Friday, April 29, 2011

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011

湖人歐頓 獲NBA年度最佳替補

湖人歐頓 獲NBA年度最佳替補
 (路透)2011年4月20日 星期三 

(路透紐約    19日電)美國    職籃NBA    洛杉磯湖人    (Lakers)首位獲頒最佳替補的歐頓(Lamar Odom),希望這項肯定能讓人們在把他看成後段生之前,再三思一下。

歐頓在2004年交易加入湖人,這筆交易還把歐尼爾(Shaquille O'Neal)送至邁阿密熱火    (Hest),歐頓以生涯最高單季53%投籃命中率,贏得NBA「年度最佳第六人」獎的殊榮。


1999年NBA選秀第4順位的歐頓在記者會中說:「在我職業生涯中,曾有人準備稱我是後段生,就在這時,我贏得此獎。」

歐頓為湖人替補上陣47次、先發35次,平均每場得14.4分、8.7個籃板和3次助攻;湖人目前戰績名列西部聯盟第2。中央社(翻譯)

意大利盃國米一球挫羅馬

意大利盃國米一球挫羅馬
 (星島)2011年4月20日 星期三 

意大利    盃四強首回合賽事,國際米蘭    作客以1:0擊敗羅馬。

羅馬初段有胡仙歷浪費黃金機會,全場唯一入球來自臨完半場前,國際米蘭的史坦高域的遠射死角入網,打開紀錄。國米今場有馬干、伊度奧    及莫達缺陣。國米最終小勝1:0,首回合領先。

熱火公牛連捷跑出

熱火公牛連捷跑出
 (星島)2011年4月20日 星期三
(綜合報道)

(星島日報    報道)撇開無謂爭議與場外風波,今年NBA    季後賽甚有看頭。西岸頭2種子馬刺和湖人首戰失利,東岸首兩位的公牛與熱火則打出應有表現,昨齊告捷同樣場數領先2:0,帶動比賽收視在美國    報捷。


  公牛球星戴歷羅斯昨在第4節攻下個人36分中的14分,連續兩場尾段發威,帶領「一哥」公牛以96:90擊退溜馬。公牛兩戰合計只贏第8種子11分,羅斯未夠痛快︰「勝利永遠得來不易,但我覺得球隊仍有不足。」

  同日,東岸第2的熱火發揮少見的強勢防守,以94:73大勝76人。在熱火壓制下,溜馬上半場投射命中率不足26%,「三巨頭」占士、維迪和波殊收起常規賽的嬉皮笑臉,實力超班毋容置疑。

  季後賽激戰連場,季後賽收視亦在美國報捷。當地消息指出,季後賽首輪收視較上季至少升30%,其中塞爾特人對紐約    人的大戰,更較上季類似戲碼有53%升幅!

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Sunday, April 17, 2011

U.S. Cracks Down on Online Gambling

April 15, 2011
U.S. Cracks Down on Online Gambling
By MATT RICHTEL
NY Times

In an aggressive attack on Internet gambling, federal prosecutors on Friday unsealed fraud and money laundering charges against operators of three of the most popular online poker sites. The government also seized the Internet addresses of the sites, a new enforcement tactic that effectively shuttered their doors.

Prosecutors charged that the operators of Full Tilt Poker, PokerStars and Absolute Poker tricked banks into processing billions of dollars in payments from customers in the United States. They said the actions violated a federal law passed in 2006 that prohibits illegal Internet gambling operations from accepting payments.

The sites have their headquarters in places where online gambling is legal — Antigua and the Isle of Man — a hurdle that has made it difficult for authorities in the United States to crack down on the industry. The indictment shows the intensifying game of cat-and-mouse between prosecutors and gambling sites that generate billions of dollars in transactions.

The online poker operators sought to avoid detection by banks and legal authorities by funneling payments through fictitious online businesses that purported to sell jewelry, golf balls and other items, according to the indictment. It says that when some banks processed the payments, they were unaware of the real nature of the business, but the site operators also bribed banks into accepting the payments.

Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in a statement that the defendants “concocted an elaborate criminal fraud scheme, alternately tricking some U.S. banks and effectively bribing others to assure the continued flow of billions in illegal gambling profits.”

Representatives for the poker sites could not immediately be reached.

On Friday, authorities arrested two defendants, including John Campos, the vice chairman of a small bank in Saint George, Utah, who they said processed gambling transactions in exchange for a $20,000 fee and a $10 million investment in the bank by poker site operators and their associates. The United States attorney’s office is working with foreign law enforcement in hopes of extraditing defendants located abroad and seizing their assets.

Experts in gambling law said that the forceful action raises tricky questions about gambling laws and the government’s reach. These experts said it was not clear, for example, whether countries that sanctioned and licensed such activity would allow extraditions.

Lawrence Walters, a lawyer who represents online gambling operations, though not those involved in these cases, said the indictment might raise an even more fundamental question: Is online poker actually illegal? Federal law prohibits sports betting, but experts are divided over whether it clearly prohibits online games like poker and blackjack.

In the indictment, prosecutors seemed to skirt the issue. They based parts of their prosecution on state laws in New York and elsewhere that prohibited unlicensed gambling, including poker. Legal experts said the prosecutors needed to rely on such prohibitions as a foundation for going after the claims of money laundering and fraud. But Mr. Walters said this strategy might face challenges. He said it was not clear that the state laws applied to foreign-based gambling operations, given that under federal law, international commerce was regulated at the federal level.

“This appears to be a precedent-setting case,” Mr. Walters said. “It will be the first time the Department of Justice takes on the looming question of whether federal law prohibits online poker.”

Opponents of online gambling have been trying to figure out for years how best to police casinos that can be located abroad but reach easily into American homes. According to statistics provided by the Poker Player’s Alliance, an advocacy organization led by former Senator Alfonse D’Amato of New York, seven million Americans play online for money once a month.

In a statement, Mr. D’Amato criticized the prosecution. “We are shocked at the action,” he said, adding, “Online poker is not a crime and should not be treated as such.”

ComScore, a company that measures Internet traffic, said that in March, Full Tilt Poker had 2.6 million visitors from the United States, PokerStars had 1.9 million and Absolute Poker had 1.3 million. ComScore also reported that 1.4 million people visited Ultimate Bet, a site that the federal indictment says joined forces last year with Absolute Poker. Those were the nation’s four most popular poker sites, ComScore said.

On Friday, visitors to those sites were met with a message that begins: “This domain name has been seized by the F.B.I.” The government used the same controversial tactic of seizing domain names in actions last year against sites accused of copyright violations. Losing a domain name can be costly for a company that has invested in promoting it as the main route to its site. But the tactic can also be of only temporary effectiveness, because the company can switch to a new Web address that is outside the reach of law enforcement in the United States — one that, for example, does not end in .com.

According to the indictment, the fraud and money laundering scheme evolved from deception to bribery. Initially, after the enactment of the 2006 law aimed at limiting payment processing for online gambling, the defendants sought to dupe banks by creating fake companies, according to the indictment.

But the indictment says that as financial institutions got wise to those efforts, several defendants sough to persuade smaller banks to process the transactions by making multimillion-dollar investments in them.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Dolled up Alex Gerrard snubs the Grand National at Aintree for girls' night out in Manchester

Dolled up Alex Gerrard snubs the Grand National at Aintree for girls' night out in Manchester
By Daily Mail Reporter
10th April 2011

Her fellow WAGs might have been showing off their best frocks at the Aintree racetrack to watch the Grand National, but Alex Gerrard decided to give it a miss this year.


Instead Alex hit the town in Manchester for a night out with friends, but still dressed up for the occasion.

The 28-year-old slipped on a pair of black peep-toe heels and a peach lace dress as she headed to San Carlo’s restaurant with her pals.

Dolled up: Alex Gerrard headed out to an Italian restaurant with friends in Manchester in a peach and black lace frock
Steven Gerrard’s wife looked like a doll in the long-sleeved peach frock, which was garnished with black lace around her bodice and arms.

She accessorised with a black oval clutch purse and plenty of pick blush on her cheeks to finish off the ensemble.

San Carlo’s boasts the very best in true Italian dining and has a bar for pre and post dinner drinks too, where the women sipped on cocktails.

While Alex decided against heading to the Aintree racetrack earlier in the day, fellow WAG Coleen Rooney made sure to make an appearance alongside her family and friends.

It was Coleen’s second day at the ground after having attended the event’s Ladies’ Day on Friday.

Girls' night out: Alex appeared to be with some fellow blonde pals, one of which wore see-through black lace tights
Meanwhile, Alex announced this week in her OK! Magazine column that she’d be taking her two daughters, Lilly, seven, and Lexie, four, to Portugal with her mother and Steven’s mother.

She wrote: ‘The children break up for school this week so I’m taking them back to Portugal. 

'I’m so fed up with this weather – one minute the sun’s shining and the next it’s raining.

‘It’s gorgeous over there and we have our own house. Steven’s working at the moment so he can’t come but after he finishes, we’ll be planning another visit out there in June.'

Grand National: Meanwhile, Alex's fellow WAG Coleen Rooney was spotted at Aintree enjoying the annual event

People:
Coleen Rooney,
Steven Gerrard
Places:
Manchester,
Portugal

Spirit Son slams rivals in the Mersey Novices' Hurdle


Spirit Son slams rivals in the Mersey Novices' Hurdle
10th April 2011

Barry Geraghty started Grand National day on a high with victory on Spirit Son in the John Smith's Mersey Novices' Hurdle at Aintree.  
The Irish jockey, winner of the great race with Monty's Pass in 2003, enjoyed a smooth success on Nicky Henderson's gelding who had finished second in the Supreme Novices' Hurdle at Cheltenham. 


All too easy: Spirit Son and Barry Geraghty jump the last in the Mersey Novices' Hurdle
Sam Winner made the running on sufferance after no-one appeared to want go on. He led until three out where Drive Time fell.  
Spirit Son (3-1) soon took it up and bounded away to score by 13 lengths from the 5-2 favourite Cue Card, who made several mistakes, with Rock On Ruby (9-2) eight lengths away third.
Geraghty said: 'He's a bit of a baby, he's only five. I said to Nicky before Cheltenham that it might just come six months too soon for him but he learned an awful lot from it.  

'Just over this longer trip he was able to get into a nice rhythm and he jumped and travelled lovely. He picked up well and he destroyed them at the finish.  
'I was going like a winner everywhere.'
Henderson, bagging his first winner of the three-day meeting, said: 'It's taken two days to get there, but we've finally managed it.  
'He was good today, Barry said the only thing was probably Cheltenham might have come six months too soon for him.  
'I don't know quite what his trip will be but you won't see him again this season. 
'We'll see where he is over hurdles just to start with (next season) and it's only just starting to happen for him.'

Cue Card's trainer Colin Tizzard said: 'We were beaten by a very nice horse. Joe (Tizzard, jockey son) had to wake him up a little on the bend, but he stayed on really well.  
'That will probably be it for the season. He will go chasing next season and he will be a nice horse over fences.  
'We thought he would travel and then pick up, but Spirit Son did that a bit better and he must be a very good horse.'  
Daryl Jacob, rider of the third Rock On Ruby, said: 'He ran a bit flat. Maybe he had a hard race at Cheltenham.'

Thrill of the chase: Racegoers shout home their horses at Aintree
Having waited two days to open his account at the meeting, Henderson wasted no time in doubling up when Finian's Rainbow atoned for a near-miss at Cheltenham in the Grade 1 John Smith's Maghull Novices' Chase.  
Geraghty did not seem to go as fast as he did in the Arkle, reserving a bit in hand for the finish, and he needed to as Ghizao was a stern challenger. 
In fact Ruby Walsh might have been going just the better when he ploughed through the second-last fence, losing all chance.  

Turning point: Ghizao's penultimate fence blunder allowed Finian's Rainbow to land the Maghull Novices' Chase
He tried gallantly to rally but also met the last wrong which allowed Finian's Rainbow to eventually win by two lengths as the 10-11 favourite.
Owner Michael Buckley was also celebrating the quickfire double. 
He said: 'Cheltenham was quite a testing time as I lost a lovely horse (Lush Life) and it was tough to finish second there, although I suppose other than winning finishing second is better than anything else.  

'It's still a terrific day and I suppose you would have to take him for the Champion Chase as you wouldn't think he'd want to go further than two miles.  

'Things change and some two milers end up going over further, but I'd imagine we'll start him off in one of the good two-mile chases and see how he gets on.'
Paul Nicholls said of Ghizao: 'Ruby said he would have won if he had not made a mistake at the second-last. If he is OK he could go to Punchestown.'  
David Pipe said of the third, Dan Breen: 'He ran as well as could be expected, the first two were the form horses, it was a good run from our horse.  
'He's had two quick races, but he likes good ground and we came for some prize money and got it. We could keep him going and there are options at Punchestown, Sandown and Ayr.'

Oscar Whisky (6-1) completed a remarkable hat-trick for Henderson and Geraghty when just holding Thousand Stars in the John Smith's Aintree Hurdle.  
The Champion Hurdle third, carrying the colours of Ffos Las owner Dai Walters, was always travelling well and jumped into the lead at the fourth-last flight. 
He went clear of the field but was all-out at the line to keep Thousand Stars and Katie Walsh at bay by a neck, with Salden Licht third.  
Market leaders Peddlers Cross and Henderson's other runner Binocular were well beaten.

Make mine a treble: Geraghty brings home Oscar Whisky to land a Grade 1 double on the day
Geraghty said: 'He's very game. The plan was to track Peddlers Cross but I was quite happy to sit behind Ruby (Walsh, on Celestial Halo).  
'He came alive with me down the back and I was happy to just go with it.  
'Like Spirit Son he's promised loads. He was fourth in the Supreme last year and third in the Champion this, but he's done it today.'

Henderson said: 'After the first two days I'd half a mind to take them all home because it was awful, but today was the big day of the three and we always knew that.  
'Barry said go for the Champion hurdle next year, but he's grown up a lot today and he'll be year older and he might want to go further. The good thing is we've got the whole summer to think about it. 
'Binocular was too bad to be true, I think he's better than that. They didn't go a gallop and I expected him to pick up. You know with him when he's not right as he knocks his hurdles and he was doing that today.  
'Oscar Whisky won't run again this season and I shouldn't think Binocular will either, but I will have to talk to JP (McManus, owner)."
Thousand Stars' rider Katie Walsh said: 'I love that horse and he gave me a winner at Cheltenham.  
'Going to the last I thought I would win, but to be fair to Oscar Whisky he kept pulling out every step of the way.  
'On the run-in it might have looked as though as I was going to get there, but I half knew I was never quite going to make it.' 
Unfortunately Walsh was given a six-day ban for using her whip with excessive frequency and in the incorrect place.
Willie Mullins, trainer of Thousand Stars, said: 'The thing is now I'm not sure whether to run him over two miles or three miles at Punchestown. He certainly wasn't stopping there.  
'I'll have to have a word with Katie.'  
Alan King, trainer of the third, Salden Licht, said: 'That was a great run, I couldn't be more thrilled with him.  
'The trouble is he is in a bit of no-man's land over hurdles. We may give him a run on the Flat or put him away and school him over fences in the autumn.'

Crowning glory: Prince De Beauchene and Paul Gallagher (right) go on to win the John Smith's Handicap Steeple Chase
Young 5lb claiming jockey Paul Gallagher rode his second winner of the week as Prince De Beauchene came out best in a war of attrition for the John Smith's Handicap Chase.  
Having joined trainer Howard Johnson from Ferdy Murphy recently, Gallagher is making a real name for himself and realised the pace wasn't strong enough a long way from home.  
Gallagher took up the running going out on to the second circuit and saw off a host of challengers to win.
Rare Bob was still in contention when unseating Bryan Cooper at the second-last, Bensalem looked beaten when a mistake at the same fence ruled him out and Reve De Sivola blundered away his chance at the last.  

Over and out: Carrickmines unsits Paddy Brennan the John Smith's Handicap Steeple Chase
The 10-1 winner than held off Categorical after the final fence for a one-and-a-half-length win.
Gallagher, who also won on Silk Drum on Thursday, said: 'His jumping won it for him and he's so quick away from his fences.  
'I thought the ground might be a bit too quick for him, but it was his first try at three miles and the extra four furlongs has helped him.  
'This has been an unbelievable week. This is what you are in the game for. I grew up dreaming about this and now it's happening.'
Winning owner Graham Wylie said: 'I wasn't sure whether he wanted soft ground at two and a half miles, but he got the three miles well and I think the ground is on the soft side of good as they have must have put a decent amount of water on last night.  
'This horse has been coming along all season but I don't know what will happen now. Ayr comes too close for him.  
'Aintree is lucky for Howard and for myself. I think that is because it comes later in the season than Cheltenham for the northern horses and that helps as we usually have worse winters up here.  
'I have noticed how fast they go at Cheltenham and here, and you really need a good horse and a fit horse to win.' 
James Reveley, who partnered the runner-up Categorical, said: 'He is progressing all the time. He travelled well and jumped the fences well and I think this is his best run yet.'

Far Away So Close (14-1) just got the better of fellow Irish raider Jack Cool in a thrilling finish to the John Smith's Handicap Hurdle for Conditional and Amateur riders.  
Paul Nolan, saddling his first winner at the Aintree Festival, said: 'He's run very well twice in the Supreme at Cheltenham and we decided to keep him as a novice for this season.   
'We used different tactics this time. He jumped well and found plenty off the bridle.   
'Mick (Doran) gave him a great ride and the plan now is to go for a two-and-a-half-mile handicap at the Punchestown Festival.'   

Gordon Elliott appears to have a smart prospect on his hands in Steps To Freedom (12-1) who had too much speed for Montbazon in the John Smith's Champion Standard Open NH Flat Race.   
Paul Carberry was at his ultra-confident best as the five-year-old came from the rear of the field to beat the favourite by two lengths.   
'He's a very good horse, he likes good ground and Paul gave him a great ride,' said Elliott.   
'We may go for the bumper at Perth and I think he's good enough to win over a mile and a half on the Flat."

Aintree day of horror as TV audience of millions see two horses die at the National


Aintree day of horror as TV audience of millions see two horses die at the National
By STEPHEN DAVIES 
10th April 2011


Death came again to the Grand National yesterday - and the horror was played out in front of a worldwide television audience of 600 million.
They and the thousands who had packed Aintree for the annual cavalry charge looked on as two horses died in appalling falls.
The race had to divert round the fences where the fatalities had occurred to avoid the bodies of the victims.

Carnage: Or Noir De Somoza (6) is brought down at Becher's Brook
Television viewers got their first inkling of the horror when, on the second circuit, racecourse workers were seen frantically waving chequered flags as the field approached the 20th fence.

The commentators gave little clue as to what had happened but viewers saw the jockeys steer their horses around the fence.
Beyond it lay the body of Ornais, covered by green tarpaulins. The horse, ridden by Nick Scholfield, had broken its neck when it fell at the fence, the fourth obstacle on the National's first circuit.

The horrifying scene was repeated when the field missed out Becher's Brook to avoid the body of Dooney's Gate, which had broken its back when attempting to clear the infamous fence first time round.
Jockey Patrick Mullins, having his first ride in the National, was thrown clear of his mount and avoided injury. 

A racecourse worker waves a chequered warning flag as the field thunders over the 19th fence on the Grand National course
But the 10-year-old horse, trained by his father, Willie Mullins, and owned by his mother, Jackie, died.
Clare Balding, who hosted the BBC's coverage, was close to tears as she revealed the news, while former National-winning jockey Richard Dunwoody said: 'It's absolutely terrible.'

Paul Nicholls, trainer of Ornais and three other horses in the race, said: 'I feel gutted for his owners, the Stewart family, but together we'll get through it.' 

Jockeys guide their mounts round the 20th fence to avoid the tarpaulin-covered body of Ornais, who had fallen there on the first circuit, fatally breaking his neck

Willie Mullins said: 'Patrick is devastated. The horse was dead when the vets got to him.'
Sir Alex Ferguson, co-owner of What A Friend, followed the race from his seat at Manchester United's Premier League match with Fulham at Old Trafford. His horse was pulled up four fences from home and Sir Alex said: 'He came back OK and that's all that matters.'

The tragedies followed the death of Inventor on the first day of the meeting on Thursday, and added to the growing list of casualties at the Liverpool course. 

Two fences later, the field misses out Becher's Brook to avoid Dooneys Gate, whose body lies surrounded by screens after he fell at the infamous fence on the first circuit, breaking his back and dying almost certainly instantaneously
There were four deaths at the three-day meeting last year, five in 2009 and since 2000 a staggering 33 horses have died at the Aintree spring festival amid increasing protests from animal welfare groups.

The BBC were criticised after one commentator referred to the body of one of the dead horses as an 'obstacle'. 
A BBC spokesman said: 'We were aware of the unfortunate events of the two fatalities. During the race and the re-run this was covered with as much sensitivity as possible.'

Island tycoon Trevor Hemmings toasts Grand National win

ISLE OF MAN / ELLAN VANNIN

10 April 2011 

Island tycoon Trevor Hemmings toasts Grand National win


Isle of Man millionaire Trevor Hemmings is celebrating a Grand National victory for the second time in six years.

His horse Ballabriggs, ridden by jockey Jason Maguire, came home by two-and-a-quarter lengths in the famous race at Aintree, Liverpool on Saturday.


Online Sportsbooks 


The 10-year-old was his second winner as his horse Hedgehunter came home first in 2005.

The London-born businessman, 75, who grew up in Leyland, Lancashire, owns more than 100 racehorses.

The winning horse was trained by Donald McCain, whose father Ginger trained famous national winner Red Rum.

Pier owner


"Donald has done a brilliant job with Ballabriggs and clearly learned plenty from Ginger as they now have five National trophies on their mantelpiece," said Mr Hemmings.

Mr Hemmings, who is also the owner of Preston North End FC, was the person who introduced the Center Parcs holiday complexes to Britain.


He currently owns two of Blackpool's piers and recently sold the North Pier.

Last year he sold the resort's famous tower to the local council.

Grand National 2011: Don't Push It is primed to do it all again in the Grand National So is it asking Don’t Push It a big question to go out there and do it all over again, this time with an even bigger weight? Top flight: Binocular and Tony McCoy team up again at Aintree Photo: ACTION IMAGES By Tony McCoy 08 Apr 2011 Horses don’t generally win successive Nationals but 34 years after Red Rum won his third you could say we are due another and I don’t think it is beyond the horse, even though he is another year older. He was the first horse to carry 11st 5lb or more to victory since Red Rum in 1977 so the weight should not be as much of a problem as it would to a smaller horse. He was always going to get top weight so we haven’t been running him in hurdle races to hide him from the Handicapper, we’ve been doing it to keep him sweet. He comes into the race arguably in better form than he was a year ago when he had pulled up over hurdles at Cheltenham. This time he ran much better in the Pertemps Final, his races have got better as the season has progressed so hopefully he is back to his peak. He remains one of the class acts in the race. The going won’t be as soft as last year but that’s no bad thing. On good ground it will be a little easier to carry the weight over such an extreme distance and so I’m thinking the drier the better this time. I have also heard some people suggest that he will be like some previous winners, who hated Aintree when they went back for another go. I’m confident he is a quirky enough character to go back and do it again rather than have been put off for life by the experience. If you were comparing him to a striker it would be Wayne Rooney rather than Michael Owen; both gifted but, like Don’t Push It, one has a wayward streak.

Grand National 2011: Don't Push It is primed to do it all again in the Grand National

So is it asking Don’t Push It a big question to go out there and do it all over again, this time with an even bigger weight?


Top flight: Binocular and Tony McCoy team up again at Aintree Photo: ACTION IMAGES
By Tony McCoy 08 Apr 2011

Horses don’t generally win successive Nationals but 34 years after Red Rum won his third you could say we are due another and I don’t think it is beyond the horse, even though he is another year older.
He was the first horse to carry 11st 5lb or more to victory since Red Rum in 1977 so the weight should not be as much of a problem as it would to a smaller horse. He was always going to get top weight so we haven’t been running him in hurdle races to hide him from the Handicapper, we’ve been doing it to keep him sweet.

He comes into the race arguably in better form than he was a year ago when he had pulled up over hurdles at Cheltenham. This time he ran much better in the Pertemps Final, his races have got better as the season has progressed so hopefully he is back to his peak. He remains one of the class acts in the race.

The going won’t be as soft as last year but that’s no bad thing. On good ground it will be a little easier to carry the weight over such an extreme distance and so I’m thinking the drier the better this time.
I have also heard some people suggest that he will be like some previous winners, who hated Aintree when they went back for another go. I’m confident he is a quirky enough character to go back and do it again rather than have been put off for life by the experience. If you were comparing him to a striker it would be Wayne Rooney rather than Michael Owen; both gifted but, like Don’t Push It, one has a wayward streak.

Kate's mate Waley-Cohen just misses out on stunning treble

Kate's mate Waley-Cohen just misses out on stunning treble

By Jonathan Powell 
9th April 2011


Leading amateur jockey Sam Waley-Cohen came agonisingly close to adding the Grand National to his victories in the King George VI Chase and Cheltenham Gold Cup. 
He unleashed Oscar Time with a sustained challenge that took him to the quarters of Ballabriggs halfway up the long, unforgiving run-in.

Jump to it: Ballabriggs and Jason Maguire (centre) rise in front of Harry Skelton on Niche Market (left) and Robbie Power on Killyglen (right) at the 11th fence
At The Elbow, as they continued to close, it seemed they might just prevail but then Ballabriggs pulled away. 
Waley-Cohen, 28, was clearly exhilarated at the performance of Oscar Time, owned by his father, Robert, and Sir Martin Broughton, former Liverpool FC chairman. 
He said: 'Second is always a difficult place to be but it's been an unbelievable season and I feel incredibly lucky and honoured to be riding in these big races and going so well. 
'Oscar Time has given me the most phenomenal round. If a horse takes to the National course, it gives you the best 10 minutes of your life and the shortest 10 minutes.

So close to history: Oscar Time (18) and Waley-Cohen clear 'The Chair'
'The plan was to come with one smooth run. I was just trying to get him to save a little bit because I knew that he had a great jump in him and that I could use that to make up the ground.' 
The next major appointment in the crowded diary of Waley-Cohen is the royal wedding at Westminster Abbey. 
The friend of Kate Middleton is credited with bringing her and Prince William together again after their split in 2007 by inviting them both to a party at his family's Oxford mansion.

Anchored by weight: Don't Push It (left) clears 'The Chair' with The Midnight Club (11) narrowly ahead
Then he will be preparing for his own wedding, to Annabel Ballin on June 11. 
But his father revealed: 'Sam did say he wouldn't be getting married until he had won the Grand National.' 

Good friends: Kate Middleton and Sam Waley-Cohen

People:
Kate Middleton,
Martin Broughton
Places:
Westminster Abbey

Ballabriggs wins Grand National racing

Ballabriggs wins Grand National racing
AFP – Ballabriggs ridden by Jason Maguire soars over the water jump on his way to winning the Grand National …
– Sat Apr 9 2011


LIVERPOOL (AFP) – Ballabriggs, trained by Donald McCain and ridden by Jason Maguire, won the Grand National here on Saturday, the 14-1 chance beating Oscar Time, partnered by amateur rider Sam Waley-Cohen.
Don't Push It, last year's winner, came in third with State Of Play in fourth.

Horse racing-McCain wins Grand National with Ballabriggs

Horse racing-McCain wins Grand National with Ballabriggs
Fri, Apr 8 2011

LIVERPOOL, England, April 9 | Sat Apr 9, 2011 11:32am EDT
(Reuters) - Trainer Donald McCain followed his father and four-time winner Ginger McCain into Grand National folklore by winning the world famous steeplechase at Aintree racecourse on Saturday.


Ridden by Jason Maguire, Ballabriggs (14-1) held off the strong challenge of amateur Sam Waley-Cohen on Oscar Time (14-1) with last year's winner Don't Push It (9-1) third. (Editing by Justin Palmer

Saturday, April 9, 2011

2011 Grand National

2011 Grand National


Amateur rider seeks Grand National racing history

Amateur rider seeks Grand National racing history

Sat Apr 9


LIVERPOOL, United Kingdom (AFP) – Amateur rider Sam Waley-Cohen, winner of the Gold Cup on Long Run, is out to spike the guns of his professional weighing room colleagues again and create history in Saturday's Grand National.

Waley-Cohen, who in his day job runs a dental practice, teams up over the famous Aintree fences for what would be an unprecedented double on Oscar Time, runner-up in last year's Irish National.

The 28-year-old, who also landed January's King George VI Chase on Long Run, is seeking to become the first amateur to win the Gold Cup and Grand National in the same season.

Waley-Cohen, who will as a non-professional forfeit any prize money he picks up in the near £1 million showpiece, said: "Although this season has been so good, it is still a boyhood dream come true to line up in the National on one of the leading contenders."

Oscar Time is part of a dozen-strong Irish raiding party headed by ante-post favourite The Midnight Club, whose rider, Ruby Walsh, will become the first jockey since the Second World War to win three Nationals should he succeed.
And his 2011 conveyance has been prepared with only Saturday in mind, having run only twice in the past year, runner-up in the Thyestes Chase at Gowran Park in January before displaying his wellbeing when going one better at Fairyhouse the following month.
Walsh's previous winners came on his father Ted's Papillon in 2000, and Hedgehunter, trained by The Midnight Club's handler Willie Mullins, in 2005.
Walsh's sister Katie was robbed of her first National appearance after her intended runner Our Monty was ruled out with a leg infection.
Another Irish trainer, flat supremo Dermot Weld, returns to the National fray for the first time in 16 years with 33-1 shot Majestic Concorde, who finished fourth on the level at Chester on his last visit to Britain.
Weld, who has two Melbourne Cups to his name, went close in the National with Greasepaint, twice runner up in 1983-84 and third in 1985.
Topweight over the gruelling four and a half mile marathon is shouldered by Don't Push It, successful last year for Tony McCoy, the multiple champion jockey for whom despite having ridden almost 3,000 winners this was a first victory in the world's most famous steeplechase at his 15th attempt.
It was also a first win for trainer Jonjo O'Neill, who had begun to think he was going to miss out on National glory.
"Sometimes you have to accept a thing is not going to happen," O'Neill told The Times on Thursday.
"You can't win everything, do everything. You can't be God."
O'Neill revealed how before last year's race he had rung owner JP McManus's racing manager, Frank Berry, to tell him it was a waste of time sending Don't Push It to Aintree, such was his disappointment at his horse's preparations.
"Luckily he (Berry) said we'd paid the money so we might as well go!"
Of the chances of a repeat O'Neill said: "I'm happier with him this year. The preparation has been brilliant, which probably means he'll fall at the first...."
Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson would relish a win in Liverpool and the Scot's hopes are carried by What A Friend, Paul Nicholls' charge last seen out when fourth in the Gold Cup at Cheltenham.
Jockey Daryl Jacob is laidback over the identity of his big race mount's owner, saying: "I don't really think about who owns the horses before I ride them.
"It doesn't matter if it's Sir Alex Ferguson, the Queen or someone from Dorset - I want to do the best I can on them all."
A maximum field of 40 go to post for the 2011 edition.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Grand National Now a Matter of Class

SPORTSAPRIL 8, 2011
Grand National Now a Matter of Class
By JONATHAN CLEGG
WSJ

AINTREE, England—The Grand National, the world's most famous steeplechase, is an event that thrives on unpredictability.


Only 11 favorites have won round here in more than a century, and none has done so in six years. Five have won at 100-to-1, most recently Mon Mome in 2009. The only sure bet in this long-odds race is that fewer than half the runners will reach the finish: In 1928, only two of the 42 horses completed the race; only four of 40 finished as recently as 2001.

Winning over Aintree's four-and-a-half miles and 40 obstacles requires experience, stamina and guts. But mostly, it's about luck.

Agence France-Presse
A. P. McCoy, right, celebrates as he rides Don't Push It to victory in last year's Grand National steeplechase at Aintree.

Or it used to be. But as the 40 thoroughbreds prepare for the 164th running of this history-steeped epic on Saturday, behind the scenes something rather unexpected is going on: This sport's most unpredictable race is no longer the wide-open sweepstake it's supposed to be.

"The Grand National always throws up interesting stories," says Julian Thick, managing director of Aintree Racecourse. "But they're not always fairy tales anymore."

The Grand National is on a tear these days. Television ratings topped 7.6 million in the U.K. last year, making the National a bigger draw than the FA Cup final and Wimbledon. Prize money for this year's race has risen to £950,000 ($1.5 million) and more than 73,000 fans will pack the racetrack for Saturday's big race, the first sellout crowd in decades.

But the biggest upturn at this race may be the one taking place on the track. For reasons that range from the modernization of this famous old course to a new plan for handicapping the field, the most remarkable jump around Aintree in recent years has been in the quality of horses taking part.

Just a decade ago, the National was still largely made up of horses that would have been better employed in front of a cart. But in the past few years, the calibre of mount has improved to such an extent that Bobbyjo, which streaked to victory by 10 lengths in 1999, wouldn't have made the final field in any of the past 10 runnings.

"It's a very different race to what it was a decade ago," said Russ Wiseman, of London-based online gambling company Sportingbet PLC.

The National's transformation from a race in which few owners were willing to enter a top-class horse into an event that attracts many of chasing's biggest names surely has something to do with the heaps of cash on offer: Prize money at this race has risen by £500,000 in the past decade.

But it's also the result of efforts by Aintree officials and race sponsors to modernize a course that included a stone wall and a stretch of ploughed field for the first Grand National in 1839.

Since the 1989 running, in which two horses died, administrators have softened the course, modfiying some of the most hazardous obstacles to protect the animals. The upshot is a race that, while still a fearsome challenge, is no longer such a perilous one—especially since the notorious Becher's Brook was covered up in 2005. Last year, more than a third of the field made it round.

At the same time, a new formula for handicapping the race has bridged the gap between the highest-rated horses and the lowest. In recognition of the unique demands of this race—the longest, toughest steeplechase in the world—the National now allocates weights for each horse that differ from the official handicaps for regular chases.

Since Phil Smith, the British Horseracing Authority's senior jumps handicapper, began tweaking the weights in 2001, the class of entries has increased dramatically. In 1999, the lowest-rated horse in the race had an official rating of 110; in Saturday's race the lowest-rated horse, Golden Kite, has a rating of 135. In other words, the quality of the field has increased by 25lbs in 11 years.

"They have tried to encourage the high-class horses to run by compressing the handicap a little," said David Pipe, the trainer of the 2008 winner Comply or Die.

All of which means that the National has swiftly come to resemble any other handicap race—one in which the best horses with the highest ratings usually win. Only four of the past 20 winners here have returned odds of greater than 20-1

In previous years, that wasn't the case—a third of the runners went to the starting post with no chance at all because a weight of 11st or more was insurmountable.

When Hedgehunter carried 11st 1lb in 2005, it was the first National winner to carry over 11st in 22 years. Since then, three of the past five winners have carried 11st or more.

Which explains why Ruby Walsh is optimistic ahead of his ride on The Midnight Club, the favorite for Saturday's race.

"It's great to have a ride in the Grand National and a fancied one at that," he says. "I think he's got a good shout—and in the Grand National, that's really all you can hope for."

Graduate of Northern Racing College in Grand National

8 April 2011 
Graduate of Northern Racing College in Grand National

A former student of the Northern Racing College in Doncaster will be riding in the Grand National at Aintree on Saturday.
Dominic Elsworth will be riding on the 40/1 shot Skippers Brig.


The horse, trained by Nicky Richards, made it into the race following the withdrawal of three horses earlier in the week.
Mr Elsworth, who has ridden in the Grand National before, said it was a "testing" but "unique" race.
'Cup final buzz'

He said: "It is like nothing you have ever experienced before, it is a tremendous buzz.
"Anything can happen, there was a hundred to one winner a few years ago.
"When you walk around at the start all you can hear is people saying good luck to you, there is a cup final buzz to it."
Mr Elsworth had more than a year out of racing after suffering the effects of concussion following a fall in August 2009 on Keepitsecret.

The fall left him in hospital with bruising on the brain, which led to problems with his balance.
He returned to racing in October 2010.

Northern Racing College, at Rossington Hall in Doncaster, opened in 1994 and provides training for young people wanting to work in the horse racing industry.

Paul Howard, senior training instructor at the Northern Racing College, said: "It is great for any former student to do well but this is a big race so it is great for Dominic and great for us."
About 100 students attend the college each year from all over the country.

Paddy Power Commercial Grand National

The latest Paddy Power Commercial offering some great features for the Grand National

Grand National jockeys at Alder Hey Children's Hospital

8 April 2011 
Grand National jockeys at Alder Hey Children's Hospital
BBC

Grand National jockeys offered their racing tips to youngsters on a visit to Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool.
Among the stars to take time out from their training schedule were last year's champion AP McCoy, Ruby Walsh, Daryl Jacob and Aiden Coleman.


They spent about an hour at the hospital's oncology unit, chatting to the children and their parents.
McCoy said the visit "really put things into perspective".

The jockey, who with retired champion Mick Fitzgerald is a patron of Alder Hey's Imagine Appeal, said: "I never fail to be moved by the bravery of these children and their families.

Shelley Ball, whose five-year-old son Nathan is undergoing treatment for Langhan Cell Histiocycosis, said: "Nathan has been very excited all week.

"He doesn't really know about horse racing but kept asking when the 'jackies' would be coming."
Mrs Ball, from St Helens, added: "I can't describe what a boost it has given him, and me."
Becca Bate, 15, from Speke in Liverpool, got some hot tips for the Aintree meeting.

Her mother, Emma Paulson, 31, said: "Becca has Ewing Sarcoma but she has been responding well to treatment.
"She asked all the jockeys which horses they were riding and which were the best to have a flutter on.
"As soon as they left she dispatched her dad down to the bookies with her pocket money."

Jenny Lee, whose nine-year-old daughter Catherine has bone cancer in her leg, said: "I think it's great that they all came down today.

"The visit has really lifted the whole place."
Christine Done, fundraising manager at the hospital, said: "Some of these children are very poorly and something like this can really give them a lift for days and weeks to come."

The hospital's Imagine Appeal is the official charity partner for the Grand National meeting.
The jockeys also took part in a singing challenge to raise money for the cause.

Aintree primed for Grand National

Aintree primed for Grand National
By Frank Keogh 
BBC Sport at Aintree 
JOHN SMITH'S GRAND NATIONAL Aintree, 
Saturday 9 April, 1615 BST

Live on BBC TV, HD, Radio 5 live, online Other races also across the BBC 7-9 April
Last year's winner Don't Push It tops the weights as 40 horses are set to contest the 164th running of the Grand National at Aintree on Saturday.


Champion jockey Tony McCoy is again on board the horse after an emotional win at his 15th attempt 12 months ago.

Two-time winner Ruby Walsh partners leading contender The Midnight Club for top Irish trainer Willie Mullins.

A worldwide audience of 600 million will watch the famous four-and-a-half mile race over 30 demanding fences.

For the first time in recent memory, all 71,000 tickets for the track have sold out in advance and racegoers are expected to bask in warm spring sunshine.

The going is expected to be just on the softer side of good with the course being watered after racing on Friday to ensure safe conditions for horses and riders.

Bookmakers estimate £150m will be wagered on the race, with more than half the adult population of the UK having a flutter.

McCoy's mount, carrying 5lb more in the handicap chase last year, is seeking to become the first consecutive winner since

in the 1970s.
"Winning last year was the best day of my racing career but that was last year, and it's more important to think about this time now," said the Northern Irishman.

"Red Rum was the last horse to win back-to-back Nationals so it would probably be a better feat than last year were he to win again."

The 36-year-old, who has been champion jockey 15 years running and has won more than 3,000 races in his career, said Don't Push It's preparations have been at least as good as last year.

Asked to nominate horses who he felt would be dangers to his mount, McCoy pinpointed The Midnight Club, stablemate Arbor Supreme and the Nicholls-trained Niche Market.

RECENT NATIONAL WINNERS 
2010 Don't Push It 10-1
2009 Mon Mome 100-1
2008 Comply Or Die 7-1
2007 Silver Birch 33-1
2006 Numbersixvalverde 11-1
2005 Hedgehunter 7-1
Other leading National contenders include

who is owned by Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson and his friend Ged Mason.
The Cheltenham Gold Cup fourth runs for Paul Nicholls, the champion trainer whose record is 0-44 in the Grand National.

Amateur jockey Sam Waley-Cohen rides

who is owned by his father Robert together with Sir Martin Broughton and the former Liverpool FC chairman's brother Steve.
Waley-Cohen, who is a friend of royal bride-to-be Kate Middleton, has already won the Gold Cup and King George VI Chase this season on Long Run.

He is one of five amateur riders in the race, with Nina Carberry on the grey Character Building bidding to become the first female jockey to triumph.

McCoy's victory was the latest in a series of National stories that have captured the public's imagination and helped him to a landslide win in the 2010 BBC Sports Personality of the Year award.

Two years ago, the 100-1 shot Mon Mome scored a shock success and this year marks the 30th anniversary of

Back in 1981, jockey Bob Champion overcame cancer to guide home the injury-plagued horse. Their triumph was made into a movie.

Champion has gone on to raise millions of pounds for his cancer charity and will lead out the runners and riders, together with Don't Push It's trainer Jonjo O'Neill, for an Aintree Legends race earlier in the day.

The charity flat contest features 10 former National-winning riders, including Carl Llewellyn (Party Politics 1992, Earth Summit 1998) and Jim Culloty (Bindaree 2002).

Jimmy Frost (Little Polveir 1989), whose son Hadden makes his debut in the National later on Saturday on Calgary Bay, and former champion jockey Peter Scudamore also feature.

Scudamore is assistant to trainer Lucinda Russell, who is hoping her National contender Silver By Nature will become the first Scottish-trained winner of the big race since Rubstic in 1979, and the first grey since Nicolaus Silver 50 years ago.

Chief Dan George runs for Jimmy Moffatt. The Scottish trainer is fighting back after a serious blood infection earlier in the year.

Story from BBC SPORT