Archive for September, 2010

SPORTS – Woods, Stricker paired for Ryder Cup start (AP)


U.S. team members Stewart Cink, right, Tiger Woods, center, and Zach Johnson attend the opening ceremony of the 2010 Ryder Cup golf tournament at the


AP – U.S. team members Stewart Cink, right, Tiger Woods, center, and Zach Johnson attend the opening ceremony …

NEWPORT, Wales – U.S. captain Corey Pavin called on one of his strongest tandems to lead off his team’s defense of the Ryder Cup.

Tiger Woods? He’ll be going third.

Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson, famous for the big-money games they play during practice rounds, will be the opening fourballs match Friday at Celtic Manor as the United States tries to win the Ryder Cup away from home for the first time since 1993.

They will face Europe’s best player, Lee Westwood, and its latest major champion, Martin Kaymer.

Woods, who has gone nearly 10 months without a victory, will be partnered with Steve Stricker in the third of four matches. They will face Ian Poulter and Ross Fisher, one of six rookies on the European side.

It’s the first time since 1999 that Woods was not in the opening match of the Ryder Cup.

European captain Colin Montgomerie was expecting Woods and Stricker in either the opening match or as the anchor.

“Tiger being hidden is a different move,” he said.

Pavin did not go into details on the nature of his pairings or the order, saying he cared only about the American team and not what Montgomerie might do.

Woods and Stricker was a natural partnership. A year ago at the Presidents Cup, they became the first team in 30 years to go 4-0 in cup competition, and the first ever at the Presidents Cup. They will take on one of Europe’s most passionate players in Poulter, who once said that when he reaches his potential, it will be just he and Woods atop the world ranking.

“I have never been so excited to play a Ryder cup match, Tiger Woods Steve Stricker vs Poults & Fish the house is about to come down,” Poulter said on Twitter.

Montgomerie told his team a week ago when they would be playing and with whom. The only decision left was whether to put the Northern Ireland duo of Graeme McDowell and Rory McIlroy, or Westwood and Kaymer in the leadoff spot.

The honor fell to Westwood because of his stature on the European team. This is the Englishman’s seventh Ryder Cup team, and he is poised to rise to No. 1 in the world ranking next month.

The Americans will hit the first two shots in the better-ball matches. Westwood will hit the first shot for Europe, which Montgomerie said was “only right to do.”

Stewart Cink and Matt Kuchar, a pair of Georgia Tech alums, will face McDowell and McIlroy in the second match, while the anchor spot belongs to Ryder Cup rookies Bubba Watson and Jeff Overton against Luke Donald and Padraig Harrington.

The Watson-Overton tandem was a shock to Montgomerie.

“You would not have expected that,” he said.

The pairings were announced at an opening ceremony in which Pavin forgot to introduce Cink, who mockingly slumped his shoulders as his teammates laughed and rubbed his bald head.

He at least remembered to put him in the lineup.

Pavin kept out of the opening sessions Jim Furyk, who is coming off a victory Sunday at the Tour Championship. Furyk is known more for his accuracy than his length, and Celtic Manor is a long, wet golf course.

“He said he’s been tired. He’s been counting the money,” Pavin said with a laugh, referring to the .35 million Furyk earned for capturing the FedEx Cup. “You’ll see him out in the afternoon.”

Also left out for the Americans were 21-year-old rookie Rickie Fowler, Zach Johnson and Hunter Mahan, who a year ago was unbeaten in five matches at Valhalla.

Montgomerie predictably sat Edoardo and Francesco Molinari — their strength is foursomes — along with rookie Peter Hanson of Sweden and Miguel Angel Jimenez.

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SPORTS – Mickelson says McIlroy-Woods spat overblown (AP)


Phil Mickelson of the U.S. holding an umbrella walks to the 16th green during a practice round prior to the 2010 Ryder Cup golf tournament at the Celt


AP – Phil Mickelson of the U.S. holding an umbrella walks to the 16th green during a practice round prior …

NEWPORT, Wales – Phil Mickelson came to the defense of Rory McIlroy on Wednesday, calling him one of the classiest players in golf and his desire to play Tiger Woods is the goal of every player who wants to beat the best.

The back-and-forth between McIlroy and Woods has captivated the early days of the Ryder Cup. McIlroy said in August he would “love to face” the world’s No. 1 player unless his game improves. Asked about that comment, Woods defiantly said, “Me, too.”

Mickelson was surprised to hear it had become such a big story.

“That’s the type of charisma that Rory McIlroy has,” Mickelson said. “He’s just like any other top player that wants to take on the best. That’s not any type of controversy or saga.”

Padraig Harrington said everyone on Europe’s team wanted to play Woods in previous Ryder Cups because when the world’s No. 1 player was on top of his game, his opponents had nothing to lose. Woods was expected to win every match.

Now that Woods’ is a captain’s pick who has failed to win this year, Harrington isn’t so sure.

“In many ways, it will be a tougher match this time around,” Harrington said. “He’ll be more enthusiastic, more motivated, so I would be very wary of him myself.”

Woods said a year ago that McIlroy had the game to eventually be No. 1 in the world. The 21-year-old from Northern Ireland won his first U.S. tour event this year by closing with a record 62 at Quail Hollow.

McIlroy tied a major championship record when he opened with a 63 at St. Andrews in the British Open, where he tied for third; and he tied for third at the PGA Championship.

Told that Woods’ did not appear happy with McIlroy’s comments, Mickelson again was surprised.

“They get along great, are you kidding me?” Mickelson said. “Rory is one of the nicest guys you can imagine. He’s one of the classiest guys out on tour. Tiger gets along with just about everybody — usually because he beats them, and he’s nice to them when he beats them. Rory is as classy a guy as there is. I’ve been paired with him a bunch, and I really enjoy playing with him.”

McIlroy is the latest player whose comments annoyed Woods.

The most famous was Stephen Ames, who jokingly said he had a chance against Woods in the Match Play Championship, “especially where he’s hitting the ball.” Woods beat him in the first round, 9&8.

At the 2000 Presidents Cup, the caddie for Vijay Singh — Woods’ opponent in the single match — wrote “Tiger Who?” on the back of his cap. Woods won the match, and later told that story by saying the score (2 and 1) was his best response. There also was the time Michael Campbell said he looked forward to taking on Woods at the Match Play, and when Woods stepped on the first tee, he said to Campbell, “I hear you want a piece of me.” Woods won, 5 and 4.

Whether Woods and McIlroy play each other is a matter of chance, as the Ryder Cup features a blind draw.

U.S. captain Corey Pavin said it would violate the spirit of the matches for him and European captain Colin Montgomerie to arrange Woods and McIlroy to face each other in singles.

“But I think it would be fun for me to watch,” Pavin said.

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SPORTS – Reds clinch title, 1st playoff spot in 15 years (AP)


Jay Bruce


AP – Cincinnati Reds’ Jay Bruce reacts after hitting a home run off Houston Astros relief pitcher Tim Byrdak …

CINCINNATI – Jay Bruce raised both index fingers as he rounded first base and took the final steps toward a long-awaited championship. Jubilant Reds teammates streamed toward the plate while fireworks went off overhead.

Fifteen years of futility had just ended with Bruce’s dramatic swing.

Bruce homered on the first pitch from Tim Byrdak leading off the ninth inning Tuesday for a 3-2 victory over the Houston Astros, securing an improbable NL Central title for a franchise that has gone through some of the worst times in its history.

Nine straight losing seasons. A 15-year playoff drought. All washed away with one home run and an eye-stinging clubhouse spray.

“There’s nothing like it,” said Bruce, who repeatedly got doused with bottles of Korbel champagne and 24-ounce cans of beer in the clubhouse.

The 23-year-old outfielder, part of Cincinnati’s young nucleus, provided a fitting finish to the championship drive. Cincinnati has won 22 games in its last at-bat, second-most in the majors.

Drama found them all season as they got into contention early, then held off the heavily favored Cardinals in a tight-as-could be race.

“When he hit that one up there, there was a big sigh of relief and the party was on,” manager Dusty Baker said. “I’m as happy as a man can be. This is sweet. This is a special group, special guys and a special feeling.”

With the latest title, Baker joined Bill McKechnie as the only managers to lead three different NL teams to the playoffs. Baker also has made it with the Giants and Cubs.

There could be more drama left.

Left-hander Aroldis Chapman (2-2) pitched a perfect ninth, topping out at 101 mph while showing playoff opponents the nasty stuff they can expect in a week or so.

The Reds sold 30,151 tickets for the clinching game — above-average for a cool September weeknight — and took the field almost tasting it. Second baseman Brandon Phillips said he doesn’t drink and has never taken so much as a sip of champagne.

“I don’t know how it’s going to taste,” Phillips said. “I don’t know what’s going to happen.”

Most Reds were novices at the sip-and-spray tradition. Four female fans in the upper deck wore shirts that, side-by-side, urged the home team to “Show Us The Bubbly.”

The crowd was on its feet in the sixth, when the Reds loaded the bases with none out. Phillips tied it at 2 with an infield single to the hole at shortstop, but Bruce grounded into an inning-ending double play.

Bruce made up for it on his next swing. Byrdak (2-2) left his lone pitch right down the middle — a perfect spot to start a celebration.

“You never want to see that,” Byrdak said. “We wanted to win all three games and make them clinch against somebody else.”

Soon, the red carpeting on the home clubhouse floor was sopped for the first time since Great American Ball Park opened in 2003.

“We’re not finished, but it doesn’t get any better than this,” said owner Bob Castellini, a box of cigars cradled in his left arm and a bottle of champagne in his right hand.

The Reds celebrated their title a day after Philadelphia clinched its fourth straight NL East title — no surprise there. The Reds’ recent history made them a most unexpected playoff team.

The Reds hadn’t reached the postseason since 1995, when Davey Johnson took them to the NL championships series, then lost his job because owner Marge Schott didn’t like him.

After that, Cincinnati lost its way.

The Reds went through three owners, five general managers and seven managers without once making it back to the postseason. They came close in 1999 under Jack McKeon, losing a playoff for the wild card to the Mets. Ken Griffey Jr. arrived the following year, raising expectations for a long run of division titles.

Instead, the bottom fell out.

Griffey was hurt often and the Reds plunged into a streak of nine straight losing seasons, their worst in a half-century. Not even the move into Great American made much difference. Junior came and went. The losing went on. Cincinnati finished fourth last season, its second under Baker, but the franchise thought it had the makings of something and kept the roster intact.

Right call.

The Reds got into the race in mid-May and didn’t crack under pressure. Instead, the defending-champion Cardinals fell apart. The two teams were separated by no more than three games from mid-May to mid-August, matching each other win-for-win.

An emerging core of young players pulled it off.

First baseman Joey Votto grew into an MVP candidate this season, ranking in the top three in batting, homers and RBIs. The Reds’ youth-laden lineup became the NL’s most prolific, leading in batting average, runs and homers. The defense became one of the NL’s best.

And Chapman put some sizzle in the stretch drive when he was called up in August and hit 105 on radar guns.

It was an emotional night for Baker, who won his fourth division championship as a manager. He also took the 1997 Giants, 2000 Giants and 2003 Cubs to the playoffs. He’s the ninth manager to lead three different franchises to the playoffs, joining McKechnie, Johnson, Tony La Russa, Jim Leyland, Billy Martin, Lou Piniella, Joe Torre and Dick Williams.

Baker’s father, Johnnie, died last November after a long illness.

“It’s really special for me this year because I think about my dad a lot,” he said. “Last year was very difficult. Every midnight call I got I thought was about my dad. He wasn’t supposed to live past the All-Star break, then he wasn’t supposed to live until August, then he wasn’t supposed to live until September. He lasted until I got home.

“So I just knew when the season started that my dad was with me big-time.”

The Reds won’t be a postseason favorite, given their inexperience and their struggles against other top teams. They’ve gone 58-28 against losing teams, only 30-41 against those with .500 or better records.

For them, just getting there was a breakthrough.

NOTES: Astros manager Brad Mills said OF Michael Bourn likely won’t play the rest of the season. Bourn missed his eighth straight game after pulling abdominal muscles. … Houston is 4-9 vs. the Reds this season, the only NL Central team they have a losing record against. … SS Orlando Cabrera was back in the Reds lineup after leaving Sunday’s game with a sore left side.

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SPORTS – Woods ready for Ryder Cup challenge (AP)


Tiger Woods of the U.S. reacts during a press conference before the start of the 2010 Ryder Cup golf tournament in Newport, Wales, Tuesday, Sept.  28,


AP – Tiger Woods of the U.S. reacts during a press conference before the start of the 2010 Ryder Cup golf …

NEWPORT, Wales – The Ryder Cup is getting personal for Tiger Woods.

Woods fired back Tuesday at a comment by Rory McIlroy last month that the 21-year-old would “love to face him” in the Ryder Cup if the game of the top-ranked player did not rapidly improve.

Asked for a reaction to McIlroy’s comments, Woods leaned into the microphone and said only, “Me, too.”

Woods has been aware of the comments since they were made right after his worst tournament ever, when he shot 18-over par at Firestone. He has lost only one singles match in the Ryder Cup.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

NEWPORT, Wales (AP) — Croeso, Ryder Cup!

Amid the lush, rolling hills of Wales, workers put the finishing touches on a course that was built with this very event in mind.

A giant stage has gone up alongside the 18th hole for the opening ceremony. An amphitheater-style grandstand wraps around the first tee. Signs proclaimed “Croeso,” the Welsh word for “Welcome” — even if some of the locals aren’t quite sure how to pronounce it.

“We’re the only country in the world,” a bus diver quipped as he shuttled reporters to the course, “that doesn’t known how to speak its own language.”

No worries. Celtic Manor looks ready for its moment in the sun, even if there doesn’t figure to be much sunshine for this biennial event between the defending champion Americans and the home team from Europe. The skies Monday were gray and dreary, with the forecast calling for rain much of the week.

While the weather is unmistakably British, the new Twenty Ten course is hardly a traditional seaside links. Instead, this is a setting that one might expect from a typical week on the PGA Tour — right down to a towering fountain in front of the 18th green.

That’s just fine with European captain Colin Montgomerie.

“There’s a so called home-course advantage that can be used for a home team,” he said. “On this occasion, I haven’t played around with the golf course at all. This golf course is set up in a very, very fair manner to allow the best team to win. I don’t think it is right to set the course up in any other way than to what it’s been designed for. It’s a great, great golf course and it’s in super condition.”

The Americans haven’t won in Europe since 1993, so they’ll take any little edge they can get. Even so, they’re the clear underdogs against a team that had such a deep pool of talent to choose from that Montgomerie passed over top 10-ranked player Paul Casey and Justin Rose, who won three of his four matches in the last Ryder Cup and had two PGA Tour victories this year.

Monty wasn’t buying the favorite’s tag, however.

“On paper, yes. Unfortunately, the Ryder Cup is not played on paper,” he said. “This will be very, very close and very competitive, as they always are.”

U.S. captain Corey Pavin had a firm grip on the gold chalice as he left the media center Monday, though he didn’t mind pausing long enough to let others get a look. The early winners are engraved on the original bowl, while the more recent champions — including the U.S. two years ago at Valhalla — are memorialized around the expanded base, a la the Stanley Cup in hockey.

Pavin likes the Americans’ chances of taking the cup back home with them Sunday night, even if most everyone on this side of the Atlantic believes a European victory is a lock with a team that includes two of this year’s major champions, Martin Kaymer and Graeme McDowell.

The U.S. roster isn’t exactly barren. Jim Furyk is coming off a million win at the Tour Championship, Dustin Johnson might have won the PGA Championship if not for his blunder in the bunker and, oh yeah, let’s not forget those two guys at the top of the world rankings.

Granted, No. 1 Tiger Woods has made far more news off the course, failing to win in a year when a sex scandal led to the breakup of his marriage, and second-ranked Phil Mickelson hasn’t done much since winning the Masters in April. But they’re still an imposing duo, even if there’s no chance of them playing together as they did during their ill-fated pairing at the 2004 Ryder Cup.

“I like the way Team USA is playing right now,” Pavin said. “There’s a lot of guys that have been playing well, and that’s always a good thing. Any captain is going to want his players to be up on their game, but then again, anything can happen during a week of golf. Things can change quickly.”

Both captains issued a no-tweeting ban for the week, hoping that will help keep their focus on the matches rather than trying to entertain their social network fans. Stewart Cink and Ian Poulter both have over a million followers on Twitter.

“We’re finally off to Wales!! Won’t be tweeting until we get back. I guess I’ll have to pass the down time actually reading or something,” Cink wrote before the U.S. team’s charter flight from Atlanta to Cardiff.

Poulter, however, clarified the policy with a Tweet late Monday night: “For the record Colin hasn’t banned twitter, he has asked to be respectful to the teams privacy. I played 7 holes today course is awesome.”

Pavin figures his team can survive a week without documenting their every move.

“We talked about it as a team and we thought it best not to do it,” he said. “We need to focus on playing and working on preparations and getting ready to play the Ryder Cup. … Team USA, whatever they would like to do — tweeting or facebooking or whatever it may be — they have the opportunity to do that next week and for the rest of their lives.”

Montgomerie figures to be one of the star attractions at Celtic Manor, even though he’ll never hit a shot. He never lost a singles match during his Ryder Cup career, and would dearly love to lead the team that brought the prize back to Europe.

“First time I’ve arrived with no golf clubs, I assure you,” he said. “It’s strange in many ways. The biggest event in my golfing career and I’ve come here with no clubs. Quite weird, really.”

Not that Monty’s giving up on returning as a player in two years at Medina.

“I stood on the first tee on Friday when I arrived,” he said. “I had my own thoughts about ever playing again in the Ryder Cup, and after this great honor and responsibility that this is, I intend to do my utmost to try to make the team in 2012.”

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SPORTS – Cutler, Bears beat Packers 20-17 (AP)


Robbie Gould,  Brad Maynard


AP – Chicago Bears’ Robbie Gould kicks a field goal with seconds left in the NFL football game to give the …

CHICAGO – Still doubting the Bears?

Jay Cutler threw for 221 yards, Brian Urlacher forced a key fumble and Chicago took advantage of a team-record 18 penalties by the Packers to beat Green Bay 20-17 on Monday night.

Robbie Gould won it with a 19-yard field goal with 4 seconds left. The Packers’ James Jones lost a fumble on a hit by Urlacher in the final minutes. Then Morgan Burnett was called for pass interference on Earl Bennett, setting up the winning kick.

Chicago is 3-0 and alone atop the NFC North. The Packers fell to 2-1.

“It’s fun, that is all you can ask for,” Cutler said. “The defense did a great job, we struggled the whole game, felt like we kind of were killing ourselves.”

The Bears kept insisting they were contenders through a sloppy preseason and less-than-inspiring opening win over Detroit. Since then, they turned heads with a win at Dallas last week, and stamped themselves as contenders by beating Green Bay — with lots of help from the Packers.

The Bears had tied it at 17 on a 25-yard field goal by Gould when Urlacher jarred the ball out of Jones’ hands after the receiver caught a pass from Aaron Rodgers near midfield. Tim Jennings recovered, giving Chicago the ball on the Packers 46 with 2:18 remaining.

Soon after, another penalty cost the Packers in a big way.

On second down at the 33, Cutler tried to hit Bennett deep along the right sideline and Burnett basically hammered him, wiping out an interception by Nick Collins and putting the ball at the 9.

Three plays later, Chicago walked away with a wild win and the only undefeated record in the NFC.

“We didn’t play our best game and won. That’s got to be a good sign,” coach Lovie Smith said.

As for the Packers?

“It was an uncharacteristic game on offense for us, well, just as a team,” Rodgers said. “Way too many penalties.”

Devin Hester delivered his first touchdown return in three years when he ran back a punt 62 yards in the fourth quarter, giving the Bears a short-lived 14-10 lead.

Rodgers threw for 316 yards and a touchdown and also scored on a 3-yard run that gave the Packers a 17-14 lead in the fourth period. Jermichael Finley had nine catches for 115 yards, but the sloppiness simply caught up with the Packers in the end.

Cutler completed 16 of 27 passes with a touchdown and interception. Johnny Knox had four catches for 94 yards.

Chicago held its longtime rival to 63 yards rushing, but the Bears had only 77 themselves. That turned it into an air game for much of the night.

Hester had just put the Bears ahead by four in the opening seconds of the fourth quarter when the Packers responded with a 62-yard touchdown drive.

A roughing-the-passer penalty on Henry Melton gave them a first down at the 3. Rodgers, who cramped up a few plays earlier, rolled to his right and lunged into the end zone, making it 17-14.

Then the Packers basically gave it away.

Frank Zombo got called for a helmet-on-helmet hit against Cutler on the next drive that erased an interception by Nick Barnett. On second down, Collins got called for a late hit on Matt Forte after a 15-yard reception, putting the ball on the Packers 29.

Gould made the 25-yard field goal to tie it with 3:59 left.

Hester’s return eased the sting after the Bears again were stopped at the goal line for the second time this season when choosing not to go for the field goal. It happened late in the third quarter after Julius Peppers blocked Mason Crosby’s 37-yard field goal.

The Bears took over on the 18 and marched to the Packers 1, only to come up short again. Cutler fired a 5-yard pass to a kneeling Bennett between defenders on third down, and the officials ruled Tramon Williams touched Bennett before he leaned over the goal line.

So coach Lovie Smith had to decide to kick the tying field goal or go for the touchdown.

Just as he did in the opener, he went for the end zone. This time, Desmond Clark dropped a potential TD pass and Chicago came away empty-handed.

Hester, however, showed his old explosiveness. He took a punt at the 38, broke up the right sideline and didn’t stop until he reached the end zone in a familiar scene, albeit one that hadn’t played in a while. It was 12th time he’s returned a kickoff or punt for a touchdown and the first since Dec. 30, 2007.

“We’ve been waiting for Devin to come back and he was back tonight,” Smith said. “Of course it was outstanding on that one touchdown run, but even before that it just felt like every time he went back there he had a chance to score.”

The Bears wore throwback 1940s jerseys to honor the Monsters of the Midway. They also honored George Blanda, who died Monday, with a moment of silence before the game.

And they made a surprising move, holding out defensive tackle Tommie Harris for reasons that were not immediately clear.

A three-time Pro Bowl pick, Harris was benched for a game last season and suspended for one in 2008 because of detrimental conduct. He has also been limited by knee and hamstring injuries over the past four years, although he was not listed on the Bears’ injury report leading up to Monday’s game.

He has insisted he is healthy, but he is also off to a slow start.

Notes: Bears LS Patrick Mannelly set a club record by playing in his 192nd game, moving head of Steve McMichael. … The Bears held out struggling receiver Devin Aromashodu, while left tackle Chris Williams and safety Major Wright sat out with hamstring injuries.

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SPORTS – Man convicted of murder in Angels pitcher’s death (AP)


Judge renders partial verdict in Adenhart death


AFP/Getty Images/File – A detail of a makeshift memorial left by fans of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim as a tribute to pitcher …

SANTA ANA, Calif. – A jury convicted a man of murder Monday in the drunken-driving deaths of promising Los Angeles Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart and two other people.

The jury also found Andrew Gallo, 23, guilty of hit-and-run and driving under the influence of alcohol and causing great bodily injury.

Adenhart died just hours after pitching six scoreless innings in his season debut.

The 22-year-old Adenhart, 20-year-old Courtney Stewart and 25-year-old Henry Pearson died in the April 9, 2009, collision in Fullerton. Another passenger was severely injured.

Prosecutors had alleged in the two-week trial that Gallo, whose blood-alcohol level was nearly three times the legal limit, spent hours drinking beers and shots with his stepbrother at three different bars before running a red light and T-boning the car driven by Stewart.

She and Pearson died instantly. Adenhart died later in surgery.

Passenger Jon Wilhite survived but was severely injured when the impact separated his spine from his skull.

Gallo could faces more than 50 years to life in prison.

Prosecutor Susan Price told jurors during her closing argument that Gallo “carries the entire burden of this crime. Their deaths lie squarely at his feet.”

She said he had been repeatedly warned by friends, family and court officials about the dangers of drinking and driving, but his arrogance and need to party prevented him from learning the lesson.

Prosecutors decided to charge Gallo with second-degree murder — not the lesser related charge of manslaughter.

Prosecutors said they charged the case as a murder because Gallo had a previous DUI conviction, had specific knowledge of the dangers of drinking and driving from his own experience and signed a court form from the earlier case saying he understood he could be charged with murder if he drove drunk again and killed someone.

To win a murder conviction, prosecutors had to show Gallo acted with implied malice: intentionally drove drunk; acted with a conscious disregard for human life; and knew from his personal experience that he could kill someone.

Gallo’s attorney said her client believed his stepbrother was his designated driver and only drove after his stepbrother became too intoxicated and asked him to take the wheel. By that point, attorney Jacqueline Goodman argued, Gallo was too drunk to realize the consequences of driving drunk.

She said the district attorney had overstepped by charging Gallo with murder and urged the jury to consider their verdict carefully.

“There are gradations of culpability in our society. Not every death is a murder and it’s the prosecution that has the burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt,” Goodman said.

In a separate ruling, a judge found Gallo guilty of driving on a suspended license.

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SPORTS – Edwards’ long TD helps Jets beat Dolphins 31-23 (AP)


Braylon Edwards


AP – New York Jets Wide receiver Braylon Edwards (17) scores a touchdown in the third quarter against the …

MIAMI – Braylon Edwards spent the first quarter on the sideline. Soon enough, he was dancing in the end zone for the New York Jets.

Benched at the start because of a drunken-driving arrest, Edwards turned a short pass into a 67-yard touchdown, and the Jets beat the Miami Dolphins 31-23 on Sunday night.

Mark Sanchez threw three touchdown passes for the second week in a row, and the Jets forged a three-way tie atop the AFC East with the Dolphins and Patriots. All are 2-1.

There were cheers for LeBron James, jeers for Jason Taylor and mostly silence for Edwards, who sprinted untouched to the end zone to celebrate the touchdown that put the Jets ahead to stay.

“The biggest thing I can say about this week is that I really am glad that I have teammates and an organization like the Jets,” Edwards said. “They’ve been very supportive.”

Edwards was arrested in Manhattan around 5 a.m. Tuesday and apologized the next day. The Jets decided to suspend him for one quarter.

“It was obviously not the situation I want to be in,” he said. “But I was there supporting my team. I was there for every play, watching and knowing what it was, up and cheering guys on. I was just being the best teammate I could be.”

His only other catch was also a big one — a 20-yarder on third and 10 to keep alive the touchdown drive that put the Jets up 31-23 with 1:55 left. That score came on 1-yard run by LaDainian Tomlinson.

The Dolphins then drove 64 yards to the 5 with 34 seconds remaining, but Chad Henne’s fourth-down pass was deflected by Eric Smith and intercepted in the end zone by Drew Coleman.

Smith also blocked a punt to set up a field goal.

Miami rallied from a 14-0 deficit with help from Brandon Marshall, who made 10 catches for 166 yards and scored his first touchdown for the Dolphins. They opened the second half with a 6-minute, 73-yard drive capped by Henne’s 11-yard touchdown pass to Marshall on third down.

That put Miami ahead for the only time, 17-14, and the Jets needed just 18 seconds to regain the lead. Edwards caught a pass near the sideline, then sprinted the final 55 yards untouched after cornerback Jason Allen slipped and fell.

“All week we said we just want to make plays after the catch,” Edwards said. “Anybody can throw a deep ball. For us, we just wanted yards after the catch. It was a situation where I caught it outside and Jason slipped, and I was able to go the distance.”

It was Edwards’ longest reception since joining New York last year.

The capacity crowd included Miami Heat newcomer James, who wore a Florida Marlins cap. Fans roared when he was shown on the video scoreboard, while they booed Taylor, a former fan favorite playing against the Dolphins for the first time after 12 seasons with Miami.

Taylor drew jeers when he represented his team for the coin toss, and again when he sacked Henne in the first period. At the end of the game, Jets coach Rex Ryan helped soak Taylor by dumping a sideline bucket on him.

The Dolphins gave up only two touchdowns in their first two games, but the Jets took the opening possession and marched 72 yards for a TD. Sanchez converted two third downs with completions, then hit Dustin Keller with a 24-yard score.

Sanchez hit Keller with a 12-yard touchdown pass to cap a 90-yard drive, putting the Jets ahead 14-0.

The early lead helped negate the Dolphins’ ground game. Henne threw for a career-high 363 yards, completing 26 of 44 passes, but Ronnie Brown ran for only 54 yards, and Ricky Williams was held to 28.

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SPORTS – Nevada ranked in AP poll for first time since 1948 (AP)


Colin Kaepernick


AP – Nevada’s quarterback Colin Kaepernick, runs for a first down in a game against BYU during an NCAA college …

NEW YORK – Nevada is ranked for the first time since 1948 and just the second time in the history of The Associated Press college football poll.

The 25th-ranked Wolf Pack (4-0) are 4-0 for the first time since 1991, when they were still a I-AA program.

The first month of the season closed with the preseason top three unchanged: Alabama is No. 1, followed by Ohio State and Boise State.

The Crimson Tide had its toughest challenge yet Saturday, coming from behind to beat Arkansas 24-20. The road victory helped the Tide gain five first-place votes, to 57.

Ohio State, which rolled to a 73-20 victory against Eastern Michigan, received two first-place votes and Boise State, which beat Oregon State 37-24, received one.

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SPORTS – Ingram’s late TD lifts No. 1 Tide to 24-20 win (AP)

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