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Inside Pro Cycling | No waffling as Belgians dominate Cyclo-cross World Championships

This past Sunday, sports fans across America concerned themselves with fried food, beer and the Super Bowl. Meanwhile, thousands of miles away in the Netherlands, the scene was similar. There was fried food galore, beer aplenty and a major sporting event to watch. Instead of a football game, however, the big draw was the Cyclo-cross World Championships.



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Track teams shine in new rankings

Both the men's and women's track and field programs have been stellar so far this season, and the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association's (USTFCCCA) first set of rankings has reflected that.


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Edes visits Tufts

Yahoo! Sports baseball columnist Gordon Edes spoke to an audience of students in Cabot Hall last night. Edes, who worked for the Chicago Tribune and the Los Angeles Times before covering baseball for 12 years at the Boston Globe, only recently made the move to Internet-based journalism. He spoke last night about his transition to new media, in addition to many other topics — among them the recent Hall of Fame election and the offseason activity on baseball's free-agent market.


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With crucial NESCAC weekend awaiting, Tufts staves off upset bid from visiting UMass Dartmouth

Coming off a weekend in which victories over Wesleyan and Conn. College launched the women's basketball team (16-2, 5-1 NESCAC) to the top of the NESCAC standings, the Jumbos headed into Tuesday night's matchup with the UMass Dartmouth Corsairs confident in their chances of securing their fourth win in a row.     Fighting through a snow storm to get to the game, the Corsairs were left with only five healthy players following an injury early in the contest. But the UMass Dartmouth proved a worthy opponent, barely allowing Tufts to eke out a 66-60 win, their closest margin of victory this season at Cousens Gym.     "It was kind of a frustrating game," sophomore point guard Colleen Hart said. "I don't think we played our best. We have some big games this weekend, so I guess the best thing to do is to move on and start preparing for those games."     Hart led the charge for the Jumbos with a career-high 23 points on 9-15 shooting, while junior forward Julia Baily also played a strong game, posting a double-double of 12 points and 11 rebounds.     The game started out well for the Jumbos, as they jumped out to a 12-0 lead five minutes into the first quarter. But the Corsairs responded with a 12-0 run of their own to cut the deficit to one point at 20-19 with eight minutes to go in the half. UMass took its first lead of the game on a three-pointer by sophomore guard Kelly Whooley with 6:36 left in the first period and went into the break leading 28-27.     The mood at halftime echoed last year's game against Worcester State, when the then-No. 18 Jumbos rallied from behind to avoid an upset against the unranked Lancers.     "[The feeling at halftime was] not a good one, certainly," Hart said. "We just knew we needed to pick it up and we needed to want it. At times it seemed like they wanted it more than us."     UMass was led by junior forward Tashauna Ashmeade, who notched a game-high 27 points and tied the score at 37 apiece with a bucket three minutes into the second half. Tufts jumped back out to a seven point lead, 50-43, with less than 12 minutes to play, but the Corsairs refused to go away, tying the score at 52-52 with 8:30 left.     The Jumbos regained the lead a minute later, however, on a layup by Baily and never looked back. The bucket started a 14-4 run that brought the lead to 66-56 with 1:42 remaining, sealing the victory.     Despite the difficulties the game presented, the Jumbos are seeking to learn from the experience.     "We can't come out differently based on who we're playing just because it's a non-league game," Hart said. "I think we need our defense to be sharper and we need to be able to look to run so we can start to not settle for tough shots."     "We definitely try not to overlook any team -- any game is just as important to us," said senior co-captain Kim Moynihan, who was recently named NESCAC co-player of the week for her performances in last weekend's conference contests. "I think as a team, it wasn't as much complacency as it was just bad basketball."     The team will need to turn things around quickly, as next up for the Jumbos are two tough road matchups. Friday night, Tufts will head to Trinity to face off against the 15-3 Bantams, who sit fifth in the NESCAC standings, before travelling to Amherst the following day for a showdown with the team that ended the 12-0 Jumbos' bid for perfection on a buzzer-beater. The Jumbos will also be looking to avenge last year's loss to Amherst in the NESCAC Championship game, which followed in March, but it will be no easy task. Currently, the Lord Jeffs are ranked No. 9 in the nation and sit at 19-1 overall and 4-1 in the conference.     "Hopefully it's all out of our system and we'll play some much better basketball this weekend," Moynihan said. "We're going to try to look ahead to this weekend and put this game behind us."




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Jumbos fall to Corsairs on the road

    The men's basketball team lost its second straight game last night, falling to nationally ranked No. 17 UMass Dartmouth 91-76 on the road. The Corsairs are the only ranked team that the Jumbos have faced this year. Tufts droped to 9-12 while UMass improved to 18-2.     Both teams shot similar percentages — 49.2 percent for Tufts and 51.5 percent for UMD — but the Jumbos were done in by 29 turnovers, 20 via Corsair steals.     The trouble began at the beginning of the game, as UMD recorded 15 steals in the first half and Tufts committed 20 total turnovers en route to a 46-37 halftime deficit. The Jumbos never got any closer than that, as the Corsairs scored the first seven points after the break and never looked back.      Junior co-captain Jon Pierce led the Jumbos with 20 points and 11 rebounds while senior co-captain Aaron Gallant and junior Tom Selby contributed 15 and 13 points, respectively.     Four Corsairs scored in double figures, including a game-high 21 from junior Matt Walker and 17 points on 7-for-7 shooting in 21 minutes off the bench for junior Tyler Turturo.     The Jumbos now look to important conference games against Trinity and No. 20 Amherst on Friday and Saturday. Tufts' playoff chances depend on the results of this weekend.


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How two pitchers preempted the offseason mess, dodging the free-agent market for a secure 2009

Few industries have managed to dodge the widespread economic downturn that has brought misery to people worldwide, and Major League Baseball is certainly not one of them. The ongoing offseason has been unlike any in the history of America's favorite pastime, with nearly half of the bevy of marquee free agents that hit the market still unemployed a week before Spring Training. That's because every Major League team, with the exception, perhaps, of the freewheeling New York Yankees, has been hesitant to shell out long-term contracts to players who would doubtless warrant them under more favorable economic conditions.     Renowned star players such as outfielder Bobby Abreu and right-hander Ben Sheets are among many who remain unsigned this winter as teams overlook their pros and dwell on their cons. The 35-year-old Abreu's age and diminishing defensive skills have badly hindered his search for a long-term deal, and Sheets' lengthy injury history has teams wary of depending on him to be a premier starter. Both entered this offseason seeking a three- or four-year contract but recently curbed those demands, indicating that they'd now be satisfied with a reasonable one-year offer just to finally secure a job.     But even as the vast majority of their colleagues struggle to satisfy their financial needs, two big league pitchers are sitting pretty: the Minnesota Twins' Joe Nathan and the St. Louis Cardinals' Kyle Lohse. The two have little in common -- one is a dominant closer, the other a crafty mid-rotation starter -- except that they wisely both inked lucrative extensions before MLB started feeling the effects of the oncoming recession.     Nathan -- a 34-year-old right-hander acquired by the Twins from the San Francisco Giants as part of a package in a lopsided deal for catcher A.J. Pierzynski -- quickly blossomed into one of the league's best closers after coming to Minnesota prior to the start of the 2004 season. Perhaps the most consistent ninth-inning man in the Bigs, Nathan has notched between 36 and 44 saves in each of the past five seasons, just once posting an ERA over 2.00 and a WHIP over 1.00 during that span -- a remarkable feat. Clearly, had Nathan simply stayed in Minnesota for the option year of his previous contract and joined a free agent class of closers that also featured Francisco Rodriguez and Brian Fuentes, he would have figured to be in line for a massive payday. But the four-year, $47 million extension he signed in late-March of last year is looking mighty good from his perspective now.     Rewind to the last month of the 2008 regular season, when Francisco Rodriguez was busy smashing the single-season saves mark as a member of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and dreaming of an unprecedented five-year, $75 million deal with his next team. Still just 26 years young, K-Rod had every reason to fantasize about securing his financial future for years to come, especially given his unorthodox mechanics and the volatile nature of the closer position. Saves may not be a particularly valuable statistic for evaluating a pitcher, but amassing 62 of them in a single season is quite an accomplishment, and K-Rod was certain that it would earn him a record payday. Little did he know that a floundering economy would force him to settle for a comparatively mundane three-year, $37 million tender with a fourth-year option from the New York Mets. If you consider that Rodriguez is eight years Nathan's junior and approximately even in quality, it's obvious that Nathan did quite well for himself by re-upping with Minnesota last spring.     Lohse's background might be far different from Nathan's, but he reaped many of the same benefits by signing an extension and foregoing a stint on the open market. The 30-year-old joined the Cardinals on a one-year, $4.25 million contract last March after years of inconsistency in the Twins organization followed by journeyman gigs with the Cincinnati Reds and Philadelphia Phillies. Perhaps thanks to the tutelage of Dave Duncan, one of the game's foremost pitching instructors, Lohse finally broke out in 2008, posting a stellar 15-6 ledger in 33 starts to go with a career best 3.78 ERA and 1.30 WHIP. And to sabermetricians, Lohse's unexceptional .303 BABIP and 3.89 FIP portend similar success in the future.     Nevertheless, had Lohse filed for free agency instead of signing a four-year, $41 million extension with Redbirds at the tail-end of the regular season, teams would likely have been skeptical of his ability to maintain that level of performance. Even including his superb 2008 numbers, Lohse's career stat line still sports a mediocre 4.67 ERA and 1.41 WHIP, and one fine year -- in the minds of financially strapped general managers -- would not have erased the 1,164 spotty innings that preceded it. Noting that just about all of the second-tier starting pitchers still looking for jobs -- including Randy Wolf, Oliver Perez, and Braden Looper, among others -- have better career numbers than Lohse, it's evident he would've been hard-pressed to find a more lucrative long-term deal than the one he got from the Cardinals in September.     Whether the wise decisions made by Nathan and Lohse were the products of excellent foresight by their agents -- Dave Pepe and Scott Boras, respectively -- or merely the result of good fortune, the two are enjoying a relaxing offseason while many of their colleagues fret about their futures.     Seldom does avoiding competition and limiting oneself to a single suitor lead to the best possible financial result. But that's just another reason the 2008-2009 offseason has been as bizarre as any in the history of the sport.


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Ice Hockey | Jumbos butt Rams out of the way in 4-1 victory Tuesday

After faltering in a pair of tough NESCAC contests over the weekend, the men's hockey team is looking to get back on track towards a playoff run.     The Jumbos took their first big step forward towards achieving that goal on Tuesday night with an important 4-1 victory over non-conference opponent Suffolk University at Steriti Rink in Boston. The road victory, only the team's third win away from the Malden Forum on the season, pushed their overall mark to 8-9-1 and sets up this weekend's slate of action against conference foes Trinity and Wesleyan as paramount in determining the Jumbos' postseason fate.     "It was an important win because we need to keep the momentum up heading into this weekend's conference games," junior defenseman Matt Ryder said. "These next three weekends will be really important in determining our chances of getting a good seed in the playoffs, and we needed to get back on the right track coming into those games. Especially with two NESCAC teams coming up this weekend, this was a win that we needed to get to keep the team focused on our goals and earning a spot in the postseason."     Entering last night's contest, the Jumbos had been outshot 654 to 512 by their opponents through their first 18 contests. Despite a hard-fought second period that saw the Rams rip 20 shots on freshman goaltender Scott Barchard in comparison to the Jumbos' six attempts, the visitors were still able to hold on for the key victory.     "[Suffolk] is a hard-working team, but skating-wise we've got much better team skating ability," junior defenseman and co-captain Dave Antonelli said. "We were just trying to slow the game down and handle the puck too much in the second period. We were focusing on trying to make too many skill plays instead of the simpler plays that were the key for us in the first."     While the game was originally scheduled for a 7 p.m. puck drop at Boston University, earlier in the day the location was shifted to Steriti Rink in the North End, and the start time was pushed up to 5:20 p.m.     "It was a last minute change and it threw off people's schedules a bit," Antonelli said. "Although it's definitely not an excuse, it's a reality of the situation and it might've affected us a bit. If you ask anyone on the team, we had much better hockey in us. It was just frustrating [the way the second period went], but it was important for us to get back on the winning track."     Tufts had an important lead to protect heading into the Rams' barrage. Junior forward Mike Fitoussi opened the scoring with a tally at 11:51 with helpers from both Antonelli and Ryder, and sophomore forward Tom Derosa, the Jumbos' leading scorer with 11 goals on the season, pushed the lead to 2-0 just 22 seconds into the second frame on an assist from sophomore defenseman Fredrik Mellgren.     The remaining time in the second period was riddled with Ram scoring chances on Barchard, who backed 36 saves on the evening. The team's budding star, who boasts a .919 save percentage -- good for fifth best in the NESCAC -- was a bulwark in cage. Barchard stopped every shot he faced and held the score at 2-0 into the third period.     "Guys are making simple plays and getting the job done," Antonelli said. "Scott has bailed us out when we've needed the big save, but as a group we've been successful because on the whole we've made the team commitment on the defensive end."     The game's third period featured vastly cleaner play, with none of the game's 14 penalties coming in the final frame. With less than eight minutes remaining in the contest, Rams junior forward Niles Moore finally beat Barchard on assists from a pair of seniors, forward John Rocchio and defenseman Mitch Sabo.     Determined to lock up the win, the Jumbos pushed the goal differential back to two at 17:40 on a goal by junior forward Joe Rosano. Freshman Nick Resor sealed the Rams' fate on his ninth goal of the season with an empty-netter as the remaining ticks expired on the game clock.     "When we focused on throwing the puck in deep and simply working for the puck, then we got somewhere," Antonelli said. "Certainly by the end of the game we had gotten back to the simpler style of hockey [we were playing in the first], and we were wearing them down and taking their legs away. We need to focus on doing the little things right to continue to be successful in the future."     The Jumbos travel to Hartford to take on fourth-ranked Trinity on Saturday night before heading to Middletown for a Sunday matinee against the NESCAC's weakest, Wesleyan. Tufts currently ranks eighth in the NESCAC standings, and the pair of conference games will certainly weigh heavily on the team's postseason plans.


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David Heck | The Sauce

Heading into the Super Bowl, it seemed like the Steelers-Cardinals matchup was destined to be a flop. But with a fourth quarter that included a safety, a 64-yard touchdown pass and an incredible two-minute drill for the victory, it turned out to be pretty exciting. In fact, many have been quick to deem it one of, if not the, best Super Bowls ever. Many have also been quick to deem the Steelers the greatest franchise in NFL history, as their six Super Bowl rings are now the most of any team.     To those people, my message is simple: Chill.     Yes, it was a great game, but Giants-Pats, Eagles-Pats, Panthers-Pats, Rams-Pats (say, did anyone notice the Pats have been in the Super Bowl a lot recently?) and Rams-Titans were all great games, and that's just the past decade. And to Steelers fans, it is now inarguable that your team has been the most successful during the Super Bowl era, but are they the "greatest" team ever? The 49ers and their five Super Bowl rings are pretty great. The Giants and their seven combined Super Bowls and NFL Championships are pretty great, as are the Packers with their 12 combined victories (though twice they won them both in the same year when they briefly overlapped).     So, as you can tell, I'm hesitant to label anything from Sunday's events as particularly historic. Well, except for one thing. And it had nothing to do with the Super Bowl.     A little less than 12 hours before the big game started, something more significant happened in the world of sports. Rafael Nadal defeated Roger Federer in a four-and-a-half-hour marathon to claim his first Australian Open title and secure his place as the best tennis player in the world.     So, you're asking, what's so profound about the ATP's world No. 1 player being the best? Because he's not just the best right now -- he's the best ever.     Let's make this clear. I'm not saying he's the most successful ever; his six Grand Slam titles are still a far cry from Pete Sampras' 14. But I am saying he's the best ever to grace a tennis court. And it's not just because I'm a fan of his hairstyle.     If you've ever seen Nadal play, you know how magnificent he is. There's almost no serve he can't return, no drop shot he can't get to. He hits impossible, opposite-court (not cross-court, when you pull the ball -- opposite-court, when you go the other way) winners like it's nothing. The topspin he gets on the ball is outrageous, even when compared to other elite players. But don't just take my word for how good he is. Look at what he's done.     He's now won three Grand Slams in the past calendar year, beating Federer in the finals of each one. Mind you, Federer has 13 Grand Slam titles, and many have argued that he is the best ever. But Nadal has defeated him 13 of the 19 times they've met --including a straight-set victory at age 17 in their first matchup -- and in each of their past five duels. That also includes their legendary match at Wimbledon, in which Nadal ended Federer's five-year winning streak on his nemesis's best surface.     He's won four straight French Opens, something that only Bjorn Borg has done, and his 81 consecutive wins on clay represent the longest winning streak on any surface in the open era. He's an Olympic gold medalist in singles, unlike Federer or Sampras. And with his most recent victory on Sunday, he becomes just the fourth player in history to win Grand Slam titles on three different surfaces -- a list from which Federer and Sampras are also conspicuously absent.     Still, the majority of the people will remember Sunday for Larry Fitzgerald's touchdowns or Santonio Holmes' final-drive performance or how much money they won or lost. They probably won't remember that it was the day Rafael Nadal proved that Wimbledon was no fluke.     That's OK, though. I have a feeling he's about to prove it over and over and over again.


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Inside the Australian Open | Tennis world's best battle their way through Melbourne

    While the 2009 Australian Open saw some familiar faces atop the podium, what the American non-tennis fanatic might have missed while 16 time zones apart from the action is just how close the world's current No. 1s — Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams — came to being dethroned.      While Nadal played with incredible heart, fighting five-set victories in both the semis and the finals and eventually defeating No. 2 seed Roger Federer, Williams won her matches by somewhat different means.     After seeing Williams struggle in the fourth round and quarterfinals of the tournament, sports analysts would have been diagnosed with Australian heat stroke had they predicted that she would go on to utterly dominate the world No. 3 Dinara Safina in the finals.     The tournament's No. 2 seed cruised through the first three rounds as expected, picking up a trio of straight-set victories over unranked opponents. In the fourth round, the younger Williams sister seemed unprepared for the young gun she was slotted to face.     Victoria Azarenka went into the tournament on fire, having won the Brisbane International Tournament the week prior to the start of the Grand Slam event. Azarenka handily dealt with her first three opponents, two in straight sets and one by way of forfeit, and went into her round of 16 match as an underdog — but an underdog with great confidence nonetheless.     Playing with the zest of a 19-year-old, the righty from Belarus caught Williams completely off-guard. In the first set, a stunned Williams could do little to combat the precision of her opponent. Azarenka took the set 6-3, breaking Williams twice.     The biggest statistical discrepancy undoubtedly was Azarenka's masterful serving, as she got an incredible 82 percent of her first serves in during the first set while Williams managed just 56 percent.     The American looked incredibly unsettled, bouncing the ball as many as 20 times before most of her serves. On one occasion, she took an unfathomable 37 bounces before serving — a stat that would make even Sergio Garcia, the undisputed king of shot procrastination, stare in awe.     Thanks to the first-serve discrepancy as well as Azarenka's first-set advantage in winners, unforced errors and double faults, the teen handed Williams her first lost set of the tournament.     In the second set, Azarenka looked a bit out of tune as the two stepped back onto the court, and she called for a medical timeout with Williams up 3-2. After briefly leaving the court, Azarenka staggered back on looking weak and devastated. The distressed Azarenka haphazardly dropped one more game before she approached the net and forfeited the match.     A terribly-timed virus spelled the end to an incredible start to the match and allowed Williams to escape what could have been an early Aussie Open exit.     Williams then faced Russia's No. 8 seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova and, for the second time in three days, lost the first set.     Once again, a force outside the players' hands in the second set boosted Williams to victory. The hot Australian sun was heating the court to a staggering 41 degrees Celsius (106 Fahrenheit) and Williams seemed unable to cope. Before the start of the second, however, officials decided to close the roof to lower the temperature — a move that infuriated Kuznetsova.     Despite the change, the Russian gained a 5-4 lead and was serving for the match, but she was broken by a determined and no longer overheated Williams, who then easily took the final set and the match.     After Williams went on to destroy her final two opponents in straight sets, including a 6-0, 6-3 final victory over Safina in under an hour, critics may have stopped attributing Williams' success in the tournament to luck and nature. But the fact of the matter is that the now-No. 1 player in the world was outplayed in two of her middle-round matches, and only after two strokes of good fortune was she able to turn the tide and leave with a win.     Perhaps it was her destiny, as Williams also won the Australian Open in 2003, 2005 and 2007 and has now continued her every-other-year crowning. Whatever the case, the sports gods down under were on her side in 2009.


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Inside the NBA | Light not so bright in the valley of the Suns

    The Phoenix Suns, at 26-20, currently sit in the would-be eighth playoff spot in the Western Conference, and they still have Steve Nash, Amare Stoudemire and a rejuvenated Shaquille O'Neal. So why does it feel like the sky is falling in the desert?     The Suns are 4-7 in their last 11 games, with three of those wins coming versus the dregs of the league — the Toronto Raptors, Sacramento Kings and Washington Wizards. A 48-point blowout win over the Kings, the elixir of the NBA, might temporarily ease some of the anxiety out in Phoenix. Still, this is a team that has looked shaky for much of the season under new head coach Terry Porter. Since a heartbreaking Christmas day loss to the rival San Antonio Spurs, the Suns' best wins have come against a Jekyll-and-Hyde Dallas Mavericks team and the injury-riddled Atlanta Hawks, who have fallen back to earth after their scorching start.     As usual, offense is not the problem for the Suns, who have the fourth-highest scoring average in the NBA. But this statistic can be misleading, as the Suns, a team that had prided itself in playing fast-break basketball, are not playing their seven-seconds-or-less style, ranking 26th in the league in field goals attempted per game. And the defense, still, is failing in Phoenix. Without Mike D'Antoni at the helm, the offense cannot pick up the slack.     Nash, who flourished under D'Antoni and won back-to-back MVP awards, has seen his numbers drop in his 13th year in the league. The Suns' floor leader is still averaging 13.9 points a game, though this is down three points from last season. He has also seen his assist numbers dip below 10 per game for the first time in five seasons. Playing with a bad back, Nash has become more of a distributor in the last month as Porter has tried to get his point guard more comfortable in the offense. It doesn't help that Nash has openly questioned the confidence of his team and the ability of his teammates to play together.     Stoudemire, meanwhile, has been the subject of numerous trade rumors lately despite being an All-Star starter. He is averaging over 21 points a game along with eight rebounds, but the power forward is the only real tradable asset on the team and has regressed since coming on strong at the end of last season. It had appeared that playing alongside O'Neal had helped improve Stoudemire's game, but this year it is the Diesel who is making great strides instead of the young gun.     Even so, the resurgence of O'Neal has not been enough to energize the fans in Phoenix. Shaq, an All-Star reserve, is averaging 17.8 points a game, his highest in three seasons, along with nine rebounds. Stoudemire's statistical decrease has been O'Neal's gain, as he has taken over the majority of touches in the post. But when it comes to getting the big man the ball down low, the Suns have moved away from the fast-paced offense that had been their trademark in recent years.      Not even the recent addition of Jason Richardson, acquired in a trade with the Charlotte Bobcats, has been enough to ease the Suns' troubles. Granted, Richardson does nothing to improve a team that needs defensive help, but with his slashing ability and his terrific three-point shooting, he seemed like a natural fit for the Suns run-'n- gun offense.     Maybe the fans in Phoenix are giving up on this team too quickly, but the Suns look to be far from a championship-caliber team. As the Boston Celtics proved last season, and the Detroit Pistons and the Spurs have also shown, defense is the peg that championship teams hang their hats on. Despite all of the moves by GM Steve Kerr, the Suns look like they have fallen further from the top in the West.     Phoenix is just a half a game ahead of the Utah Jazz in the fight for the playoffs. One team is going to be left out of this race, and it could be the Suns. So how can Phoenix get back near the top of the conference? If it involves trading Stoudemire, they will need to make sure they get quality defense in return.     Suns fans are trying to talk themselves off the ledge, and the 48-point win over the Kings does give a glimpse of what this team can do when it is clicking. Still, with key cogs O'Neal and Grant Hill aging and the face of the franchise, Nash, slated to be a part of the 2010 free agent class, the window is closing in Phoenix. With this in mind, the Suns urgently need to find new ways to stay on the list of championship contenders as they continue to slip toward the middle of the pack in the league.


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Daily Digits

100- Yards Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker James Harrison ran after intercepting a pass from Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner on Sunday, recording the longest play in Super Bowl history. Harrison, who needed an oxygen tank after recording the touchdown, finished the game with four tackles in a 27-23 Steeler win. With just 19 seconds left in the half, Harrison's pick viciously swung the momentum towards the Pittsburgh sideline.


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Women's Fencing | Jumbos fall to NYU, lose four of five over tough weekend

     For the first time this season, the women's fencing team both fenced on back-to-back days and hosted a meet. But despite the change of schedule and venue, the results ultimately remained the same, as the Jumbos dropped four out of five matches over the course of two days, culminating in a 1-3 Sunday at the MIT Eric Sollee Invitational.     In the latter of Tufts' two separate days of competition, the epeeists proved they could hold their own against even the best of Div. I opponents, continuing to confirm themselves as the strongest Tufts weapon in competition     "Yesterday, it was a long day, considering we had a meet Saturday as well," junior epee captain Rebecca Hughes said. "I think we exceeded our expectations considering the fact that we beat Yeshiva and [Boston College]. BC is really formidable, so that was a good moment for us."     Over the course of the day, epee went 22-14, while foil and sabre lost 14-22 and 11-27, respectively, solidifying the losing results. Every weapon beat up on Yeshiva, however, while epee pulled out the only other win with a 7-2 victory over Boston College. Tufts faced more difficult challenges later on, as the field was filled with nationally ranked top-10 teams. Still, the Jumbos put forth respectable efforts against No. 9 Pennsylvania and No. 7 Princeton, especially in epee.     "Penn and Princeton both have world-class fencers," Hughes said. "We normally don't face them, but that's a really good experience for us, and it lets us be able to get points [towards individually qualifying] for NCAAs. It's tough for a [Div. III] school to qualify for NCAAs, so fencing those programs gives us some bonus points."     The 20-7 loss to Penn. was as close as any team came on the day to the Quakers, as Penn. deftly sliced through the competition, finishing Sunday at a perfect 5-0. Tufts' 23-4 loss to Princeton was less respectable, though the Tigers did manage to post a clean 6-0 sheet at the Invite. The most impressive individual performance came from sophomore Georgia Ranes, who won all three of her bouts against Penn.     "I feel like everything came together and worked for me," Ranes said. "I didn't overthink anything. I just kind of fenced. I didn't stress about anything, and it made me really relaxed. Even when I lost, I felt like the other girl was just better, so I never got upset. The girls I fenced were all competitive, and it just so happened [that] my point was on and I could figure them out before they could figure me out."     "Georgia fenced amazingly," Hughes added. "She was really composed all day, and against Penn she was confident, patient and took her time, so she deserved to win."     The day before, Tufts hosted its first meet of the year in Jackson Gym against NYU, another team that has received votes in the NCAA national poll. The end result for Tufts was a narrow defeat, but the Jumbos came away feeling they'd put forth a strong effort.     "I didn't do too great, but I've only had two weeks of practice, and NYU is solid," said junior foilist Naomi Bryant, who is also the executive arts editor for the Daily and who spent last semester abroad.     Tufts' sabre captain, junior Alex Cheetham, also recently returned from abroad, and in her short time back on the Hill is already noticing improvement in the young sabre squad.     "We still have somewhere to go as a fairly new team, but I think we did very well against a very good team in NYU," Cheetham said. "As the season progresses, we've shown a marked improvement. Sarah Danly did very well, going 2-1. She's a freshman, and she's improved a lot since last meet."     Epee's dominating 8-1 win against NYU displayed the level of progress the other weapons are seeking.     "I didn't know what to expect against NYU," Hughes said. "Last year we didn't do nearly as well. But this was a big deal for us. We had a lot of bouts go to the final touch and we won them 5-4, and those feel good because they could go either way."     The tensest bout of the day came on the middle strip in Jackson where, with Tufts freshman foilist Meredith Paul knotted in her individual match at four points apiece, a victory could have kept the Jumbos in contention for the overall win.     "I was backed up and then I lost a meter, so I was only allowed one foot on the strip," Paul said.  "And then I lost. It was disappointing."        Tufts eventually fell 15-12, with sabre and foil both going 2-7, but coach Jason Sachs expressed no disappointment.     "It was a tremendous improvement," he said. "NYU is strong. It was a little like David vs. Goliath. [Senior foil captain] Christine Lee beat an A-ranked fencer. You can see the improvement as we're getting back into the swing of things."     "She beat me last year, so I'm happy I got to beat her before I graduate," said Lee, who went 2-1 against NYU. "We're ranked Ds and Cs, so we did well considering how strong NYU is."     On Saturday, Tufts will host the second conference meet of the year after recording a 2-4 performance last week in the first conference meet at Brown.     "I'm looking forward to fencing Wellesley," Hughes said of the upcoming Feb. 7 competition. "Every year that's a tossup, but I think we should be able to beat them. Also, fencing BC again — I'd like to have a chance for the team to beat them, not just our weapon."


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Jumbos overcome Corsairs

    The women's basketball team pulled out its narrowest win of the season last night in Cousens Gym, edging out UMass Dartmouth 66-60 in a non-conference matchup. The nationally ranked No. 15 Jumbos improved to 16-2 on the season and are on a four-game winning streak since a Jan. 23 loss to the Colby Mules. UMass Dartmouth fell to 3-17 but was playing with only five able-bodied players for most of the game, actually managing to lead 28-27 at the half and tie it up at 52-52 with under 10 minutes remaining. Tufts stormed ahead with a 9-2 run in the final minutes to put the game out of reach.     The Jumbos outrebounded UMass Dartmouth by 13 to counter lights-out shooting from three-point land for the Corsairs, who shot 57 percent from beyond the arc. Sophomore guard Colleen Hart scored a career-high 23 points while distributing five assists, while senior co-captain Kim Moynihan, the NESCAC co-Player of the Week, scored 12 points and grabbed eight rebounds.       See tomorrow's Daily for further coverage.


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Barchard stands his ground as Tufts beats Suffolk

    The ice hockey team ended a two-game losing skid last night with a 4-1 victory over non-conference Suffolk. The win was only the team's third on the road this season, the last one coming over Norwich on Jan. 9 at the tail end of a five-game Jumbo winning streak.     Junior Mike Fitoussi opened the scoring for the Jumbos at the 11:51 mark in the first period with his first goal of the season. Just 22 seconds into the second frame, Tufts' sophomore leading scorer Tom Derosa netted his 11th goal of the season to give the Jumbos a 2-0 lead, also securing him sole possession of the Jumbos' top spot in the points column with 19.     Freshman goaltender Scott Barchard proved crucial in the second frame, stopping all 20 shots he faced to keep the Jumbos on top. He would finish with 36 saves on 37 shots.     The Rams finally broke through with 7:19 left in the game on a tally by junior Niles Moore, cutting the Jumbos' lead to 2-1, but they could not beat Barchard again.     Junior Joe Rosano added a security goal for the Jumbos, his third of the year, with 2:20 remaining, and freshman Nick Resor added his ninth on an empty-netter with five seconds to go for the final score in the 4-1 victory.     The victory evens the Jumbos' overall record at 9-9-1, though their NESCAC standing remains unchanged as they still sit at No. 8.     See tomorrow's Daily for further coverage.


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Skiing | Ski team scales peaks and valleys as captains crash and newbies excel

    After a weekend of top-notch skiing, the alpine ski team has left itself in strong position heading into the final weekend of regular-season racing.     The men's team currently sits in third place in the Thompson Division, having racked up 27 points in eight races so far this season and leaving itself only a point off the pace of second-place Boston University. But since a somewhat tumultuous start to the season that saw the Jumbos finish fourth and sixth in their first two races of the season, the team has eclipsed BU's mark in five of the last six races, leaving the skiers confident in their ability to overtake the Terriers.     "I think that barring anybody falling — basically as long as we can stand up — we can definitely overtake BU next weekend," sophomore captain Brian Bresee said.     On Sunday, the men's squad finished the day at Dartmouth placing second out of 11 teams, topped only by the eventual victors from Castleton State, which has won all eight of its races this season. The Jumbos' top three finishers were Bresee with a two-race combined time of 2:05.57, sophomore Arlin Ladue with a mark of 2:09.24 and sophomore Thomas Valentin at 2:09.59.     "Clearly, the strength is our team unity and the fact that we're competing very well even though we're a young team," junior Greg Hering said. "The majority of our talent pool is all sophomores. Our weakness is that we kind of fall a lot."     Ladue's Sunday performance was particularly impressive. In his second race of the day, he skied the 3,000-foot course in a time of 59.78 seconds, a blazing average of 34 miles per hour. Ladue's time was also only one second off the pace of the first-place finisher, senior Justin Schwartz of Castleton State, and less than seven tenths of a second off the pace of his teammate Bresee.     "Ladue had the race of his life," Hering said. "It was a treacherous, high-speed course. That hill is legendary. He creamed me; he beat the number two kid and came within [0.7 seconds], which is so close to the first. [His] top speeds were approaching 50 miles per hour."     Bresee also had a stellar day individually. He finished in second place out of a large field of 87 finishers — though there were a handful of skiers who did not finish the race or were disqualified — and was less than eight tenths of a second out of first.     With his strong Sunday showing, Bresee solidified his sixth-place overall individual standing on the year. Trailing Bresee are Valentin in ninth, Ladue in 20th and Hering in 24th.     While the men took care of business on Sunday en route to their second-place finish, the women performed equally impressively but without the same result. The Jumbos, currently in sixth place on the season, finished fifth out of eight full teams. Three other teams were racing short-handed, resulting in a much higher score due to an automatic last-place score taking the stead of the absent skier.     The Jumbos were led by freshman Jessica Levine, who came in with a time of 2:23.61 and was followed immediately by sophomore Lindsay Rutishauser with a time of 2:23.93 and freshman Fritzi Pieper at 2:32.19. Senior captain Alissa Brandon had a mediocre first race and did not finish her second, leaving her out of the mix on Sunday.     "She fell and lost a ski," senior Pam Garfinkel said. "She was really ripping it down there and lost a ski or something. It's a really fast course at Dartmouth, so there are a lot of falls."     Saturday, however, was a different story. Brandon, as per usual, led the women's team with a combined time of 2:25.01, which was good enough for an 18th-place finish in the field of 80. She was followed by Levine at 2:29.54 and Rutishauser at 2:33.58.     Unfortunately, Brandon's strong finish did not lift the team to a higher overall result than on Sunday. Once again, the Jumbos finished in fifth place out of nine full teams.     The men's team, in similar fashion to Sunday's result, took home second on Saturday as well. Bresee led the pack with a time of 2:14.12, Valentin was second with 2:15.88 and Hering third with 2:18.27.     The last mountain standing between the Jumbos and the regional competition on Feb. 21-22 is Killington next weekend, a course where the Jumbos have had mixed results.     "[Our] goals are just to keep up the momentum into the last race," Garfinkel said.     "We've skied there a couple of times already this year. We're enthusiastic … We know the terrain pretty well. We'll be looking to exceed expectations, definitely."


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Top Ten | Moments From Super Bowl XLIII

    We at the Daily aren't ready to anoint this the best Super Bowl of all time, but it certainly is up there. For three quarters we were in danger of seeing the Big Game turn into a blowout, but the Cardinals staged a miraculous comeback. Of course, Santonio Holmes and the Steelers ended Arizona's Cinderella dreams within a span of two minutes.     And since we aren't ready to leave football behind, this Top Ten honors the best parts of the 43rd installment of the Super Bowl: 10. Comcast's porn glitch. While people in Arizona were surely celebrating after Larry Fitzgerald's go-ahead touchdown catch, there were a few unhappy customers in Tucson. Comcast's feed of the game was interrupted by a short clip from the pornographic channel Shorteez. The image (let's just say it involves "going down") was a bad omen for the end of the Cardinals' season. 9. Big-Game Kurt. He might have made one of the worst plays in Super Bowl history, turning the game around at the end of the first half by throwing a pick to James Harrison at the goal line. But Kurt Warner still lived up to his reputation as a big-game player, hitting Larry Fitzgerald for the go-ahead score and once again finishing with over 300 yards for his third strong Super Bowl performance (even if he lost two out of three). 8. Roethlisberger's Eli impression. Someone was taking notes when Eli Manning pulled off his phenomenal game-winning pass last year. The only difference between Eli and Big Ben was that Ben pulled it off twice. Warner made his own theatrical attempt at a miracle play at the end of the game ... and fumbled. Ouch, Kurt. Maybe next time? 7. Touchdowns from the unknowns. Gary Russell? Ben Patrick? That's right, the first two touchdowns of the game were scored by a back who finished with negative rushing yards and a backup tight end who had 11 catches all season. 6. ‘Zona's double goal line stand. Up 17-7 with the ball on the 5-yard line, Pittsburgh appeared ready to put the game away at the end of the third quarter. But Arizona had not one, but two (thanks to a penalty on the Steelers' first field goal try) goal-line stands to keep the game within striking distance. 5. Springsteen goes nuts. We heeded his call when he told us to put down the chicken fingers and guacamole. So what was the reward from Mr. Springsteen? A knee-slide in the middle of "Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out" that let everyone watching at home get a view of the Boss's crotch. 4. The Cash4Gold commercial. Considering most of their ads consist of insincere testimonials from people with sun in their eyes, Cash4Gold really stepped up its game this time. Pairing Ed McMahon with M.C. Hammer was perfect for the Cards-Steelers Super Bowl: Nobody knows how they got there, but somehow it just worked. 3. James Harrison's interception return. How he managed to keep his feet down the entire way downfield may forever be a mystery. But at least now we all know what it's like to see a 240-pound man rumble his way 100 yards down a football field for a Steeler TD. And it is awesome. 2. Fitzgerald's "game-winner." How many people thought the game was over when Fitzgerald blew past the entire Steelers' secondary with less than three minutes to go? He's proven that he can take games over at any point ... He just can't play defense. 1. Holmes' game-winner. The Cardinals fought valiantly, but in the end they couldn't overcome the Steelers' Holmes-field advantage. Four catches for 73 yards and a game-winner on the team's final drive? Give this man his MVP trophy.


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Men's Track and Field | Junior Engelking wins Tufts Pentathlon

    For junior Jared Engelking, Friday evening's pentathlon was a game of precision.     With a score of 3,400 points, Engelking hit the exact mark necessary to qualify for the NCAA Championships — a personal best for the junior, who outscored WPI senior Joe Krasinskas by 177 for the top spot.     "I think there were a couple of events that I could have done better in, but all in all, I qualified for Nationals, so I was pleased," Engelking said.     "I wasn't really looking at it as in terms of trying to win the meet — I was just trying to go for points," he continued. "The competition was pretty good; I was pushing myself the entire time. The hurdles were the only event that I actually won, so it was good competition."     Tufts' other two competitors posted impressive results during the pentathlon at the Gantcher Center as Junior Trevor Donadt claimed fourth place with 3,115 points — just five points out of third — followed by senior quad-captain Skip Pagel, who finished fifth with a score of 3,059. The Pentathlon featured athletes from Tufts, WPI, Bates, Colby, Williams, MIT and Fitchburg.     Notching more than 2,900 points apiece, all three Jumbos qualified for Div. III New Englands.     "[Donadt and Pagel] both achieved their goals of qualifying for New Englands, so based on that, they did pretty well," Engelking said. "I know both of them are capable of performing better than that, but both of them achieved their goal."     Engelking's best performance came in the 55-meter hurdles, which he won with a time of 7.94 seconds, earning himself 865 points — the highest point total any athlete received in a single event Friday.     Despite earning his lowest point values in the jumps, Engelking placed second in the long jump with 6.05 meters while tying for third in the high jump with 1.77 meters.     "I definitely still need to work on my high jump and long jump," Engelking said.     Donadt's best performance was his third-place finish in the 55-meter hurdles with a time of 8.02 seconds. Pagel also claimed two third-place finishes, recording a jump of 5.98 meters in the long jump and a throw of 11 meters in the shot put.     The athletes will compete in the pentathlon again at Div. III New Englands Feb. 20-21.     "[At New Englands], I would like to try to improve on the 3,400 to get a higher score to guarantee myself at spot at Nationals," Engelking said.


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Jeremy Greenhouse | Follow the Money

     The Yankees are ruining baseball. Well, no, they're not. The Yankees are exploiting a financial advantage that exists in the league's rules. But isn't the point of sport to have all its participants competing on an equal playing field? Sure, and that's why every team in baseball is bound by the same rules. So how then do we fix the problem that allows the Yankees to purchase Mark Teixeira, A.J. Burnett and CC Sabathia in the same offseason? By limiting team spending, and herein lies the idea of a salary cap.     The news that baseball owners in Milwaukee, Houston, Pittsburgh and Oakland advocate a cap is not, in fact, news. You're telling me employers want to keep costs down? What's next? Will owners start looking to finance stadiums with public funds? The possibility of a cap is near nil, simply because the Player's Association would never go for it. Baseball players remain underpaid, and a salary cap would further limit their income.     Yet all the other major sport leagues have salary caps in place, and they all seem to be working. Let's take a look at those other caps.     The NFL works as the most successful sports league on several levels for several reasons. The main source of league revenue comes from national television contracts, which are divided equally among teams. In baseball, Boston and New York have the respective cash cows of NESN and YES. Washington's local TV audience drew approximately 9,000 viewers per Nationals game last season, which was less than a third of any other team.     Local revenues are also distributed much more evenly in football than in baseball. Every home team fills its stadium with at least 55,000 fans per football game. In baseball, the difference between the Yankees' and Marlins' average attendance is around 35,000 fans per game, and that's strung across 162 games, not 16. The NFL is able to use a hard salary cap that treats all teams equally because all teams are relatively equal.     The NBA and NHL have similar problems to MLB in that so much of the league's revenue is generated by specific markets. The NBA uses a soft salary cap that allows teams to go over the cap to retain star players. Big markets like New York can go way over the cap, but they have to pay a luxury tax.     Compared to baseball, the NBA's soft cap is a disaster. Some owners refuse to pay a luxury tax and therefore sacrifice players and draft picks to get under the cap. This structure also requires teams making a trade to have matching salaries pass between sides, creating a situation in which players with pricey expiring contracts become assets.     The NHL's collective bargaining agreement has been rather successful since the lockout, as the league has had record revenues. The NHL's cap is a similar concept to the NFL's, but hockey has a major problem. Small-market clubs are forced to spend an impossible percentage of their local revenue on player salaries. So while the small-market Phoenix Coyotes may be a playoff competitor, they're going bankrupt. This flaw would likely exist within a baseball hard cap.     For baseball, my solution would be to limit team spending by imposing revenue sharing and a luxury tax but without a salary cap. If certain markets generate excess revenues, then they should distribute that money around the league as well as to their players. Teams that face this luxury tax on exorbitant payrolls would experience diminishing returns and would be discouraged from signing too many free agents. Small-market teams would be able to spend their revenue as necessary without the impediment of a floor.     Of course, this is the system already in place. The problem is that the Steinbrenner family that owns the Yankees is willing to dip into its own pockets and, at times, operate at a deficit. Meanwhile, Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria is willing to pocket his stake in revenue sharing instead of reinvesting it in his team. One change I'd make is to require teams that benefit from revenue sharing to spend that money on maintaining or improving their rosters, be it on drafting, international signings or arbitration cases. With this provision in place, I would also increase the luxury tax and the number of teams that face it.     Yes, there is a problem. But a salary cap isn't the answer.