NBey6's Blog

Vision

Monday 8-31-09

222, 111, 666, 802, 362, 376, 375, 475, 646

619, 270, 352, 023, 071, 073, 596, 526, 096

443, 373, 086, 579, 372, 721, 650, 555, 888

0009, 2769, 8769, 2219, 3945, 0519, 0529

Entry #1,482

Thought of the Day

"Children are the living messages we send to a time we will not see."

- Neil Postman -

Entry #1,481

NC / SC Pick 3 Wildcard

Midday 8-26-09 Evening

** until 8-28-09 **

013 049 058 067 139 148 157 238 247 256 346 589

679 004 112 022 229 337 445 355 166 778 688 499

Troll

Entry #1,480

NJ Pick 3

Midday 8-26-09 Evening

** until 8-29-09 **

017 018 026 027 035 036 039 045 048 049 057 058 067 089 125 126 129 134 135 138 139 147 148 156 157 179 189 234 237 238 246 247 256 269 278 279 359 368 369 378 458 459 468 489 579 589 678 679 008 009 116 117 224 225 228 229 233 044 144 449 255 558 066 166 669 778 188 288 588 688 099 399 499

Japanese Umbrella

Entry #1,479

CA Pick 3

Midday 8-26-09 Evening

** until 8-28-09 **

012 017 026 035 039 048 057 089 125 129 134 138 147 156 179 237 246 269 278 345 359 368 458 467 489 579 678 003 008 116 224 228 233 336 044 449 255 557 066 566 669 377 188 588 399 899 111 444 777

Lurking

Entry #1,478

Thought of the Day

Monday, August 24, 2009
Updated: August 26, 11:41 AM ET
All or nothing for Serena Williams 
By Greg Garber
ESPN.com
No one in women's tennis has been as dominant as Serena Williams over the last two years; she has won three of the last four Grand Slam singles titles and will be the consensus favorite in the U.S. Open, which begins main-draw play Monday.
How, then, is it possible that she has failed to win any of her past 16 non-major tournaments? Elena Dementieva beat her for the fourth time in that streak on Saturday in a straight-sets semifinal victory at Toronto. Non-champions are admonished for not being able to win the big one. Lately, Serena -- and this is less a quibble than an observation -- can't win the little ones. Why, she hasn't won a Sony Ericsson WTA Tour event in more than 16 months, since …
"… Charleston," said ESPN analyst Pam Shriver last week, with impressive authority. "It's simple. She gets up for the big stage. Which, obviously, all of us would like to do. She focuses more, trains better, points toward them.
Tweet, tweet
Don't miss a moment of the latest tennis coverage from around the world. Follow us on Twitter and stay informed. Join »
"Late in their careers, champions really start to focus on the Slams. Sampras is a really good example."
Indeed, after finishing as the ATP's No. 1-ranked player for six consecutive years, Pete Sampras won only one non-Grand Slam title in the last three years of his career -- but took home his seventh Wimbledon crown in 2000 and, most memorably, his fifth U.S. Open title in 2002 at the age of 31.
Talking about Roger Federer (and himself) earlier this year, Sampras told ESPN, "It's a human reaction to let down a little bit. It's so hard to be so good for so long. Eventually you lose a few matches, and you lose that edge. You win 12, 13, 14 majors and you go to Cincinnati and you just don't have that drive any more.
"It happens. It happened to me."
Serena's triumph over her sister Venus in the final at Wimbledon was her 11th major title. She is clearly moving into that mature period of narrow focus that Sampras and, to a large extent, Federer have experienced. Put another way, Serena's last three titles are all majors. Federer, by contrast, has won four titles this year, two of them majors.
She won't turn 28 until after the U.S. Open, so -- given the current landscape in women's tennis -- Serena would appear to have a few more prime years to approach or surpass those just ahead of her on the all-time singles majors list -- Billie Jean King (12), Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert (18).
It's hard to believe that Serena's very first major triumph came at the U.S. Open one decade ago at the precocious age of 17.
With a win in New York, Serena will have captured three of the four Grand Slam titles this year, something she has done only once -- in 2002, on her way to the Serena Slam that included the 2003 Australian Open.
All of which makes the non-Slam streak seem even stranger.
After winning the Australian Open -- with a resounding 6-0, 6-3 victory over Dinara Safina -- Serena withdrew from the Paris event, citing a knee injury before her semifinal match with Dementieva. She won three matches in Dubai, losing to Venus in the semifinals, then avenged that loss in the Miami semifinals before falling to Victoria Azarenka in the final.
Including that uninspired straight-sets loss, Serena has won only six of 13 non-Slam matches -- and three of those victories came last week in Toronto. There were three consecutive one-and-dones in Marbella (Spain), Rome and Madrid. Although the last two matches were against worthy opponents, then-ranked No. 20 Patty Schnyder and No. 45 Francesca Schiavone, the loss in Marbella was to Klara Zakopalova, ranked No. 95.
A cynic might wonder if Serena was merely content to collect her appearance money and move on.
And then, with remarkable swiftness, Serena snapped into form and won 11 of 12 matches at the French Open and Wimbledon. After taking her third title at the All England Club, she was asked why she plays better in the big points. The answer helped explain her success in big matches.
"I love playing big points," Serena said. "I just love the opportunity to be pressured. Billie Jean King wrote once, 'Pressure is a privilege.' Being able to work with her on Fed Cup, she's really been able to help me understand that it's a privilege to feel that pressure."
Her most recent non-Slam outings have been uneven. Serena won two matches in Stanford before falling to Samantha Stosur in the quarters and then lost her second match in Cincinnati, to Sybille Bammer.
"I've never played a worse match in my life," said Serena, who committed 44 unforced errors and hinted that she was feeling ill. "I hit balls in the bottom of the net. Anyone could have beaten me today."
With a singles record of 38-10 in 2009, Serena seems likely to post the most single-season losses of her career since 1998, when she was 29-11.
Most Slam titles; active women
Serena and Venus Williams have won a total of 18 Grand Slam singles titles -- double the total of all the other women in the U.S. Open draw.
Player Grand Slam titles
Serena Williams 11
Venus Williams 7
Maria Sharapova 3
Svetlana Kuznetsova 2
Amelie Mauresmo 2
Ana Ivanovic 1
Kim Clijsters 1
As Shriver points out, since she's enjoyed relatively good health the past several years, Serena has been playing more Tour events than when she averaged fewer than 30 matches during 2005-07.
"What's good about it is she's played a lot of good tour stops in the last few years," Shriver said. "She's been better prepared for those majors. Those tour stops haven't been for naught."
The anti-Serena, of course, is Safina.
She has won seven WTA events in the last two years, but is still looking to collect her first career victory in a major. Safina has appeared in three of the past six Grand Slam singles finals but failed to convert, losing to Ana Ivanovic, Serena and, most recently, to Svetlana Kuznetsova in the French Open final. Here overall consistency, however, has carried her to the No. 1 ranking; when she plays her first U.S. Open match she will have been on top for 20 consecutive weeks.
When Serena was asked at Wimbledon if she saw herself as the No. 1 player in the world, she smiled.
"I see myself as No. 2," she said. "That's where I am. I think Dinara did a great job to get to No. 1. She won Rome and Madrid."
That last remark drew laughter from the assembled media, but it was a window to her all-or-nothing philosophy. Grand Slams, at this stage of her career, are clearly all that matter.
Monday, August 24, 2009
Updated: August 26, 11:41 AM ET
All or nothing for Serena Williams 
By Greg Garber
ESPN.com
No one in women's tennis has been as dominant as Serena Williams over the last two years; she has won three of the last four Grand Slam singles titles and will be the consensus favorite in the U.S. Open, which begins main-draw play Monday.
How, then, is it possible that she has failed to win any of her past 16 non-major tournaments? Elena Dementieva beat her for the fourth time in that streak on Saturday in a straight-sets semifinal victory at Toronto. Non-champions are admonished for not being able to win the big one. Lately, Serena -- and this is less a quibble than an observation -- can't win the little ones. Why, she hasn't won a Sony Ericsson WTA Tour event in more than 16 months, since …
"… Charleston," said ESPN analyst Pam Shriver last week, with impressive authority. "It's simple. She gets up for the big stage. Which, obviously, all of us would like to do. She focuses more, trains better, points toward them.
Tweet, tweet
Don't miss a moment of the latest tennis coverage from around the world. Follow us on Twitter and stay informed. Join »
"Late in their careers, champions really start to focus on the Slams. Sampras is a really good example."
Indeed, after finishing as the ATP's No. 1-ranked player for six consecutive years, Pete Sampras won only one non-Grand Slam title in the last three years of his career -- but took home his seventh Wimbledon crown in 2000 and, most memorably, his fifth U.S. Open title in 2002 at the age of 31.
Talking about Roger Federer (and himself) earlier this year, Sampras told ESPN, "It's a human reaction to let down a little bit. It's so hard to be so good for so long. Eventually you lose a few matches, and you lose that edge. You win 12, 13, 14 majors and you go to Cincinnati and you just don't have that drive any more.
"It happens. It happened to me."
Serena's triumph over her sister Venus in the final at Wimbledon was her 11th major title. She is clearly moving into that mature period of narrow focus that Sampras and, to a large extent, Federer have experienced. Put another way, Serena's last three titles are all majors. Federer, by contrast, has won four titles this year, two of them majors.
She won't turn 28 until after the U.S. Open, so -- given the current landscape in women's tennis -- Serena would appear to have a few more prime years to approach or surpass those just ahead of her on the all-time singles majors list -- Billie Jean King (12), Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert (18).
It's hard to believe that Serena's very first major triumph came at the U.S. Open one decade ago at the precocious age of 17.
With a win in New York, Serena will have captured three of the four Grand Slam titles this year, something she has done only once -- in 2002, on her way to the Serena Slam that included the 2003 Australian Open.
All of which makes the non-Slam streak seem even stranger.
After winning the Australian Open -- with a resounding 6-0, 6-3 victory over Dinara Safina -- Serena withdrew from the Paris event, citing a knee injury before her semifinal match with Dementieva. She won three matches in Dubai, losing to Venus in the semifinals, then avenged that loss in the Miami semifinals before falling to Victoria Azarenka in the final.
Including that uninspired straight-sets loss, Serena has won only six of 13 non-Slam matches -- and three of those victories came last week in Toronto. There were three consecutive one-and-dones in Marbella (Spain), Rome and Madrid. Although the last two matches were against worthy opponents, then-ranked No. 20 Patty Schnyder and No. 45 Francesca Schiavone, the loss in Marbella was to Klara Zakopalova, ranked No. 95.
A cynic might wonder if Serena was merely content to collect her appearance money and move on.
And then, with remarkable swiftness, Serena snapped into form and won 11 of 12 matches at the French Open and Wimbledon. After taking her third title at the All England Club, she was asked why she plays better in the big points. The answer helped explain her success in big matches.
"I love playing big points," Serena said. "I just love the opportunity to be pressured. Billie Jean King wrote once, 'Pressure is a privilege.' Being able to work with her on Fed Cup, she's really been able to help me understand that it's a privilege to feel that pressure."
Her most recent non-Slam outings have been uneven. Serena won two matches in Stanford before falling to Samantha Stosur in the quarters and then lost her second match in Cincinnati, to Sybille Bammer.
"I've never played a worse match in my life," said Serena, who committed 44 unforced errors and hinted that she was feeling ill. "I hit balls in the bottom of the net. Anyone could have beaten me today."
With a singles record of 38-10 in 2009, Serena seems likely to post the most single-season losses of her career since 1998, when she was 29-11.
Most Slam titles; active women
Serena and Venus Williams have won a total of 18 Grand Slam singles titles -- double the total of all the other women in the U.S. Open draw.
Player Grand Slam titles
Serena Williams 11
Venus Williams 7
Maria Sharapova 3
Svetlana Kuznetsova 2
Amelie Mauresmo 2
Ana Ivanovic 1
Kim Clijsters 1
As Shriver points out, since she's enjoyed relatively good health the past several years, Serena has been playing more Tour events than when she averaged fewer than 30 matches during 2005-07.
"What's good about it is she's played a lot of good tour stops in the last few years," Shriver said. "She's been better prepared for those majors. Those tour stops haven't been for naught."
The anti-Serena, of course, is Safina.
She has won seven WTA events in the last two years, but is still looking to collect her first career victory in a major. Safina has appeared in three of the past six Grand Slam singles finals but failed to convert, losing to Ana Ivanovic, Serena and, most recently, to Svetlana Kuznetsova in the French Open final. Here overall consistency, however, has carried her to the No. 1 ranking; when she plays her first U.S. Open match she will have been on top for 20 consecutive weeks.
When Serena was asked at Wimbledon if she saw herself as the No. 1 player in the world, she smiled.
"I see myself as No. 2," she said. "That's where I am. I think Dinara did a great job to get to No. 1. She won Rome and Madrid."
That last remark drew laughter from the assembled media, but it was a window to her all-or-nothing philosophy. Grand Slams, at this stage of her career, are clearly all that matter.

 

Monday, August 24, 2009
Updated: August 26, 11:41 AM ET
All or nothing for Serena Williams 
By Greg Garber
ESPN.com
No one in women's tennis has been as dominant as Serena Williams over the last two years; she has won three of the last four Grand Slam singles titles and will be the consensus favorite in the U.S. Open, which begins main-draw play Monday.
How, then, is it possible that she has failed to win any of her past 16 non-major tournaments? Elena Dementieva beat her for the fourth time in that streak on Saturday in a straight-sets semifinal victory at Toronto. Non-champions are admonished for not being able to win the big one. Lately, Serena -- and this is less a quibble than an observation -- can't win the little ones. Why, she hasn't won a Sony Ericsson WTA Tour event in more than 16 months, since …
"… Charleston," said ESPN analyst Pam Shriver last week, with impressive authority. "It's simple. She gets up for the big stage. Which, obviously, all of us would like to do. She focuses more, trains better, points toward them.
Tweet, tweet
Don't miss a moment of the latest tennis coverage from around the world. Follow us on Twitter and stay informed. Join »
"Late in their careers, champions really start to focus on the Slams. Sampras is a really good example."
Indeed, after finishing as the ATP's No. 1-ranked player for six consecutive years, Pete Sampras won only one non-Grand Slam title in the last three years of his career -- but took home his seventh Wimbledon crown in 2000 and, most memorably, his fifth U.S. Open title in 2002 at the age of 31.
Talking about Roger Federer (and himself) earlier this year, Sampras told ESPN, "It's a human reaction to let down a little bit. It's so hard to be so good for so long. Eventually you lose a few matches, and you lose that edge. You win 12, 13, 14 majors and you go to Cincinnati and you just don't have that drive any more.
"It happens. It happened to me."
Serena's triumph over her sister Venus in the final at Wimbledon was her 11th major title. She is clearly moving into that mature period of narrow focus that Sampras and, to a large extent, Federer have experienced. Put another way, Serena's last three titles are all majors. Federer, by contrast, has won four titles this year, two of them majors.
She won't turn 28 until after the U.S. Open, so -- given the current landscape in women's tennis -- Serena would appear to have a few more prime years to approach or surpass those just ahead of her on the all-time singles majors list -- Billie Jean King (12), Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert (18).
It's hard to believe that Serena's very first major triumph came at the U.S. Open one decade ago at the precocious age of 17.
With a win in New York, Serena will have captured three of the four Grand Slam titles this year, something she has done only once -- in 2002, on her way to the Serena Slam that included the 2003 Australian Open.
All of which makes the non-Slam streak seem even stranger.
After winning the Australian Open -- with a resounding 6-0, 6-3 victory over Dinara Safina -- Serena withdrew from the Paris event, citing a knee injury before her semifinal match with Dementieva. She won three matches in Dubai, losing to Venus in the semifinals, then avenged that loss in the Miami semifinals before falling to Victoria Azarenka in the final.
Including that uninspired straight-sets loss, Serena has won only six of 13 non-Slam matches -- and three of those victories came last week in Toronto. There were three consecutive one-and-dones in Marbella (Spain), Rome and Madrid. Although the last two matches were against worthy opponents, then-ranked No. 20 Patty Schnyder and No. 45 Francesca Schiavone, the loss in Marbella was to Klara Zakopalova, ranked No. 95.
A cynic might wonder if Serena was merely content to collect her appearance money and move on.
And then, with remarkable swiftness, Serena snapped into form and won 11 of 12 matches at the French Open and Wimbledon. After taking her third title at the All England Club, she was asked why she plays better in the big points. The answer helped explain her success in big matches.
"I love playing big points," Serena said. "I just love the opportunity to be pressured. Billie Jean King wrote once, 'Pressure is a privilege.' Being able to work with her on Fed Cup, she's really been able to help me understand that it's a privilege to feel that pressure."
Her most recent non-Slam outings have been uneven. Serena won two matches in Stanford before falling to Samantha Stosur in the quarters and then lost her second match in Cincinnati, to Sybille Bammer.
"I've never played a worse match in my life," said Serena, who committed 44 unforced errors and hinted that she was feeling ill. "I hit balls in the bottom of the net. Anyone could have beaten me today."
With a singles record of 38-10 in 2009, Serena seems likely to post the most single-season losses of her career since 1998, when she was 29-11.
Most Slam titles; active women
Serena and Venus Williams have won a total of 18 Grand Slam singles titles -- double the total of all the other women in the U.S. Open draw.
Player Grand Slam titles
Serena Williams 11
Venus Williams 7
Maria Sharapova 3
Svetlana Kuznetsova 2
Amelie Mauresmo 2
Ana Ivanovic 1
Kim Clijsters 1
As Shriver points out, since she's enjoyed relatively good health the past several years, Serena has been playing more Tour events than when she averaged fewer than 30 matches during 2005-07.
"What's good about it is she's played a lot of good tour stops in the last few years," Shriver said. "She's been better prepared for those majors. Those tour stops haven't been for naught."
The anti-Serena, of course, is Safina.
She has won seven WTA events in the last two years, but is still looking to collect her first career victory in a major. Safina has appeared in three of the past six Grand Slam singles finals but failed to convert, losing to Ana Ivanovic, Serena and, most recently, to Svetlana Kuznetsova in the French Open final. Here overall consistency, however, has carried her to the No. 1 ranking; when she plays her first U.S. Open match she will have been on top for 20 consecutive weeks.
When Serena was asked at Wimbledon if she saw herself as the No. 1 player in the world, she smiled.
"I see myself as No. 2," she said. "That's where I am. I think Dinara did a great job to get to No. 1. She won Rome and Madrid."
That last remark drew laughter from the assembled media, but it was a window to her all-or-nothing philosophy. Grand Slams, at this stage of her career, are clearly all that matter.

 

Monday, August 24, 2009
Updated: August 26, 11:41 AM ET
All or nothing for Serena Williams 
By Greg Garber
ESPN.com
No one in women's tennis has been as dominant as Serena Williams over the last two years; she has won three of the last four Grand Slam singles titles and will be the consensus favorite in the U.S. Open, which begins main-draw play Monday.
How, then, is it possible that she has failed to win any of her past 16 non-major tournaments? Elena Dementieva beat her for the fourth time in that streak on Saturday in a straight-sets semifinal victory at Toronto. Non-champions are admonished for not being able to win the big one. Lately, Serena -- and this is less a quibble than an observation -- can't win the little ones. Why, she hasn't won a Sony Ericsson WTA Tour event in more than 16 months, since …
"… Charleston," said ESPN analyst Pam Shriver last week, with impressive authority. "It's simple. She gets up for the big stage. Which, obviously, all of us would like to do. She focuses more, trains better, points toward them.
Tweet, tweet
Don't miss a moment of the latest tennis coverage from around the world. Follow us on Twitter and stay informed. Join »
"Late in their careers, champions really start to focus on the Slams. Sampras is a really good example."
Indeed, after finishing as the ATP's No. 1-ranked player for six consecutive years, Pete Sampras won only one non-Grand Slam title in the last three years of his career -- but took home his seventh Wimbledon crown in 2000 and, most memorably, his fifth U.S. Open title in 2002 at the age of 31.
Talking about Roger Federer (and himself) earlier this year, Sampras told ESPN, "It's a human reaction to let down a little bit. It's so hard to be so good for so long. Eventually you lose a few matches, and you lose that edge. You win 12, 13, 14 majors and you go to Cincinnati and you just don't have that drive any more.
"It happens. It happened to me."
Serena's triumph over her sister Venus in the final at Wimbledon was her 11th major title. She is clearly moving into that mature period of narrow focus that Sampras and, to a large extent, Federer have experienced. Put another way, Serena's last three titles are all majors. Federer, by contrast, has won four titles this year, two of them majors.
She won't turn 28 until after the U.S. Open, so -- given the current landscape in women's tennis -- Serena would appear to have a few more prime years to approach or surpass those just ahead of her on the all-time singles majors list -- Billie Jean King (12), Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert (18).
It's hard to believe that Serena's very first major triumph came at the U.S. Open one decade ago at the precocious age of 17.
With a win in New York, Serena will have captured three of the four Grand Slam titles this year, something she has done only once -- in 2002, on her way to the Serena Slam that included the 2003 Australian Open.
All of which makes the non-Slam streak seem even stranger.
After winning the Australian Open -- with a resounding 6-0, 6-3 victory over Dinara Safina -- Serena withdrew from the Paris event, citing a knee injury before her semifinal match with Dementieva. She won three matches in Dubai, losing to Venus in the semifinals, then avenged that loss in the Miami semifinals before falling to Victoria Azarenka in the final.
Including that uninspired straight-sets loss, Serena has won only six of 13 non-Slam matches -- and three of those victories came last week in Toronto. There were three consecutive one-and-dones in Marbella (Spain), Rome and Madrid. Although the last two matches were against worthy opponents, then-ranked No. 20 Patty Schnyder and No. 45 Francesca Schiavone, the loss in Marbella was to Klara Zakopalova, ranked No. 95.
A cynic might wonder if Serena was merely content to collect her appearance money and move on.
And then, with remarkable swiftness, Serena snapped into form and won 11 of 12 matches at the French Open and Wimbledon. After taking her third title at the All England Club, she was asked why she plays better in the big points. The answer helped explain her success in big matches.
"I love playing big points," Serena said. "I just love the opportunity to be pressured. Billie Jean King wrote once, 'Pressure is a privilege.' Being able to work with her on Fed Cup, she's really been able to help me understand that it's a privilege to feel that pressure."
Her most recent non-Slam outings have been uneven. Serena won two matches in Stanford before falling to Samantha Stosur in the quarters and then lost her second match in Cincinnati, to Sybille Bammer.
"I've never played a worse match in my life," said Serena, who committed 44 unforced errors and hinted that she was feeling ill. "I hit balls in the bottom of the net. Anyone could have beaten me today."
With a singles record of 38-10 in 2009, Serena seems likely to post the most single-season losses of her career since 1998, when she was 29-11.
Most Slam titles; active women
Serena and Venus Williams have won a total of 18 Grand Slam singles titles -- double the total of all the other women in the U.S. Open draw.
Player Grand Slam titles
Serena Williams 11
Venus Williams 7
Maria Sharapova 3
Svetlana Kuznetsova 2
Amelie Mauresmo 2
Ana Ivanovic 1
Kim Clijsters 1
As Shriver points out, since she's enjoyed relatively good health the past several years, Serena has been playing more Tour events than when she averaged fewer than 30 matches during 2005-07.
"What's good about it is she's played a lot of good tour stops in the last few years," Shriver said. "She's been better prepared for those majors. Those tour stops haven't been for naught."
The anti-Serena, of course, is Safina.
She has won seven WTA events in the last two years, but is still looking to collect her first career victory in a major. Safina has appeared in three of the past six Grand Slam singles finals but failed to convert, losing to Ana Ivanovic, Serena and, most recently, to Svetlana Kuznetsova in the French Open final. Here overall consistency, however, has carried her to the No. 1 ranking; when she plays her first U.S. Open match she will have been on top for 20 consecutive weeks.
When Serena was asked at Wimbledon if she saw herself as the No. 1 player in the world, she smiled.
"I see myself as No. 2," she said. "That's where I am. I think Dinara did a great job to get to No. 1. She won Rome and Madrid."
That last remark drew laughter from the assembled media, but it was a window to her all-or-nothing philosophy. Grand Slams, at this stage of her career, are clearly all that matter.

"I have not been afraid of excess. Excess on occasion is exhilarating. It prevents moderation from acquiring the deadening effect of a habit."

- William Somerset Maugham -

Entry #1,477

VA Pick 3

Midday & Evening

** until 8-27-09 **

015  019  024  037  046  069  078  123  127  136  145  159  168  249  267  348  357  379  456  469  478  568  789  001  006  114  118  226  334  244  447  366  667  177  577  199  699

Lurking

Entry #1,476

Thought of the Day

"Many people have too much will power. It's won't power they lack."

- John Shedd -

Entry #1,475

Vision

Monday 8-24-09

240, 352, 870, 967, 907, 653, 796, 325, 793, 657

593, 951, 179, 644, 042, 905, 141, 017, 130, 376

264, 758, 828, 373, 000, 111, 444, 555, 666, 777

888, 3521, 3205, 3295, 1253,  2574, 3646, 3673

Entry #1,474

Vision

Saturday 8-22-09

986, 538, 735, 318, 803, 210, 564, 240, 463

042, 201, 656, 651, 958, 801, 753, 501, 024

135, 759, 011, 899, 888, 555, 222, 777, 999

1919, 2202, 8710, 2704, 4022, 2302, 6666

Entry #1,473

Thought of the Day

"Experience is what you get when you didn't get what you want."

- Italian Proverb -

Entry #1,472

NC / SC Pick 3 Wildcard

Midday & Evening

** until 8-23-09 **

016  025  029  034  038  047  056  079  124  128  137  146  169  178  236  245  259  268  349  358  367  389  457  479  569  578  002  007  011  115  119  223  227  133  335  344  448  155  556  466  668  277  677  088  488  889  299  799  000  222  444  555  777  999

Lurking

Entry #1,471

Williams sisters to own part of Miami Dolphins

Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Williams sisters to own part of Dolphins


Associated Press

MIAMI -- Venus and Serena Williams will become the latest celebrities to own a stake in the Miami Dolphins, a person familiar with the deal said.

 

The person spoke Wednesday on condition of anonymity because the team plans to announce the involvement of the tennis-playing sisters next week.

 

The Williamses live in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., about an hour's drive from the Dolphins' stadium.

 

Musicians Gloria and Emilio Estefan and Marc Anthony recently bought small shares of the team. New Dolphins owner Stephen Ross also forged a partnership with singer Jimmy Buffett's Margaritaville enterprise.

Entry #1,470

Bolt reaches 200m semifinals

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Bolt reaches 200m semifinals


ESPN.com news services

BERLIN -- Looking for his second gold medal of the world championships, Usain Bolt jogged across the line Tuesday to advance to the semifinals of the 200 meters.

 

Two days after setting a world record of 9.58 seconds to win the 100, the Olympic 200 champion ran a good curve and coasted through the final straight to finish in 20.41 seconds, a full 1.11 seconds behind his world record.

 

In the absence of injured defending champion Tyson Gay, Bolt is the overwhelming favorite for gold. He said he would try to get a second world record at the championships, too.

 

"I'll be running hard," Bolt said.

 

The Jamaican set a record of 19.30 seconds at the Beijing Olympics, widely considered one of the toughest to beat in the sport.

 

"I'm just trying to get through the rounds. That's my aim," Bolt said. "I'm trying to do it round by round like last year. Then I'll go to the finals and just execute."

 

Celebrating and showboating after winning the 100 on Sunday, he was short on antics this time. Blame it on fatigue since he had to be in the stadium early Tuesday for the first heat.

 

"I'm feeling a little tired, but nothing a good night's rest won't cure," Bolt said after his sixth race in four days.

 

Jamaican teammate Steve Mullings had the best qualifying time, winning his heat in 20.23. Shawn Crawford was third in 20.37, with American teammate Wallace Spearmon also easily advancing.

 

The U.S. team needs to change something quick to challenge the Jamaicans for sprint supremacy at the championships. They lost 5-0 in Olympic titles at the Beijing Games and are already behind 2-0 after the 100s. The specter of another rout is looming ever larger, especially with Gay out for the 200 and doubtful for the relays.

 

The final for the 200 is set for Thursday. Bolt is also favored to lead Jamaica to a sprint relay gold on Saturday to equal his feat of three golds at the Olympics.

 

In the 400 meters, Sanya Richards shook off years of disappointment with her first major title, pumping her fist after crossing the line.

 

Her main rival, Olympic champion Christine Ohuruogu of Britain, was back in fifth. And for Shericka Williams of Jamaica, it was silver again.

 

"I finally got it right," Richards said. "It means the world to me."

 

With a time of 49.00 seconds, Richards set the fastest mark of the year. In Beijing last year, Richards faltered over the last 50 meters and Ohuruogu won. Not so this year.

 

"She wanted it a little bit more than the rest of us," Ohuruogu said.

 

Richards was 0.32 seconds faster than Williams. Antonina Krivoshapka of Russia took bronze.

 

In the 100 hurdles, two-time defending champion Michelle Perry was eliminated in the heat, finishing only seventh in her race. Perry injured her right knee in Monaco and had to fight to make the starting block.

 

"It was a victory in itself," Perry said.

 

She is set to have surgery at home next week.

 

The United States still looked strong, with Olympic champion Dawn Harper and Damu Cherry both qualifying from their heats.

 

Priscilla Lopes-Schliep of Canada had the top time of 12.56, ahead of Jamaican veteran Brigitte Foster-Hylton, who finished in 12.67.

 

Olympic champion LaShawn Merritt and defending champion Jeremy Wariner easily qualified for Wednesday's semifinals of the 400.

 

In the discus, overpowering Olympic and defending world champion Gerd Kanter qualified on his first throw.

 

"A very easy throw, controlled and enough to qualify and save my energy for the final," Kanter said.

 

Ezekiel Kemboi of Kenya won the men's 3,000 steeplechase gold medal. Kenyan teammate Richard Mateelong took the silver, and Bouabdellah Tahri of France settled for the bronze.

 

Kemboi, the 2004 Olympic champion, pulled away in the final lap and crossed the line in 8 minutes, 0.43 seconds, a championship record. He came into the meet as the world leader, with the only sub-eight time.

 

Brimin Kipruto, the reigning Olympic and defending champion, finished seventh.

 

Late Tuesday, the finals are the men's triple jump and 400 hurdles and the women's javelin.

Entry #1,469