| |
Auto
Business
Community Announcements
Commentary
Editorial
Entertainment
Health
International
Local
National
Religion
Sports
|
SPORTS
Golf Sensation Zakiya Randall
Fourteen year old female golfer Zakiya Randall from Atlanta is quietly making a name for herself in the sport. The teen, who began playing golf only five years ago, was named Player of the Year by the Atlanta Junior Golf Association in her first year of competitive play in 2002. She has since gone on to dominate her division in the Georgia PGA Junior Tour and win various high-profile junior tournaments across the country. During her 2005 campaign, Randall won every tournament she entered in her division in the Georgia PGA Junior Tour, as well as the overall champion title. "I've had so much fun on the PGA Junior Tour, and I'm really excited about playing this summer," Zakiya Randall said. "I've been working really hard this winter to get better and improve my swing ... My dream right now is to play on the LPGA Tour one day."
Duke Players Charged
North Carolina police have arrested the two Duke University lacrosse players who were named in sealed indictments handed down Monday in the alleged rape of a 27-year-old North Carolina Central University student. Reade Seligmann and Collin Finnerty, both 20, were charged with raping and kidnapping the woman at a team party, where she was hired as an exotic dancer. District Attorney Mike Nifong said he hopes to charge a third person soon. Early Tuesday, Seligmann, a 6-foot-1 sophomore from Essex Fells, N.J.; and Finnerty, a 6-foot-3 sophomore from Garden City, N.Y., were released from custody after each posted $400,000 bond. The next court appearance for both players was set for May 15.
Bonds Heckler Arrested
A man who threw an object at San Francisco Giants star Barry Bonds during a game against Arizona Monday night was charged with disorderly conduct. Mark Greggersen, 23, of Show Low, Arizona, is accused of tossing the object at Bonds during the fourth inning of a game between the Giants and the Arizona Diamondbacks. “We take that stuff very seriously,” Diamondbacks president Richard H. Dozer said. The person who threw a syringe at Bonds during a game in San Diego earlier this month has not been found. Meanwhile, the San Francisco Chronicle is reporting that the head athletic trainer for the Giants has been ordered to testify before a federal grand jury investigating whether Bonds lied about his connection to the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO) steroids scandal. Stan Conte, (no relation to BALCO owner Victor Conte), was subpoenaed to appear in a San Francisco federal courtroom on April 27, the Chronicle reported Tuesday, citing three anonymous sources familiar with the investigation.
Sparks Nab Kobe’s Pops
The WNBA’s Los Angeles Sparks has hired as its new head coach Joe Bryant, the father of Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant, reports AP. The elder Bryant joined the team as an assistant coach last season under Henry Bibby. Bryant took over for the last five games after Bibby left the squad by mutual agreement with management. Bryant finished the season 4-1 and helped the Sparks enter the playoffs, where they were swept in the first round by eventual champion Sacramento. Bryant played eight years in the NBA with the Philadelphia 76ers, San Diego Clippers and Houston Rockets before moving to Italy, where he played in the 1980s.
Williams Ruling Lacks Deadline
A lawyer for Miami Dolphins running back Ricky Williams said the NFL has no deadline to rule on an appeal of a positive drug test that could result in his suspension for the 2006 season. As previously reported, lawyer David Cornwell and Williams met Monday with NFL counsel Jeff Pash in an attempt to have the league overturn a drug test that apparently involved a drug other than marijuana. If the positive result is upheld, it would be Williams' fourth violation of the NFL's substance abuse policy, meaning at least a one-year suspension. Cornwell said Tuesday he and his client presented "compelling evidence" showing that disciplining Williams would "undermine the integrity" of the NFL's substance abuse policy.
Read more
|
|
|
Puckett Honored at Twins Home Opener
The late Kirby Puckett was remembered Tuesday night during the home opener of his former team, the Minnesota Twins. Before their 7-6 win over the Oakland Athletics, video from Puckett's career and last month's memorial service was shown, and former teammate Jack Morris read a tribute to his fellow star in the 1991 World Series. Puckett's children, Catherine and Kirby Jr., threw ceremonial first pitches to Twins center fielder Torii Hunter and A's third base coach Ron Washington -- both close friends of the Hall of Famer, who died on March 6 following a stroke. A large, red No. 34 has been painted in center for the team's first homestand, and players are wearing a patch with Puckett's old uniform number on their sleeves all season.
Williams Sisters Drop out of Fed Cup
The U.S. Fed Cup team will have to play without Venus and Serena Williams. The siblings opted out of competition because of a right elbow sprain and left knee injury, respectively. Fed Cup captain Zina Garrison will go with Jill Craybas, Jamea Jackson, Shenay Perry and Vania King against Germany on the outdoor clay April 22-23, the International Tennis Federation announced on Wednesday.
Bengals’ Henry Charged
Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Chris Henry, charged with carrying a concealed firearm, is due to stand trial on May 30 - just two weeks before Bengals minicamp starts June 15. The athlete was arrested in January after a police officer allegedly saw him pull a gun on a group of party-goers. Officers found a Luger on the back seat of a limousine and a loaded magazine ditched in a gutter where Henry was standing, according to police reports. Henry pleaded not guilty last Thursday. The player pleaded guilty last month to marijuana charges stemming from a Dec. 2005 arrest in Kentucky. He avoided jail time by agreeing to drug rehab.
| |