Monday, June 20, 2011

Strikeforce Dallas: Conor Heun Fights Through Badly Damaged Arm to Gain Victory

Strikeforce Dallas: Conor Heun Fights Through Badly Damaged Arm to Gain Victory

Prior to facing Magno Almeida on Saturday, June 18, Conor Heun had not won a fight since October 2008. Granted, he had only fought twice since that win, but both fights ended in decision losses.

If there was a fighter that needed a win on Saturday's Strikeforce card, it was Heun.

Heun did gain the win (29-28 on all three cards) in a unanimous decision, showing a no-quit attitude and paying a pretty big cost in the process, as his arm appeared to be severely damaged at the end of the fight.

During the second round of the preliminary card fight, Almeida locked on an armbar that looked like it was going to end Heun's night. Almeida was grimacing as he was doing all he could to force Heun to submit, but Heun refused to go gently into the good night and didn't tap. Almeida eventually released the hold.

When the third round finished, and and the fighters stood with the referee, Heun could be seen talking to the referee as he held Heun's right arm, waiting for the decision to be announced.  When the results were read, and the referee raised Heun's arm, he seemed to visibly wince. 

After the fight, a very emotional Heun spoke about the win and how he hoped his actions in the cage could be used as an inspiration. Some pretty good stuff from Heun and well worth watching.

If you didn't know Conor Heun before this fight, you should now.

Click here to see the video interview

Rebecca Romijn Nadine Velazquez Pink Mila Kunis Samaire Armstrong

New Deals for Armin Bacinovic and Josip Ilicic Could Mean Pastore Set to Leave

Coppa Italian winner's Palermo look to be preparing for the impending exit of Javier Pastore as they have inked fellow midfielders Josip Ilicic and Armin Bacinovic to new deals at the Serie A club according to Goal.com.

The two midfielders arrived at the beginning of the season from Maribor and have been regular starters striking up a great partnership that will be the backbone of Palermo for years to come as they look to be solidifying the two in the middle for seasons to come.

The two of them combined for 10 goals and eight assists taking up where Pastore left off.

Monica Keena Anne Marie Kortright Paige Butcher Amanda Peet Xenia Seeberg

Venus Williams Captures Wimbledon Win in Outfit Inspired by John Belushi

Venus Williams Takes to Wimbledon With Toga Outfit

Here's the thing. Athletes don't want to just play well nowadays, they want to look good too. The same is doubly true for tennis stars, many of whom have their own clothing lines. 

So it is no surprise that Venus Williams stepped out onto Williams making a fashion statement. I just don't know why she chose to go with a fashion better suited for Ancient Greece, or a frat party. 

Williams only needed an hour to take care of Akgul Amanmuradova 6-3, 6-1. What was more shocking is that she decided to go on the court looking dreadful. 

I can only imagine she stood in front of her closet and thought, what is the most ridiculous thing I own?" That is how we got Venus in her opening Wimbledon attire.

MUST READ: Top 50 Sexiest Water Sports Athletes 

I tried to watch her match without chuckling. All I could hear in my head was the late John Belushi shouting, "toga, toga, toga."

The Williams sisters have long been forward-thinkers when it comes to fashion. There is nothing too silly for them to wear on or off the court. It is one reason that has me thinking the two are still underrated as players. 

Half the time I have the TV on one of their events, I am trying to figure out the think tank that decided on that particular garb. That leaves me to appreciate only half their game. 

I can only imagine you have the same problem at home. I will look for Venus to be wearing some sort of caveman outfit at her next match. At least it would be in keeping with her line. 

Shakara Ledard Vanessa Marcil Rachel McAdams Kristin Cavallari Brittany Murphy

NBA playoffs: New York Knicks back in the mix after major rebuilding | David Lengel

The most infamous NBA franchise are where they used to belong but the might of the Celtics stand in their way

On Sunday the New York Knicks will play the Boston Celtics in the first round of the NBA playoffs ? New York's first appearance in the post-season since 2004. On the court for the Knickerbockers will be two bona fide NBA superstars, Amar'e Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony, in the prime of their careers, a scenario that was the stuff of fantasy a year ago. For these Knicks, this post-season series is their signature on a season that marks their return to relevance in New York and the NBA.

Ten years ago the Toronto Raptors bounced the Knicks from the opening round of the playoffs, and fans consoling themselves inside Madison Square Garden, known here as the World's Most Famous Arena, sensed that the times were indeed a-changing. Still, those diehards couldn't have possibly known what was about to hit them ? over the next decade, the building on 34th street would house the most infamous franchise the NBA had to offer.

In a league where oligarchs can't write blank checks at will, and where payrolls are kept in line with revenues via a salary cap, missteps by men in suits managing those spending restrictions can cripple a team's ability to rebuild for years. Until this season, this has been the long-running theme of pro basketball in New York City.

The problems with the Knicks and the salary cap management pre-dated Isaiah Thomas, the former general manager, probably one of the most disliked characters in Knicks history. The team owner, James Dolan, hired Thomas in December of 2003, and almost immediately upon his arrival, the Hall of Fame point guard exacerbated the Knicks already difficult salary cap situation.

New York slipped further and further into NBA purgatory as Thomas dealt for high priced, low return players such as Stephon Marbury and Eddie Curry. Unable to dig out from the mountain of bad contracts, the Knicks couldn't dream of bidding for top free agent talent, and New York, wearing skintight salary cap shackles, had sadly become irrelevant ? unthinkable in a city known for passionate support of its basketball team.

Thomas became head coach for two seasons, and in 2008 was let go. Donnie Walsh, a Bronx boy in exile, who had managed the Indiana Pacers to 16 post-seasons, was brought in to shake up the team. The mission ? forget about winning for the time being, and dump the salary duds in time to make cap space to compete for the free agent class of 2010, a group that included the best player in the world, LeBron James. In two short years, Walsh was able to accomplish what no Knick executive had done, clear the deck.

The dream of landing James was just that, as he nixed New York to join his buddies in Miami. The consolation prize was Stoudemire, a player viewed with suspicion by Knicks fans, but who, early in 2010, proved that New York had their first true franchise player since Patrick Ewing. Young and athletic talent surrounded Stoudemire, making the most of the head coach Mike D'Antoni's high-octane offensive style, lifting the toxic clouds off of the Garden.

In late February came the fruition of a long-rumoured deal in the form of a three-way exchange with Denver and Minnesota, bringing Anthony, without a doubt, one of the top five players in the NBA, to New York along with proven point guard Chauncey Billups. The Knicks got a second franchise player in their bid to keep up with the Joneses in Miami, but relinquished several talented players in a trade that some believed was unnecessary ? Anthony, a player with strong links to NYC could have come to the Knicks as a free agent after the season without New York dealing any of their young guns.

New York has struggled since the trade, having to come together as a team quickly with a rebuilt roster, just in time for the playoffs. The trade for Anthony is seen as part of a long-term plan, but questions linger about chemistry between Stoudemire and Anthony, and whether the Knicks can acquire the missing pieces to propel New York to their first title since 1973. For now, the Knicks will have at least two post-season games in New York, and that long-sought opportunity to breathe playoff life back into the Garden.

EASTERN CONFERENCE PLAYOFF PREVIEW

Boston Celtics v New York Knicks

Boston come into these playoffs knowing their window of opportunity for a second championship in four seasons is closing ? the dynamic core of Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen are slightly vulnerable in their old age. Plus, their center Kendrick Perkins was controversially dealt away at the trade deadline, upsetting the head coach, Doc Rivers, some former team-mates, and the applecart. There are other issues with Boston, such as the health of Shaquille O'Neal. Still, they should crush the undersized Knicks whose time is yet to arrive. Celts in five.

Chicago Bulls v Indiana Pacers

Derrick Rose will be the NBA's Most Valuable Player, and if that doesn't give you confidence in Chicago, the Bulls owner, Jerry Reinsdorf, will. He said in early March that his team can win four championships. Not one, four. Chicago does play smothering defense, which should keep the Pacers best player, Danny Granger, in check. Bulls sweep.

Miami Heat v Philadelphia 76ers

When is a 58-win season considered to be a disappointment? How about when you have three of the NBA's top 15 players, LeBron James, Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh on the same team. Can the Sixers pull off the upset? Well, they have a better head coach in Doug Collins, an excellent point guard in Jrue Holiday, and a nice big juicy target to shoot at. Miami's out in a shocker. Sixers in seven.

Orlando Magic v Atlanta Hawks

Orlando's Dwight Howard is awesome and Atlanta is a dump. I really don't like it there, so I'm taking it out on the Hawks. Seriously folks, Atlanta will double team Howard, and the big man will kick it out to multiple Magic men to drain three's all night long. Magic in five.

WESTERN CONFERENCE PLAYOFF PREVIEW

San Antonio Spurs v Memphis Grizzlies

If you would have told me before the seasons that the Spurs would win 61 games I would have said to go have another puff on ye old pipe. The clock is ticking on San Antonio but if they do go out, it ain't going to be against Memphis. For the Grizzlies, there's history to be made here ? Memphis have never won a post-season game. Spurs in five.

Los Angeles Lakers v New Orleans Hornets

Can someone tell me why Kobe Bryant hasn't been suspended for muttering anti-gay slurs at a referee? A $100K fine? Big deal ? that's like taking a buck 75 off me. You can't allow that sort of thing to go on in the NBA or anywhere. Let me see, if I go into work today and scream that at someone, I wonder what would happen? The Lakers legend Jerry West criticised the team earlier in the season saying: "The reason you 'can't play defense' is because you can't", and even the coach, Phil Jackson, agreed. It will catch up with them, but not yet. Lakers in five.

Dallas Mavericks v Portland Trailblazers

It's easy to chalk up an easy series win for Dallas. Not so. Portland has a lot of kitchen sink to throw at Dirk Nowitzki in Marcus Camby, Gerald Wallace and LaMarcus Aldridge, and this will be no walk in the Pacific Northwest for these Texans. Blazers in seven.

Oklahoma City Thunder v Denver Nuggets

Good series, a lot of fun. Contrary to expectations, the Nuggets have been excellent since Anthony was traded for half of the Knicks, and there's been lots of jabs at him from the Rockies. One question for Denver ? who will take the big shots down the stretch? Oklahoma has an easy answer ? Kevin Durant won the NBA scoring title. I like Denver here, with a bit of bias coming me from here in NY. Nuggets in seven.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Salma Hayek Jennifer Scholle Tatiana Zavialova Tila Tequila Tamie Sheffield

NBA Rumors: Detroit Pistons Zeroing in on Next Head Coach

NBA Rumors Have Pistons Interviewing Last String of Candidates for Coaching Gig

The Detroit Pistons, in search of their next head coach after the firing of John Kuester, have already interviewed Boston Celtics assistant coach Lawrence Frank and Milwaukee Bucks assistant coach Kelvin Sampson.

Today, they interview former Atlanta Hawks coach Mike Woodson and on Wednesday they'll interview former Pistons great Bill Laimbeer.

After interviewing Laimbeer, it's possible the Pistons could hire their next head coach by the end of this week.

The two candidates most likely to be hired appear to be Frank and Woodson.

READ MORE: Top 50 Craziest Buzzer Beaters of All Time

Wrote Ryan Wolstat of the Toronto Sun, "word out of Detroit is Frank 'blew the Pistons away'" in his interview on Wednesday.

As for Woodson, his ability to turn around the Hawks in the 2007-2008, 2008-2009 and 2009-2010 seasons has many tabbing him the front-runner.

Woodson's interview today could be the last straw. If he does well, he may be the next Pistons coach.

The Pistons, of course, are in dire need of repairs. They haven't reached 40 wins in each of the last three seasons and they finished an embarrassing 30-52 last season.

Beyond that, there was a minor players' revolt against coach Kuester. The team also needs to begin a youth movement, with their veterans declining due to age.

Woodson may have the pedigree to build them back up.

-Ryan Rudnansky

Rachel Perry Mary Elizabeth Winstead Piper Perabo Anna Kournikova Esther Cañadas

Miami Heat surge past Bulls and into NBA finals

? Dwyane Wade leads team to 83-80 Game Five win
? Chicago stunned as rivals wrap up series 4-1

Ice cold for three quarters of Thursday's Game Five, Dwyane Wade caught fire in the fourth and led Miami to an 83-80 win over Chicago that put the Heat in the NBA finals, where they will meet Dallas.

Wade, hampered by a shoulder injury, turned the ball over nine times and had shot just two-for-eight from the floor before the fourth quarter. Not the sort of performance he wanted to put on in front of his hometown friends and family in Chicago.

Chicago looked set to send the Eastern Conference finals to a Game Six but Wade suddenly found a spark, leading the Heat on an 18-3 run to the buzzer that stunned the Bulls. The MVP of Miami's run to the title in 2006 did not want to blame the injury for his struggles but team-mate LeBron James knew something was wrong.

"Absolutely," said James, who also found his range in the late rally after missing nine shots in a row. "I could see it on his face, but I said 'Just get through it. We need you'. He's one of the best players in this league. Guys like that are gonna find their way through it and he did that late for us."

Wade began finding the range on his jump shot. After hitting two, he flashed past a defender and drove to the hoop for more points. Then came a critical four-point play when he sank a three-pointer and converted a free throw for being fouled in the process. Wade finished with 21 points and said he drew strength from the confidence shown in him by James.

"I'm a person who believes other people give you confidence," Wade told reporters. "When LeBron threw me back the ball after me struggling so much, I thought, 'Well, I've got to make something happen.'"

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said Wade was simply special. "He's got something different, a different makeup inside of him," the coach said. "He's able to rise to the occasion. He may have struggled for a game, or parts of a game, but when it's winning time, there's really not many players that are better than him in the last two minutes."


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Hilary Swank Whitney Port Minka Kelly Carol Grow Erika Christensen

Red-Band 'Conan the Barbarian' Trailer Shows Off Fake Blood, Bad Music, Casual Dialogue

Malin Akerman Melissa Joan Hart Bianca Kajlich Giulianna Ramirez Ashley Greene

Weekend Box Office: Green Lantern Man Not as Popular and Well-Known as Warner Bros. Figured

Chandra West Kasey Chambers Megan Ewing Kristanna Loken Aubrey ODay

NBA finals: Dallas Mavericks put Miami Heat in the shade | David Lengel

Dirk Nowitzki, Jasons Kidd and Mavericks claim NBA championship leaving LeBron James empty-handed this time

Until Sunday night, the star stitched on to the backs of Dallas Mavericks jerseys represented the Lone Star State of Texas from which they hail. Now it has two meanings. With the Mavs defeat of the Miami Heat the NBA Finals, that star also represents Dallas' maiden title triumph.

There will be a temptation to talk about the team that did not win the NBA championship on Sunday. Don't do it. In the years ahead, there will be plenty of time to focus on the "Big Three" players that came together in 2010, the elite core who dominated the headlines, that transformed the Heat into a four letter word that followed other four letter words, at least to fans outside of South Beach.

No, this space is reserved for the Dallas Mavericks, a franchise that entered the league in 1980, once lost 71 games in a single season, and is finally on top of the basketball world. They are winners, capping off their 11th consecutive playoff appearance with that elusive piece of hardware--and they deserve it, because they were the better team, a complete team, unlike their opponents.

Those who labeled the Mavs as underdogs in this series were misguided.

Dallas is a team full of all-stars, who have their own big three in Dirk Nowitzki, Jason Kidd and Jason Terry - but it doesn't stop there.

They also had Shawn Marion, Tyson Chandler, Jose Juan Berea and more-serviceable backups are abound, this despite losing their second best player Caron Butler to injury earlier in the season.

Yes, the Dallas Mavericks are a deep, talented club that swept the Los Angeles Lakers en-route to the Finals, and put a team on the floor which Miami could not answer.

Consider that Terry, a guard who comes off the bench for Dallas, scored 27 points on Sunday, allowing the Mavericks to take a lead into half time, on a night when Nowitzki, their all-world German forward, scored just three first-half points. Miami's top bench scorer was Udonis Haslem, who scored 11 points.

Then there is Jason Kidd, who at 38 became the oldest point guard to start in the NBA Finals. Kidd, one of the greatest point men of all time, surprised Miami with his ability slow down the Heat elite, who had targeted him as the weak defensive link. Kidd's offensive play however surprised no one, and on Sunday, his trademark distribution of the basketball yielded eight assists in addition to a pair of timely three pointers.

Now Kidd, who began his career in Dallas over 15 years ago, during much leaner times for the franchise, finally has a ring, as does his teammate, Dirk Nowitzki.

The question with Nowitzki is how do you stop a seven foot forward who runs the floor beautifully and can shoot over anyone from just about anywhere? The answer of course is you don't, and Nowitzki, who rather incredibly is actually the third German to play for the Mavericks (fourth if you count Shawn Bradley), took home the NBA Finals MVP award, completing a dominating playoff performance with ten points in the fourth quarter of Game Six, quashing any chances of a Miami comeback and a decisive seventh game.

The credit extends beyond the players as well. Mark Cuban, the poster child for owners who behave like fans, has always done whatever it takes to help his Dallas team win a championship, and that includes encouraging his management team to go after players such as Tyson Chandler, the big man they acquired last summer, whose interior defense helped clog the paint, and was a big part of the Mavs success.

The head coach, Rick Carlisle, did an exceptional job of keeping a younger and more athletic Miami team from running with the basketball, dragging them into a half court game which played against the Heat's strengths. Carlisle now has a championship ring as a coach to go along with one he won with the Boston Celtics as a player, which puts him in some pretty classy company.

Can Dallas come back next season and do it again? It's unlikely ? they are an older, more fragile team, that had to win now and did. We saw what happened to aging teams such as the San Antonio Spurs, Boston Celtics and Los Angeles Lakers in these playoffs. Fresher franchises such as the Oklahoma City Thunder are emerging and change is in the NBA air. Never-mind that Miami, and those players who shall remain nameless, this one time, will be staking their claim to the title for many years to come.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Majandra Delfino Maria Bello Jennifer Gareis Ashlee Simpson Donna Feldman

Last Shot - Chariots of Fur

Filed under: ,

mascot marathon
Thanks for the caption, Jamie! Honorable mention to Adam - your caption was hilarious too!


Big news, Urlbots! We've officially handed all our Last Shot headline duties off to you. Every afternoon M-F, we'll post the Last Shot on our Facebook page and from there it's up to you guys to come up with the best headlines you can think of. We'll feature our favorite on the homepage every day at 6pm ET.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Drew Barrymore Marley Shelton Thalía Brooke Burke Thandie Newton

Donothingfor2minutes Helps You Do Nothing For Two Minutes

Filed under: ,

donothingfor2minutesYou know what the nicest thing about donothingfor2minutes.com is? Even nicer than the soothing sound of waves cascading on the sand and the magnificent ocean view? It's the fact that at no point during the two minutes of calm-filled nothingingness that donothingfor2minutes.com so deftly provides, does Linda Blair's demonic face pop up on the screen and scare the living chips out of you just when you least expected it.

Donothingfor2minutes is just two minutes of pure, unadulterated internet bliss -- except for the fact that if you do do something computer related during the allotted two minutes, like move the mouse or open a new tab because two minutes never felt so long and you're just totally bored out of your mind, the site tells you you failed (thanks a lot, website) and starts the timer all over again.

Whatever. It's a small price to pay for nothing.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Ali Campoverdi Giuliana DePandi Pamela Anderson Amber Arbucci Christina Aguilera

New 'Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes' Trailer: Tom Felton's Cruelty Knows No Bounds

The only thing longer than the title for "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" is the two month wait for "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" that we're still suffering through. Thankfully, 20th Century Fox is making things a little bit easier on us with a new trailer. That's right ? another new [...]

Paz Vega Rebecca Mader Eva Green Lauren Conrad Arielle Kebbel

Sunday, June 19, 2011

2011 US Open: Brilliant Performance by Rory McIlroy Exactly What PGA Tour Needed

Rory McIlroy's astounding victory in the 2011 US Open at Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Maryland, brings to a close one captivating story line while leading beautifully into a host of others, each of which portends to be just as compelling, if not more so.

After choking away the lead on Sunday at the 2011 Masters in historic fashion, the 22-year-old kid from Northern Ireland bounced back with the kind of brilliance seldom, if ever, seen at an Open, becoming one of five players in the 111 years of the US Open play to finish the tournament with all four rounds under par, while setting the all-time scoring record of 268 in 72 holes at the toughest Major of them all, going 16 strokes under par for the tournament as a result.

 

What About Augusta?

This, after McIlory was hardly the biggest story coming into the week. So much of the chatter around the Beltway was focused on the absence of Tiger Woods, who sat out the Open so as to allow his physical and mental woes more time to heal. 

There was tremendous concern that no one would care enough to tune without Woods, no longer the No. 1 player in the world but still easily the biggest draw in the sport, partaking in the competition.

And, frankly, that likely would've been the case had the baby-face McIlroy not gotten off to such a tremendous start...and kept it going...and going. Golf legend Jack Nicklaus, who still holds the record for most Major championships won in a career, told young Rory not to block out the pressure, but welcome it—even apply some of his own!

And he did just that, with greater success than anyone could have imagined.

This time, there would be no collapse for the baby-faced budding star, and no Charl Schwartzel or Y.E. Yang to upend him after an 80 on Sunday.

No demons to haunt McIlroy, to cause him to question his swing, to keep him from barging his way into golf history as one of seven wire-to-wire US Open champions.

No need to worry that Tiger Woods might come bearing down on him on the back nine because, well, Tiger just wasn't there.

No, Rory McIlroy wasn't about to be the next Sergio Garcia, who, in 1999, was thought to be the next big thing in golf after tying for second at the PGA Championship as a rookie on the PGA Tour.

 

The Next Tiger Woods?

Because, frankly, there is no Tiger Woods to overtake him, no Tiger Woods to crush his dreams, devour his spirits and stomp on his throat as Tiger did so many times, not out of malice but rather competitive spirit.

Even if Woods had been on the course this week, he couldn't have done that to McIlroy, even with sound body and mind.

McIlroy was Tiger this weekend—nearly perfect in every way, unchallenged, self-assured, confidence bordering on cocky.

So it will be written that Rory McIlroy is the youngest US Open champion since Bobby Jones sat atop the leader board in 1923. So it will be told that McIlroy, just a month into his 22nd year of life, became the youngest Major champion since Tiger took the 1997 Masters at 21 years of age.

And the PGA Tour will write that story a thousand times over, because that's the narrative the Tour needs and will need, at least until Tiger is well enough to compete at the highest level, if ever again.

Rory McIlroy will be the Golden Boy of the golf world going forward. With each passing tournament, victory or no, the pressure on his shoulder will build. It will sit hard and heavy, unrelenting. This would never have been the case without Tiger, but with the standard being as tough as it is today, young Rory will have to bear it nonetheless, fairly or unfairly.

The spotlight will turn next to the 140th British Open at Royal St. George's starting on July 14th. There, McIlroy will be that much closer to his native Northern Ireland, the whole world watching his every step all the while.

 

A New Era in Golf?

McIlroy didn't even get to finish his final round before the talking heads on NBC got around to anointing him the next King of the Links.

He may very well be the next superstar to carry the sport of golf into a new generation of young guns. America's "Golf Boys" may want to take a cue from McIlroy if they're ever to join him atop the heap.

However, let's be careful not to call this kid Tiger just yet. Yes, let's all applaud his efforts, as they were thrilling, if not wholly awe-inspiring.

But for Rory McIlroy to truly be golf's next icon, he'll have to do this again...and again...and again. He'll have to destroy the field again...and again...and again.

Most importantly, he'll have to fail, approach the critics who so loudly ask "What happened?" and question his ability, and answer them with yet another breath-taking performance.

Because, as is so often said, the true measure of a champion is not how one wins, but how one bounces back from defeat.

Which, to McIlroy's credit, he has done, given his previous failure at the Masters. Except now, he'll have to do so under the most intense microscope his sport has.

Until then, let's all thank Rory McIlroy for an inspiring four rounds of golf at the US Open and wish him well heading into the Open Championship next month. 

Chloë Sevigny Janet Jackson Georgianna Robertson Reese Witherspoon Jordana Brewster

NBA playoffs: New York Knicks back in the mix after major rebuilding | David Lengel

The most infamous NBA franchise are where they used to belong but the might of the Celtics stand in their way

On Sunday the New York Knicks will play the Boston Celtics in the first round of the NBA playoffs ? New York's first appearance in the post-season since 2004. On the court for the Knickerbockers will be two bona fide NBA superstars, Amar'e Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony, in the prime of their careers, a scenario that was the stuff of fantasy a year ago. For these Knicks, this post-season series is their signature on a season that marks their return to relevance in New York and the NBA.

Ten years ago the Toronto Raptors bounced the Knicks from the opening round of the playoffs, and fans consoling themselves inside Madison Square Garden, known here as the World's Most Famous Arena, sensed that the times were indeed a-changing. Still, those diehards couldn't have possibly known what was about to hit them ? over the next decade, the building on 34th street would house the most infamous franchise the NBA had to offer.

In a league where oligarchs can't write blank checks at will, and where payrolls are kept in line with revenues via a salary cap, missteps by men in suits managing those spending restrictions can cripple a team's ability to rebuild for years. Until this season, this has been the long-running theme of pro basketball in New York City.

The problems with the Knicks and the salary cap management pre-dated Isaiah Thomas, the former general manager, probably one of the most disliked characters in Knicks history. The team owner, James Dolan, hired Thomas in December of 2003, and almost immediately upon his arrival, the Hall of Fame point guard exacerbated the Knicks already difficult salary cap situation.

New York slipped further and further into NBA purgatory as Thomas dealt for high priced, low return players such as Stephon Marbury and Eddie Curry. Unable to dig out from the mountain of bad contracts, the Knicks couldn't dream of bidding for top free agent talent, and New York, wearing skintight salary cap shackles, had sadly become irrelevant ? unthinkable in a city known for passionate support of its basketball team.

Thomas became head coach for two seasons, and in 2008 was let go. Donnie Walsh, a Bronx boy in exile, who had managed the Indiana Pacers to 16 post-seasons, was brought in to shake up the team. The mission ? forget about winning for the time being, and dump the salary duds in time to make cap space to compete for the free agent class of 2010, a group that included the best player in the world, LeBron James. In two short years, Walsh was able to accomplish what no Knick executive had done, clear the deck.

The dream of landing James was just that, as he nixed New York to join his buddies in Miami. The consolation prize was Stoudemire, a player viewed with suspicion by Knicks fans, but who, early in 2010, proved that New York had their first true franchise player since Patrick Ewing. Young and athletic talent surrounded Stoudemire, making the most of the head coach Mike D'Antoni's high-octane offensive style, lifting the toxic clouds off of the Garden.

In late February came the fruition of a long-rumoured deal in the form of a three-way exchange with Denver and Minnesota, bringing Anthony, without a doubt, one of the top five players in the NBA, to New York along with proven point guard Chauncey Billups. The Knicks got a second franchise player in their bid to keep up with the Joneses in Miami, but relinquished several talented players in a trade that some believed was unnecessary ? Anthony, a player with strong links to NYC could have come to the Knicks as a free agent after the season without New York dealing any of their young guns.

New York has struggled since the trade, having to come together as a team quickly with a rebuilt roster, just in time for the playoffs. The trade for Anthony is seen as part of a long-term plan, but questions linger about chemistry between Stoudemire and Anthony, and whether the Knicks can acquire the missing pieces to propel New York to their first title since 1973. For now, the Knicks will have at least two post-season games in New York, and that long-sought opportunity to breathe playoff life back into the Garden.

EASTERN CONFERENCE PLAYOFF PREVIEW

Boston Celtics v New York Knicks

Boston come into these playoffs knowing their window of opportunity for a second championship in four seasons is closing ? the dynamic core of Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen are slightly vulnerable in their old age. Plus, their center Kendrick Perkins was controversially dealt away at the trade deadline, upsetting the head coach, Doc Rivers, some former team-mates, and the applecart. There are other issues with Boston, such as the health of Shaquille O'Neal. Still, they should crush the undersized Knicks whose time is yet to arrive. Celts in five.

Chicago Bulls v Indiana Pacers

Derrick Rose will be the NBA's Most Valuable Player, and if that doesn't give you confidence in Chicago, the Bulls owner, Jerry Reinsdorf, will. He said in early March that his team can win four championships. Not one, four. Chicago does play smothering defense, which should keep the Pacers best player, Danny Granger, in check. Bulls sweep.

Miami Heat v Philadelphia 76ers

When is a 58-win season considered to be a disappointment? How about when you have three of the NBA's top 15 players, LeBron James, Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh on the same team. Can the Sixers pull off the upset? Well, they have a better head coach in Doug Collins, an excellent point guard in Jrue Holiday, and a nice big juicy target to shoot at. Miami's out in a shocker. Sixers in seven.

Orlando Magic v Atlanta Hawks

Orlando's Dwight Howard is awesome and Atlanta is a dump. I really don't like it there, so I'm taking it out on the Hawks. Seriously folks, Atlanta will double team Howard, and the big man will kick it out to multiple Magic men to drain three's all night long. Magic in five.

WESTERN CONFERENCE PLAYOFF PREVIEW

San Antonio Spurs v Memphis Grizzlies

If you would have told me before the seasons that the Spurs would win 61 games I would have said to go have another puff on ye old pipe. The clock is ticking on San Antonio but if they do go out, it ain't going to be against Memphis. For the Grizzlies, there's history to be made here ? Memphis have never won a post-season game. Spurs in five.

Los Angeles Lakers v New Orleans Hornets

Can someone tell me why Kobe Bryant hasn't been suspended for muttering anti-gay slurs at a referee? A $100K fine? Big deal ? that's like taking a buck 75 off me. You can't allow that sort of thing to go on in the NBA or anywhere. Let me see, if I go into work today and scream that at someone, I wonder what would happen? The Lakers legend Jerry West criticised the team earlier in the season saying: "The reason you 'can't play defense' is because you can't", and even the coach, Phil Jackson, agreed. It will catch up with them, but not yet. Lakers in five.

Dallas Mavericks v Portland Trailblazers

It's easy to chalk up an easy series win for Dallas. Not so. Portland has a lot of kitchen sink to throw at Dirk Nowitzki in Marcus Camby, Gerald Wallace and LaMarcus Aldridge, and this will be no walk in the Pacific Northwest for these Texans. Blazers in seven.

Oklahoma City Thunder v Denver Nuggets

Good series, a lot of fun. Contrary to expectations, the Nuggets have been excellent since Anthony was traded for half of the Knicks, and there's been lots of jabs at him from the Rockies. One question for Denver ? who will take the big shots down the stretch? Oklahoma has an easy answer ? Kevin Durant won the NBA scoring title. I like Denver here, with a bit of bias coming me from here in NY. Nuggets in seven.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Kim Kardashian China Chow Alecia Elliott

'What If You Lived At Ikea' Is 375 Sq. Ft. Of Pre-Packaged Home

Filed under:

Living in Ikea would be a lot like living at home, except the furniture is already built so there's none of those tiny wrenches and missing screw stuff to deal with. Oh yeah, there's also the fact that they seem to think people can live totally comfortably in under 400 square feet of space with minimalist household tools. Would it work? Is it comfortable? That's the theme behind Christian Gideon's latest set of photos, "What if you lived at Ikea?"

Gideon, his brother Dylan and their buddy Michael hung out in the pre-created living space at their local Ikea, waiting for staff and customers to roll on through, picking up their Ekby Gruven and other easy-to-build furniture along the way, and snapping shots of the living situations there-in. And because you're wondering, they thought the bedrooms were the most true-to-life of every area they frollicked.


 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Amanda Swisten Scarlett Chorvat Kim Smith

U.S. Soccer: Why the US Should Fear Mexico

Mexico beat Guatemala 2-1 on a beautiful evening at the New Meadowlands Stadium.  The crowd of 70,000 plus fans cheered as goal scoring sensation Javier Hernandez scored a spectacular goal to give El Tri the lead.

In a game that was dominated by Mexico from start to finish, our neighbors to the south showed little in the way of results.  An early mishap by the Mexican back line allowed Philadelphia Union striker Carlos Ruiz to sneak in and give Guatemala a 1-0 lead. 

But after that goal, keeper Alfredo Talavera patted his defenders on the back and acted like it never happened.

The remaining 85 minutes were played in the Guatemalan half.  Besides a few counter attacks, Mexico controlled the game, relentlessly peppering Guatemalan keeper Ricardo Jerez from all over the field. 

Mexico squandered countless chances and Jerez made some fantastic saves.  But opportunities kept on coming.

Mexico finally broke through with a rebound goal from substitute Aldo De Nigres moments after coming on in the 46th minute.  Hernandez would supply the game-winner 20 minutes later.

What is truly frightening about Mexico is they have now proven that they are a total team.  It was the first time in the tournament that they had been behind.  It was the first time that everything they shot didn't go in.  It was the first time everything didn't go their way.  But they kept pressing and it paid of in a trip to the semifinals.

You can tell by watching the game that the frustration was beginning to grow, but they never let it affect their play.  They knew they were the better side and they knew they were going to win this game.  The only question was when and how.

What makes Mexico the clear favorites is that this is the style of play they have adopted.  With Hernandez on the field, they know they will score goals and because of that they have no reason to panic. 

As long as they continue to play their game, the goals will come.  After all, they are the most talented team in the tournament.

Watching the US play Guadaloupe the other night you could see frustration boil over onto the pitch.  They took erratic shots, became selfish, and began to yell at one another.  They won only because Jozy Altidore scored one of the goals of the tournament.

This was the opposite way Mexico approached the game and it it led to an embarrassing 1-0 win against a team that is not even recognized by FIFA.  The US should take a long look at Mexico tonight and try and take something away from it.

Unfortunately, it may already be too late.  Mexico has already mastered what the US has yet to learn.

Emmanuelle Vaugier Sarah Silverman Larissa Meek

Gold Cup: Who Bob Bradley Should Start to Save His Job

Sunday could prove to be one of Bob Bradley's most important games yet.  With a spot in the Confederations Cup on the line, Jamaica is a must-win game for his inconsistent USA side, a side that failed to finish top of a rather weak group.  

To avoid the sack, Bradley must change his lineup.  Too often he starts the same group of guys, guys that just can't get the job done.  If he does that Sunday night, it's safe to say that Sunil Gulati, head of the US Soccer federation, will resume talks with Jurgen Klinsmann.  

Here's the XI Bradley should start if he wants to avoid the axe:

Goalkeeper:

Tim Howard.  

Timmy has been amazing between the sticks for the US.  With the exception of a slight error against Panama, Howard should still be the number one choice.  No questions asked.

Defenders:

Lichaj, Bocanegra, Goodson, Cherundolo.  

This is the same lineup Bradley started against Guadeloupe, after his wake-up call against Panama.  Although Guadeloupe wasn't much of an offensive threat, they defended well for the shutout.  Lichaj has been excellent.  He can make the runs up the line and get in the box, a goal scoring thereat at all times.  Bocanegra has been solid as always.  Goodson has had a breakout tournament, asserting his presence in the box with the aerial goal he scored.  Cherundolo should also get the start, although he has struggled with speed from the opposition, something that Jamaica has plenty of.  

Unfortunately, Bradley has no other trustworthy choice.  Onyewu and Ream can't play under pressure, and Bornstein and Spector lack the speed and agility to deal with the Jamaica front men. 

Midfielders:

Bradley, Jones, Donovan, Edu.  

This is a bit of a switch from the lineup Bradley has been playing. It adds more power to the midfield, something the US will need against a strong Jamaican team.  Edu, Jones, and Bradley are this power, while Donovan is more of the finesse.  

Where's Dempesy?  He's up top.

Forwards:

Dempsey, Agudelo.  

I know you're thinking, "did you see Altidore's goal against Guadeloupe?"  Yes, I did, but hear me out.  Altidore's game is power and strength, something the Jamaica defenders don't lack.  With Agudelo up top, and Dempsey sitting just behind him (his normal Fulham role), the US should be able to out play the Jamaican defenders and get their shots off. 

Julianne Hough Paula Garcés Genelle Frenoy

'Green Lantern' Gets Hijacked By New 'Muppets' Trailer

In brightest day, in blackest night, no evil shall escape my puppet. Wait... that's not how it goes...
Forgive the confusion ? it's got nothing to do with a lack of comic book know-how, and everything to do with the new teaser trailer for "The Muppets." That's right, the endless parodies from Kermit the Frog, Miss [...]

Jennifer Gimenez Katie Cassidy Estella Warren Cinthia Moura Monica Potter

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Miami Heat's LeBron James secures minority share in Liverpool

? Liverpool regard partnership as key to expanding their brand
? Basketball player is excited over affiliation to club

The basketball star LeBron James has secured a minority stake in Liverpool after cutting a deal with the club's US owner.

Fenway Sports Group, which also owns baseball's Boston Red Sox, has struck an agreement with James's sports-marketing firm, LRMR Branding & Marketing, to be the representative for the controversial Miami Heat player around the world. In return James will become a minority owner in Liverpool. He said he was "excited to be affiliated with this incredible organisation" and looked forward to donning a red shirt and visiting Anfield.

"The first time I stepped on an NBA [National Basketball Association] court I became a businessman," James, 26, told the Wall Street Journal. "This is a great opportunity for me."

Liverpool regard the partnership as key to expanding their brand. The chairman, Tom Werner, said: "There are very few athletes who can match his global reach, appeal and iconic status ... We feel the business opportunities for both working and being identified together in emerging international markets will result in unforeseen opportunities that neither would have been able to realise alone."

In a statement Fenway said it would "aggressively explore global business opportunities for LRMR and LeBron James, future business, marketing, endorsement and philanthropic endeavors all over the globe".

LRMR's chief executive, Maverick Carter, a high-school team-mate of James, said partnering with Fenway would open up international business opportunities for the athlete.

Terms of the deal have not been disclosed but Fenway is expected to earn a small commission on deals it does on James's behalf. The 26-year-old is one of the richest sportsmen in the world, earning $15.8m (�9.7m) from the Miami Heat and an estimated $30m a year from endorsements with companies including McDonald's, Nike, Bubbilicious and Coca-Cola.

A true rags to riches story, James was born in Akron, Ohio in 1984. His mother raised him on her own after his ex-convict father left them. Nicknamed "King James" while still in high school, James got his first Nike endorsement before he turned professional.

But James attracted some heat of his own last year after his controversial decision to quit the Cleveland Cavaliers. The move was announced in an hour-long TV show called "The Decision" and his former team were told minutes before the show was aired. Cleveland's owner, Dan Gilbert, called James' decision "selfish", "heartless", "callous" and a "cowardly betrayal". The move was also criticised by NBA commissioner David Stern. "I think that LeBron is a really good guy and he's going to be a great player and I don't think that this particular production showcased him to the best of our abilities," Stern said.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Tessie Santiago Jessica Simpson Mandy Moore Shannon Elizabeth Maggie Gyllenhaal

Baby Deer Is Just The Right Size For This Doggy Door

Filed under: , ,

Baby deer, that door isn't for you, but you come on in whenever you want because you are just too cute to turn away!

If you can believe it, this little baby deer has decided to squeeze through a tiny door made for cats and wanders into a house made for people and pets of a smaller, more domesticated nature.

If this cute little deer happened to wander into my house I would struggle with not keeping him forever and showering him with baby deer luxuries. None of that watching out for cars and running away from vicious hunters for him.

Of course, I would have to talk myself out of this idea; they are wild animals after all. But the dream lives on in this video of my perfect world, a world where man and deer can set aside their differences and coexist peacefully.



type="text/javascript"
src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js">

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Diane Kruger Magdalena Wróbel Connie Nielsen Melissa George Cameron Richardson

Cedric the Entertainer Tells Kimmel About Singing with Prince (VIDEO)

Filed under: ,

Cedric the EntertainerCedric the Entertainer stopped by 'Jimmy Kimmel Live' (Weeknights, 12AM ET on ABC) and reminisced about the time he performed on-stage with Prince.

He told Jimmy Kimmel how he'd previously been over to Prince's house for one of the diminutive rocker's "crazy parties in the midle of the night," and even described the house for us: "It's a 'Prince' house. ... It's got all kinds of sparkles and glitter and stuff ... there's fireworks going off inside ... "

Later on, Cedric was in the crowd at a Prince gig when the singer called him up on-stage to sing along with 'Raspberry Beret.' Performing live shouldn't hold any terrors for such a seasoned veteran of the stand-up circuit, but there was a snag. Cedric didn't know any of the words.

Thankfully, he managed to keep it together and bluffed his way through the verse by humming and mumbling in the right key. Then, at the crucial point he belted out the chorus: 'Raspberry Beret!'

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Jennifer Morrison Adrianne Palicki Amanda Righetti Michelle Branch Melissa Howard

Joe DiMaggio's Streak, Game 31: It All Averages Out in the End

Game 31: June 18, 1941

Early in the Wednesday afternoon game of June 18, 1941, Joe DiMaggio’s deceiving speed helped him leg out an undisputed infield hit against the White Sox. The Streak now stood at 31 games.

While journalists were still murmuring about whether or not Joltin’ Joe’s previous day’s hit off (over?) the shoulder (chest?) of shortstop Luke Appling was legitimate or not, the Yankees were trying to subdue this pesky Chicago club.

Trailing 3-2 into the bottom of the eighth, Sox pitcher Thornton Lee was trying to correct course after a two-game losing streak. He was dodging bullet after bullet (the Yankees would leave 10 men on base this day).

With one out and one on, DiMaggio came to the plate. Keep the ball away, Lee thought. The big lefty was tiring. Don't give him anything to hit, he urged himself.

Taking a little walk behind the mound, Lee collected himself. New York’s horrid, humid summer months were at hand, and this steamy afternoon hinted at what was ahead come July. Sopping wet was Lee’s flannel uniform. The 10,000 or so in attendance were anxious.

DiMaggio had to go, one way or another, Lee knew. A free pass to Joe wouldn’t be the end of the world.

DiMaggio used to say the difference between him and Ted Williams as hitters was that the Boston outfielder “was willing to take his walks, regardless of score or situation…I always swung, trying to win ballgames.”

It didn’t have to be a strike for DiMaggio to work his magic.

Now would be a terrific time for a jolt from Joe.

Lee rocked and fired.

Another sphere, thrown with the intent to walk Joe, was too close to the Yankee Clipper’s reach. DiMaggio’s bat swiftly glided toward the pitch and sent a towering drive to right.

Sox fielder Taffy Wright had to jump on his horse. By accounts in Big Apple newspapers, the ball was headed into the stands. But Wright made a fine running catch, Red Rolfe scrambled back to first and Lee survived the next four outs to win, 3-2.

Lucky to reach on a scratch hit earlier, DiMaggio was “robbed” of the chance to win the game later.

DiMaggio said later in life, “I pretty much felt it all evened out on the streak.”


JoeDiMaggio
.com is the official and authorized Web site of Joe DiMaggio. During the 70th anniversary of DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak, it is publishing “Reliving Joe DiMaggio’s Streak,” which follows the daily progress of Joltin' Joe in 1941. Series Archive

Jill Arrington Tami Donaldson Padma Lakshmi Sarah Mutch Gabrielle Union

Strikeforce: Fabricio Werdum's Career and Training with Kings MMA

Strikeforce: Fabricio Werdum's Career and Training with Kings MMA

Bleacher Report's Joshua Carey:

It has been five years since Fabricio Werdum (14-4-1 MMA, 3-0 Strikeforce) defeated Alistair Overeem (34-11 MMA, 2-0 Strikeforce).

Overeem fell victim to Werdum's world class submission skills in the second round and was defeated at PRIDE Total Elimination Absolute in 2006.

Since their fist meeting one fighter has went on to submit a legend and the other is the most hyped fighter not competing in the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

BleacherReport.com profiles Werdum's work since his first fight with Overeem and the training home he's found in California.

Click here to read the entire article

Monika Kramlik Lacey Chabert Amber Brkich Gretha Cavazzoni Marla Sokoloff

'Jurassic Park IV' Looking More Likely Again

Victoria Silvstedt Hilary Swank Whitney Port Minka Kelly Carol Grow

The Inspirational Speech America Needs (The One)

Filed under: , ,

dog riding monkey guy gives speechIf you're a diehard Urlbot you probably already know about the monkeys that ride dogs and herd goats at minor league baseball games, but unless you watched seven minutes into the YouTube video, you probably missed the important speech trainer Tim "Wild Thang" Lepard made. Don't worry, though, because someone's put together a video of just his speech and it's getting a lot of attention.

It makes perfect sense, honestly. It's like I've always said: if you're gonna take advice from somebody in this world, it should be a man who owns an American flag pickup truck and a bunch of tiny saddles.





We get it -- you're busy. Only have time for one web bit a day? Here's The One thing we think you cannot miss today. Subscribe to "The One" RSS Feed.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Michael Michele Marisa Tomei Shannyn Sossamon Rachael Leigh Cook Elisha Cuthbert

Donothingfor2minutes Helps You Do Nothing For Two Minutes

Filed under: ,

donothingfor2minutesYou know what the nicest thing about donothingfor2minutes.com is? Even nicer than the soothing sound of waves cascading on the sand and the magnificent ocean view? It's the fact that at no point during the two minutes of calm-filled nothingingness that donothingfor2minutes.com so deftly provides, does Linda Blair's demonic face pop up on the screen and scare the living chips out of you just when you least expected it.

Donothingfor2minutes is just two minutes of pure, unadulterated internet bliss -- except for the fact that if you do do something computer related during the allotted two minutes, like move the mouse or open a new tab because two minutes never felt so long and you're just totally bored out of your mind, the site tells you you failed (thanks a lot, website) and starts the timer all over again.

Whatever. It's a small price to pay for nothing.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Taylor Swift Milla Jovovich Maggie Grace Luján Fernández Charli Baltimore

Shaquille O'Neal announces retirement from basketball

? Boston's Shaquille O'Neal calls time on 19-year career
? Centre won four NBA championships in glittering career

Shaquille O'Neal has announced that he is set to retire from the NBA. The 39-year-old Boston Celtics centre posted a video on his Twitter page saying he was bringing an end to his 19-year career.

"We did it, 19 years, baby," O'Neal said. "Thank you very much. That's why I'm telling you first. I'm about to retire. Love you. Talk to you soon."

O'Neal, a 7ft 1in centre, started his career at the Orlando Magic before moving to the Los Angeles Lakers in 1996 and where he won three successive championships from 2000.

He moved to the Miami Heat in 2004 and won a fourth championship in 2006 before spells at the Phoenix Suns and the Cleveland Cavaliers. He has been at the Celtics since last year.

O'Neal, who has also released several rap albums and appeared in a number of films, won the NBA Most Valuable Player, All-Star game MVP and Finals MVP awards in 2000, among a host of other honours.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Chyler Leigh Julie Berry Lori Heuring Nicole Scherzinger Jill Arrington

Might as Well Make Another 'Percy Jackson & the Olympians' Movie

Jessica White Anna Friel Monica Bellucci Minki van der Westhuizen Katharine Towne

A Video Peek at the Season Finale of 'The Killing'

Filed under: ,

Given how many ups and downs there have been this season on 'The Killing' (more downs than ups, in my humble opinion), the season finale of the show is likely to be the focus of many Monday morning conversations.

Will the AMC murder mystery stick the landing? Check back here after midnight ET Sunday to find out what I thought of 'The Killing's' season finale -- I'll try to get that recap posted as quickly as I can after the final episode of Season 1 airs.

Until then, we've got a clip from 'The Killing''s Season 1 swan song:

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Vitamin C Scarlett Johansson Christina Ricci Missi Pyle Jessica Alba

Friday, June 17, 2011

'Green Lantern': Ryan Reynolds & Blake Lively Play The Yes/No Show

"Green Lantern" hits movie theaters today, bringing the longtime DC Comics superhero to the big screen for the very first time. Ryan Reynolds stars as Hal Jordan, a cocky fighter pilot who reluctantly accepts a powerful ring from a dying alien that transforms him into a member of the Green Lantern Corps, an intergalactic peace-keeping [...]

Alessandra Ambrosio Amanda Detmer Emma Stone Raquel Alessi Marisa Coughlan

James Mangold Directing 'The Wolverine'

Brittany Daniel Kate Moss Zhang Ziyi Nikki Reed Natasha Bedingfield

UFC 137 Preview: 5 Reasons Georges St-Pierre Will Beat Nick Diaz and Move to MW

A fight that many fans have asked for will happen at UFC 137.

UFC welterweight champ Georges St-Pierre will meet Strikeforce Welterweight Champion Nick Diaz in one of the biggest matches of the year.

St-Pierre, 22-2, is currently on a nine-fight winning streak while Diaz is riding a 10-fight win streak.

Despite Diaz being a tough fighter, many predict he will become another victim of St-Pierre. Some may also believe St-Pierre could move to middleweight . Here are some reasons why they may be right.

Begin Slideshow

Chloë Sevigny Janet Jackson Georgianna Robertson Reese Witherspoon Jordana Brewster

NFL Predictions 2011: Predicting the Stats for Every Rookie Quarterback in 2011

The 2011 rookie QB class is loaded with talent from top to bottom.

From a former Heisman Trophy winner to a 6'6" gunslinger from the University of Nevada, the sky is the limit for many of these first-year signal-callers.

In the following slides, I have predicted the stats for each of the rookie QBs that I believe will see the field this season.

Begin Slideshow

Drew Barrymore Marley Shelton Thalía Brooke Burke Thandie Newton

'Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2' Trailer Commentary: One Last Spell

"Harry Potter" fans have been slammed with trailer after trailer, photo after photo, poster after poster, but it's all finally barreling to a close: the final "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2" trailer has arrived, and you know what that means ? it's all about to end.
Well, it isn't all about to end [...]

Yamila Diaz Alicia Keys Tyra Banks Vanessa Hudgens Sarah Michelle Gellar

NBA review: Chicago Bulls take top seed status for play-offs

? Bulls close regular season with ninth straight victory
? San Antonio Spurs lose 106-103 to the Phoenix Suns

Kyle Korver scored 19 points as the Chicago Bulls closed the regular season with their ninth straight victory, beating the New Jersey Nets 97-92. The Bulls had to wait for San Antonio's result to see who would be seeded No1 for the play-offs ? with the Spurs' loss to Phoenix earning them home-court advantage.

Joakim Noah finished with 10 points and 10 rebounds to help the Bulls finish 62-20, equalling their best showing since the 1997-98 championship season. They begin their play-off campaign against the Indiana Pacers.

Suns 106, Spurs 103

Marcin Gortat had 21 points and 13 rebounds as Phoenix denied San Antonio their chance to secure home-court advantage throughout the play-offs. The Spurs, who at 61-21 finished a game behind Chicago for the best record in the NBA, lost Manu Ginobili to injury early in the game. San Antonio will open against Memphis in the play-offs.

Lakers 116, Kings 108, OT

Lakers star Kobe Bryant scored 36 points and forced overtime with a tying three-pointer with 4.8 seconds left in regulation, as the Kings lost what might be their last game in Sacramento. A standing-room only crowd packed the 17,317-seat capacity arena, clanking cow bells and roaring louder than they had in years. With the team mulling a move to Anaheim, fans brought handmade signs and cheered their loudest to will the team back. Instead, the Lakers pulled away in overtime to take the No2 seed in the Western Conference, setting up a first-round series against New Orleans. Marcus Thornton had 33 points and Tyreke Evans added 16 for the Kings.

Heat 97, Raptors 79

Eddie House scored a career-high 35 points and Juwan Howard added 18 as Miami beat Toronto. With the Heat assured of the second seed in the East, Miami's coach, Erik Spoelstra, rested LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. Miami will host Philadelphia in its post-season opener. House's previous career best was 31, set against Utah on 18 November 2005. He was seven of 13 from three-point range. The Heat have won four straight and 15 of 18 heading into the play-offs. Jerryd Bayless scored 21 points for Toronto.

Celtics 112, Knicks 102

At Boston, Avery Bradley scored a career-high 20 points to help Boston's "B'' team beat New York's second string. Glen "Big Baby" Davis had 17 points and eight rebounds, and Sasha Pavlovic added a season-high 19 points as the Celtics ended a two-game losing streak. Amare Stoudemire played 20 minutes and scored 14 points for New York.

Magic 92, Pacers 74

Ryan Anderson scored 14 points, and Dwight Howard had 13 points and 13 rebounds in a short night in Orlando's victory over Indiana. Mike Dunleavy and Brandon Rush both scored 16 points for Indiana. The Pacers will open their first play-off series in five years against top-seeded Chicago, while the Magic will host Atlanta in a match-up of the fourth and fifth seeds.

Clippers 110, Grizzlies 103

Blake Griffin had 31 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists in the 82nd and final game of his spectacular rookie season for Los Angeles. Griffin sat out all 82 games last season after hurting his knee in the final pre-season game and having surgery. He was the only player to appear in every game this season when injuries plagued the team. Eric Gordon added 24 points and DeAndre Jordan had 14 points and 10 rebounds for Los Angeles. The Clippers finished 32-50 to miss the playoffs again.

Mavericks 121, Hornets 89

Dirk Nowitzki scored 12 of his 32 points in the decisive third quarter, leading Dallas past New Orleans. Dallas wound up No 3 in the Western Conference and will face Portland in the opening round. New Orleans hung on to the seventh spot because Memphis also lost. The Hornets will face the Lakers. Jarrett Jack led New Orleans with 22 points.

Warriors 110, Trail Blazers 86

Reggie Williams scored 28 points, and Stephen Curry had 18 points and nine assists in Golden State's victory over Portland. Dorell Wright had 20 points to cap a breakout season for the veteran forward and David Lee added 13 points for the Warriors. Patty Mills had a career-high 23 points and Wesley Matthews added 18 points for Portland, which already had secured the No6 seed in the Western Conference.

Bucks 110, Thunder 106, OT

Brandon Jennings scored 16 points as Milwaukee beat Oklahoma City. Jennings outscored the Thunder 8-2 in the final 2:21, hitting the go-ahead reverse layup with 56.8 seconds left and then hitting two free throws to put the game away. Russell Westbrook scored 20 points and Kevin Durant added 14 in a season-low 23 minutes as the Thunder gave their starters a lightened load with the playoffs looming. Oklahoma City will be the No4 seed in the Western Conference and open against Denver.

Jazz 107, Nuggets 103

At Salt Lake City, rookie Gordon Hayward scored a career-high 34 points and hit five three-pointers to lift Utah past play-off-bound Denver. The game meant little to the Nuggets, who already had secured the Western Conference's No5 seed and rested many of their players. Wilson Chandler led the Nuggets with 27 points.

Bobcats 96, Hawks 85

Gerald Henderson scored 20 points, and DJ Augustin added 17 points and seven assists as Charlotte sent Atlanta into the play-offs on a six-game losing streak. With no starter playing more than 25 minutes and only Kirk Hinrich (10 points) scoring in double figures, the coach, Larry Drew, earned the Hawks rest, but no momentum heading into their first-round game at Orlando.

Pistons 104, 76ers 100

Rodney Stuckey scored 29 points, and Tayshaun Prince had 14 to help Detroit hand play-off-bound Philadelphia its fifth loss in six games. Jrue Holiday led the 76ers with 21 points. They will open the play-offs against Miami.

Cavaliers 100, Wizards 93

At Cleveland, Ramon Sessions scored 27 points and JJ Hickson added 15 as Cleveland closed out one of the worst seasons in franchise history and the first in eight years without LeBron James. The Cavs finished 19-63, an extreme drop after going a league-best 61-21 during the regular season in 2010. Andray Blatche scored 20 for Washington.

Rockets 121, Timberwolves 102

At Minneapolis, Chase Budinger scored a career-high 35 points and Kevin Martin added 25 for Houston. Michael Beasley scored 34 points and Anthony Randolph had 23 for Minnesota. The Timberwolves lost their last 15 games of the season to finish with the worst record in the NBA at 15-65.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Reese Witherspoon Jordana Brewster Laetitia Casta Claudette Ortiz Julia Stiles