Friday, December 28, 2007

Maybe She Died This Way, No That Way!

The news organizations plastered their stations, newshole and online headlines with coverage once someone killed Pakistani political leader and hero Benazir Bhutto yesterday - and they haven't stopped down yet.

But that may be the problem.

These outlets, even the reputable ones, are in a fury to release the latest and "truest" information about Bhutto's death.

CNN slipped several times. I've checked its website three times today. Bhutto dies from bullet wounds. No wait, Bhutto dies from shrapnel, no gun shots. Scratch that, she hit her head on the sunroof and her skull fractured.

Now CNN's backing off, realizing its missteps. It's essentially saying, "XYZ says Bhutto died from the sunroof, but we're not saying that." Earlier the network was saying, "BHUTTO DIED FROM XYZ". They went from certainty to cautious, sourced reporting.

The lesson to learn is that you shouldn't race to claim a cause of death if it's wrong. Oh, then you'll just release a new cause of death and it'll be right - oh no, wrong AGAIN! Slow down and get the facts right, chief.

The first three grafs (paragraphs) of this story indicate how CNN has backed off as the day and the varying reports were relased.

Have a look: http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/12/28/pakistan.friday/index.html

Clip of the Day

I thought Arizona State was good? Come on, Pac-10 - don't prove how weak you really are when you face teams in bowl season. To me, this validates how weak Pac-10 teams become when a strong program (from the SEC or even the Big 12) has time to prepare. 52 points against this Texas team? Please.

Check out Mack Brown's face. Classic.



Journalists are Becoming...Telemarketers?

A little off subject again, but deal with it. Here's the future of the industry I will receive a degree in this May and the one you depend on for local, national and international news. God help us and the media companies.


The Miami Herald to outsource ad work
MIAMI

The Miami Herald is outsourcing some of its advertising production work to India, the newspaper's editor said Thursday.

Starting in January, copyediting and design in a weekly section of Broward County community news and other special advertising sections will be outsourced to Mindworks, based in New Delhi.

The project is still in the testing phase, so it was not clear if or how employment in South Florida will be affected, Executive Editor Anders Gyllenhaal said.

Mindworks will also monitor reader comments posted to online stories, he said.

Earlier this month, The Sacramento Bee, also owned by the McClatchy Co., announced it would outsource some of its advertising production work to India.

In May, news Web site, pasadenanow.com, was widely criticized after editors hired two reporters in India to cover the Los Angeles suburb.

On an Irrelevant Note..

I apologize for my unforeseen blogging hiatus. I was held back by computer issues at my home (virus or something) and my grandparents' home (prehistoric computer).

In any case, I couldn't restrain myself from discussing this next topic. The Wire is the greatest show on television - period. If you haven't watched it, treat yourself. Please. Go to Blockbuster and rent the first season; I assure you won't regret it.

I am forever thankful that a professor and mentor introduced me to the show two years ago and more importantly, illuminated the negative truths about a city that my home state routinely neglects. I watched the first two seasons of The Wire - 25 - 30 one-hour episodes with no commercials - in 10 days. I was working 50 - 60 hours a week at the time.


Do yourself an additional favor by withstanding the killing, drugs, vulgar language and corruption that will frustrate you and may make it difficult for some to watch. If you can't, you'lll miss the multi-layered themes and motifs, thorough character development, unyielding anticipiation, and the abundance of sheer truth that The Wire offers on a silver tray.

David Simon, a former reporter with The Baltimore Sun, writes and directs television treasure with Ed Burns, a former Baltimore crime investigator, and several other talented minds.

The final season's theme is the media's coverage or understanding of Baltimore's major issues - AIDS, drugs, crime, etc. - we'll have to see. That excites me, a print journalism major, but may not lure you. Don't let it stop you from watching. I didn't think I'd be interested in a season devoted to corruption in the city ports, but the season was as engaging as ever.

The show receives praise from anyone who gives it a moment's chance. It might have taken some critics a few seasons to accept its value, but they've come around.

Even NPR. Check it: http://www.hbo.com/thewire/cast/characters/chris_partlow.shtml

More truth looms, get ready.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Clip of the Day

Remember the Warriors' Run Last Summer?

As I searched for today's Clip of the Day, I saw a saved clip of Baron's memorable dunk over Andrei Kirilenko. This happened in Game 3 of their playoff series, but the first round defeat of the Mavericks was also quite sensational.

That said, this Clip of the Day is in memory of the Warriors, the fans' yellow t-shirts, and most importantly, Jessica Alba cheering intently for BDiddy on the sidelines.

Enjoy.




Wednesday, December 19, 2007

"Clip of the Day" series begins

Today marks, hopefully, the beginning of several new features on the blog. I plan and pray for these features to be consistent, foreseeable posts.

Don't get too excited - they're not too revolutionary yet. The first of the bunch is a "Clip of the Day," that will highlight an entertaining video in the realm of sports, entertainment or comedy. YouTube is my major asset in making this possible, obviously, but hope to pull from other sources as well.

Here's the first. PLEASE COMMENT. The more hits, the more people see the blog.





Tuesday, December 18, 2007

SVP Shows the World His Personal Side



Courtesy of the world's greatest sports blog, Deadspin, here is a little tip into the world of Scott Van Pelt. A little sad, I must say. But, at least we know his humor isn't part of the act and is really SVP.


Scott Van Pelt Addresses America's Future

So, you might be wondering: Who was the commencement speaker at the University of Wisconsin-Madison? (Trust us, you were wondering this.) Well, it was, of all people, our old pal Scott Van Pelt ... and we're not ashamed to say it was a pretty amusing speech.


Not only did he praise Madison -- which, we agree, is a wonderful city -- but he even referenced that famous voice mail message.

This hourglass will serve several purposes here. First of all, it's my reminder to be brief. I might have left a voice mail message for a young lady that made it's way on to the Internet. If you're familiar, you know it's proof that I do get a little long-winded. And as a side note to the fellas, when in doubt, maybe a text message is nice...I'm just saying.

The more important purpose of this is that it is symbolic. When I was where you now are, I gave no thought to the passage of time, no thought to the sand in my hourglass, so to speak. But as I stand here today, I am painfully aware of how much sand is in the bottom and how quickly it piles up there. And if you believe nothing else that I tell you today, believe me that a year will become five, will become 10 and you wake up one morning and you don't recognize the bald-headed guy looking back at you in the mirror. For the ladies that analogy doesn't work quite so well, unless you marry a bald-headed guy, and you'll probably find him quite charming, because really we have no other option.



Van Pelt continues to be our favorite "SportsCenter" anchor, and not just because he constantly references "Flight Of The Conchords." (Though that helps.) We might find it strange that a major American university would ask a "SportsCenter" anchor to address their graduates, but if they had to pick one, they picked the right one

Could this Slow FSU's Revival? Well... It Should


Florida State's football program is dying to reenergize and reclaim some notariety on the college footbal scene.

While the football hasn't gotten much better in the last year or two, there are some signs.
Bobby Bowden has assembled Rivals.com's No. 4 recruiting class for 2008 graduates. Two five-star recruits and an absurd 13 four-star recruits highlight Bowden's 23-player class so far.

FSU cleared the air about who would succeed Bowden when they annointed the currently disputed, but overall impresive offensive coordinator Jimbo Fisher to assume the job when Bowden moves on. Recruits probably feel more comfortable accepting an FSU offer if they know who will coach if the senior citizen passes away in office.





Having said those favorable things about FSU's future, consider this substantial blow not only to the team, but also the credibility of its academic advisors to athletes.

Report: 20 Seminoles may be bowl ineligible

Posted: December 18, 2007
Sporting News staff reports

Up to 20 Florida State players could be suspended from the Dec. 31 Music City Bowl against Kentucky and the first three games of 2008 because of their involvement in a cheating scandal, an unidentified source has told ESPN.com. Athletes in several other sports also were implicated in a cheating scandal that involved an Internet-based course, and the university is expected to make public the findings of an investigation this week. A tutor is said to have told investigators that he had been providing students with answers to test questions as well as typing papers for the students.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Sign of the Apocalypse

This is my version of SI's "Sign of the Apocalypse." Consider:



Alonso's two-year deal reportedly to pay him $51.3M per season


MADRID, Spain -- Two-time Formula One world champion Fernando Alonso is heading back to Renault.

Fernando Alonso

Alonso

The 26-year-old Spaniard announced his return to the French team Monday after a turbulent season at McLaren.

At Renault in 2005, Alonso became the youngest driver in F1 history to win the title. He repeated in 2006.

"I am delighted to be returning to Renault," Alonso said in a statement. "This is the team where I grew up as a driver in Formula One. Now it is time for us to begin a new chapter together."

Renault said that Alonso, who agreed to a two-year contract, would drive along with Nelson Piquet Jr. The duo will make their debut testing the new R28 car at Valencia from Jan. 22-24.

"Fernando and Nelsinho will form one of the most exciting driver lineups of 2008," Renault managing director Flavio Briatore said. "We are delighted to be welcoming Fernando back home to the team where he enjoyed his greatest success. His abilities as a driver and a team leader are well known, and we look forward to forging another strong partnership."

Spanish media reported that Alonso would earn $51.3 million per season, though Renault would not confirm the figure.

Alonso had been linked with a return to Renault ever since he was released from his three-year contract with McLaren in November. A move to the French team gained momentum Friday when FIA decided against penalizing Renault for possessing confidential information about rival team McLaren.

"To be honest, the first three weeks of November, I was on a much needed vacation and during which I disconnected from Formula One," Alonso said. "The decision to choose a team did not take more than a week, as me and the people close to me were clear about what we wanted."

Alonso dismissed talk that he could have taken a year off, preferring patience while analyzing all of the possible options.

"It would have never come to me not having a drive for next season," Alonso said. "We are talking about a very important decision and since I could not get back at the wheel of a car until January or February, there was no rush."

Alonso finished third in the 2007 drivers' standings with 109 points, though his season is better remembered by rocky relations with rookie driving partner Lewis Hamilton and a spy scandal that cost McLaren $100 million and all of its constructors' championship points.

Renault finished third in the constructors' championship in 2007 with 51 points, 153 behind champion Ferrari.

Alonso made his F1 debut in 2001 with Minardi and spent three years at Renault from 2003-06. In 105 races, he won 19 and finished on the podium 49 times.

Giancarlo Fisichella and Heiki Kovalainen drove for Renault in 2007.

"Renault had a difficult year in 2007, but I know that the team has real strength in depth," Alonso said. "I am confident they can produce a fast and competitive car and be back at the top in 2008."

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

ACC vs. Do You Still Play Basketball

This is a belated post, but I most post it anyway. I yearned to write about the ACC-Big Ten Challenge this year because it's a debacle.

The ACC rolls on each year with competition with the Big East for the best conference and sometimes the SEC for a few of the best teams. But the Big Ten seems to spiral further and further downward each year. Thank the lord for Eric Gordon, or I might not watch a Big Ten game this year. Ok, maybe I'll tune in to see MSU just to see the "Izzone."

But really, Big Ten basketball can only compete for worst downswing with itself - Big Ten football. Alright, Big Ten football will survive and probably thrive again.

But honestly, I'm not sure Big Ten basketball will. It's become cool to play basketball for Southern Cal and to an extent, Gonzaga. One-year-and-done college ballers find it cool to to play in Manhattan, Kansas now.

If that's the case, the ACC, Big East and PAC 10 schools will have to take in lower recruiting classes just because of these outliers. Where does that leave the Big Ten?

The answer is I'm still not sure, and I don't think the Big Ten knows either.






Watch out for Tubby Smith, he'll find a way to make Minnesota dominate this conference.... in a year or two.

The blog lives on

The blog returns after a brief...err...four-month hiatus. I apologize to the dedicated loyal followers who might number in the double digits at this point.

I've started things up again because I've finally found time. I stopped working a couple weeks ago, and I've found that I have time to spend productively - if I chose - when I don't work. I can legitimize this as "productive" work to myself and whether it is doesn't really matter.

I also concede that this is probably my favorite time of the sports year. I love watching basketball more than any other sport - at the college and NBA level. Also, the college football bowl season gives me a chance to watch football on any given....Tuesday? But that's the case all year in college football now.


I don't have a definitive position on the BCS. But, I do know that when LSU's at their best, they're phenomenal. When they have time to prepare, they're phenomenal.

Remember last year? The national media projected that LSU would blow out the high-powered Notre Dame offense led by a few big-time NFL prospects. Could Notre Dame and the maestro Charlie Weis wield magic?

Yes, to the tune of a 41-14 LSU blowout victory. Stat line? Brady Quinn: 15/35 for 148 yards, 2 TDs, 2 INTs. Stellar.

Who knows if that will hold true this year, though.

Just a few random, entangled thoughts to appease you thirsting readers.

But for now, to balance this poor argument. Here's a clip to show you why you see "LSU - 10 Penalties for 150 yards" each game.




Glad to be back.





Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Win-Win Situation for the Timberwolves


The completion of the Kevin Garnett for the Celtics' entire roster is complete after talks that were on and off for months. The trade exchanges Garnett to Boston for Gerald Green, Sebastian Telfair, Ryan Gomes, Theo Ratliff, Al Jefferson and two future first-round draft picks.

On the surface this trade appears to be trading a potential future Hall of Famer for a bunch of menial players. Instead it's more like a potential Hall of Famer past his peak for a couple emerging stars and a few others with immense potential. The following explains why this is a Win-Win situation for the Timberwolves:

The Timberwolves weren't going to reach the playoffs with or without Garnett this year. Minnesota probably wouldn't have made it any of Garnett's remaining years in the league, either. So they traded him for a handful of skillful players, a couple potential stars and two first round picks - who could be stars. This trade was a thoughtless "YES" for the Wolves to make.

Jefferson is a budding star. Don't tell me he won't be any good in the West - he had little scoring help this season with Pierce out and still managed to put up numbers. Mind you, that was ON THE NBA's WORST TEAM.

IMAGE: courtesy of www.msnbcmedia.msn.com

Green's potential has no cap, thanks to his surreal athleticism. His skill isn't bad either. I cede that Telfair has had inexplicable legal troubles - but he can play the point. He has little range, but magical ball handling skills, solid strength and decent speed. On a team with a few scorers, he can distribute. Gomes is a minor question mark, but has a true NBA body. He'll have to compete for a spot down low, and he'll know it quickly.

Lastly, Ratliff provides the experience to mentor the aforementioned names and the two future first rounders. These picks could be monumental if the right player falls in the right spot in the future.

Don't forget that Rashad McCants, Randy Foye and Craig Smith will now want and be forced to compete for starting spots and minutes. Foye and Smith should be moved by management's effort to build a solid team for the long haul. Maybe this will inspire McCants to do something with his God-given talent, but I personally doubt it.

Minnesota has a plethora of skillful, young players dying to prove themselves in the NBA. From this they may eventually form a talented TEAM from these young players; Garnett never had that chance.

DISCLAIMER: This column is NOT AT ALL intending to argue that the Timberwolves can be or are immedately a better team from this trade. They're not, but they're not far away and will certainly catch up to the KG team's tortoise-like pace.


Saturday, July 28, 2007

Performance Drives Funds


The following article is emblematic of college football and the money it generates. My school, the University of South Carolina, has had recent football success and thoroughly expects it to continue. Its supporters not only agree, but are eager to cough up the money as well. It's unfortunate that money separates a good football program from an elite football program, but I'm glad Gamecock supporters are making that transition possible. Take a look at the type of money I'm talking about:



Capital campaign tops $13 million

Seven big donations have been earmarked for USC athletics facilities


By JOSEPH PERSON - jperson@thestate.com

South Carolina raised nearly $14 million in the first year of the athletic department’s first major capital campaign, according to university officials.

In the just-completed fiscal year, donors made gifts totaling $13.7 million earmarked for the athletic department’s facilities plan, according to Michelle Dodenhoff, USC’s associate vice-president for university development.

Those gifts came from seven donors, including five who made pledges of $1 million or more, Dodenhoff said.

“We’re off to an unprecedented start,” Gamecock Club director Chris Wyrick said Friday. “We certainly hope this is the beginning and we don’t intend to go backward next year.”

The campaign remains in the silent phase, during which officials meet with a limited number of potential donors. Wyrick described the initial response as “incredible.”

“You’ve got to understand that the $13 million that we’re talking about is from only about five or six people,” he said. “Everyone that we’ve asked so far has participated.”

USC athletics director Eric Hyman last year announced a $195 million, long-term facilities plan that includes expansion of Williams-Brice Stadium and redevelopment of the 41-acre Roost complex that will be modeled after the USC Horseshoe.

Dodie Anderson, a 1981 alumna of what is now known as USC-Upstate, pledged a major gift for the new academic enrichment center, an $11.4 million, 35,000-square foot building that will be named in her honor. Officials hope to begin construction on the academic center next year and open the facility in the fall of 2009.

“The fundraising has been exceptional, absolutely exceptional,” Hyman said. “We’re trying to raise as much money as we can. We’ve got some ambitious goals to be able to do some of the things that we want to in this athletic department.”

Besides the major gifts, USC announced that Gamecock Club revenues rose to $14.5 million, a 9 percent increase from last year’s $13.3 million total. Club members paid $40 more for their football season tickets this year and are being charged to park for games for the first time in the club’s history.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

The Dumbass Wises Up


The following are Mike Nifong's disgustingly belated apology and first complete concession of his unbelievable acts against the Duke lacrosse players. His true intentions now seem...premeditated and malicious. Take a look at his comments today in court:

"We all need to heal," Nifong said. "It is my hope we can start this process today."


IMAGE: Courtesy of rightpundits.com

"I agree with the attorney general's statement that there is no credible evidence that Mr. Seligmann, Mr. Finnerty or Mr. Evans committed any of the crimes for which they were indicted -- or any other crimes against [the accuser] -- during the party," Nifong said.

"For many months, we have sought a real and meaningful apology from Mr. Nifong, for the pain he has caused these families and these young men, the entire Duke lacrosse team, the state of North Carolina and others," said attorney Joseph Cheshire.

Others Know About Balkman's Prowess

This article from 82games.com helps me recall my former USC fellow student Renaldo Balkman's emergence onto the NBA scene. As understandably negative NBA press floods our television and radio speakers, I started looking for engaging NBA discussion and analysis. I'll grant you that this article was written a year ago, but as many people don't know Balkman now as did then. Enjoy.

Vegas Summer League: Balkman is the next...?

by Roland Beech, Founder 82games.com

Also see:
- Day 1: Bargnani debuts
- Day 2: Aldridge vs O'Bryant

LAS VEGAS, NV - Day three of the summer league was another five game special, but I focused my attention most squarely on the nightcap where the New York Knicks faced the Amare Stoudemire led Phoenix Suns. The key player to watch? Renaldo Balkman, the Knicks' controversial first round draft pick.

When David Stern announced that New York had selected Balkman with the 20th pick, a resounding chorus of boos broke out as the feisty audience let their feelings be known. Notable players such as Rajon Rondo, Marcus Williams and Josh Boone were selected immediately after Balkman, all of whom had typically been expected to go higher than Balkman in mock drafts, with many people expecting Renaldo to be an early second round pick at best.

So the question is, did Isiah Thomas make a clever move in bucking some of the conventional wisdom, or was it a bit of a reach? Some have called Balkman the next Ron Artest, which would certainly justify Thomas' faith in him if true.

First off, the official line

Player
Min
FG
FT
Reb
Ast
Stl
Blk
T/O
PF
Pts
Balkman 27 3-4 2-2 4 1 2 1 1 3 8

So, on a traditional box score level you'd say he did a bit of everything, including some efficient shooting. Ah, but that's not the 82games way...let's add some more detail into the mix. I should mention that my charting of his play disagrees slightly with the official scorer's take.

First up my unofficial plus/minus card (Suns won the game 89-70)

Balkman
Q1: 10 mins, -10
Q2: 4:30 mins, -6
Q3: 8:08 mins, +2
Q4: 4:13 mins, -4
Total: -18

The Knicks didn't have tremendous success then when Balkman was on the court, but since he was matched up with the Suns starters for much of the time, he didn't have the easiest setup perhaps. However he was playing in arguably a more legitimate NBA lineup since the Knicks started Frye, Lee, Nate Robinson, Balkman and fellow first rounder Mardy Collins. Overall then, the plus/minus scorecard isn't pretty for Renaldo in this game.

Let's move on to his offensive touches. Now first I should note that Balkman spent most of the time on offense hanging out near the baseline, and as the Knicks roster included NBA veterans like Channing Frye, Nate Robinson, and David Lee, there were seemingly few plays run for Renaldo. He did serve as the primary inbounder for offensive sideouts however.

BALKMAN Offensive touches

Starting
Zone
# of
Touches
Dribble
End in
Paint
Outcomes
Three-Point 8 50% 13% two PF drawn
Mid-range 8 88% 75% 2-3 FG (dunk, layup), 2-4 FT, 1 T/O, 1 Assisted Missed Shot
In the Paint 3 33% 100% 1-2 FG (dunk, missed tip), 1 Assist (layup)
Total 19 63% 53% 3-5 FG, 2-4 FT, 1 T/O, Assist Passes 1-2 FG

A couple of notes -- the Tip Shot miss, as with many tips, is a questionable play, especially given his tip of the ball on the offensive glass didn't exactly get too close to going in the basket! Finally on a fastbreak play in the first quarter I had him drawing a foul and missing the free throws.

Anyway, a few things jump out:

  • Balkman's touches per minute and possession usage are low for a summer league game
  • He dribbles the ball on most touches (63% -- compare that say to Bargnani's debut of 39%)
  • He gets into the paint at a high rate, particularly when fed the ball in a midrange starting zone.
  • Also, while not explicitly shown in the table above, all of his offensive activity came in the paint! He took no outside shots, and both shooting fouls drawn occurred in the paint as well. Even his one assist came when he was in the high paint area.
Without a single outside shot than, it's hard to say whether he has the capability to knock them down on the jumper or if he is strictly a slasher type performer. The fact that his three-point range touches led almost always to uneventful passes to a teammate, while his midrange touches (generally on the baseline) led to immediate forays to the hoop suggests he may indeed not have tremendous confidence at this point in taking the jump shot.

All told then the first impression was of a player who on offense will let the game come to him, won't demand the ball, and will generally drive at the first opportunity on his infrequent touches.

His ability to finish was nicely on display with two dunks (one explosive) and a layup, as well as a missed reverse layup. He has then the makings of a low-usage, high efficiency shooter. That may fit very well on New York given he will likely be playing alongside Marbury, Francis, Nate Robinson, Crawford, Curry and other Knicks' players with free shooting tendencies.

Ah, but of course if people are comparing him to Artest it must be because of his defensive abilities.

BALKMAN on Defense

Role
Plays
FG
FT
Blk
Stl
PF
Pts
Initial/Switch defender 5 2-2

1 1 4
Help defender 4 1-2 2-2 1
1 4
Fastbreak defender 2 * 1-2

1 1
Total 11 3-4 3-4 1 1 3 11

One of his switch defense moments was guarding Amare Stoudemire on the baseline, which after a fake got him in the air was an easy layup. On one of the fast break plays he went for a steal and missed, after which the ball handler dished out an assist for two points, so arguably Balkman should be charged for something there too.

The numbers add up to look a little less than tremendous (basically a wash with his own efficient offense) and twice he was faked into the air for baskets. The steal though was spectacular, coming when he was defending an inbounds and deflected the ball up whereupon he jumped and grabbed it. Generally though he didn't seem to have much of a presence on defense, and as with his offense was content to let the game come to him rather than be a force all over the court.

The next Ron Artest? No, I don't think so, not even a poor man's Artest. For one thing Balkman doesn't seem to have the same build -- Artest is a rock with that genuine boxer's son toughness, whereas Renaldo is lean and lithe at this point, albeit with seemingly long arms. In addition Artest is much more active, on each end of the floor and on the glass.

No, if anything the player who came to mind visually as a comparison, was ex-Knick Latrell Sprewell. The similarity evaporates quickly when you look at the college stats -- Sprewell scored 17 points a game in his last year in college, Balkman under 10, and the jump shooting, free throw shooting, and passing all seem to be areas of glaring differences. Both players though came with defensive reputations and were drafted in the latter part of the first round to some degree of surprise.

The Verdict: I can't fault a guy for being efficient on offense in limited chances and defering to his more experienced teammates, but I was a little surprised there was not more energy on display. Nevertheless as he acclimates to the NBA, he may well prove to be worth more than the typical #20 selection.

[Update: through three summer league games, Balkman is averaging 8 pts, 5 rebs, 1 stl, 1.3 blks...on 64% FG shooting, with good foul drawing but lousy 54% FT shooting.]

An Impressive Coach Dies Too Soon...


Wake Forest basketball coach Skip Prosser died Thursday. He was 56.

Prosser, 56, was at the Demon Deacons' Manchester Athletic Center and had apparently been jogging when he collapsed. Assistant Mike Muse administered CPR until emergency-medical technicians arrived to take Prosser to Baptist Hospital, according to the Winston-Salem Journal.

Prosser left Orlando, where the AAU national tournament is being held, this morning at 6 a.m. to return to Wake Forest for a basketball camp. Mark Prosser, Skip Prosser's son and a Bucknell assistant coach, received a phone call at about 2:40 p.m. ET this afternoon while watching games at the Milkhouse in Orlando. He left the gym immediately.

Prosser took over at Wake Forest in 2001 after coaching at Xavier for seven seasons, including five straight NCAA Tournament bids. He coached for one season at Loyola (Md.) in 1993-94.

IMAGE: Courtesy of media.gatewaync.com

CLASSIC TRIBUTE
As a tribute to Skip Prosser, ESPN Classic will show Wake Forest's 2005 upset win over Duke TONIGHT at 9 p.m ET.
Prosser's career record was 291-146 (.666). He was the 2003 ACC coach of the year. Prosser was 126-68 in six seasons at Wake Forest. Last season, Wake Forest was 15-16 and lost to Virginia Tech in the second round of the ACC Tournament. In 2006, the Demon Deacons lost in the first round of the NIT.

In 2005, Wake Forest was a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament, but lost to West Virginia 111-105 in double overtime. It was Chris Paul's final game at Wake Forest.

The 2004 team reached the East Region semifinals, losing to St. Joseph's. The year before, Wake lost to Auburn in the second round of the NCAA Tournament after winning the ACC regular-season title. He was the only coach in NCAA Tournament history to lead three different schools to the tournament in his first season at the school. Prosser was born Nov. 3, 1950, in Pittsburgh. A 1972 graduate of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, Prosser earned his master's degree in secondary education from West Virginia in 1980 while he was a high school coach. He joined the Xavier staff as an assistant before the 1985-86 season, spending eight years on the bench there. Prosser is survived by his wife, Nancy, and two sons: Scott and Mark, both in their 20s. Information from The Associated Press and ESPN.com senior writer Andy Katz is included in this report.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Tour Leader Removed Because He's..... a Coward

Sports fans often label their favorite stars as "role models." I imagine cycling fans have abandoned all hope of finding one in their sport. Within hours I discovered that the Tour's leader - THE TOUR'S LEADER - has been yanked from the race because he gave "incorrect information" to the sports director. Surprise, surprise - he also missed two random drug tests in the last two months. But the team couldn't have been suspicious of that, could they? Take a look at these clowns...

GOURETTE, France (AP) -- Tour de France leader Michael Rasmussen was removed from the race by his team after winning Wednesday's stage, the biggest blow yet in cycling's doping-tainted premier event.

"Michael Rasmussen has been sent home for violating [the team's] internal rules," Rabobank team spokesman Jacob Bergsma told The Associated Press by phone.

The expulsion, which Bergsma said was ordered by the Dutch team sponsor, was linked to "incorrect" information that Rasmussen gave to the team's sports director over his whereabouts last month. Rasmussen missed random drug tests May 8 and June 28.

The 33-year-old rider, who won Wednesday's stage, had looked set to win the race, which ends Sunday in Paris. But Tour officials had questioned why he was allowed to take the start on July 7 in London, England.

"We cannot say that Rasmussen cheated, but his flippancy and his lies on his whereabouts had become unbearable," Tour director Christian Prudhomme told the AP.

The leader of cycling's governing body applauded the decision.

"My immediate reaction is, why didn't they do this at the end of June, when they had the same information," Pat McQuaid said. "The team decided to pull him out; that's their prerogative. I can only applaud that. It's a zero-tolerance policy, and it's a lesson for the future."

With Rasmussen out, Spanish rider Alberto Contador of the Discovery Channel team moved into the race lead.

"It's in no way a celebration on our end. It's the third piece of bad news," said Discovery Channel spokesman P.J. Rabice. "It reflects badly on our sport."

After the Tour's upbeat start in London, when millions of spectators lined the streets, bad news -- nearly all of it related to doping -- quickly claimed the spotlight.

On Tuesday, star cyclist Alexandre Vinokourov was sent home after testing positive for a banned blood transfusion, and his team pulled out of the race. Wednesday, it happened again when the Cofidis squad confirmed its rider Cristian Moreni of Italy had failed a doping test, prompted the withdrawal of the entire squad.

It wasn't immediately clear whether the 104-year-old Tour ever had lost its leader in such fashion so close to the finish.

"In the very old history of the Tour de France, I don't know, but the recent past -- never," said Tour spokesman Philippe Sudres.



The Tour de France is DONE

The Tour de France needs to give up. I know little about cycling, but watched it religiously when Armstrong was involved. I assume I would have watched some this year, but the other two names I knew - Ivan Basso of Italy and Jan Ullrich of of Germany both tested positive for illegal injections. Smart move, fellas.

Now, just because I'm done doesn't mean that cycling fans should give in. But wait, the positive tests haven't stopped even as the tour occurs....




Say It Ain't So


Alexandre Vinokorov's positive "A" sample test from stage 13 is both untimely and tragic. But there are a few silver linings to keep in mind.

Say it ain't so. Tell me it isn't true that Alexander Vinokourov, one of cycling's biggest stars, tested positive for blood doping. This is not what cycling needs right now. The fans are tired of the scandals and losing faith in the sport. The sponsors are pulling out because they want positive PR, not positive dope tests tied to their brands. And the clean riders and coaches are fed up, too. But after we all get over our initial "Dammit, Vino!" reaction, there are a few things to remember:

1. His B-sample still needs to be tested

Though it's rare for a B-sample to show anything different from the A-sample (especially when you're looking at the blood of two people in one tube), it is possible that a mistake was made and Vino isn't guilty. The anti-doping procedures give an athlete or his representative the opportunity to be present when the B-sample is being tested, so you can confirm for yourself that the correct procedures were followed. In fairness to the athlete, we need to wait until the positive test results are confirmed by the B-sample before tying him up in the town square and flogging him.

2. Clean riders can and do win races

I've coached them, my coaches coach them, and countless other coaches and team directors have guided clean athletes to victories in the world's biggest sporting events. Doping scandals like this one hurt the credibility of the entire peloton, and it's the clean riders who bear the heaviest burden. They're struggling to win races against juiced competitors, fighting for fans' trust and respect, and hoping that someone else's poor decision doesn't end up costing them their jobs.

3. In the long run, catching cheaters is better for the sport

In the short term, better testing procedures means a steady stream of doping scandals. There are a lot of people working to clean up our sport, and maybe if there's anything good about Vino testing positive it's that it shows that the testing procedures work. The governing bodies and labs are making it harder and harder for cheaters to keep their secrets. And if the sport survives through this tumultuous period, I think there's hope that one day large-scale doping scandals will be a thing of the past.

Interestingly, if he's guilty, Vinokourov will be one of the first riders who signed the UCI's Commitment to New Cycling to test positive for doping. As a result, on top of the normal 2-year suspension, Vino would have to pay the UCI his entire 2007 salary. It's the first time the UCI has added a huge financial penalty to the fight against doping, and as a threat it may not have deterred Vino, but let's see what happens when riders start having to write big checks.

I've been involved in cycling for more than 30 years. The sport has treated me very well at times and kicked me in the teeth at others, but it's the sport I love and I'm in for the long haul. Cycling has made some great strides against doping in the past few years, but each "victory" comes at a high price. As coaches, athletes, teams, labs, and governing bodies work to clean up the sport, the world is watching and the race is on. If it takes too long, we'll be saving a sport no one cares about.

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Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Hate to Say I Told You So

Many NBA fans would love J.J. Redick's pro career to be a disastrous, swift collapse after he tormented their favorite college teams for four years. These fans thought their dream had come true last year - when Redick was glued to the Magic's bench. But "Not so fast my friend," as the atrocious Lee Corso says. Redick has dominated the Orlando summer league and people - namely the Worldwide leader - are noticing.

I've never understood the obsession with hating Redick, though I am a Duke fan. Sure, he was the overachieving white guy at Duke for four years. For some reason, people tend to hate that Duke has skillful, but rarely dominant white players. His cocky expressions are glazed on the faces of many elite college and pro basketball players after they finish an astounding play. He's NO different. Needless to say, all those expressions came after he was heckled, had things thrown at him, and received threats directed at himself and his family. Who could hold back a quick smile after all that criticism and after knocking down say....a 23-foter plus the foul? His NBA doubters all probably have something in common - he torched their favorite college team for four years. Here's ESPN's account of the Orlando camp, J.J.'s not through folks.

Hoping for bigger Magic role, Redick comes out shooting

By John Denton
Special to ESPN.com

Updated: July 11, 2007, 3:52 PM ET

ORLANDO -- Not even once while J.J. Redick was hitting those five 3-pointers, 18 free throws and averaging 23.5 points the past two days has he glared over at former Orlando Magic coach Brian Hill.

Then again, nobody would be surprised if he had done exactly that.

Redick is shooting with the confidence of his Durham days.Buried on the bench most of his rookie season with the Magic while Hill was still the coach, Redick has taken the Pepsi Pro Summer League by storm this week by once again resembling the cocky scoring machine who dominated college basketball slightly more than a year ago.

A day after torching New Jersey's summer league team for 30 points, Redick showed more of his all-around skills Tuesday in the Magic's 88-65 whipping of Indiana. He scored another 17 points, but more impressively worked his way to the free-throw line seven times, corralled five rebounds and set up his teammates with six drive-and-kick assists.

It's just the summer league, a forum filled mostly with rookies and vagabond free agents, but to Redick, the event is somewhat of a saving grace. After playing just 42 games and an average of only 14.2 minutes a night, Redick has used this week of games to try to get back the swagger that disappeared at times this past season when he never knew when he might play.

"I struggled a good part of the season. It was really frustrating, really draining to tell you the truth," Redick said. "It was a test in patience. But a lot of rookies have gone through that and really my case isn't that unique. A lot of guys have gone through what I did and turned out to have really good careers. I'm hoping to do the same thing."

Hill played Redick only sparingly even though the Magic clearly needed shooters around Dwight Howard and some punch in their shoddy offense. But in Hill's defense, Redick fell behind early with injuries, missing most of the summer with a herniated disc in his back and most of training camp with torn tissue in his foot.

His season high with the Magic this past season was 16 points, but he had more than that (18) by halftime Monday. Magic GM Otis Smith and new coach Stan Van Gundy are well aware that Redick can score from almost any spot on the floor, but they are watching this week to see whether he can defend well enough to contend for the starting job at shooting guard next season.

Both Hills are gone -- Grant Hill is off to Phoenix to chase a championship, and Brian Hill is expected to join New Jersey's staff as an assistant after being fired by Orlando -- and Redick knows there's a huge opportunity for him to become a key player for the Magic. He's keeping his summer league success in perspective, though, knowing it's what he does in October that really will decide whether he will get some meaningful playing time.

"In the big scheme of things, I'm not sure this week really means a lot," Redick said. "Travis Diener had an incredible summer league last year [including a 34-point game], and it didn't help him much. Coach [Van Gundy] is going to play the guys he feels the most comfortable with. I'm just hoping to be one of those guys."

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Stay Classy, Baseball


Baseball has again proved why its administration and players themselves are responsible for the game's demise. Michael Wilbon and Dan Le Batard just debated the new issue on Pardon the Interruption. A Fred Mitchell report (Chicago Tribune) says that "more than 70" corked bats were in the Cubs' clubhouse the night Sammy Sosa busted his open and that 1/3 of the bats DID NOT belong to Sosa. Oh lawd, baseball's in trouble. Now we can all begin to understand just how many players cheated in baseball in ways outside of steroids.

--PHOTO-- Courtesy of www.spitter.com

But it gets better - the report also says that MLB officials told the Cubs that they had an hour to clear all these bats from the clubhouse/dugout before any measures were being advanced. Oh jeez, Bud Selig. If this is true, all of Selig's and baseball's credibility is eliminated - in my eyes. Selig can no longer act like he's mulling over his decision about whether or not to follow Bonds's inevitable defeat of history and the record books, if this is true.

This will break any semblance of credibility that the public has for baseball players and the league administration. Confirmation of the story's validity would mean that league officials not only turned a blind eye to cheating, but that they've captained it at times.

--PHOTO--Courtesy of www.espn.com

Monday, July 09, 2007

Once Upon a Time....

...Steve Spurrier blessed my college experience when he chose to coach my South Carolina Gamecocks when he returned to college football. I'm a die-hard Washington Redskins fan but I had no doubt the Head Ball Coach could resurrect USC football and knock down the conventional order of SEC dominance. Spurrier's got USC on its way with an exceptional recruiting class, a stable running game and one of the nation's best defenders, Jasper Brinkley.

The college football season is 55 days away (for my team anyway) and I wanted to commemorate Spurrier's return with Tony Kornheiser's reaction to Spurrier 10 games into Spurrier's first season. I chose Kornheiser's piece for this week's column of the week because Kornheiser knows Spurrier deserved his NFL shot and is ready to win in college, again --

A FEW CHOICE WORDS: TONY KORNHEISER

Gamecocks Spurred by Ol' Ball Coach


Tuesday, November 15, 2005; Page E02

How about a big round of applause for the Ol' Ball Coach!

What a triumphant return Steve Spurrier has made to the place where he belongs -- college football. (Though hour by hour in Gainesville, an increasing number of angry souls fume about what on earth Spurrier is doing in South Carolina, and not back at his alma mater, Florida.)



I'll defend my position until my dying breath that it was the right move for Danny Snyder to hire Spurrier. A man that innovative and dominant in big-time college football deserved the chance to carry that magic to the NFL. Okay, he couldn't. We're all wiser and more humble. . . . Well, I'm not, but Spurrier is.

Spurrier never lobbed grenades at Snyder and the Redskins. He sat out a year to watch his son play high school ball, then jumped back in at South Carolina -- because the geniuses who are running Florida didn't want him. They wanted young, hot shot Urban Meyer instead. How's that working out for them?

Spurrier went boldly back to the Southeastern Conference -- even though it meant playing Florida -- and cleaned out the trash Lou Holtz left behind in Columbia, S.C., some of whose names Spurrier had to read on a police blotter. In his first year Spurrier has coached 'em up pretty good. He's 7-3, and ranked No. 19. He beat his perennial patsy, Phil Fulmer, and over the weekend he humiliated the Gators' Whiz Kid.

How sweet to be the Ol' Ball Coach now. Spurrier is happy coaching South Carolina. (You'll love this: To raise money for a short-game practice area for the school's golf team, Spurrier has lent his name and likeness to a California vineyard producing, hello, "Cock-n-Fire Cabernet" at $15 a bottle!)

And everybody here is happy with Joe Gibbs coaching the Redskins. Who says there are no happy endings?



-Courtesy of www.washingtonpost.com

Sunday, July 08, 2007

Sports Illustrated's Demise?

Sports Illustrated has entered a realm of embarrassment it is not used to. Journalism's top sports writers have been dodging job opportunities with SI in favor of the behemoth ESPN or other employers (See J.A. Adande). SI just endured a larger wake-up call aptly described below by AOL Fanhouse:

Whoops! Henry Abbott of True Hoop almost got duped as well, but I can't blame the guy, because SI.com is still looked upon as "mainstream media" -- so people believe them. You'd think they'd check their sources and reference them accordingly. But now I'm not so sure "SI" doesn't stand for "Stealing Information" since they have been notoriously bad this year (see: taking a quote from With Leather without attribution, see also: running a story that no one bothered to check its validity). Oh, sure they added this:
NOTE: An earlier version of this item contained a quote attributed to P. Diddy, which turned out in fact to be the creation of a blogger. My apologies to the readers and to P. Diddy, for attributing it erroneously to him.
But I don't see a link, the name of the blogger or the exact place you took it from. Geez, guys, man up and give credit. It could've been one of those, "Oh ha ha ha, I misread," but now it's more like, "We're never wrong and readers won't know otherwise." Not cool SI.com, not cool.

Friday, July 06, 2007

Maybe It's time for Venus

As you'll note, the last post was about Serena's continued reemergence into the tennis elite. Serena fell to the current best player in women's tennis, so don't discount her return. Venus has meanwhile made the Williams-family comeback a 2-2 affair.

Venus Williams is playing tennis as well as I've ever seen her play. In true American flavor, Venus dominated Maria Sharapova on the 4th 6-1, 6-3. Venus was like lightning in the first set - hitting the lines, showing her power and prancing across the court before Sharapova could seemingly notice.

Sharapova elevated her game to an exceptional level in the second set, but it mattered little. Venus swept through Sharapova and challengers Svetlana Kuznetsova and Ana Ivanovic to return to her home - the Wimbledon final.

Expect Venus to utterly dominate France's Marion Bartoli tomorrow. Why? Because when the Williams sisters are at their pinnacle they lose to no one. Except of course when they have to play each other in the finals.


R.I.P. Andy Roddick's Effort to Grasp a Wimbledon Championship - I'm feeling for you Andy, things just don't bounce your way often.

Monday, July 02, 2007

Serena the Champion Deposes Injury



For those that think Serena Williams doesn't care about tennis and hasn't for some time - reconsider. Williams injured her thigh between points while up a set on and on serve at 5-5 in the second set today. Williams cringed and yelped in pain as the tournament trainer attempted to relieve her muscle spasms. Williams forefeited the next two points, presumably in the hopes of mustering out a service-game win and a tossup tiebreaker. Then the rain gods reigned supreme - slowing Hantuchova's attempt to win the breaker and race through the third set. When play resumed Serena lost the breaker but unleashed her uncanny power game. "Going for broke is all I could do pretty much. You know, I have that game," Serena reminded. Serena's backhand returns seemed to scoff at Hantuchova's second serve, daring it to come at its normal slow pace. Serena was Serena - slamming winners, yelling and egging herself on. She was the old Serena - the-best-player-in-the-world Serena. "I just decided at one point, you know, it was over and I was going to die trying," Williams said. "I figured my heart wouldn't give out, so I had a good chance of making it." Comments like this are the reflection of gutty champions. Whether or not Serena was feeling better in the third set really doesn't matter to me - the fact that she gave herself a chance to get there does. To me the chance she gave herself reflects more on her willingness and ability to wait out such a dire circumstances, rather than her unprecedented physical talent. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Don't Be Surprised


Williams glided to a 6-1, 6-2 Australian Open victory over Maria Sharapova when many thought her health should have kept her from playing in the tournament. Williams then mounted a charge at the French Open before falling to Justin Henin-Hardenne in the Quarterfinals, despite looming health concerns. Williams didn't impress herself or others in the match. Wimbledon commentators readily recall the lulling performance. Serena conceded her lackluster effort also, but she wasn't too impressed by Henin's performance either. Williams has been eying the imminent quarterfinal against Henin since the draw was unveiled. But she didn't get ahead of herself before the match began nor flail out when tested. Wake up bandwagon tennis fans - this champion's reemergence ensues.

Did Tommy Haas Get Paid Off?

I was forced to do classwork yesterday afternoon and couldn't allow myself to be distracted by Wimbledon - because there were no matches. To compound that issue, Tommy Haas had to get injured and botch his role for this week - at least be on Roger Federer's mind and potentially get him a little tired in your 4th round match against him. Now Haas has retired and Federer is strutting into the Wimbledon quarterfinal waiting for good weather, and his opponents to catch up with him. I wish I'd written about this last night when I thought about it - but evidently former pro tennis player Todd Martin beat me to it on the Worldwide Leader. Take a look:

Mother Nature puts Federer in the driver's seat

Updated: July 1, 2007, 4:29 PM ET



Advantage Federer!

On the eve of Week 2 at Wimbledon, Roger Federer has to be liking his chances more than ever. He is obviously in fine form as is the norm every year on the grass, not to mention every week of every year. Federer already is the best player in the world and has asserted himself even more robustly on grass, dominating the surface for the past four years.

Weather and a walkover have made Roger Federer even more of a favorite to win Wimbledon for a fifth straight year.

The best thing going for Federer has nothing to do with his play. His biggest advantage is that, most likely, the bottom half of the draw has been taken out of contention. Mother Nature has handed Wimbledon a bum hand so far this year and the club's tradition of being closed on the middle Sunday exacerbates the already tenuous situation. What Rafael Nadal and his fellow competitors in the bottom of the draw are faced with is the challenge to win five matches over the next seven days, daunting to say the least. I am not sure that even Nadal's strengths -- courage and stamina -- can hold up under the pressure of these conditions. With Nadal possibly operating on less than all cylinders come next Sunday, Federer's chances of winning the title for a fifth straight time are escalating by the day.

Being a bit of a traditionalist (some might say a "rigid" traditionalist), I have a soft spot in my heart for the way Wimbledon operates. However, when considering what is on the line every year at the All England Club, one has to take into account competitive fairness and the need for a tournament to provide an even playing field for all its participants. All it takes is one day of bad weather in the first week to create an untenable competitive environment for half the men's field. Each year half the draw is scheduled to play their third round on Saturday of the first week. If the rain hits hard that day, the tournament moves those matches to Monday of the second week, the same day the other half of the draw plays its fourth-round matches. Despite the challenges the weather presented this past week, if it was clear on Saturday, the men's singles competition would be right on track. What a difference a day makes.

I believe it is time for Wimbledon to address this issue. This traditionalist believe there should be greater willingness to play on the middle Sunday of Wimbledon. In this year's scenario, it would be automatic, as none of the eight third-round matches were completed Saturday. It is the only way to preserve some element of fairness. Yes, the roof going on Centre Court by 2009 will help in the completion of some matches, but even that improvement won't allow for all of the early-tournament contests to conclude. Wimbledon can't control the weather, but it can react to it and do what is right for everyone involved.

Let me touch on a peculiar dilemma for Federer. Tommy Haas has defaulted their fourth-round match. Now, Federer has to figure out how to keep himself sharp during a four-day layoff in the middle of a tournament."

And it moves on from there.... In essence, Americans, pray hard for Andy Roddick because Federer's already thinking about their potential match. Andy still has to play.


Saturday, June 30, 2007

Columns that Celebrate Great Journalism, or at least Great Sports Moments


I plan on posting a column each week that represents great journalism, sports moments, or at least sports stories. These columns have been collected over the last few years. I apologize if The Washington Post Sports section is featured often - I grew up on Wilbon, Sally Jenkins, Kornheiser, the occasional John Feinstein, and now Mike Wise. That's a tough crew to match. In any case, I read other papers/blogs/internet sports sites now, so articles will be taken from there as well.

As I said before, I might have saved a column for its impeccable writing, to remember certain moments in sports history, or something else that made me just say - 'Damn, this is good." I'll grace the beginning of this series with someone that should appeal to all - a recollection of a wonderful sports moment just a couple years ago - the Louisville vs. WVU Final Four game. I'm an avid basketball fan and both of these teams play the brand of basketball I love. At no point has that ''brand'' of basketball been on better display than that game. This article is great for the quotes it provides. Without further ado, here is Eric Crawford's article from The Courier-Journal of Louisville, KY:

From out of The Pit
Down 20, Cardinals climb to Final Four

By Eric Crawford
ecrawford@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Rick Pitino said it best after his University of Louisville basketball team came from 20 points down to to beat West Virginia 93-85 in overtime yesterday.

"Greatest comeback ever," the coach scrawled on the board in the locker room. "You are now part of legend."

Legend follows Pitino, who is now the first coach to take three schools to the Final Four. It has followed him to U of L, which waited 19 years since its last national championship to return to college basketball's biggest stage.


Image also courtesy of Courier-Journal

The Cardinals (33-4) were expected to win the Albuquerque Regional final in The Pit, but they had to survive -- and take part in -- the greatest three-point shooting display in NCAA Tournament history to do it. The 29 three-pointers made by the two teams broke the tournament record of 28 set by Loyola Marymount and Michigan in a 1990 game.

West Virginia made 18 of 24 three-point attempts in regulation, then finally missed all three in overtime. The Mountaineers (24-11) had missed only seven shots in the first half and eight in the second.

"I've never beaten a team that played that well," Pitino said. "This is the gutsiest, most phenomenally tough group that I've ever been around."

They needed every bit of those qualities. When Kevin Pittsnogle hit the Mountaineers' 10th three-pointer of the first half -- and seventh in a row -- the Cardinals trailed 38-18. And they hadn't played badly.

They scrapped within 40-27 at halftime, and as they huffed their way up the long ramp to their locker room, Pitino told them, "To be down only 13 after a display like that, that's the best thing I've seen since I've been a coach."

In the locker room, he told his players this was nothing. He retold tales of comebacks past. He told them he was sure they were going to win -- even if he wasn't really sure.

"By the time we left that locker room," junior Francisco Garcia said, "we believed we were coming back, no problem."

But it was a problem. U of L scored on 19 of its final 25 possessions and still didn't pull even until its next-to-last possession in regulation.

"The only thing that surprised me was that it took so long to come back," junior Taquan Dean said. "That shows how well they were playing. We were playing great, and they never folded. We had to take it from them."

After taking the U of L job four years ago, Pitino met with his players in a small upper room at the Kentucky International Convention Center, introducing himself to them one by one as they entered. When they were all seated, he lowered the boom. He said, "You don't know me, and I sure as hell don't know you, because not one of you bothered to tell me your name."

Ellis Myles is the only one of those guys still on the team, but the Cardinals are no-names no more, having written themselves into school history.

Dean did it with the guttiest performance of a career already marked by stout efforts. The last time the Cards were in the Elite Eight, in 1997, they lost to North Carolina when a sprained ankle hobbled high-scoring guard DeJuan Wheat. Dean wouldn't be hobbled yesterday.

Even in a game where he started off cold, he drained seven three-pointers and scored 23 points. Cramping up in the late stages, he winced in pain with every move but continued to lead the team after Garcia fouled out with about four minutes left in regulation.

Senior guard Larry O'Bannon, scoreless and a non-factor in the first half, finished with 24 points and was named MVP of the regional, joining fellow Male High School alumnus Darrell Griffith and Pervis Ellison as the only U of L players ever to earn that honor.

Garcia spent the most crucial moments of the game on the bench after fouling out, but he kept the Cards in contention early and finished with 13 points and eight assists.

Myles, sidelined by a twisted ankle for a stretch of the second half, dominated the defensive lane late with a major blocked shot and several big rebounds.

And there were heroes whose names have not been prominent all season.

Pitino said that at halftime he told his players: "There is greatness in all of you, and we need it from every one of you, even if you are only on the court for a minute."

For a team that has been adjusting all season, the second half was a study in adaptation and survival. The Cards abandoned their zone defense and sacrificed their bodies in the 5,300-foot altitude with pressure man-to-man defense all over the court.

They pulled within nine in the early minutes of the half, then fell back by 12. They clawed within three with 10:29 to play, but the Mountaineers made back-to-back threes to lead by nine.

O'Bannon's three-pointer brought the Cards back within six, but Johannes Herber hit a three falling out of bounds on the other end, and the Cards seemed to sag for a moment.

But they kept coming. Beginning with Myles' tip-in with 8:39 left, U of L missed only five shots the rest of the game.

It took that kind of offensive brilliance to beat West Virginia. Back-to-back baskets by Garcia pulled the Cards within 71-67 with 4:09 left, but seven seconds later he fouled out trying to set a trap. O'Bannon's putback got the Cards within 74-71 with 3:03 left, and Otis George drilled a shot in the key to make it 74-73 with 2:04 left.

Pittsnogle answered with a three, and West Virginia led 77-73 with 1:44 left in regulation. But the Mountaineers wouldn't score again in regulation. Juan Palacios connected in the post with 1:27 left, and O'Bannon's layup in traffic tied it with 38 seconds left.

Looking to win it in the final seconds, West Virginia point guard J. D. Collins drove the lane and pulled up for a jumper, but Brandon Jenkins blocked it. Dean got the ball on a fast break but missed an off-balance 12-footer at the buzzer.

Pitino charged onto the court, pumping his fist.

"We felt at that point there was no way we were losing," Dean said.

He drilled a three 1:13 into the overtime to give U of L an 82-78 edge, and the Mountaineers began to fade. Their shots stopped falling, Myles and Palacios cleaned up the misses and the Cards put it out of reach at the foul line.

"I've been a part of some great comebacks," Pitino said, "but none has ever been so big or satisfying as this one."

Said West Virginia coach John Beilein: "This was a lifetime experience for us. The only place we lost was on the scoreboard. I don't know that we could have played better."

Before every game this season, each U of L player has touched a sign before heading onto the court. The sign bears the Final Four logo and the words, "March to the Arch."

Now they'll get to touch the real thing.

They've already touched their fans. In the stands, many were in tears.

"The character of this team, it leaves a lump in your throat," Matt Ferreri said. "These guys, they are not All-Americans, they aren't pros. But I can already tell you, the city of Louisville will never forget them."