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Scott Barkett
Thursday, 9 October 2003
Detective Reveals Accuser's Acount of the Evening
EAGLE, Colo.(AP)-- Following testimony that accuses Kobe Bryant of rape, Eagle County Judge Frederick Gannett said he won't rule Thursday on whether to order a trial for the NBA susperstar.

Gannett is presiding over the preliminary hearing that will determine whether prosecutors have enough evidence to proceed to trial. Gannett didn't say when he would make that ruling.

The 19-year-old resort worker accusing Bryant of rape told investigators the Los Angeles Lakers star attacked her from behind, grabbing her by the neck and forcing himself on her despite repeated protests.


The woman described a consensual sexual encounter that spiraled suddenly out of her control, Eagle County Sheriff's Detective Doug Winters said at the hearing.


According to Winters, Bryant was joined by the front desk worker on a tour of the posh mountain resort last June. After some flirting, Bryant asked her back to his suite.


The woman showed Bryant a tattoo on her back but turned down his request to join him in the hot tub, Winters said.


Her shift was ending and she "wanted to go home," he said. "She stated she was starting to feel a bit uncomfortable."


She stood up to leave and Bryant gave her a hug that led to some consensual kissing, Winters said.


When she turned around to leave, Bryant grabbed her by the neck, pulled up her skirt and raped her against a chair, Winters said. She told investigators she told Bryant "no" at least twice, before bursting into tears as the five-minute attack went on.


During and after the attack, he said, Bryant kept asking, "You are not going to tell anyone, right?" She said she agreed at one point.

"She said the reason she told him no was for fear of -- she didn't want him to commit more physical harm to her," Winters said.


He also said a nurse who examined the woman later at a hospital found injuries consistent with a sexual assault.


Bryant faces up to life in prison if he stands trial and is convicted of the single felony charge of sexual assault.

That testimony came after, in a surprising move, Bryant's lawyers went ahead with the hearing.


Legal experts had expected the defense to waive the hearing and head straight to trial rather than allow prosecutors to lay out their case publicly for the first time.

"The only reason the defense would choose to go ahead with a preliminary hearing when it doesn't have to is it believes, given the minimal amount of evidence the prosecution is going to be putting on, it may gain more by cross-examining those witnesses," said Stan Goldman, a professor at the Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, when the decision to hold the hearing was announced.

Goldman suggested the defense may call witnesses to testify -- a list that could include Bryant himself.


Judge Gannett had already rejected defense requests to have the woman testify in person and to see her medical records.

Earlier in the afternoon, Bryant arrived at the courthouse, ignoring a throng of reporters and spectators gathered outside. He had to take off a necklace and was checked with a metal-detecting security wand before walking through a metal detector and into the courtroom.



Thursday morning, people began lining up at the courthouse to get into the hearing. Security for the hearing was beefed up after dozens of threats have been made against the prosecutor, the judge and Bryant's accuser. Judge Gannett has acknowledged receiving letters containing death threats, and two men have been charged with threatening Bryant's accuser.

Court officers examined photo identifications before issuing passes to the handful of people. Among them was George Zinn of Salt Lake City, who arrived on a Greyhound bus to watch the spectacle.

"I don't consider Kobe a role model," he said.

Virginia Ricke, an Ames, Iowa, retiree sightseeing in Colorado, drove to Eagle from nearby Glenwood Springs to watch. She said she believes the justice system will work but her intuition tells her something went awry between Bryant and the woman in a room at a nearby resort last June.

"I kind of believe that what happened in that room was dumb, whether it was rape or not, because he had such a good, clean image before," she said.

Nearby, a group of University of Colorado students handed out packages of condoms and legal contracts that both parties would sign to agree to consensual sex.

The case against Bryant could lead to a celebrity trial the likes of which have not been seen since O.J. Simpson was acquitted of murder charges eight years ago.

Since Monday, about 300 television, print and radio reporters and camera crews have been arriving in Eagle, filling motel rooms and parking TV satellite trucks in a vacant lot across from the courthouse that normally is a lumber dealer's back yard.

At Bryant's initial court appearance on Aug. 6, he said just two words: "No, sir," when Gannett asked if he objected to giving up his right to have a preliminary hearing within 30 days. Unlike that appearance, cameras were banned from the courtroom this time.

Prosecutors planned to put a sheriff's detective on the witness stand to describe some details of what allegedly happened between Bryant and his accuser.


Bryant needed to appear for a bail hearing regardless of whether his lawyers waived the preliminary hearing. There also is a possibility he could enter a plea during an arraignment before another judge.

Two district judges were on notice they might be called to preside over an arraignment if the defense asks, state courts spokeswoman Karen Salaz said. By agreeing to an immediate arraignment, Bryant would not have to come back to Eagle again in the next 30 days to answer the charge.

Under Colorado law, Bryant must be arraigned within 30 days of the preliminary hearing or the decision to waive the hearing. After that, he is guaranteed the right to go to trial within six months, but he could waive that right as well.


Posted by me5/scottbarkett at 7:14 PM EDT
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Monday, 6 October 2003
Pedro-Zito Shapes Up To Be A Classic
By Sean McAdam
Special to ESPN.com

Momentum, Earl Weaver once said, is the next day's starting pitcher.

Using that analogy, both the Boston Red Sox and the Oakland A's are well-positioned to move forward as they head to a Game 5 showdown in their American League Division Series tonight, tied at two games apiece. The Red Sox will start Pedro Martinez while the A's will go with lefty Barry Zito.

Between them, Martinez and Zito have won three of the last four Cy Young Awards in the American League. Each won 14 games this season.

But if the pitching matchup rates a tossup, the Red Sox hold two clear edges.

After throwing a season-high 130-pitches in a Game 1 no-decision, Martinez will be working on regular rest. Zito, on the other hand, will be pitching with just three days' rest.

Moreover, the edge clearly swung Boston's way over the weekend. After the A's took the first two games of the series at home -- including a 5-4, 12-inning win in Game 1 which seemed to send the Red Sox into a day-after tailspin -- the Sox reboounded at Fenway Park with dramatic last at-bat victories, the kind which typified their season.

Over the course of the season, the Sox won nearly one-quarter of their games in their final turn at bat. Now that October is here, the Red Sox aren't about to mess with the formula.

"We've been fighting and scratching all season long,'' said Boston Game 4 starter John Burkett.

Until David Ortiz' two-run double in the eighth inning Sunday, the Sox still hadn't demonstrated the ability to produce the big hit when they needed it most. In four games, they have exactly three hits with runners in scoring position.

Ortiz' hit was his first of any kind. Cleanup hitter Manny Ramirez has been limited to two singles, thanks to brilliant work by the Oakland advance scouts and pitching coach Rick Peterson.

If the offense remains a question mark, no such doubt surrounds Martinez, who was so eager to contribute before Game 5 that he told manager Grady Little that he was available for Game 3.

In the bottom of the eighth inning of Game 3, Fenway buzzed with the sight of Martinez warming in the bullpen. If the Sox had managed to score in the bottom of the inning, Martinez would have been called upon to get the final three outs.

They didn't, so he wasn't. But it was the thought that counted. Martinez offered his services again Sunday, but Little, though perhaps sorely tempted, politely refused.

"I can't make myself do that,'' said Little.

Martinez has pitched only one Game 5 Division Series game before. In 1999, after coming out of a Game 1 start with a back strain, he returned with six no-hit innings, despite being unable to top 87 mph with his fastball.

Tonight, the Sox will have him from the start.

"It's a great feeling, knowing we've got our best guy on the mound,'' said second baseman Todd Walker. "That's what we wanted.''

Meanwhile, the A's turn to Zito, who completely stifled the Red Sox bats with seven innings of one-run ball in Game 2. Zito will have the added edge of throwing in the twilight shadows -- the game will have a 5 p.m. local start time in the Bay Area -- making his overhand hammer curve that much more difficult to pick up.

But that might be mitigated by the fact that Zito will be, for the first time in his career, pitching on just three days' rest. The A's were already shorthanded when the series began, having lost lefty Mark Mulder with a fracture in his right hip in August.

Sunday, Tim Hudson left after just one inning with a strained oblique muscle, leaving Zito as the lone healthy ace of Oakland's Big Three.

"They have to feel comfortable with Barry going for them,'' said Red Sox reliever Alan Embree, "Even on short rest, he's no slouch. He has a Cy.''

"We didn't do a very good job against him last time,'' acknowledged Walker. "We've got to do better.''

Finally, the A's confidence level must be questioned. In each of their last three Division Series appearances, Oakland held a series lead -- leading the New York Yankees one-game-to-none in 2000, 2-0 in 2001 and taking a 2-to-1 edge over the Minnesota Twins last October. Each time, the A's lost the fifth and deciding game.

Sunday's Game 4 loss to the Red Sox, in fact, was the A's eighth straight defeat with a chance to send a team home for good.

"We know how hard it is just to win one game,'' said shortstop Miguel Tejada.

The manner in which the A's dropped the two games at Fenway can't be of any comfort. Saturday, they forfeited two runs when Tejada and Eric Byrnes failed to touch home plate. Sunday, closer Keith Foulke, blew just his second save since the All-Star break. Both have come against the Sox.

But the A's owned the best home record in the American League, and have already beaten the Sox twice in two tries there.

"They've got to come to our house now,'' said outfielder Jose Guillen. "It's a different story there.''

After three failed tries at Game 5, the A's could use a different ending.

Sean McAdam of the Providence (R.I.) Journal covers baseball for ESPN.com.


Posted by me5/scottbarkett at 9:29 PM EDT
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Saturday, 4 October 2003
Two Home Plate Collisions Go Marlins' Way
MIAMI (AP) -- Somehow, Ivan Rodriguez and the Florida Marlins held on.

The 10-time All-Star catcher withstood a hard collision to tag J.T. Snow for the final out and the Marlins beat Barry Bonds and the San Francisco Giants 7-6 Saturday, clinching their best-of-five division series 3-1.

In typically dramatic fashion, the wild-card Marlins moved into the NL championship series to face either the Chicago Cubs or Atlanta.

"This is a start," Rodriguez said. "We have a great team, and I think we can go all the way."

Dontrelle Willis and the Marlins blew a 5-1 advantage before rookie Miguel Cabrera helped them regain the lead in the eighth with an RBI single.

Rodriguez scored the go-ahead run, jarring the ball loose from catcher Yorvit Torrealba. When the ball scooted away, another run scored.

But the defending NL champion Giants weren't done. They scored once in the ninth against closer Ugueth Urbina and had runners at first and second with two out when Jeffrey Hammonds singled to left.

A charging Jeff Conine fielded the ball on one bounce and threw a one-hopper wide of the plate to Rodriguez, the hero of Friday's 11-inning victory.

Rodriguez quickly moved in front of the plate and applied the tag as Snow bowled him over, trying in vain to dislodge the ball. Rodriguez's mask and helmet went flying, but he held the ball.

Rodriguez got up and was tackled again by a jubilant Urbina as the Marlins began to celebrate, accompanied by the roar of 65,464 fans, a record for a division series game.

"It was a very tough play," Rodriguez said. "You know, Conine is a good outfielder. He threw the ball right to me.

"In that situation I'm just going to grab that ball in my glove. I don't want to let that ball go out of my glove."

He spoke while still clutching the ball.

During Rodriguez's 12 seasons with the Texas Rangers, they went 1-9 in playoff games, all against the New York Yankees. At 31, he found a limited market as a free agent last winter and settled for a one-year, $10 million contract with the Marlins.

"This is what I've wanted for a long time," Rodriguez said. "And there's nothing better than me getting the last out."

It was a triumph tough to imagine when 72-year-old manager Jack McKeon's team trailed 1-0 in the series and 4-1 in the fifth inning of Game 2 -- or when Florida was 19-29 in May. But the resilient Marlins will the start the NLCS on the road Tuesday.

"They're just exciting guys to be around," McKeon said. "They've got that fire in their eyes. They're never going to quit. You're going to have to beat us."

With the victory, the Marlins saved themselves a long trip to San Francisco for a decisive Game 5 Sunday. The NL West champion Giants, the first team to clinch a division title this year, were the first to be eliminated.

"I'm proud of my guys," manager Felipe Alou said. "They didn't give up when they were trailing by four runs. They didn't give up when they were trailing by two runs in the ninth inning. They made it tough for the Marlins. It wasn't meant to be."

The loss ended the latest bid for that elusive World Series ring by Bonds, who went 0-for-2 with a sacrifice fly and an intentional walk.

"See y'all in spring training," Bonds said in the somber Giants clubhouse.

After hitting a record eight home runs in the postseason last year, Bonds batted .222 in the series (2-for-9) with no homers, one double, two RBI and eight walks, six intentional.

"I'm surely relieved," McKeon said. "You're managing against one guy. You know every time he comes to bat he can beat you. I'll be damned if I was going to let him beat me."

Florida stranded 11 runners, including at least one in scoring position in each of the first six innings. But with two out and runners on first and second in the eighth, Cabrera broke a 5-all tie with a single -- his fourth hit, tying a playoff rookie record.

Right fielder Jose Cruz, the goat for the Giants on Friday, made a wide throw home as Rodriguez scored from second base. Derrek Lee scored on Torrealba's error.

Cabrera also doubled twice and had a two-run single in the fourth. McKeon, managing in the playoffs for the first time, opted to start the rookie instead of All-Star third baseman Mike Lowell, still not 100 percent after breaking his left hand in August.

"Jack has got the Midas touch," Lee said. "Everything he does turns to gold."

Neifi Perez led off the Giants' ninth with a double, and Snow singled him home. Urbina retired the next two batters but hit Ray Durham, which brought Hammonds to the plate and set the stage for the wild finish.

The game looked like a blowout after five innings. By then, Willis already had tripled and singled twice while the Giants had only one hit.

Alou wanted to start ace Jason Schmidt, who threw a three-hit shutout against the Marlins in Game 1. But the right-hander was reluctant to pitch on three days' rest, something he has never done, so Alou went with Jerome Williams.

The right-hander was the first Giants rookie to start a postseason game since Cliff Melton in the 1937 World Series, and he retired only six batters, allowing five hits and three runs.

Game notes
Willis became the first pitcher to get three hits in a postseason game since Los Angeles' Orel Hershiser in the 1988 World Series. Willis' achievement was the first by a rookie pitcher. ... Trumpeter Arturo Sandoval, perhaps afflicted with pregame jitters, skipped several measures when he performed the national anthem.

Posted by me5/scottbarkett at 6:10 PM EDT
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Friday, 3 October 2003
I Take NO Credit For Writing ANY of the Articles On This Site
Just to make sure that everybody is clear on this, I TAKE NO CREDIT FOR WRITING ANY OF THE ARTICLES. I post the news source and author of each article if either are made available.

Posted by me5/scottbarkett at 2:20 PM EDT
Updated: Friday, 3 October 2003 2:21 PM EDT
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Players say Rush's Comments Off-Base
PHILADELPHIA --(AP) Some NFL players were still upset Thursday at last weekend's comments about Donovan McNabb that caused conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh to resign from ESPN.


On "Sunday NFL Countdown," Limbaugh said the Philadelphia Eagles quarterback was overrated because the media wanted to see a black quarterback succeed.


"You can have your opinion, but there are certain things that are sensitive that you have to adhere to and certain lines that you don't cross," Carolina Panthers quarterback Rodney Peete said. "And I think he definitely crossed that line with that particular comment."


As one of McNabb's closest friends, Cleveland Browns wide receiver Kevin Johnson offered another view.


"He's disappointed," said Johnson, a teammate of McNabb's at Syracuse. "He has done everything right as a player. He's been a perfect role model. He has done everything that you would ask him to do as an NFL quarterback."


Limbaugh resigned from the show Wednesday night.


Rev. Jesse Jackson told The Associated Press on Thursday that Limbaugh's remarks were "a painful insult."


"It is not true and it is demeaning to the black athlete," Jackson said in a phone interview from California. "It is wrong to suggest that the hard work of black coaches and black quarterbacks are breaking in by the gratuity of the media."


In 2000 Tennessee's Steve McNair became the second black quarterback to start a Super Bowl.


He said the fans always treated him fairly and he was surprised the issue of race has resurfaced.


"Until this episode, I thought it was gone," he said. "Evidently, there will always be a small portion out there. That's just people's opinion and how people look at different things."


Dallas Cowboys coach Bill Parcells said Limbaugh's opinion doesn't "represent how the majority -- the high majority" of people involved in the game for a long time think.


"I know it doesn't represent anything near what I think," he said.


Washington Redskins coach Steve Spurrier was far from agreeing with the overrated part of Limbaugh's opinion.


"They didn't give him all that money because he's an average quarterback," Spurrier said. "He's one of the best in the league."


Many Redskins players took issue with both the premise and conclusion of Limbaugh's statement. They felt McNabb is indeed worth all the attention he gets, and they wondered what on earth race has to do with it.


"Who's Rush Limbaugh to make a statement like that?" linebacker LaVar Arrington said. "He needs to stay in his area of expertise because clearly he's out it. That's one of the most asinine comments a person can make. It shows his IQ level in football."


Posted by me5/scottbarkett at 2:13 PM EDT
Updated: Friday, 3 October 2003 2:23 PM EDT
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Thursday, 2 October 2003
Penguins D Rozsival out two months following knee surgery
October 2, 2003
PITTSBURGH (Ticker) - Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Michal Rozsival underwent arthroscopic right knee surgery Thursday and will be sidelined approximately two months, the team announced.

Team physicial Dr. Charles Burke repaired the meniscus, one day after Rozsival injured the knee in practice.

Rozsival missed 27 games last season with groin, shoulder, head and thumb injuries. The 25-year-old Czech finished with four goals and six assists in 53 contests.



Posted by me5/scottbarkett at 9:28 PM EDT
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Steelers concerned they'll be taking on desperate Browns
By ALAN ROBINSON, AP Sports Writer
October 2, 2003
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The Cleveland Browns are coming off a loss to Cincinnati that dropped their record to 1-3. They're not scoring very much. Starting quarterback Kelly Holcomb is injured, so Tim Couch will start Sunday night in Pittsburgh.

Maybe that's what has the Steelers so concerned. Whenever very little is going right for the Browns, it can mean things are about to start going wrong for the Steelers.

``The Browns-Steelers game is one of those things where it really doesn't matter who has the better record,'' wide receiver Plaxico Burress said. ``Cleveland has always played us hard. It's always a physical game and their coach always has their guys fired up to play us.''

That kind of rhetoric may sound more suited for high school than the NFL, but Browns-Steelers games regularly deviate from the supposed norm. Remember 1999? The Steelers beat up on the Browns 43-0 in Cleveland's return to the NFL, only to lose the rematch 16-15 in Three Rivers Stadium.

Their wild card playoff game in January is another example. The Steelers beat the Browns by three points for the third time in just over three months, but the game barely resembled the previous two.

Holcomb threw for 429 yards, the third-most in an NFL playoff game, as the Browns opened a 24-7 lead, but the Steelers rallied with two touchdowns in the final 3:06 to win 36-33.

Pittsburgh's comeback was such a letdown to the Browns, Burress expects to see a desperate opponent Sunday, especially given Cleveland's poor start. The Browns have talked about playing with a sense of urgency, given how tough it would be to make the playoffs should they lose and fall to 1-4.

``You would think those guys will be a little teed off about what happened last year,'' Burress said.

Steelers guard Alan Faneca is equally angry about the Steelers' 30-13 loss Sunday to Tennessee. The Steelers have followed a win-lose-win-lose pattern so far this season, one reason that Faneca said they must begin to play with more consistency.

``It still makes me mad,'' Faneca said. ``It was the little things. You say that and it doesn't really tell you much, but it was a thing here or there.''

Of less concern to the Steelers than the Browns' state of mind is the status of their quarterbacks. They've played against both Couch and Holcomb, and they don't expect the Browns to overhaul their game plan just because Holcomb (sprained left ankle) isn't expected to play.

With the Browns struggling to run the ball, the Steelers expect to see many of the spread formation, four-receiver looks they saw in that January playoff game.

``I really don't see too much difference, they're kind of the same type of player,'' nose tackle Casey Hampton said of Couch and Holcomb.

Strong safety Mike Logan said the Browns have too much offensive talent to keep being held to 14 points or fewer, as they were in each of their first four games.

``At some point in the year they're going to start clicking, but we just don't want that to happen against us,'' he said.

The Steelers' efforts to get their own running game going could be helped by the expected return of left tackle Marvin Smith, who sat out Sunday with a sore shoulder. He returned to practice Thursday.



Posted by me5/scottbarkett at 8:55 PM EDT
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October 2, 2003
1st Update. I just created this site and I'll be posting a lot better stuff in the future. Today I just wanted to test it out and get everything going. BTW today is my sister Jacquie's birthday...Happy Birthday

Posted by me5/scottbarkett at 5:39 PM EDT
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