What’s Different About the Australian Football Pools?

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The Australian football pools season gets under way in April, and Australian-based pools coupons are published in Britain from mid-late May onward. Australian pools are a very different proposition to British pools. Team-form based systems still work, but with a few tweaks. Analysis of the historical data uncovers some interesting patterns which can be useful in optimising the odds for football pools players.

So What’s Different?

* The game. Aussie football is not soccer as we know it. It is much more physical and injury rates are much higher than in soccer.

* Playing standards. The best teams play well below the standard of even an English third division team.

* Teams die and are re-born regularly and change their names regularly.

* There are usually several instances of points deductions for breaking of rules each season.

* The difference in performance between top and bottom sides in a division can be massive, and when this is the case then a lower performing team might not even show for a match, resulting in a forfeit.

* With a forfeited match, a score of even 10-0 can be awarded against the loser, which has a big impact on goal difference.

* Players change teams with great regularity, and the move of just one good player can make a massive difference to team’s performance.

It really is a frontiersman’s game!

Whilst most serious punters accept that ‘playing to form’ is much more apparent in Australian football because of the much wider range of standards within a given league, there are other interesting aspects too. For example, the statistics show that when a team loses at home, then the probability of winning its next match, if it is an ‘Away’, is relatively high.

Typically, almost half of teams avoid losing in away games following a home defeat.

This means that when completing an Aussie pools coupon, the punter needs a much stronger bias towards Away wins than would be the case in the English football pools.

Home-Away-Draw Sequences

More detailed analysis of the home-lose-win sequences can be rewarding, and uncovering ‘Away’ bankers for a coupon is possible – something which is unthinkable on the English coupon (think about some of the ‘certain away wins’ in the English Premiership in the most recent season, which just didn’t turn out to be as expected).

Again, this is down to the performance range within a given league – very wide in Australian football, and relatively much narrower in British soccer. Indeed, predicting Away wins is much more lucrative for Aussie pools.

League Differences

Now in the UK football pools, some people may have a view about biasing draw selections towards (or away from) Scottish leagues, for example. In Australian pools, there are clear differences in performance statistics across the various leagues (there may be up to twelve or thirteen leagues appearing on an Australian football pools coupon); this affects the strategy for draw selection on the Treble Chance football pools.

Fixed Odds

Finally, fixed odds betting on Aussie pools can be rewarding if enough time and effort is put into analysing the bookmakers’ odds. The wide range of performance levels means that occasionally a bookie may miscalculate odds and make it possible to lay bets across bookmakers which are almost certain to pay. That is the subject of another article.

The author first developed his winning pools system over 20 years ago. It is now available in updated form to deal with online football pools entry. For more information about Australian football pools data, click over to www.footballpoolswizard.co.uk

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Does Your Sports Player Need Football Cleats?

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Are you shopping for new shoes for your sports player and are considering getting them some youth football cleats? If our children want to play sports then as parents we all want to provide them with the ability to follow their dreams so that they can get some type of scholarship when they get older. If you are a parent then chances are you will do anything to help your child follow their dreams. We all want to prove to our children that it is possible to dream and achieve their goals.

If you are shopping for the internet for some great shopping tips that you can use when shopping for youth football equipment; then be sure to read this entire article. We all should realize that there is certain equipment that they will need to help keep them safe. If you are unsure of what type of gear to get; then you will need to seek professional assistance from someone who can ensure you get the right gear.

As consumers the most important thing to look for when shopping for football equipment is to ensure that it is designed to keep your sports player safe. Football is a very popular sport; however it involves a lot of contact and this is the main reason we need to ensure that the football gear that they wear is safe.

Mouth Pieces For Football: Every parent should realize that the mouth piece can prevent your child from accidents on the football field. No parent ever wants to deal with unnecessary dental work that could easily cost thousands.

As you begin shopping for these mouth pieces you will notice that they come in many different shapes and sizes. It is important that you find one that fits your child correctly as this can easily prevent them from losing it during the game and experiencing an accident.

We all need to realize that the shoes that our football player wears is extremely important. Youth football cleats are great for grabbing a hold of the field which has been known to prevent those unwanted slips and falls. You can easily find some cheap football cleats online that will help your child score more points during the game.

Anyone who loves playing football should know what it takes to shop for the right equipment that they will need to keep them safe. You can easily browse the site below for all your sporting goods needs and get the best deals online.

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On the Football Field

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I work in the media. This has allowed me to be around the big names in different sports like basketball, tennis, and football. I work as a sports reporter by the way and of all the sports that I have covered, football is my favourite. Ever since I was young I was interested in football. In fact I was playing in the junior football league back in my hometown as a goalkeeper wearing goalkeeper shirts.

When I was in high school until when I was in college I continued to play football and was really doing good in my role in the field in my goalkeeper shirts. Football also paved the way for me to finish my college as a beneficiary of the sports scholarship in the university. I finished a degree in mass communication. I figured out that this is really what I wanted to do since I was young. Playing football is just my second love.

Many were disappointed in my decision to stop playing football and stop wearing my goalkeeper shirts after I finished college. They said, they would have wanted to see me continue playing and may be make it to any of the national teams. I really appreciate it and I took it as a compliment. More often than not I find myself explaining that I love playing football. I have always enjoyed being out there in the field and experience the rush and exhilaration of being able to entertain and be a part of a working team achieving a common goal to win the match. Although, I don’t actually find myself out there in the field for long, and to be a part of a major media network and be a sports journalist is what I really dreamed of.

My personal experience in football while I was still wearing my goalkeeper shits during my early days in school became an advantage for me when I applied in one of the country’s best media network. I used what I have learned when I was still a football player and applied my own personal techniques in covering different football matches and my bosses seemed to like it. I also get positive feedback from viewers.

I guess having the personal experience in football gave me ideas and personal insights on the player’s side of the story. It couldn’t be more interesting than me injecting my thoughts and views when I’m doing interviews and reporting the happening in the football field. I may not be wearing my goalkeeper shirts anymore but I’m still very happy.

I didn’t regret any single decision I made with regard to my quitting football and giving up my goalkeeper shirts. In fact I think all of those experiences prepared me for this; and I know something greater is yet to come.

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2010 Fantasy Football Players – Big Names Moving Only Muddies the Waters

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Teams and players have been busy again this NFL off-season. We’ve seen players run from their current team, get traded, be pushed out or just flat let go. Whatever the reasons were, they’ve lead to an off-season that has seen some big name fantasy players shift teams. With all that shifting, comes all the speculation of who’s going to do what and the impact on all teams and players affected. Depending on if you are a glass half full or half empty type that might determine your opinion on the expected future results. I like to think of myself as a “half full” kind of guy, but I’m struggling to get fired up about some of these moves this year. Regardless, it’s important to make sure you know all the key players that changed locations and if their new home is an upgrade or downgrade before you go into your 2010 Fantasy Football Auction or Draft. With that, let’s dig into some of the bigger names who have moved and determine if they move up or down on the Fantasy Fortune’s board along with the impact to their former team.

Quarterback:

Donovan McNabb was the big name move amidst the gun slingers. I’ve always liked Donovan as a fantasy QB and have had pretty good luck with him on my teams, despite the injuries. I love him for his week one performances….I feel like when he’s on your team; you’re a lock for a week one win. But hey, that’s only one week, there’s a whole season after that and it’s tough to imagine him getting better in Washington. McNabb had a good thing going with DeSean Jackson last year, but now he’s going to have to make due with a lot less in Washington. If he outperforms expectations in 2010, I think it is going to be based purely on him seeking vengeance and wanting to prove people wrong. Public perception is that Philly fans never really took to McNabb, and I don’t know why. Most teams would kill to have a QB like him. Trading him to a team in the same division will at least make for some interesting pre-game hype twice a year now for the otherwise boring PHI vs. WAS series. I’ll be routing for him to succeed, I just don’t think I’m taking a chance on him as my #1 QB. Speaking of players that won’t be on my team, I know you don’t care about Brady Quinn (Broncos) or Seneca Wallace (Browns), and neither do I. We try to analyze relevant fantasy players that you might actually have on your team.

McNabb to WAS:

McNabb: Downgrade.

PHI Offense: Downgrade. If only out of respect for the McNabb/Westbrook era being over. They get younger with their recent moves, but not necessarily better.

DeSean Jackson: Stable. Based on Kolb looking great in a couple games last year, hopefully he’ll be good enough to keep DeSean producing at a high level.

WAS Offense and WR’s: Upgrade. It’s tough to envision a star emerging from their WR core right now, but having Donovan will at least give this offense a chance.

Running Backs:

I wish players had more of a sense of humor when it comes to the products they choose to endorse. Take the “Shell of LT” (formerly known as LaDainian Tomlinson) for example. Shouldn’t he do some type of Car Wax commercial? Stay with me now; imagine LT in a cheesy green suit coat and slacks, “Our special formulated wax can keep your car looking new. You’re car may be 10 years old with countless miles, but now no one needs to know. Keep your car looking the exact same on the outside even though it’s a broken piece of junk on the inside!” Or how about doing a commercial for a tire shop that does re-treading? Are you telling me either of those businesses and LT wouldn’t get some good publicity out of that? Why not LT? Laugh at yourself a little bit, it’s ok, you’re image could use the upgrade from your current “pouty” self. You have millions in the bank and should never have to work again, have some fun. With that here are sulky takes from me and my view from the bench (with my arms crossed and bottom lip protruding out).

LT to the Jets:

LT: Downgrade. Not because of the Jets running game by any means. LT (31 yrs old at beginning of ’10 season) has regressed so much the last couple years I don’t see a comeback this year especially with the new up and coming stud, Shonn Greene, who should get most of the work. LT’s best chance to be relevant next year will be as a goal line vulture.

Shonn Greene: Downgrade. The swings have been violent for Greene’s stock this off-season; first T Jones goes to the Chiefs, making Greene look like a monster. Then they bring in LT along with all sorts of question marks on workload distribution. We might have to wait a little while for the Greene era to officially begin. If LT goes down, I absolutely love Greene.

SD Running Game: Upgrade. Addition by subtraction? Ouch, sorry LT. It’s sad to see the great ones deteriorate so quickly. SD has become more pass heavy and I don’t see Darren Sproles lasting a whole season given his size. The upgrade here comes due to the potential of Ryan Matthews taking full time roll in a stellar offense. He could be an absolute beast of a rookie.

Thomas Jones to the Chiefs:

T. Jones: Downgrade. He’s another year older and was already old to begin with (he’ll be 32 at start of season). Jamaal Charles was great last year in the lead role. This could end up being a full split of the work here, yuck.

Jamaal Charles: Reluctant Downgrade. Errrr, I really liked him down the stretch last year, he’s the only thing the Chiefs had going for them. But with Jones in house it’s tough to imagine Charles getting the same number of touches in 2010.

Chester Taylor to the Bears:

C. Taylor: Mild Upgrade. He put up decent numbers for a backup behind AP in Minnesota. The Bears might not be a better system, but he could easily overtake Forte as the lead dog in their running attack. Another inter-division trade, so he gets two cracks at the Vikes, but that isn’t usually a good thing for opposing runners.

AP and Vikes running game: Slight upgrade to AP due to increased touches, downgrade to Vikes running game as a whole. AP is so good, but is he going to hold onto the ball next year? Bringing in Toby Gerhart from Stanford is interesting as well. You wouldn’t think he would steal goal line or crunch time touches, but he not a 3rd down/pass catching back, so why did they bring him in….time will tell.

Westbrook to Wherever:

Sadly it doesn’t matter. If he was a three course meal, he’d already have the salad fork and main course fork sticking in him…….now we’re just waiting for that final dessert fork to be stuck in him. It was a good run until concussions took there toll. R.I.P. to one of the best combo running/catching backs fantasy has seen.

Wide Receivers:

Three big name Wide Receivers bounced around this off-season. They’re not your stereotypical group of WR’s with the “me first” attitude, trouble making, and generally unlikable clubhouse guys. Oh, wait, who am writing about again…..whoops, scratch that. Denny you want to take it from here, “they are who we thought they were!”

Brandon Marshall to the Dolphins:

B. Marshall: Stable. If he can flourish with Kyle Orton as his QB, I’ll trust him in any offense at this point until proven otherwise.

Chad Henne: Upgrade. The bar is set pretty low; he’s young enough that he should make some decent progress this year.

Kyle Orton: Downgrade. You can’t really have a lot of confidence in Orton based on the front office moves made by Denver this off-season; brought in Brady Quinn and drafted Tim Tebow. Not exactly a ringing endorsement in your starting QB from 2009.

Anquan Boldin to the Ravens:

A. Boldin: Upgrade*. The asterisk is for the fact that I’m saying he’s going from Matt Leinart to Joe Flacco, not Warner to Flacco, which would be a downgrade using that comparison.

Joe Flacco: Upgrade. It can’t hurt to have a guy like Boldin going out for passes; he’s a big, athletic target who always plays with a chip on his shoulder.

Matt Leinart: Downgrade. Dear Arizona fans, I’d be nervous. Prepare for the worst, hope for the best.

Santonio Holmes to the Jets:

S. Holmes: Downgrade. Hate on Roethlisberger all you want as a person, but he’s a solid QB and Sanchez, while he shows promise, has a ways to go. The Jets are obviously a very run heavy offense as well. Oh, and don’t forget the suspension to start the year, ouch.

Ben Roethlisberger: Downgrade. I knew he was lying when he said he was going to Disney World after those Super Bowl wins.

Mark Sanchez: Upgrade. Again, real life issues aside, Holmes has been pretty good, not great. He will help the Jets passing game.

All in all, a decent amount of big name players moving around, but things seems to skew a bit more heavily towards downgraded situations than upgrades, in relation to a player’s rank on the overall and positional player rankings.

Don’t agree with any of these takes? Let us know. Come check out our site and post your comments to the message board under the “Forums” page.

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Holding court: Ana Ivanovic

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Beautiful, charitable and talented, Ana Ivanovic has battled the pretty tennis player stereotype and proved her critics wrong.
But as this 21-year-old is finding out, staying at the top can be harder than getting there.

It is in a karaoke booth that Ana Ivanovic proves she is flawed. Wearing tracksuit pants and a blue singlet top, coloured lights spinning, she twirls and waves one hand goofily in the air as she dances to a Diana Ross tune.
“Upside down you’re turning me,” Ivanovic sings out of key. “You’re giving love instinctively”.

She moves awkwardly, theatrically pulling the microphone back, as she points her finger at the camera.

She descends into giggles and resorts to miming parts of the song. Singing is something Ivanovic can’t do well. But what does it matter? This is the woman who calls up UNICEF to volunteer her services, studies economics and takes exams between grand slams. The woman who says the roguish Andrew Symonds is her favourite Australian sportsman and often decorates magazine pages like a supermodel.

She’s a sports beauty devoid of pretension, and one who has won a grand slam title. But when asked about her imperfections she insists there are many things she can’t do. “I mean I can’t sing,” Ivanovic admits through a torrent of giggles. That’s an understatement; she couldn’t hold a note in a bucket. The incriminating YouTube footage is proof.

Ana Ivanovic

Ana Ivanovic

“But obviously I appreciate what I have and I feel very fortunate to have what I have at a young age,” Ivanovic, 21, says. “I think it’s normal as human beings that we want more and more and more. You think: ‘Have I got everything? Can I have more?’ There’s always something. But you’ve got to appreciate, realise: ‘Hey, I’ve got so many things in my life so I should just appreciate it’. Obviously I have goals, and something more that I want to achieve, but I have to take life as it comes. I don’t need to have everything right here, right now.”

Ivanovic has graced the pages of US Vogue and models expensive watches. She has the most visited website of any sportswoman in the world, which is unsurprising as she is often voted “sexiest”, “most beautiful” and as having the “most beautiful body in sport” by various polls.
“She has everything,” her long-time manager, Dan Holzmann, says. “And she is natural. Some people are made. But with Ana we didn’t have to do anything. She is smart, has a good heart – a pretty girl who’s very competitive and fights for every ball.”

Oh yes, let’s not forget she can play. Ivanovic has won eight WTA singles titles but, of course, the highlight is her French Open win last year. During that perfect French spring Ivanovic also collected the No.1 world ranking.
She had everything. But since she cried tears of joy on clay nearly a year ago, Ivanovic has wobbled under the weight of having it all, with her ranking dropping to seven. She injured her thumb between the French Open and Wimbledon and was bundled out in the third round at the All England Club. Following that, Ivanovic failed to win back-to-back matches in her next five events including an early second round exit at the US Open. During this time she admitted being No.1 was a cross to bear. After her 12-week reign at the top she wondered how Roger Federer had survived as No.1 in the men’s game for so long.

When she bowed out of the Australian Open this year in the third round, the critics again questioned her heart and talent. Would she just be a one-slam wonder?

Ivanovic says she knew the magnitude of her French Open success last year. Her Roland Garros win relieved the burden that comes with being a beautiful and talented sportswoman. The parallels once drawn between her and Anna Kournikova were quickly dismissed.

“Yes, before definitely people were [distracted by my looks],” Ivanovic says. “I’d played disappointingly before that French Open win. People were saying: ‘Can she do it?’ It was great to make that happen. It’s one thing getting into the final, it’s another altogether winning it. That gave me a lot of confidence.” However, since winning her first grand slam title she admits she has struggled to maintain that confidence. But if anything, Ivanovic has proved that adversity is a fuel for her.

She grew up scheduling her training sessions according to when the bombs would be most likely to drop on Belgrade. She remembers as a 12-year-old she had to practise between seven and nine in the morning because from midday the bombing would start. Those dark days during NATO’s 78-day bombardment of the city amid the Kosovo crisis of 1999 were harrowing times for Ivanovic. The grief of that period aside, the tennis facilities were unconventional. In the winter Ivanovic crafted her game in an abandoned Olympic-sized swimming pool that had been drained of water, carpeted and converted into an indoor court. In trying financial circumstances her parents, Dragana, a lawyer, and Miroslav, a businessman, still managed to support her tennis dream. “My family was in a very tough situation, my country was in a very bad place,” Ivanovic says. “They were some very hard years [but] my parents always supported me.
I was just this kid who wanted to play and people were finding it hard to survive.”

During the spring of 1999, Ivanovic spent four months sheltering from the air raids. She remembers her crippling fear as she heard the bombs and felt the building shake. Despite the bombardment her family refused to tuck themselves away in the cellar. They filled the house with “positive” people and made an effort to remain emotionally resilient. Ivanovic now wears her positivity like an armour.

While many sports stars may sour with success, Ivanovic has not changed. She’s a walking Disneyland. Ivanovic bubbles through press conferences and even the most inane questions don’t trouble her cheery demeanour. “Yeah, I always have been like this,” Ivanovic says. “Ever since I was a kid I’ve always thought it very important to be happy inside. There’s a lot of bad things happening in the world, but it’s important to try to stay happy and appreciate what you’ve got and don’t look externally for the happiness.”

Her parents have been the key to her attitude and success, says Holzmann. “If you met her parents you’d know she’s their daughter,” he says. “I have met many tennis parents on the tour and some of them are so crazy and manipulative.”

Everything changed for Ivanovic when, as a 14-year-old, she met Holzmann, a Swiss businessman with a passion for tennis. His tennis coach told him about Ivanovic, whose sponsor was facing bankruptcy, so the teenager and her mother flew to Switzerland for a visit.

In their first meeting, Holzmann remembers Ivanovic having “warm eyes” but a steely determination. “She knew what she wanted,” Holzmann says. “She said to me: ‘I want to be No.1.’ And I believed her.
I believed this 14-year-old girl.”

Holzmann, who had made his riches from the vitamin drink Juice Plus, decided to finance and manage Ivanovic’s career. However, her first match with Holzmann on her side was a disaster. She lost. This led to tears and a locker room lock in. He had travelled to Milan to watch Ivanovic and she was devastated that she had failed. She sobbed for hours. “She wanted to prove she was great,” Holzmann says. “She thought I was going to cancel her contract.”

During the next few years Holzmann spent $500,000 on Ivanovic’s career. Within two years of becoming a pro, she had repaid his investment. Today, the pair have a sturdy friendship. He is kept busy helping manage her multi-million-dollar empire, seeking the right endorsement opportunities. Selling Ivanovic requires little effort. Her image is faultless and she has remained an unchanged “modest girl” since he met her seven years ago. “She’s not Little Miss Perfect but the nice thing about Ana is she is very natural. She is very different to, say, Jelena Jankovic, the Williams sisters. You look at Maria Sharapova, these people, they are thinking: ‘What can I do to be loved, to be more respected by my fans today?’
“Ana has a life outside tennis. If she didn’t play tennis she would be a doctor.”

The attention lately has also been on Ivanovic’s love life. In the past she has dated Spanish player Fernando Verdasco and she was recently linked to Australian golfer Adam Scott. The pair are both brand ambassadors for Rolex and are said to have “hooked up” in the last Australian summer. Her management states the pair are “friends”. For now there is no significant other. The only man Ivanovic has recently brought into her life is American coach Craig Kardon. It’s the first time in two years she has employed a full-time coach. In her first tournament in February under Kardon’s tuition she defeated Alisa Kleybanova, the Russian who had rubbed her out of the 2009 Australian Open. “We have a firm view of how my game should develop,” she says.

Holzmann says Kardon could be just the man she needs, reflecting on her slump after the French Open. “It was tough,” Holzmann says. “A lot happened to her; she became No.1, won a grand slam tournament. Once you get there it is even more difficult to stay at the top.” And she has 10 million people in Serbia watching her. Ivanovic is feted in her home country. The President of Serbia, Boris Tadic, attended her 20th birthday party.

She admits it can be hard constantly having people approach her in the street, but, Ivanovic finds good in this, saying it’s nice to be a role model. “Wherever I go many people come up to talk to me and give me advice on my shots, on my game – on everything,” Ivanovic says and then descends into another heap of giggles.

“I understand it’s how it is,” she says. “If I make a change to a young kid to play any sport, not only tennis, instead of spending time in front of the TV or computer, that is good. I want to give them a good example: ‘Hey, go out and play and see the world’.”

Although the tennis road may have been bumpy, Ivanovic says, in her optimistic way, that things will get better. “I want to win more grand slams. I think I’ve got the ability to achieve that, I know that I’ve got to work very hard for it. Yes, I think I’ve the game and talent to do that.”

source: www.watoday.com.au

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LeBron surpasses Kobe as the top player: Jerry West

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – LeBron James is the best player in the NBA, surpassing veteran Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant, 14-times All-Star guard Jerry West said Monday.


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James and Bryant headline all-star selections

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NEW YORK (Reuters) – Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James continued to pile up NBA awards, adding a first team all-star selection on Wednesday to the most valuable player honors he claimed last week.


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MVP James leads Cavs to victory, Nuggets beat Mavs

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CLEVELAND, Ohio (Reuters) – LeBron James showed why he is the NBA’s Most Valuable Player on Tuesday, scoring 34 points to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a crushing 99-72 victory over the Atlanta Hawks in their Eastern Conference semi-final opener.


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James scores 34 as Cavaliers crush Hawks

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CLEVELAND, Ohio (Reuters) – LeBron James showed why he is the NBA’s Most Valuable Player on Tuesday, scoring 34 points to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a crushing 99-72 victory over the Atlanta Hawks in their Eastern Conference semi-final opener.


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James scores 34 as Cavaliers crush Hawks

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CLEVELAND, Ohio (Reuters) – LeBron James showed why he is the NBA’s Most Valuable Player on Tuesday, scoring 34 points to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a crushing 99-72 victory over the Atlanta Hawks in their Eastern Conference semi-final opener.


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James scores 34 as Cavaliers crush Hawks

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CLEVELAND, Ohio (Reuters) – LeBron James showed why he is the NBA’s Most Valuable Player on Tuesday, scoring 34 points to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a crushing 99-72 victory over the Atlanta Hawks in their Eastern Conference semi-final opener.


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I’m the best despite the rankings, says Serena

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ROME (Reuters) – Serena Williams still rates herself as the best player in the world even though she has been toppled from the top spot by Russia’s Dinara Safina.


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Giggs earns prestigious PFA award

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Manchester United’s Ryan Giggs wins the PFA player of the year award with Aston Villa’s Ashley Young taking the young player award.
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Stallworth charged with manslaughter over crash

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MIAMI (Reuters) – National Football League player Donte Stallworth was charged with manslaughter on Wednesday for killing a pedestrian last month while driving after a night out at a club on Miami Beach, local media reported.


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Howard youngest to 5,000 rebounds as Magic win

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MIAMI (Reuters) – Dwight Howard passed Wilt Chamberlain as the youngest NBA player to reach 5,000 rebounds as the Orlando Magic withstood Dwyane Wade’s 42 points for a 101-95 road victory over Miami Heat Monday.


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Rays send top pitching prospect Price to minor leagues

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NEW YORK (Reuters) – Left-hander David Price of the Tampa Bay Rays, one of Major League Baseball’s top pitching prospects and a key player in last year’s surprise march to the World Series, will start the season in the minor leagues.


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Gerrard downplays Zidane praise

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Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard says he is not the best player in the world despite Zinedine Zidane’s claims to the contrary.
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Iraqi soccer fan shoots player dead

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BAGHDAD (Reuters) – An Iraqi soccer fan shot dead a player of the opposing team as he tried to score an equalizing goal in the final minutes of a match, police said Monday.


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