Friday, September 30, 2011

Jody McIntyre and the Tottenham riots: quelle surprise

Two days after the worst rioting in Tottenham since the 1980s, and the facts of what happened are slowly coming together.

What's already fairly clear is that not all the rioters were locals; as David Lammy MP noted in the Times: "Many of the people arrested weren't from Tottenham. The grief of one family must never be hijacked to inflict grief on others."

Coming after months of social unrest and protests, particularly in the capital, the idea that a peaceful protest could be hijacked by the more anarchic elements in society should come as no surprise.

Nor should the fact that one of the key figures has been pinpointed as Jody McIntyre, a far left protester who rose to prominence in the wake of the student rallies after he alleged that he had been knocked from his wheelchair by a policeman (the incident was investigated and the Met was later cleared of wrongdoing).

It later transpired that McIntyre was no political ing�nue, but a venomous anti-Israel campaigner who had made a catalogue of unfounded allegations against the Jewish State on his personal blog.

He labelled Israel schizophrenic and lunatic and spoke of having a casual sandwich break with Hamas terrorists (only he didn't describe them as terrorists). In the months since, he has been on the platform at Palestine Solidarity Campaign events and continued to rail against Israeli "apartheid".

Of course, he's been less vocal on the subject of the rockets fired at Israeli towns, the murder of a three-month-old baby by a Palestinian extremist, or the bomb that went off in Jerusalem earlier this year ? killing a British Christian.

He is, of course, a poster boy of the far left, a darling of the socialist world. He even writes for the Independent and occasionally for the Guardian. Regardless of his views on Israel, he has painted himself as a crusader for the oppressed, a fighter for the poor and unrepresented.

So as small businesses and the homes of those who didn't have a back-up plan were being destroyed, was this bastion of the left condemning the violence and its impact on those who didn't deserve it?

No, actually on Friday he slammed the lack of accountability in the police in an Indy post about the "violence and provocation" of the force.

And the next day, as the riots broke out, he was advising his more than 9,000 Twitter followers to get involved and add to the pain.

"Be inspired by the scenes in Tottenham, and rise up in your neighbourhood," he cried. "100 people in every area = the way we can beat the feds."

I'm sure those people who have had their livelihoods destroyed will be delighted to have been part of the attempt to "beat the feds".

Hey, my flat's burnt to the ground, my windows have been smashed, kids terrified. But we're sticking it to the man, yeh.

Today, as most of us looked in horror at the photographs of destruction on the front pages, McIntyre didn't show any remorse. "You ask if looting is justified, I ask if the police will ever be held accountable for killing people?"

It's for the Indy to decide if they want him to continue writing in their name (they stated yesterday that they don't "condone lawbreaking").

I doubt the PSC or the rest of Britain's far left anti-Israel brigade will distance itself. He hates Israel, so that's enough. It doesn't matter how unpalatable the rest of his behaviour is.

But isn't it interesting that someone like McIntyre, a self-proclaimed campaigner for social justice and rights, is only bothered when it suits him.

Update: Posted on the Indy website: "Following his recent tweets and statements on the London riots, The Independent will no longer be taking blogs from Jody McIntyre."

Source: http://www.thejc.com/blogs/jennifer-lipman/jody-mcintyre-and-tottenham-riots-quelle-surprise

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Cleveland Indians' top draft pick, Francisco Lindor, singles in first pro at-bat: Minor-league report

McAllister sharp in Columbus win; Akron earns series split vs. Richmond; Tice shines in Kinston win; late rally falls for for Lake County; Lake Erie loses despite pitching a one-hitter.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers 9, Jammers 2: Cleveland's No. 1 draft pick Francisco Lindor singled in his first at-bat of his professional debut, and later scored on a base hit. For the night, the shortstop was 1-for-3, as Mahoning Valley defeated Jamestown, N.Y., in a New York-Penn league game in Niles. Lindor also flied to left and grounded to second. Lindor also turned the pivot on two 4-6-3 double plays.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 8, Bats 5: Zach McAllister (11-3), who started a game for the Indians last week against Seattle, pitched six innings to pick up the win as Columbus won an International League game against visiting Louisville (Ky.). McAllister gave up three runs (two earned) and struck out nine. Josh Judy pitched a scoreless ninth for his 23rd save.

Notes: Judy's 23 saves tie for the IL lead, and are the seventh most in a season for Columbus.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 5, Flying Squirrels 2: Akron scored four runs in the bottom of the third inning to erase a two-run deficit and gain a split of a four-game series against Richmond (Va.) at Canal Park. Right-handed starter Austin Adams (11-10) struck out seven in five innings of the Eastern League game for Akron.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 9, Hillcats 2: Jeremie Tice homered as part of a three-hit, four RBI effort as Kinston won the Carolina League game at Lynchburg, Va. Clayton Cook (9-8) scattered four hits over five innings in getting the win.

Notes: The series between the Hillcats and Kinston was moved to Lynchburg because Grainger Stadium, in Kinston, was damaged by Hurricane Irene.

A Lake County Captains

Silver Hawks 3, Captains 2: Lake County scored a run in the top of the ninth at South Bend (Ind.), but the rally ended with runners on the corners. The Captains lost their seventh straight Midwest League game. Jordan Cooper (2-8) allowed three runs on eight hits, walked one and struck out three in six innings for Lake County.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

RiverHawks 2, Crushers 0: Rockford (Ill.) defeated Lake Erie in a Frontier League game in Avon. The Crushers out-hit Rockford, 3-1. The RiverHawks' only hit was an RBI double.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/cleveland_indians_top_draft_pi.html

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Tribe greats besides Jim Thome also merit statues: Bill Livingston

The Indians are going to commemorate Jim Thome with a statue, only the second one ever of a player, after Bob Feller. With more than 600 home runs, hit by all indications cleanly, Thome some day will be remembered in Cooperstown with a bust. In some ways, it is a fitting end to Thome's reappearance in the Tribe's lineup during the failed September stretch drive.

jim-thome.JPGView full sizeJim Thome takes a high-five from Lonnie Chisenhall on the way back from scoring against the Detroit Tigers.
The Indians are going to commemorate Jim Thome with a statue, only the second one ever of a player, after Bob Feller.

With more than 600 home runs, hit by all indications cleanly, Thome some day will be remembered in Cooperstown with a bust. In some ways, it is a fitting end to Thome's reappearance in the Tribe's lineup during the failed September stretch drive.

He is a nice man, and he was an island of civility on the snarling 1990s teams. But his last go-round in the city where his career began had more of sweet reconciliation than of triumphant return to it. Thome can't turn on the fastball the way he used to.

It is good that the vast majority of fans realize it has been a long time since Thome chased the money to Philadelphia. Fans who continue to carp about that steep themselves in bitterness. It was understandable that they felt that way at first, but it has been a long time since 2003, and Thome himself apologized for it.

His return let us have a month when the game was not about business, when the dry statistics of the information revolution depicted in the movie "Moneyball" gave way to affairs of the heart. Romance and nostalgia returned briefly to baseball in Cleveland, although Indians fans know better than most that the "happily ever after" part is the real fairy tale.

At the same time, it should be permissible to wonder why Thome is the second player so honored. Is it because in a time of free agency his franchise record of 337 homers will stand forever?

JIM THOME
Year HR RBI BA OBP
1994 20 53 .268 .359
1995 25 73 .314 .438
1996 38 116 .311 .450
1997 40 102 .286 .423
1998 30 85 .293 .413
1999 33 108 .277 .426
2000 37 106 .269 .398




ALBERT BELLE
Year HR RBI BA OBP
1994 36 101 .357 .438
1995 50* 126* .317 .401
1996 48* 148* .311 .410



MANNY RAMIREZ
Year HR RBI BA OBP
1997 26 88 .328 .418
1998 45 145 .294 .377
1999 44 165* .333 .442
2000 38 122 .351 .457

Why not Larry Doby, who broke the American League color barrier with the Indians only six weeks after Jackie Robinson broke in with the Brooklyn Dodgers? The world was not changed overnight or in six weeks.

Why not Lou Boudreau, the player-manager, the American League's Most Valuable Player and pennant playoff game hero in 1948, the team leader in 1948, the last year the Indians won the World Series?

If the intention was to remember the "Era of Champions" in the 1990s and be more contemporaneous, why not look more closely at the years from 1994-2000? In a time when the Indians dominated the Central Division and went to two World Series, Thome, an adequate, at best, defensive player, was not even the team's most feared slugger.

From 1994, when the players strike prevented a possible Tribe playoff appearance, through 1996, that presence was Albert Belle. The raging Belle would have won the MVP award in 1995, when he hit 50 homers and 50 doubles in a 144-game season, had he not comported himself like a black Ty Cobb. Belle played with a barely suppressed rage -- at the pitcher, the fans and a game that denied the perfection he sought. In a time of cheaters, steroid rumors did not dog Belle. He favored corked bats, a more time-honored method of performance enhancement.

After Belle left for the big money in 1997, Manny Ramirez batted in the middle of the lineup and carried the biggest stick until he left after the 2000 season for the same reason. Two failed drug tests late in his career led to Ramirez's decision to retire. He stands revealed as a steroid cheater, which disqualifies him from statuary.

So that leaves, at least in this view, Omar Vizquel, the defensive genius on a slugging team, the glove man in a lineup of big bats, the smile on the face of a sometimes sullen team.

Omar was the greatest shortstop I ever saw, although I only saw St. Louis' Ozzie Smith in person during the playoffs and World Series. Like Thome, Vizquel some day will be in Cooperstown in bronze, wearing an Indans cap.

Vizquel was the magician who didn't need a glove with all his barehanded plays and didn't even need hands with his soccer-style stops on grounders during infield practice. When Roberto Alomar, now in the Hall of Fame, played second base alongside Omar, the Indians' middle infield was where miracle plays occurred.

Vizquel wanted to stay here, but he doesn't have the edge for that. He simply made plays I never saw another human being make. Perhaps it is impossible to capture what made Vizquel so special in a frozen and unmoving statue, though. The spell Omar cast over hitters was a result of his quickness, agility and instincts. How do you cast them in bronze?

To reach Bill Livingston: blivingston@plaind.com, 216-999-4672

Previous columns online: cleveland.com/columns

On Twitter: @LivyPD

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/livingston/index.ssf/2011/09/tribe_greats_besides_jim_thome.html

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Preview: Westlake at Olmsted Falls

What, when, where: Southwestern Conference game, 7 p.m., Olmsted Falls High, 26939 Bagley Road, Olmsted Falls. Call 440-427-6115.

Records: Westlake 3-2, 1-1; Olmsted Falls 3-2, 2-0.

What to watch: The Demons had their three-game winning streak snapped with a 21-14 overtime loss to North Olmsted. Running back Jonathan Brick has been the workhorse for the grind-it-out offense. The Demons ...

Source: http://highschoolsports.cleveland.com/news/article/-4246632925853989805

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Luis Valbuena's 15th homer can't prevent Columbus loss: Minor-league report

Akron offense falls flat in Portland; Kinston shut out by Lynchburg; Erie's RBI single wins it for Crushers; Captains suspended, Scrappers postponed by weather.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Bats 5, Clippers 2: Columbus SS Luis Valbuena (.303) hit his 15th homer of the season, and Jared Goedert (.235) had three hits, but the Clippers lost an International League game in Louisville, Ky.

RH Joe Martinez (7-6, 4.29) started and took the loss. He gave up five earned run on six hits in six innings. He struck out seven and walked one.

AA Akron Aeros

Sea Dogs 9, Aeros 2: Akron managed just three hits, two by RF Ben Copeland (.275), and got blasted in the Eastern League game in Portland, Maine. Aeros LH starter Matt Packer (5-11, 4.61) gave up 11 hits and six runs -- all earned -- in 51/3 innings.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Hillcats 9, Indians 0: Kinston LH starter T.J. House took nine for the team as the K-Tribe got crushed in a Carolina League game in Lynchburg, Va. House (6-10, 4.92) allowed nine earned runs in five innings of work. He gave up nine hits, walked six and fanned one.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 5, Freedom 4: Brian Erie's RBI single in the bottom of the 11th inning scored Chris Luick with the winning run as Lake Erie triumphed at All-Pro Freight Stadium. Luick led off the inning with a walk, stole second and moved to third on Florence catcher Jeff Dunbar's throwing error.

A Lake County Captains

Dragons 2, Captains 0, susp.: Lake County's Midwest League game against visiting Dayton was suspended in the top of the fourth inning because of heavy rain. The game will be completed this weekend in Dayton, where the Captains begin a three-game series Saturday.

Fans with tickets for Tuesday's suspended game can exchange them for any regular-season game (based on availability) at the Classic Park ticket office.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers at ValleyCats, ppd.: Mahoning Valley's New York-Penn League game in Troy, N.Y., was rained out. The game will be made up Wednesday as part of a doubleheader -- two seven-inning games -- beginning at 6 p.m.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/luis_valbuenas_15th_homer_cant.html

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Travis Hafner will return, but status of Grady Sizemore, Fausto Carmona unsettled: Cleveland Indians Insider

GM Chris Antonetti says DH Travis Hafner will be back in 2012 for the final year of his contract.

travis hafner.JPGView full sizeTravis Hafner hit 13 home runs this season and played in just 94 games, but Indians management believes he's productive enough when healthy to bring him back next season for $13 million.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Three days after the final game of the World Series, the Indians must decide whether to exercise the 2012 club options of Grady Sizemore for $9 million and Fausto Carmona for $7 million.

If they don't, Sizemore is eligible for free agency and Carmona for salary arbitration.

The Indians don't have an option on Travis Hafner for 2012, but they do have a decision to make. They could bring him back next year to honor the final year of his contract for $13 million, or they could cut the cord on the biggest deal in Indians history and start over at DH.

On Thursday, GM Chris Antonetti said Hafner would be back, despite making two trips to the disabled list this year and not playing more than 118 games a season since 2007. For a while, there has been a feeling among the Indians string-pullers that if Hafner's production ever dropped low enough, ownership might be willing to eat a part of the contract.

Hafner played only 94 games this year. He hit .280, with 16 doubles, 13 homers and 57 RBI. Apparently that was enough to persuade owners Larry and Paul Dolan to put down the knives and forks.

"What Travis has continued to demonstrate is that, when he's healthy and on the field, he's a productive hitter," said Antonetti. "So when we look to next year's team, we think Travis is going to be healthy and if he is, he'll be a productive player for us."

Here are some other points Antonetti and manager Manny Acta touched on during their wrap-up of the 2011 season:

Sizemore will go to Vail, Colo., on Monday to have his bruised right knee examined by Dr. Richard Steadman. The information the Indians receive will help determine if they exercise his option.

Steadman performed microfracture surgery on Sizemore's left knee last year. The Indians don't think Sizemore will need surgery on his right knee. The decision they make on his option will determine, in part, what they can and can't do in the postseason.

"It will determine where we may have some needs," Antonetti said. "There's an economic impact as well, in terms of the dollars we can allocate to improve the team elsewhere."

One of Carmona's biggest problems this season came when he pitched out of the stretch. Acta said the Indians will work on that in spring training.

Acta said rookie second baseman Jason Kipnis will go into spring training with a "leg up" on the second-base job.

Regarding rookie third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall, Acta said, "I can't say he'll be our third baseman in April, but he's going to get a good opportunity in spring training."

From the way Antonetti and Acta talked about third baseman Jack Hannahan, it sounds as if he will be back.

The Indians could have as many as nine players eligible for salary arbitration if Carmona's option isn't picked up and Tony Sipp makes Super Two status. That will increase the Indians $49 million payroll big time.

First baseman Matt LaPorta has been told he has to come to camp next spring and win a job. Acta wants to add a hitter to the lineup. It could be at first or third base, and Acta doesn't care which side of the plate that person hits from.

Antonetti feels Jim Thome, 41, can still help a team next season.

"I think Jimmy is the one who is going to make the decision whether he plays or doesn't," Antonetti said.

Acta wants the Indians' defense to improve. It has made 110 errors in each of the past two seasons.

"You won't make the postseason if you have 100 errors a year unless you have a dominant pitching staff and offense," Acta said.

Indians hitters struck out 1,269 times, the second-highest total in the AL. Acta said a lot of that has to do with the youth and inexperience of the Indians.

"We had the third-youngest team in the big leagues," he said.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: phoynes@plaind.com, 216-999-5158

On Twitter: @hoynsie

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/09/travis_hafner_will_return_but.html

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Plenty to win by losing, plenty to lose by winning?

Donal Lenihan, Rotorua

PARANOIA has gripped the southern hemisphere big boys with conspiracy theories abounding.
The New Zealand public are convinced that France are about to throw Saturday's long awaited contest in Auckland where the All Blacks are under pressure to atone for those dastardly deeds of the past when the French had the audacity to beat them in the knockout stages of a World Cup tournament.
By and large, as Ireland found out to their cost on successive Saturdays back in August when the French started twenty eight different players against them and still won, there is very little to separate the two sides that Marc Lievremont is capable of putting on the field from his World Cup squad. He has chopped and changed so much over the course of the last four years that even he has very little idea of what his strongest starting side is.
The giveaway, however, is the selection of Morgan Parra at out half. One of the few areas of continuity under Lievremont has been the selection of Francois Trinh-Duc in the pivotal role. Lievremont promoted him from the obscurity of Montpellier at a time when he had barely registered on the French domestic scene. Despite a very indifferent start to his international career, the coach persisted with him and saw something special in him. He has been one of Lievremont's rare success stories and is now a very decent international fly half with a very good boot, a physical presence in defence, strong game management and has a good eye for a break.
How, all of a sudden, Lievremont can justify the selection of Parra for his first ever start at out half in an international test match against New Zealand in Eden Park of all places just beggars belief. Then again they are the French. The New Zealand media have created such a storm around this French selection that heaven only knows what the reaction would be if the French turned around and actually beat them.
Ireland, of course, are the cause of this entire hullabaloo by having the audacity to turn all recent form on the head and beat the reigning Tri Nations champions Australia. Despite that incredible performance and result it appears that nobody is willing to take us seriously given that everyone wants to be on the Irish side of the draw. It was even suggested that if South Africa could somehow manage to lose to Samoa but by less than seven points thus securing a losing bonus point then they too could engineer a passage down Ireland's side of the draw. The whole tournament is beginning to take the appearance of Italian soccer's Serie A with the reward for losing getting better and better.
All of this makes Saturday night's game even more intriguing in my view as I have never seen an international test game where one side is allegedly setting out to lose. How will they go about approaching the contest? Will there be no pushing in the scrums by the French? Will they refuse to contest lineout ball, pull out of tackles or offer up the breakdown to Richie McCaw and company uncontested. Who knows? Either way it should make for compulsory viewing.

Source: http://feeds.examiner.ie/~r/iesportsblog/~3/mAcyzFfhQ38/post.aspx

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South Wales Evening Post commented Lido demolition set to clear the way for leisure complex

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Norwood chief seeks to preserve services

At a time of restricted finances, new Norwood chief executive Elaine Kerr will bring to the role invaluable experience of getting the utmost out of a budget.

During her five years in the top job at Chai Cancer Care, the charity has expanded services and experienced almost a four-fold increase in clientele, yet spending has risen only by around 50 per cent.

Ms Kerr previously held an executive role at Hillingdon Primary Care Trust, where she managed an annual �183 million budget and was responsible for commissioning and planning health services.

Replacing the long-serving Norma Brier at Norwood at the beginning of November, she sees great virtue in the charity's brand recognition. "Everyone in the community knows Norwood."

But running through the vast array of children and family and adult learning disability services it provides - among them Ravenswood in Berkshire, Kennedy Leigh in Hendon, the Somers Centre in Hackney and Leonard Sainer in Redbridge - she acknowledges the "complex challenges" ahead. "But an opportunity like this comes along very rarely."

Chai receives no statutory funding and Ms Kerr takes particular pride in having seen the number of users grow from 400 to more than 1,550, with its main Hendon centre supplemented by satellite operations in north and south Manchester, Glasgow, Southend, Redbridge, south London and Hackney.

"I don't think need has increased," she reflected. "It's just that people have found us.

"I will always be one of Chai's greatest ambassadors because I recognise the difference it has made to people."

However, Chai's operating costs do not reflect the huge expansion in its operations. Its accounts show that for the financial year ending in March 2006, expenditure was �930,000. For the year to March 2010, spending was just under �1.4 million.

Norwood has been dealing with the consequences of a �4 million loss in local authority funding and, after months of talks, care staff agreed a deal with management in spring on pay cuts.

Ms Kerr will look to explore ways of reducing expenditure without cutting back on services or staff. "I want to see if there is any slack in the system."

As she is serving her final weeks at Chai, she has, to date, been able to meet only trustees, some major donors and a small number of staff.

She has also visited Ravenswood, "meeting residents, which was very important. I am keen to secure a future for Ravenswood and to improve their quality of life."

Ms Kerr looked forward to getting to know many more of the 1,200 employees and 800 volunteers and promised an "open door" policy.

"I want to let staff know they are valued and I support them. And if you find something which can be done differently, don't be frightened to speak up."

While admiring Norma Brier's contribution to improving the lives of "such a disadvantaged client group", she felt Norwood, and for that matter Chai, could benefit from "a trickle of change.

"If you stay in an organisation for too long, you can be a disservice to yourself and the organisation. Sometimes you need a fresh pair of eyes.

"Finding solutions to challenges is what brings me to work in the morning."

Raised in Edgware, Ms Kerr will commute to Norwood's Stanmore headquarters from her home in Radlett. She has two daughters and two stepchildren and is a Shenley Synagogue member.

Chai CHOOSES Anticoni

Rachel Anticoni will be Elaine Kerr's successor at Chai.

Ms Anticoni has spent three years as a management consultant working in the NHS, following six years as director of the Marie Curie hospice in Hampstead.

She is "very excited about further developing Chai's excellent services for the community. I am also looking forward to working alongside its committed and talented trustees, staff and volunteers."

Chai chair Louise Hager said "Rachel is ideally placed to continue Chai's innovation in cancer support".

Source: http://www.thejc.com/community/community-life/55498/norwood-chief-seeks-preserve-services

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Thursday, September 29, 2011

Russians issue health warning for Irish hopes

Simon Lewis, Rotorua

THE Russians may be winless on their World Cup debut appearance but having played both Ireland and Italy in the last week they are in the perfect position to assess the likely winner of Sunday’s crunch Pool C finale.

The Bears began their World Cup journey in New Zealand with a narrow loss to fellow minnows the United States before going down by eight tries to three in a 53-17 loss to Italy last Tuesday.

Ireland went one try better in the credit column and one less in the debit as they eased past the Russians 62-12 in Rotorua yesterday and both Australian-born lock Adam Byrnes and Welsh director of rugby Kingsley Jones will be backing the Irish to prevail in Dunedin this weekend.

“Ireland. Yes. I think it will be close. I don’t think there will be many points in the game itself, but from their victory against Australia I think they have a lot of self-belief,” said Melbourne Rebels lock Byrnes, who qualifies for Russia through his maternal grandparents.

“I just spoke to a couple of the Ireland boys in the changing room about the Australian game, and I think they took a lot out of that victory and they surprised even themselves.

“I watched them play Australia, and that was an unbelievable victory for them. That would have given them a great sense of belief moving forward to Italy next and then the quarter-finals. They’ve proven that by beating Australia, they can do anything. It’s just the consistency [they need] when it comes to the quarter-finals and maybe the semi-finals and final.

“As for today, they scored a lot of points so they’ve got a great attack. They did leak a couple of tries against Russia which they didn’t do against Australia. I think they’re a great side and they’re capable of anything. It’s just the consistency.”

Former Sale Sharks head coach Jones said his side handed Ireland victory by self destructing inside the opening 15 minutes.

“Our discipline, yellow cards, probably six penalties in the first six minutes; any team that does that will be under the cosh and concede points,” the Welshman said, before plumping for an Irish victory over the Italians.

“You’d have to say Ireland. The first thing is the amount of support they’ve got. I thought it was Thomond Park at the beginning to be honest with you.

“But, just the experience, I think. They’ve an experienced front five, Italy, but this Irish team have a lot of experience. It will be an interesting game. I wouldn’t put a lot of money on it but I’d say Ireland.”

Russia face another daunting challenge next Saturday when they conclude their Pool C schedule with a game against Australia in Nelson, and a chance for Byrnes to front up against the country of his birth.

“For me personally it’s a great way to finish off the World Cup campaign and also a dream match I never thought was possible,” he said.

 

Source: http://feeds.examiner.ie/~r/iesportsblog/~3/w02zuulCcec/post.aspx

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Can the Shoah ever be art?

Sitting down to write my review for Gramophone of Weinberg's The Passenger at the English National Opera, I struggled. How should I start? What criteria should I adopt? Here was a Holocaust opera by a Jew who had escaped the Shoah only for its furnace to consume his parents and sister. Should I even presume to review it?

Not many seemed to share my struggle. Most of my fellow critics rushed to applaud. A few, like Stephen Pollard in this paper, or Rupert Christiansen in the Telegraph ("a complete dud," he wrote), fumed.

One colleague emailed me the following day to say how furious he was at what he saw as the manipulation of the Holocaust to serve the theatre's cynical demands.

It was all so false, he fulminated, with the clearly well-fed members of the chorus and a scene where a group of female Auschwitz prisoners produced candles and had a little party for the main character's birthday. He told me that a friend had encountered a lady crying on the theatre's front steps. Her grandmother had been in the camps. "If they had been able to get candles," she raged, "they would have eaten them".

Yet why did I struggle? I didn't like the opera much, that was clear. But then, what has like got to do with something like this? The commitment of all involved seemed genuine. If some of the cast seemed a touch generalised or two-dimensional (the Jewish guards prowling and scraping like Alberich's Nibelungs in Wagner's Ring), well, everyone knows that opera singers aren't always the most refined actors. But they were trying, really trying, to evoke that terrible time. Lest we forget.

What's so wrong about that? In fact, doesn't it put them beyond criticism?

There was a girl in my Holocaust literature class at university who took exception to an assignment we were given to assess various survivors' memoirs. She thought it wrong to subject them to the kind of process one might accord to a Bronte novel. Yet how else do you assess art? And are Holocaust works art at all, or should they be viewed purely as historical documents? Would you ever want to read a review of The Diary of Anne Frank?

Arthur Miller's Broken Glass is enjoying a successful West End revival with Antony Sher. "Unmissable" proclaims one billboard. I didn't think so when I first saw it. Interesting, yes, in its presentation of a woman psychologically crippled by the Holocaust. Hardly unmissable. But then, perhaps this revival is unmissable for Sher, one of our finest actors. He's certainly the main reason to see it again.

But is that a moral way to approach it - as a showcase for great acting? Because then there's the danger that we're simply using the unimaginable evil of the Holocaust as the broadest of canvasses on which to paint Great Theatre. To show what we can do.

I'm reminded uncomfortably of Kate Winslet's admission in an episode of the comedy series Extras - scripted, I hasten to add, by Ricky Gervais - of why she was doing a Holocaust film. "If you do a film about the Holocaust, you're guaranteed an Oscar," deadpans Winslet. Not very long afterwards, she actually did win one for The Reader, a Holocaust film. "Told you," smirked Gervais on yet another awards show.

I'm not saying that she didn't deserve the accolade. I simply question why it is indeed true that Holocaust films win Oscars. Why it is that Holocaust plays tend to get well reviewed? Why it is that The Passenger got mostly great notices?

I'd hope it's for the struggle to show something for which it has been argued that a whole new language needs to be invented, because the words we have cannot do it justice. But I'm also aware that dramatic extremes, from Richard III onwards, allow artists to - in the nicest possible way - show off.

I haven't watched Schindler's List for about five years now. I won't. Because the last time I did, I found myself starting to admire Ralph Fiennes's performance as the Nazi for its own sake. I don't want to watch that film to see how brilliant Fiennes is. It doesn't feel right. And here's something I haven't told anyone yet. For the last few weeks I haven't been able to get John Williams's melancholy theme to the same film out of my head.

I was whistling it jauntily the other day. Until I caught myself. Shocked.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/comment-and-debate/comment/55577/can-shoah-ever-be-art

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JC MSFL Top-Scorers - Sept 23

There is a new joint-leader at the top of the JC MSFL Goals following Jamie Kent's exploits in the Sunday FA Cup. But there is still no budging Shirley Park hotshot Saul Conway who fired his seventh of the season in the cup win over Blizzard.

JC MSFL TOP-SCORERS (as of September 12)

7 ? Saul Conway (Shirley Park), Jamie Kent (Brixton)

6 - Joel Kutner (Los Blancos)

5 - Jamie Wolfson (NL Raiders A), Adam Hersh (Los Blancos), Mark Zealander (Redbridge JC B), Nicky Plotnek (Shirley Park),

4 ? Mike Pearson (Faithfold A), Gary Cohen (Montana), Glenn Michaels (Chigwell), Daniel Orgel (Redbridge JC B), Gav Noe (Hendon B), Joey Lazare (LM Lions B), Raph Noe (Hendon B), Dan Lipman (Glenthorne Utd A), Craig Sandford, Lewis Walker (all Glenthorne Utd B), Joey Marks (Camden Park), Terry Jeffries (Temple Fortune B), Matt Sheldon, , David Cohen, Max Worth, Dan Bell (all FC Team C)

3 ?Alex Kaye (Faithfold A), Jason Lindsay (Neasden A), Jerome Marks (Woodford), Dave Marcus (Harmen B), Ben Simons (Faithfold C), Richard Rosenthal (Glenthorne Utd B), Jamie Weinrich (Boca Jewniors), Mark Pasha, Ed Green (both Athletic Bilbaum), Daniel Bell (Brixton B), Matt Sheldon, Max Worth (both FC Team C)

2 ? Danny Kon (Hendon A), Adam Bolle, Ben Sollosi (both Redbridge JC A), Igal Yahya (NL Raiders A), David Dinkin (NL Raiders B), Jonny Ellis (Brady A), Danny Daggers (Neasden A), Alex Bourne (Harmen A), Daniel Castle (Chigwell), Rob Benson (Temple Fortune A), Richard Silver, Darren Davidson, David Khalastchi (all Camden Park), Michael Goldberg (Temple Fortune A), Daniel Orgel (Redbridge JC B), Ben Menaham, Jono Gaon (both Norstar B), Guy Marks (both Camden), Chaim Gothold (Hendon B), Doron Weinstein (Redbridge C), James Gold (LM Lions B), Adam Grossman (Faithfold B), Adam Goldsmith, Freddie Marks (both FC Team B), Ashley Stokes, Eli Baraty (both Catford), Stefan Benfredj, Sacha Benfredj, Simon Shelley (all Shirley), Sami Birnbaum (both Los Blancos), Simon Moses, Benny Goldberg (both Hendon C), Shai Revivo (Blizzard), Ashley Burns (SPEC), Rob Sanford, David Cohen, Dan Bell (FC Team C), Josh Greibach (Bilbaum)

1 ? Brad Frankel, Danny Sugarman, Mitch Lassman, Adam Stolerman, Fabio Revieccio, Sam Sollosi (all Redbridge A), Jonny Shapiro, Jonny Blain, Jacob Gold, Ben Ellis, Mark Leader (all Raiders A), Nicky Woolf, Mike Hershman, Gilad Kestenbaum (all NL Raiders B), Elliot Stern (Neasden A), Alex Bourne (Harmen A), Greg Corin Josh Bentley, Ari Last (Hendon A), Josh Gordon (Brady A), Oli Craig, Josh Newman, Yoav Lebens, Pete Lazard (all LM Lions A), Alan Hart, Nick Gold (both Southgate Harmen A), Lorian Madanes, Joe Cohen, Alex Levack (all Faithfold A), Matt Drage, Simon Peterman and Jules Noti (all FC Team A), Eddie Manson, Bradley Wine, Jonny Beilin, Matt Geey, James Abrams, Dan Ash, Adam Levine (all Oakwood), Dan Castle, Craig Pearl, Paul Lenchner, Antony Mendel, Jon Swead (all Chigwell), Darren Cohen, Nick Goodmaker, Jordan Segal, Simon Lindall, Mitch Green (all Montana), Paul Stein, Doron Hershkorn, Josh Sasto, Dan Amram (all Harmen B), Jonny Cutter (Neasden B), Jeff Gotch (Norstar A), Jason Miller, Jeff Bathija (both Temple Fortune A), Rory Lincoln, Alon Hershkorn (both Brixton A), Parys Hammond, Chanania Englesman, Pinty Baddiel, Motty Korman (all Hendon B), Dan Hildebrand (Faithfold B), Dan Yossman, Matt Smith, Matt Kleinman (all Faithfold C), Josh Wynne (Glenthorne A), Phillip Braham, Emile Ben-Atar, Ricky Shafier, David Silver, Daniel Afreds (all FC Team B), Daniel Needleman, Dan Beneth, Jake Saunders, Josh Marks, Leo Feldman, (all Camden), David Elf (all Lions B), Adam Kantor, David Castle, David Dobrin (both Redbridge C), James Rubin, Andy Levy, Dan Lassman (all Glenthorne B), Jonny Kay (Norstar B), Yosh Radomsky, Dovid Greenberg, Benji Englesmen (Los Blancos), Dean Shaw, Joe Stolerman, Ben Roback (all Blizzard), Aron Lewis, Tony Chadwick (both Neasden C), Dov Birnmbaum (Hendon B), Gary Chajet (UJIA), Adam Redhouse, Dan Mitman, Stefan Benfredj (both Shirley), Andy Levy (Glenthorne B), James Lester, Barry Green, Paul Black (all Team JLGB), Steve Keller, Yoni Bord, Joel Isaacs (all Catford), Craig Cohen (SPEC), Rob Jay, Jonathan Dubiner (both Temple Fortune B), Ben Hildebrand, Ollie Kay, Marc Maynard, Sam Mogilner, Josh Dagul, Kane Alexander (all Brady B), Joel Newman (Boca Jewniors), Sam Roth, Adam Landes Joe Bekhor (both Athletic Bilbaum), Matt Bennett, Adam Newton, Matt Greene, Rob Samuelson, James Franks, Toby Katz, Matt Keston and Sam Morell (all, NL Raiders C), David Wexler, Adam Aminoff, Avi Nejad, Jamie Cooper, Dean Marks, Eitan Ben-Zion (all FC Team C), Dave Sawyer (Temple Fortune B), Richard Hayim, Sam Marchant, Amit Dinowitz (all Athletico Finchley)

Email dcaro@thejc.com if your goals have not been added.

Source: http://www.thejc.com/sport/sport-news/55514/jc-msfl-top-scorers-sept-23

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Luis Valbuena's slam powers Columbus past Pawtucket: Minor-league report

Drennan's RBI single lifts Aeros in 12th; infield mistake dooms Kinston; Crushers post road win in Traverse City.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 5, Pawsox 2: Luis Valbuena hit a grand slam in the second inning and Corey Kluber (7-8, 5.61) pitched 6 scoreless innings as Columbus beat host Pawtucket. Kluber recorded 11 strikeouts and walked five. Valbuena, who is batting .299, hit his 16th homer of the season. The Clippers' Cord Phelps doubled in the first inning and then scored on a single by Jerad Head. After the Pawsox threatened a rally with two runs in the bottom of the ninth, Josh Judy replaced Zach Putnam, and earned his 20th save.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 4, Senators 3: LF John Drennen's (.243) RBI single in the bottom of the 12th allowed RF Ben Copeland to score the winning run. Aeros pinch hitter Kyle Bellow's (.234) RBI single in the bottom of the ninth scored Drennen to send the game into extra innings. An RBI double by Copeland in the second inning scored CF Jordan Henry (.253).

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Nationals 6, Indians 3: A mishandled popup was the Indians' undoing in the 11th inning Tuesday. The Potomac Nationals' Francisco Soriano hit the popup on the infield. None of the four K-Tribe infielders took charge and the ball dropped, scoring Sandy Leon from second base. The K-Tribe had tied the game in the ninth on RBI singles by PH Jeremie Tice (.268) and C Roberto Perez (.233).

A Lake County Captains

The Captains were idle Tuesday night.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 4, Beach Bums 1: Jordan Rivera's RBI double and Kyle Boe's RBI single paced Lake Erie in the win at Traverse City, Mich.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/luis_valbuenas_slam_powers_col.html

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Justin Germano fires perfect game as Columbus tops Syracuse: Minor-league report

Akron can't overcome early deficit vs. Trenton; Kinston's Brach struggles in loss; Crushers lose in 11 innings.



germano-mug-tribe-second.jpgView full sizeJustin Germano pitched just the fifth perfect game in International League history, and the first ever for the Clippers.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 3, Chiefs 0: Justin Germano (1-2) pitched a perfect game for Columbus, as the Clippers won at Syracuse, N.Y., in an International League game. Germano, a 6-2 right-hander, struck out seven in facing the minimum of 27 batters. He threw 95 pitches, and 69 were strikes.

In the bottom of the ninth, Germano retired Jhonatan Solano on a fly ball to center fielder Tim Fedroff, and then Jeff Frazier on a fly ball to left fielder Jerad Head. He finished with a flourish, fanning Corey Brown looking.

Fedroff slugged a double and triple and drove in two runs.

Notes: Germano, 28, pitched the first perfect game in Clippers history and the first thrown in the International League since 2003. It is the sixth no-hitter in Clippers history. Germano's ERA is 3.65 in 441/3 innings.

He has been used as a starter and reliever, and Tuesday's gem was his first complete game of the season. He has three saves. A native of Pasadena, Calif., he signed a minor-league contract with the Indians on March 24, 2010. He has appeared with the Indians this season in relief, compiling an 0-1 record in nine appearances, with a 5.68 ERA in 12 innings.



AA Akron Aeros

Thunder 4, Aeros 3: Akron rallied for three runs in the bottom of the eighth, but lost an Eastern League game at Canal Park to Trenton, N.J. Akron starter T. J. McFarland (7-5), was the starter and losing pitcher. He struck out six in five innings, and gave up three runs, but just one earned.

Notes: Akron was 2-for-9 with runners in scoring position.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Dash 9, Indians 2: Kinston, N.C., starter Brett Brach (6-7) gave up eight runs (seven earned) and nine hits in 5 innings, as the K-Tribe lost a Carolina League game at Winston-Salem, N.C.

A Lake County Captains

The Captains were off on Tuesday.

Notes: First baseman Jesus Aguilar has swung a potent bat. He leads the team with 68 RBI and 19 home runs, and is hitting .292 in 346 at-bats. Four pitchers lead the Captains in victories: Cole Cook (5-10), Michael Goodnight (5-9), Mike Rayl (5-5) and J.D. Reichenbach (5-1).

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

The Scrappers were off on Tuesday.

Notes: Outfielder Jordan Smith leads Mahoning Valley with a .344 batting average, with 44 hits in 128 at-bats. With 16 walks, his on-base percentage is .430.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Wild Things 5, Crushers 4 (11): Robert Wendzicki (0-2), surrendered a solo home run in the bottom of the 11th inning, and Lake Erie lost a Frontier League game in Washington, Pa.

Notes: The Wild Things avoided a three-game sweep. Lake Erie collected 36 hits in the three games.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/07/justin_germano_fires_perfect_g.html

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Manny Acta's coaching staff rocked again as Tim Belcher steps down as Cleveland Indians pitching coach

Pitching coach Tim Belcher steps down a day after bench coach Tim Tolman resigned to deal with Parkinson's Disease.

belcher-charts-vert-cc.jpgTim Belcher, Indians pitching coach, steps down.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Manager Manny Acta's coaching staff suffered another loss today when pitching coach Tim Belcher stepped down to spend more time with his family. Bullpen coach Scott Radinksy is believed to be a leading candidate to replace him.

Before Wednesday's season finale, bench coach Tim Tolman said he was stepping aside to deal with Parkinson's Disease, an affliction that he was diagnosed with two years ago. First base coach Sandy Alomar Jr. was named the new bench coach for 2012, but he's a candidate to replace Ozzie Guillen as manager of the Chicago White Sox.

GM Chris Antonetti and Acta will address the coaching staff situation and other offseason matters with reporters today at Progressive Field.

Pitching, since the second half of the 2010 season, has been the strength of the Indians. Acta continually credited Belcher and Radinsky with the staff's progress.

This was Belcher's second year on Acta's staff. Before that the 14-year big league  veteran spent eight years working with pitchers throughout the Indians system. It's believed he'll assume that role again.

Belcher, in a statement, said, "After much reflection and deliberation, I have decided not to return as the pitching coach for the 2012 season.

"When I accepted the position two years ago, I understood and embraced the challenges of the role.  Over the last two years I was fully committed to the responsibilities of the job and enjoyed it.

"However, as I began to look forward to 2012, I felt that I would not be able to balance the changing needs of my family and the demands of the job. As a result, I have decided that it would be best for me to step away from coaching at this time."

Under Belcher, Justin Masterson became the Indians ace this season. When the Indians acquired from Boston in 2009 he was a pitcher bouncing between the rotation and bullpen. The Indians made a commitment to him as a starter and this year it paid off.

Masterson went 12-10 with a 3.21 ERA in 34 appearances, including 33 starts. He threw a career high 216 innings and led the team in strikeouts with 158.

Josh Tomlin won 12 games before being sidelined by a right elbow injury and Carlos Carrasco showed progress before he underwent Tommy John surgery. Jeanmar Gomez arrived from Class AAA Columbus in late August and won five straight starts.

On the negative side, former ace Fausto Carmona faded. Carmona went 7-15 with 5.25 ERA. He finished first in runs allowed, second in earned runs allowed and third in losses in the AL.

The bullpen was the hook that the Indians hung their hat this season. Radinsky, who made 557 relief appearances in the big leagues, did a nice job with the pen. They ended the season at 27-21 with 38 saves and the fifth best ERA in the AL at 3.71.

Ruben Niebla, Indians pitching coach at Class AAA Columbus, is another possible candidate for a spot on Acta's staff. He was credited with helped Gomez and David Huff at Columbus this season.

Clippers manager Mike Sarbaugh, who has won two straight national Class AAA titles, should get some consideration as well. Even if the Alomar stays with the Indians, they're going to need a first base coach.

 

 

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/09/manny_actas_coaching_staff_roc.html

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South Wales Evening Post published Swansea's Glynn Vivian Art Gallery gearing up for £6m...

Article

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Valbuena's walk-off HR is latest late-inning magic for Clippers: Minor-league report

Bellows drives in a pair in Aeros win, Popham struggles for Kinston, Montero's homer not enough for Captains, Scrappers falter late to Yankees, Lake Erie wins at Florence.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 5, Tides 4: SS Luis Valbuena (.309) slugged a two-run homer with two outs in the bottom of the ninth as the Clippers completed a four-game sweep of Norfolk (Va.), with the last three on walk-off hits. Valbuena was 4-for-4 with a walk in the International League game at Columbus. The homer was his 13th.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 3, Thunder 2: Akron third baseman Kyle Bellows had two hits and two RBI to lead Akron to an Eastern League victory at Trenton, N.J. Bellows, who has 34 RBI on the year, also stole his fourth base of the season.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Pelicans 5, Indians 3: Marty Popham (4-2) gave up six hits and five earned runs in six innings, and Kinston, N.C., lost a home game to Myrtle Beach, S.C., in the Carolina League.

A Lake County Captains

Loons 4, Captains 3: Great Lakes scored three runs in the bottom of the sixth and defeated Lake County in a Midwest League game. C Moises Montero hit his second homer for the Captains, a solo shot in the sixth.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Yankees 7, Scrappers 4: Mahoning Valley gave up three runs in the eighth inning and lost a New York-Penn league game to Staten Island, N.Y., in Niles.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 4, Freedom 3: Florence, Ky., stranded a runner at third three times over the final four innings, and visiting Lake Erie won the Frontier League game.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/valbuenas_walk-off_hr_is_lates.html

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Minor league notes for Cleveland Indians' 5 farm teams and independent Lake Erie

Some stat trends for Columbus Clippers, Akron Aeros, Kinston Indians, Lake County Captains, Mahoning Valley Scrappers and Crushers' players.

Lake Erie Crushers.jpeg

MINOR LEAGUE NOTES

AAA Columbus Clippers

Notes: RH Justin Germano, who pitched a perfect game in Tuesday’s 3-0 win over the Syracuse (N.Y.) Chiefs, has struck out 33 and not walked a batter in his last 35 2/3 innings....OF Shelley Duncan (.214) was 2-for-5 with a three-run home run in the Clippers' 6-5 loss to the Chiefs in Syracuse on Thursday night. He was 0-for-22 in his previous six games....1B-DH Nick Johnson (.220) is 8-for-25 (.320) with three home runs, two doubles and five walks in his last eight games....OF Jerad Head (.282) was 2-for-5 with a double on Thursday night, after going 2-for-26 (.077) in his previous eight games....RH closer Josh Judy (4-2, 14 saves, 2.65) has not allowed an earned run in his last 15 games, pitching 17 innings with 23 strikeouts, and allowing nine hits and eight walks....RH reliever Chen Lee (2-0, 0.61) has pitched 14 2/3 innings with the Clippers, striking out 22, walking four and allowing 11 hits.

AA Akron Aeros

Notes: 1B-OF Matt McBride (.294) belted two home runs in the Aeros' 7-4 win over the Erie (Pa.) SeaWolves on Thursday night, and is 10-for-26 (.385) with three doubles, two homers and seven RBI in seven games since returning to Akron from Columbus....OF Jordan Henry (.263) is 12-for-40 (.300) with eight walks, nine RBI, eight runs and four stolen bases in his last 10 games....LH T.J. McFarland (7-5, 3.97) is 5-1 with a 2.20 ERA in his last seven games, striking out 34 and walking 12 in 45 innings....LH Drew Pomeranz (0-1, 2.57), the Indians’ first pick and the fifth overall in the 2010 draft, has struck out 17, walked six and allowed 10 hits in 14 innings while making three starts with the Aeros. He is 3-3 with a 1.98 ERA in 18 combined starts with Akron and Kinston, striking out 112, walking 38 and holding opponents to a .202 batting average, including just three home runs, in 91 innings....RH reliever Matt Langwell (4-1, three saves, 2.72) is 2-0 in his last five games, giving up one run and striking out 11 in 8 1/3 innings....RH Austin Adams (7-8, 3.99) is 2-0 with a 2.84 ERA in 25 1/3 innings over his last four starts.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Notes: The Indians lost to the Dash, 6-3, at Winston-Salem (N.C.) on Thursday night....RH closer Preston Guilmet (1-1, 1.70) is second in the Carolina League with 26 saves. In 42 1/3 innings over 38 games, he has struck out 45, walked seven and held opponents to a .183 batting average....RH reliever Toru Murata (0-2, two saves, 3.28) has pitched 10 scoreless innings in his last seven games, earning one save while allowing just two hits, striking out 13 and walking four....DH-IF Jeremie Tice (.275) is 12-for-39 (.308) with four homers, two doubles and 10 RBI in his last 10 games....OF Tyler Holt (.267) is 16-for-38 (.421) with two doubles, one triple, six walks, 11 runs and three stolen bases in his last 10 games. He has 25 stolen bases in 30 attempts this season.

A Lake County Captains

Notes: OF Carlos Moncrief (.243) is 13-for-43 (.302) with five home runs, one double, one triple, 13 runs and 10 RBI in his last 10 games....OF Brian Heere (.256) is 13-for-31 (.419) with a homer and double in his last nine games....SS Kevin Fontanez (.200), at DH, was 2-for-3 with an RBI, run and walk in Thursday night's 5-4 Captains win over the Bowling Green (Ky.) Hot Rods. He had been 1-for-20 in his previous five games....RH reliever Clayton Ehlert (1-2, 12 saves, 1.74) has allowed one earned run on 10 hits in his last 18 innings. 

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Notes: The Scrappers lost, 10-7, to the Lowell (Mass.) Spinners on Thursday night....SS Tony Wolters (.313) is on an eight-game hitting streak, going 16-for-33 (.485) with three doubles, four walks, five RBI, six runs and three stolen bases....2B Todd Hankins (.244) is 10-for-30 (.333) with two doubles, one homer, six RBI and two stolen bases in his last eight games....RH reliever Cody Allen (2-1, 2.45) has pitched six scoreless innings, striking out 11, in his last three games....RH reliever Nathan Striz (2-2, one save, 2.45) is 2-1 with one save and a 1.93 ERA in his last eight games, allowing just nine hits in 14 innings.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Notes: The Crushers lost, 8-2, to the Joliet (Ill.) Jammers on Thursday night....3B Jason Taylor (.269) is 14-for-40 (.350) with five doubles, two homers, 10 RBI, 10 walks and seven runs in his last 12 games....RH Randy Sturgill has made four starts and four relief appearances for the Crushers, going 4-0 with a 2.73 ERA in 26 1/3 innings, striking out 17 and walking six.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/07/minor_league_notes_5.html

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Minor league notes on players at Columbus, Akron, Kinston, Lake County, Mahoning Valley and Lake Erie

Clippers' Jared Goedert continues his strong August hitting. Updates on local players Anthony Gallas with Kinston and Alex Lavisky with Mahoning Valley.

MINOR LEAGUE NOTES

AAA Columbus Clippers

Notes: Going into Tuesday night’s game against Buffalo, 3B Jared Goedert (.262) was 7-for-19 (.368) with three home runs and a double in his last five games. In his last 24 games, Goedert was 29-for-78 (.372) with seven homers in his last 24 games. Goedert began the season on the disabled list with a right abdominal strain. After slugging three home runs and two doubles in 29 at bats to get his season going at Akron, Goedert started slowly with the Clippers, but now has 14 doubles and 11 homers for them in 233 at bats. Goedert, 26 and a right-handed hitter, was a ninth-round pick by the Indians out of Kansas State in the 2006 draft. Last season at Akron, he hit .325 with 14 doubles and seven homers in 163 at bats, before being promoted to Columbus, where he hit .261 with 23 doubles, one triple and 20 homers in 318 at bats....OF Tim Fedroff (.265) was 13-for-35 (.371) with four doubles, six RBI, six runs and five walks in his last nine games....2B Cord Phelps (.295) was 9-for-33 (.273) with four doubles, one triple and one home run in his last eight games....IF Argenis Reyes (.308) was 11-for-31 (.355) with two doubles and four RBI in his last nine games....LH reliever Nick Hagadone (4-2, four saves, 3.30) was 2-1 with two saves and a 1.85 ERA in his last 16 games. In 24 1/3 innings, he had struck out 31 and walked five....RH Paolo Espino (1-1, 5.31) was 1-0 with a 1.53 ERA in his last seven games — including two starts — striking out 16 while allowing four walks and 13 hits in 17 2/3 innings.

AA Akron Aeros

Notes: Going into Tuesday night’s game at Bowie, the Aeros were 5-for-59 (.085) with one run scored in their last two games, both losses....SS Juan Diaz (.255) was 9-for-28 (.321) with a home run in his last seven games....LH starter Matt Packer (7-11, 4.18) was leading the Eastern League with 148 2/3 innings pitched. Packer is 5-3 with a 2.00 ERA in his last nine games, striking out 60, walking 10 and allowing 55 hits in 67 1/3 innings. He pitched at least seven innings in eight of the nine starts. Packer has been named the Indians Minor League Player of the Week for last week, as he won both of his starts, allowing one run (earned, 0.56 ERA) on eight hits and two walks in 16 innings, with 16 strikeouts. Packer pitched eight innings in each start....RH closer Cory Burns’ (2-4, 2.29) team-record 31 saves were 11 more than any other pitcher in the Eastern League. He had pitched nine scoreless innings in his last eight games, earning four saves. Overall, Burns had struck out 57, walked 11 and held batters to a .217 average with three homers in 51 innings....RH reliever Tyler Sturdevant (3-1, two saves, 3.00) was 1-0 with two saves and a 1.72 ERA in 15 2/3 innings over his last nine games, fanning 20 while giving up 10 hits and four walks....RH reliever Bryan Price (2-3, 3.07) had pitched 7 1/3 scoreless innings, giving up three hits and one walk with three strikeouts, in his last five games....RH reliever Bryce Stowell (0-1, 2.61) has struck out 16, walked six and given up seven hits in 10 1/3 innings (eight games) with the Aeros.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Notes: Going into Tuesday night’s game at Fredrick, RH reliever Toru Murata (2-2, two saves, 1.99) had pitched 22 2/3 straight scoreless innings. Overall, Murata had struck out 50, walked 10 and held batters to a .190 average, including one home run, in 40 2/3 innings....RH closer Preston Guilmet (1-1, 1.66) was leading the Carolina League with 33 saves. In 54 1/3 innings, he had struck out 56, walked nine and held batters to a .198 average. In his last nine games, Guilmet had pitched 11 scoreless innings and earned seven saves....RH reliever Kyle Landis (8-1, two saves, 1.91) was 0-1 in his last two games, striking out 10 but giving up five runs in four innings. Prior to those two games, Landis was 8-0 with two saves and an 0.94 ERA in 38 1/3 innings, fanning 40 while holding opponents to 21 hits, including one homer, and seven walks....LH Francisco Jimenez (3-3, 3.43) was 0-1 with a 1.25 ERA in his last six games — including starts in his last four games — with 27 strikeouts in 21 2/3 innings....1B Jesus Aguilar (.233) was 5-for-13 (.385) with three home runs and seven RBI in his last three games....3B Adam Abraham (.252) was 6-for-15 (.400) with four doubles and two stolen bases in his last three games....OF Jordan Casas (.291) was 12-for-34 (.353) with two doubles, one triple, six RBI and five runs in his last nine games.... OF Anthony Gallas, from Strongsville High School and Kent State, returned to action on Sunday, going 1-for-3. The right-handed hitter had not played since being hit on the hand by a pitch on July 31. Gallas started the season at Lake County, where he hit .314 in 207 at bats. At the time of his promotion to Kinston, Gallas was leading the Midwest League with 24 doubles. He also hit six home runs and had 21 RBI for the Captains. With Kinston, Gallas is hitting .206 in 131 at bats, with 10 doubles, two homers and 21 RBI. Before going 0-for-5 in the two games prior to his injury, Gallas was 10-for-29 (.345) with six doubles and eight RBI in his previous eight games.

A Lake County Captains

Notes: Going into Tuesday night’s game against Fort Wayne, SS Ronny Rodriguez (.254) was 13-for-36 (.361) with five doubles, one triple, two home runs, six RBI, four walks and three stolen bases in his last 10 games....OF Luigi Rodriguez (.281) was 13-for-41 (.317) with two doubles in his last 10 games....OF Brian Heere (.260) was 7-for-22 (.318) with two doubles, one homer and five walks in his last seven games....SS Nick Bartolone (.225) was 9-for-30 (.300) with three doubles and a triple in his last nine games....RH reliever Cody Allen was 2-0 and had pitched 13 scoreless innings in five appearances with the Captains, striking out 20 and giving up four walks and nine hits. Allen was promoted from Mahoning Valley, where he was 3-1 with a 2.14 ERA in 14 games, fanning 42 and walking nine in 33 2/3 innings, while holding batters to a .183 average and one home run....RH closer Clayton Ehlert (1-2, 14 saves, 1.62) had pitched 10 scoreless innings and earned four saves in his last eight games, giving up five hits and a walk while fanning four....LH J.D. Reichenbach (7-1, 3.23) was 3-0 with a 2.12 ERA in his last seven games — the last four of those as a starter. He had struck out 19, walked five and allowed 31 hits in 29 2/3 innings....RH Dale Dickerson (2-2, three saves, 2.24) was 0-1 with one save and a 1.88 ERA in his last eight games, fanning 13 while allowing 10 hits and eight walks in 14 1/3 innings.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Notes: Going into Tuesday night’s game against Auburn, catcher Alex Lavisky — a 2010 Lakewood St. Edward High School graduate who was drafted in the eighth round by the Indians that June — was hitting .205 in 215 at bats for the Scrappers, with 14 doubles, four home runs and 20 RBI. He began the season with the Lake County Captains, hitting .207 in 184 at bats with 10 doubles, eight homers and 24 RBI....OF Bryson Myles (.300) was on a six-game hitting streak, going 8-for-21 (.381) with three doubles, five RBI, four runs, five walks and two stolen bases. He had 17 stolen bases in 20 attempts overall....OF Jordan Smith (.335) was 10-for-26 (.385) with one double, seven runs, four RBI and eight walks in his last nine games....SS Tony Wolters (.303) was 14-for-47 (.298) with two doubles and three stolen bases in his last 12 games....RH reliever Enosil Tejeda (2-2, nine saves, 3.54) had struck out 49 and walked 14 in 28 innings, holding batters to a .184 average and no home runs....LH Danny Jimenez (3-3, 2.52) is 2-2 with a 1.72 ERA in his last six starts, fanning 21, walking nine and allowing 28 hits in 31 1/3 innings....RH Joseph Colon (4-3, 3.38) is 4-1 with a 2.58 ERA in his last nine games (eight starts), fanning 33, walking 16 and allowing 34 hits in 45 1/3 innings.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Notes: Going into Tuesday night’s game at Joliet, IF Andrew Davis (.336) was hitting .415 (73-for-176) in his last 44 games, with 19 doubles, three triples, six homers and 45 RBI....IF Jason Taylor (.290) was 23-for-57 (.404) with eight doubles, one triple, three homers, 15 RBI, 11 runs and six stolen bases in seven attempts in his last 16 games....Catcher Brian Erie was hitting .379 (25-for-66) with three doubles and 13 RBI in 17 games with the Crushers....Catcher Kyle Shaffer (.219) was 7-for-23 (.304) with one homer, one double, four RBI and four runs in his last seven games....The Crushers are getting excellent relief pitching from five right-handers: Ruben Flores (2-3, 17 saves, 2.57, 66 strikeouts in 49 innings, allowing 27 hits); Chris Allen (2-2, two saves, 1.69); Kelyn Schellenberg (3-2, three saves, 1.85); Paul Daniels (5-1, 2.32); Travis Risser (2-5, six saves, 3.33)....RH Thomas Campbell is 3-0 with a 2.72 ERA in eight games (seven starts) with the Crushers, allowing just 21 hits in 39 2/3 innings.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/minor_league_notes_on_players.html

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Gilmour Academy wins boys Division III golf sectional: High School Roundup

A roundup of Northeast Ohio athletic events.

Source: http://highschoolsports.cleveland.com/news/article/4921867363728608238

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Morning Call: Becoming very warm - Mist and fog clearing, Sep 29 - 06:03

Very warm with mist and fog clearing Good morning, There are some fairly dense mist and fog patches around this morning, but the good news is that these should be clearing fair quickly. A dry air mass over the country then gives lots of sunshine for most, and it is going to be feeling very warm too. I think that we could be reaching 27C today across southeast England.

Further west there will be more cloud; this mainly affecting Ireland and western Scotland. There is the chance of spot of rain here, but this risk is considered low through daylight hours. However, the rain threat for western Ireland and western Scotland increases through tonight.

Have a great day. Simon me at simon.keeling@weatheronline.co.uk


Source: http://feeds.weatheronline.co.uk/~r/weatheronline/~3/nD5hpCdtihE/reports

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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

St. Louis Cardinals shut out Houston Astros, clinch playoff spot as Atlanta Braves complete collapse

The Cardinals will open the postseason on Saturday at NL East champion Philadelphia.

cardinals.JPGView full sizeCardinals pitcher Chris Carpenter is drenched as the team celebrates after clinching the National League wild card Wednesday in Houston.

HOUSTON — Chris Carpenter and the St. Louis Cardinals completed one of baseball's greatest comebacks, clinching the NL wild card Wednesday night with an 8-0 win over Houston and a later loss by Atlanta.

The Cardinals got their playoff spot when the Braves fell to Philadelphia, 4-3, in 13 innings.

St. Louis trailed Atlanta by 10 1/2 games on Aug. 25. The Cardinals won 23 of their last 31 games.

The Cardinals will open the postseason on Saturday at NL East champion Philadelphia. In the other NL playoff matchup, Arizona visits Milwaukee.

Carpenter (11-9) struck out 11 and allowed two hits in his 15th career complete-game shutout as St. Louis kept up its improbable September charge.

"We had nothing to lose. We were already out of it," Carpenter said. "People were telling us we were done. We decided to go out and play and not embarrass ourselves and do what we can. We played ourselves back into it."

The Cardinals poured onto the field after Carpenter fielded J.D. Martinez's weak grounder for the final out. The celebration was brief and muted, as the team raced into the clubhouse to watch the end of the game in Atlanta.

"It was exciting, there's no doubt about it," Carpenter said. "The way these guys have played the past month and a half has been amazing, every single night grinding, playing their butts off, not giving up.

"We continued to give ourselves an opportunity and now we are here."

The teams entered Wednesday's regular-season finales with 89-72 records.

Atlanta's game started an hour earlier, but the Cardinals virtually took away any hope for a Houston victory in the first inning of their contest, jumping to a 5-0 lead against Brett Myers (7-14).

Albert Pujols and Lance Berkman drove in runs with singles, and David Freese doubled to left-center before Myers even recorded an out. Berkman scored when Skip Schumaker's hard grounder ricocheted off Myers' glove for an infield hit, and Freese came home on Nick Punto's single to right.

Carpenter handled the rest.

He had struggled at Minute Maid Park lately, going 0-3 with a 4.62 ERA in his last five starts here, but he was in total command from the start on Wednesday, striking out five of the first nine hitters he faced. He also had an RBI single in the third to drive in Freese, who reached base when right fielder Brian Bogusevic dropped his fly ball for an error.

Freese led off the fifth with a double to right center, the Cardinals' 10th hit of the game. Myers, 4-0 with a 1.24 ERA in his last five starts, hadn't allowed more than nine hits in a start since Aug. 6.

Freese later scored on Schumaker's groundout to shortstop Clint Barmes for a 7-0 lead, equaling the most runs given up by Myers in 33 starts this season. Wilton Lopez replaced Myers for the start of the sixth.

As the Astros batted in the seventh, the left-field scoreboard posted a 3-3 tie in the Phillies-Braves game, prompting a roar from the large contingent of Cardinals' fans in the stands behind the St. Louis dugout.

Carpenter then struck out Bogusevic and Jimmy Paredes to wrap up another easy inning. Allen Craig hit a solo homer in the ninth off Lance Pendleton.

The Cardinals huddled around a television in the clubhouse cafeteria after their victory.

Only three weeks ago, the Cardinals had virtually lost all hope.

"There was absolute doubt from us," Punto said. "I remember early on in September, we were like, 'Let's just finish up strong for the fans. Let's give them something to come out and watch.'

"When you're 10 1/2 games out, that's a hole you can't climb out of," he said, "unless you get a lot of help."

The Cardinals were loose and relaxed -- and confident -- before the game.

Champagne was ordered for a potential postgame celebration and someone wrote, "Happy Flight! After Game" on a marker board in the clubhouse.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/sports/index.ssf/2011/09/st_louis_cardinals_shut_out_ho.html

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