Month: January 2010 (Page 46 of 65)

Donovan has key presence in Everton debut

Landon Donovan

Earlier today, Landon Donovan debuted with English Premier League club Everton and earned an assist in the 2-2 draw. The talented striker is currently on loan for ten weeks from the Los Angeles Galaxy.

From the Los Angeles Times:

The lead lasted just 16 minutes. Denilson charged down a clearance, and the ball fell to Andrei Arshavin on the edge of the penalty area. Arshavin fed Eduardo da Silva, who touched a pass back to Denilson and his low strike deflected off Osman past U.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard.

With snow blowing around the stadium, Donovan came close to restoring Everton’s lead at the start of the second half. The American weaved into the penalty area, but his curling shot drifted wide.

Everton replaced Donovan with Diniyar Bilyaletdinov in the 68th minute and went ahead again in the 81st minute. Steven Pienaar raced onto a pass from Tim Cahill and chipped past goalkeeper Manuel Almunia.

Donovan’s two previous attempts abroad were met with mixed results. Regardless, with a record of 5-8-7, Everton can certainly benefit from his services.

But don’t fret — Donovan will be back on the Galaxy in March. Also, the stint in England shouldn’t be a problem with the U.S. National Team and the upcoming World Cup.

G-Town beats UConn with gritty comeback

Georgetown looked absolutely dreadful in the first half, and trailed by 19 points early in the second, but the Hoyas erased that deficit behind a brilliant 28-point second half by Austin Freeman. (He finished with 33 points, seven boards and three assists.)

The Hoyas got going when they started to push the tempo, effectively beating the Huskies at their own game. UConn had a chance to take the lead, down one, with under a minute to play. But the Hoyas played tough defense, survived a couple of missed shots and eventually forced a turnover. The Huskies still haven’t won away from home.

It looks like it will be another rough-and-tumble year in the Big East.

Davydenko sneaks by Federer, will face Nadal in Qatar final

Well, we can all thank Nickolay Davydenko for spoiling the year’s first chance at an important Rafael Nadal/Roger Federer collision. Davydenko upset Federer 6-4, 6-4 on Friday in the Qatar Open semifinal for his second-straight win against the world’s top player.

“I’d beaten him once, so I knew I could beat him again. Then I thought, why not this time? I concentrated more on baseline and serves,” Davydenko, who has lost 12 times to Federer, told a news conference.

“In the second set, it was getting tougher as both of us were tired and couldn’t run fast. It was a difficult situation but fortune favoured me. I think my serve has improved lately.”

Federer committed 37 unforced errors and had no answer to many of the world number six’s powerful cross-court shots.

“He deserved the lead, held it and finished the game. Hats off to him. It isn’t that I played too badly, but he played better,” said Federer.

I just wish I could watch the match at home. Davydenko will undoubtedly have a tough time against world No. 2 Nadal who is blowing by opponents once again. A victory on Sunday would be a nice confidence boost for both players as they head into the Australian Open, which runs from Jan. 18-31. Nadal won that Grand Slam last year in a grueling five-setter against Federer.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

Vitale: Pete Carroll “beat the posse”

During the broadcast of the Georgetown/UConn game on ESPN, Dick Vitale commented on the report that Pete Carroll has signed a deal to coach the Seattle Seahawks.

“Well, you know, to me, he beat the posse. Posse coming after him down there, the NCAA. He takes the money, the program gets hurt in the future. I really have a problem with that. These guys go on, they leave the program, take their cash and run. Because, you know, the NCAA is still investigating them for Reggie Bush. And I just feel that he beat the posse, got his cash, and off he went.”

— Dick Vitale, during Georgetown/UConn broadcast (1/9/10)

Report: Seahawks hire Pete Carroll

Adam Schefter of ESPN.com reports that Pete Carroll has reached an agreement to become the next head coach of the Seattle Seahawks.

Carroll was fully expected to be introduced by the Seahawks as early as Monday, assuming they comply with the Rooney Rule this weekend.

The hangup could be locating a candidate to interview that would put the Seahawks in compliance with the rule, which requires teams to interview a minority candidate for head-coaching hires.

But the bottom line is, Carroll’s agreement with Seattle is “100 percent done,” one NFL source close to the situation said.

In a text message to ESPN’s Chris Mortensen on Friday, Carroll said, “You know I haven’t responded to a NFL question in two years.”
But a league source told Mortensen that Carroll was trying to persuade USC offensive coordinator Jeremy Bates to join him in Seattle — as opposed to Bates pursuing the same position with the Chicago Bears.

First and foremost, I don’t think Dan Rooney had this situation in mind when he and the league established the “Rooney Rule.” It’s crap that a minority will be brought in to interview for a position that he has zero chance of getting and therefore, the Seahawks should be fined just like the Lions were in 2003 when they hired Steve Mariucci without complying with the rule.

As far as Carroll goes, we can speculate all we want about why he chose now to leave USC and pursue the NFL again. Maybe it was money, maybe it was the perfect situation, or maybe he’s running from something. Either way, he’s going to be on the Seahawks sidelines next year and if I were a fan, I’d have mixed feelings about the deal.

There’s no doubt that Carroll is an outstanding college coach, but he’s already failed twice at the pro level. That’s not to say that the third time won’t be a charm, but I would have my doubts if I were a player or a fan, because his methods haven’t worked before. Granted, he ran a pro style system while at USC so in terms of game planning, he should be fine. But his ra-ra approach didn’t work with the Jets or Patriots, so it stands to reason that it won’t work in Seattle.

There’s already a rumor making its way around the net that Carroll might target Matt Leinart to be his quarterback. But as of right now, that makes little to no sense. First of all, the Cardinals aren’t going to trade within the division and secondly, Kurt Warner is nearing the end of his career and Arizona probably still has some hope that Leinart can be “the guy.” The rumor makes little sense, but we’ll see how this whole thing transpires.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

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