Thursday, May 26, 2011

May 25, 2011, MMA legalization plan and UFC 130 notebook for Metro NYC Newspaper



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Senate-backed MMA delivers its best shot

GETTY IMAGES

Jon Jones and UFC?ring girls are just a couple of the perks of legalizing MMA.

“[The sport] was very barbaric at first. The UFC has come a very long way. ... I do it. Look at my face, I don’t have too many scars.” –Jon Jones, MMA fighter

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DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK

Published:
May 24, 2011 11:26 p.m.
Last modified: May 25, 2011 7:14 a.m.
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The battle to legalize mixed martial arts in New York state has been long and costly. Following a vote Monday, though, it is one step closer to paying off.


After receiving far more support in the state Senate than previous attempts, the bill will now go to the state Assembly. If it passes, fighters like UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones can finally enter the Octagon on their home turf.


“Last year the vote was 32-26, and this time it was 42-18, and we’re excited the decision-makers in New York are looking at this sport for what it is, the safest contact sport in the world,” UFC president Dana White said.


It’s also one of the most profitable. April’s UFC 129 in Toronto set company records for tickets sold (55,000) and gate ($12.1 million). In a January press conference at Madison Square Garden, UFC announced a new study that reported MMA would create $23 million in revenues for New York state, along with job creation. White and UFC majority owner Lorenzo Fertitta also said, if and when MAA is legalized, they plan on producing annual shows at MSG, Buffalo’s HSBC Arena and smaller events in Rochester, Albany and Syracuse.


“It's time to bring the fastest growing sport in the world to New York. We want to thank the State Senate, and we're confident that when Assembly members take an objective look at our safety record, popularity with their constituents and the economic benefits we would bring to the State, they will reach the same conclusion," Fertitta said. "With every passing month, our sport gets more and more popular around the world and we hope UFC fans in New York will finally be able to see live UFC events in their home state soon.”


Saratoga County Assemblyman Bob Reilly, though, has battled the legalization process for years. Reilly said the violence inherent in the sport is damaging to children and has questioned whether the state should do business with the heads of UFC. Reilly told Metro last fall he did not think the sport would ever be legalized in the state.


In January, UFC backer and Assemblyman Dean Murray of Suffolk County said he “had a funny feeling” he and Reilly would discuss legalizing MMA.




Looking ahead to UFC 130 in Vegas


Dana White stood at the dais on the floor of Toronto’s Rogers Centre in the very early hours May 1 and marveled at what the UFC had pulled off.


A whopping 55,000 tickets sold. A $12.075 million gate. The first major mixed martial arts event in the Canadian province, UFC 129, was a record setting event for the organization. White went on to say its success had caused the organization’s decision makers to look favorably upon doing more stadium events.


Still, in the aftermath of one of the greatest nights in UFC history, the organization has suffered some blows. The main event of Saturday night’s main event had to be canceled due to back and rib injuries to lightweight champion Frankie Edgar while challenger Gray Maynard suffered a knee injury. The Quinton “Rampage” Jackson vs. Matt Hamill light heavyweight fight was moved up from the semi-main event to replace Edgar vs. Maynard.


White and Brock Lesnar recently announced that the former heavyweight champion had to pull out of June’s UFC 131 main event No. 1 heavyweight contendership fight against fellow Ultimate Fighter season 13 coach Junior Dos Santos because of a recurrence of diverticulitis.


Without Lesnar for the foreseeable future, UFC has rescheduled the main event of UFC 131. Dos Santos will meet Shane Carwin, while former heavyweight champion Frank Mir will fight Roy Nelson in the semi-main event at UFC 130 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas this Saturday. Almost certainly, the winner will of Mir-Nelson will be in prime position to challenge Dos Santos sometime in 2012.


Somewhat surprisingly, both Mir and Nelson were somewhat critical of Dos Santos, who has won three of his five UFC fights by knockout or TKO. Dos Santos has a career record of 12-1.


“I just think that I'll match up well. As far as dos Santos, (he) is a very good boxer. I think he has excellent hands. I just think sometimes he falls into the pattern of only throwing boxing and not utilizing wrestling and jiu jitsu and all the other skills,” Mir said about a proposed fight against Dos Santos in a conference call last week.


Added Nelson: “You’ve always (have) to be scared of Frank. He’s got a true mix of martial arts. He’s good in every aspect. He’s knocked out (Mirko) Cro Cop. Frank’s even said it—he’s bigger and stronger than Dos Santos, so I’m assuming he hits harder.”


Mir even suggested that his hated rival, Lesnar, would have beaten Dos Santos.


“I just think that it would depend on how Brock recovered from the Cain Velasquez fight, whether he decided that he didn't want to be a striker or if he just came in and wanted to take dos Santos down. I (saw) that happening, and I thought that Dos Santos (was) going to have a hard time with him on the ground,” Mir said when asked his thoughts about how the proposed Lesnar-Dos Santos fight would have played about before acknowledging the opportunity in front of the heavyweights.


“It depends on our performances. Roy's a tough guy. I'm really just looking at that fight. I really haven't given too much thought about what's beyond it. In the past, I caught myself looking past people and I don't want to do that to Roy. He's a pretty tough guy, and I think that anybody that overlooks him ends up having a rough night.”


You can follow us on Twitter @MetroNewYork and @DenisGorman.







http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/870144--senate-backed-mma-delivers-its-best-shot--page0

Monday, May 23, 2011

May 23, 2011, Derek Boogaard death story for Metro NYC Newspaper

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Boogaard's death ruled accidental


NEW YORK
DENIS GORMAN

Published:
May 20, 2011 4:32 p.m.
Last modified: May 23, 2011 4:35 a.m.
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The Hennepin, Minn. County Medical Examiner announced Friday Rangers left wing Derek Boogaard’s death was accidental, caused by combination of alcohol and oxycodone.


The 28-year old Boogaard died last Friday night in his Minneapolis apartment. He was buried over the weekend in Regina, Saskatchewan. Blueshirts teammates Brandon Prust, Michael Del Zotto, Wojtek Wolski and Marc Staal attended the services.


Boogaard was reportedly receiving treatment at the NHL/NHLPA Substance Abuse and Behavioral Health Program, which he entered as a member of the Minnesota Wild in 2009.


“We would like to express our appreciation for the outpouring of love and support for our family during this difficult period as we grieve the loss of Derek – our son and brother. We are deeply saddened by this unimaginable loss, but we are grateful for the expression of support that has given us strength as we go through this tragic time,” the Boogaard family said in a statement released by the National Hockey League’s Players Association. The family has donated his brain to Boston University Medical Center to study the effects of brain injuries to athletes.


“It is very comforting for our family to know that, while Derek’s life was far too short, he had a great impact on many people who he came into contact with. We are proud that Derek was able to live his boyhood dream to play in the National Hockey League. We are even more proud of the fact that Derek was dedicated to making a difference in his adopted communities of Minnesota and New York City, through his countless hours of charitable work.


“Earlier today, we received the results of Derek's toxicology report at the time of his accidental death. After repeated courageous attempts at rehabilitation and with the full support of the New York Rangers, the NHLPA, and the NHL, Derek had been showing tremendous improvement but was ultimately unable to beat this opponent. While he played and lived with pain for many years, his passion for the game, his teammates, and his community work was unstoppable.


“Our family would like to like to thank the New York Rangers, the Minnesota Wild, the National Hockey League Players’ Association, and the National Hockey League for supporting Derek's continued efforts in his battle.


“Derek will be greatly missed and will never be forgotten by his fans, friends, and teammates, and especially by us – his family. We respectfully ask for continued privacy as we grieve the loss of Derek”


Signed a four-year deal worth $6.5 million on July 1, 2010, with the Rangers, Boogaard played in 22 games and recorded a goal, an assist, two points and 45 penalty minutes before his 2010-11 season ended due to concussion symptoms following a fight with Ottawa enforcer Matt Carkner on Dec. 9.


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http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/868128--boogaard-s-death-ruled-accidental

May 23, 2011, New York Mets Subway Series Sunday Seventh inning collapse sidebar for Metro NYC Newspaper






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Pelfrey comes up just short yet again


NEW YORK
DENIS GORMAN

Published:
May 22, 2011 10:24 p.m.
Last modified: May 23, 2011 4:43 a.m.
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Mike Pelfrey had been the ace that the Mets expect him to be for six innings. Then the seventh rolled around.


“It’s frustrating,” Pelfrey said after the Mets’ 9-3 Subway Series loss to the Yankees. Pelfrey (3-4) went six innings-plus, allowed eight hits and five earned runs. He struck out four and walked two as his ERA rose from 5.11 to 5.37.


Thirteen Yankees came to bat in the inning in which they scored eight runs, a season high. Brett Gardner singled and doubled in the inning, while Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez, Robinson Cano and Chris Dickerson recorded base hits.


Leading 3-1 going into the bottom of the seventh, Pelfrey allowed a leadoff single to Gardner and walked Dickerson before hitting Francisco Cervelli in the shoulder as the Yankee catcher attempted a bunt. Cervelli laid motionless at home plate for a minute before jogging to first.


“I’m definitely not trying to hit him there,” Pelfrey said. “Hitting Cervelli is throwing gasoline on the fire.”


Pelfrey and the Mets were burned as Jeter singled up the middle to score Gardner and Dickerson to tie the game at 3-3.


“He was fine,” Terry Collins said of Pelfrey. “I asked him after the sixth how he was doing and he said that he felt great. A ground ball up the middle, two ground balls up the middle, a walk and a hits batsman. You can’t walk guys in this ballpark. You’re going to get in trouble.”


Collins lifted Pelfrey for Tim Byrdak. The left-handed specialist intentionally walked Mark Teixeira to load the bases after Curtis Granderson dropped a sac bunt that moved Cervelli to third and Jeter to second.


The next batter, Alex Rodriguez, entered the game with 22 grand slams in his Hall-of-Fame to be career. He ended the at-bat with 22 grand slams and an infield RBI single off of right-hander Pedro Beato that gave the Yankees a 4-3 lead. Cano, Gardner and Dickerson followed with base hits that increased the advantage to 9-3.


“It was just one of those innings. They swung it and it found a hole. We got ground balls; we got pop-ups that dropped in. Nothing we can do about those,” Collins said. He then explained his thinking as it pertained to loading the bases for Rodriguez.


“I still needed a ground ball and I got a ground ball,” Collins said. “I’m well aware of ARod, who he is, what he is, what he’s been and what he will still be. He’s truly one of the great players that has ever played this game. But situations dictate you try to get out of the inning with a ground ball. That’s why I did it.”


You can follow us on Twitter @MetroNewYork and @DenisGorman


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May 23, 2011, 2011-12 St. John's schedule and transferal of Dwayne Polee for Metro NYC Newspaper



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Johnnies add UK to sked, lose Polee to transfer


NEW YORK
DENIS GORMAN

Published:
May 23, 2011 12:28 a.m.
Last modified: May 23, 2011 4:30 a.m.
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What is the right way to ensure a team of 10 freshmen is prepared for the rigors of a Big East season?


Why, adding Kentucky to a non-conference schedule that includes Duke and UCLA, of course.


St. John’s will play Kentucky at Rupp Arena as part of ESPN’s Big East-SEC Challenge, the network announced Thursday. St. John’s last visited Rupp in the 1985 Final Four and last played Kentucky in the iconic venue December 17, 1977. St. John’s is 5-10 all-time against the Wildcats. The Red Storm won the last game between the historically significant programs, 62-61 at the Coaches vs. Cancer in November 2000.


St. John’s will also participate in the 2K Sports Classic along with Arizona, Texas A&M and Mississippi State.


“It is a unique opportunity for St. John’s to have a non-conference schedule that includes matchups against three of the most-storied programs in the history of college basketball in Kentucky, UCLA and Duke. Facing UK at Rupp Arena in front of a raucous crowd will be a valuable experience in preparation for Big East Conference play. Coupled with our conference slate and our participation in the 2K Sports Classic, this diverse and rigorous schedule will present an outstanding challenge for the youngest team in the country,” Steve Lavin said in a statement released by the school.


The 2010-11 season was a transformational one for St. John’s, which reached the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2002. Lavin guided the senior-laden squad to a 21-12 record which included wins over Top 25 programs Georgetown, Duke, Notre Dame, UConn, Pittsburgh and Villanova.


Heading into 2011-12, the only returnee is junior guard Malik Stith. The school announced Sunday that sophomore forward Dwayne Polee was transferring due to a “health issue” with his family. Polee averaged 4.4 points, 2.5 rebounds, 45.6 percent shooting, 14.9 minutes and played in all 33 games. He started 27.


Lavin’s recruiting class is ranked third in the nation. A finalist for National Coach of the Year, Lavin was signed Queens product Maurice Harkless, Chicago prep point guard Phil Greene, Amir Garrett, D’Angelo Harrison, Norvel Pelle, Sir’Dominic Pointer, Jakarr Samspon, Nurideen Lindsey and JUCO transfer God’s Gift Achiuwan. Achiuwan finished last season averaging 22.3 points, 11.7 rebounds and 2.2 blocks per game for Erie (NY) Community College. He will be expected to provide a post presence, offensively and defensively, for a team that looks to be heavily wing-oriented.



http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/868126--johnnies-add-uk-to-sked-lose-polee-to-transfer