and if he had a day off from school he'd be in the gym from eight in the morning till eight at night. And he was trying to play against the pros and watch everything and lift weights."

Having been around basketball most of his life, Thibodeau knew what he was seeing.

"You knew his talent," Thibodeau continued. "In high school, when he was playing against pros he looked like he belonged with them. You knew he was going to be special. But I think his drive is what really separates him when you combine that drive and intelligence with his talent. It's the top of the line."

Bryant was too young to know anything about Thibodeau's future head coaching prospects. He was just happy a man in Thibodeau's position took a liking to his game and his ability.

"When I was in high school I really didn't know what the hell was going on," Bryant said. "I just knew he was this really nice man who was very knowledgeable about the game and was willing to teach me things. Seeing him [as an assistant with the Boston Celtics], and in Houston before that, you knew that his time was going to come."

http://sports.espn.go.com/chicago/nba/news/story?id=5839022&campaign=rss&source=NBAHeadlines


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