May 19, 2013

Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom

f1b8fb4762d8965bb0f69163938be263 Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom

(PhatzRadio / AP) — It’s his fourth GS title after winning in 2008 and 2010-11. He also successfully defended his GS title at the world championships last month.

“To win here again is a super cool feeling,” said Ligety, who has won in five times and been on the podium every year since 2008. “I am really proud of that.”

Ligety held his first-run lead to win in 2 minutes, 35.43 seconds for his 16th , all in GS.

He established an insurmountable 125-point lead over Austria’s Hirscher, who was 0.45 behind in second.

A men’s on the same course is scheduled for today. The last GS of the season is next Saturday at the in Lenzerheide, Switzerland.

“It’s a big weight off my ,” Ligety said. “I had an awesome, awesome season but Hirscher was there all the time. Even if I beat him by three seconds, he was still in second place. That makes it tough going for the title. It becomes kind of a head game when he is so close all the time. So I am pretty psyched to have it locked up now.”

Ligety has finished on the podium in all seven GS races this season and became the to achieve that feat since Michael von Gruenigen of Switzerland in 1995-96.

Pinturault of France was third, 0.77 behind, and Felix Neureuther of Germany was fourth, 0.81 off Ligety’s time. Ligety led Hirscher by 0.60 after the opening run, in which the Austrian placed fourth.

In the overall standings, Hirscher extended his lead to 69 points over Norway’s Aksel Svindal, who finished sixth.

made for difficult conditions during the final run on a course that was soft by days of mild temperatures.

“Racing in the rain is not my ,” Ligety said. “I grew up in Park City, Utah, where it’s usually warm and sunny. These are totally different conditions.”

“The snow is really soft,” Ligety said. “It’s hard to keep your edge in the snow well. It didn’t feel good at all. This is a very difficult course set, especially for how the snow is running. It was tough to have a good feeling.”

The course for the first run was set by Austrian coach Michael Pircher. He designed numerous sharp turns, an unusual feature for a GS and one that didn’t benefit Hirscher.

“I don’t know why it didn’t go better,” said Hirscher, who beat Ligety for the GS title last season. “My feeling was OK, but obviously it wasn’t good. It’s hard to tell, it’s a mystery to me.”

The rule change for seems to have helped Ligety, who along with other racers weren’t happy when the governing body announced in 2011 a switch to wider radius and longer to help reduce the number of injuries.

The new make it harder to make direction changes. But he’s defended the world championship title and won five of seven World Cup races with them.

“It takes a little bit different technique,” Ligety said. “A lot of guys are trying to ski like they did in the past but that makes them much slower in many conditions. I can ski pretty similar to the way I did before as my technique matches up better with these skis.”

He won the season-opener by a massive 2.75-second margin. Two of his other wins — in Beaver Creek, Colo., and Alta Badia, Italy — were also by nearly two seconds, while at the worlds in Schladming, Austria, the best of the rest came 0.81 behind.

A run on the new equipment is more tiring for a racer.

“It definitely takes a new level of fitness,” Ligety said. “The skis take so much more energy to get the speed out of the turn. The little mistakes that would cost you a couple of tenths before, cost you half a second to a second now.

“So that all adds up to these huge margins. The way it currently is, these mistakes and the intensity level create a much bigger than before.”

1ca73224e23479aa86dc16be79366aeb Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom
Tina Maze celebrates in the finish area after winning the slalom in Ofterschwang, Germany, on Sunday. (Giovanni Auletta/Associated Press)

Tina Maze wins World Cup slalom, takes discipline lead

(PhatzRadio / ) — Overall champion Tina Maze of Slovenia won a World Cup slalom on Sunday in Ofterschwang, Germany to overtake Mikaela Shiffrin in the discipline standings and close in becoming the first woman to win five crystal globes in a season.

Maze finished her two runs on the Ofterschwanger Horn course in one minute, 52.85 seconds to beat Wendy Holdener of Switzerland by 0.25 seconds. More importantly, Mikaela Shiffrin was 0.75 back in third, meaning Maze now leads the 17-year-old American by seven points in the slalom standings with one race remaining.

Maze has already clinched the overall and giant slalom title, setting a record for points in a season. She leads the super-G standings and can also clinch the downhill title at next week’s World Cup finals at Lenzerheide, Switzerland.

Ivica Kostelic wins rain-drenched slalom; Hirscher clinches discipline title

(PhatzRadio / ) — Ivica Kostelic of Croatia won a rain-drenched World Cup slalom Sunday in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, while Marcel Hirscher of Austria clinched the discipline title after his sole rival skied out in the opening run.

Kostelic mastered the difficult conditions on the weakened Podkoren course to finish in an aggregate time of 1 minute, 45.81 seconds.

Hirscher finished 0.19 behind in second, and fellow Austrian Mario Matt came third, 0.34 behind Kostelic.

Hirscher led Felix Neureuther by 184 points going into the race, and the German was left without a chance of making up the deficit when he straddled a gate.

Alexis Pinturault of France led the field by 1.45 seconds after the opening leg, but failed to finish his second run.

The slalom was the last event before the World Cup finals start in Lenzerheide, Switzerland, on Wednesday.

Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom  Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom  Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom  Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom  Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom

 Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom

Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom

f1b8fb4762d8965bb0f69163938be263 Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom

(PhatzRadio / AP) — It’s his fourth GS title after winning in 2008 and 2010-11. He also successfully defended his GS title at the last month.

“To win here again is a super cool feeling,” said Ligety, who has won in five times and been on the podium every year since 2008. “I am really proud of that.”

Ligety held his first-run lead to win in 2 minutes, 35.43 seconds for his 16th career victory, all in GS.

He established an insurmountable 125-point lead over Austria’s Hirscher, who was 0.45 behind in second.

A men’s on the same course is scheduled for today. The last GS of the season is next Saturday at the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide, Switzerland.

“It’s a big weight off my shoulders,” Ligety said. “I had an awesome, awesome season but Hirscher was there all the time. Even if I beat him by three seconds, he was still in second place. That makes it tough going for the title. It becomes kind of a head game when he is so close all the time. So I am pretty psyched to have it locked up now.”

Ligety has finished on the podium in all seven GS races this season and became the to achieve that feat since Michael von Gruenigen of Switzerland in 1995-96.

Pinturault of France was third, 0.77 behind, and of Germany was fourth, 0.81 off Ligety’s time. Ligety led Hirscher by 0.60 after the opening run, in which the Austrian placed fourth.

In the overall standings, Hirscher extended his lead to 69 points over Norway’s Aksel Svindal, who finished sixth.

made for difficult conditions during the final run on a course that was soft by days of mild temperatures.

“Racing in the is not my favorite thing,” Ligety said. “I grew up in Park City, Utah, where it’s usually warm and sunny. These are totally different conditions.”

“The snow is really soft,” Ligety said. “It’s hard to keep your edge in the snow well. It didn’t feel good at all. This is a very difficult course set, especially for how the snow is running. It was tough to have a good feeling.”

The course for the first run was set by Austrian slalom coach Michael Pircher. He designed numerous sharp turns, an unusual feature for a GS and one that didn’t benefit Hirscher.

“I don’t know why it didn’t go better,” said Hirscher, who beat Ligety for the GS title last season. “My feeling was OK, but obviously it wasn’t good. It’s hard to tell, it’s a mystery to me.”

The rule change for seems to have helped Ligety, who along with other racers weren’t happy when the governing body announced in 2011 a switch to wider radius and longer to help reduce the number of injuries.

The new make it harder to make direction changes. But he’s defended the world championship title and won five of seven World Cup races with them.

“It takes a little bit different technique,” Ligety said. “A lot of guys are trying to ski like they did in the past but that makes them much slower in many conditions. I can ski pretty similar to the way I did before as my technique matches up better with these skis.”

He won the season-opener by a massive 2.75-second margin. Two of his other wins — in Beaver Creek, Colo., and Alta Badia, Italy — were also by nearly two seconds, while at the worlds in Schladming, Austria, the best of the rest came 0.81 behind.

A giant slalom run on the new equipment is more tiring for a racer.

“It definitely takes a new level of fitness,” Ligety said. “The skis take so much more energy to get the speed out of the turn. The little mistakes that would cost you a couple of tenths before, cost you half a second to a second now.

“So that all adds up to these huge margins. The way it currently is, these mistakes and the intensity level create a much bigger than before.”

1ca73224e23479aa86dc16be79366aeb Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom
Tina Maze celebrates in the finish area after winning the slalom in Ofterschwang, Germany, on Sunday. (Giovanni Auletta/Associated Press)

Tina Maze wins , takes discipline lead

(PhatzRadio / ) — Overall champion Tina Maze of Slovenia won a World Cup slalom on Sunday in Ofterschwang, Germany to overtake Mikaela Shiffrin in the discipline standings and close in becoming the first woman to win five crystal globes in a season.

Maze finished her two runs on the Ofterschwanger Horn course in one minute, 52.85 seconds to beat Wendy Holdener of Switzerland by 0.25 seconds. More importantly, world champion Mikaela Shiffrin was 0.75 back in third, meaning Maze now leads the 17-year-old American by seven points in the slalom standings with one race remaining.

Maze has already clinched the overall and giant slalom title, setting a record for points in a season. She leads the super-G standings and can also clinch the downhill title at next week’s World Cup finals at Lenzerheide, Switzerland.

Ivica Kostelic wins rain-drenched slalom; Hirscher clinches discipline title

(PhatzRadio / CBC Sports) — Ivica Kostelic of Croatia won a rain-drenched World Cup slalom Sunday in , Slovenia, while Hirscher of Austria clinched the discipline title after his sole rival skied out in the opening run.

Kostelic mastered the difficult conditions on the weakened Podkoren course to finish in an aggregate time of 1 minute, 45.81 seconds.

Hirscher finished 0.19 behind in second, and fellow Austrian Mario Matt came third, 0.34 behind Kostelic.

Hirscher led Felix Neureuther by 184 points going into the race, and the German was left without a chance of making up the deficit when he straddled a gate.

Pinturault of France led the field by 1.45 seconds after the opening leg, but failed to finish his second run.

The slalom was the last event before the World Cup finals start in Lenzerheide, Switzerland, on Wednesday.

Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom  Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom  Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom  Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom  Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom

 Skiing Weekend Recap: Ligety wins World Cup giant slalom

Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub

70dafc0e565a0f6a1f1685ef5d15287c Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub

(PhatzRadio / ) — Wrestling’s has parted company with its president in the wake of the recommendation to drop the sport from the .

The sport must now vie with other fringe disciplines for a spot in , following the ’s () decision.

Switzerland’s Raphael had been in the position since 2002.

He was issued with a at a executive committee meeting in Thailand.

“He has given his resignation,” said Fila member Rodica Yaksi of Turkey.

“The bureau has selected an for the extraordinary congress that will be held in Budapest in September, during the .

“We voted and elected Mr Nenad Lalovic [from Serbia] as the for the congress, not the Fila president.”

Fila vice president Tomiaki Fukuda said the governing body would continue to discuss wrestling’s plight during the annual gathering in Phuket.

“We will discuss in what ways we can bring wrestling back, but if nothing is decided today, we’ll continue our discussions on Sunday,” said Fukuda.

Modern pentathlon and taekwondo were thought to be the sports most at risk when the met in Lausanne on Tuesday, but wrestling was the surprise choice.

It will now compete with with seven other sports – baseball/softball, squash, karate, sport climbing, wakeboarding, wushu and – for a place in the 2020 .

Wrestling, which combines freestyle and Greco-Roman events, was included in the inaugural modern in 1896.

It has been in every Games since, apart from Paris in 1900. At last year’s Olympics, it 344 athletes competing in 11 medal events.

Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub  Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub  Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub  Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub  Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub

 Olympics: Wrestling chief resigns following Olympics snub

Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational

f8a991b3f6aa1116444e9de6fa2ec4c4 Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational

(PhatzRadio / AP) — FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The Tyson Invitational is one of the biggest meets of the year for the teams and athletes who enter.

On Friday, it turned into a showcase for Texas Tech’s Kennedy Kithuka and Katie Grimes and for South Plains College’s Vernon .

Kithuka and Grimes broke school records on day one of the two-day meet, and upstaged one of the NCAA’s top runners in winning a 400-meter title.

Kithuka won the invitational 5,000 meters in a school-record and nation-leading time of 13 minutes, 26.69 seconds, winning by an even 60 seconds. Wayland Baptist’s Jordan Valle took third in 14:28.63.

Grimes got second in the women’s 60-, running a Tech record 8.16 in both the semifinals and finals. ’s Tiffani McReynolds, the NCAA indoor runnerup in the event two years ago, ran an 8.02 to beat Grimes.

In the men’s invitational 400 meters, Norwood won the third of four sections in 46.02 and it stood up to win the event. Though not running head to head, Norwood edged Oregon star Mike Berry, who was second with a time of 46.48 that won the fourth section.

Berry is one of the nation’s top young quartermilers, having won a gold medal with in the 1,600-meter relay at the 2011 . In the 400, he finished third in last year’s NCAA indoor and second in last year’s NCAA outdoor.

Norwood, a South Plains College sophomore, signed on Wednesday with his home state .

The Tyson Invitational has more than 40 teams and eight returning NCAA individual champions.

In other opening-day results, SPC sophomore Darroneshia Lott won the women’s college division mile in 4:49.79, and four other current or former area athletes finished second in events.

Tech freshman Nick Rivera ran second in the college division 800, running a 1:52.29, and Tech’s Ezekiel Kissorio took second in the college division mile (4:03.69).

Two South Plains College also were second: Oklahoma Baptist’s Jura Levy in the women’s 60 meters (7.25) and Arkansas’ Anton Kokorin in the men’s college division 400 (46.88).

South Plains College freshman Shawn Johnson got fourth in the men’s college division long jump with a mark of 23 feet, 51/2 inches. Tech freshman Haley Combs was fourth in the women’s pole vault (12-11/2).

Area athletes who finished fifth were Tech’s Amoy Blake in the women’s college 400 (54.42), South Plains sophomore Anthonio Mascoll in the men’s invitational 800 (1:49.29) and Texans sophomore Jarvis Gotch in the men’s invitational long jump (24-81/2).

Tech all-American Bryce Lamb made his season debut in the event, but scratched on his first three attempts.

? Texas Tech softball

LAS VEGAS — Shanon Hays became Texas Tech softball’s all-time wins leader with a first-day split in the Sportco Kick-Off Classic.

Hays, in his fourth season at Tech, earned his 122nd victory when the Red Raiders defeated Central Florida, 12-4, in a five-inning game to start the weekend.

Tech later lost to No. 18 Louisville, 10-6.

Against the Knights — who are coached by Tech’s former all-time wins leader, Renee Luers-Gillespie (1996-2000) — the Red Raiders went off for four runs in the first inning and five in the third to take a commanding 9-1 lead into the fourth inning.

Adriana Perez finished a perfect 3 for 3 from the plate, homering and driving in three runs.

Mikey Kenney also homered for Tech, driving in two runs. Freshman catcher Lexie Elkins doubled and drove in two runs in her Red Raider debut. Brittany Talley earned the win for Tech, allowing one run in 4 2/3 innings. She struck out six.

Later in the day, Louisville (1-0) overcame a 4-0 first-inning deficit, using a five-run third and three-run fourth to hold back Tech.

Cara Custer was saddled with the loss in the circle, allowing six runs in 3 innings pitched. Perez hit her second home run of the day, and Katelyn Williams added a solo shot in the fifth, but the Red Raiders couldn’t keep up with Louisville’s strong hitting. Rachel Le Coq earned the win after coming in with no outs in the first to relieve Caralisa Connell, who allowed four runs and didn’t record an out.

Tech continues its weekend in Las Vegas today with a 5:45 p.m. game against Minnesota and 10:15 p.m. contest against UNLV.

TEXAS TECH 12, CENTRAL FLORIDA 4

Cen. Florida 010 03 — 4 5 4

Texas Tech 405 21 — 12 9 0

Turnier, Hartshorn (5) and Acevedo; Talley, Aucoin (5), McPherson (5) and Elkins. W — Talley (1-0). L — Turnier (0-1). 2B — Tech, Johnson, Elkins. HR — UCF, Barraco (1); Tech, Kenney, Perez (1). Records: UCF 0-1, Tech 1-0.

LOUISVILLE 10, TEXAS TECH 6

Texas Tech 401 010 0 —6 9 1

Louisville 005 320 x —10 10 1

Custer, Talley (4), Brokeshoulder (4), Aucoin (5) and James; Connell, Le Coq (1) and Ruckenbrod. W — Le Coq (1-0). L — Custer (0-1). 2Bs — Tech, James. HRs — Tech, Perez (2), Williams (1); UL, Keller (1), Wolny (1). Records: Tech 1-1, Louisville 0-1.

? LCU baseball

Derek Loera threw a two-hit shutout as No. 16 Lubbock Christian University beat Texas College 4-0 Friday and salvaged a split of the Chaparrals’ home-opening doubleheader.

LCU (5-1) and Texas College (2-8) conclude the series with a doubleheader at 1 p.m. today at Hays Field.

Loera, a former Odessa High and Odessa College standout, struck out 10 and walked one.

First baseman Brandon Wilson went 3 for 3 with a run batted in, and Brennyn Smith hit a solo home run. Joel Lutz and catcher Wigberto Nevarez drove in a run apiece.

Texas College won the opener 12-11, almost blowign a 10-2 lead. The Steers got four hits from Juan Carrillo, three hits from Jose Serna and two RBIs apiece from Frank Mora, Carrillo and Moises Espinoza.

Smith, Lutz and Jason Fisch all homered for LCU. Fisch and shortstop Christian Vazquez both had three-hit games.

The Chaps rallied with six runs in the bottom of the seventh, starting with Smith’s two-run homer. They had the tying run on first with one before Brett Kauten lined into a double play.

First Game

TEXAS COLLEGE 12, LCU 11

Texas College 307 001 1 — 12 15 2

LCU 202 100 6 — 11 15 1

Montoya, Creighton (5), Hungerford (7), Garza (7) and Serna; Porter, Burch (3), Silva (6) and Fisch. W—Montoya (1-2). L—Porter (0-1). Sv—Garza (1). 2B—Texas College, Serna; LCU, Rainey. HR—LCU, Lutz (1), Smith (1), Fisch (1).

Second Game

LCU 4, TEXAS COLLEGE 0

Texas College 000 000 0 — 0 2 1

LCU 100 102 x — 4 7 0

Neal and Serna; Loera and Nevarez. W—Loera (2-0). L—Neal (0-2). 2B—Texas College, Serna; LCU, Nevarez. HR—LCU, Smith (2). Records: Texas College 2-8, LCU 5-1.

Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational  Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational  Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational  Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational  Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational

 Track and Field: Kithuka, Grimes, Norwood star at Tyson Invitational

Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title

c13f5aa1a3b29bedcc8a1182bd9f8752 Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title
Max Aaron competes in the Men’s Short Program during the 2013 U.S. Figure Skating Championships at CenturyLink Center on January 25, 2013 in Omaha, Nebraska.
(January 24, 2013 – Source: Jonathan Daniel/ North America)

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) Never mess with the guy who knows how to rumble.

Little-known Max Aaron won his first title at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships on Sunday and helped knock down three- to the last step on the podium. With two quadruple jumps and an arsenal’s worth of other tricks in his “West Side Story” program, don’t count the 20-year-old upstart out at the in March, either.

“I kind of thought in the he could be the ,” Zakrajsek said. “There are so many and you never know how they’re going to skate or how it’s going to be judged. I did think he gave a performance today – when you give a performance like that, it’s worthy of a national title.

“He skated into the title, which is kind of a nice way to earn it.”

Aaron screamed and shook his when he finished his program, then slid across the ice giving a -like fist pump. (He was wearing red, appropriately, and it was Sunday.)

“The goals I had coming into this event were just to complete two clean programs. I didn’t think of ever medaling,” Aaron said. “But I knew if I completed the programs the way I know I can do them, I knew I could be up there.”

When his marks were posted, Aaron’s jaw dropped and the audience roared. He won the free skate in a to jump from fourth to first, and finished with 255 points overall, almost four better than Ross Miner.

Abbott, who had won three of the last four U.S. titles, dropped to third after a disappointing and flawed free skate. The Americans can only send two men to the world championships, so Abbott will have to watch and hope Aaron and Miner do well enough to get an extra spot for the .

“These two men skated brilliantly and they deserve to be in the positions they are,” Abbott said. “Not to put any pressure on them, but they better get three spots for next year.”

Aaron was the U.S. junior champ two years ago, but has done little of note since then. He actually considered quitting skating last summer, after he finished eighth at nationals.

Skating first of the top men, however, he wasted no time letting everyone know he’s got the makings of a champion. He opened with two quadruple salchows, the first in combination with a double toe loop, and did seven triples. Aside from a small turn out on a triple axel, his jumps were done with such great speed and flow people watching at home on their couches were probably saying, “That doesn’t look so hard, I could do that.”

Aaron is more than just a jumping bean, however. His spins were excellent, so fast and tightly centered he was practically a blur. He jazzed up his footwork with high kicks and hops, the kind of flourishes audiences – and judges – love.

But it was his perfect portrayal of the bad boy in “West Side Story” that was most entertaining. As he heard the first notes of his music, he fixed the audience with a smirk and began snapping his fingers. He oozed attitude throughout the entire program, so much so it’s a wonder the Jets didn’t storm the ice and try and wipe the smile from his face.

“This wasn’t just a performance that happened. This is how he trains,” Zakrajsek said. “Our big goal was just to deliver what he trained and see how he fit in.”

Aaron’s big score in the free skate – 175.87 – was going to be tough for Abbott, Miner and the rest of the guys to top. No one came close.

Miner has quietly developed into one of the most reliable U.S. men, finishing third at the previous two nationals and winning a bronze at this year’s NHK Trophy. That’s bolstered his confidence, and he’s skating with more polish and assertiveness than ever before. Every element in his program, to the old “Captain Blood” movie, was finished to perfection. There was no rushing out of jumps or awkward ends to spins.

It’s the kind of precision a has to have if he’s to contend with the international crowd.

He, too, did a quad salchow – a gorgeous one, to boot – and seven other triple jumps. His only flaw was singling an axel, a silly mistake that’s sure to nag at him until next year’s nationals.

“The single axel is not what I was looking for, but I’m happy I kept my head in it and fought all the way to the end,” Miner said. “It was a good day.”

Not for Abbott, whose program was barely adequate technically for a skater of his caliber.

He was so slow on the approach to his quadruple toe it looked as if he was going to stop and, no surprise, he landed on his rear end. But it was his other jumps that were more disappointing. His landings were scratchy and awkward, a shock for a skater who prides himself on his skating skills, including edge quality so fine the carvings could be sold as artwork.

He still might have finished ahead of Miner had he not popped his final jump, turning a planned triple salchow into a double. He skated off the ice banging his forehead with his fist.

“Stupid bleeping triple sal,” Abbott said of what he was thinking. “When I doubled it, I knew that was going to be the difference. It’s the easiest jump in the program, and I let it go. I knew at that point I going to be just enough behind.”

Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title  Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title  Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title  Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title  Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title

 Figure Skating: Aaron shakes up US men’s skating with 1st title

Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold

ca1127fe19387f781273176d6f42a149 Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold

ST. MORITZ, Switzerland (AP) — The , including Olympic 100-meter hurdler , won gold Sunday in the combined bobsled-skeleton team event at the .

Jones was brakewoman for Elana Meyers in the women’s bobsled portion of an event that also added times in two-man bobsled plus men’s and women’s skeleton.

The U.S. edged Germany by 0.24 seconds even though the Germans won three of four disciplines on the Olympia track.

Jones added her first in her new sport to her two in the indoor 60-, in 2008 and ’10.

The winning U.S. team included two-man bobsled pilot Steven Holcomb, who earlier Sunday lost his title in his main event.

The youngest in history, at 22 years, 270 days, Francesco Friedrich of Germany broke a record set in 1935 by Swiss driver Reto Capadrutt, according to bobsled’s . Holcomb placed fourth.

Skeleton racer Noelle Pikus-Pace was 1.7 seconds faster than German rival Marion Thees to lead the U.S. to victory. Canada took bronze, 1.01 seconds behind the Americans’ overall time of 4 minutes, 31.29 seconds.

Meyers and Jones were the third-fastest in women’s bobsled; Holcomb and Curtis Tomasevicz were third in two-man bobsled; and was seventh-fastest in men’s skeleton.

After leading the two-day, two-man bobsled competition throughout, Friedrich became the to win senior and junior in the same season.

Friedrich and brakeman Jannis Baecker were 0.56 seconds faster than silver medalists Beat Hefti and Thomas Lamparter of Switzerland. Friedrich drove to a combined four-run time of 4 minutes, 22.78 seconds.

German Thomas Florschuetz and Andreas Bredau trailed Friedrich by 1.19.

Holcomb and Steven Langton finished fourth, 0.08 off the , after being third in the opening two runs Saturday.

Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold  Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold  Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold  Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold  Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold

 Track and Field: US, with Lolo Jones, wins combined gold

Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold

6ba63dff66bd58a9006f69a748366e56 Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold

KEARNS, Utah (AP) — Lana Gehring looked so at ease Friday after sweeping a pair of at the U.S. short track speedskating championships,

Wearing and a smile, she sank into a plush for interviews.

Weeks earlier, she was so embarrassed by her skating, she didn’t want the world to see it.

“To do so horrible and then like no improvement (between) . I couldn’t show that. I couldn’t show that to the world,” Gehring said Friday.

Instead of continuing to race with the U.S. team at the most recent World Cup in Japan, she headed back to the states in November, and sought out Jae Su Chun, the coach at the center of a controversy that rocked the speedskating world earlier this year.

“I was just trying to turn things around,” the 22-year-old said. “I’m happy that I’m starting to come back to where I want to be, through all the drama and everything.”

Gehring was among a group of skaters who backed Chun despite abuse and skate-tampering charges leveled against him. She continued to back him even after he was suspended then resigned while maintaining his innocence.

Thus the began in October with one . Interim coaches replaced Chun and his assistants and the group that brought the continued skating with the splinter FAST team.

While FAST athletes such as JR Celski on the World Cup circuit, Gehring could do no better than ninth in races this fall.

“It was so mentally draining,” Gehring said. “Last season I was at and I got a bronze then all of a sudden I can’t even make it to a semifinal or a final. It just killed me.”

So she made the change, spending 2 1/2 weeks at a Washington, D. C., club working on nothing but technique, then joined forces with three other skaters who supported Chun – Jessica Smith and Cole and John-Henry Krueger – to work with Chun as part of a new group called Salt Lake International.

Instead of driving seven minutes to the Utah Olympic Oval to train, Gehring drives 30 miles cross-town to a rink near the University of Utah.

“We were a little worried about it in the beginning,” Gehring said.

Now, they carpool, leaving at 5:30 or 6 most mornings.

She said the group plans to continue working with Chun, even though US Speedskating recently hired two-time Olympian Guy Thibault to coach the team going forward as the 2014 Winter Games approach.

She has a cordial relationship with Thibault but plans to remain with Chun, though he can’t coach on the road.

“Right now I’m where I want to be,” Gehring said. “I’m glad to be back with Jae Su. . But I’ve got a long way to go. These are just steppingstones. Things are more settled and more stable now and the results are showing.”

They did Friday, with Gehring and Celski dominating the competition at the U.S. short track championships.

In the women’s 1,500, Gehring finished in 2 minutes, 27.944 seconds, edging Emily Scott (2:28.087) and Smith (2:29.408).

Celski won the men’s 1,500 in 2:25.719, ahead of Jeff Simon (2:25.930) and Travis Jayner (2:26.281). Celski, the two-time Olympic bronze medalist, cruised to an easy win in the men’s 500, finishing in 41.365. Chris Creveling (41.934) took silver and Eduardo Alvarez bronze (47.865).

Gehring (44.492) also won the 500, edging Alyson Dudek (44. 539) and Smith (44.804.)

Dudek grabbed silver despite dislocating her left shoulder just two days earlier in practice.

It’s part of skating, almost like all the controversy.

“I was really trusting of him to get me out of that slump I was in,” Gehring said about Chun.

“I’ve been with him for six years, and I know he wants the best for me.

Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold  Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold  Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold  Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold  Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold

 Speeding Skating: Gehring, Celski sweep US speedskating gold

Swimming: Lochte leaves short-course worlds with 6 golds

d4bf4538b1f530b7214c3c56c4556de5 Swimming: Lochte leaves short course worlds with 6 golds
of USA competes in the Men’s 100m semi final during day four of the 11th Short Course at the Erdem Dome on December 15, 2012 in Istanbul, Turkey.
(December 14, 2012 – Source: Clive Rose/ Europe)

ISTANBUL (AP) — won two more races at the short-course on Sunday, finishing the event with six golds and one silver. The result matched his medal total from the last championships, in Dubai in 2010.

Lochte won the 100-meter individual medley, a day after he broke the world record in the event. The five-time finished in 51.21 seconds, ahead of Kenneth To of Australia and George Bovell III of .

To started well and led at the halfway mark. He held off Lochte over the breaststroke leg, but the American accelerated in the freestyle to move ahead.

Lochte then joined the U.S. team of Matthew Grevers, Kevin Cordes and to win the 4×100-meter in 3:21.03, with Russia second and Australia third. Lochte’s time of 45.22 seconds was the fastest on the team.

He also won silver in the 200 .

“All the races I have done last week are starting to catch up,” he said. “But it is the last day of the tournament and there is always something left in the tank.”

Radoslaw Kawecki of Poland beat Lochte and said he deployed the same tactics as his rival.

“We both wanted to wait until the final 50-75 meters and start pushing really hard. I am happy I came out on top and proved that I was better prepared than Lochte,” Kawecki said, adding it felt “great to be better than a world-record holder.”

Lochte broke the world record in the 100 IM with a time of 50.71 in the semifinals at Erdem Arena on Saturday, eclipsing the mark set by of Slovenia in December 2009. On Friday, the American broke the world record in the 200 IM.

Swimming: Lochte leaves short-course worlds with 6 golds is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Swimming: Lochte leaves short course worlds with 6 golds  Swimming: Lochte leaves short course worlds with 6 golds  Swimming: Lochte leaves short course worlds with 6 golds  Swimming: Lochte leaves short course worlds with 6 golds  Swimming: Lochte leaves short course worlds with 6 golds

 Swimming: Lochte leaves short course worlds with 6 golds

Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9-1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset

76f10776167384c3fcb49f438737f47b Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset

ARCADIA, Calif. (AP) — got beat again in the $5 million Breeders’ Cup Classic. Bill Mott settled for half of a repeat sweep in the weekend’s two biggest races.

The trainers could only wince as 9-1 long shot won North America’s richest race on , capping a weekend of upsets in the at .

ran the race of his life, leading all the way to win by a half-length over Mucho .

The highly anticipated Classic was strictly a two- to the finish in front of 55,123.

Game On Dude, the 7-5 favorite, ran what Baffert said was “probably the worst race of his life” in finishing seventh. He lost in the closing a year ago at .

Mott’s trio of Flat Out (third), Ron the Greek (fourth) and To Honor and Serve (10th) came up short.

“I don’t think we have any huge excuse,” he said.

Mott, unlike Baffert, didn’t leave empty-handed. Royal Delta successfully defended her title in the $2 million Ladies’ Classic on Friday as one of only four favorites to win in 15 races over two days.

After sang “The Best Is Yet to Come” as the horses were led onto the track, the spotlight belonged to an unheralded entry named for an old post in Kansas that protected the Santa Fe Trail, a who rides in racing’s minor leagues, and a low-profile trainer.

“The prestige of winning this race in front of the world is unbelievable,” jockey Brian Hernandez Jr. said.

He celebrated his with the biggest victory of his career. Trainer Ian Wilkes could say the same.

“Fort Larned just gave us the greatest birthday present ever,” said Hernandez, the leading rider this year at Ellis Park and Kentucky Downs.

Fort Larned ran 1 1/4 miles in 2:00.11 in the showcase race of the two-day world championships at that was shown in prime time for the first time. The 4-year-old colt paid $20.80 to win.

“I knew we were good when he broke sharp,” Wilkes said. “That’s where Brian won the race. We broke sharp and Game On Dude broke bad.”

Fort Larned went right to the lead and had things under control, with only Mucho Macho Man picking up the chase. Those two pulled away from the pack with Fort Larned digging in under Hernandez’s left-handed whip through the stretch.

Fort Larned’s biggest previous win came in the Whitney at Saratoga in August. The colt finished third behind winner Flat Out in the Jockey Club Gold Cup in September.

“No one, I don’t think, was too worried about us coming off our last race,” Wilkes said. “We could do what we wanted to do and without having that bull’s eye.”

All the week’s attention had focused on Baffert and Mott, two veterans well acquainted with winning on the big days.

Baffert went 0 for 9 on the weekend, with Game On Dude failing to deliver the Hall of Famer a first-ever win in the Classic. It was the end of a bummer year for him after surviving a heart attack in March and finishing second in each of the Triple Crown races.

“It was a tough day for me, but I’ve had tougher,” the white-haired trainer said. “Joe Torre told me that you’ve got to forget it.”

Torre, the retired manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees, co-owns Game On Dude, who could never employ his favored front-running style under Rafael Bejarano.

“At the three-eighths (pole) he gave me his move,” the jockey said. “And then, all of a sudden, he was flat, totally out of gas. I can’t understand it and I can’t explain it.”

Mott was trying to duplicate his feat from last year when he won the Ladies’ Classic and the Classic with Drosselmeyer.

Upsets dominated six of the day’s nine races, with Little Mike pulling off the biggest stunner at 17-1 odds in the $3 million Turf.

Rosie Napravnik joined Julie Krone as the only female jockeys to win a Breeders’ Cup race when she guided 6-5 favorite Shanghai Bobby to a head victory over He’s Had Enough in the $2 million Juvenile.

“As long as you’ve got the horse underneath you, you can get the job done,” said Napravnik, who started her career riding under her initials A.R. so no one would realize she was a woman.

Shanghai Bobby set himself up as the winter book favorite for the Kentucky Derby. The colt improved to 5-0 under trainer Todd Pletcher, who went 1 for 10 on the weekend.

“He’s got everything you want. He’s fast and courageous,” Pletcher said.

Wise Dan, the 9-5 favorite in the $2 million Mile, came through with a 1 1/2-length victory, covering the distance in a track-record 1:31.78. He paid $5.60 to win under jockey John Velazquez, who earned his 12th BC victory.

Animal Kingdom, last year’s Kentucky Derby winner who had been off for 259 days after his second and most recent injury, finished second.

The string of upsets continued with Little Mike winning the Turf by a half-length under jockey Ramon Dominguez. He paid $36.60, the highest win price for this year’s event.

The win price on Little Mike topped Calidoscopio’s payout of $36.40 in the $500,000 Marathon on Friday.

Tapizar beat a talented field that included 5-2 favorite Emcee and Shackleford. He won by 2 1/4 lengths and paid $32.60 for trainer Steve Asmussen.

Trinniberg won the $1.5 million Sprint by three-quarters of a length at 13-1 odds, triggering a win price of $29.40. Defending champion Amazombie, the 7-2 favorite, was eighth.

Baffert, a three-time Sprint winner, got shut out with his entries of Fast Bullet (sixth), Coil (seventh), Capital Account (12th).

In the $1 million Juvenile Turf, 9-1 shot George Vancouver won by 1 1/4 lengths and paid $20.60. Trainer Aidan O’Brien, jockey Ryan Moore and owner Coolmore Stud teamed to win for the second straight year.

Filly Mizdirection beat the boys by a half-length in the $1 million Turf Sprint off a six-month layoff, giving sports talk radio host and co-owner Jim Rome his first Breeders’ Cup victory.

“I’m numb,” he said. “Having a hard time believing that that happened.”

Sent off at 6-1 odds, Mizdirection paid $15.80, $7.40 and $5. Hall of Famer Mike Smith won his 17th Breeders’ Cup race and second of the weekend, extending his record for wins among jockeys.

Groupie Doll came through as the 3-5 favorite in the $1 million Filly & Mare Sprint, winning by 4 1/2 lengths. Jockey Rajiv Maragh won his second race of the weekend, having taken the $500,000 Juvenile Sprint on 15-1 shot Hightail on Friday.

In the Juvenile, Shanghai Bobby ran 1 1/16 miles in 1:44.58 and paid $4.60, $3.40 and $2.60. He’s Had Enough returned $12.60 and $7.40 for trainer Doug O’Neill, jockey Mario Gutierrez and owner J. Paul Reddam, the same connections behind Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner I’ll Have Another.

Capo Bastone paid $5 to show.

Baffert’s duo of Power Broker and Title Contender finished fifth and eighth, respectively.

Trinniberg springs upset in Breeders’ Cup Sprint

ARCADIA, Calif. (AP) – Trinniberg sprang an upset in the $1.5 million Sprint at 13-1 odds, extending the streak of long-shot winners on the second day of the Breeders’ Cup at Santa Anita.

Ridden by Willie Martinez, Trinniberg ran 6 furlongs in 1:07.98 and paid $29.40 for the win by three-quarters of a length on Saturday.

The Lumber Guy was second and Smiling Tiger was another 2 1/4 lengths back in third in the field of 14. Defending champion Amazombie, the 7-2 favorite, was eighth.

Trinniberg finished 17th in the Kentucky Derby for trainer Shivananda Parbhoo, whose daughter, Sherry, owns the 3-year-old colt.

trainer Bob Baffert, a three-time winner of the race, went 0 for 3 with his entries of Fast Bullet (sixth), Coil (seventh), Capital Account (12th).

Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9-1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

help Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
help Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
help Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
help Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
help Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset
325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Horse Racing Recap: Fort Larned, a 9 1 shot, wins Breeders’ Cup Classic in upset

Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics

a4bac14a328ad2b6d2fc4d5e5024efc9 Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics

LONDON (AP) — Their closest were still on the floor competing when the Chinese whipped out five big gold stars and held them up in the shape of their flag.

Why wait?

The Chinese won their second straight in men’s and third and in in a rout Monday, making fools of everyone who wrote them off after a in qualifying.

“We don’t have any . That’s our secret to beat the Japanese and to beat everyone,” Zhang Chenglong said. “In , we had a little bit of faults. But tonight was completely perfect.”

Well, almost.

It took five minutes and a video review to sort out the silver and after Japan questioned the score of three- Kohei Uchimura on pommel horse, the last routine. Japan jumped from fourth to second after judges revised Uchimura’s score, bumping Britain down to bronze and Ukraine off the medals podium.

It was the ’s first team medal in a century, and it set off raucous celebrations at the O2 Arena. Even joined in.

“To win a medal in your , I’ll take that any day,” Kristian Thomas said. “We never actually had the silver in our hands, so there’s no real disappointment.”

Tell that to the Japanese, who were bested by the Chinese yet again. Japan was the runner-up to China in Beijing, as well as at the last four .

And unlike last year’s world championships, where the Japanese had appeared to close the on China, this one wasn’t even close. China finished with 275.997 points, more than four points better than Japan.

China now has gone eight years without losing at a major competition.

“At the very beginning it was fourth for Japan so I couldn’t say anything. I couldn’t think anything,” a somber Uchimura said. “I was thinking, ‘It’s fourth, it’s fourth.’ Even after it was changed, I was not too happy.”

The Americans weren’t all that happy, either.

Bronze medalists four years ago, they could practically feel their first gold since 1984 after finishing No. 1 in qualifying, with captain Jon Horton jokingly asking if they could claim their prizes. But everyone gets a do-over in team finals, and whatever momentum the Americans had evaporated when Danell Leyva and John Orozco fell on pommel horse, their second event.

They wound up fifth, six points behind China and almost two behind Britain.

“There’s definitely disappointment,” Horton said. “We are one of the best teams in the world.”

But China is in a class by itself.

The Chinese have been like playground bullies most of the last decade, sauntering into every competition and scooping up as many as possible: Team golds at the last five world championships and Olympic titles in Sydney and Beijing, where they won all but one of the men’s medals.

They probably would have claimed that, too, had they bothered to contend for vault.

But with most of the Beijing squad moving on and a rule change putting a premium on all-arounders, China has looked – dare we say it? – vulnerable of late. Chen Yibing, a double gold medalist in Beijing, even tried to dampen the expectations this spring, saying it would be “extremely hard” for the Chinese to defend their team title. It didn’t get any easier when Teng Haibin, the 2004 gold medalist on pommel horse, dropped out with an injury Thursday and had to be replaced by Guo Weiyang.

An abysmal performance in qualifying only furthered the doubt when they finished sixth. Sixth!

While everyone else was gleefully expecting the end of a dynasty, China was as cocky and cool as always.

“We have the abilities and the skills,” said Chen Yibing, one of only two holdovers from the Beijing squad. Asked when he knew his team would win, he said: “After getting up from bed.”

China doesn’t have Japan’s stylish elegance, Britain’s youthful exuberance or even the Americans’ flair for the dramatic. What the Chinese do have, however, is sheer, brute strength. Chen set the tone in the very first event on still rings, where he is the defending Olympic gold medalist and four-time world champion.

Simply watching the event makes most folks grab their arms and scream for mercy. He flips from one skill to another with silky smoothness – at one point lifting his head a bit higher as if to say, “Oh, you liked that one? How about this?” The cables stayed perfectly still when he did a somersault into a handstand, the veins bulging in his arms and neck the only signs of exertion.

The Chinese only got better from there, with half their 18 scores at 15.6s or higher. Compare that to Japan, which had five, or the British, who had four.

When Zhang’s feet slammed into the mat after his pommel horse routine, China’s last of the night, he let out a roar the rest of the world will be hearing for four years. While the rest of his teammates broke into their latest victory celebration, Chen leaned against a wall and buried his face in his hands, unable to stop the tears.

“Our rivals were not necessarily stronger than in previous years,” Zhang said, “so we kept a cool mind.”

Japan had to keep its cool, too. Uchimura lost control on his dismount, flailing wildly before he got his feet beneath him. Judges initially gave him just a 5.4 for difficulty, and his overall score of 13.466 left Japan in fourth place.

But the Japanese coaches rushed to the judges to protest, saying Uchimura’s dismount should have been worth more. While judges huddled around a video screen, Uchimura and his teammates sat stone-faced against a wall.

Finally it was announced that judges had revised Uchimura’s score, giving him an additional seven-tenths credit on his dismount. That boosted Japan’s total to 271.952, good enough for the silver medal but not the gold that Uchimura and his teammates crave.

“This is the Olympics, and this is a special environment and we really couldn’t do as we planned,” Uchimura said. “It was really difficult.”

Difficult, it seems, for everyone but the Chinese.

Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics

help Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
help Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
help Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
help Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
help Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics
325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Olympics: China wins 2nd straight gold in men’s gymnastics