Monday, 6 June 2011

Lisa Fernandez US Soft Ball Player

The 37-year-old Fernandez was named a replacement player on the American team, which will attempt to win its fourth straight gold medal this summer. Fernandez was on the mound when the U.S. team won gold in Athens, completing a historic run through the tournament in which the Americans outscored the competition 51-1. Fernandez was also the starting pitcher when the U.S. won it all in Sydney in 2000. Four years earlier, she came in as a reliever when the Americans lcinched gold in Atlanta. “I have no regrets,” Fernandez said. “I know I gave it everything I had. There wasn’t a corner cut or a practice missed. I just ran out of time. To me, the most important thing is that I know I gave it everything I had. But there were certain things I couldn’t control.” She was making a comeback after missing three years of international competition to start a family and never quite got back to form. “I was really hoping she would get close to where she was in 2004,” said U.S. coach Mike Candrea. “She is still in my eyes the best player who has ever played this game. I wanted her to go out on top.” Candrea kept only three pitchers: returning gold medalists Jennie Finch and Cat Osterman, as well as first-time Olympian Monica Abbott. Alicia Hollowell, a hard-throwing right-hander who played for Candrea at Arizona, was also named a replacement player. Candrea will only make changes to his roster if there are injuries. He must submit it to the U.S. Olympic Committee for final approval by July 1.


She returned to the coaching staff in 2007 after taking two years off from the US National Team for the birth of her son and playing competitively during the past two summers as part of the launch of the PFX tour. She is one of five former Bruins to play on the 1996 gold-medal winning US Olympic Team and one of six Bruins included on the active roster for the gold medal winning squad of 2000. She was the top hitter and pitcher in the tournament, and led the US to a third consecutive gold medal in 2004 in Athens, Greece where she posted a .545 batting average which was a new record for an Olympic tournament.
Lisa Fernandez – Famous Softball PlayersDuring USA Softball’s “Central Park to Sydney Tour,” Fernandez pitched five straight perfect games, and in one of those games she struck out all 21 batters. At the 2000 Games, she posted a 0.47 ERA with 52 strikeouts.
In 1996, she shined in Team USA’s 3-1 gold medal win over China, where she recorded the final three outs to earn the save and secure the win. In the 2000, Sydney Games Fernandez pitched for the U.S. in both their victories against Australia (semifinal), and Japan (final.)
In 1999, she was named the Amateur Softball Association /USA Softball Female Athlete of the Year. As a pitcher and third baseman, she was on the USA Softball Women’s National Team that won gold medals at both the Pan American Games and the Canada Cup. She even helped the California Commotion win the ASA Women’s Major Fast Pitch championship for the fourth straight time.



Fernandez played at UCLA from 1990-1993 and completed her psychology degree in 1995. She has won the sport’s Honda Award three times and became the first softball player to win the important Honda-Broderick Cup, which recognizes the best college female athlete in sports, when she won the award in 1993. She is a four-time, first-team All American, who led the Bruins to two national championships (1990 & 1992) and two second place finishes (1991 &1993.) She was even All-Region and All-Pac-10 first-team each season and Pac-10 Player of the Year her final three years.




In her career, she has a 0.22 ERA and a 93-7 record with 784 strikeouts. Her ERA is second in NCAA history and her 74 shutouts are the most at UCLA and ninth in the history of NCAA. In her junior and senior seasons, she had the lowest ERA in the nation (.14 in 1992, 0.25 in 1993.) She had a perfect 29-0 mark in 92. She had 11 career no hitters, which includes a pair in the 1993 College World Series, and has two perfect games to her name.




She was powerful at the plate also, compiling a .382 batting record with 15 home runs and 128 runs batted in. She hit .401 in her junior season, and passed that mark by more than 100 points in her senior season, batting an NCAA-best .510 with 11 homers and 45 rbi’s. She is in the top 10 in UCLA history in many offensive categories, including fifth in average and fourth in strikeouts.



Continue reading

Thursday, 2 June 2011

Best Indian Cricket Team Player Rohit Sharma Wallpapers





Continue reading

Pakistani Three Player Bans too Soft - Survey

Five-year bans handed to three Pakistani cricketers for spot-fixing offences were too lenient, according to a survey of international players released Thursday.

Over three-quarters of respondents to the Federation of International Cricketers’ Associations (FICA) players’ survey, said the bans meted out to Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer were inadequate.
The trio, accused by Britain’s News of the World of conspiring to deliberately bowl no-balls as part of a ’spot-fixing’ betting scam last year, were banned by the International Cricket Council (ICC).


All deny wrongdoing and are appealing the verdicts at the Swiss-based Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
“The vast number of players want significant penalties to be invoked against those who are found guilty of serious corruption offences,” said FICA chief executive Tim May.
“Whilst 100% of players say that they will report any corrupt approaches made to them, 20% of them do not have confidence in the ICC to treat this information confidentially.”

May said the vast majority of the 45 players polled were more comfortable reporting corruption approaches to their team manager, than to the ICC Anti Corruption Unit.
Meanwhile, nearly a third of players said they would retire early from international cricket to play exclusively in the Indian Premier League, citing fears over fixture clashes curbing their participation in the money-spinning event.
“The Indian Premier League continues to be popular with the players, and its superior pay structures for the players, continue to challenge players’ priority over international cricket,” May said.

“When players are able to earn over ten times their annual salary from their Boards, for just seven weeks cricket in the IPL, it would be foolhardy of Boards to continue to schedule international matches during IPL and expect players to remain loyal to the Board and international cricket,” he said.
The survey also found that 54% of the players would retire from one or more formats of the game because of too much international cricket.
Players cited the major issues facing the game as governance, corruption and an overkill of international cricket, while only a single-figure percentage said decisions made at ICC Board level were in the wider interests of the game.


Source by = www,timeslive.co.za
Continue reading

Puyol Out For 2-3 Months After Surgery

Barcelona captain Carles Puyol will be sidelined for two to three months after having surgery on his troublesome left knee on Wednesday, the Spanish and European champions said.
The 33-year-old defender, unavailable for Spain’s friendlies against United States and Venezuela this month, missed most of the second half of the season due to the recurring injury.
He was left out of the starting 11 for Saturday’s 3-1 Champions League final victory over Manchester United but was given a run-out in place of Daniel Alves in the 88th minute.
“The injury lasted about four months and had a number of phases,” doctor Ricard Pruna told a news conference.
“The player decided to wait until after the Champions League final and that was the right decision,” he added.
Puyol is likely to miss most of Barca’s pre-season friendlies, including a match against United in Maryland on July 30.
Source by = www,timeslive.co.za
Continue reading

World Champion Hijacked

World boxing champion Moruti Mthalane has been left traumatised after he was hijacked by three armed men in Johannesburg on Wednesday night.

His trainer, Nick Durandt, said the incident took place at 6.45pm when the IBF flyweight titleholder was driving home from a petrol station.
The robbers, who had apparently followed him from the garage, pulled in front of him, slamming brakes and forcing him to stop. They pointed their firearms at him before smashing the driver’s side window and forcing him out of the car.
“It was like he was stalked and followed,” said Durandt, adding they also took Mthalane's cellphone.
“The police were very quick to respond. By the time I got to him a task team of the Jeppe police station was at his house.”
Durandt said that the fighter was traumatised and was recuperating at his home in Johannesburg.
“If you haven’t been affected by crime in South Africa you are just standing in line and waiting for your turn,” Durandt said.
Mthalane is the first South African boxer to have lifted the flyweight crown offered by the IBF, one of the four major world sanctioning bodies.
Other compatriots had previously failed in this task, including Baby Jake Matlala in 1991.
Continue reading

Murray reaches first French Open Semi Finals

Andy Murray suffered a few lapses in concentration in a 7-6 7-5 6-2 win over Juan Ignacio Chela on Wednesday to reach the French Open semi-finals for the first time — but he knows he must do better against Rafa Nadal.

The fourth-seeded Briton, who twisted his ankle in his fourth-round match with Viktor Troicki, recovered from two breaks down in the opening set to win a tiebreak 7-2 and blew a 5-2 lead in the second before getting his act together.
Murray, who has never won a grand slam title, was more consistent against unseeded Argentine Chela in the third set and sealed the win with a delicate drop shot.
“It was just very up and down. The wind obviously doesn’t help but it was a really scrappy match,” the Scot told a news conference.
“I didn’t start particularly well and then got a little bit better, started moving a bit better towards the end of the first set.”
Murray must be switched on from the start to stand a chance of booking a place in the final because he faces world number one Nadal on Friday after the five-times champion beat Swede Robin Soderling 6-4 6-1 7-6.
“I got up in the second, maybe lost concentration a little bit, which you can’t afford to do against someone like Juan who has a lot of experience on this surface. Something I definitely won’t get away with against Rafa,” he added.
Murray possesses a seemingly nonchalant attitude but has shown plenty of fighting spirit on a slow surface he does not favour.
“I’m surprised I’m here, to be honest, because I haven’t actually played that well. Aside from everything else that’s happened I haven’t played particularly well,” he said.

TWISTED ANKLE

Murray, the Australian Open runner-up, looked on the brink of retirement when he twisted his ankle in a five-set victory over Serb Troicki.
“I needed to fight back against Troicki in tough circumstances. I think all my matches except that one were straight sets,” said Murray.
“I’m glad I’ve got tomorrow off where I can rest and recover ... because you’re going to need all of your reserves to get through a match with Rafa at the French.”
Nadal has a 43-1 record at Roland Garros. Murray has a 4-10 record against the world number one and has never beaten him in three encounters on clay although the Spaniard dropped a set at the Monte Carlo Masters this year when they met in the semi-finals.
Continue reading