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Beckham Appears Likely to Stay With Galaxy

Thursday, January 5, 2012

David Beckham’s days in Major League Soccer are apparently not over after all.
David Beckham passing during a friendly last month in Melbourne, Australia.
The president of the French club Paris-St. Germain, which had been trying to lure the 36-year-old Beckham back to Europe with a deal paying a reported $1 million a month, said Tuesday that Beckham would not be joining the club.
“We feel a little disappointed,” PSG’s Qatari president, Nasser al-Khelaifi, told reporters at the Qatar Open tennis tournament. “But both sides agreed it would be better that we not do the deal.”
Khelaifi said Beckham would instead return to the Los Angeles Galaxy, the club he led to the M.L.S. championship last season in the final year of a five-year contract that paid him $6.5 million a year. A newspaper in England reported that Beckham would sign a new deal with the Galaxy “within the next week,” news that Khelaifi appeared to confirm. “Beckham is in Los Angeles, and he’s going to stay there,” he said.
Beckham has made no secret of his desire to play for Britain at this summer’s London Olympics, which was why many had assumed he would move back to Europe after his Galaxy contract expired in November. But family considerations played a role in his decision. Beckham and his wife, Victoria, have four young children, the last of whom was born in Los Angeles last year, and his family is said to have enjoyed living in Southern California the past five years.
A Galaxy spokesman said the team would have no comment about the reports. But PSG’s sporting director, Leonardo, who coached Beckham when he played on loan at A.C. Milan in 2010, confirmed that Beckham’s proposed move to France was off.
David was very interested in coming to Paris,” he said. “But the welfare of his family in Los Angeles, the wish not to change everything in his life, weighed heavily.”
Any deal with the Galaxy will almost certainly include provisions that would allow Beckham to return to England to prepare for and play in the Olympics, provided he is named to Britain’s team.
The Games will be played during the M.L.S. regular season.
The Galaxy open preseason training Jan. 20. Their home opener will be March 10.
The PSG move also might have been a long shot for commercial reasons; the club is sponsored by Nike, and Beckham has had a long relationship with Adidas.

Dempsey Raises the Bar for U.S. Stars in Europe

LONDON — American soccer’s biggest name has arrived in England, hoping to live up to the reputation he made for himself on his first visit. Landon Donovan is fresh from Los Angeles, so it was understandable when he noted that sequels sometimes do not live up to the original.
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But Dempsey may have to move on to get a chance to play in the Champions League.
Not that he will not try to do even better this time around. But as Donovan begins his second stint with Everton, he will inevitably be measured against another American — Clint Dempsey — who has already proved himself in England’s Premier League.
Dempsey, a 28-year-old Texan, has been playing in England for Fulham since the start of 2007. Last month, he broke the record for goals by an American in the Premier League, when he scored his 37th in a 1-0 win against Liverpool.
Dempsey overtook Brian McBride, a former Fulham teammate who made 151 appearances for the club from 2004 to 2008 and became enough of a legend that the club named a bar in the stadium after him.
Since his record-breaking goal, Dempsey has scored twice more, including the tying goal against powerhouse Chelsea in a 1-1 tie on Dec. 26.
In the midst of this success, here comes Donovan, who had a strong three-month run with Everton in 2010 that has now prompted his return. But whereas the 29-year-old Donovan has spent much of his career in the United States, starring for first the San Jose Earthquakes and then the Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer, Dempsey has essentially been all-England, joining Fulham after playing only three seasons for the New England Revolution. And he gives no indication of wanting to go home despite the demands of playing in the Premier League, especially for a smaller club like Fulham.
“There’s more pressure on you game in and game out,” Dempsey recently told Fox Soccer about playing in what is widely considered the best league in the world. “It’s such a roller coaster. If you go on a bad run of form, after five or six games, you can find your manager fired. That’s something I didn’t see in M.L.S.”
Dempsey, a midfielder, has played under five managers in the five years he has spent in England, and each one has asked something different of him. The man who brought him to England, Chris Coleman, saw him as a right wing. Coleman’s successor, Lawrie Sanchez, wanted him as a striker. Roy Hodgson played him on the left, and Mark Hughes in all of the above. Dempsey’s current manager, Martin Jol, uses him in more of a roving role.
Dempsey’s diversity comes from playing in the dust outside his childhood home, a trailer in his grandparents’ backyard in Nacogdoches, Tex. The state may be a football hotbed, but Dempsey had Hispanic friends and grew up watching soccer.
He plays with a swagger well suited to the Premier League, and with no shortage of toughness. While still learning his craft in M.L.S., he played two games with a broken jaw.
But the casualty list for close encounters with Dempsey is also fairly extensive. Kansas City defender Jimmy Conrad’s jaw, Chelsea defender John Terry’s cheekbone and, just last month, the right side of Manchester United defender Phil Jones’s face have all come off worse for colliding with one of Dempsey’s elbows.
But Dempsey also knows how to find the cracks in soccer’s space-time continuum: he seems to be everywhere in the same moment. He scored the only goal for the United States in the 2006 World Cup, and got the tying goal against England in 2010 in South Africa.
And consider his performance against Arsenal on Monday, a 2-1 victory for Fulham brought about by over-my-dead-body determination.
One minute, Dempsey was defending his penalty area. Seconds later, he was dictating possession, and then he was launching himself at full stretch toward the Arsenal goal.
One of Dempsey’s greatest strengths is his ability to retain the ball, maintaining pressure on opponents. Another is his nose for the goal. Already Fulham’s top scorer this season, with six goals, he seemed about to convert a shot against Arsenal when he drifted in behind defender Per Mertesacker in the 66th minute, rising quicker than Mertesacker but heading the ball just wide of the far post from three yards.
Although his trademark finish is from close range — even as striker Bobby Zamora scored Fulham’s winner against Arsenal, Dempsey was sprinting toward the goal line in case of a loose ball — he is capable of producing moments of audacity straight from one of those trailer-park games.
One came late in a Europa Cup game against Juventus in 2010, after Dempsey got the ball with his back toward the goal. Swiveling at the top of the penalty area, he chipped an exquisite lob over goalkeeper Antonio Chimenti. Fulham advanced to the championship game, where Dempsey became the first American to appear in a European final.
With his contract set to expire next year, attention will naturally turn to his future. Dempsey has been linked with more elite English teams like Arsenal and Liverpool, and the lure of playing for a much bigger club — and the potential to appear in the Champions League — could prove irresistible.
“You never know your road in life, but, hopefully, Champions League is in the cards for me,” he told Fox Soccer.
Meanwhile, Donovan could begin his sequel Wednesday against Bolton. His team is scheduled to meet Dempsey’s on April 28, but by then, Donovan should be back home, helping the Galaxy try to defend their M.L.S. championship.
Until Donovan departs, he and Dempsey will lead parallel lives, each playing for clubs trying to make the most of their talent. Which would seem to describe Dempsey’s determined mind-set, one that has already carried him far overseas.
“You grab some sand and put it in your hand,” he once said. “That’s all the people who want to play the game. Then, you drop the sand and that’s all the people who make it to the next level. Then you pat your hand and there are only a few left. And they’re the ones who make it in the world. That’s how I view it. I’m just someone who wants to make it in the world.”
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: January 4, 2012
An earlier version of this article omitted the attribution on two of Dempsey’s quotations. He made them to Fox Soccer.

Seton Hall Stuns Connecticut

Jordan Theodore scored all 19 of his points in the second half andSeton Hall ended almost 11 years of frustration by stunning No. 8 Connecticut, 75-63, on Tuesday night in Newark.
Julio Cortez/Associated Press
Seton Hall's Fuquan Edwin (23) and Brandon Mobley during the Pirates' victory over UConn.
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Herb Pope added 15 points as the Pirates (13-2, 2-1 Big East) beatUConn (12-2, 2-1) for the first time since March 3, 2001. The win — Coach Kevin Willard’s biggest since he took over the program last season — snapped the Huskies’ seven-game winning streak.
Jeremy Lamb had 19 points for Connecticut, which was playing its final game without Coach Jim Calhoun, who was finishing a three-game N.C.A.A. suspension.
“All the credit to Seton Hall,” said the associate head coach George Blaney, who ran the team in Calhoun’s absence. “I think they really outplayed us and I was not happy about that.”
KENTUCKY 73, ARK.-LITTLE ROCK 51 The freshman Anthony Davis had 22 points and 16 rebounds as the No. 2 Wildcats (14-1) overcame a slow start at home.
OHIO STATE 71, NEBRASKA 40 Jared Sullinger had 19 points and 12 rebounds, and No. 6 Ohio State shook off its most recent loss with a home victory.
The Buckeyes (14-2, 2-1 Big Ten) had little difficulty in their first game since a 74-70 defeat at No. 13 Indiana on Saturday. Toney McCray had 13 points and Bo Spencer 10 for Nebraska (8-6, 0-3), which was playing its first Big Ten road game.
MISSOURI 87, OKLAHOMA 49 Kim English had 23 points and 9 rebounds, and host Missouri (14-0) hit 12 3-pointers to open Big 12 play with a rout of Oklahoma.
MICHIGAN STATE 63, WISCONSIN 60 Wisconsin’s Ryan Evans had an apparent game-tying 3-pointer overturned on an officials’ replay review, allowing No. 10 Michigan State to hold on for a victory. Draymond Green had 18 points and 14 rebounds, while Keith Appling added 16 points for the visiting Spartans (14-2, 3-0 Big Ten).
FLORIDA 79, U.A.B. 61 Erving Walker scored 23 points, Kenny Boynton added 20 and No. 13 Florida had a home victory in its final tuneup before Southeastern Conference play. Patric Young chipped in 15 points and 7 rebounds for the Gators (12-3).
YALE 82, HOLY CROSS 67 Greg Mangano scored 27 points and grabbed 13 rebounds as host Yale (9-4) defeated Holy Cross (6-8).
WOMEN
TENNESSEE 90, CHATTANOOGA 47 Ariel Massengale scored a season-high 19 points and No. 6 Tennessee (10-3) cruised to a lopsided win at home.
The victory came on the same day that the 12 members of the SEC announced they were planning a “We Back Pat” week beginning Jan. 15 to show support for Tennessee Coach Pat Summitt and the foundation she created to support efforts to fight Alzheimer’s.
Summitt and her son, Tyler, created the Pat Summitt Foundation in November in the wake of her revelation that she had been found to have early onset dementia.
RUTGERS 55, SYRACUSE 44 April Sykes scored 14 points and Khadijah Rushdan added 13 to help No. 10 Rutgers (12-2, 1-0 Big East) win at home.

Basketball Is Reborn at an Old Bronx Gym

Opulent sunlight filtered through the windows at one end of Rose Hill Gym in the Bronx on Wednesday, a fitting picture after one of the brightest moments the Fordham men’s basketball team had experienced in decades.
Bill Kostroun/Associated Press
Fordham's players celebrated their first victory over a ranked opponent since 1978.
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Bryan Smith (24) and host Fordham beat No. 22 Harvard on Tuesday.
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Fordham's Tom Pecora depends on New York recruits.
On Tuesday night, Fordham beat No. 22 Harvard, 60-54, the Rams’ first victory over a ranked opponent since 1978.
Less than 24 hours later, Coach Tom Pecora was playing down the significance of the achievement, even though a victory over a ranked team seemed like an impossibility when he arrived from Hofstra last season, taking over a team that had won three games in 2008-9 and two in 2009-10.
“They were damaged goods,” Pecora said. “Emotionally, the kids on the team, the fans, people on campus, they had all been through a tough stretch, but we put that behind us.”
Fordham improved to 7-21 in Pecora’s first season, but still stumbled through a 17-game losing streak. A poor start this season that included losses to Northwood (Fla.), Lehigh and Monmouth may have made some worry that the Rams were regressing after the advancements made last season.
Then, as winter break descended upon Fordham’s Gothic campus, a team that features seven freshmen and four sophomores began to jell. The win over Harvard was the Rams’ third in a row, following defeats of Texas State and Georgia Tech. All at home in their little slice of New York basketball history.  
Rose Hill Gym, with a capacity of 3,470, opened in 1925 and is the oldest gymnasium still being used by a Division I team. And, perhaps fitting for a team that plays in one of New York’s basketball landmarks, Pecora has assembled a squad that relies heavily on talent from the tri-state area.  
Eight of the 15 players on the Rams’ roster are from New York City. Against Harvard, the starting lineup featured four players from Brooklyn and one — Chris Gaston, the team’s leading scorer — from Union City, N.J.
“That’s the only way I’ve ever done it,” Pecora said. “I’m New York, born and bred. Born in Brooklyn, raised in Queens. Live on Long Island, coach in the Bronx. Hang out in Manhattan, drive through Staten Island.”
Pecora once moved away from New York in the early 1990s, but quickly returned.
“I left for 18 months and it was the worst 18 months of my life,” he said of stints as an assistant at Nevada-Las Vegas and Loyola Marymount.
“The coaches I’m dealing with in the tri-state area,” he said, “I’ve either known them since childhood, they’re my peers — guys I came up through the ranks with and coached and played with — or they’re young guys now that I’ve coached or coached against.”
He added: “The local high school coaches and the local club coaches convinced me that this is a good job. They were part of the equation.”  
While Pecora hopes to expand the program’s recruiting reach, he knows that plucking players out of the city’s high schools is still a key if Fordham (7-6) wants to compete in the Atlantic 10.
“We can still get New York guards,” he said. “I’ll still hang my hat on that.” 
The university is also investing in the program. Facilities have been upgraded or renovated (or the plans are in the works), including improvements to the weight room and modernizing the offices.
“Before Tom Pecora arrived, we had good coaches,” the university’s athletic director, Frank McLaughlin, said. “But I’m not sure we had the institutional commitment — financial, etc. — to be really successful in the best non-B.C.S. league in the country.”
A former Fordham basketball player, McLaughlin was the captain of the 1969 team that went to the National Invitation Tournament and is pictured with other Fordham basketball luminaries in the hallway that leads to refurbished athletic offices. All three of his daughters graduated from the university.  
“When I played here in the late ’60s, we were very successful and we could compete against anybody on a national level,” he said. “Then, I think, when the Big East was formed, that hurt Fordham."
McLaughlin was drafted by the Knicks after he graduated from Fordham and eventually went on to coach Harvard for eight years. Even with that connection, and the fact that Tuesday night’s victory stopped a 54-game losing streak against ranked teams, Pecora did not want to overstate the win’s importance.
“We met before practice today and I said, ‘Hey, guys, I’m not satisfied and you better not be,’ ” he said. “ ‘Don’t forget I gave you the poll at the beginning of the year and they picked us last in the Atlantic 10.’ ”  
After practice Wednesday, Pecora took his team to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass. The Rams were on their way to play Massachusetts on Thursday, when they will try to show that they can win on the road, something they have done just three times since 2009.  
Back inside Rose Hill, a banner hung from the ceiling with the words: “New York is my Campus. Fordham is my School.” Sunlight bounced off the fabric, and it appeared that the future might be looking brighter for Fordham, too.

Depleted Nets No Match Against Celtics

BOSTON — On at least two occasions before Wednesday night’s game against the Celtics, Coach Avery Johnson flatly stated that the Nets were, in fact, a real N.B.A. team composed of real, live N.B.A. players. He even sounded as if he believed it.
Elise Amendola/Associated Press
Nets guard MarShon Brooks driving against the Celtics' Keyon Dooling in the first half. Brooks, a rookie, scored 17 points.
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But with three of his preferred starters injured, and a fourth hurt during the game, the Nets are really an N.B.A. team in name only. They gave it your basic college try, which given their roster was about as much as could be expected, before falling, 89-70, to the Celtics.
It was the Nets’ sixth straight loss and the Celtics’ fourth straight win. Slowly, but surely, the natural order of things is starting to emerge in the Atlantic Division. The Celtics, who started the season 0-3, are back near the top of a division they have ruled for the last four seasons. They have allowed an average of 83.3 points a game in those four victories.
“I like the way we’ve been playing defensively,” said the Celtics’ captain, Paul Pierce, who had a game-high 24 points. “We’ve really picked it up because we’re a defensive team first. We just want to see what kind of team we really have once we get healthy.”
The beleaguered and battered Nets (1-6) are at the bottom of the division, last in the league in shooting, but leading the league in celebrity husbands (Shelden Williams and, for 72 days, Kris Humphries). The Knicks want to be the team that challenges the Celtics this season, but do not look like it now after home losses to Toronto and Charlotte.
The Celtics did not have Ray Allen (flu) and have had their preferred starting five for only two of the seven games they have played this season. But after their rocky start, they have taken advantage of a favorable schedule to vault from the bottom to the top of the division.
Wedneday’s game was the Celtics’ fourth in a stretch where they will play 19 of 25 games at home, and many of the opponents are more like the Nets than the Miami Heat. Their four wins (the Nets, the Pistons and two over the Wizards) have come against teams with a combined record of 3-16.
An even greater luxury looms, one game in the next six days, a rarity in this truncated season. Things do get much tougher in March and April, but a fifth straight division title is a distinct possibility.
“I think this is probably their last big stand with this team and when you’re looking at Garnett and Paul Pierce and Ray Allen, those guys, they don’t have five years left,” Johnson said, referring to Kevin Garnett. “But I sure think they have one great year left in them, and that’s why they’re playing as well as they playing.”
Johnson said his team went through a spirited shootaround Wednesday morning — “our guys were really into it” — and then, noting who the Nets were playing, wistfully added, “hopefully, we’ll handle it well.” They did handle things reasonably well until the Celtics went on a 20-5 run in the third quarter, with Pierce scoring 9 points in the run, including consecutive 3-point field goals. The run gave the Celtics a double-digit lead they would not relinquish.
“Everyone now is trying to get into rhythm,” Celtics Coach Doc Rivers said. The Celtics will hold their first practice Thursday since the start of their season on Christmas Day. “It’s not here yet. But it’s getting better.”
The Celtics are 4-0 since Pierce returned after missing the first three games with a bruised right heel. On Wednesday, Garnett registered his first double-double of the season (14 points, 12 rebounds) and the super-sub Brandon Bass also had a double-double (15 points, 13 rebounds). The rookie MarShon Brooks led the Nets with 17 points, 15 of them in the first half.
The Nets did not have Deron Williams, who bruised his right side Monday against Indiana. Humphries (left shoulder) and Brook Lopez (broken left foot) were also out, and Damion James hurt his right foot just before halftime and did not return. Brooks turned his left ankle, but X-rays were negative, and he is listed as day to day.
“In this league, whether you’re 0-5, 1-6, 0-6, 1-10, 2-12, whatever it is, no one feels sorry for you,” Johnson said. “We’re an N.B.A. team. Our future is bright. The future is not now.”
Not for the Nets, it isn’t. But for the future-is-now Celtics, it looks to be business as usual.

Stoudemire and Shumpert Return, but Knicks Still Fall

On a night of reunions, returns and letdowns at Madison Square Garden, the emotions jerked from elation to anxiety to anger on Wednesday.
Barton Silverman/The New York Times
Knicks guard Iman Shumpert scored 18 points against the Bobcats.
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Amar’e Stoudemire had 25 points and 12 rebounds in his return for the Knicks.
The Knicks’ offense surged, but their defense regressed. Amar’e Stoudemire and Iman Shumpert returned to wild cheers, but Shumpert limped away again — his health a momentary concern, albeit one ultimately eclipsed by a disheartening 118-110 loss to the Charlotte Bobcats.
It was the Knicks’ second straight home loss to an inferior team, their fourth defeat in five games, and it elicited a torrent of boos.
“That one, that hurt,” said Carmelo Anthony, who led the Knicks with 32 points, 6 rebounds and 5 assists. “Just the way we’ve been playing the last couple games — I mean, it hurts to lose games like that. To dig ourselves a hole like that and trying to fight back every time, it takes a toll on everybody.”
Shumpert, a rookie guard, left the game in the fourth quarter, but the problem was merely leg cramps. His sprained right knee held up fine.
The Knicks (2-4) spent their (brief) preseason talking up their new defensive focus, emboldened by the arrival of center Tyson Chandler and the defensive-minded assistant coach Mike Woodson. So far, the results are scant, or at least sporadic.
The Bobcats seemed to do whatever they wanted, shooting 55.3 percent from the field and leading by as many as 16 points in the fourth quarter. They dominated despite losing a night earlier in Cleveland and despite losing Corey Maggette to a hamstring injury in the third quarter.
Boris Diaw paced the Bobcats with 27 points, going 12 for 15 from the field. Gerald Henderson added 24 points and made 10 of his 13 attempts. Byron Mullens, a backup center, added 16 points, mostly on jump shots.
The Knicks never seemed to be close to any of them when the ball left their fingertips.
“It takes time to be a good defensive team,” said Chandler, who helped the Dallas Mavericks become an elite defensive team last season. “We just have to dedicate ourselves to get there.”
Anthony said the Knicks were lacking a “trust factor” on defense. Chandler suggested the Knicks were “out of sync,” blowing a rotation on one possession, then exacerbating matters the next time by trying to improvise. The rushed schedule has allowed little practice time, and injuries have disrupted the Knicks’ rotation, further slowing their progress.
“No training camp, no preseason — games are just piling on us,” Chandler said, adding, “It’s almost impossible to do right now.”
Amid the gloom, there was at least some reason for excitement. The Garden echoed with chants of “Shumpert!” as he scored 18 points in just his second N.B.A. game, his first since spraining his knee Dec. 25. Shumpert dazzled with 3-pointers and swift drives, showing no ill effects from the injury, nor any discomfort with his knee brace.
Stoudemire, who had missed two games because of a sprained ankle, also came back strong, with 25 points and 12 rebounds.
Shumpert proved so critical to the Knicks’ success at both ends of the court that Coach Mike D’Antoni put him back in the game in the fourth quarter, against his better judgment. The fatigue and dehydration brought on leg cramps, forcing Shumpert out with 3 minutes 50 seconds left.
“I knew that was going to happen,” D’Antoni said, with a tone of regret. He added: “I had to get him back in there, because he was playing well. I’m just glad I didn’t hurt his knee.”
It was an unfortunate end to what had been an exhilarating evening for Shumpert and his growing legion of fans. The crowd cheered every time he checked into the game and booed when Toney Douglas was sent to replace him early in the fourth quarter.
The injury did not dampen Shumpert’s confidence. He took a pull-up jumper the first time he touched the ball, and a transition 3-pointer on his next time down the court. He drained both.
He then electrified the arena with a flying dunk attempt over Bismack Biyombo, the Bobcats’ rangy rookie forward, who fouled him to break up the play. Shumpert said his knee felt fine.
“I just felt a little step slow, a little sluggish, which will get better in time,” he said. “Other than that, we just got to pull things together.”
REBOUNDS
Jared Jeffries will probably not return until early next week, Mike D’Antoni said. Jeffries, who injured his right calf on opening day, is making steady progress, but the Knicks are exercising caution because of the nature of the injury. “We just got to make sure he doesn’t pop it again,” D’Antoni said. “Then he’s out for a while. So we’ll be overly cautious about it.” ... The returns of Iman Shumpert and Amar’e Stoudemire knocked Mike Bibby and Steve Novak out of the rotation and reduced the role of Josh Harrellson to minor relief. Bibby did not play for the first time since opening day, when he was recovering from back soreness. Harrellson, who had started two games in place of Stoudemire, played just 3:28.

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