Ashes betting – Australia backed to retake urn from England

Ashes svenska bettingsidor – Australia backed to retake urn from England
Australia vs England Ashes Wednesday, November 24, 6.30pm ET (10am Brisbane local time) Cricket Betting Lines: Australia -110 Draw +400 England +175 [Off topic: by the way, do you want to get a 55% bonus on your first deposit here at BetUS? If so JOIN NOW.] As much as fast bowlers around Australia would be hoping the juicy green deck at the Gabba could push Australia towards a four-man pace…

Devils score 5 in 3rd to beat Lightning (AP)
Martin Brodeur and the New Jersey Devils were back, at least for one game. Brodeur made 33 saves and the Devils had season highs for goals in a game and a period in snapping a four-game losing streak with a 6-3 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Sunday night. Jason Arnott’s lucky go-ahead goal highlighted a five-goal third period that carried New Jersey to its third win in 18 games.

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Capitals lose to Blues in Hunter’s debut (AP)

Capitals lose to Blues in Hunter’s debut (AP)
WASHINGTON (AP)—If Dale Hunter needs a role model as a new coach trying to make the Washington Capitals play better defense and with more confidence, all he has to do is study Ken Hitchcock and the St. Louis Blues. Hunter’s NHL coaching debut was spoiled Tuesday night by the stingiest defense in the league. Hitchcock’s Blues were a shutdown machine once again, limiting Alex Ovechkin(notes) to one shot on goal Tuesday night in a 2-1 victory. “We didn’t give up anything in two periods,” said Hitchcock, who is 8-1-2 since taking over from Davis Payne on Nov. 7. “We’re starting to dial in the way we need to play to win hockey games. When you play this well, it’s a good feeling.” T.J. Oshie(notes) and Matt D’Agostini(notes) scored, and Jaroslav Halak(notes) made 18 saves for the Blues, who have allowed only 13 goals in Hitchcock’s 11 games. “The first three games, everyone’s playing in front of a new coach, you’re trying to make a good first impression,” Oshie said. “Everyone’s playing hard, and it seems like we haven’t taken our foot off the gas since then.” Sounds like a perfect blueprint for the Capitals, who were in a tailspin when Bruce Boudreau was fired on Monday and replaced by former team captain Hunter. Making his debut behind an NHL bench—he spent the last 11 years coaching in the Ontario Hockey League—Hunter got a better defensive effort from the Capitals but not much offensive spark. Washington was outplayed until desperation time in the third period, but at least it didn’t suffer the odd-man rushes in the uninspired routs of Boudreau’s last days. “You can’t set a timeframe to it,” Hunter said, “but I want them to get better and better every game. … By watching them live now, we’ve got some stuff to work on.” Nicklas Backstrom(notes) got the lone goal for the Capitals, and Washington was outshot 30-19. Two stars who bore the brunt of Boudreau’s more disciplinarian ways in recent weeks failed to get untracked in the new regime’s debut. Ovechkin supplied the assist on Backstrom’s first-period goal, but the two-time league MVP’s only shot on goal came with 18:14 to play, and of both Alexander Semin’s(notes) shots came in the third period. Hunter and the players said the defense was the first priority. The offense will come around eventually. “We did what he ask us to do,” said Ovechkin, who has only one goal in his last nine games, “and I think if we (are) going to play the same way, we (are) going to get some success.” Wearing a blue suit—“the only one I got,” he said—and a lime green tie before the game and a red one during the game, Hunter took his spot behind the bench to cheers from Capitals fans who watched him play for the franchise from 1987-99 and can look up anytime to the rafters to see the banner featuring his retired No. 32 jersey. The team’s production staff put together slick videos with the themes “History welcomes you back, Coach” and “November 29, 2011, back where you belong,” the second one bringing the crowd to its feet during a first-period break. The dividends weren’t immediately apparent. The Blues controlled play from the opening whistle, winning individual battles and keeping the puck bottled up at the Capitals’ end. It took a counterattack started by goalie Tomas Vokoun(notes) to produce the first goal, with Ovechkin feeding Backstrom for the one-time wrister that went underneath Halak’s right leg pad. The Blues got their well-deserved tying goal later in the first period when Oshie put in the rebound when Alexander Steen’s shot hit the underside of the crossbar. The Blues took the lead in the second period when Patrik Berglund(notes) kept alive the rebound of Chris Stewart’s(notes) shot, then D’Agostini gathered the puck and beat Vokoun on a wraparound. Boudreau won 200 games faster than any coach in modern NHL history but couldn’t find sustained success in the playoffs. His attempt to make the players — including team captain Ovechkin—more accountable this season didn’t fly, and he was dismissed after losing six of eight. Now they’re getting a crash course in the ways of Hunter, who has to install his system a little bit at a time between games. “It’s not like having three days off or something,” Hunter said, “where you can really hammer it home.” NOTES: The Capitals announced the first change to Hunter’s staff, with Jim Johnson hired as an assistant to replace Bob Woods. Johnson was the head coach of the AHL’s Norfolk Admirals for 39 games in 2009-10. He played 13 seasons as a defenseman in the NHL, including two-plus seasons in Washington from 1993-96. … St. Louis won at Washington for the first time since Jan. 28, 2003. … Hunter is the second coach to move straight from the Ontario Hockey League to the NHL in the past four seasons. Peter DeBoer, now with the New Jersey Devils, was hired by the Florida Panthers in 2008. Joseph White can be reached at http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

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Johnson cruises to 3rd win in NASCAR All-Star race (The Associated Press)

Johnson cruises to 3rd win in NASCAR All-Star race (The Associated Press)
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) It’s not often a race car driver intentionally cruises slowly at the back of the field. Jimmie Johnson did it for roughly 60 laps Saturday night, and it earned him a cool $1 million payday. Johnson used a calculated strategy – he drove hard for the first and last segments, and coasted for the three in between – to join Dale Earnhardt and Jeff Gordon as the only three-time winners of NASCAR’s All-Star race. The five-time champion won the first 20-lap segment of the Sprint All-Star race, then deliberately faded to the back for the next three 20-lap segments at Charlotte Motor Speedway. His plan was to keep the No. 48 Chevrolet out of trouble, then make his play for the win in the fifth and final segment. ”We did a strategy that we thought was best for our team,” he said. It certainly was, even if it was the antithesis of what race car drivers do for a living. But it worked for this year’s new format, which guaranteed the winners of the first four segments would be the first four drivers down pit road for a mandatory stop before the 10-lap sprint to the finish. Johnson’s win in the first segment meant he was guaranteed to be the first driver down pit road, and he had the first stall – the reward for his Hendrick Motorsports team winning Thursday night’s Pit Crew Competition. His race, after winning that first segment, was simply to beat everyone else off pit road. Johnson raced Matt Kenseth down the lane, and edged him across the line. He then needed a clean and quick restart, which he executed to perfection, to pull away for the win. This win comes a week after his Darlington Raceway victory gave Hendrick Motorsports its 200th Cup win. ”Man, I don’t want this week to end,” Johnson said. He celebrated by picking up team owner Rick Hendrick, who climbed halfway through the window of the Chevrolet for Johnson’s celebratory lap. It was Hendrick’s seventh All-Star race win. ”He said come pick me up, and once I got to him, he didn’t want the ride,” Johnson said. ”I’m like, ‘No, no, I came to get you, Get on the car.’ It was great to take him around.” It didn’t look very comfortable – or safe. ”That was the dumbest thing I’ve ever done in racing,” Hendrick said. ”I thought I was going to be a busted watermelon.” Brad Keselowski, winner of the third segment, had no chance to catch Johnson over the closing 10 laps. The final segment was the shortest by 10 laps, but Keselowski didn’t think it mattered. ”I don’t think it was going to make a difference if it was a hundred laps at the end; Jimmie was just that fast,” Keselowski said. ”You can’t really steal any of his thunder on that. I was doing all I could to get by, but wasn’t meant to be.” But Keselowski, who won the third segment, wasn’t all that disappointed. ”It’s all about the restart,” Keselowski said. ”The high line on the restart just wouldn’t go. I don’t know if I would have been able to do anything, but I would have liked another shot. We got beat by a five-time champ and two-time All-Star winner, so I think we’re doing pretty good. We didn’t have enough to pull it off.” Kenseth, winner of the second segment, finished third. He had some tense moments after teammates Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle had engine failures – Biffle’s exploded into a giant fireball – and initially wasn’t all that comfortable following Johnson’s lead of running around the back until the final 10 laps. ”I watched what the 48 did. They won the first one, so they didn’t race until the last 10,” Kenseth said. ”They seem to know what they’re doing, pretty smart. We watched that, kind of hung back. There wasn’t any reward for racing up through there. You knew you were coming on pit road second.” And after losing the race off pit road to Johnson, and the restart, too, Kenseth knew he couldn’t catch the winner. It was Kenseth’s fifth top-five finish in 12 All-Star races. ”For me, you got somebody as fast as him out front, there was no way I was going to have a shot in 10 laps,” Kenseth said. ”Ten laps is kind of short, but yet the fastest car was out front. It was hard to beat that.” Kyle Busch finished fourth and was followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr., who won the fourth segment and advanced into the All-Star race by winning the qualifying race earlier Saturday night. Busch, the pole-sitter, wasn’t surprised by the finishing order. ”It was exactly like everybody thought it would be; Anybody who wins the first segment will win the race,” Busch said.

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888 Casino Bonus February 2012

888 Casino Bonus February 2012
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Blues captain Backes glad to be on road for Game 3 (Yahoo! Sports)

Blues captain Backes glad to be on road for Game 3 (Yahoo! Sports)
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) David Backes was grateful the St. Louis Blues were out of their homes and comfort zones Wednesday, practicing in an opponent’s practice rink just a few slap shots from the Pacific Ocean. Still reeling from the shock of two home playoff losses, the St. Louis captain realizes that a strong road trip is the only way to save his team’s season. ”It’s good to get away from home and all the people that told us how good we were all year,” Backes said. ”We’ve had a little trouble dealing with success, with all the talk about Presidents’ trophies and Jennings trophies … and now we’re stumbling on our toes.” Indeed, St. Louis is in an 0-2 hole in its second-round playoff series against the Los Angeles Kings, giving up eight goals at home to the lowest-scoring team that made the NHL playoffs. Game 3 on Thursday night is vital to the Blues, who know that only three teams have overcome an 0-3 deficit and advanced. After the Blues’ stellar regular season and an impressive first-round win over San Jose, Backes can see slippage in the Western Conference semifinal series. St. Louis isn’t playing with the precision or the all-out energy necessary to compete with the eighth-seeded Kings, who have extended their late-season surge into the playoffs. ”We’ve had times in the season where we’ve all bought in, and we’ve had times when we’re half in, half out,” said Backes, who had two assists in the Blues’ 5-3 loss in Game 2. ”That’s where we are right now. … Enough is enough, and we’ve got to determine as a group if we’re going to attack this thing, or if we’re going to tuck tail and run.” Backes’ unusual frankness, echoed by coach Ken Hitchcock in more friendly terms, might be just what this gifted team needs to hear. The Blues were the first team to clinch a playoff berth and a division title this season, so they didn’t have to push down the regular-season stretch. St. Louis isn’t extraordinarily gifted offensively, and its defense in front of beleaguered goalie Brian Elliott must be much better for the Blues to keep chasing their first Stanley Cup championship. Hitchcock echoes his captain’s thoughts about the Kings, who have been remarkably consistent in their seven playoff games, putting them halfway to their first conference final series since 1993. ”The difference is the resolve in the opponent,” Hitchcock said after the Blues’ afternoon practice. ”L.A. has had to be dug in for a long time. Their commitment is 100, and ours is maybe 85 right now.” Whatever the Kings are doing right on the road, coach Darryl Sutter appears to be going to remarkable lengths to see it in Game 3: His team is staying in a downtown hotel the night before both games, and their pregame skate Thursday will be at Staples Center – a rare opportunity in a building with all three of its pro sports franchises currently in the playoffs. Sutter wouldn’t confirm he made the changes to preserve the Kings’ good feelings from the road, where they are 5 for 5 in playoff games this season. Los Angeles has been remarkably inept at home in the past three postseasons, losing six of its last seven – including a potential clinching Game 4 in the first round against Vancouver. ”We just haven’t done it this year,” Sutter said of the Kings’ pregame plans. ”That’s one of things we talked about when I came here was never being able to be at your own home rink. It’s just hard to do, because of the basketball schedule. It’s an opportunity for us to do that.” The Kings probably shouldn’t look to change much else about their playoff efforts to date. They have outscored their opponents 20-11, and goalie Jonathan Quick is thriving behind an improved defensive effort. Los Angeles also realizes it can’t expect another halfhearted, mistake-prone effort similar to the Blues’ stumbles in Game 2. ”That was probably one of the worst they’ve had in their season so far, and they said it,” said Anze Kopitar, whose short-handed goal in the first period opened the floodgates. ”They said it themselves. We know they’re going to be ready to go, and we’re sure they’re going to throw everything at the table.” While Quick has been largely impenetrable, the Blues need a return to form from Elliott, who hasn’t received much help from his teammates while getting shelled in the first two games. Elliott is by himself after spending all season in a tandem with injured Jaroslav Halak, and Hitchcock is hopeful the part-time goalie can produce full-time success. ”The break (between games) has been good for him,” Hitchcock said. ”It was a frustrating last couple of games for him, both mentally and physically. The break is good.” Although Jason Arnott didn’t practice Wednesday while nursing a lower body injury, the Blues might get a much-needed boost from defenseman Alex Pietrangelo, who returned to practice in California after getting hurt on a check by Los Angeles’ Dwight King in Game 1. Hitchcock said St. Louis’ best defenseman felt ”OK.” ”If he feels OK (Thursday) and wants to give it a go, we’ll let him go,” Hitchcock said.

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John Harbaugh mentions ‘asterisk’ on Belichick’s Super Bowl wins, quickly backs off

John Harbaugh mentions ‘asterisk’ on Belichick’s Super Bowl wins, quickly backs off
“Don’t look now, but I think Mickey Loomis is watching us.” (Getty Images) On Tuesday morning, Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh said something on the radio that will most likely be interpreted by many as sour grapes, coming as it did from the man whose team lost the 2011 AFC championship game to the New England Patriots. Asked by Baltimore radio station 98 Rock about recent NFL scandals involving the Patriots and New Orleans Saints, Harbaugh gave his philosophy regarding the “It ain’t cheating if you don’t get caught” philosophy that prevails in certain front offices and locker rooms. Specifically, the Spygate scandal which gave the Pats a black mark that won’t wash off. “The funny thing about that is … in the end, everything is brought before the light of day when it’s all said and done. Even the thing in New England — no matter whether those things had any impact on whether they won any of their championships or not, they’ve got asterisks now. They’ve been stained. So to me, it’s never worth it. I mean, you’ve got to figure out ways to use the rules to your advantage, and figure out ways to make the most of everything. We’ve got new work rules [in the new CBA] about what he can and can’t do with our players, and we’re going to make the most of it. What we’re finding out is that … man, we can do something even better than we did before, because these rules make us focus on some things we didn’t do before. That’s what success is in this world — you’ve got to find ways to do things better than somebody else. “But if you’re cheating? In the end, you’re going to get discredited. It’s just not worth it.” Harbaugh was then asked if he’s ever been on the sideline during a game and suspected the other team had illegal intel — that his opponent knew things about their play selection they should not have. “Yeah, I have. But if I say when, there’s going to be like, Pro Football Talk is going to blow up and go crazy, and I’m going to get accused of accusing somebody.” Harbaugh’s comments are making the round on Twitter in headline form, frequently parsed as if he’s saying something specifically directed at the Patriots and Bill Belichick in a transparent attempt to drum up controversy. I don’t see it that way — in fact, the two coaches are longtime friends, and Belichick gave Harbaugh a positive recommendation when he was in the hunt for his current job. Soon after the inevitable poopstorm happened, Harbaugh released a statement through the team: “While on the 98 Rock show this morning to talk about the run to honor O.J. Brigance and raise funds for ALS research, I answered a question about playing within the rules and referred to the perception that the Super Bowl championships won by the Patriots and Saints have a stain. My reference was to the perception out there that came as the result of the league’s actions. “I could have been more clear that I was referring to those viewpoints. I totally believe that the Patriot and Saint coaches and players earned those championships. Bill (Belichick) and Sean (Payton) both know that. “There has been some distortion about what I said. “The original tweet indicated I pointed the finger at Bill Belichick and mentioned Bill’s name. I did not. I have so much respect for Coach Belichick and the job he does and has accomplished in his Hall of Fame career. I called him to remind him of my respect for him. I also reached out to Tedy Bruschi, who rightfully defended those Patriot players and coaches on ESPN, to tell him that I agree with him that the Patriots earned every victory.” According to the team, Harbaugh also “called Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick and former Pats player turned ESPN analyst Tedy Bruschi to explain his comments.” Again, I don’t see the big deal. Harbaugh was asked about cheating in general, and he could have just as easily said that the Saints’ Super Bowl win now had some extra punctuation around it because of the illegal hits Gregg Williams ordered up, and the recent allegations that Saints GM Mickey Loomis bugged opponents’ locker rooms in the Superdome. (We would also add the shocking news we recently uncovered, courtesy of SI.com’s Holly Anderson: The press box in the Superdome doesn’t have a ladies’ room.) To put a fine point on it, Harbaugh said that New England’s Super Bowl titles do have asterisks, not that they should. Seems like a small semantic difference, but it isn’t. We can’t have it both ways. We can’t clobber coaches and players for giving generic boilerplate answers, only to clobber them harder when they say what’s really on their minds. And we’d all better get used to this line of inquiry, because when coaches and players come back up from the offseason, they’re all going to be asked about it — especially when their orbits match those of the Saints and Patriots. More sports news from the Yahoo! Sports Minute:

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Marshall football player Warren kicked off team (Yahoo! Sports)

Marshall football player Warren kicked off team (Yahoo! Sports)
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Marshall football coach Doc Holliday has dismissed defensive back Phillip Warren and plans to discipline three other players following their weekend arrests outside a Huntington bar. Holliday said Tuesday that Warren has been kicked off the team for an unspecified violation of team rules and policies. A criminal complaint accuses Warren of striking a police officer who was assisting patrons out of a bar early Sunday. Warren is charged with battery on police, disorderly conduct and obstructing an officer. Three other players were arrested. Holliday says linebacker Stefone Grace, running back Martin Ward and defensive back Corie Wilson will be ”disciplined internally.” A Cabell County Magistrate Court clerk said she had no information Tuesday on court dates for the players. Warren started one game last season and compiled 26 tackles.

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Phillies place lefty Cliff Lee on 15-day DL (Yahoo! Sports)

Phillies place lefty Cliff Lee on 15-day DL (Yahoo! Sports)
SAN DIEGO (AP) The Philadelphia Phillies placed Cliff Lee on the 15-day disabled list on Saturday, three days after he strained a muscle in his left side in the 10th inning of his gem at San Francisco. ”We’re being very cautious with this,” general manager Ruben Amaro Jr. said. ”There’s no reason for him to kind of completely blow it out because it’s an injury that if he hurts himself and really pulls it, we could lose him for a long time. We’ll shut him down, get him right and hopefully he’ll miss only a couple of starts and go from there.” Lee strained his left oblique. ”I don’t know what pitch it was, but he must have made a pitch that bothered him a little bit,” Amaro said. Lee threw 10 scoreless innings Wednesday night at San Francisco but got a no-decision. The Giants won 1-0 in 11 innings. The lefty had been scheduled to pitch Monday night at Arizona. Right-hander Kyle Kendrick is now scheduled to make that start. To take Lee’s spot on the roster, the Phillies recalled lefty Joe Savery from Triple-A Lehigh Valley.

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