cycling, mind games

Midweek Myriad: Mind games

You may have noticed from the last post that Sports Myriad has a new contributor from across the pond. Carrie Dunn was part of the legendary crew of Guardian minute-by-minute and over-by-over commentators, though she’s more charitable to Americans than most of them. She’ll write about a lot of sports — darts, cricket, women’s sports — that I’ve wanted to cover at Sports Myriad but haven’t had much of a chance to cover because I’m just not quite as plugged into those sports as I am elsewhere.

We’re also expecting a rugby preview from another contributor soon.

All of which means you should be adding Sports Myriad to your RSS readers if you haven’t already.

A couple of items of interest so far this week, starting with games played with the head rather than hands or feet:

Chess: Vishy Anand has retained the world title, but the man to watch is 19-year-old Norwegian grandmaster Magnus Carlsen. He is already No. 1 on FIDE’s rating list and is gaining on Garry Kasparov’s all-time high. NYT blogger Dylan Loeb McClain tells us he wins with creativity rather than encyclopedic knowledge of familiar openings. And he already has some celebrity appeal, joining Liv Tyler for some sort of fashion shoot this week.

Another youngster, 22-year-old Czech grandmaster Viktor Laznicka won the World Open, a top U.S. event. Lubomir Kavalek takes us through a wide-open game Laznicka won with black.

Poker: Daniel Alaei won the pot-limit Omaha world title for his third World Series of Poker bracelet. (Not this year — only Frank Kassela, who win Player of the Year honors unless one of his pursuers can reach the November Nine, has two bracelets this summer.)

Pros and semi-pros (Kassela is considered semi-pro) have won most of the events this year, but one of the last event winners before the Main Event is a Dutch physicist named Marcel Vonk. Good week for the Netherlands.

Day 1A of the Main Event (the tournament is so large that players start on four different days — 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D) featured Chris Moneymaker, the amateur who helped launch the poker boom with his unlikely Main Event win a few years ago, and cross-country skier Petter Northug, perhaps the only World Series of Poker participant whom I saw in a press conference tent in Whistler this year.

My former USA TODAY colleague Gary Mihoces has landed in Vegas and tells us Ray Romano has busted out. He also has details on Phil Hellmuth’s planned MMA-style entrance, featuring Wanderlei Silva, King Mo and the man himself, Bruce Buffer.

ESPN has a video interview with one of its own, former baseball pitcher Orel Hershiser, who comes up with some clever analogies between baseball and poker:

http://espn.go.com/videohub/player/embed.swf

Cycling: One day after the cobblestones rattled Lance Armstrong and others, we had a much less eventful day at the Tour de France and the usual first-week sprint finish.

Soccer: Hey, there’s a game on.

soccer

U.S. Open Cup and why lower-division teams are happy

No, we shouldn’t read too much into U.S. Open Cup results. Having two USL-2 teams in the quarterfinals and no one from the USL/NASL shotgun marriage of a second tier doesn’t mean the USL-2 teams are doing everything right while the USL/NASL teams are getting it wrong.

But there’s something curious happening in the USL ranks. Several years after Dave Ungrady’s Unlucky chronicled a professional team at this level that had organizational struggles (one side effect: paychecks?), we’re seeing a couple of well-established American soccer clubs that are at this level voluntarily, and they’re quite happy.

You could call it the final nail in the “promotion/relegation NOW” argument. Though these clubs have roots, either with youth systems or stadiums, they’re not fretting away that they can’t be promoted to MLS. They’re not even interested in moving up to the second level of American soccer.

“Ultimately, we want to be in a situation where we are now where we’ve got local rivals, we have a stable league and stable group of teams,” Kickers coach Leigh Cowlishaw said after his team played well but lost 2-0 to D.C. United in the round of 16. “We’re not looking to change the recipe. The reason we’ve been successful over the last 20 years is that we try to make financial decisions that make sense long-term not only for the club but the growth of soccer. We’re very happy where we are. Hopefully there will be more teams that want to follow the model that we have.”

So the Kickers have opted for stability and short trips in their handsomely appointed bus over trips to Puerto Rico and ambitions of challenging MLS anywhere other than an Open Cup bracket.

“We’re more excited, we have something to prove,” said Kickers captain Mike Burke, who played for D.C. United several years ago. “So I think we’re going to have the edge from that standpoint, and that’s why a couple of USL-2 teams win games. Obviously the quality in MLS is better. But sometimes these lower-division teams are just more up for the game.”

The teams advancing through the Cup bracket have more going for them than a pro team and some grandiose marketing hype. The Harrisburg City Islanders, like the Kickers, have an extensive youth program. The Charleston Battery have a soccer-specific stadium with 5,100 seats, a few amusements for kids and a pub for adults.

What distinguishes the Kickers is that its long-running youth system — a team makes an appearance in the 1994 book Twenty-Two Foreigners in Funny Shorts — is producing players for the pro team. Midfielder Bobby Foglesong played with the Kickers’ Super Y League and PDL teams. Defender Roger Bothe was a U-15 player for the Kickers in 2002.

“I was there when he was 13 or 14 and coached him a few times,” Burke said, joking that he feels old. “It makes you feel good that you have a kid with your youth club who’s with the pro team now.”

“We’ve got programs for 2-year-olds up to the pro level,” Kickers forward Matthew Delicâte said. “So we’ve got everything in place. It’s a great system now. The pro players can be around and help teach young players about the game.”

The system also is ideal for older players with coaching aspirations like Burke, an assistant technical director in the youth ranks, and Delicâte, who traveled to the LA area’s Home Depot Center to earn his “B” coaching license in the offseason.

“Those are the kinds of things that are going to keep me around,” Burke said. “My soccer career’s almost over. I have maybe one more year in me.”

Richmond is a hospitable place to settle down — Englishman Delicâte first came to Richmond to play for Virginia Commonwealth and is happy to live close to his wife’s family. Having the Kickers in place gives players with ties to Richmond a nice option, particularly with a youth program producing a steady stream of talent.

“The goal is to play at the highest level possible, but if they want to continue to play professional soccer and Richmond’s their home, that’s a great situation,” Cowlishaw said.

And so as we follow along tonight with the Battery hosting MLS’ Columbus Crew (plus an all-MLS matchup of Houston and Chivas USA), the annual questions of whether USL teams are better than MLS teams seem less interesting than this question: What will it take to replicate Richmond?

cycling, mind games, olympic sports, soccer, tennis, track and field

Monday Myriad: Want U.S. world titles? We’ve got ’em

Even with an extra day, the weekend was overstuffed:

Soccer: No disrespect to Uruguay and the Netherlands, but isn’t the Germany-Spain matchup as good as it gets? The most explosive team in the Cup against a team that has spent the last three and a half years as the Harlem Globetrotters of world soccer?

Closer to home, MLS had terrific goals in the Seattle-Los Angeles matchup, and Conor Casey is playing like he’s still auditioning for the national team. Or like he thinks he’s Marta.

Tennis: Serena and Nadal winning Wimbledon isn’t the surprise. The surprise is that Roger Federer has fallen all the way to No. 3.

Track and field: David Oliver set an American record in the 110 hurdles at the Prefontaine Classic, which also saw Walter Dix outrun Tyson Gay down the stretch in the 200. Field events were less kind to Americans — Dwight Phillips finished second in the long jump and pulled up with some sort of strain, and Jenn Suhr no-heighted in the pole vault.

Softball: Not all of the games were easy, but the USA trounced Japan 7-0 in five innings in the World Championship final.

Water polo: Soccer isn’t the only sport settled with a penalty shootout. The U.S. women tied Australia 7-7 in the World League final and won the shootout. Brenda Villa was named top player; Betsey Armstrong was top goalkeeper.

Gymnastics: Bronze for U.S. men at Japan Cup, featuring mostly A-teamers.

Cycling: The Tour de France is underway, which means it’s time for one of the funniest annual reading activities — the Tour de Schmalz. If you prefer drama to comedy, read the Wall Street Journal‘s harrowing story on Floyd Landis’ doping allegations.

Poker: The Main Event is underway, even as two other events are still going … and going … and going …

The Tournament of Champions is over, at least, with Huck Seed outlasting Howard Lederer.

Volleyball: The U.S. men got two wins in Egypt, leaving themselves in contention to make the World League’s six-team final tournament. All they have to do is beat pool-leading Russia twice July 9-10 in Wichita.

Beach volleyball: Phil Dalhausser and Todd Rogers remained unbeatable, winning the FIVB event in Norway. Yes, Norway. What? They have beaches.

MMA: All hail Brock Lesnar.

Chess: Yes, they exhumed Bobby Fischer.

And a couple of random reads of interest …

Cricket: Did you know about Staten Island’s cricket history?

Soccer: One of the best reads about South Africa since the Cup started — meet Santos, “The People’s Team.” (Not in the Communist sense.)

soccer

Game report: Freedom 0, Red Stars 0 (updates with quotes)

BOYDS, Md. — Though they were playing at home, the Washington Freedom may consider themselves lucky to have escaped with a 0-0 draw Sunday against fellow playoff bubble team Chicago.

Despite the oppressive heat — 96 degrees by one check at kickoff — the Red Stars came out running, with a direct approach that kept the Freedom on their heels much of the game. The stats told the story — Chicago outshot Washington 23-5, putting 11 shots on goal to Washington’s 3.

“We knew early on that it was going to be hot this week, so we wanted the ball to do the work,” Freedom forward Abby Wambach said. “But to be quite honest, I felt like they had the ball the whole game. There’s probably 10 different reasons why that’s the case, but the fact is it’s no fun to play when the other team has the ball and you’re defending the whole game.”

Chicago co-captain Kate Markgraf says the tactics were a departure for a team that’s normally possession-oriented.

“The way D.C. plays, sometimes that’s the only option,” Markgraf said. “They clog the center so much.”

Coach Omid Namazi felt the Red Stars were ready to turn up the heat.

“We’ve been working a lot on our fitness,” Namazi said. “We’ve also been working on the speed of our play. We still lack that finishing touch.”

Chicago had a lively start with Marian Dalmy’s long ball to Megan Rapinoe, who shot high. Washington countered with a more patient but equally effective buildup, with a series of passes down the right springing Lene Mykjaland against keeper Jillian Loyden, who was alert to the danger.

They traded chances again before the 15-minute mark, with Dalmy again sending a long ball to Ella Masar and a Freedom free kick causing chaos in the Chicago box.

Cristiane looked dangerous on the left flank for Chicago with good footwork and speed, setting up Masar for a terrific chance from 12 yards, but the shot sailed high.

The game slowed for the next 15 minutes, though Chicago continued to bypass the midfield in its buildup. Dalmy drilled a 30-yard free kick on frame for Erin McLeod to punch over, and the ensuing corner yielded another shot, a Cristiane header easily collected.

Within two minutes, Masar was again on the receiving end of a long ball, with McLeod just getting enough of the ball to keep out of danger.

The Freedom finally got another chance on a 42nd-minute free kick that Sonia Bompastor cheekily sent toward the near post while most traffic went far. Mykjaland couldn’t get a clear shot.

Early in the second half, McLeod again had to be alert on a long ball to Masar, coming up to challenge just in time.

The Red Stars’ direct danger continued in the 65th, with a through ball that put Cristiane a step ahead of the defense. But her touch failed her ever so slightly, and Nikki Marshall broke up the play with a well-timed slide.

The substitution patterns seemed backward, with the Freedom taking out attacking players at home. At halftime, midfielder Beverly Goebel replaced the ever-dangerous Bompastor.

“She physically just couldn’t do what she normally could do,” Freedom coach Jim Gabarra said in a postgame interview on the Soccerplex PA system. “She was in the All-Star Game a couple of days ago. Prior to that, she’s been fatigued with all the play.”

In the 70th, defender Kristi Eveland replaced forward Lene Mykjaland, though the Freedom pushed converted forward Marshall from the backline up alongside Abby Wambach.

“It was pretty unexpected,” Marshall said. “I had played a little bit of forward the last couple of weeks in practice. But he just kind of threw me up there to see what would happen. I’m excited — I hope I get to play more up there. I think I could have done a little bit more — I’m not pleased with my performance completely, but I only got 15 minutes up there.”

The Red Stars kept pressing, bringing in forwards Casey Nogueira and Kosovare Asllani to replace starting attackers Masar and Rapinoe.

But the Freedom started to get chances, earning a free kick that Cat Whitehill ripped just wide. Then Marshall sprang free on the left, only to be see the danger cut out by a speedy recovery from ageless captain Kate Markgraf.

Whitehill, Markgraf’s frequent national team line-mate, made an uncharacteristic misplay of the ball in her own box in the 80th. Chicago centered to the top of the box for Karen Carney, whose shot produced McLeod’s toughest save of the afternoon.

“Our theme this week was about having each other’s back,” McLeod said. “Cat played a tremendous 89 minutes and 45 seconds, and she had that one lapse. We have to be there for those mistakes, and we were.”

The Red Stars’ efforts deserved a goal, and it nearly came in the 85th minute. Asllani played a through ball to fellow sub Nogueira, splitting the defense. McLeod came out to challenge at the top of the box, getting there just as Nogueira shot. The ball trickled just wide of the goal.

“That was a relief, especially the timing of the game,” McLeod said. “We played Philly and lost in the last few minutes of the game.”

McLeod wasn’t surprised, though, to race off her line a few times.

“Cat Whitehill does a tremendous job of keeping a high line,” McLeod said. “When the defense keeps a high line, you have to ready to come out. Cat was yelling at me a couple of times to get my ass out, and I did.”

The defensive end wasn’t really the Freedom’s problem, anyway.

“I’m as frustrated as I’ve ever been today,” Wambach said. “I just can’t find the ball. I had one good chance and didn’t do my best with it.”

Chicago could be pleased with the road draw if not for the fact that they’re still three points behind the Freedom in the race for the fourth playoff spot.

“We have to get points, though,” Markgraf said. “We’re not in the playoffs right now.”

“These are opportunities we’ve got to start taking,” Namazi said.

track and field

Viewer’s guide: Prefontaine Classic

What: Prefontaine Classic

Where: Eugene, Ore.

When/how to watch: Saturday 2 p.m. ET for first field event, 4 p.m. at UniversalSports.com, 4:30 p.m. at NBC

More info: Schedule, start lists, results

The Prefontaine Classic track and field meet is indeed an American classic. Named after the legendary Steve Prefontaine, the meet has always attracted a solid collection of athletes.

On the international calendar, the Pre has long been in the second tier, whatever it was called — Grand Prix, Super Grand Prix, Super Duper Fast Meet, etc. With the expansive, global Diamond League replacing the Euro-centric Golden League, the Pre made the cut.

So most of the events in Eugene will have Diamond League points at stake. The exceptions are the women’s 5,000 (featuring American stars Shalane Flanagan, Jen Rhines and Amy Yoder-Begley), the women’s hammer throw (not a Diamond League discipline for some reason) and the men’s 1,000 (an iconoclastic event, perfect for a meet featuring an iconoclastic distance runner).

Even in these metric days, the Pre simply has to feature the mile, which will count toward the Diamond League’s 1,500 standings.

The Diamond races at a glance:

MEN

Mile (1,500): Asbel Kiprop (KEN) has the Diamond League lead, and Mekonnen Gebremedhin (ETH) and Gideon Gathimba (KEN) also are here. So is meet-record holder Daniel Kipchirchir Komen (KEN). But American distance runners always show up in force at the Pre, and Bernard Lagat, Lopez Lomong and Leo Manzano can all run with the top guys from Africa.

110 hurdles: Terrific opportunity for co-leader David Oliver (USA) to gain points. Cuban co-leader Dayron Robles and Chinese contenders Shi Dongpeng and Liu Xiang aren’t here.

200: Co-leader Usain Bolt (JAM) still isn’t back from injury. Tyson Gay (USA), on the other hand, is on the entry list. So is co-leader Walter Dix, who won the 100 at the U.S. championships last week.

5,000: Leader Imane Merga (ETH) is here along with the only man to beat him in the Diamond League this year, Eliud Kipchoge (KEN). Bernard Lagat is the only American to get points in any of the three Diamond League races so far, but he’s in the mile instead of this one. American hopefuls are Matt Tegenkamp, Ben True and Chris Solinsky.

Discus: Zoltan Kovago (HUN) and Piotr Malachowski (POL) have split the two Diamond League events so far and share the lead. Gerd Kanter (EST) shares third with Robert Harting (GER), the only member of the leading quartet not to be here. Good competition for the American contingent — Ian Waltz, Jarred Rome, Casey Malone, Jason Young.

Long jump: Dwight Phillips (USA) is still bringing it in this event, leading with six points to five for Fabrice LaPierre (AUS). Third-place Irving Saladino (PAN) also is here. This one will be fun. Prepare rhythmic claps.

Shot put: Americans have been trading the podium places amongst themselves in this event for a while, but this year, it’s all Christian Cantwell. He’s 3-for-3 in the Diamond League. Dylan Armstrong (CAN) is second, Reese Hoffa (USA) is tied for third, and Tomasz Majewski (POL) has a point. Another German, Ralf Bartels, didn’t make the trip. Adam Nelson (USA) has a world championship and was unlucky to get silver rather than gold in 2000 and 2004.

WOMEN

100: All five sprinters with Diamond points are in the race — Carmelita Jeter (USA, 4), Lashauntea Moore (USA, 4), Chandra Sturrup (BAH, 3), Shelly-Ann Fraser (JAM, 2) and Tahesia Harrigan (IVB, 1). Also 200-meter leader Veronica Campbell-Brown (JAM).

400: Allyson Felix (USA) won the only Diamond League race she has entered at this distance. She trails Amantie Montsho (BOT) in the standings. The other two points-getters also are here: Noviene Williams-Mills (JAM) and Debbie Dunn (USA).

400 hurdles: Lashinda Demus (USA) has won both Diamond League races. Second-place Natalya Antukh (RUS) isn’t here, but third-place Kaliese Spencer (JAM) is.

800: Fellow Duke grad Shannon Rowbury is dropping down to 800? Actually, so is 1,500 leader Nancy Jebet Langat (KEN), so she’s in good company. Janeth Jepkosgei (KEN) is the leader here. Alysia Johnson and Maggie Vessey finished 1-2 in the USA championships.

3,000 steeplechase: Leader Milcah Chemos Cheiywa (KEN) is the only runner here with points. It’s mostly a North American group, including new U.S. champ Lisa Aguilera and runner-up Nicole Bush.

Javelin: Leader and world record-holder Barbara Spotakova (CZE) is in a six-woman field including new U.S. record-holder (and, obviously, champion) Kara Patterson.

Pole vault: Fabiana Murer (BRA) and Anna Rogowska (POL) have points, but this may be the day Jenn Suhr (USA, formerly Jenn Stuczynski) launches her challenge for the season jackpot.

Triple jump: Co-leader Olga Rypakova (KAZ) can open a gap over absent Yargelis Savigne (CUB).

cycling, mma, olympic sports, soccer, tennis, track and field

Friday Myriad: Wimbledon, World Cup, le Tour

Funny thing about July 4th weekend – the most important action in the sports world is all overseas.

The three-day absence from posting here won’t happen often. Had a lot of actual paid work to do, plus a week of solo parenting. Shouldn’t have a break like this until vacation.

Off we go (all times ET) …

HEADLINES

Water polo: Big comeback keeps the U.S. women unbeaten in World League final tournament.

Poker: The last weekend before the Main Event — the $10,000 buy-in no-limit hold-’em World Championship that draws thousands of entrants and weeks of ESPN coverage — features several events of interest:

  • Tournament of Champions: They’ve only knocked the field down the original 27 to 17, and that’s causing scheduling problems. The idea was to play it across two weekends. They’ll resume Saturday at 10 p.m. IF none of the 17 players is busy in another event. They may have to resume at noon Sunday. That’s 9 a.m. Vegas time. Is anyone awake then?
  • $25,000 buy-in six-handed no-limit hold’em: Several big names just missed out on the final three tables (18 players) — John Juanda, Barry Greenstein, Vanessa Rousso, Freddy Deeb, Erik Seidel and Phil Ivey. But Daniel Negreanu is still in, threatening Saturday’s Tournament of Champions start. So is Frank Kassela, who’s in position to edge Juanda for Player of the Year honors.
  • Pot-limit Omaha World Championship: Phil Hellmuth is still active in this one and the TOC, and a few other notable names are still going after Day 1.
  • Two smaller no-limit hold’em events that shouldn’t attract may top players.
  • Ante Up for Africa: Poker pro Annie Duke and actor Don Cheadle host an annual charity event that usually draws a good crowd of celebrities, some of whom hang around for the Main Event the next week, and many top players, though the crowded schedule may preclude a few people from entering.

FRIDAY (all times ET)

10 a.m.: World Cup quarterfinal, Netherlands-Brazil. ESPN / ESPN Deportes / ESPN3 / Univision

10:45ish a.m.: Wimbledon men’s semifinal, Andy Murray-Rafael Nadal. Winner faces Tomas Berdych, who upset Roger Federer this week and Novak Djokovic this morning. Murray’s path of Nadal, always better on clay and inconsistent here, and Berdych is Britain’s best hope in a generation. ESPN2, shifting to NBC at noon

2:30 p.m.: World Cup quarterfinal, Uruguay-Ghana. Just think — this could be the USA. ESPN / ESPN Deportes / ESPN3 / Univision

7:30 p.m.: Softball, World Championship final, USA vs. Canada-Japan winner. Not vouching at all for quality, reliability or even safety of this Webcast. Venezuelan government

SATURDAY

9 a.m.: Wimbledon women’s final, Serena Williams-Vera Zvonareva. Also should get some doubles finals, with at least one American player to appear in the women’s doubles. NBC

10 a.m.: World Cup quarterfinal, Argentina-Germany. ABC / ESPN Deportes  / Univision

11:30 a.m.: Tour de France, prologue. Lance Armstrong is saying this will be his last, though he has said that before. If he’s trying for an individual win rather than a teammate’s win this year, he’ll need to do well in the time trials, starting here. Versus

2:30 p.m.: World Cup quarterfinal, Paraguay-Spain. ABC / ESPN Deportes  / Univision

4:30 p.m.: Track and field, Diamond League Prefontaine Classic. One of the most storied meets in the USA is now part of the world’s top circuit. Full preview coming later today. Really. Hold me to it. NBC

5:30 p.m.: Poker, $25K no-limit hold’em six-handed. See above. ESPN3

7:30 p.m.: Water polo, World League women’s final. TeamUSA.org

8 p.m.: MLS, Columbus-Chicago. FSC

9 p.m.: UFC 116, Brock Lesnar vs. Shane Carwin for the heavyweight title in the main event. Spike has Seth Petruzelli, whose win over Kimbo Slice was erroneously called the biggest upset in MMA history at the time, in one of its two prelims. Spike, shifting to PPV at 10 p.m.

10:30 p.m.: MLS, Chivas USA-Philadelphia. FSC

SUNDAY

8:30 a.m.: Cycling, Tour de France, Stage 1. Cue the sprinters. Thor smash? Versus

9 a.m.: Wimbledon men’s final and possibly mixed doubles final. NBC

Noon: Hot dog eating. No Kobayashi? ESPN3

10:30 p.m.: MLS, Los Angeles-Seattle. ESPN2

MORE MYRIAD

  • Full soccer listings at Soccer America.
  • Selected weekend listings at USA TODAY
  • ESPN3: Australian Rules football, CFL, golf, lacrosse and poker.
  • Tennis Channel: Classic matches.
  • Universal Sports: Beach volleyball and more Prefontaine Classic coverage.
  • More Olympic sports: Canoe/kayak World Cup final stop, U17 men’s basketball World Championship, U.S. men’s volleyball in Egypt for World League