Martin Truex and DEI

July 3, 2007

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — The perception was DEI would fall apart without Dale Earnhardt Jr. The reality is Martin Truex Jr. appears ready, willing and able to step into a starring role with the team.

Truex finished third in New Hampshire to continue a strong string of runs that began shortly after Earnhardt’s May 10 announcement that he will leave DEI at the end of this season. In the seven races since, Truex scored his first career Nextel Cup victory, notched four finishes of third or better, and has only been lower than 16th once.

NY SPORTS GEAR.com

Truex has been on such a roll, he had to couch his disappointment Sunday after failing to win at New Hampshire. He led 46 laps, was beat out of the pits by eventual winner Denny Hamlin on the final stop, and gave up second-place to Jeff Gordon in the closing laps.

“Hey, we’ll take third,” Truex said after. “Six months ago, I would’ve begged you for a third-place finish.”

So true.

Six months ago, Truex was a bit player at Dale Earnhardt Inc. despite consecutive Busch Series titles in 2004 and 2005. Earnhardt was the star, and nothing Truex did was good enough to take the shine off his teammate.

Even his January run-in with Daytona Beach, Fla., police failed to generate much buzz. Truex was charged with disorderly intoxication after he was caught urinating on his car in a parking garage, then allegedly tried to pay the $100 fine in cash when confronted by police.

The incident might have earned bold headlines for most drivers, but Truex flew way under the radar because the police report came out on the same day Earnhardt gave an update on his contract negotiations with stepmother, Teresa.

Asked that day if he disliked being stuck in Earnhardt’s shadow, Truex explained that attention is earned through performance. If he could pick it up on the race track, the spotlight would find its way toward him.

That’s exactly what’s happened, said Max Siegel, president of DEI’s global operations.

“I think that probably the most difficult thing for all of us is trying to battle public perception … and if you look at the focus of what people talked about at DEI, it was always Dale Jr. vs. Teresa,” Siegel said. “When you perform on the track, it pushes away all the personal issues.”

Truex stayed out of Earnhardt’s contract squabble, and learned at the same time as everyone else that Junior was leaving when he watched the announcement on live TV.

As DEI’s demise was instantly predicted, Truex buckled down and reconfirmed his commitment to the organization. His contract runs through 2008, and sponsor Bass Pro Shops last week extended its deal with DEI.

“People think I’m crazy when I say this, but I really don’t think it’s a big deal,” Truex said a day after Earnhardt’s announcement. “Just ’cause Junior isn’t driving for us, I don’t see it making that big of an impact. Maybe long-term, but not in the next couple years.

“I’ve got to give it a fair shake. They gave me my opportunity, and I’ve decided I’m going to finish out the year and honor my contract because of all the things they’ve done for me.”

There’s been speculation that this sudden surge is related to Earnhardt’s decision. After all, Junior said the inability to win a championship at DEI was one of the reasons he’s leaving.

But in the seven weeks since, Truex has emerged as a legitimate title contender and is currently ranked 10th in the race to make the Chase for the championship. He’s 48 points ahead of Earnhardt, who is holding down the 12th and final Chase spot and giving DEI hope that it might have two drivers racing for the Nextel Cup title this season.

Siegel said the timing — particularly as it pertains to Truex — is coincidental.

“Martin’s equipment has been good all year,” Siegel said. “His team had good momentum at the end of last year, and the chemistry is gelling for that whole crew. And we’ve been focusing on performance for some time now.

“So it makes sense that things are clicking. If there’s any relation at all, it’s that there might be an added determination to validate what we’ve known all along: We are a good company.”

Although Truex is showing he can carry DEI into the future, team officials don’t want to burden him with that. They learned through Earnhardt’s parting that it’s never healthy to have one superstar surrounded by a supporting cast.

“Not that Martin is even trying to step into Dale Jr.’s shoes, but he’s almost been pushed into it and has accepted it an eager and mature way,” Siegel said. “And can he be our marquee driver? Absolutely. But we want to be stronger as an entire company, we want to have four strong teams, not just one. And I don’t think we want to put the pressure on him that he’s responsible for the future of DEI.”

Either way, Truex’s success has made it easier for Earnhardt to walk away from his late father’s company.

“It takes a lot of pressure and worry off of me for what everybody’s plans were with DEI and what everybody assumed would happen,” Earnhardt said. “He’s going to be able to provide that company the success it needs to garner the sponsorship dollars it needs to garner to bring in the corporate interest it needs to compete.”

NY SPORTS GEAR.com


What’s the Price of the No. 8? None.

June 27, 2007

cool comments on if/why Dale Jr should keep the number 8

read more | digg story


Oregon State Wins College World Series

June 25, 2007

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Oregon State became the first team in a decade to repeat as College World Series champion, completing a dominant run through the tournament with a 9-3 victory over North Carolina on Sunday night.

The Beavers (49-18) won all five of their CWS games, including a sweep of the Tar Heels in the best-of-three finals, and trailed for only one of 45 innings they played in Omaha.

North Carolina was runner-up for the second straight year after the first CWS finals rematch since Arizona State and USC met in 1973. Oregon State is the first back-to-back champion since LSU in 1996-97 and the fifth overall.

Darwin Barney’s two-run homer gave the Beavers the lead in the second inning of the decisive game. Jordan Lennerton hit his second homer in two nights, a two-run shot in the eighth.

The Tar Heels (57-16) didn’t get much going against Oregon State’s steady pitching and solid defense, and were shut down whenever they appeared on the verge of a big inning.

Mark Grbavac and Joe Paterson combined to retire the last seven North Carolina batters. Paterson got a called third strike against pinch-hitter Kyle Shelton to end the game and send the Beavers sprinting out of their dugout for the celebratory pile.

“It’s crazy. It’s just crazy,” Oregon State coach Pat Casey said. “I just felt like we were going to win. There is something in that dugout.”

Visit NY SPORTS GEAR.com for Oregon State Gear

The Beavers, who were nearly left out of the 64-team national tournament field after struggling in the Pacific-10 Conference, finished the season with 10 straight wins and became the first to win four CWS games by six runs or more.

“When we got here, we were excited to get in that dugout and in that locker room,” Barney said. “We feel very comfortable in there. This is home, baby. This is Omaha.”

The Beavers knocked out North Carolina starter Luke Putkonen (8-2) in the second inning after Barney lined a pitch over the left-field wall. Another run scored on third baseman Chad Flack’s throwing error.

Putkonen, a sophomore, went only 1 2-3 innings in the shortest outing of his career.

Tar Heels coach Mike Fox made a surprise move by bringing in closer Andrew Carignan, whose appearance in the second inning was his earliest in two years.

Not even Carignan, who allowed no runs and only one hit in 6 1-3 CWS innings before Sunday, could stop the Beavers. Singles by Santschi in the third and John Wallace in the fifth stretched the lead to 5-2.

Dustin Ackley hit his second homer of the CWS and 10th of the season to pull North Carolina to 5-3, but Scott Santschi’s third RBI single and Chris Hopkins’ infield hit made it 7-3 in the seventh.

Ackley’s RBI single in the first put North Carolina up 1-0 and ended a streak of 61 innings over seven games in which Oregon State led or was tied. The Beavers hadn’t trailed in a CWS game in 50 innings, since the fourth frame of Game 2 of last year’s finals.

North Carolina’s first three batters reached against Mike Stutes (12-4) in the first and third innings, but the Tar Heels came away with only one run each time.

Ackley homered in the fifth, and two more batters reached before Stutes induced an inning-ending groundout.

After Garrett Gore doubled in the sixth, Anton Maxwell entered and hit Josh Horton to put two runners on with the dangerous Ackley coming up. Ackley drove a liner into left field that Wallace snagged to end the threat.

In the seventh, Tim Fedroff tried to score on Seth Williams’ hit to the left-field wall. But Wallace threw to Barney, the shortstop, whose relay home was in plenty of time to get Fedroff at the plate.

The Beavers lost six position players, two-thirds of their starting rotation and the closer from last year’s team. They almost were left out of the NCAA tournament after they went 4-8 in May and finished tied for sixth in the Pacific-10 Conference.

They got on a roll once the postseason started. They were sent to Virginia for regionals and lost their second game to the host Cavaliers. They never lost again.

“We realized during that Virginia regional we could do this again,” Stutes said. “We started rolling again.”

The Beavers never trailed in any of their first four games at the CWS.

Their closest game here was their first, a 3-2 win over Cal State Fullerton. Victories of 12-6 over Arizona State and 7-1 against UC Irvine got them into the finals.

It was a much easier path than a year ago, when Oregon State lost its CWS opener 11-1 to Miami. The Beavers staved off elimination four straight times to make it to the finals against North Carolina. They came back from a loss in Game 1 to win the title.

Texas (1949-50), Southern California (1970-74) and Stanford (1987-88) also won consecutive titles.

Visit NY SPORTS GEAR.com for authentic Oregon State memorabilia


Yeah OK!

June 23, 2007

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — St. Bonaventure baseball coach Larry Sudbrook was fined $1,000 Thursday after he pleaded guilty to trying to carry a .357 Magnum revolver onto a commercial airplane.

U.S. District Court magistrate Kenneth Schroeder accepted the plea to a federal infraction while describing Sudbrook’s mistake as “mind-boggling.” But, Schroeder said, “I’m firmly convinced, based on your background, that it was the result of human error.”

Sudbrook, who completed his 22nd year with the Bonnies last month, said he was relieved to put the case behind him with the plea bargain.

“I want to apologize to all the good people at St. Bonaventure for the embarrassment that I have caused,” he said. “I made an honest but regrettable mistake, and I am truly sorry about it.”

In accepting the plea, Schroeder ordered Sudbrook to forfeit ownership of the confiscated weapon.

He was arrested and charged with a federal felony, which could have carried jail time, after the gun was found in his carryon bag at a security checkpoint at Buffalo Niagara International Airport on May 10.

Sudbrook was with his team on their way to a three-game series against Atlantic 10 Conference rival Charlotte and forgot he had left the gun in a zippered compartment a few days earlier, according to his testimony.

A hunter and gun collector, Sudbrook said he traveled with the same bag three weeks earlier, and noted he wouldn’t have noticed the gun because the bag was already heavy with game and recruiting reports.

Sudbrook faces potential school sanctions when his case is reviewed by a panel this summer.

“It was certainly a mistake that made for some dark days around my house for a while,” Sudbrook said. “I’d like to thank the U.S. Attorney’s office and the judge. They understand that I was a tunnel-visioned coach, who was focused on preparing to beat a nationally ranked team, Charlotte, and not something I should have been focused upon.”


Surfer Marisa Miller

June 22, 2007


NY SPORTS GEAR.com

images from Getty Images


Sammy Six Hundred

June 21, 2007

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Sammy Sosa’s 600th homer resembled so many that came before — except this time the Chicago Cubs were on the other side.

Playing for the Texas Rangers after a year out of baseball, Sosa became the fifth member of the 600-homer club Wednesday night when he connected against his former team.

NY SPORTS GEAR.com

After driving a 1-2 pitch to right-center for a solo shot in the fifth inning of Texas’ 7-3 victory, Slammin’ Sammy bounced out of the batter’s box with his trademark hop and thrust his right fist into the air before reaching first base. He was mobbed at home plate by his teammates while the scoreboard showed pictures of all five members of the elite club: Hank Aaron, Barry Bonds, Babe Ruth, Willie Mays and Sosa.

“It was something that cannot be explained,” Sosa said. “Getting my 600th against the Chicago Cubs, and my first team (was) the Texas Rangers. It’s liked everything clicked. My emotions, I don’t know what they are.”

Sosa played for the Cubs from 1992-2004, winning the ‘98 NL MVP award and making seven All-Star teams while hitting 545 homers with Chicago.

No. 600 came off Jason Marquis, the 364th pitcher the 38-year-old Sosa has homered off in his 18 major league seasons.

It was Sosa’s 12th homer in 62 games this season since signing a minor league deal and making the roster in spring training with Texas, the franchise that gave him his start. He hit his first big league homer with the Rangers in 1989.

Sosa also has 52 RBIs, which ranks seventh in the American League. He has homered against every major league team in his career.

After going into the dugout with his teammates, Sosa came out for a curtain call. He blew kisses to the crowd and acknowledged the Cubs’ dugout with a pump of his fist, and Chicago manager Lou Piniella pointed back toward the slugger. Sosa had never faced the Cubs before the series opener Tuesday night.

A countdown banner that has hung in right field for about a month was flipped from 599 to 600 — and a new banner was unfurled in center field congratulating Sosa for joining the 600-homer club.

Chants of “Sam-my! Sam-my!” prompted a second curtain call from Sosa.

The cheering hadn’t even subsided before Frank Catalanotto followed with a homer, the 75th of his career, to give the Rangers a 6-1 lead.

While Sosa has had an impressive comeback this season, his pursuit of 600 homers was overshadowed by the Rangers (27-44) having the worst record in baseball and Bonds’ chase to catch Aaron atop the career home run list.

Bonds has 748 homers — seven shy of Aaron’s mark — with only three in his last 97 at-bats. Ruth is third on the home run list with 714 and Mays is fourth with 660.

Sosa had a similar homer drought. No. 600 was only his second in 22 games — a span of 83 at-bats in which his only other homer was a grand slam Friday at Cincinnati.

“Sammy’s had a great career,” Piniella said before the series began. “It’s maybe apropos that here the Cubbies are in town. … He was an icon in Chicago for a long time, was loved.”

When Sosa returned to the majors, he insisted he was coming back for more than the 12 homers he needed to reach 600.

“Definitely,” Sosa reiterated after the game. “I’m showing the whole world I still have a few years left in the tank. I’m hungry every day. I’m here because I want to compete. Everything depends on how I feel a few more years. I feel great. Nothing can stop me right now.”

A tumultuous 2005 season almost drove Sosa out of the game for good.

It started during spring training that year when he testified before Congress about possible steroid use in baseball, and it didn’t get much better from there. He hit .221 with 14 homers and 45 RBIs in 102 games with Baltimore before going home to the Dominican Republic, where he stayed for more than a year.

Like Mark McGwire and Bonds, Sosa is suspected of using steroids before they were banned by baseball, and he was caught with a corked bat in front of his home crowd when he played for the Cubs in 2003.

He has never been penalized for a positive steroids test, however, and was not involved in the BALCO scandal that has dogged Bonds.

“I’m quite sure a lot of people were skeptical about him for many reasons,” Rangers manager Ron Washington said. “But he showed us he was serious about coming back.”

Besides the consecutive homers, Marquis (5-4) walked four batters that scored without a hit. Those runs came on two errors, a double-play grounder and a groundout. The right-hander is 0-3 in eight starts since a three-hit shutout against Pittsburgh on May 9 that was his fifth straight victory.

Kameron Loe (3-6), coming off eight shutout innings against the Pirates in a start Thursday that ended his six-game losing streak, allowed three runs over 6 2-3 innings.

Alfonso Soriano was 3-for-4 with two doubles and his 12th homer, a solo shot with two outs in the fifth for the Cubs’ first run. Koyie Hill, the starting catcher after Michael Barrett was traded earlier Wednesday, hit a two-run homer in the seventh.

Sosa is the only player with three 60-homer seasons. He hit .308 with a career-high 66 homers and 158 RBIs in his 1998 MVP season for the Cubs — and was part of that memorable home run chase with McGwire, the first major leaguer to hit 70 homers.

Sosa holds the major league record by hitting homers in 45 ballparks, adding Rangers Ballpark in Arlington and two other stadiums to that list this season. He also homered for the first time at Cleveland’s Jacobs Field and at Disney World in a series against Tampa Bay.

The slugger was 16 when Texas signed him out of the Dominican Republic in 1985. He was still a lanky kid in 1989 when he made his major league debut and hit his first home run, the only one he had in 25 games for the Rangers before he was traded to the Chicago White Sox and later to the Cubs.

NY SPORTS GEAR.com


Another Bengal Gets Arrested

June 19, 2007

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) — Running back Quincy Wilson was charged with disorderly conduct for failing to disperse after a weekend wedding party, making him the 10th Cincinnati Bengals player arrested in the past 14 months.

The former West Virginia star was with a wedding party celebrating outside a downtown bar around 3 a.m. Sunday when he and 13 others refused a police request to leave, assistant prosecuting attorney Lora Maynard said Monday.

Signed Sports Memorabilia Available At NY Sports Gear.com

Some were charged with disorderly conduct, others with obstructing justice and underage drinking, police Lt. Hank Dial said.

The running back was booked at a jail and released Sunday afternoon. He is scheduled to appear in Huntington Municipal Court on July 19.

Bengals spokesman Jack Brennan said it was inappropriate for the team to comment on Wilson’s arrest because the matter is unresolved.

Dial said police wanted to disperse the crowd because some shots had been fired about 30 minutes earlier a block from the bar. None of those arrested with Wilson were thought to be connected to the shooting, Dial said.

Wilson is the 10th Bengals player arrested in the past 14 months, a streak of misconduct that drew the attention of NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, resulted in three suspensions and made Cincinnati an example of players gone bad.

Wilson is the third former West Virginia player in the NFL to get into trouble in recent years. Wilson was the Mountaineers’ leading rusher his final season.

Atlanta drafted the running back in the seventh round in 2004. The Bengals signed him off the Falcons’ practice squad later that year, and he spent the next year on Cincinnati’s practice squad.

Wilson got into three games last season, carrying two times for 2 yards in an Oct. 1 loss to New England. He was waived on Oct. 19 and signed back onto the practice squad.

Wilson, who lives in Weirton, was a teammate of receiver Chris Henry, a Bengals player who has been arrested four times. Goodell suspended Henry for two games last season for misconduct, and has suspended him for the first eight games of the 2007 season for his most recent convictions.

Another former West Virginia player, Titans cornerback Pacman Jones, has been suspended for the entire 2007 season. Jones was being sought by police as a witness in a shooting early Monday involving members of his entourage after a fight at an Atlanta strip club.

Bengals linebacker Odell Thurman was suspended last season for violating the league’s substance abuse policy. He has yet to be reinstated.

Last month, linebacker A.J. Nicholson was arrested on a domestic violence charge in northern Kentucky, across the Ohio River from Cincinnati. The Bengals released him three days later.

Signed Sports Memorabilia Available At NY Sports Gear.com


NFL’s Landry out with a paintball injury

June 17, 2007

ASHBURN, Va. (AP) — A paintball shot in the groin left rookie LaRon Landry unable to practice when the Washington Redskins opened their minicamp Friday.

The No. 6 overall pick in this year’s draft was injured during a team-building outing Wednesday, when coach Joe Gibbs allowed the players to leave early at the end of the voluntary spring workouts. Some players went bowling or had lunch together, while many of the defensive players went to play paintball.

NY Sports Gear.com

“I didn’t know paintball was that dangerous,” linebacker Marcus Washington said. “I hope it wasn’t friendly fire.”

Landry was on the sidelines when practice began, but within minutes he left and began laboring slowly up the hill toward the team’s main building, appearing to favor his left leg.

Gibbs said Landry should be fine after a couple of days’ rest.

“It’s kind of bizarre,” Gibbs said. “Almost anything can happen in life, so every now and then something like that does happen.”


J.J. Yeley Survives Jimmie Johnson….

June 16, 2007

J.J. Yeley barely hung on to capture his first career…



read more | digg story

NY SPORTS GEAR.com


The Votes Are In

June 16, 2007

It was a big night for Sidney Crosby and anyone who hates Versus. Here’s all the NHL award winners, plus the complete voting totals and the usual assortment of sarcastic comments.



read more | digg story

NY SPORTS GEAR.com


And Another Reason To Like Soccer – European Football

June 13, 2007

NY Sports Gear.com

I’ve got to admit I am starting to like soccer…or at least the cheerleaders and female fans!


NY Sports Gear.com


NY Sports Gear.com


NY Sports Gear.com


NY Sports Gear.com



NY Sports Gear.com



NY Sports Gear.com



NY Sports Gear.com

NY Sports Gear.com

Images are from Getty and the AP


Haiti’s National Soccer Team Deserts

June 13, 2007

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) – Most of Haiti’s under-17 national soccer team apparently deserted the team during a stopover in New York, hours before a planned trip to South Korea to prepare for the upcoming U17 World Cup, officials said Wednesday.

Thirteen of the team’s 18 players – all under 17 – went missing from New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport sometime between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning and their whereabouts were not immediately known, Felix Augustin, Haiti’s consul general in New York, told The Associated Press.
“We don’t know exactly where they are, but we’re making calls to people (in the Haitian community) to try and get them back,” Augustin said in a telephone interview.

NY Sports Gear.com

He said he didn’t know if U.S. authorities were helping to find the players, who arrived from Haiti on Tuesday and were scheduled to depart early Wednesday for Seoul, South Korea, to play in a friendly tournament ahead of the U17 World Cup in August.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Embassy in Haiti, Shaila B. Manyam, said embassy officials were looking into the matter.

Augustin said authorities believe adults may be involved in the players’ desertion and warned they could face criminal charges unless they turn over the minors.

“It seems that some adults may have been involved. If so, they are going to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” said Augustin, who declined to give further details.

Speaking to a Haitian Creole-language radio station in New York, the president of the Haitian Football Federation, Yves Jean-Bart, warned the youngsters that they were hurting their futures and threatened to involve U.S. authorities “unless these players reinstate themselves as soon as possible.”

Jean-Bart gave no indication why the players would abandon the team. Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere and thousands of Haitians leave the country each year to escape miserable living conditions, violence and political instability.

The apparent desertions dealt a major blow to Haitian soccer, which has been experiencing a resurgence of late after years of dismal performances. The U17s qualified for the biennial World Cup for the first time in the Caribbean nation’s history earlier this year, while the men’s team won the Caribbean Cup for the first time in January.

NY Sports Gear.com