Thursday, February 5, 2015

Seahawks' Sherman, girlfriend welcome baby boy

AP Source: Saints bringing back reserve QB McCown
RENTON, Wash. (AP) -- Just as Richard Sherman predicted, his new son was a disciplined young man.
Sherman's girlfriend, Ashley Moss, gave birth to the couple's first child Thursday morning, four days after the Super Bowl. Sherman tweeted about the birth around 4 a.m. PST.
Sherman tweeted: ''My son sure does know how to make an entrance! 2/5/15... Is it a coincidence or is he just that clever?! Either way I'm ecstatic.''
The pending birth and what Sherman would do if Moss - who was in Arizona with the team - went into labor around game time became one of the biggest stories of Super Bowl week.Three days before the game, Sherman joked, ''I think he's going to be a disciplined young man and stay in there until after the game.''

Orlando Magic fire coach Jacque Vaughn

Jacque Vaughn (AP)
The Orlando Magic have fired coach Jacque Vaughn.
Vaughn, 39, was informed of the decision on Thursday in Orlando, ending his tenure less than three years after his hiring. The Magic are 15-37 this season.
The players were informed at a meeting at 1 p.m. EST.
Assistant coach James Borrego will become the interim head coach.
Scott Skiles, a popular ex-Orlando Magic player and former head coach with Phoenix, Chicago and Milwaukee, has emerged as a serious candidate to eventually take over as head coach, league sources told Yahoo Sports.
Orlando will consider his possible hiring during the All-Star break next week, or could possibly wait until season's end and do an extended search. Nevertheless, the firing of three assistant coaches Thursday –  Wes Unseld Jr., Brett Gunning and Zack Guthrie – as reported by the Orlando Sentinel, suggests a new head coach could come sooner than later.
There has been no contact between the Magic and Skiles' camp, league sources told Yahoo Sports.

Monday, February 2, 2015

Teenager Ko becomes youngest world number one

Lydia Ko, of New Zealand, hits off the second tee during the final round the LPGA Coates Golf Championship at the Golden Ocala Golf and Equestrian Club, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2015, in Ocala, Fla. (AP Photo/The Ocala Star-Banner, Bruce Ackerman)
(Reuters) - Seventeen-year-old Lydia Ko of New Zealand became the youngest golfer to hold top spot in the world rankings by tying for second place at the LPGA season-opening Coates Golf Championship in Ocala, Florida, on Saturday.
American Tiger Woods was previously the youngest golfer to become world number one when he did it in 1997 at 21, while Shin Ji-yai held the women's record after reaching top spot in 2010 aged 22.The Korean-born Ko, led by as many as four strokes in the final round but slipped behind after a double-bogey six at the 17th hole as she finished one shot behind winner and good friend Choi Na-yeon of South Korea, who fired a 68.
Still, it good enough to lift her ahead of Inbee Park of South Korea in the rankings.
"It's amazing," said Ko, who also ended the 2014 season by winning the CME Titleholders event in November and a $1 million prize for claiming the season-long points race.

Obama lauds 'embarrassment of riches' in Los Angeles sports

U.S. President Obama hosts 2014 NHL Stanley Cup winners Los Angeles Kings and 2014 MLS Cup champions Los Angeles Galaxy in the White House
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama says he may be resentful as a Chicago sports fan, but he has to give credit to Los Angeles for producing two championship teams.
Hockey's Kings and soccer's Galaxy were honored in a joint ceremony Monday in the East Room of the White House. Obama says Los Angeles has an ''embarrassment of riches'' in sports and that he's especially impressed that a city with no snow, ice or winter can turn into a hockey town.
Obama gave a special shout-out to Galaxy star Robbie Rogers as the MLS league's first openly gay player. Obama says Rogers is inspiring people around the world.
He wished both teams the best of luck ''when you are not playing Chicago.''

Cubs legend Ernie Banks remembered for unwavering optimism

Cubs legend Ernie Banks remembered for unwavering optimism
CHICAGO (AP) -- Fans and friends paid tribute to legendary Chicago Cubs slugger Ernie Banks on Saturday, recalling how he helped break baseball's color barrier during a Hall of Fame career in which he won over teammates and an entire city with the unwavering optimism he brought to the game an life.
At a memorial service in a Chicago church, the buoyant man known as ''Mr. Cub'' was remembered for his character as much as his accomplishments on the ballfield, including his 512 career home runs. Speaker after speaker recalled Banks' unflagging spirit and good cheer - he enthusiastically predicted each spring that his team would win the pennant - as well as his humility and care for others.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson said Banks ''disarmed adversaries with optimism'' and ''branded goodwill.'' Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Banks was a ''humble hero'' who taught younger generations ''how to play the game of life.'' Fellow Hall of Famer Fergie Jenkins said the unassuming, joyful Banks strove to be a good teammate, not a star.
Billy Williams, another Hall of Famer, recalled animated conversations that he and Banks would have while driving to Wrigley Field on game days.
''I never did see him read a book, but he knew about everything,'' Williams marveled.
Saturday would have been Banks' 84th birthday, and several speakers called on the crowd to celebrate his life, not mourn his passing. Banks, a two-time MVP, military veteran and winner of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, died Jan. 23 of a heart attack. His coffin, which was in front of the altar, was draped in a banner emblazoned with his jersey number, 14. A choir performed a rousing version of ''This Little Light of Mine.''
Jackson, exhorting everyone to stand, led a thunderous round of applause to celebrate Banks' birthday. In the hush that followed, the civil rights leader noted it was also the 150th anniversary of Congress passing the 13th amendment abolishing slavery.
''Smiling faces can sometimes conceal what's deep within,'' Jackson said, describing Banks' cheerfulness as a thermostat that ''helped control the temperature'' of his times. The work of Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. was possible because of Banks, Jackson said. ''We rode on Ernie's shoulders.''
Banks was the Cubs' first black player when he joined the team in 1953, six years after Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier.
Emanuel noted that in Banks' early years with the Cubs, he couldn't stay at some of the same hotels or eat at the same restaurants as his white teammates because of segregation. He suffered the same racial taunts and indignities as other black players of his time, but if he ever got angry, he never seemed to show it. In a 19-year career full of amazing statistics, one of the most remarkable was that he was never ejected from a game.
Roosevelt Johnson, 45, arrived at Chicago's Fourth Presbyterian Church at 5:30 a.m. and was first in line.
''I wanted to pay my respects to a true icon of the sport,'' said Johnson, of Zion.
Chicago native Estelle Martin, 56, said she loved to play baseball as a girl and collect baseball cards. ''I was a tomboy. Ernie Banks was my favorite. He was everybody's favorite,'' she said.
Banks' connection to the city was evident inside the church, where the pews were filled with mourners of all ages. There were young fans who knew him only from grainy video clips and from his appearances at the ballpark after he retired, always with a smile, always chatting with fans.
But there were also older men, particularly older black men who remembered the days when Banks and others made history. While he wasn't the first African American to play in the majors, Banks was the first with the Cubs in what was one of the most segregated cities in the United States.
Banks was playing for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Leagues when the Cubs purchased his contract for $10,000. He made his major league debut at shortstop and three days later hit his first home run.
With his play, particularly in the first chapters of his career when he was hitting home runs at a clip that no shortstop had ever hit them before, he simply won over a city.
After Saturday's service, many other Chicagoans got the chance to say farewell. They doffed their hats in respect as a procession carried ''Mr. Cub'' past his statue at Daley Plaza downtown. It then made its way up Lake Shore Drive to Wrigley Field.
 
 
 
 
 



Details of Warren Sapp's arrest on assault and solicitation of prostitution charges

Warren Sapp is introduced before the inaugural Pro Football Hall of Fame Fan Fest Friday, May 2, 2014. (AP)
PHOENIX – In the early morning hours before NFL Hall of Famer Warren Sapp's arrest on assault and solicitation of prostitution charges, hotel guests at the Phoenix downtown Renaissance awoke to what they believed to be an argument and physical altercation in a hotel hallway, Yahoo Sports has learned.
 
The Phoenix police department and an employee at the Renaissance declined comment Monday, but a source with details of Sapp's arrest told Yahoo Sports that sometime around 2:30 a.m. MT, guests reported hearing an argument followed by objects banging in either the hallway or another room. When guests opened doors to see the disturbance, at least one reported seeing two women – one lying on the floor with apparent marks associated with a physical altercation, and a second woman who was with her, the source said. The women were shouting and alleged that Sapp had assaulted them and asked for someone to call police, the source said.