entertainmenT buzz, sports maniaOctober 10, 2008 4:44 am

Tickets for the "Dream Match" between Filipino boxing icon Manny Pacquiao and international superstar Oscar de la Hoya was sold out in just two hours after going on sale in Las Vegas Wednesday (Thursday in Manila).

Golden Boy Promotions, Inc., the fight’s co-promoter, said the sellout has made $17 million, making the megabout the second biggest gate sales in boxing history.

The fight is slated on December 6 at the almost 16,000-seat MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

"This is just a reflection of the overwhelming interest in this mega-event and we are extremely delighted that tickets sales were so swift," said Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaefer. "The match-up is one of the best in boxing and will be one of the biggest events the sport has ever seen."

"This is fantastic and shows the magnitude and appeal of this event," said Top Rank executive Bob Arum. "When you have two superstars like Manny Pacquiao and Oscar de la Hoya fighting each other, the public is going to respond and that is what they just did. No one wants to miss this one."

sports mania, travel timeSeptember 4, 2008 12:48 am
More than 4,000 athletes are set for the opening Saturday of what promises to be a dazzling Paralympics, with the head of the international movement predicting a "fantastic" Games. Competitors from nearly 150 countries will battle for 472 gold medals in 20 sports at the iconic venues used for last month’s Olympics such as the "Bird’s Nest" National Stadium and the Water Cube. "There are more countries than ever, more sports than ever and more athletes than ever. This is great news for the Paralympic movement," said International Paralympic Committee President Philip Craven.

"They’re going to be tremendous sports events, an incredible opportunity for Paralympians to just show what they can do, how they can perform, how they are very much the equal of their Olympic peers. "I’m not going to tell you they’re going to be the greatest Games before they even start but they’re going to be fantastic."

The host nation, which topped the medals table at the 2004 Athens Paralympics with 63 golds ahead of Britain and Canada, is widely expected to dominate again — and even more comprehensively than at last month’s Olympics.

"China is currently very strong across the board in Paralympic sport and, having seen their efforts at the Olympic Games, have shown that they intend to fully benefit from the home advantage of these Games," said British Chef De Mission Phil Lane.

Aside from China’s seemingly inevitable domination of the Games, much attention will focus on South Africa’s double amputee track sensation Oscar Pistorius — dubbed "Blade Runner" due to the specially adapted carbon fiber blades with which he has won a host of titles.

Carrying the flag at the opening ceremony for South Africa will be Natalie du Toit, who finished 16th in the women’s 10 kilometers marathon swim in the Olympics.

The South African, who lost her lower left leg in a motor accident, won five golds and one silver in Athens, and is looking for another huge haul in Beijing.

The final Paralympic torch-bearer reached the end of the torch relay Saturday, with escorts due to carry the flame to the Bird’s Nest to light the Paralympic Torch during the opening ceremony.

The ceremony, involving thousands of performers, will start at 8:00 pm (1200 GMT) and will be attended by dignitaries and sports ministers from around the globe.

The 20 sports at the 13th Paralympics, which ends on September 17, include athletics, swimming, powerlifting, wheelchair fencing and two versions of football — five-a-side and seven-a-side — as well as the lesser-known goalball and boccia.

Although China will pull out all the stops to produce a stunning event, the Paralympics takes place in a country in which the disabled have long suffered discrimination in social, education and employment sectors.

The staging of these Games is part of efforts to change that, according to Jiang Xiaoyu, vice-president of the Beijing Olympic organizing committee, which is also running the Paralympics.

China’s motto for the Paralympics, comparing it with the Olympics, is: "Two Games with Equal Splendor."

Like the Olympics, the Paralympics have not been free of scandal and there will again be a focus in Beijing to stamp out any cheating.

But the IPC’s Craven said he was looking forward to a clean Games.

"We have worked very hard over the last four years both from a testing point of view and also from an education point of view and we’re very hopeful for good results," he said.

The event dates back to 1948, when Sir Ludwig Guttmann organized a sports competition involving World War II veterans with spinal cord injuries in Stoke Mandeville, England.

sports maniaMarch 4, 2008 11:58 am

Roger Federer is once again beaten for the second time in four months. The top-ranked Federer, who won three Grand Slam titles last year but has struggled since the U.S. Open, lost to Andy Murray 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-4 on Monday in the first round of the Dubai Tennis Championships. "My expectations are not sky-high at this point," said Federer, who was playing for the first time since losing to Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open semifinals Jan. 25. "Obviously, I haven’t played much so you don’t go in with any expectations, actually. You hope to get past the first round, no matter if it’s a guy with no ranking or a guy ranked basically in the top 10." After winning his 12th Grand Slam title at last year’s U.S. Open, Federer lost to David Nalbandian in the Madrid Masters final. The Swiss star then won the Swiss Indoors, but lost to Nalbandian in the third round of the Paris Masters and followed that with a round robin loss to Fernando Gonzalez in his opening match at the ATP Masters Cup, which Federer eventually won.

 

 

sports maniaFebruary 27, 2008 2:06 am
 Yao Ming out for the whole season
 
yao  

        The Houston Rockets joy at recording a 12 match winning streak was dampened considerably on Tuesday when it was revealed that Chinese center Yao Ming would miss the rest of the NBA season. Yao has suffered a stress fracture in his left foot which will see him miss the rest of the campaign and also could endanger his participation in the Olympics in August which is in Beijing. Yao was examined after practice on Monday and met Rockets doctor Tom Clanton to assess the injury. The injury is a significant setback for a team that had climbed back into contention in the Western Conference playoff race. The Rockets have won 12 consecutive games - their longest winning streak since they started the 1993-94 season with 15 straight victories en route to an NBA title - since losing the one game Yao has missed this season. Yao, who missed 32 games last season with a fracture in his right leg, was enjoying one of his best seasons of his dynamic career, averaging 22 points and 10.8 rebounds.

        Doctors are hopeful Yao will be healthy in time to compete for his native China in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The Summer Games begin August 8. "We’re hopeful that Yao Ming can represent his country in the Olympics," Morey said. "But at this point, all we can be is hopeful. We know it’s important to Yao Ming and the Rockets that he can represent his country.Yao has been undergoing treatment for his sore foot since the NBA all-star break. He told doctors he couldn’t remember the exact moment in a game that the injury occurred. Yao was named the Western Conference’s Player of the Month in January.


sports maniaFebruary 6, 2008 5:25 pm

 


Giants David Tyree #85 and his teammates celebrate his touchdown against the Patriots during Super Bowl XLII
at the University of Phoenix Stadium on February 3, 2008 in Phoenix, Arizona.

                 

                        The New York Giants’ thrilling win over the New England Patriots was the most-watched Super Bowl ever, with 97.5 million viewers, Nielsen Media Research said Monday. Giants coach Tom Coughlin and kicker Lawrence Tynes celebrate the team’s Super Bowl win.The game eclipsed the previous Super Bowl record of 94.08 million, set when Dallas defeated Pittsburgh in 1996. More people watched Sunday’s game than all but one American television broadcast ever, the "M-A-S-H" finale in 1983, which was seen by 106 million viewers.

 

                 The game had almost all the ingredients Fox could have hoped for: a tight contest with an exciting finish involving a team that was attempting to make history as the NFL’s first unbeaten team since 1972. But the Giants ended New England’s bid for perfection, 17-14. Throughout the game, the teams were never separated by more than a touchdown. A lot of personalities where seen in super bowl, such as Spurs point guard Tony Parker with wife Eva Longoria.

sports maniaFebruary 4, 2008 7:47 am

                                                  

                                                        Sharapova

              Maria Sharapova is finally back on top, because on the latest Australian Open 2008 she bagged the Women’s Singles Championship match, she says her victory is just reward for all the hard work she has put in over recent months. according to the Australian Open official website Sharapova struggled with injury for much of 2007 but finally managed to shake off most of her ailments in the latter part of the year and returned to some of the tennis that she’s renowned for when she reached the final at the WTA Tour Championships.

                    And having avenged her defeat to Justine Henin in that final in Madrid when she won her quarter-final against the Belgian world No.1 earlier this week, Sharapova completed her third Grand Slam win with a 7-5 6-3 defeat of Serbian Ana Ivanovic. "So exciting, it’s amazing," she said of her feelings about her latest triumph. "Sometimes you just … when you’re putting the work in it just seems so, so hard, and you never know when that work’s gonna pay off." "When you’re going through tough moments, you never know when you’re going to have good moments. I’m just so thankful that I got this one." But having been humbled by unseeded American Serena Williams in the corresponding match 12 months ago when she was the No.1 seed, Sharapova denied that she had any extra motivation this time around in an event in which she didn’t drop a set. "No, just satisfying, period, to win a Grand Slam, and to win one that you’ve never won before, especially after some of the tough losses that I’ve had," Sharapova said when asked if she was more satisfied to win it in light of her loss in 2007. "The feeling is just so weird, because with every match you play, you finish the match and you think, there’s one more to go and you’ve got to concentrate.

                Although you just beat a top player, you played really good tennis, you always feel like there’s one more to go." "And right now there’s no more to go, and I just can’t feel that yet, you know. I feel like I still have to get up tomorrow and play another match," a smiling Sharapova added. "But it will settle in - I hope - really soon. I mean, I don’t have a match till next week." Having come close to being ousted in the first round in 2007 when a scorching Melbourne day almost brought her undone, Sharapova was much more comfortable in the warm conditions on Saturday. "When I was in Singapore a couple weeks ago it was so hot and humid out there," she said. "I got to practice there for about three days outdoors.

                   It was great, because when I got out on the court today, I was like, ‘This is a piece of cake’." "Even though it’s hot, it wasn’t nearly as hot as it was over there. You know, just mentally going into the match I didn’t really care. Whatever it took, I was just gonna try to do everything I could to win that match." While unsure at first whether she could say that her greater Grand Slam final experience had helped her, Sharapova did confirm that to be the case when she cast her mind back to the pivotal 10th game of the first set. "When I was down 0-30 on my serve, when she had that opportunity to break me and win that set, I think experience definitely helped me because I didn’t get impatient," Sharapova said. "I was just steady. I knew that, you know, it was for her to take." "I mean, she’s two points away from winning the first set in a Grand Slam final. You know, if you want it, take it. And she didn’t. Was that experience? I was just calm. I just did the right things." Having also revealed after her win that she has regular contact with former star Billie Jean King, and was in touch with her both before and after the final, Sharapova ominously warned her rivals she thinks her game can still improve. "I know I’ve already won three Grand Slams, I know I keep saying this, but I don’t think I’m at the peak of my career yet," she said. "I don’t think my body has 100 per cent developed into its own." "I’ve got many more things to learn, you know, in my tennis, and many things to build and improve.

            That takes time. It’s not an overnight process. It’s something that I look forward to. Sharapova is obviously confident any time she enters a Grand Slam that she can go all the way, but two of her biggest goals for the rest of 2008 would surely be trying to complete a career slam and also success at the Beijing Olympics. And if she can maintain the stellar form that took her to this breakthrough on Saturday, few would bet against the Russian being right in the hunt at the business end of many major tournaments for years to come.

                 While in the men’s division, it was Novak Djokovic of Serbia who won his first Grand Slam title after dispatching France’s Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the Australian Open men’s final.