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Updated Wed, February 8, 2012.
251.www.jayski.com353
252.www.sportschau.de353
253.www.lba.de353
254.ttvn.de352
255.www.rkcwaalwijk.nl352
256.www.fihp.org351
257.www.bolina.it351
258.www.lega-calcio.it351
259.www.federugby.it350
260.www.chargers.com349
261.www.dynamo-dresden.de349
262.www.golf.be349
263.www.formula1.com348
264.www.prowrestling.com348
265.www.federtennis.it348
266.www.volleyball.it348
267.www.football365.com347
268.sportsnavi.yahoo.co.jp347
269.www.nuoto.it346
270.www.whufc.com346
271.www.georgiadogs.com346
272.www.msnsportsnet.com345
273.www.fisg.it345
274.www.fidal.it344
275.www.olympian.it343
276.www.stadionwelt.de343
277.www.sportfondsen.nl343
278.www.automobilismo.it343
279.www.ismailyonline.com342
280.www.dcb.org342
281.www.basketball.nl342
282.www.equibase.com341
283.www.tnawrestling.com341
284.www.skateparkoftampa.com339
285.www.tour-magazin.de339
286.www.feyenoord.nl338
287.www.formel1.de336
288.www.fcenergie.de336
289.www.adodenhaag.nl336
290.www.quattroruote.it334
291.www.fcn.de334
292.www.genoacfc.it333
293.sport.tiscali.it333
294.www.nascar.com332
295.sport.ard.de332
296.www.segelflug.de332
297.www.emperordivers.com331
298.www.custorino.it329
299.www.sport1.de329
300.www.horses.nl329
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268. sportsnavi.yahoo.co.jp

Rating: 347 points*
*amount mentions of word 'sportsnavi.yahoo.co.jp' on the other websites

sportsnavi.yahoo.co.jp

sportsnavi.yahoo.co.jp

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NYRA CEO jockeys to keep 40-day meet next year
The New York Racing Association Inc. netted $3 million from an extra four days of horse races at this summer’s meet in Saratoga Springs.
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Ricky Hatton's confession threatens to upstage future contenders
• Former world champion admits his days as a boxer are over• Details emerge as Kell Brook wins Birmingham boutIt was with wicked timing that Ricky Hatton laid bare some of his soul, finally admitting his fighting days were done, just as the next generation were turning it on for his one-time promoter and subsequent adversary, Frank Warren. Hatton's muted confession in today's News of the World arrived as the welterweight Kell Brook, who threatens to be a star in the 10-stone-plus mix occupied by Hatton's conquerors Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr, was winning the 22nd contest of his unblemished career on Warren's expanded bill in Birmingham.Nathan Cleverly and James DeGale also won important fights for Warren that will lead to world title opportunities in the coming months, as word leaked of Hatton's reappearance in the paper that exposed him the previous weekend as a voracious user of cocaine. Cleverly, one fight from owning the WBO light-heavyweight belt, said: "I hope, after his problems, I can do something to give boxing a little bit of a boost."There is widespread sympathy in the business for Hatton, who has friends across the spectrum among fighters and fans (if not all promoters), but bewilderment that he continues to play down the extent of his struggle with alcohol and drugs, perhaps the worst kept secrets in boxing. While he fell short of admitting addiction to either vice, but did confront his depression, Hatton also finally put the cap on speculation about his future. "I know I am never going to fight in the ring again," he told the paper.In a confrontational interview that clearly did not go according to the wishes of the people paying for it, Hatton danced around the facts with as much skill as he once showed in the ring. "Problem?" he said in answer to questions about his cocaine use. "What problem?" Neither does Hatton regard his alcohol intake with the same concern as those close to him. "You would associate alcoholism with shorts like whisky and vodka – but I have never really had that."As much as that sparring suggests denial, he revealed worrying details about his health. Hatton could not explain why he had suffered random blackouts, even "when I was stone cold sober", which induced panic attacks and pains in his chest that restricted his breathing. He had no idea, either, why recently he had been watching footage of his brutal knockout by Pacquiao, in his last fight 16 months ago, "every day".Ricky HattonBoxingJames DeGaleKevin Mitchellguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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Weekly NFL picks from USA TODAY's analysts
USA TODAY's NFL analysts make their picks for each week's NFL winners.
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Sale captain James Gaskell out two months with ankle injury
• Gaskell injured ankle ligaments during training• Marc Jones will captain side against CR El SalvadorSale Sharks have been dealt an injury blow with the loss of their captain, James Gaskell, for at least two months.The second-row forward Gaskell, 20, became the youngest captain in Premiership history when he was appointed to the role by the Sale head coach, Mike Brewer, before the current campaign.But an ankle ligament injury suffered during training this week means he is likely to be sidelined until December, ruling him out of several Premiership and Challenge Cup games.The hooker Marc Jones will lead the Sharks in tomorrow night's Challenge Cup opener against the Spanish side Cetransa El Salvador at Edgeley Park.SaleRugby unionguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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San Francisco coach Mike Singletary gets serious after the pants saga
Ahead of the NFL match at Wembley, Mike Singletary recalls his controversial debut as 49ers head coachSay the words "Mike Singletary" to any NFL enthusiast and you will find the reactions broadly split along generational lines. To those old enough to remember the championship-winning Chicago Bears team of 1985 he is Samurai Mike, the wild-eyed leader of a defence so ferocious they came to be known as the Monsters of the Midway. To children of the 90s, on the other hand, he is Coach Singletary, the one who pulled his trousers down.Promoted to interim head coach of the San Francisco 49ers after Mike Nolan was sacked seven games into the 2008 season, Singletary wasted no time making an impression. In the first half of his head coaching debut – a 34-13 loss to the Seattle Seahawks – Singletary benched the then starting quarterback JT O'Sullivan. In the second he sent the starting tight end and former first-round draft pick Vernon Davis to the locker room after a furious sideline exchange."I want winners. I want people who want to win," Singletary raged in a now infamous post-game press conference. And then the news started to filter through: during an even more colourful half-time speech the coach had apparently turned around and exposed his bottom to his players.An air-conditioned room in the NFL's international office in London provides a rather less emotionally charged setting. Singletary is relaxed, at ease and perhaps even a little bit worn out from an intensive schedule of media interviews, though behind puffy lids his eyes still burn with an intensity undimmed since his playing days. He is here to promote the 49ers' fixture against the Denver Broncos at Wembley, but knows very well that he will be asked to relive that debut more than once before he returns Stateside.There is a sense, though, that even now Singletary can't quite understand what all the fuss is about. "It's one thing when you drop your pants, but it's another when people don't explain what's underneath them," he says. "Everybody says 'coach dropped his pants' and of course when I heard from my wife she said 'did you have underwear on?' Well, come on now, you know I've got underwear on. It's the thought process I struggle with. Guys walk around in jockstraps in the locker room, while women are walking around in there too. So what?"It was an amazing thing to me but I learnt a tremendous amount that first day. You learn what you can do, you learn what you can't do. I remember looking at the eyes of the reporters and it was like 'this guy … is really different'. I was just being me. But there are things that I have to continue to refine. Bob [Lange, the 49ers' director of public relations] is tremendous at helping me do those things and I'm very thankful for him. But I wouldn't change one thing from that day."Lange can't speak highly enough about Singletary. It is his job to do so, of course, but having spent eight years with the Philadelphia Eagles before moving to San Francisco in 2009, Lange has experience of working with a huge number of players and coaches, and yet claims to have been startled by how ready Singletary was to take on board his suggestions. A subsequent conversation with the San Francisco's co-owner, John York, supports Lange's claim that Singletary is both a keen listener and an relentless note-taker."I am always listening, I am always learning," Singletary says, "because too many times in life there's just one person that I met, just one thing that I heard, one movie that I saw, one song that was sung, that changed my life. So I'm always trying to stay awake to be in the moment, and capture the moments when they come, because they come and go all the time."In his early life Singletary had no choice but to sit and observe. His mother, who had already had several miscarriages, was advised by doctors in the early stages of pregnancy to have an abortion due to the high risk of complications. Opposed on religious grounds, she refused. Singletary was born very frail, spending much of his first eight years confined to bed with various ailments. Even when he did leave the house in those years he was almost never allowed to play with the other children and usually got left to wait in the car."It's something when you can't play with the other kids," Singletary says, yet even at that age he was determined to find a positive. "I learned how to think. I remember just lying on the ground and looking at the clouds for hours and just sitting there, thinking. Looking out of a window and watching the other kids, whatever it might be. Sometimes maybe there's a lesson in it when you see things from a distance. People arguing, people fighting, and thinking how would you do it differently."Singletary was nine or 10 when his mother finally told him about the doctors' abortion advice, informing him that he was not only destined to live but "that there was greatness in me, that there was something special I would bring". He deflects a question about whether that "something" was American football, but greatness is something he demands from all around him. In the kitchen of his family's home hangs a mission statement that begins: "This is the home of champions. As Singletarys we will always strive to do our very best in all we do."But his team right now are a long way from being champions of anything. This was supposed to be the 49ers' year, an opportunity to return to the play-offs for the first time since the 2002 season. Although they finished runners-up in the NFC West last year, they had beaten the team that finished ahead of them, the Arizona Cardinals, twice, and had finished the season strongly, winning three of their last four games. With the Cardinals losing their quarterback Kurt Warner to retirement, the division was there for the taking.But while the Cardinals have stuttered – and their fellow division rivals the Seattle Seahawks and St Louis Rams have been no better – the 49ers have imploded, losing their first five games. A win over the Oakland Raiders last weekend may have stopped the rot but the play-offs already look a distant dream. The firing of offensive co-ordinator Jimmy Raye after the week-four defeat to the Atlanta Falcons may have bought Singletary some time, but his position is under threat.That puts an even greater onus on Sunday's game in London. The 49ers gave up one of their home games to play at Wembley and can ill afford to drop another game at this stage, especially against a Denver Broncos team who themselves have won just two of their first five games. "I'm excited about it. I think our players are excited about it, it's a tremendous opportunity," he says. "The challenge will just be for our guys to stay focused."Well, that and tracking down some winners. Some people who want to win.NFLUS sportPaolo Bandiniguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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