mind games, olympic sports, soccer, winter sports

Monday Myriad: Keep watching the skis

It was Thanksgiving weekend in the USA, which explains why most MMA circuits were quiet.

But internationally, it’s prime skiing, skating and sliding time. The top stories of the weekend:

Marco Sullivan (By Tom Kelly, U.S. Ski Team)

1. Lindsey Vonn had a decent weekend considering her recent hospitalization. But the U.S. Ski Team had a surprise elsewhere: At age 31, Marco Sullivan hadn’t finished in the top 10 in a World Cup race in nearly three years. Saturday in Alberta, he picked up his fourth World Cup podium. Alan Abrahamson has the story on how Sullivan kept his career alive in the offseason.

2. The U.S. women’s cross-country skiers had been a force in the sprints for a few years. But this weekend, they had a double breakthrough in Sweden. First, Kikkan Randall was on the podium in a non-sprint race for the first time, and Holly Brooks was a career-best fifth in a 10K freestyle. The results might have been even better if not for the rough course wiping out other U.S. skiers who were poised for top-10s. Then on Sunday, Randall, Brooks, Jessie Diggins and Liz Stephen combined for third in a mixed relay.

3. Our first Myriad Questions subject, Sarah Hendrickson, was second in the World Cup season opener and her first competition since knee surgery.

4. We’ve already covered figure skating, where the USA will send Ashley Wagner and Meryl Davis/Charlie White to the Grand Prix Finals, which will have a heavy Russian and Japanese presence.

5. And we’ve already covered chess, where we’ll have a new women’s world champion until Hou Yifan takes back the title next year.

Elsewhere, the USA had more good results in men’s bobsled, Julia Clukey returned to luge action with a promising result, cyclocross star Katie Compton shook off jet lag for another win, and other U.S. sliders had a rough run.

Sport-by-sport results (if no parentheses, the athlete is from the USA):

Alpine skiing: Men’s World Cup, Lake Louise, Alberta

Downhill: 1. Aksel Lund Svindal (Norway). 3. Marco Sullivan, 25. Ryan Cochran-Siegle, 39. Travis Ganong, 40. Steven Nyman, DNF. Andrew Weibrecht.

Super-G: 1. Svindal. 4. Ted Ligety, 19. Weibrecht, 20. Cochran-Siegle, 29. Thomas Biesemeyer, 39. Sullivan, 47. Ganong, 60. Jared Goldberg

Women’s World Cup, Aspen, Colo.

Giant slalom: 1. Tina Maze (Slovenia). 9. Mikaela Shiffrin, 15. Julia Mancuso, 21. Lindsey Vonn, DNQ. Abby Ghent, Megan McJames, DNF. Julia Ford.

Slalom: 1. Kathrin Zettel (Austria). 7. Shiffrin. DNQ. Mancuso, Resi Steigler, DNS. Ford, DNF. Paula Moltzan, Hailey Duke.

Wrestling: Arvo Haavisto Cup, Ilmajoki, Finland (Greco-Roman)

145.5 pounds: 1. Mykola Savcnenko (Ukraine). 2. Thrasher Porter, 10. Ben Sanchez

163: 3. Andy Bisek, 9. Geordan Speiller

264.5: 1. Robbie Smith

Henri Deglane Challenge, Nice, France

Women’s 158.5 freestyle: 1. Adeline Gray

Men’s 121 freestyle: 1. Omak Sjurjun (Russia). 3. Mark McKnight

Men’s 185 Greco-Roman: 1. Sergei Severin (Ukraine). 3. Shaun Scott

Cross-country skiing: World Cup, Gaellivare, Sweden

Women’s 10k free: 1. Marit Bjoergen (Norway). 3. Kikkan Randall, 5. Holly Brooks, 21. Liz Stephen, 32. Jessie Diggins, 53. Ida Sargent

Men’s 10k free: 1. Martin Johnsrud Sundby (Norway). 33. Kris Freeman, 38. Noah Hoffman, 59. Tad Elliott, 63. Simi Hamilton, 76. Sylvan Ellefson

Women’s 4×5 mixed relay: 1. Norway I, 2. Sweden I, 3. USA (Brooks, Randall, Stephen, Diggins)

Men’s 4×7.5 mixed relay: 1. Norway I, 2. Sweden I, 3. Russia I. 15. USA (Andy Newell, Hoffman, Elliott, Hamilton).

Ski jumping: World Cup, Lillehammer, Norway

Women: 1. Sara Takanashi (Japan), 2. Sarah Hendrickson. 8. Lindsey Van, 13. Jessica Jerome, 24. Abby Hughes, 40. Alissa Johnson, 44. Nina Lussi

Men, first competition: 1. Severin Freund (Germany). 48. Peter Frenette (USA).

Men, second competition: 1. Gregor Schlierenzauer (Austria). No U.S. competitors.

Mixed team: 1. Norway, 2. Japan, 3. Italy. 5. USA (Van, Anders Johnson, Hendrickson, Frenette)

Nordic combined: World Cup, Lillehammer, Norway

10k: 1. Magnus Moan (Norway). 24. Todd Lodwick, 30. Taylor Fletcher, 38. Bryan Fletcher, 43. Bill Demong

10k penalty race: 1. Moan. 22. B. Fletcher.

Luge: World Cup, Igls, Austria

Men: 1. Felix Loch (Germany). 16. Chris Mazdzer, 25. Taylor Morris

Women: 1. Anke Wischnewski (Germany). 6. Julia Clukey, 11. Erin Hamlin, 23. Kate Hansen

Doubles: 1. Tobias Wendt/Tobias Arlt (Germany). 10. Matthew Mortensen/Preston Griffall

Relay: 1. Germany. 5. USA (Clukey, Mazdzer, Mortensen/Griffall)

Bobsled: World Cup, Whistler, B.C.

2-man: 1. Steven Holcomb/Steven Langton. 9. Nick Cunningham/Chris Fogt. 10. Cory Butner/Johnny Quinn

4-man: 1. Alexander Zubkov (Russia). 4. Holcomb, 11. Cunningham, DQ. Butner

Women: 1. Kallie Humphries/Chelsea Valois (Canada). 9. Jazmine Fenlator/Katie Eberling, 10. Elana Meyers/Lolo Jones, 11. Jamie Greubel/Emily Azevedo

Skeleton: World Cup, Whistler, B.C.

Men: 1. Frank Rommel (Germany). 15. Matt Antoine, 19. John Daly, 24. Kyle Tress

Women: 1. Marion Thees (Germany). 6. Noelle Pikus-Pace, 7. Katie Uhlaender

Biathlon: World Cup season opener, Oestersund, Sweden

Mixed relay: 1. Russia, 2. Norway, 3. Czech Republic. 17. USA (Sara Studebaker, Susan Dunklee, Jay Hakkinen, Lowell Bailey)

Speedskating: World Cup, Kolomna, Russia (only a couple of events)

Men’s 1,500: 1. Verweij Koen (Netherlands). 3. Brian Hansen, 10. Shani Davis

Women’s 1,500: 1. Marrit Leenstra (Netherlands). 13th, Division B. Maria Lamb.

Women’s 3,000: 1. Claudia Pechstein (Germany). 4th, Division B. Jilleanne Rookard.

Men’s 5,000: 1. Sven Kramer (Netherlands). 8th, Division B. Emery Lehman.

Women’s mass start: 1. Bo-Reum Kim (South Korea). 19th. Maria Lamb.

Men’s mass start: 1. Jorrit Bergsma (Netherlands). DQ. Patrick Meek.

(Headline source: The sixth quote of this Simpsons episode.)

mind games

Strange ways to determine world champions, #145: Chess

Chess championships are usually determined in long one-on-one matches, sometimes involving Cold War posturing or at least a few accusations of espionage.

In men’s chess, in the confusion over the Garry Kasparov split and the flirtation with the International Olympic Committee, FIDE (the international overlords/organizing body) settled on March Madness-style tournaments as the way to determine a world champion. The first, in 1999, gave us new FIDE world champion Alexander Khalifman — a fine champion if you overlook the fact that Kasparov, Anatoly Karpov and Vishy Anand skipped the tournament, or the fact that Khalifman wasn’t rated in the top 40 at the time. (He did make the top 15 and even the top 12 a couple of years later.)

Anand won the big FIDE prize in 2000, the same year Kasparov finally lost an independently organized world championship match to Vladimir Kramnik. The Kasparov-Kramnik group had trouble organizing the next match, and Kasparov himself refused to play in the candidates matches to determine Kramnik’s next challenger. Over the next four years, all sorts of unification series were suggested, usually involving some permutation of Kramnik (the lineal champion, more or less), Kasparov (still the world’s top-rated player until 2006), the winner of a major candidates tournament, and whoever held the FIDE tournament title at the time.

Ruslan Ponomariov, the 2002 FIDE winner, was also ranked #1 — among juniors. (He was at least a top-10 player through much of his reign.) The 2004 FIDE tournament was a farce, with only two of the top 10 players in the world participating and world #44 Rustam Kasimdzhanov taking the title. The real action in 2004 was in the independent group, where Peter Leko took Kramnik to the wire before the champion won Game 14 to level the match 7-7 and retain his title.

By 2005, the situation was improving. FIDE held an eight-player (not eight-man — Judit Polgar participated) round-robin tournament, with third-rated Veselin Topalov winning. Kramnik and Kasparov declined to participate, but Kramnik faced Topalov in an actual unification match in 2006 and kept the title despite a controversy over the toilets.

FIDE held another eight-player double round-robin tournament in 2007. Anand, long a top-three player and No. 1 in the wake of Kasparov’s retirement, won the title. From then on, FIDE’s champion has been the undisputed champion, and Anand has defended the title in three matches (2008, 2010, 2012).

So that’s men’s chess. What about women’s?

For decades, the women’s title was decided by traditional matches. The exceptions were either unfortunate (a round-robin after the 1944 air-raid death of longtime champion Vera Menchik) or curious (FIDE’s insistence on a three-player tournament with the champion, the past champion and the top contender in 1956).

Until 2000, when they decided that this “tournament” thing was such a great idea that they’d try it on the women’s side as well. China’s Xie Jun had held the title much of the previous decade except from 1996 to 1999, when Hungarian-American Susan Polgar held the title and was stripped when she couldn’t agree to terms with FIDE about returning to action from childbirth. Xie managed to defend her title in the 2000 tournament, a remarkable feat, but passed on the 2001 tournament.

The 2001 winner was the fourth seed, Zhu Chen. The runner-up was a remarkable 17-year-old prodigy named Alexandra Kosteniuk, who kept up her overachieving ways in European and other tournaments. The absurd comparisons to Anna Kournikova (they’re Russian, they get attention for their looks, they hang out in Florida) were smashed to bits when she won the world title in 2008.

The 2004 tournament was lacking the last two champions — Xie and Zhu — along with Judit Polgar, who prefers the men’s (open) tournament. But the winner was the solid Antoaneta Stefanova, ranked 10th at the time but higher than that in most rankings in the years before and after the tournament. No. 6 Xu Yuhua won in 2006, then No. 10 Kosteniuk in 2008. In 2010, Kosteniuk passed the title to another prodigy, Hou Yifan, the top-ranked junior and third-ranked woman in the world.

Then finally, the women’s title reverted to matches. Humpy Koneru, the only non-Judit Polgar player ranked ahead of Hou, won the Grand Prix for the right to challenge for the title in 2011. Hou won three games out of eight; Koneru won none. Title defended.

But …

FIDE has decided to alternate championship approaches. Matches in odd years. In even years, we’re back to tournaments.

And this year, the upsets that have often shook up the men’s tournaments struck the women’s tournament. Hou and Koneru, still the top-rated players behind Judit Polgar, were knocked out in the second round. Your finalists are the former champion Stefanova, now ranked 19th, and No. 38 Anna Ushenina.

The good news for Hou — she has already won the Grand Prix, giving her the right to challenge for the world title next year. So to recap: The world champion won a challengers tournament so she could challenge for the world championship after losing it in a crapshoot tournament. Got that?

Meanwhile, in Mexico, top-ranked woman Judit Polgar has advanced to the final of a tournament and will face Magnus Carlsen … the top-ranked man in the world. Carlsen, who will turn 22 this week, dropped out of the qualifiers for the 2012 world championship match. But he’ll be in the mix the next time around. For now.

It’s better than boxing. The top players in the world play each other regularly. But the world championship needs to be special. The world champion shouldn’t lose his or her title in a two-game tournament “match.”

 

mind games, mma, olympic sports, soccer

Monday Myriad: Bye-bye, Beckham

Admit it. You never thought David Beckham would be here as long as he was.

When I spoke with him in 2008, a year into the “experiment,” he was saying all the right things. Then over the years, he stuck with the Galaxy but had trouble convincing fans of his commitment to the team.

But in 2011, the last year of his original contract, he once again won over the fans (and maybe teammates). Winning MLS Cup didn’t hurt. And then he signed a two-year extension.

I can imagine fans clamoring for Grant Wahl to write Part 2 of The Beckham Experiment. But at this point, is there any doubt that the experiment worked? MLS is in infinitely better shape today than it was in 2007, and while plenty of other factors are at play (Seattle, other expansion, other business deals), Beckham’s presence surely has helped.

Elsewhere in myriad sports …

MLS: Beckham’s Galaxy held off the Sounders on what Taylor Twellman insists was a legit handball call. And the Dynamo sprayed beer all over their locker room at RFK Stadium.

The waiver draft gave Real Salt Lake another Duke alum.

Premier League: Tactics man Jonathan Wilson wonders if West Brom’s decision to split their management jobs between two people instead of one All-Encompassing Man of Total Power is paving the way for a prolonged stay in the top flight.

Field hockey: Should North Carolina’s seniors be disappointed with only one title out of their four appearances in the final? Or was Princeton due?

Chess: Just call the Kosintsevas the Williams sisters of chess. Nadezhda beat Tatiana in the women’s world championship. She’s the only Russian in the quarterfinals. China has three.

Wrestling: Good showing for Greco-Roman Americans.

Figure skating: Fairfax County’s own Ashley Wagner is two-for-two on the Grand Prix circuit after her Trophee Bompard win in France, ensuring a U.S. presence at the Finals. Christina Gao has a spot in the top six in the standings, with fellow Americans Agnes Zawadzki and Mirai Nagasu among those who can knock her out this weekend. It’s a safe bet Meryl Davis and Charlie White will get there in ice dance. Caydee Denney and John Coughlin might make it in pairs.

Jeremy Abbott, second in France, is clinging to a spot in the top six of the men’s standings (note all the guys with 15, 13 and 11 points who are competing in Japan).

Speedskating: U.S. top-five finishes in the World Cup opener in Heerenveen, Netherlands:

– Heather Richardson, 1st, 1,000
– Heather Richardson, 2nd, 500 and 2nd, 500. Yes, they raced that distance twice.

That is all. Didn’t see Shani Davis in the results.

Bobsled/skeleton: Huge U.S. weekend. Steven Holcomb was first in two-man and second in four-man. And Katie Uhlaender won the women’s skeleton.

Cody Butner and Chuck Berkeley took second behind Holcomb and Steve Langton in the two-man.

The U.S. women’s bobsledders were fourth, fifth and eighth. Olympic track and fieldsters Lolo Jones and Tianna Madison had the week off.

More Olympic sports: Good results for the U.S. field hockey men and a few other athletes; see the roundup.

MMA: GSP beat up Condit, Tom Lawlor got robbed, and strikes to the back of the head are still illegal.

In Bellator, Marcin Held held a toe hold … OK, that’s awful. Anyway, Held got Rich Clementi to tap to a toe hold and Dave Jansen won a split decision over Ricardo Tirloni in the lightweight semifinals. Also, Marlon Sandro beat TUF alum Dustin Neace. Remember the fight where Akira tapped but said he didn’t? That was Neace.

Champions League tomorrow!

mind games, olympic sports, soccer

Monday Myriad: Paralympic wrap, injured gymnasts and Diamonds

Shirley Reilly photo by USOC/Long Photography

Yes, the Monday Myriad is back! Mostly because I want to try to mention the big stuff and some fun stuff that happens on weekend, and soccer coaching/PTA/parenting duties don’t let me work an actual seven-day week. It only seems that way.

And we had a lot of long-term events wrapping this weekend. Feels almost like the end of summer, and not just because we have a nice cool front on the East Coast after the power-threatening storm front Saturday.

Here we go …

Paralympics: China dominated the final medal count with 231 medals, 95 gold. Britain was a distant second overall with 120; Russia a remote second in golds with 36. The USA finished with 98 medals (fourth) and 31 gold (sixth).

The U.S. highlights near the end were in the team events — silver in women’s sitting volleyball, bronze in men’s wheelchair basketball. The wheelchair rugby team lost 50-49 to Canada in the semifinals and rebounding to beat Japan for bronze. Women’s wheelchair basketball missed the podium, finishing fourth.

Also this weekend — Shirley Reilly got a long-awaited gold medal after several near-misses, winning the marathon in a sprint finish. Yes, that’s right — a sprint finish in the marathon. Think about that the next time your local pro athlete talks about a “gut check.”

As in the Olympics, the USA’s strengths were in the pool (41 medals, 14 gold) and on the track (28 medals, nine gold). Cyclists accounted for 17 more, six gold. The rest were scattered among wheelchair tennis (three), archery (two), judo (two), rowing, sailing and the three team sports above.

Chess: Armenia won the Olympiad, barely beating Russia on tiebreak. Ukraine took sole possession of third. China, which handed the USA its sole loss, took fourth. That left the USA in fifth, with Gata Kamsky and Hikaru Nakamura posting the eighth- and ninth-rated performances.

The U.S. women didn’t do quite as well, finishing 10th. They rebounded from some puzzling results with a nice run, only to run into Ukraine and then draw Mongolia. Top three: Russia, China, Ukraine.

Cycling: Alberto Contador won the Vuelta a Espana (Tour of Spain, for the European language-impaired). We can only hope he gets to keep this one. Spanish riders dominated, while Britain’s Chris Froome should get some sort of endurance prize for finishing fourth after reaching the Tour de France podium and medaling in the Olympics.

Track and field: The Diamond League is done, and I’ll be parsing the results from the complete track and field year sometime this fall. Or maybe when the Diamond League site stops bogging down. Season winners from the USA: Aries Merritt, Christian Taylor, Reese Hoffa, Dawn Harper, Chaunte Lowe.

Tennis: Serena Williams was challenged in the U.S. Open final but pulled out another win. Rain pushed the men’s final to today. Check CBS at 4 p.m. ET to see Andy Murray go for that elusive Grand Slam title against Novak Djokovic. No British man has won a major since the 1936 U.S. Open. As Channel 4 put it — no pressure, Andy.

Gymnastics: Women’s soccer isn’t the only sport with a post-Olympic tour. The gymnasts are doing it, too, but Fierce Five members Aly Raisman and McKayla Maroney have been injured. In related news, the “McKayla is not impressed” Tumblr is running out of good ideas.

Women’s soccer: Transfer speculation! Jeff Kassouf takes a good look at the latest rumors on big-spending Paris St. Germain, finding the Christine Sinclair rumors plausible and the Abby Wambach rumors far less plausible. He dares not speculate on Hope Solo. I’d have to agree on all three counts.

mind games

Miracle on the chessboard: USA topples Russia

Hikaru Nakamura

A general rule of thumb at the Chess Olympiad: The winner uses an alphabet we Westerners struggle to read.

So when the USA, having drawn three and won five of its first eight matches, turned up against first-place Russia today in Istanbul, the odds weren’t on the USA’s side.

And then just look at the Russian lineup. Former world champion Vladimir Kramnik, ranked No. 3 in the world today, on Board 1. Perennial contender Alexander Grischuk, one of the world’s best blitz (speed chess) players and someone unlikely to crack under time pressure or the strain of a long tournament, on Board 2. Sergey Karjakin, ranked seventh in the world, on Board 3. Then on Board 4, U.S. teen Ray Robson faced Dmitry Jakovenko, whose rating is 124 points higher than Robson’s.

Alex Onishuk got a quick draw with Karjakin. But Robson fell behind Karjakin.

On Board 2, former world championship contender Gata Kamsky got a slight advantage and squeezed the time-pressured Grischuk. Beating a top-12 player with the black pieces isn’t something you see every day, but Kamsky meticulously pulled it off.

That’s 1 1/2 to 1 1/2. So what of Board 1, with Kramnik bringing the pressure against 24-year-old Hikaru Nakamura?

Nakamura eked out a small advantage in a complex situation. Then came a moment of brilliance, highlighted here by women’s grandmaster/author/analyst Jennifer Shahade:

http://es.twitter.com/JenShahade/status/243817804778835968

Want the answer? Move 62.

Moderately old Nakamura photo from the Flickr stream of sakatxa under an awesome Creative Commons license.

mind games

Chess Olympiad – not just a night in Bangkok

The official site has live video in English and Russian.

The 40th Chess Olympiad is underway in Istanbul. The one thing we can tell you with certainty is that the country that has won it the most won’t win it this time — the Soviet Union no longer exists. But the former Soviet republics — Russia, Ukraine, Armenia — still dominate.

The last time a non-Soviet country won it was in 1978, when Hungary upset the Soviet Union but didn’t take the title very far away. Before that, in 1976, the USA won a boycotted Olympiad when most Eastern bloc countries refused to travel to Israel.

The USA isn’t bad in this event, placing on the podium in 10 of the 16 Olympiads since it won.

If that’s not enough history for you, check this lively account by Bill Wall to learn about the winners, the mugging victims and the fight with a couple of grandmasters playing Crash Davis and Nuke Laloosh outside the bar scrapping over an Australian player whose outfit is a little excessive for the Carolina League.

On to the present:

– Twelve of the top 16 players in the world are here. The big exceptions are world champion Vishy Anand (India) and top-ranked Magnus Carlsen (Norway). Anand hates the format.

– The U.S. team is seeded fifth but has two of the top 10 in the tournament — No. 5 Hikaru Nakamura (2778) and No. 10 Gata Kamsky (2746). Third-ranked American Alexander Onishuk (2666) also is on the team, but several of the next players in the rankings are not. Top 10ers Varuzhan Akobian (2617) and Ray Robson (2598) make up the rest of the team. Robson’s only 17.

– Can you guess the major country that is seeded only 92nd? And it’s not as if their best players are skipping the proceedings.

– Women can compete in the “Open” Olympiad (Judit Polgar is playing for Hungary) or the Women’s Olympiad.

– The U.S. women also are seeded fifth. The team by rating (among women actually playing in the Women’s Olympiad): No. 10 Anna Zatonskih (2512), No. 18 Irina Krush (2467), No. 55 Sabina Foisor (2356), No. 69 Rusudan Goletani (2341), No. 91 Tatev Ambrahamyan (2303).

– “Chess Queen” Alexandra Kosteniuk is playing. The “Anna Kournikova of chess” label once applied to her really shouldn’t. At least not since she won a world championship.

– A lot of top teams rested their first-board players in the first round. Teams have five players; only four play in each matchup.

– Some of the “countries” in the Olympiad aren’t really countries. The UK not only has separate entries for England, Scotland and Wales but also for Guernsey and Jersey. Host Turkey is entering three teams. Also entered: The International Braille Chess Association, the International Physically Disabled Chess Association and the International Committee of Silent Chess.

– Follow on Twitter? Why, yes. I also have a Twitter list called “mind games” that includes chess news and updates on how much money your favorite poker player made in the past six hours.

– The top four in the pre-tournament rankings: Russia, Ukraine, Armenia, Hungary. The bottom four: Mozambique, Turkey’s third team, Rwanda, Nigeria.

– The top four on the women’s side: China, Russia, Georgia, Ukraine.

– Parity in women’s chess? Not really. The first round saw 46 scores of 4-0, eight more of 3.5-0.5, six more of 3-1 and just two 2.5-1.5.

– The men’s side also was rather lopsided, with 45 teams posting 4-0 wins. But only two of the top six (including the USA) did it. A player from the Dominican Republic (William Puntier, 2312) held Russian grandmaster Evgeny Tomashevsky (2730) to a draw, and Bolivian grandmaster Oswaldo Zambrana (2471) beat Armenia’s Sergei Movsesian (2698). The win that gives real hope to us non-masters: the Virgin Islands’ Reece Creswell (1765) drew Scotland’s Alan Tate (2332).

mind games

Chess and cultural amnesia

In some respects, it’s a Golden Age for chess. The Internet makes so many fun things possible, from online play to comprehensive up-to-date databases.

But it’s lacking compelling personalities, and it’s run by mad men.

How America Forgot About Chess – Santiago Wills – Entertainment – The Atlantic.

Game 1 of the World Championships, incidentally: Draw. The U.S. Championships also are underway.

mind games, mma, olympic sports, soccer, tennis, winter sports

Midweek Myriad: Marta, Nadal, handball, 1260s, etc.

One of the joys of following a hundred sports or so is that you’re not stuck dissecting the Super Bowl to the point that it becomes joyless. Instead, we have all this:

Marta signs with Western New York. A WPS shocker. Good news from a media point of view because it means more of us will be paying attention to veteran Rochester reporter Jeff DiVeronica, who jokes on Twitter that Marta will push him up to 1,000 followers.

The conventional wisdom would be that Marta would sign with The Club Formerly And Still Partially Known As The Washington Freedom But Also With Magic Jack In The Name (TCFASPKATWFBAWMJITN) so that Dan Borislow would have a marquee player to market in South Florida and perhaps somewhere in Washington once the team hires marketing and sales staffs and finds venues in which to play. Instead, Borislow has given us the best WPS smack talk in the league’s brief history, via Our Game: “This came as a total surprise. I am glad she will be playing in the league. She will discover we are the team to beat, so I hope she is at the top of her game when she plays us.”

For all the talk in MLS about “Rivalry Week,” maybe we should be circling the calendar for TCFASPKATWFBAWMJITN’s visit to Rochester.

Nadal loses. And it’s a pity. Tennis could use a Grand Slam charge from the charismatic, humble Spaniard, but an injury has derailed his Australian Open campaign. Nadal didn’t want to use the injury as an excuse, but he wasn’t fooling opponent David Ferrer. Class acts all around. (NYT)

– Winter X Games time. And the NYT notes that several more X sports may be joining the Winter Olympic program. No word on women’s ski jumping, though that sport has a better-defined set of rules and so forth.

The Summer Olympics might be too big. The Winter Olympics aren’t, and it’s hard to begrudge slopestyle its place. But if the IOC adds the X sports without women’s ski jumping, the excuses will ring hollow.

Handball heaven. It’s only $20 away. At least the highlights are free, so I was able to scout semifinalist France in their win over my buddies from Iceland in a rematch of the 2008 Olympic final. (Dan Steinberg also enjoyed covering that team in Beijing and linked to my highest-read blog post ever.)

Iceland plays Croatia for fifth place on Friday. The semifinals the same day: France-Sweden, Denmark-Spain.

Also this weekend:

  • Cyclocross World Championships. The muddier, the better.
  • U.S. Figure Skating Championships, in my former hometown of Greensboro.
  • Luge World Championships. U.S. sliders not having a particularly good year.
  • Paralympic Athletics World Championships.
  • Millrose Games.
  • Strikeforce: Middleweight and welterweight title fights, plus Herschel Walker.
  • Final weekend of Tata Steel chess classic, where U.S. player Hikaru Nakamura shares the lead in an elite group.
cycling, mind games, mma, olympic sports, soccer

Myriad most popular

I’ve crunched a few numbers to figure out pages that drew at least 0.1 percent of my total page views for the year. (The percentages are slightly lower than they should be due to some extraneous stuff in the stats — scripts, other ways of reaching a page, etc. — so 0.1 may actually be 0.15 or so.)

Here are the top pages, with an unofficial category added to show the post’s topic. You might notice a pattern.

MMA 1.6 /2010/11/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-8-its-a-trap/
MMA 1.43 /2010/06/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-10-iceman-1-crab…
MMA 1.32 /2010/05/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-9-if-only-tito-c…
MMA 1.31 /2010/04/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-4-the-doors-of-p…
WCSoc 1.1 /2010/04/the-marketing-of-landon-donovan/
MMA 0.94 /2010/04/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-5-epic-struggle/
MMA 0.9 /2010/04/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-3-not-that-there…
MMA 0.85 /2010/05/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-8-wild/
MMA 0.82 /2010/10/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-6-choke-choke/
MMA 0.81 /2010/04/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-2-get-off-my-bac…
MMA 0.81 /2010/09/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-2-bruce-decoy/
WCSoc 0.79 /2010/05/1994-2010-world-cup-rosters-usa-getting-better/
MMA 0.79 /2010/10/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-7-kos-gets-a-bre…
MMA 0.79 /2010/03/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-1-14-fight-whirl…
MMA 0.78 /2010/05/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-7-medic/
MMA 0.73 /2010/09/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-1-fight-x14/
MMA 0.67 /2010/05/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-episode-6-overwork-pays-…
MMA 0.64 /2010/10/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-4-maturity-rocks…
WCSoc 0.56 /2010/09/world-cup-economics-and-skepticism/
Oly 0.54 /2010/08/beach-volleyball-hitting-another-ebb-in-usa/
WPSoc 0.48 /2010/09/wps-seasons-change-freedom-advance-scurry-says-goodbye-…
General 0.4 /2010/05/friday-myriad-ufc-giro-and-a-field-of-their-own-in-wps/
MMA 0.36 /2010/06/the-ultimate-fighter-season-11-semi-finale/
WPSoc 0.35 /2010/11/why-the-washington-freedom-should-not-collapse/
MLS 0.34 /2010/05/mls-week-10-the-meek-shall-inherit/
General 0.34 /2010/07/friday-myriad-up-all-night-for-aussie-rules-mma-le-tour…
MLS 0.33 /2010/05/mls-week-9-east-shifts-back-to-ohio/
General 0.32 /2010/06/monday-myriad-marry-lolo-beat-phelps/
MMA 0.3 /2010/04/bellator-nets-nice-ratings-despite-uneven-distribution/
MMA 0.3 /2010/05/the-curse-of-fedor-former-opponents-faring-poorly/
MMA 0.3 /2010/05/ufc-113-rua-rules-koscheck-controversy-and-the-case-for…
General 0.29 /2010/07/monday-myriad-no-soccer-withdrawal-here/
MLS 0.29 /2010/08/announcing-the-mls-ratings-project/
General 0.28 /2010/06/friday-myriad-enjoy-the-usa-ghana-game-for-what-it-is/
WPSoc 0.27 /2010/05/how-two-wayward-wps-investors-could-hurt-the-u-s-womens…
Cycling 0.27 /2010/07/tour-stories-schlecks-angry-stomach-lance-on-vacation-t…
General 0.26 /2010/03/welcome-to-sportsmyriad/
Chess 0.25 /2010/04/why-this-world-chess-championship-is-so-exciting/
General 0.25 /2010/06/friday-myriad-french-finals-final-cup-tune-ups/
WCSoc 0.25 /2010/05/alejandro-bedoya-stealth-marketing-and-the-u-s-world-cu…
MLS 0.25 /2010/05/mls-eight-worthy-playoff-teams-pre-cup/
USSoc 0.25 /2010/04/throwing-open-the-u-s-open-cup/
Cycling 0.24 /2010/05/floyd-landis-confession-lets-no-one-off-the-hook/
General 0.24 /2010/06/friday-myriad-usa-england-ii-liddell-franklin-i-track-f…
WPSoc 0.24 /2010/05/marons-world-tour-loans-to-africa-teams-in-iceland-and-…
MLS 0.23 /2010/04/mls-week-5-no-sleep-til-seattle/
MLS 0.23 /2010/11/a-modest-mls-playoff-proposal/
WPSoc 0.23 /2010/12/selling-wps-tickets-with-no-staff/
General 0.23 /2010/09/are-sports-monopolies-necessary/
MLS 0.23 /2010/07/mls-fans-shut-the-up/
General 0.23 /2010/07/friday-myriad-morning-tv-friendly-soccer/
MMA 0.22 /2010/05/judging-the-rashad-rampage-ufc-conference-call/
General 0.22 /2010/06/friday-myriad-world-cup-by-day-mma-by-night/
MMA 0.22 /2010/09/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-3-tyson-for-tea/
Cricket 0.22 /2010/07/my-fractured-relationship-with-ian-bell/
IntSoc 0.22 /2010/04/book-review-a-beautiful-game/
General 0.22 /2010/04/friday-myriad-europa-but-no-pirate-twins/
General 0.21 /2010/05/monday-myriad-sparkling-play-in-wps-short-sighted-decis…
General 0.21 /2010/03/tuesdays-headlines-moscow-mourns-man-u-in-munich/
IntSoc 0.21 /2010/04/what-makes-a-soccer-game-change-besides-messi/
General 0.21 /2010/03/randy-couture-kimbo-slice-and-lacrosse-closer-than-you-…
General 0.21 /2010/05/monday-myriad-world-series-of-poker-schedules-around-wo…
MLS 0.2 /2010/08/panic-at-rfk-olsen-replaces-onalfo-with-d-c-united/
WCSoc 0.2 /2010/07/fifa-world-cup-2011-announces-mascot-a-cat-an-elegant-c…
MMA 0.2 /2010/11/defending-koscheck-the-standing-up-for-his-guys-theory/
General 0.19 /2010/05/friday-myriad-i-see-italy-i-see-france/
MMA 0.19 /2010/12/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-semis-everything-zen/
General 0.19 /2010/03/welcome-to-sportsmyriad/feed/
MLS 0.19 /2010/05/mls-week-7-seattle-sets-the-bar/
MLS 0.19 /2010/10/colorado-1-0-columbus-squander-squander-squander/
MMA 0.18 /2010/05/whats-on-ufc-114-culture-clash-at-mandalay/
Oly 0.18 /2010/11/2012-medal-projections-old-cold-war-battles-jamaica-hea…
Chess 0.18 /2010/04/world-chess-championship-delayed/
General 0.18 /2010/05/monday-myriad-twenty20-just-not-cricket-injury-free-gir…
Oly 0.18 /2010/05/live-diamond-league-debut/
WCSoc 0.18 /2010/05/book-review-chasing-the-game/
USSoc 0.17 /2010/09/immediate-questions-after-the-usl-bombshell/
General 0.17 /2010/04/the-perils-of-predicting-prospects-futures/
General 0.17 /2010/05/friday-myriad-must-be-better-than-thursday/
MLS 0.16 /2010/07/mls-still-not-sturdy-enough-to-wish-for-another-teams-d…
Tennis 0.16 /2010/06/isner-mahut-and-wimbledon-triumph-of-will-or-failure-of…
MLS 0.16 /2010/08/mls-in-the-silverdome-raise-the-roof-yall/
MMA 0.16 /2010/10/the-actual-cause-for-concern-beneath-the-brock-lesnar-p…
USSoc 0.16 /2010/10/does-the-usa-need-a-no-10/
MLS 0.16 /2010/11/settling-all-mls-dilemmas-in-one-easy-fix-maybe/
MMA 0.16 /2010/05/the-ultimate-fighter-quarterfinal-catchup/
General 0.15 /2010/06/the-frustrations-of-free-lance-blogging/
WCSoc 0.15 /2010/07/record-low-for-world-cup-scoring-still-in-sight/
WPSoc 0.15 /2010/07/game-report-freedom-0-red-stars-0/
USSoc 0.15 /2010/08/there-is-no-try-adu-or-not-adu/
General 0.15 /2010/05/monday-myriad-trash-talking-backfires-in-chess-order-re…
WPSoc 0.15 /2010/10/wps-best-xi-and-the-evolving-u-s-womens-national-team/
Oly 0.15 /2010/04/lashawn-merritt-male-enhancement-and-unanswered-questio…
WPSoc 0.15 /2010/04/wps-welcomes-the-sound-of-sponsors-in-season-2/
General 0.15 /2010/04/thursday-no-fooling-around-here/
MMA 0.15 /2010/10/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-5-nam-better/
General 0.15 /2010/03/tuesdays-headlines-moscow-mourns-man-u-in-munich/feed/
General 0.14 /2010/05/friday-myriad-diamond-debut-four-soccer-trophies-on-the…
General 0.14 /2010/08/friday-myriad-epl-madness/
MLS 0.14 /2010/04/mls-week-4-cool-is-a-rule-but-bad-is-bad/
MLS 0.14 /2010/06/twitter-tabloids-and-landon-donovan/
WPSoc 0.14 /2010/04/wps-week-1-best-womens-league-ever/
WPSoc 0.14 /2010/07/freedoms-misfortunes-touch-gold-pride-too/
USSoc 0.14 /2010/07/u-s-open-cup-and-why-lower-division-teams-are-happy/
General 0.14 /2010/04/monday-myriad-bolt-flies-while-u-s-nets-wins-in-tennis-…
MLS 0.14 /2010/05/mls-week-6-how-long-can-red-bulls-surge-last-before-cra…
Poker 0.13 /2010/07/paralympic-poker-player-cashing-in/
MLS 0.13 /2010/06/mls-marquee-matchup-real-salt-lake-and-r-e-s-p-e-c-t/
General 0.13 /2010/04/friday-myriad-get-your-track-shoes-and-chess-pieces/
MLS 0.13 /2010/04/whats-better-about-the-dynamos-new-stadium/
General 0.13 /2010/07/friday-myriad-not-out-of-our-league/
WPSoc 0.13 /2010/09/briana-scurry-bids-farewell/
MMA 0.12 /2010/04/could-judges-have-botched-the-aldo-faber-fight/
MLS 0.12 /2010/11/the-big-mls-playoff-and-schedule-announcement/
WPSoc 0.12 /2010/05/wps-bompastor-goes-mindless-solo-reviews-dave-matthews/
WPSoc 0.12 /2010/07/womens-soccer-small-world-wouldnt-want-to-paint-it/
WCSoc 0.12 /2010/11/time-to-transition-to-a-post-fifa-world-or-world-cup-an…
MLS 0.12 /2010/05/mls-eight-worthy-playoff-teams-pre-cup/feed/
WPSoc 0.12 /2010/12/mad-about-the-freedom-place-the-blame-on/
General 0.12 /2010/08/friday-myriad-bolt-vs-gay-silva-vs-sonnen-dps-vs-dps/
MMA 0.12 /2010/08/mma-not-pro-wrestling/
MLS 0.11 /2010/11/is-mls-too-physical/
MMA 0.11 /2010/04/thursday-bring-on-bellator/
MLS 0.11 /2010/09/player-ratings-d-c-united-columbus/
MMA 0.11 /2010/11/the-ultimate-fighter-season-12-episode-9-1-1/
MLS 0.11 /2010/07/concacaf-the-mls-graveyard/
Oly 0.11 /2010/08/diamond-league-gay-pearson-upset-bolt-jones/
Oly 0.11 /2010/08/womens-ski-jumpers-the-phoenix-of-olympic-sports/
USSoc 0.1 /2010/04/tales-of-soccer-survival-misls-milwaukee-wave/
Chess 0.1 /2010/05/after-alleged-world-title-blunderfest-chess-world-turns…
Oly 0.1 /2010/08/diamond-league-the-pen-penultimate-meet/
Oly 0.1 /2010/06/can-four-woman-beach-volleyball-make-a-comeback-if-gabr…
General 0.1 /2010/07/who-are-you/
WCSoc 0.1 /2010/09/world-cup-economics-and-skepticism/comment-page-1/
Rugby 0.1 /2010/07/bledisloe-bash-begins-in-tri-nations/
USSoc 0.1 /2010/08/why-dont-we-have-a-soccer-blog-like-this/
General 0.1 /2010/04/wednesday-now-officially-renamed-messiday/
MLS 0.1 /2010/09/player-ratings-chicago-toronto/
Cricket 0.1 /2010/08/a-curse-on-cricket/
Darts 0.1 /2010/07/phil-the-power-taylor-prepares-once-more-for-battle/
WCSoc 0.1 /2010/06/virtual-viewing-party-usa-england/
mind games, olympic sports, winter sports

Holiday diversions: Chess, biathlon … any curling?

This is the time of year in which work productivity is minimal, traffic and weather can be too much to bear, and the yule log is sometimes the highlight of the TV programming.

SportsMyriad sadly cannot be your all-inclusive guide to everything interesting on TV. For one thing, we don’t know what you like. But we can offer up a few items of interest if you need a December diversion aside from the mountains of soccer still available on FSC, GolTV and ESPN3:

Chess: FIDE can’t get the world’s best players to agree on a world championship format, but several of them have turned up in the London Chess Classic: world champ Vishy Anand, world #1 Magnus Carlsen, former world champ Vladimir Kramnik, top American Hikaru Nakamura and four English players who were once or might be contenders. Carlsen lost on the first day, while Nakamura held off Anand. The fun part: They use soccer’s scoring system — 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw. Neat thing to try in a competition that often sees too much caution. Check the Day 1 recap, check each game in progress at Susan Polgar’s blog, and get live commentary (or witty dissection, if Nigel Short is involved) on the official site.

Biathlon: Weekend sprint, pursuit and relays — unfortunately, the “late” race each day is at 8:15 a.m. ET. Live on the official site.

Other Olympic sports: Universal Sports has figure skating’s Grand Prix final, rugby sevens, Alpine skiing and a few other events — some pay-per-view, some free.

I have not, however, been able to find any televised curling. Can’t have everything.