Suns prez, CEO Welts reveals he’s gay (AP)

Suns prez, CEO Welts reveals he’s gay (AP)
PHOENIX (AP)—Rick Welts was 40,000 feet in the air on a flight two hours from New York when, as he put it, “my life was changing below me.” The Phoenix Suns president and chief executive officer knew the story revealing he was gay had been posted on the Internet by The New York Times. When he landed, his Blackberry “exploded with e-mails from all over the place,” all supporting him. There was a voice mail from Charles Barkley, a text from Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban and “really a nice message” from Arizona Cardinals President Michael Bidwill. In all, he said, he had “a couple hundred” emails, some from people he didn’t know. “It was incredibly gratifying and pretty emotional,” he said. “People who had read the story when it went up online wanted to just reach out and give me a hug.” In an interview with The Associated Press on Monday, Welts explained why he chose such a public forum to announce his sexual orientation. “One was to engender conversation about the topic, which is not discussed in our industry,” he said. “The other was if there was a chance to do some good for people, young people, who are struggling with their own issues and wondering whether or not they could pursue their passions and have a chance to have a successful career, whether that was team sports or something else.” It’s one thing for a 58-year-old sports executive to announce to the world he’s gay. For an NBA player to do so would be quite another challenge, Welts said. “The fact that it hasn’t happened before I guess speaks to the difficult circumstances that someone will have to personally decide to take on to go forward with that,” he said. “I think players have a much shorter career and have contracts at stake. They don’t have anybody who’s gone before them to know how that will actually play out. So more than anything it’s the fear of the unknown, of not knowing.” Welts said he believes that “at least in male team sports,” the attitude toward gays is “definitely not in step today with where society’s thinking is on the whole topic. You know, it’s going to take some time.” Welts, once the No. 3 man in the NBA’s front office, came to the Suns as president and chief operating officer in 2002. He was named president and CEO in 2009, overseeing all the business aspects of the franchise. Suns owner Robert Sarver told the AP that Welts’ announcement was “pretty much a non-event” for the franchise. “I’ve known Rick was gay for a long time and it never made any difference in how I viewed him as an executive,” Sarver said. “We take all comers and judge them on how they do their job, regardless of color, religion or sexual orientation.” While many of his co-workers may have known he was gay, Welts said the subject was never broached. “It has become increasingly difficult and I just reached a point where the quality of the relationships I had with people were more important than whatever my fears had been up to that point,” he said. “But as hard as this may be to believe, never once in the 40 years I’ve been involved in sports had anyone ever asked me if I was gay, and honestly I’ve never asked anyone else. So there’s something like a conspiracy of silence about it where it’s just not discussed.” Welts said he brought up the idea of revealing he was gay at a dinner in New York in January with a friend of three decades, public relations executive Dan Klores, first about speaking forthrightly to a small circle of friends, then on the concept of telling his story to the public. Klores introduced Welts to the Times’ Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Dan Barry, who spent 18 hours in interviews with him about three weeks ago in Phoenix. Barry also spoke to NBA Commissioner David Stern, Welts’ longtime friend Hall of Famer Bill Russell and Suns star Steve Nash(notes). Nash, like so many in the Suns organization, thought everyone knew Welts was gay. “I think through this there’s a lot of people who have been pretty sure or very aware of my situation,” Welts acknowledged, “and they’re just very happy for me that there’s going to be a different way I can relate and have more meaningful and in-depth relationships with a lot of people that I care about so much that I’ve worked with with the Suns or all the way back to my days in Seattle.” Welts was a ballboy for the Seattle SuperSonics in 1969 and spent 10 years with that franchise in various capacities. He went to work for Stern in the NBA office in 1982 and eventually became president of NBA Properties. Because he knew of the Suns’ progressive attitude on social issues, Welts said he was not at all concerned what the reaction would be, although he said his one regret was that he wasn’t able to tell Sarver and Lon Babby, team president for basketball operations, that his story was about to be revealed. However, Welts is well aware that Arizona is a conservative state in many ways. “I’m not Pollyannish enough to think there will be no negativity headed in my direction,” Welts said. “I’m sure there will be. I haven’t experienced any to this point. But it didn’t cause me additional concern or pause because we’re talking about Arizona.”

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Gators starting over with revamped staff

Gators starting over with revamped staff

Florida coach Billy Donovan is treating his revamped staff like an overhauled roster. He’s trying to build bonds
develop chemistry and create teamwork. If it works
the Gators could stay atop the Southeastern Conference and make another deep run in the NCAA tournament next season. “When you have three people leave at one time
you’re [...]This was posted on www.officialsportsbetting.com
your guide to online sports betting. If you like new online casinos
please visit our partner site: http://www.hypercasinos.com online casinos.Gators starting over with revamped staff

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Track Smack: Debating pretenders and contenders (NASCAR.com)

Track Smack: Debating pretenders and contenders (NASCAR.com)
Track Smack: Debating pretenders and contenders

Button learning on the job

Jenson Button has admitted that all the drivers in Formula One are learning to deal with how the sport has changed this season
with the new rules
regulations and toys all introduced this year. The changes were implemented to make overtaking more common and therefore increase the excitement in the sport. The biggest change made [...]Originally written by Bet123.net
an online betting GuideButton learning on the job Related posts:Button ready to mount challenge Jenson Button F1 odds F1 Canadian Grand Prix Betting Sunday June 8th

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Over half of London Olympic events oversubscribed (PA SportsTicker)

Over half of London Olympic events oversubscribed (PA SportsTicker)
By ROB HARRIS AP sports Writer

NFL Wildcard Injury Report
Latest NFL injuries for the Wilcard Playoff Round.

Pang
Tong lead pairs at worlds (AP)
Defending champions Pang Qing and Tong Jian have taken the lead after the pairs short program at the figure skating world championships
scoring an even 74.00 points. Germany’s Aliona Savchenko and Robin Szolkowy
the current silver holders
were in second after Wednesday’s program. Close behind in third are Russia’s Tatiana Volosozhar and Maxim Trankov
in their first season skating…

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Nadal wins sixth Barcelona Open title (AP)

Nadal wins sixth Barcelona Open title (AP)
Rafael Nadal beat David Ferrer 6-2, 6-4 in their second all-Spanish final in two weeks to claim his sixth Barcelona Open title Sunday. The top-ranked Spaniard won his 29th straight match at the clay court event when the fourth-seeded Ferrer hit his backhand wide. “It is a dream for me to win here six times,” said Nadal, whose sole loss at Barcelona came against another countryman, Alex…

Goerges upsets Wozniacki in final (AP)
Julia Goerges upset top-ranked Caroline Wozniacki 7-6 (3), 6-3 in the final of the Porsche Grand Prix on Sunday. The 22-year-old German won in Bad Gastein, Austria, last year but had never captured a title in one of the WTA’s premier events. “I only know I won, but I don’t know how,” Goerges said.

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Wozniacki reaches final in Stuttgart (AP)

Wozniacki reaches final in Stuttgart (AP)
Top-ranked Caroline Wozniacki beat Agnieszka Radwanska 7-5, 6-3 to advance to the final of the Porsche Grand Prix on Saturday and a shot at her fourth title of the year. For the title and the Porsche sports car that goes with it, Wozniacki will play Julia Goerges, who upset last year’s runner-up, Sam Stosur, 6-4, 3-6, 7-5 to play for her second career WTA title.

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Hamilton doesn’t blame coach for injury

Hamilton doesn’t blame coach for injury
Josh Hamilton was in the clubhouse with his Texas teammates, trying to stay hopeful a day after finding out he could miss two months with a broken arm. “Obviously, I’d like to be out there playing with them, but it’ll be fun to watch them the next few weeks,” Hamilton said. “I’ll work hard and [...]This was posted on www.officialsportsbetting.com , your guide to online sports betting. If you like new online casinos, please visit our partner site: http://www.hypercasinos.com online casinos.Hamilton doesn’t blame coach for injury

Top Nike designer can’t stand LeBron’s entourage
Since LeBron James stopped being a nominal amateur in the late spring of 2003, Nike has acted as both witness and primary aide in the man’s hopeful rise to global icon status. It’s nurtured his brand, and the biggest part of that work has been his signature shoes. As you can imagine, Nike had its top shoe designer, the wonderfully named Tinker Hatfield, work with LeBron. Except, after dealing with LeBron’s entourage, the legendary Hatfield decided the work wasn’t worth the trouble. At a rare public appearance in Miami, he explained his decision. From Brian Windhorst at the Heat Index: “I don’t like working with LeBron’s entourage,” Hatfield said. “It’s too many people, too many ideas, too many opinions.” It is the second time in the last six months Hatfield has publicly taken a shot at James various friends and managers. During a similar event last October in Santa Monica, Calif., Hatfield told a group of listeners at a shoe store that “I used to work on LeBron’s, until his entourage kind of pissed me off.” Hatfield was the main designer on the first generations of James’ shoes, starting in 2003. But according to sources, in 2008 he stopped working with him to focus working on Kobe Bryant’s shoes and the Jordan Brand. In the meantime, Hatfield said last week that James’ products have “suffered a little bit” and “hasn’t done as well as the Kobe stuff.” “[Working with Bryant] one guy comes into the room with him and he has ideas and is very forward thinking and is smart about what he needs to do, what he thinks he needs to do to be a better player,” Hatfield said last week. “LeBron is a great guy, I really like him, but when he comes into the room and he’s got like eight other guys saying things. That is one reason why the LeBron stuff, even though it does OK, it isn’t quite as exciting to me as the Kobe stuff or what we’ve done with the Jordan Brand.” Congratulations to Kobe fans, who now have one more piece of evidence to declare that Bryant is a better player, since we have now learned that Kobe knows shoes in addition to being excellent at counting his own rings. Hatfield’s remarks are obviously bad news for LeBron’s business sense — if he wants to be a massive international brand, he probably shouldn’t do anything to alienate the top basketball shoe designer in the world. But the amount to which you think this is a problem probably depends on what you think of LeBron, as is usually the case with all manners related to King James. For instance, if you like LeBron, then it’s possible to look at the decision to quit working with him as a sign that Hatfield has reached such great heights at Nike that he can pick and choose his projects as he wishes, opting to take those that have few distractions apart from the work at hand. However, if you don’t like LeBron, then it’s possible to think that his entourage must have been terribly annoying to make Nike’s top designer quit their biggest project. We should take Hatfield at his word and assume that LeBron’s entourage actually did make these discussions more difficult than they need to be. But the amount to which you think they acted out of turn is most likely dependent on how you look at everything LeBron does. He’s divisive even when everyone can agree that he and his friends are annoying.

Wolves finish with worst record in NBA
Chase Budinger scored a career-high 35 points and Kevin Martin added 25 to lead the Houston Rockets to a 121-102 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves on Wednesday night in the season finale for both teams. Michael Beasley scored 34 points and Anthony Randolph had 23 for the Timberwolves (17-65), who lost their last 15 games [...]This was posted on www.officialsportsbetting.com , your guide to online sports betting. If you like new online casinos, please visit our partner site: http://www.hypercasinos.com online casinos.Wolves finish with worst record in NBA

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NFLPA conference call shows players with solid resolve

NFLPA conference call shows players with solid resolve
On Monday, several important members of the former players union and NFLPA assistant executive director of external affairs George Atallah, held a media conference call in which they outlined their positions in detail for the first time since the decertification and lockout last Friday. I will be going extensively into those issues later Monday, but I wanted to get a line-by-line summary up so that you can see where the players stand after a solid weekend of invective from the NFL’s side. The players on the call were former Seattle Seahawks, New York Jets and Tennessee Titans center Kevin Mawae, New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees, and Indianapolis Colts center Jeff Saturday. All three spoke convincingly and eagerly; the players at times taking questions over from Atallah to give their view. One thing that was perfectly clear from the start of the call — after the appeal decision in the lockout insurance case, and two weeks of mediation that ended last Friday, the players may have their heels dug in even more than before. This is going to the Minnesota District Court on April 6, and though the players (now termed the “class counsel” as opposed to the “players union”) could decide to negotiate further with the owners, it would seemingly take a near-miracle for that to happen. These guys are not happy with the way things went, and they want the world to know. Here, for now, are the salient points of the call.  Atallah said that the language of the Doty appeal ruling on the lockout insurance case provides potential damages to the players, but that there is no timeline for that to happen. David Doty will not hear the Brady v. NFL case, but he would/will hear arguments re: damages. So, Doty’s still involved. Atallah would not comment on recent reports stating that the players have been encouraged to boycott the draft. To a man, the players said that whether Doty, Susan Nelson, or Batman hears the antitrust case, it doesn’t matter. The law is more important than the judge. Mawae said that the April 6 court date doesn’t matter from a timing perspective — as long as the players can play in the fall, it’s irrelevant. Brees put his name as a primary plaintiff on the Brady case because he wanted to do something meaningful for the players now, before, and in the future.   As to the NFL’s portrayal that the last deal offered to the players split the difference, it’s important to remember that the league was attempting to “split the difference” between the $2 billion the owners want off the top of gross revenue now, not the $1 billion they got off the top in the old CBA. Brees said that the last proposal was trying to get back $1.66 billion in the first four years, and “that was only a good deal to them.” Mawae said that of all the misrepresented statements by the NFL, the worst was the claim that the players walked away from the negotiations. Atallah tag-teamed on this as well, saying that the NFL’s timeline view was ridiculous, and he half-sarcastically wondered if he should present time-stamped photos of the fax machine used to send the decertification papers so that people would know what happened when. Mawae said that it was amazing to him that a paid attorney would be like that in public, obviously referring to NFL counsel Jeff Pash, who has been the league’s primary mouthpiece through this most recent process. A slew of lawyer jokes immediately hit Twitter when I put that up. Brees said more than once — this seemed to anger him in particular — that the owners’ last proposal was a sham and that the NFL intended to lock the players out all along. He said that the owners were just setting it up so that they could say they tried to act in good faith when that wasn’t the case. The audited financials continue to be the main sticking point. Brees said that because the salary cap is based off revenue, it’s like no other business — the players have access to revenue, but not to cost, and even in a horrible economy, the NFL grew 7.5 percent last year. Costs outstripping revenue? Brees said. Show us the books. They say no, that’s not how business works. “It’s impossible to negotiate a fair deal when you don’t know the numbers,” he said. Mawae confirmed the report that the players were willing to take $1 billion in an equity stake instead of cost credits, and the owners refused. The players were asked more than once why they didn’t extend the league year so that they could better review the last offer, and the answers were more general re: the financials and the “sham” nature in perception, but my sense is that the rancor and mistrust had hit the point where there was nothing to be gained by a 24-hour extension, and the players weren’t getting enough concessions for a longer extension. Mawae had this zinger: “Maybe you should ask the owners if they trust each other to see each other’s books. Maybe that’s the real question.” When asked if there could be negotiations before the April 6 court date, Brees said that “We’re going to let the process take course, but are still open to discussions under right circumstances,” which basically means 10 years of audited financials. This thing is going straight to court, kids. Saturday was asked by Mawae to clarify a Peter King report that he and Roger Goodell had dinner last Thursday. Saturday said that everyone from DeMaurice Smith on down knew what he was doing — there was no subterfuge about it — and that he wanted to make sure Goodell knew the players’ points of view before time ran out. Saturday also pointed to Pash as a problem, saying that “I wanted to reiterate with [Goodell] our points, since Pash was doing all the talking [in public].” Finally, Brees on the recent report that Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen had offered to open his books: “Hopefully, the other owners will follow suit.” My quick take on this is that it’s impossible to overestimate the degree to which the players’ discovery that the owners were selling their revenue down the river to fund a lockout added to the adversarial nature of this process. As fans, analysts, and lovers of the game of football, our best hope is that the courts use the Sherman Act to enjoin the owners from locking the players out, which is what happened in 1989. Then, the NFL played under a court order for three years until the Reggie White Ruling came down, and the free agency which led to the league’s unbelievable prosperity began. If the lockout stands, and these two factions are responsible for keeping the game of football alive … I don’t hold out much hope. Despite universal endorsement of the mediation process, it seems that the two sides are further apart than they were before mediation started. We could be in for a very long ride. More later.

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Notre Dame fined $77.5K in student death (AP)

Notre Dame fined $77.5K in student death (AP)
The Notre Dame president says the university will study a state report that says the school committed six safety violations in the October death of a 20-year-old student. Declan Sullivan was killed when the hydraulic lift he was on toppled over in high winds while he was filming football practice. The Indiana Department of Labor says it is fining the university $77,500 for a series of safety…

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Reynoldstown romp marks Master as a Sun Alliance contender

Reynoldstown romp marks Master as a Sun Alliance contender

Trainer Nicky Henderson maintained his hold on Ascot’s major staying novice chase when his Master Of The Hall cruised home to win the Reynoldstown Chase at the Berkshire venue. While there were only four runners in the line-up it was still a classy affair
but Henderson’s charge took care of his rivals with the minimum [...]Originally written by Bet123.net
an online betting GuideReynoldstown romp marks Master as a Sun Alliance contender Related posts:Aintree master Walsh has a tough choice to make Tataniano far from certain to run in Champion Chase Horse Racing Preview Sunday May 11th – Uttoxeter
Worcester and Plumpton

Football Pick Nr. 2 and 3 05/12/2010

Germany Bundesliga Nurnberg – Dortmund   Shocking weekend in Bundesliga because of the numbers of goals scored but today the game is between two overish teams. Last 8 games of Nurnberg were overs while Dortmund are 6-1 on overs when they play away from home. Nurnberg are missing two important defenders for this game: Pinola and Nilsson while Mike Frantz(midfielder 13 games – 2 goals) is missing also. I think this game will be an open one and by statistic and by what we have in the cards there is value on the odds for over.   So take over 2.5 @ 1.88 with Pinnaclesport   Greece 1st League Larissa – PAOK   This game is more of a speculation. PAOK are in some crysis at the moment
both financial but also with their game. They also played in Europe in midweek so they could be more tired than the home team today. Ok
Larissa are on the last place but that means they are desperate in need of points. Another fact that point to what we are picking for this game is that these teams have shared points for some years now. Also
Larissa are playing their first game on a new stadium so they will be motivated to do something good today for their fans. I see value in them.   Take Larissa to win @ 3.01 with Pinnaclesport (5 units bet)

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