Saturday, April 9, 2011

SPORTS - Minnesota Duluth tops Michigan in OT for 1st title (AP)

SPORTS - Minnesota Duluth tops Michigan in OT for 1st title (AP)
Kloeden wins Tour of Basque country AFP/File – German Andreas Kloden of RadioShack, pictured in action in March 2011, won the Tour of the Basque country …

MADRID (AFP) – German Andreas Kloden of RadioShack won the Tour of the Basque country on Saturday after HTC compatriot Tony Martin took the sixth and final stage - a 24km individual time-trial at Zalla.

Kloden, who previously won the event racing for Deutsche Telekom, placed second on the day as he landed the overall title for the second time after 2000.

The champion, who twice finished runner-up in the Tour de France (2004 and 2006), finished in a total 22hr 12min 11sec, 47sec ahead of US teammate Christopher Horner with Dutchman Robert Gesink of Rabobank completing the podium.

Kloden's time-trial showing was sufficient to gain him the overall accolade despite his failure to win any of the stages across the week.

"The time trial went very well," said Kloden.

"Johan Bruyneel and Jose Azevedo coached me so well in the following car. They had the split times of Tony Martin. I started very fast and the climb went very well for me. I could keep my good pace till the end. Perfect.

"It's unbelievable really that I've won here again after 11 years," added the German.

"But it shows what can happen. You need to be strong mentally and have a nice team. Without the team it's not possible."

Martin, taking his fifth season stage win, bagged the final day's honours in 32min 16sec with Kloden 9sec behind and Italian HTC rider Marco Pinotti third at 24sec.

Spaniard Joaquin Rodriguez, who had led overnight, had a nightmare in the time-trial to see his hopes evaporate - having suffered a similar experience in last year's Tour of Spain.

Rodriguez finally came in 33rd, fully 2min 08sec off the pace as he missed out even on a top ten finish, coming 11th at 1min 59sec.

"The goal of the week here was to win today, and that's what I've achieved," Martin said after his final flourish.

"I had a bit of a break after Paris-Nice and when I started this race I knew that I wasn't going to be at 100 percent straight away."

"But I've ended the race in great condition, and this win is the confirmation."

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SPORTS - Kloeden wins Tour of Basque country (AFP)

SPORTS - Kloeden wins Tour of Basque country (AFP)
Maxim Lapierre, Henrik Karlsson AP – Vancouver Canucks' Maxim Lapierre, right, tries to get the puck past Calgary Flames goalie Henrik Karlsson, …

CALGARY, Alberta – Christian Ehrhoff scored at 2:31 of overtime and the playoff-bound Vancouver Canucks wrapped up the best regular season in franchise history with a 3-2 victory over the Calgary Flames on Saturday night.

After rallying from a 2-0 deficit in the third, the Canucks got the victory when Ehrhoff's slapshot from the blue line beat Henrik Karlsson between his pads. Karlsson was furious after the goal, pleading with the referees that he had been interfered with.

Daniel Sedin had a pair of assists to clinch the NHL scoring race with 41 goals and 63 assists. Twin brother Henrik Sedin won the scoring title last season.

Daniel Sedin's 104 points are the fewest for an Art Ross Trophy winner since Tampa Bay's Marty St. Louis won it with 94 in 2003-04.

Ryan Kesler and Alex Burrows also scored for Vancouver (54-19-9), which finishes the season with a team-record 117 points. The playoffs begin on Wednesday, but the Canucks will not know their first-round opponent until Sunday.

Jarome Iginla and Mikael Backlund scored for Calgary, which missed the playoffs for the second season in a row. Since reaching the Stanley Cup final in 2004, Calgary has either lost in the first round or missed the playoffs entirely.

It was a battle of backups with Cory Schneider drawing the start for the Canucks against Karlsson, who finished with 36 saves in just his second start since Jan. 21.

Vancouver trailed 2-0 heading to the third and after getting outshot 15-2 in the second.

However, the visitors came out flying in the final period, cutting the deficit to 2-1 on Burrows' goal at 2:02.

The Canucks kept pressing and tied it on the power play at 11:05.

The tying goal came compliments of more wizardry with the puck from the Sedin brothers. Daniel crosses the Flames' blue line and sent a behind-the-back pass to Henrik, who slid it over to Kesler for a one-timer that beat Karlsson over his glove.

Karlsson is one of several Flames who may have played their last game in Calgary. Other pending unrestricted free agents include Alex Tanguay, Curtis Glencross, Anton Babchuk and the injured Brendan Morrison.

Schneider made 34 saves to improve to 16-4-2. He played his 25th game of the season, qualifying the rookie to get his name alongside Roberto Luongo's on the William Jennings trophy, which goes to the team that surrenders the fewest goals. Vancouver clinched the trophy for the first time, allowing just 183 goals.

After a scoreless opening 20 minutes, Calgary scored twice in the second.

Iginla opened the scoring on a two-man advantage at 2:39. Tanguay neatly stepped around Kevin Bieksa then dished off a pass to Iginla, who scored his 13th goal in 10 games.

Backlund made it 2-0 just past the midway point in the period, again on the power play. The rookie scored his 10th on a set up in the slot from Mark Giordano.

Notes: Vancouver D Dan Hamhuis (concussion) returned after missing five games. ... Iginla's goal gives him 1,006 career points, tying him with Lanny McDonald for 75th on the NHL's all-time list.

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SPORTS - Is a green jacket headed for Antarctica next? (AP)

SPORTS - Is a green jacket headed for Antarctica next? (AP)
Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland reacts after making a birdie on the 17th hole during the third round of the Masters golf tournament Saturday, April 9 AP – Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland reacts after making a birdie on the 17th hole during the third round …

AUGUSTA, Ga. – One look at the leaderboard reveals what the homers will be loath to acknowledge: North America has as many golfers with a real chance to win the Masters as Antarctica — which is to say none.

Each of the five other continents has at least one representative in the top seven. Europe and Australia have two.

"America is big," South African Charl Schwartzel said, stating the obvious, "but the world is bigger."

Maybe the first sign that the hosts were going to struggle bubbled up when Canadian and former champion Mike Weir missed the cut. And so by sundown Saturday at Augusta National, what remained of the continent's hopes rested on the shoulders of two guys named Bo and Bubba — Van Pelt and Watson, respectively — a still out-of-sorts Tiger Woods and 51-year-old Fred Couples.

Van Pelt is 6 under, but still six strokes back of leader Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland. Four strokes back, but next on the leaderboard is Argentine Angel Cabrera, followed by Schwartzel, South Korean K.J. Choi, Australians Jason Day and Adam Scott and Englishman Luke Donald.

Watson, Woods and Couples are 5 under, Matt Kuchar and Ryan Palmer are 4 under, and it's another two strokes back to defending champion Phil Mickelson.

If none of them manages to pull off an upset — and the largest comeback in Masters history was from eight shots behind, by Jackie Burke in 1956 — it would mark the first time in golf history that the United States has failed to hold at least one of the four major titles or the Ryder Cup.

"I think players are really watching how the other top players are playing," said Choi, who, like many of the overseas players, lives most of the year in the United States — in his case, Houston.

"And the more chances that they have to play abroad, that definitely gives them the experience. Me, personally, I try to practice a lot. I study other players and I do my homework. So I think," he added, "that's what's contributing to the development of the international players."

Choi came to the game late, but more than a few of the international 20-somethings who have turned this year's tournament into a coming-out party have talked about how Woods' dominating win in 1997 was among their first vivid memories of the game and a source of inspiration.

That singular win cast much the same blanket spell over the rest of the world that USA Basketball's "Dream Team" weaved at the 1992 Summer Games in Barcelona. After those Olympics, all of a sudden kids in Lithuania, China and Argentina began dribbling a basketball on their way to the store with one hand and then back using the other — much the same way their counterparts in New York City and all over Indiana had been doing for decades. It changed the NBA forever.

And when Woods followed it up by taking his act to the farther-flung corners of the world, it changed golf as well. Courses popped up and equipment became accessible in places were once they were as scarce as McDonalds. Yet it was, in a sense, the amplification of the echo that Jack Nicklaus sent out before TV and computers reached into every remote corner of the world.

More than once, in trying to explain the success of Europeans at the Masters two decades ago, three-time champion Nick Faldo of England talked about how as a kid, he planned his days around a delayed broadcast of one of Nicklaus' wins on the telly. After he won, former champion Vijay Singh of Fiji recalled how his father, who worked at the lone airstrip on the island, bargained with pilots for a copy of one of Nicklaus' instructional videos, and how they were among the most prized possessions of his childhood.

The reasons for the emergence of the internationals are many. But as Schwartzel pointed out, the sheer number of people playing the game beyond these shores predicted that days like this — and many more — were on the way.

The British owned the game during the 19th century and Americans most of the last one. But with golf finally locking up a spot on the Olympic menu for the 2016 Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro, it virtually guarantees that China, India and any of several other of this century's emerging powers will dominate it.

Get used to it.

___

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org

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SPORTS - McIlroy leads Masters, staying cool on hot day (AP)

SPORTS - McIlroy leads Masters, staying cool on hot day (AP)
Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland tees off at the first hole during the third round of the Masters golf tournament Saturday, April 9, 2011, in Augusta, AP – Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland tees off at the first hole during the third round of the Masters golf …

AUGUSTA, Ga. – It was a roar that defines the Masters, so loud it startled even Tiger Woods.

Rory McIlroy, who already dazzled the crowd with a shot through the pines to the back of the 17th green, raised the putter in his left hand as the birdie putt turned toward the hole, then slammed his right fist when the ball disappeared into the cup.

The cheer was so clamorous that Woods, who had settled over his shot in the 18th fairway, had to back away. After all these years of crushing the hopes of so many others, the four-time Masters champ finally felt what it was like on the other end.

That moment — and right now, this Masters — belongs to McIlroy.

"I had been waiting on a putt to drop all day," McIlroy said Saturday. "And for it to drop there, it was great timing."

It sent the 21-year-old from Northern Ireland to a 2-under 70 and gave him a four-shot lead going into Sunday, the largest 54-hole lead at the Masters since a 21-year-old Woods led by nine in 1997.

Woods is not close to him after a 74 to finish seven shots behind. Chasing after McIlroy are former Masters champion Angel Cabrera, Charl Schwartzel, K.J. Choi and Jason Day.

"It's a great position to be in," McIlroy said. "I feel comfortable with my game, comfortable with the way I prepared, and all of a sudden I'm finally feeling comfortable on this golf course. With a combination like that, you're going to feel pretty good."

He is making it look easy.

That bounce in his step turned into a swagger as he walked to the 18th tee, ripped another drive and walked toward the green to a loud ovation — perhaps a preview to a coronation.

Following him around Augusta National was U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell, who missed the cut but didn't want to miss out on his countryman having a chance to give Europe another major.

"He just texted me and told me he loves me," McIlroy said. "I don't know if that's him or the beer talking. No, it's great to see him out there and I appreciate his support. He's going to know how I'm feeling. Here's a major champion and he got it done last year at Pebble. Hopefully, I can emulate that feeling and get a major myself."

McIlroy was at 12-under 204 and will play in the final group Sunday with Cabrera, who won the Masters two years ago and is the only major champion within six shots of McIlroy.

Cabrera has fallen to No. 97 in the world, with only two top 10s in the last year. He didn't think he had much of a chance when he arrived at Augusta. But he's starting to believe after a 67.

"Now that I see that I'm playing well, I sure think I can do it," Cabrera said.

The group at 8-under 208 also includes Schwartzel (68), Choi (71) and Day, the 23-year-old Australian who took the lead on the front nine with a long birdie on No. 5, but paid for his aggressive putting and had to settle for a 72.

"I'm not getting ahead of myself," McIlroy said. "I know how leads can dwindle very quickly. I have to go out there tomorrow, not take anything for granted, and go out and play as hard as I've played the last three days. If I can do that, hopefully things will go by way."

The challenge from Woods, who started the third round only three shots behind, never materialized.

He squandered birdie chances with a fairway metal that went too long on the par-5 eighth, a 5-foot birdie putt that never had a chance on No. 9, a shocking miss for par from 2 feet on No. 11 and a three-putt par on the 15th after an amazing hook around the trees that barely cleared the water.

"The way he played yesterday, you would expect him to come and play well," McIlroy said. "Sometimes it happens, and sometimes it doesn't. But as I said, I really don't care about anyone else in this golf tournament, other than myself."

Woods ended his streak of 16 rounds at par or better at a major he won four times.

The final hole summed up his day, perhaps the tournament, and the state of golf as it prepares for the next generation.

For so many years, it was Woods who delivered big birdies that made everyone else take notice. This time, it was McIlroy who forced Woods to back off. He then hit his approach over the green and missed a 6-foot par putt.

"I just made nothing," Woods said. "I hit the ball well all day. That wasn't the problem. Take away the two three-putts there, a couple of unforced errors and it should have been a pretty good round."

McIlroy didn't have to make any such excuses.

He has made only three bogeys over three rounds, and no three-putts, always a key at the Masters. He and Day were tied for the lead at 9 under as they made their way through Amen Corner, and McIlroy seized control on the 13th.

A bold tee shot down the left side, where Rae's Creek winds its way along the azaleas, gave McIlroy a clear shot with a 6-iron on the green and he two-putted for a birdie. Day attacked the flag in the back left corner and went long, into the second cut. His delicate chip rolled back toward him, he putted up the slope about 6 feet below the hole and missed the putt to make bogey.

Day fell further behind as McIlroy played well beyond his 21 years.

The Australian was saved on the par-5 15th when his shot came up short, but stayed dry because the grass is not shaved as low as it normally is. He was able to get up-and-down for birdie to match another two-putt birdie by McIlroy.

On the 16th, both were on the bottom shelf. Day gunned his putt about 6 feet past the hole and missed it coming back. McIlroy rolled his with better pace to pick up an easy par, and another stroke.

Then came the 17th, where McIlroy hooked his approach around the pines to the back of the green, then holed the slick putt that unleashed his emotions and set off the loudest roar of the day.

It was the third straight day for McIlroy and Day to play in the same group. Saturday was different, though, and as both tried to get into position for a green jacket, there was a lot less chatter.

"I still went out there and had fun," Day said. "Obviously, I made a few disappointing choices. But I'm going to go out there tomorrow and I've got a game plan that I want to stick to. And if I can do that and hole some putts, hopefully I can try and chase them down."

Missing from the pack are the Americans. Bo Van Pelt was the low American after a 68 put him in eighth place, six shots behind. Woods was in the group seven shots behind along with 51-year-old Fred Couples and Bubba Watson.

If an international player wins, it will be the first time ever that Americans did not own any of the four majors or the Ryder Cup.

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SPORTS - Kenseth ends 76-race drought with Texas win (AP)

SPORTS - Kenseth ends 76-race drought with Texas win (AP)
Matt Kenseth AP – Matt Kenseth (17) drives out of Turn 4 during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race at Texas Motor Speedway …

FORT WORTH, Texas – Matt Kenseth can quit wondering. He is still good enough to win.

After going 76 races without a win, Kenseth finally got back into Victory Lane with a dominating run at Texas Motor Speedway on Saturday night when the entire Roush Fenway team was outstanding.

"As you start to get a little older and start looking up at the results, it's been over two years since we won," Kenseth said. "You can't help but think, is the way it's going to go? Are we going to keep trickling backwards?"

Kenseth led 169 of 334 laps at the 1 1/2-mile, high-banked track for his 19th career victory, his first since California in February 2009 when he won the first two races of that season. Since his other win at Texas in 2002, Kenseth had four runner-up finishes, including last fall behind Denny Hamlin, and six other top-10 finishes at the track.

"It has been a long time," Kenseth said. "I have lost a lot of close ones at this track. It feels good to be able to close it out."

This time, the No. 17 Roush Fenway Ford was only trailing late behind Tony Stewart and Kurt Busch when both of those drivers were out of sequence on stops and trying to stretch fuel in hopes of catching a caution. Lucky for Kenseth, there were no yellow flags at the wrong time.

Kenseth went back ahead to stay with 13 laps to go when Busch had to make his final stop and give up a 8.2-second lead. Kenseth finished 8.315 seconds ahead of Clint Bowyer on warm and windy night for the first Texas race under the lights.

"One of the hottest times I've ever had in a car," Bowyer said. "More than anything, my feet were burning up."

Edwards, Kenseth's teammate, joked that he was "hopped up on Pepto Bismol" because of an upset stomach from something he ate earlier in the day. He also dealt with a loose car all night, but still finished third to take over the series points lead by nine over Kyle Busch.

"I was a little sick this morning. I thought I was alright. But my stomach was messed up about 50 laps in. My mom made a dish and I think one of the ingredients was bad," Edwards said. "We were trying really hard to get the car right and we never did. That's why I was happy with third."

It was a weekend sweep in the Lone Star State for car owner Jack Roush after Edwards won the Nationwide race Friday night. Roush has 16 NASCAR wins in Texas — eight in Cup, seven in Nationwide and one in Trucks.

All four of Roush's drivers finished in the top seven Saturday night. Greg Biffle was fourth and polesitter David Ragan seventh, the best finish of the year for both.

"I'm really proud of what we've been able to do in 2011," Roush said. "I can't say how proud I am to be here with Matt. He hasn't gotten the success that his effort deserved in the recent past."

Kenseth led nine times and won with an average speed of 149.234 mph. The race featured 31 lead changes among 13 drivers.

Stewart had gone 58 laps since his last stop with 58 laps to go, and had nearly a 17-second lead over Kenseth and more than 19 seconds over Bowyer when he made his stop.

Any chance for a victory ended when Stewart got penalized for speeding on pit road. He finished 12th, the last driver on the lead lap even though he coasted across the finish line after running out of fuel.

Kurt Busch, who led five times for 50 laps, finished 10th. It was his fifth top-10 finish this season, his best being fifth in the season opener at Daytona.

"Just a hard-fought battle all night," Kurt Busch said. "Overall, we got off-sequence which might have helped preserve that top 10. It's tough. We want to compete for top fives and wins and we're only getting top 10s right now."

While Kenseth had led only five laps in the first six races this season, he got to Texas coming off three consecutive finishes in the top six and had been in the top 12 for every race since an accident in the season-opening Daytona 500 led to a 34th-place finish.

Kenseth became the career laps leader at Texas, pushing his total to 669 laps in 18 starts.

The first night race of the season was also the first at Texas, which hosted its 21st Sprint Cup race since the track opened in 1997.

Hamlin finished 15th and Kevin Harvick 20th, both being denied trifectas.

Harvick had won the last two Cup races this season at Martinsville and California. Hamlin swept both races at Texas last season and was trying to become the first driver to win three consecutive Cup races at the track.

Both had problems early in the race, Harvick getting a penalty in the pits on the first stop and Hamlin with some power problems in his car.

After a runner-up finish last week at Martinsville, Dale Earnhardt Jr. had another strong run and finished ninth. But his winless streak was extended to 100 races since winning in Michigan nearly three years ago. That was his only win in 115 starts since joining Hendrick Motorsports, a span in which teammate Jimmie Johnson has won three season championships.

Johnson finished eighth at Texas, just ahead of Earnhardt.

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SPORTS - Midnight Interlude wins Santa Anita Derby (AP)

SPORTS - Midnight Interlude wins Santa Anita Derby (AP)
Victor Espinoza, Corey Nakatani AP – ** ALTERNATE CROP ** Midnight Interlude, front left, ridden by Victor Espinoza, edges ahead of Comma …

ARCADIA, Calif. – A year ago, Bob Baffert was seething after favorite Lookin At Lucky ran a troubled third in the Santa Anita Derby. What a difference 12 months makes.

The Hall of Fame trainer was all smiles when Midnight Interlude scored a surprising victory in the $1 million race Saturday, suddenly giving Baffert a third option for the Kentucky Derby.

"We weren't sure," he said about the unproven colt. "He'd been training well, but he hadn't had the class test, gut-check yet."

Midnight Interlude got it in the stretch, rallying under Victor Espinoza to overhaul Comma to the Top and win by a head in the West's biggest prep for the May 7 Kentucky Derby. Midnight Interlude ran 1 1-8 miles in 1:48.66.

"I'm not even feeling it yet. I can't believe it," said Ellen Zetcher, who bred and owns the colt with her husband, Arnold.

The victory represented a dramatic turnaround for Baffert and Espinoza from last April. That's when Lookin At Lucky got squeezed down along the rail, forcing Garrett Gomez to stand up in the saddle.

Gomez accused Espinoza, riding a horse called Who's Up, of bouncing him off the rail. He went after Espinoza after the race, landing punches before the two were separated and later went at it again in the jockeys' room.

Baffert was furious at Gomez for putting his horse into that spot, and he wasn't too pleased with Espinoza.

"I told Victor, `A year ago I wanted to kill you. Now you win the Santa Anita Derby,'" Baffert said, smiling.

Last year, Baffert's wife, Jill, lit into Espinoza, asking why he tried to unseat Gomez. Espinoza repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, but the damage to his long relationship with Baffert was done.

The two, who won the 2002 Kentucky Derby with War Emblem, drifted even further apart, having previously butted heads. But when Baffert needed a rider for Midnight Interlude, he called Espinoza's agent, and the jockey was back in the fold, riding for Baffert for the first time since Santa Anita's meeting opened Dec. 26.

"They know I still respect them," Baffet said of the riders. "My wife was upset because she was worried Lookin At Lucky could have gotten hurt and I was mad because he (Gomez) shouldn't have been in that spot."

Now, Baffert and Espinoza are headed to the Derby together.

"We've always been lucky and I think this year we're going to go forward again," the jockey said. "I'm just excited to be back. We're old-timers, huh, Bob."

It was Espinoza's first Santa Anita Derby win, and Baffert's record sixth. Jill Baffert was in Arkansas on Saturday, watching her horse lose in the Oaklawn Handicap.

"She's so excited," he said. "She needed a picker-upper."

Sent off at 13-1 odds by the crowd of 31,523, Midnight Interlude paid $29.80, $12 and $6. It was Baffert's third win on the day's card.

Midnight Interlude was the least accomplished of Baffert's Kentucky Derby possibilities, having lost his first two races before winning for the first time by 8 1/2 lengths on March 20.

"Up until Midnight Interlude won, Ellen wouldn't even let me mention the Kentucky Derby," Arnold Zetcher said. "When it happened, I had to go confirm with Bob, `Are we really going to the Kentucky Derby?' and he said, `Yes.'"

The Factor has garnered most of the attention for the three-time Kentucky Derby-winning trainer, and if he runs impressively in next weekend's Arkansas Derby, he could give Baffert the favorite for the Run for the Roses.

That role was supposed to belong to Uncle Mo, who lost for the first time Saturday, finishing third in a stunning defeat in the Wood Memorial.

Jaycito was supposed to run Saturday in the Santa Anita Derby, which would have given Baffert two starters, but was scratched a day earlier because of a foot injury. If Jaycito recovers, Baffert plans to run him in the April 23 Coolmore Lexington Stakes at Keeneland for his final Derby prep.

If all three make it to Louisville, he will have his hands full Derby week.

"I love that. I wish I had the whole field," he said, smiling.

Comma to the Top, who led most of the way, returned $9.20 and $5.80.

Trainer Peter Miller had already said Comma to the Top wasn't going to run on the first Saturday in May, and he reaffirmed that after the race.

Mr. Commons was another 2 1/4 lengths back in third and paid $3.60 to show. He was ridden by Mike Smith and trained by John Shirreffs, who were part of Zenyatta's team.

Silver Medallion, the 5-2 favorite ridden by Gomez, was fourth.

"I thought Garrett gave him a great chance and I was disappointed that he didn't pick it up from there," trainer Steve Asmussen said. "It was a little crowded going into the first turn, but it sorted out perfectly for us, and he didn't take advantage of it. I thought Garrett gave him every chance."

Anthony's Cross was fifth, followed by Indian Winter, Bench Points, Quail Hill and Offlee Wild Boys.

In the day's other stakes, Liberian Freighter won the $150,000 Arcadia Stakes by a half-length; Cambina took the $150,000 Providencia Stakes by three-quarters of a length; and Separate Forest earned a neck win in the $100,000 Las Cienegas Handicap.

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SPORTS - Spurs cruise to 111-102 win over Jazz (Reuters)

SPORTS - Spurs cruise to 111-102 win over Jazz (Reuters)
Minnesota Duluth players and fans celebrate after defeating Michigan 3-2 during overtime of the NCAA Frozen Four college hockey championship game in S AP – Minnesota Duluth players and fans celebrate after defeating Michigan 3-2 during overtime of the NCAA …

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Minnesota Duluth's players recently decided to dye their hair blond.

Everyone except Kyle Schmidt, who had the getting-married alibi to abstain from the not-so-fashionable exercise in team bonding.

The finish was fitting, then, when Schmidt whisked in the winning goal 3:22 into overtime to give the Bulldogs a 3-2 victory over Michigan on Saturday night for the first national championship in the program's 50-year history.

Coach Scott Sandelin wryly prodded Schmidt to say yes when asked if sitting out the ritual was the secret.

"Blond hair or just the tips, either way, I think I would've buried that one and luckily I did," Schmidt said.

This was the 15th overtime game this season for the Bulldogs.

"I didn't really do a whole lot. My linemates were working their butts off there in the corner. Luckily it was a gimme because I was probably too nervous to bury anything else," said Schmidt, a senior from Hermantown, near Duluth. "Saw it go in and just started skating for the other end. It was amazing."

Travis Oleksuk pulled Wolverines goalie Shawn Hunwick to the side and, from behind the net, fed Schmidt for a blink-of-the-eye tap-in to hand Michigan coach Red Berenson his first loss in a championship game.

"I just didn't get over across in time," Hunwick said.

Oleksuk and Max Tardy had second-period goals for Minnesota Duluth (26-10-6), which hadn't played for the championship since losing in four overtimes to Bowling Green in 1984.

"We know what to do to get it done," said forward J.T. Brown, picked as the tournament's most outstanding player.

This has been quite the school year at UMD on the hill above Lake Superior, just a 2 1/2-hour drive north from the Xcel Energy Center, with the football team winning the Division II championship. Hockey is the time-worn way to endure those long, harsh winters, and this trophy was a long time coming for a team that has been in the University of Minnesota's shadow for decades.

"It's been a long time coming for them," Berenson said. "They've got a good coaching staff, and they've got a good team. They're a better team than we thought they were all year."

Ben Winnett and Jeff Rohrkemper scored for Michigan (29-11-4), which fell to 9-3 in title games. The Wolverines still have the NCAA record of nine, with two of those under Berenson.

"It's the opportunity of a lifetime gone in the blink of an eye," Rohrkemper said.

The Bulldogs handed the Wolverines just their second loss all season when scoring the game's first goal (22-2-3).

After going 8 for 23 in prior opportunities in the NCAA tournament, the Bulldogs were 1 for 9 on the power play in regulation. The Wolverines, who killed all five penalties against North Dakota in the semifinals, deftly pressured the point men and kept UMD from getting many clean shots. But that took a lot of energy.

"Just too many penalties. Were they good penalties? I can't tell you what I really think," said Berenson, who thought his team played with some jitters at times. The Wolverines were on their heels more than they wanted to be and were outshot 38-24.

Said Hunwick: "In the overtime anything can happen, but it was a strong defensive effort."

The Wolverines were denied the lead early in the first period when Chris Brown's point-blank poke was waved off (the video review confirmed the official's whistle came before the puck was pried loose from goalie Kenny Reiter), but they kept at it and scored 5:18 into the game when Winnett's screened shot off the draw zipped past Reiter's stick.

Winnett had only three goals during the regular season, but he scored in both games at the Frozen Four.

Oleksuk evened the score just 1:39 after the first intermission when his rebound nicked the thigh pad of Mac Bennett, skipped over the Wolverines defenseman and into the corner out of Hunwick's reach.

Then Tardy scored the first goal of his college career on a power play to make it 2-1, before Rohrkemper snagged a loose rebound and sent it in to tie the game later in the second period.

A "UMD! UMD!" chants filled the sold-out arena, another reminder that this was essentially a second straight road game for the Wolverines after playing in front of a pro-North Dakota crowd in the semifinal. In homage to the UMD players and their bleached hair, four fans held up signs that read, "Blonds have more fun."

Michigan never looked fazed, though, just like their stone-faced, crewcut, 72-year-old boss on the bench. Berenson, who guided the Wolverines to national titles in 1996 and 1998, finished his 27th season coaching his alma mater.

The Bulldogs were the fourth straight Western Collegiate Hockey Association foe the Wolverines faced in this year's tournament, beating Nebraska-Omaha, Colorado College and North Dakota to get here. Michigan left the WCHA in 1981 for the Central Collegiate Hockey Association.

"That's how the game goes. It doesn't always go your way," Wolverines defenseman Greg Pateryn said. "We are all disappointed and sad but we're still moving forward. Our time will come, I guess."

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SPORTS - Key hole in third round of the Masters (AP)

SPORTS - Key hole in third round of the Masters (AP)
Will Power AP – Driver Will Power takes the pole for the second time in the Honda Grand Prix of Alabama on Saturday, …

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Will Power is on the pole again for the IndyCar Grand Prix of Alabama.

Power claimed his second pole in two races this season and second straight at Barber Motorsports Park on Saturday, posting a fast lap of 1 minute, 11.46 seconds in the Fast Six competition.

He'll start on the inside of the front row Sunday, next to Penske teammate Ryan Briscoe. Scott Dixon and Penske's Helio Castroneves start on the second row. Justin Wilson and Oriol Servia will share the third row.

St. Petersburg winner Dario Franchitti starts seventh while Danica Patrick will open in the 22nd spot in the 26-team field.

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SPORTS - Lawyers for NFL, players talk mediation with judge (AP)

SPORTS - Lawyers for NFL, players talk mediation with judge (AP)
David Boies AP – NFL attorney David Boies, center at microphone, addresses the media outside a federal courthouse after …

ST. PAUL, Minn. – The locked-out NFL players don't want to go back to collective bargaining with the league. They have now made a move to allow their former union boss to be present if court-supervised talks take place between the two sides.

Attorneys for the NFL and the players held a conference call Friday to discuss mediation with U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson, who is currently deciding whether to lift the lockout.

League spokesman Greg Aiello confirmed the call took place and said Nelson wanted details to remain private. Jeffrey Kessler, a lawyer for the players, declined to comment.

The most notable development Friday was the formal addition of DeMaurice Smith as an attorney for the players. Smith is the executive director of the NFL Players Association, which is now officially a trade association and not a union. Lawyers who practice in a different state must file for approval through the court.

NFLPA spokesman Carl Francis confirmed that the move allows Smith to participate in any mediation sessions that might take place under Nelson's supervision.

After a hearing Wednesday on the players' request for an injunction to stop the lockout, Nelson urged both sides to resume talks toward a new labor pact. Negotiations broke down last month.

Both sides expressed a willingness to talk again after the hearing, but the NFL wants to resume negotiations before a federal mediator in Washington while the players prefer to remain in Nelson's court.

Lawyers from each side sent letters to each other and to Nelson outlining their stances.

"The purpose of the mediation would be to negotiate a settlement not only of the issues raised in the complaints, but also the many other issues that must be resolved to permit the upcoming season to be played and for the league to operate effectively," wrote David Boies, an attorney for the NFL.

He also said the federal mediator has a 16-day "head start" on the issues.

Barbara Berens, a lawyer for the players, spelled out support of Nelson's offer to supervise.

"We think this is an excellent suggestion and are prepared to engage in such mediation without delay," Berens wrote.

The players voted to dissolve the union and filed an antitrust lawsuit against the league last month, and owners declared a lockout. The players say the lockout is illegal, and the owners say the decertification of the union was a negotiating ploy.

No fresh talks have occurred since the expiration of the previous CBA on March 11.

___

AP Sports Writer Jon Krawczynski contributed to this report.

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SPORTS - Uncle Mo a no show in Wood, runs 3rd in huge upset (AP)

SPORTS - Uncle Mo a no show in Wood, runs 3rd in huge upset (AP)
Eddie Castro Toby's Corner, Ramon Dominguez, Arthur's Tale, Uncle Mo, John Velazquez AP – Jockey Eddie Castro rides Toby's Corner, right, to victory in the Wood Memorial horse race ahead of Ramon …

NEW YORK – The sight of Uncle Mo being passed by not one, but two horses in the stretch of the Wood Memorial silenced the hundreds of fans gathered at the rail at Aqueduct ready to cheer him on to another victory.

Uncle Mo inexplicably failed to produce his usual race-ending burst of speed, though, and finished third behind Toby's Corner and Arthur's Tale in one of the biggest upsets in the 87-year history of the Grade 1 Wood.

"I'm as depressed now as I am after (losing) a $25,000 claimer," Uncle Mo's owner Mike Repole said. "That's why you have to run the races, whether you are 1-9 or 9-1, or whatever the winner was. ... The horse didn't fire today."

Secretariat's loss to stablemate Angle Light in 1973 is considered the biggest upset in Wood history, but this one is pretty close after all the prerace buildup centering on Uncle Mo.

Repole said he watched the movie "Secretariat" on Friday night.

"It was probably a stupid idea," he said. "Maybe he has an abscess on his tooth (like Secretariat). I'm going to check it later."

Trainer Todd Pletcher, who won last year's Derby with Super Saver, said he was more disappointed then shocked.

"I was a little concerned turning for home at the 3-16th pole when he didn't really kick clear," Pletcher said. "I thought then that we were going to be in for a fight. You could see the last 50-60 yards he was tired."

Uncle Mo won his first four races by a combined 27 lengths, but now the Kentucky Derby in four weeks likely will have a new favorite, although it's tough to pick one at this point. In the past three days, two contenders were taken off the Derby trail with injuries (Premier Pegasus and To Honor and Serve) and Jaycito was scratched from Saturday's Santa Anita Derby.

With John Velazquez aboard, 1-10 favorite Uncle Mo controlled most of the 1 1-8-mile race against what was supposed to be a weak field. But when the 10 3-year-olds turned for home in the $1 million Wood, Uncle Mo on the inside was first passed by Arthur's Tale, and then Toby's Corner shot through between them and won by a neck. Uncle Mo was another length back in third.

"Oh, I'm surprised," winning trainer Graham Motion said, adding that owner Dianne Cotter hadn't even discussed going to the Derby.

He added: "We're going, as long as he's doing fine. It's obviously a very wide open group and I kind of think he ranks right up there with the top ones."

Not one of Uncle Mo's rivals was given much of a chance in the Wood, but Toby's Corner's bloodlines said he deserved a chance.

The chestnut colt is a son of Bellamy Road, who won the 2005 Wood by a record 17 lengths. Cotter bred both horses.

"Oh, I was very surprised, but there's always hope," Cotter said. "His daddy won much more impressively. To think this could happen ... I can't stop laughing. It's just such a wonderful feeling. Graham did such a wonderful job, and Eddie (Castro) rode him just perfectly today. It's just been heaven."

Toby's Corner was the 8-1 second choice, and was coming off a third-place finish in the Gotham Stakes last month at Aqueduct.

Uncle Mo will head to the Derby if he's healthy.

"It goes without saying that if he wins by 10 today he goes in there (the Derby) with quite a bit different morning line than he is now," Pletcher said. "It doesn't mean we're not going to go, it doesn't mean we are going to go.

"We'll see how he comes out of it and make sure he's physically OK, that's a priority."

Norman Asbjornson was fourth, followed by Isn't He Perfect, Starship Caesar, Son of Posse, Preachintothedevil and Duca.

Toby's Corner returned $19.40, $7 and $2.50. Arthur's Tale paid $11 and $3.30, and Uncle Mo returned $2.10 to show. The winning time was 1:49.93.

Toby's Corner earned $600,000 to boost his earnings to $722,240.

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SPORTS - Ehrhoff scores in OT to lift Canucks over Flames (AP)

SPORTS - Ehrhoff scores in OT to lift Canucks over Flames (AP)
Japan's Nishikori reaches second ATP final AFP/Getty Images/File – Japan's Kei Nishikori, pictured in March 2011, advanced to the second final of his career by beating …

HOUSTON, Texas (AFP) – Japan's Kei Nishikori advanced to the second final of his career by beating Pablo Cuevas 6-3, 7-5 in the semi-finals of the ATP Tour's US Clay Court Championships on Saturday.

Sixth-seeded Nishikori put away Uruguay's Cuevas with a forehand winner on the second match point to reach the final, where he will face American wild card Ryan Sweeting.

"I played great today. My serve was not well but otherwise, grinding a lot and it was hot and humid, but I think I battled through," Nishikori said.

The 21-year-old Nishikori broke seventh seeded Cuevas in the fifth and 11th games of the second set before serving for the match.

Nishikori is hoping that a victory in Sunday's final will help bring awareness to the charities he has set up to help the victims in the wake of his homeland's earthquake/tsunami disaster.

"It's not like I can promise to win, but I hope I can win tomorrow and give a little hope," said Nishikori. "It is always on my mind but when it comes to a match I have to concentrate on one thing."

World number 61 Nishikori had two aces and three double faults and won 71 percent of first serve points to reach his first final since winning at Delray Beach three years ago.

A win over Sweeting would make Nishikori the highest ranked Japanese player in history, moving him past Shuzo Matsuoka who in 1992 reached 46 in the world.

"The ranking comes if I play well," Nishikori said.

Sweeting advanced to his first ATP final with a 7-6 (7/3) 6-3 win over hard-serving Croatian Ivo Karlovic.

Sweeting is the first wild card to reach the tournament final since Mardy Fish did it in 2006. American No. 1 and top seed Fish was sent crashing out of the tournament by Nishikori in the quarter-finals.

Sweeting sealed his win with a blistering forehand against Karlovic, who looked tired after needing more than three hours to beat John Isner in Friday's quarter-final.

"At first you have the nerves in closing out a match but I feel like I've been in this position enough times to get good wins," Sweeting said. "I just concentrated on staying focussed.

"It was crucial for me to get the first set. I gave him a little blow. He's such a big guy it's never each to come back. He seemed to struggle in the second set."

Karlovic, the winner here in 2007, did hammer one serve 219 kph (136 mph) to take a 3-2 lead in the first set tiebreaker. Karlovic was playing his seventh match in eight days.

"It was hot and I was really tired," Karlovic said. "This morning I could not inhale normally. It was not easy but it was a good week. We'll see what is going on next.

"Today was not my best."

Karlovic escaped one match point in the eighth game of the second set and had his serve broken for just the third time in the event in the sixth game of the second.

He finished with 56 aces for the tournament, four shy of Pete Sampras' tournament record.

Nishikori won his only previous match against Sweeting earlier this year at Delray Beach.

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SPORTS - Penn, Fitch fight to draw at UFC 127 (AP)

SPORTS - Penn, Fitch fight to draw at UFC 127 (AP)
Jacques Rogge AP – President of the IOC Jacques Rogge in conversation ahead of an IOC board meeting in London, Wednesday, …

LONDON – The IOC and U.S. Olympic Committee made more progress Thursday in negotiations on a new revenue-sharing agreement and hope to sign a deal by July.

USOC chairman Larry Probst and CEO Scott Blackmun met with the three-man International Olympic Committee negotiating team in the latest talks aimed at resolving the long-festering financial dispute that has strained relations.

"We had a very positive meeting," IOC marketing commission chairman Gerhard Heiberg told The Associate Press. "They had a proposal. We had a counterproposal. We will study this and see how we proceed. We are getting closer and closer to finding an end solution. Hopefully we will find a solution as soon as possible."

The sides will meet again next month in Lausanne, Switzerland, and "hopefully" complete an agreement before the IOC general assembly in early July in Durban, South Africa, Heiberg said.

It's the first time any IOC or USOC official has spoken about completing a deal so soon.

"We need this agreement," Heiberg said. "It's in the interest of everybody."

Blackmun also was upbeat about progress in negotiations.

"Our discussions with them are going well," he told the AP. "They appear to be headed in a positive direction. We're having very constructive discussions."

The USOC receives 20 percent of global sponsorship revenues and nearly 13 percent of U.S. broadcast rights deals — figures many international officials consider too high.

International resentment over the USOC's share was considered a key factor in Chicago's first-round loss in the IOC vote in 2009 for the 2016 Olympics, which were awarded to Rio de Janeiro.

The two sides agreed last year to negotiate a new formula that will take effect in 2020. The negotiations were originally scheduled to begin in 2013, but officials agreed last year to start as soon as possible. The first round of talks was held in January in Lausanne.

"We weren't even going to begin these discussions until 2013, so the mere fact that we're having them is a positive sign," Blackmun said.

A first breakthrough on financial issues came in September when the USOC agreed to contribute about $18 million toward the administrative costs of staging the 2010 and 2012 Olympic Games.

Apart from Heiberg, the IOC negotiating team includes finance commission chairman Richard Carrion and director general Christophe De Kepper.

The talks Thursday mark another step in the concerted efforts by Probst and Blackmun to mend ties with the IOC and rebuild relations with the international Olympic movement. The two men have traveled the world and appeared at numerous international meetings in the past year, including this week's SportAccord convention in London.

"One of the most newsworthy things is that it's no longer newsworthy when Larry and I show up at these events," Blackmun said. "I think that's a good thing."

On another USOC-IOC issue, Blackmun welcomed moves to seek a ruling from the Court of Arbitration for Sport on an anti-doping rule that could prevent American runner LaShawn Merritt from defending his 400-meter title at next year's London Olympics.

The IOC has a rule that bars any athlete with a doping suspension of at least six months from competing in the next Olympics.

Merritt received a 21-month suspension last year after testing positive for a banned substance found in a male enhancement product.

The American Arbitration Association panel that banned Merritt contested the IOC rule, saying it goes against the World Anti-Doping Agency code and would essentially extend his ban to three years. The IOC says it is not a sanction but an eligibility issue.

"We have two separate rulings — one from the IOC basically saying that he's not eligible and one by an arbitrator in the United States saying we have to let him compete, so those two rulings are directly in conflict with each other," Blackmun said.

The IOC and USOC are working on submitting a joint application to CAS in Switzerland.

"I'm very hopeful in the near term there will be proceedings that end the uncertainty that exists," Blackmun said. "We fully support the IOC in their efforts to have the strictest possible anti doping rules. In this case, we have some uncertainty that we need to get clarified and we're working with the IOC to try to do that."

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SPORTS - Japan's Nishikori reaches second ATP final (AFP)

SPORTS - Japan's Nishikori reaches second ATP final (AFP)
Erik Morales, Marcos Maidana AP – Erik Morales, right, of Mexico, punches Marcos Maidana, of Argentina, during their WBA interim junior …

LAS VEGAS – Marcos Maidana outpointed five-time world champion Erik Morales on Saturday night to win the vacant WBA interim super lightweight title.

Two judges scored the bout 116-112 for Maidana (30-2) and the other had it even at 114.

"This was my toughest fight yet," Maidana said. "But I knew it would be difficult so I trained hard and was prepared. ... The fight was close but I came on strong in the end and feel I won the fight."

Maidana came out strong, dominating the older, slower Morales (51-7) in the first few rounds. By the end of the second round Morales' right eye was swollen shut.

Morales, a heavy underdog, appeared to be far past his prime in the early rounds, but was able to rally in the middle rounds to keep the fight close.

"He may have won a close fight but it wasn't a clean win for him," Morales said. "I thought I landed the better punches. I thought I won. I know I still had speed and velocity, but more importantly I had heart."

In the co-main event, Robert Guerrero unanimously outpointed Michael Katsidis to take the vacant WBA and WBO interim lightweight titles. Guerrero, the former IBF featherweight and super-featherweight champion, had winning scores of 117-108, 118-106, 118-107 from the judges in the 12-round bout.

"I feel great," Guerrero said. "I won two titles tonight. I'm a warrior and I'm ready to fight anyone."

Guerrero solidified his position as one of the top lightweights in the world, outslugging Katsidis and leaving his face battered.

On the undercard, former IBF junior welterweight champion Paulie Malignaggi earned a lopsided unanimous decision over Jose Miguel Cotto, Nobuhiro Ishida stunned the previously unbeaten James Kirkland with a first- round knockout, and super lightweight prospect Danny Garcia upped his record to 21-0 with an unanimous decision over former lightweight champ Nate Campbell.

In the preliminary fights, 2008 Olympic gold medalist Rakhim Chakhkiev remained undefeated with a third- round knockout of Harvey Jolley, and Mikael Zewski also remained perfect with an unanimous decision over Clint Coronel.

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SPORTS - Giants rally again, beat Cards 3-2 on Tejada's hit (AP)

SPORTS - Giants rally again, beat Cards 3-2 on Tejada's hit (AP)
Mark DeRosa AP – San Francisco Giants' Mark DeRosa hits an RBI-single against St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Jaime …

SAN FRANCISCO – Miguel Tejada hit a two-run double that glanced off the glove of center fielder Colby Rasmus with two outs in the ninth inning and the San Francisco Giants rallied late for the second straight day to beat the St. Louis Cardinals 3-2 on Saturday night a few hours after receiving their World Series rings.

The Giants celebrated as though they had just won the championship all over again, with ace Tim Lincecum among those who sprinted out of the dugout to hug the team's new shortstop. Tejada skipped in jubilation after his 15th career game-winning hit.

It came against Cardinals closer Ryan Franklin (0-1), who blew his third save in four chances and second in two days. St. Louis lost 5-4 in 12 innings Friday.

Ramon Ramirez (1-0) pitched the ninth for the win and San Francisco secured its first series victory of the season.

Franklin allowed Buster Posey's one-out single and then a walk to Pat Burrell. Aaron Rowand flied out to bring up Tejada, who fouled off pitches down each base line before coming through with the big hit.

Rasmus ran down Tejada's high drive at the edge of the warning track in left-center, but tried to catch it by his hip and the ball deflected off his glove to the ground. Both runners scored easily.

The finish spoiled a solid start by St. Louis lefty Jaime Garcia, who outdueled Matt Cain and struck out a career-best nine batters for the second straight outing this year.

Rasmus hit a go-ahead homer leading off the seventh. Cain had gone 32 1-3 innings without allowing an earned run dating to last year before Skip Schumaker scored on a wild pitch in the sixth.

Mark DeRosa drove in San Francisco's first run with a single in the fifth while making a rare start.

Tejada, the 2002 AL MVP across the bay with Oakland, then gave the sellout crowd of 41,742 even more to cheer about as fans continue to celebrate the city's first title since the club came West in 1958.

Garcia threw his first career complete game against San Francisco last Aug. 22, a three-hit shutout in a 9-0 victory at Busch Stadium — and appeared headed for another impressive win. Garcia held the Giants scoreless over 14 innings dating to last year before allowing DeRosa's single.

He gave up four hits and one run and walked one in six innings Saturday.

Giants center fielder Andres Torres left in the top of the fourth with a mild left Achilles' strain. X-rays were negative and he is scheduled to be evaluated again Sunday.

Torres was hurt after charging in to field Lance Berkman's line drive for the first out, then stayed in as Rasmus popped up to shortstop. But Torres began hobbling in pain and athletic trainer Dave Groeschner hustled out to check on him followed by manager Bruce Bochy.

Rowand moved from right to center to replace Torres, and Nate Schierholtz entered to play right. Schierholtz tripled and had a pair of singles.

Cain carried a streak of 27 1-3 innings without allowing an earned run into his second outing of the year after he tossed six shutout innings last Saturday against the Dodgers.

The right-hander and longest-tenured member of the Giants didn't allow an earned run in 21 1-3 innings during last fall's improbable postseason run.

"Incredible postseason run he had. It is fitting to have him out there," Bochy said. "What an unsung hero he is with the way he pitched."

Six of the first eight games for the Giants (3-5) have been decided by two or fewer runs.

Members of the other Bay Area championship teams each threw out a ceremonial first pitch: Steve Young of the NFL's San Francisco 49ers, Al Attles of the NBA's Golden State Warriors, Jim Otto of the NFL's Oakland Raiders and Reggie Jackson representing the Oakland Athletics. Lincecum ran out to greet Jackson with a handshake.

The Giants wore commemorative uniforms and caps with gold lettering instead of the standard orange or black.

On Sunday, Posey — San Francisco's NL Rookie of the Year catcher — will be presented with his award in yet another pregame ceremony.

NOTES: Cardinals cleanup hitter Matt Holliday deemed himself set to return to the lineup for Sunday's series finale against LHP Barry Zito, though manager Tony La Russa didn't commit. The slugger underwent an appendectomy on April 1. ... Bochy thanked a few of the Cardinals players for their patience waiting through Friday's 50-minute pregame ceremony. ... Giants RF Cody Ross, on the DL with a strained right calf, expects to begin running and fielding flyballs early in the week. He likely will need a short rehab stint in the minors before rejoining the team. ... San Francisco rookie 1B Brandon Belt got his first day off. 3B Pablo Sandoval didn't start against the LHP after consecutive three-hit games but flied out as a pinch-hitter in the eighth. ... San Francisco has won nine of its last 14 against the Cardinals at AT&T Park dating to 2007.

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SPORTS - Park-inspired Monaco down 10-man Lille (AFP)

SPORTS - Park-inspired Monaco down 10-man Lille (AFP)
Park-inspired Monaco down 10-man Lille AFP – Monaco's forward Chu Young Park (R) jumps for the ball with Lille's defender Adil Rami (L) during …

PARIS (AFP) – A first half strike from South Korean forward Park Chu Young ensured leaders Lille suffered just their fourth defeat of the season as Monaco moved out of the drop zone in French league action on Saturday.

Lille have lost an important tie with a view to claiming their first league title in 53 years, as they could see their lead shaved to just one point should champions Marseille win at home to Toulouse on Sunday.

Third-placed Rennes' title ambitions were further hit as they fell 2-0 at midtable Brest in Saturday's late match, leaving them four games without a win and in danger of being overtaken by Lyon who host Lens on Sunday.

Lille have 58 points from 30 games with Marsille four points behind and Rennes on 51, one point ahead of former multiple champions Lyon.

The leaders were reduced to ten men after 37 minutes when Gervinho was given his marching orders, as their rivals showed a battling spirit which ensured they move out of the relegation zone into 14th place.

Monaco got off to an attacking start with Lille's defenders deflecting out an early effort from Cameroonian Benjamin Moukandjo after seven minutes.

But it was a nightmare return from injury for Lille's Adil Rami as his poor back pass to goalkeeper Mickael Landreau allowed Park to score the winning goal.

Park made no mistake, picking up the pass to fire past Landreau for his 11th goal of the season.

Although Lille monopolised the ball for long periods Rudi Garcia's side seemed tense and unable to create real chances.

And faced with the incessant Monaco pressure, Gervinho lost his cool and was sent off for a foul on Adriano eight minutes before the break.

Landreau did well to keep out a second Park effort four minutes into the second half.

Garcia substituted Tulio De Melo for Florent Balmont in the Lille attack after 59 and a minute later the move almost paid dividends but the Monaco defence proved solid as Stephane Ruffier kept his cool in the goal.

Monaco coach Laurent Banide hailed his side's efforts.

"It was a beautiful operation. Tactically we mastered the match and our task was helped by the sending off of Gervinho," he said.

"We've shown that we're still alive and kicking, and what's more we did it on front of our fans."

Lille counterpart Rudi Garcia insisted the Monaco goal was offside.

"Moukandjo was five metres offside," complained Garcia.

He added: "We're partly to blame for this defeat. We got off to a good start but we weren't all conquering. We asked for a strong start to the match and we didn't have it, but overall we didn't deserve to lose."

In Brittany, Brest opened with a superb first half goal from Nolan Roux under the eyes of Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish who had come to watch Rennes goalkeeper Nicolas Douchez.

But it wasn't to be Douchez's night as he could find no reply when Roux fired in from 35 metres to opening the score after 29 minutes. Bruno Grougi scored the second after 55 minutes as Brest move up two spots to 11th.

Elsewhere, Paris Saint Germain got back to winning ways with a 2-1 success at Caen as they stay fifth with 49 points with eight games to play.

Christophe Jallet opened for PSG after 13 minutes with Clement Chantome getting the second after 69 minutes. Romain Hamouma pulled one back for Caen three minutes into extra time.

European hopefuls Saint Etienne were held to a 2-2 draw by struggling Auxerre, while Bordeaux's European hopes took a knock as they were held to a goalless draw at home to tailenders Arles-Avignon.

Midtable Lorient and Sochaux drew 1-1 as did Valenciennes after a last-gasp goal by Marama Vahirua gave visiting Nancy a share of the points.

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SPORTS - Woods remains a puzzle that can't be solved (AP)

SPORTS - Woods remains a puzzle that can't be solved (AP)
Tiger Woods reacts after missing a putt on the 13th hole during the third round of the Masters golf tournament Saturday, April 9, 2011, in Augusta, Ga AP – Tiger Woods reacts after missing a putt on the 13th hole during the third round of the Masters golf tournament …

AUGUSTA, Ga. – The crowd followed him eagerly from hole to hole, still buzzing about what happened the previous afternoon.

Tiger Woods was back, and if anyone needed a reminder all they had to do was look at the giant white leaderboard on the first fairway and see the nine birdies he posted in the second round.

It was all coming together according to plan, after a year when nothing went according to plan. Sure, the youngsters behind him had the lead, but the faithful at Augusta National had seen this act before and they knew it was only a matter of time before order was restored in the game of golf once again.

That was the way they wanted it to happen.

That was the way it always used to happen.

Once again, it didn't happen.

The enigma that is Tiger Woods was on full display on a hot, steamy day at the Masters, and it wasn't for the faint of heart. This was supposed to be the day he finally put to rest questions about his swing and his mental state, but there were no answers to be had on the finely manicured grasses of Augusta National.

Those who believe Woods is on the verge of being his old self will point to his brilliant shots and the putts that might have been. Those who believe Woods will never be the same will replay video of him blading a chip and missing two putts within four feet, golfing transgressions that the old Tiger would never have committed.

He's a puzzle who refuses to be solved, headed back to greatness one moment before returning to mediocrity the next. He didn't need a 64 in the third round to contend on Sunday, but the 74 he shot pretty much ensures he won't.

Seven shots back, with a ton of players between him and leader Rory McIlroy, he's as done as some of the patrons who baked for hours in the Georgia sun to catch a glimpse of him. There will be no fifth green jacket on Sunday, even if Woods is the last one to figure that out.

Asked if he could still win the Masters, Woods gave a one word answer: "Absolutely."

Ask almost anyone who watched him play a maddeningly inconsistent round Saturday and they might sum up his chances in two words: "No way."

Actually, the guy who watched him closer than most in the third round was more charitable. Playing partner K.J. Choi said Woods is hitting good shots and has a nice rhythm to his swing.

"He's better than where he was last year," Choi said.

That's not saying a lot because Woods was miserable most of last year after coming back from his self-imposed exile to struggle with a swing change. Things haven't been a whole lot better this year, though Woods was hopeful he might find some magic on a golf course he knows intimately with a swing that seems to be coming around.

The 66 he shot on Friday brought back the roars from fans who wanted to believe. Woods himself seemed to believe as he walked off the course just three shots off the lead and with the kind of momentum that would normally make the leaders sleep uneasily.

"It's going to be fun," he said.

The fun didn't last long. Shooting a round to get in contention may not be easy, but shooting a good round once you're in contention is even harder.

Playing in the second-to-last group, Woods striped a 3-wood down the middle, twirled his club and set off in pursuit of the young upstart McIlroy, who was 7 years old when Woods shocked the golfing world by running away with the Masters by 12 shots.

When he got to the ball, though, it was in the middle of a sand divot. Woods would come back from the ensuing bogey with a birdie on No. 3, but the momentum was gone.

There was a time players like McIlroy would fade at the sight of Woods on the leaderboard. This time, McIlroy could only watch from the group behind as Woods fell off the leaderboard.

"The way he played the last nine holes yesterday, you would expect him to come out and play well," McIlroy said.

The trouble is, no one knows what to expect from Woods anymore, including Woods himself. He can still hit shots other players can't, but the ones in between often go sideways and the putts that he could once seemingly will in now slide past the hole or hang on the edge.

About the only thing he's still consistently good at is cursing — which he did loudly on the eighth green Saturday after flubbing a chip.

He's 35 now and, though golfers can play well into their careers, he's facing players in their 20s who show no signs of being intimidated by him. They're bunched on the leaderboard in front of him now, and even Woods has to know deep down that it would take a miracle round to get past all of them on Sunday.

One fan tried to give him hope as he walked out of the scoring hut off the 18th green after signing his card.

"You're in this Tiger," the fan yelled.

Not a chance.

___

Tim Dahlberg is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at tdahlberg(at)ap.org

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