Perfect Match - Alexis N. Sanchez
Transcription
Perfect Match - Alexis N. Sanchez
Photog ra ph b y rod mar inside MLB Perfect Match Rebuilt by the game’s best pitching coach, Philip Humber made history b y T o m v e r d u c c i W El a in e T h o m p s o n /a p (ri g h t ) on-baseless claim to fame Humber, who before last year had fewer career wins than teams, finally fulfilled some of the promise that made him a top three draft pick in 2004. hen Philip Humber stood one pitch away from immortality last Saturday—full count, two outs after he’d retired the first 26 Mariners he’d faced— there was no hesitation about what to throw for the defining pitch of his career. It would be one he had been using for less than a calendar year: the slider. The choice to complete the 21st perfect game in baseball history was something of a tribute to White Sox pitching coach Don Cooper. Humber, 29, who was drafted third overall by the Mets in 2004, joined Chicago before last season after getting waived twice in a month. He had fewer big league wins (two) than organizations (four). Cooper tweaked the righty’s delivery—creating a more downhill angle by reducing the bend in his back leg—and, after three starts, replaced his mediocre cutter with a slider. In his next start Humber took a nohitter into the seventh at Yankee Stadium. “He whipped out like 25 of them [against the Yankees],” Cooper said on Sunday. “It became his secret weapon.” Beginning with that game, Hu mber went 8–7 w it h a 3.67 ERA last year. In his second outing this year he dominated the punchless Mariners, who did not come close to a hit and did not see a three-ball count until the ninth inning. Brendan Ryan, a righthanded hitter, was their last chance. With a full count Humber threw his 19th slider among his 96 pitches. The pitch was far off the plate, but it broke so violently that Ryan started a desperate swing, then stopped. As the ball bounced toward the backstop, umpire Brian Runge ruled a third strike on a swing, prompting Ryan to argue before racing for first. The delay gave catcher A.J. Pierzynski a moment to retrieve the ball and throw to first for the final out. Humber collapsed on the infield grass, overcome with emotion. His wife, Kristan, was at home, nine months pregnant. The early promise to his career had been validated eight years after his lofty draft status. “He’s a guy that’s been rejected, neglected and beaten down,” Cooper says. “He deserves success because of the price that he paid.” The gem made Cooper, 56, the only active pitching coach with two perfect games on his watch—Mark Buehrle threw one in 2009—and enhanced an already sterling reputation. Since he took over in Chicago in ’02, no pitching coach has been better at keeping pitchers healthy and few have revived more stalled careers. Cooper’s pitchers have thrown 200 innings in a season 25 times. No other franchise has even 20 such seasons in that span. He also has helped rescue the careers of pitchers such as Jose Contreras, Javier Vazquez, Matt Thornton, Bobby Jenks, Esteban Loaiza, John Danks and Humber. “We do an awful lot of work with pitchers’ deliveries,” Copper says. “Injuries are not an act of God. Injuries occur because of poor deliveries.” Even i n t he d ig it a l a ge Cooper retains the old-school manners of a master teacher. “You can overeat, oversleep and overdrink, and I’ve been accused of all three,” Cooper says, “but I don’t believe I’ll ever be accused of overcoaching.” Continuing a trend from last year, when runs dropped to their lowest level in 19 years, this season has been defined by pitching. Last week alone, as the major league batting average dipped to .247, 49-year-old Rockies lefty Jamie Moyer became the oldest man to win a big league game, A’s righty Bartolo Colon threw 38 straight strikes and eight shutout innings, Cliff Lee became the first Phillies pitcher in 55 years to throw 10 shutout innings without a walk, and Humber threw the fourth perfect game in slightly less than three years. “This was certainly not about me,” Cooper says. “It’s about Phil. This was his moment—after a lot of hard work—when the light shines brightest on a pitcher. It was the perfect storm.” a pril 30, 2012 | S p o r t s I l l u s t r at e D | 29 inside on si.com mlb power rankings MLB This season SI’s weekly ranking of all 30 teams looks different. Powered by Fangraphs, it’s based not on opinion or the standings but on data, with teams slotted by Wins Above Replacement (WAR), a metric showing how valuable players are compared with replacement level. Here’s a taste of this week’s rankings (stats through Sunday), with the full list at SI.com/mlb. —Ben Duronio, FanGraphs.com Bring HimUp 1 Rangers Mike Trout, one of the two best prospects in the game, has nothing left to prove in the minors. So why is he still there? help on the way? by joe sheehan T ting .233/.246/.450 so far in 2012. He is a serviceable leftfielder, but his defense pales in comparison to what Trout would bring. Of course, on-field numbers aren’t the only ones that count. Wells is making $21 million this year and is owed another $42 million through 2014. His contract is what economists call a sunk cost: The Angels are committed to paying it no matter what. They can’t let that sunk cost affect their decisions. To play Wells because they’re paying him $21 million is to lose twice: money and games. The Angels, who are ninth in the AL in OBP and 11th in slugging, cannot afford to waste any more at bats on the inferior player. In recent seasons the team has had success letting young players play—see Kendrys Morales in 2009 and Peter Bourjos and Mark Trumbo in ’11. Manager Mike Scioscia, who isn’t known for developing young players, nevertheless writes out a lineup card most days with five players who have come through the Angels’ system. Until and unless he makes it six, the Angels have no hope of keeping pace with the Rangers in the AL West. 30 | S p o r t s I l l u s t r at e D | a pril 30, 2012 2 Cardinals Winning %: Expected .781 Actual .688 Total WAR: 12 Actual Wins: 11 Matt Carpenter’s presence is already being felt in St. Louis. With Lance Berkman on the DL, the Cardinals haven’t missed a beat thanks in part to the rookie corner infielder who has a solid .347 Weighted On-Base Average (wOBA). Carlos Beltran, Yadier Molina and David Freese have also produced, adding up to an offense that has the NL’s highest OBP, slugging percentage and home run total in the National League. 3 Yankees Winning %: Expected .696 Actual .600 Total WAR: 10 Actual Wins: 9 The Bombers have baseball’s third-best offense despite relatively slow starts from Alex Rodriguez and Robinson Cano, thanks in part to four home runs apiece from Derek Jeter and Nick Swisher. The starting pitching has been awful overall, with the league’s secondhighest rotation ERA (5.84). But the bullpen (2.14 ERA, second lowest in baseball) has come to the rescue. 4 Braves Winning %: Expected .618 Actual .625 Total WAR: 10 Actual Wins: 10 After starting 0–4, Atlanta has lost just twice and is 10–6. It has done it with both offense and pitching: The Braves have scored more runs than any team in the NL, Brandon Beachy leads the league in ERA and young lefty Mike Minor is putting together a breakout season. Jason Heyward, trying to rebound from a rough 2010, has gotten off to a great start with a 1.1 WAR. 5 Dodgers Winning %: Expected .600 Actual .750 Total WAR: 10 Actual Wins: 12 Matt Kemp already has nine home runs and an OBP of .500, with Andre Ethier, Mark Ellis and A.J. Ellis also hitting well. The pitching has been impressive: L.A.’s is the only NL staff to average a strikeout per inning. At some point Kemp will cool down, and the pressure will be on other position players to produce if the Dodgers are to stay this high. Don’t bet on it. B ren t A s ay/S a lt L a ke B ee s he Angels won the offseason by committing $317.5 million to two players, Albert Pujols and C.J. Wilson, but their season may hinge on whether they add another $480,000 to the payroll. That’s what the team would have to pay rookie Mike Trout to take over as its starting leftfielder. Trout, who along with the Nationals’ Bryce Harper is one of the top two prospects in the game, made his big league debut at 19 last season, batting .220/.281/.390 in 135 plate appearances. That doesn’t do him justice; last year Trout dominated the Double A Texas League, hitting .326/.414/.544 and stealing 33 bases. This season the centerfielder is running roughshod over the Triple A Pacific Coast League. Despite being the youngest player there by four months, he was batting .400/.463/.600 through Sunday. He was 6 for 7 as a base stealer, had walked more than once every 10 trips—exceptional for a player of his age—and was playing strong defense. It’s not just that Trout is ready—he’s also so much better than the Angels’ current left fielder. Last year Vernon Wells, 33, had the lowest OBP for a starting leftfielder (.248) in more than 100 years. It doesn’t appear to have been a fluke; Wells is bat- While the Angels’ offense struggles, Trout, only 20, is tearing up Triple A and showing he’s ready for the Show. Winning %: Expected .837 Actual .813 Total WAR: 13 Actual Wins: 13 Josh Hamilton’s impression of Babe Ruth has driven the Rangers’ offense, the second best in baseball so far. They also have the third-lowest rotation ERA, and only six teams have allowed fewer balls in play to land for hits, which is a good sign for their defense. Being among the best at pitching, offense and defense tends to put you at the top. inside “jostling in the corner” “knifed down” “ Waffleboa rding” “Net-mouth scramble” “SHOVELE”D ALONG Follow @SI_NHL ’s “off the gonalaielia ” par apher “HIT THE WITH THE POST SHOT !” “DRI VE! SCOOORE !“ “Ladled alonsg” the board nhl Word to the Doctor Thirty-nine one-goal games, 20 decided in OT, three Game 7s: Nobody captures the drama of NHL Spring quite like the erudite Mike Emrick b y m i c h a e l f a r b e r B ru c e B en n e t t/G e t t y Im ag e s W affleboarding. The word is nowhere to be found in either the Oxford English or t he Merriam-Webster’s dictionary, but it appears prominently in the Doc Dictionary. Mike (Doc) Emrick, the preeminent lexicographer of the frozen game, invented the word, which, despite its ominous tone, is no act of torture, like, say, rooting for the Blue Jackets. The definition: a blocker save in which the goalie purposely guides the puck to a specific area of the ice. The etymology is the old-style blockers, which did resemble a waffle, and the ability of a goalie like the Devils’ vener- able Martin Brodeur to use it in order to direct a puck anywhere he chooses. Like Emrick himself, who last December became the first media member to be enshrined in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame, the word is curious, clever and note perfect, an original piece of hockey Americana. This is the spring of Doc. For the first time, NBC and its sister stations are televising every NHL playoff game: on the Peacock on weekend afternoons and, most of the rest of the time, on the recently rebranded NBC Sports Network. Emrick is the network’s lead play-by-play man. He might not be your f avorite— like the most delicious flavor of ice cream, this is a matter of personal taste—but he surely is among the most remarkable work ing in any sport. Emrick is a hybrid. He uses his voice like an instrument, modulating it to impute significance to a moment in the manner of classic old-school announcers, such as Bob Cole of Hockey Night in Canada. But beyond tracking the puck from Player A to Player B, he marbles his calls with information and pertinent digression and wry humor, which makes him as fresh as some of the other leading practitioners of hockey’s modern style, such as Jim Hughson, Chris Cuthbert and Gord Miller. Like Knicks analyst Walt (“stumbling and bumbling”) Frazier, the 65-year-old Emrick is foremost a verb man. A defenseman does not simply shoot a backhander out of his zone to center ice. He skyhooks or pitchforks or ladles it. The puck will careen or skitter. “When I was in grad school at Miami [of Ohio]”—Emrick earned a master’s in radio- television there in 1969 and later a doctorate at Bowling Green—“I’d go to the [International Hockey League’s] Dayton Gems games,” he says. “I interviewed the announcer, Lyle Stieg, who told me that there were many ways to say the same thing. Really, how many times can you say ‘dump in’? . . . [But] I’m not sitting there with three-by-five cards and deciding what word I should use. I’m reacting to the puck.” He had a n e ven e a rl ier broadcasting influence—Una McClurg, his fifth-grade teacher in La Fontaine, Ind. Emrick recalls he d idn’t have an extensive vocabulary as a child, but she told him if he could use a word five times, that word would then belong to him. Waffleboarding. He owns it. ± m ay 14 , 2012 | S p o r t s I l l u s t r at e D | 35 INSIDE FOLLOW NBA These Kids Are Alright By battling back to beat the streaking Spurs, the young Thunder showed how much it has grown since last year’s conference finals B Y L E E J E N K I N S D uring a midseason trip to Los Angeles, the Thunder held its morning shootaround at Santa Monica High, in a dilapidated gym that coach Scott Brooks found entirely appropriate. “Our guys are only two years removed from high school, anyway,” he said. Brooks was exaggerating—barely. No one in Oklahoma City’s core four is older than 23, hard to believe given that the team is in it second straight conference finals. On that morning in Santa Monica, Brooks referenced some of the challenges that remained, specifically convincing young players to space the floor and move the ball. “They want to be around it all the time,” he said. Indeed, the Thunder won 47 games this season while finishing last in the NBA in assists. A coming-of-age occurred Rough Draft BY CHRIS MANNIX field goals in the first half and point guard Russell Westbrook just two the entire night, but they repeatedly set up power forward Serge Ibaka (who was 11 for 11 from the floor) and center Kendrick Perkins. Durant was able to preserve stamina for the final seven minutes, when he scored 16 consecutive points, and Westbrook wisely stepped out of his way. “We’ve got to go to our first option,” Westbrook said. “That’s Kevin.” Even if Oklahoma City loses this series, it has taken another step forward. Last year the Thunder led the Mavericks by 15 points at home with five minutes to play in the fourth game of the conference finals, with a chance to even the series. Brooks’s troops celebrated prematurely, blew the lead and were eliminated two days later. In an identical situation, against a similar opponent, they held firm and won. They are still young, but no longer too young. ± WHERE DOES THE TALENT DROP OFF? WHO’S THE BIGGEST POTENTIAL BUST? WHO IS THE TOP INTERNATIONAL TALENT? WHO STANDS TO IMPROVE THE MOST? Several executives agree: Kentucky freshman Anthony Davis, expected to be taken by the lotterywinning Hornets, is the only sure thing. But while the other top prospects carry higher-than-usual risk, there will be strong values available after the lottery. “It’s unstable at the front,” says one G.M. “It’s hard to be sure what you are getting. But 20 through 40, this is the deepest draft we have had in a long time.” Ohio State’s 6' 9" Jared Sullinger. Two executives say he’s not athletic enough to play power forward. “He reminds me of Stacey King,” says one G.M. But what about Kevin Love, a similarly built, nonathletic four who is now an All-Star? “Love had better range and passing ability,” says a West G.M. “Sullinger doesn’t play with a high motor. He’s going to have a difficult time defending multiple pick-and-rolls.” Tomas Satoransky, a 6' 7" swingman from the Czech Republic. The foreign pool was depleted last year, when 14 overseas players were drafted. “But,” says a West executive, “Satoransky could be a second-round steal.” The 20-year-old averaged only 4.8 points in 17.3 minutes for Spain’s Cajasol Savilla. But, in the words of one exec, “He’s a playmaker. He can slash, he’s unselfish and he can defend.” Aside from the Hornets, Washington, which finished the season on a six-game winning streak. Point guard John Wall (7.1% from three-point range) will only get better and Nenê will stabilize the front line. The Wizards pick third—a precarious position—but if they can land a contributor (such as Kentucky forward Michael Kidd-Gilchrist or Florida guard Bradley Beal), the surge they began in April should continue. 28 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | J U N E 11, 2012 G REG N EL S O N Four key questions heading into the June 28 selections, which are riddled with uncertainty—after the No. 1 pick last week in Oklahoma City, with the Thunder facing a 2–0 deficit in the conference finals against the Spurs, who were riding a 20‑game winning streak. The Thunder won t w ice, but more startling was the way in which it was accomplished: driving and kicking, catching and shooting, a team that had averaged 18.5 assists piling up 50 in two games. OKC ha s t a ken muc h from the Spurs—most notably general manager Sam Presti—but mimicking their offensive precision and selfsacrifice would be the greatest coup. In Game 4 last Saturday, scoring champ Kevin Durant had only two t DURANT @SI_nba OLYMPIC FORECASTING Five reasons to target archery as the breakout sport of the 2012 Summer Games MOTOR SPORTS WILLIAM HAWKEYE The Avengers Snow White and the Huntsman MERIDA Brave BRONN Game of Thrones KATNISS EVERDEEN The Hunger Games FACES IN THE CROWD | Edited by ALEXANDRA FENWICK BILL STANLEY SOUTH PARK, PA. > TRACK AND FIELD < KIMMONS WILSON Ferrari is banking on turning a young Canadian into a Formula One star of tomorrow Amid the high-tech glamour of the Ferrari garage at the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal on Sunday, a 13-year-old boy stood with a headset pressed to his ears and listened to the voice of two-time world champion Fernando Alonso crackling over the radio. “It’s crazy to WINTER PARK, FLA. > ROWING < Kimmons, a freshman coxswain for the Winter Park boys’ freshman eight, helmed the Wildcats to a come-from-behind victory at the Scholastic Nationals at Cooper River in Camden, N.J. Trailing in the 1,500-meter race until she called for a sprint at 250 meters out, the team won in 4:31.091, defeating runner-up St. Joseph’s Prep by 1.552 seconds. A week earlier the crew won at the Stotesbury Cup Regatta in Philadelphia. In April it took first at states and at the Orlando city championship. CHRIS BROWN NORTH CHELMSFORD, MASS. > TRACK AND FIELD < Brown, a senior at Brandeis, won the 800 (1:55.31) and the 1,500 meters (3:47.94) at the University Athletic Association finals and was named the New England Division III outdoor runner of the year. Earlier this year he ran a 3:43.49 in the 1,500 for a school record and the fastest D-III time this season by more than three seconds. Brown, who finished third in the mile at the NCAA indoor championships, was named All-America for the second time after placing fourth in the 1,500 at the outdoor NCAAs. SHANTANA KANHOYE QUEENS, N.Y. > FLAG FOOTBALL < Shantana, a senior quarterback at John Adams High, received the Wingate Award for athletic excellence in the New York City Public Schools Athletic League’s inaugural flag football season. She led the city with 1,518 passing yards and 28 touchdowns and rushed for 657 yards and nine more scores to lead the Spartans to a 7–1 season and the Queens borough title. As a wideout Shantana had 14 catches for six TDs, and she returned two interceptions for scores on defense. K.C. WILSON WINTER SPRINGS, FLA. > WATERSKIING < K.C., a recent graduate of The Master’s Academy (Oviedo, Fla.), won his fourth straight slalom title at the Junior U.S. Open at Lake of Dreams in Jerseyville, Ill., successfully clearing two buoys with a rope shortened to 391⁄2 feet in his fourth pass. A week earlier he won the slalom at the Junior Masters at Robin Lake in Pine Mountain, Ga., with the same score, tying his own Junior Master’s record, which he already shared with fellow U.S. skier Ian Trapp, who first set the mark in 2003. ALLI CASH OVERLAND PARK, KANS. > TRACK AND FIELD < Alli, a junior at Shawnee Mission West, repeated as 6A state champion in the 800 and 1,600 meters and the 4 … 800 relay and added a fourth gold medal in the individual 3,200, winning by a whopping 20 seconds. She set a state meet record in the 1,600 (4:52.31), which she also won by more than 20 seconds. Winner of the state individual cross-country title last October, she was third in last Saturday’s Dream Mile in New York City. Alli is Kansas’s Gatorade girls’ cross-country runner of the year. Nominate Now To submit a candidate for Faces in the Crowd, go to SI.com/faces. For more on outstanding amateur athletes, follow @SI_Faces on Twitter. 24 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | J U N E 18 , 2012 hear the drivers,” he said. “I know exactly what they’re saying.” Young Lance Stroll is no casual fan. He’s not racing in F1 just yet, but the Montreal native represents the coming generation—and an ambitious experiment for the sport’s oldest team. He was just 11 when he signed on with Ferrari after dominating the Canadian go-kart circuit. “A huge jump in the dark,” says Luca Baldisserri, head of the Ferrari Driver Academy in Maranello, Italy. Yet for Ferrari, the math is clear: Hiring top drivers costs tens of millions of dollars; kids are low-risk, potentially highreward investments. Lance now races karts full time in Europe, making monthly visits to Maranello for strategy sessions, reflex drills and breathing exercises. In 10 races this year he has three podium finishes, including a win. At 15 he’ll make the jump to cars. For now, though, listening to Alonso’s voice through the headphones, Lance hears one sound: “Myself in 10 years,” he says, “on that grid.” —Grant Robertson TO P, F R O M L EF T: WA LT D ISN E Y S T U D I OS M OT I O N PI C T U RE S , ©2012 U NI V ERS A L PI C T U RE S , D ISN E Y/ PIX A R / PH OTO F E S T, H B O, L I O N S GAT E / P H O TO F E S T; G I O R G I O B EN V EN U T I / F ERR A RI / EPA (S T R O L L); T EC H NI Q U E S PH O TO G R A PH Y (S TA N L E Y ); M EG G EN WIL S O N (WIL S O N); CO U R T E S Y O F B R A N D EIS U NI V ERSI T Y (B R OW N); R O B ER T T R OT TA /J O H N A DA M S HI G H (K A N H OY E); CO U R T E S Y O F K .C . WIL S O N (WIL S O N); T H E K A N S A S C I T Y S TA R (C A SH) Bill, a senior at South Park High, broke the national high school javelin record with a throw of 246’ 9”, winning the Pennsylvania 3A title in his first attempt. His throw surpassed the farthest marker at 220 feet out on the javelin field and nearly reached the woods beyond it, breaking the previous record by 2’ 7”. Bill was unbeaten this season and set meet records at every invitational, including the Penn Relays (223’ 3”). Next year he will compete at Ohio State. Driver’s Education INSIDE HORSE RACING Rags to Riches In a Belmont without I’ll Have Another, Union Rags delivered a victory that validated himself and saved the day B Y T I M L A Y D E N T his year’s Triple Crown might have produced history, but instead it delivered a sweet, compensating form of justice that is rare in life and rarer still on the racetrack. It came early last Saturday evening as the culmination of 30 hours in which the game itself plunged from the peak of anticipation to a deep trough of disappointment and then clawed its way back to relief when Union Rags and jockey John Velazquez won the 144th Belmont Stakes with a bold, rail-scraping stretch run that made good on a promise delivered much earlier. This was back before everything happened. It was before I’ll Have Another came from California and won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness and then came to New York with a shot at becoming racing’s 12th Triple Crown winner. It was before I’ll Have Another was suddenly scratched with tendinitis one day before the Belmont, killing every ounce of the joy that had temporarily made the struggling sport seem buoyant and meaningful. And it was before I’ll Have Another’s saddle was ceremonially removed in the Belmont winner’s circle, leaving Cinderella jockey Mario Gutierrez in tears, a morsel thrown to fans who had come to the big racetrack in Elmont, N.Y., to see him race, not retire. This was on a cold April morning at Keeneland Race Course, and thoroughbred trainer Michael Matz stood beneath budding maples with his hands stuffed into a windbreaker and hope filling his every sentence. In his care was a strapping bay colt named Union Rags who showed promise as a 2-year-old and in his first start at three but had been compromised by racing luck and a lousy ride from jockey Julien Leparoux in the March 31 Florida Derby, in which he ran third despite being a 2–5 favorite. “He needs a chance to run,” said Matz that day. “And if he gets it, he’s the kind of horse who can win the Kentucky Derby.” If that had happened, the racing gods would be fully understood for rewarding Matz, who had won the 2006 Derby with B IL L F R A K E S (B O T TO M); K EI T H B ED F O RD/ REU T ERS 36 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | J U N E 18 , 2012 ONE SHINING MOMENT After Velazquez (in yellow) guided Union Rags past Paynter, the jockey shared cup-carrying duties with Wyeth, whose love for the horse was finally rewarded. Barbaro, only to see him break down in the Preakness (and famously die eight months later). “I really thought that Barbaro could have won the Triple Crown,” said Matz that morning in Kentucky. “But that day in Baltimore, the whole thing just split apart.” And those same gods would be understood for rewarding Union Rags’s owner, Phyllis Wyeth, 71, who has spent most of her adult life in a wheelchair after an automobile accident when she was 20. Union Rags is the last in a long line from her family’s racing brood, and she so loved the colt that though she grudgingly sold him as a yearling for tax purposes for $145,000, she bought him back as a 2-year-old for $390,000, cost be damned. But those rewards were not delivered at Churchill Downs. Union Rags’s Derby odyssey was exponentially worse than his Florida trip, and he finished seventh. I’ll Have A nother was anointed in victory, and runnerup Bodemeister was honored in defeat. Matz took his horse home to a sprawling training center in Elkton, Md., skipped the Preakness and hoped that the Belmont would validate his belief. He did something else, too: He changed jockeys, replacing Leparoux with John Velazquez, who had won the 2007 Belmont on Rags to Riches and ridden thousands of races on the quirky Belmont track. And it was Velazquez who squeezed Union Rags through a narrow space between the rail and front-running Paynter and won the Belmont by a neck. In fading late spring light, Matz’s assistant, Peter Brette, walked next to the horse back to his barn. “We were watching I’ll Have Another try for the Triple Crown,” said Brette. “And there was a time when we thought INSIDE FOLLOW that was going to be us. Now we’re just happy people got a chance to see what he could do.” What he did was break blessedly clean from the gate and then stalk Paynter for nearly a mile. But when he tried to accelerate in the final turn, he was briefly blocked, a flashback to previous troubles. “I was worried there for a second,” said Matz. “But I knew Johnny was going to ride his race.” Paynter, who like Bodemeister is owned by Ahmed Zayat, trained by Bob Baffert and ridden by Mike Smith, took the lead into the stretch. Atigun, a 20–1 shot, closed on the @SITimLayden outside, and Smith hit Paynter lefthanded. “Trying to intimidate Atigun,” said former jockey Gary Stevens. “That caused [Paynter] to drift out.” It left a narrow hole on the rail, and Velazquez urged Union Rags through. In the closing strides the Belmont crowd roared as Velazquez pushed Union Rags’s head beneath the wire, clear of Paynter and clear of his long spring’s problems, validated at last. The crowd rose in full throat, forgetting for one moment that I’ll Have Another was gone and embracing a brilliant performance as salve to an open wound. ± S CO T T SERI O/ EC L IP SE / ZU M A P RE S S .CO M (BA F F ER T ); R O N K U N T Z / REU T ERS (RE A L Q UIE T ); J O H N H AY E S /A P (SILV ER C H A RM); C H RIS M A R T IN E Z /A P (C AVO N NIER); H EIN Z K LU E T M EIER (B O D EM EIS T ER); B RYA N SMI T H / ZU M A PRE SS .CO M (PAY N T ER); B EN O I T PH OTO/A P (PI O N EER O F T H E NIL E) Baffert’s Blues Poor Bob Baffert. Paynter’s second in the Belmont completed for Baffert, who placed in the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness with Bodemeister, a painful feat: the Runner-Up Triple Crown. Baffert is no stranger to Triple Crown heartbreak; he has finished second seven times. The races this year don’t even compare with some of the past close calls on the heartbreakmeter (five Bafferts being the most painful). RACE 2012 PREAKNESS MARGIN NECK RACE 2012 BELMONT MARGIN NECK RACE 2012 DERBY MARGIN 11⁄2 LENGTHS RACE 2009 DERBY MARGIN 63⁄4 LENGTHS HORSE BODEMEISTER HORSE PAYNTER HORSE BODEMEISTER HORSE PIONEEROF THE NILE Bode led by three lengths before being caught three jumps from the wire. Baffert’s other top 3-year-old was run down inside 1⁄16 of a mile. Despite Bode’s being caught in the stretch, Baffert was happy with how he ran. He led briefly in the stretch but was left in the mud by 50–1 shot Mine That Bird. RACE 1998 BELMONT MARGIN NOSE RACE 1997 BELMONT MARGIN 3⁄4 LENGTH RACE 1996 DERBY MARGIN NOSE HORSE REAL QUIET HORSE SILVER CHARM HORSE CAVONNIER Real Quiet was nipped at the wire, denying Baffert the Triple Crown a second time. Silver Charm never saw Touch Gold coming, ending a Triple Crown attempt. Baffert saw his first Derby starter lose a photo to the laterunning Grindstone. INSIDE FOLLOW NHL Cold Draft On Tap The best player won’t necessarily be the first taken in this week’s draft, where even the top prospects are receiving icy receptions BY SA R A H K WA K W GO TO SI.COM/NHL FOR ALLAN MUIR’S MOCK DRAFT PIERRE M c GUIRE ’ S DRAFT FORECAST SURE THINGS 1. Nail Yakupov t This Russian winger has great speed and superior playmaking abilities, and wants the puck in key situations. Currently with Sarnia of the OHL, Yakupov wants to stay and play in North America. He’s a true can’t-miss player. 2. Ryan Murray Though he’s not a point getter, Murray’s a smart shutdown defenseman for Everett of the WHL who should be able to handle the grind of the NHL as an 18-year-old. He’s a leader who’ll someday be team captain. 3. Alex Galchenyuk A Sarnia teammate of Yakupov’s, this 6' 1", 198-pound center has command of the game in all three zones. He’s a perfect fit for the Canadiens, who will pick third and are starving for size and skill down the middle. WILD CARDS u 1. Mikhail Grigorenko He has the tools (40 goals, 45 assists in 59 games for Quebec last season) and body (6' 3", 200) to be drafted in the top three, but concerns over his intensity may prevent him from going until the middle of the first round. 2. Zemgus Girgensons This Latvian-born star from Dubuque (USHL) could evolve into a top-end center if he matures physically. Girgensons (6' 3", 195) is committed to attending the University of Vermont next season. 3. Stefan Matteau The 6-foot, 210-pound Matteau, a son of 13-year NHL vet Stephane Matteau, is a good skater for a big man. The question is, Does he become a true power forward who can score or a grinding, two-way winger who only provides depth? BEST UPSIDES 1. Morgan Rielly A torn ACL last season limited his play with Moose Jaw of the WHL, but Rielly’s a mobile and smart defenseman who will play for a long time in the NHL. He handles the puck well and seemingly makes a difference in every game. 2. Griffin Reinhart t A huge defenseman (6' 4", 200) whose father, Paul, played in the NHL for 11 years, Reinhart can shoot the puck and handle big minutes. He could eventually become a Norris Trophy nominee, much like Nashville’s Shea Weber. 3. Hampus Lindholm Some scouts think that Lindholm, a smart two-way defenseman from the Swedish club team Rogle, is the player whose stock is rising the most due to his consistent play and serious approach to the game. 38 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | J U N E 2 5 , 2012 F R O M TO P : L EO N T. S WI T ZER / I CO N SMI; RI C H A RD WO LOW I C Z /G E T T Y IM AG E S; M A RIS S A BA EC K ER /G E T T Y IM AG E S ith regards to this week’s NHL entr y draft, the consensus among general managers and scouts is that Sarnia Sting (OHL) winger Nail Yakupov is the class’s best player. The Oilers, owners of the top pick for the third straight year, however, do not need another swift-scoring forward as much as they need a defenseman. So if Edmonton keeps the pick, as G.M. Steve Tambellini has indicated, there is no guarantee that Yakupov would go No. 1. While there are plenty of safe picks—serviceable players who may have decent NHL careers— even the most talented ones carry question marks that will give teams pause. Mikhail Grigor enko, for instance, a high-scoring center for the Quebec Remparts (QMJHL), has all-world skill, but scouts have questioned his consistency and work ethic (sidebar). Craig Button, a former general manager with the Flames and now an analyst for TSN, had Grigor enko sixth in his prospect rankings last December; by last week Grigorenko had dropped to 20th. “If you look at every team’s top 10,” one G.M. says, “I’d venture to say you’ll see 30 very different lists.” ± @SI_sarahkwak INSIDE FOLLOW touted Dutch (Ronaldo scored both goals), and in a tour de force quarterfinal against the Czech Republic he scored the game’s lone goal, hit the post twice and in general played on a different level from everyone else on the field. But here’s where the Ballon d’Or race gets tricky. Lionel Messi, winner of the last three awards, has had slightly better individual club stats in calendar 2012: a preposterous 44 goals for Barcelona compared with Ronaldo’s still impressive 35. But team performance counts as well, and here Ronaldo trumps Messi, Real Madrid having won the Spanish league title ahead of the Blaugrana. (Both teams reached the semis of the Champions League.) Is it fair that Ronaldo has had the showcase of a major international tournament for Portugal, while Messi has had just a handful of friendlies and one World Cup qualifier SOCCER The Case for Cristiano Messi may be more beloved (and have better numbers), but the Euros confirm the claim of his rival, Cristiano Ronaldo, to the title of 2012 world player of the year B Y G R A N T W A H L F or such a prestigious award, the FIFA Ballon d’Or—given to soccer’s world player of the year— is a quirky prize. Instead of rewarding the best player of a typical August-to-May club season, plus June international tournaments, the Ballon d’Or applies to the calendar year. The 2012 award will be handed out next January, which is about as silly as presenting the NBA MVP trophy at the following year’s AllStar break. FIFA compensates by almost always awarding the Ballon d’Or to the top performer of the year’s first six months, and with that in mind I’d argue that Cristiano Ronaldo, the dynamic goal scorer for Portugal and Real Madrid, has already done enough to deserve the 2012 prize. Ronaldo’s Euro 2012 performance for Portugal makes his case. Not since Argentina’s Diego Maradona at the ’86 World Cup has a team made a deep run at a major tournament almost entirely on the back of one dominant player. Portugal sealed its passage out of the Euro’s group of death with a 2–1 victory over the highly @GrantWahl for Argentina in 2012—and last week was off barnstorming in an all-star game in Miami? Probably not. But as we said: It’s a quirky prize. Too often, in fact, voting for the Ballon d’Or comes down to a popularity contest in which selectors answer the wrong question (Who’s the best player in the world?) instead of the right one (Who had the best 2012?). It doesn’t help that the voters are the national team coach, national team captain and one journalist from most countries in FIFA—so that Papua New Guinea’s ballots carry as much weight as Spain’s or Brazil’s. As a result, look for the more popular Messi to win his fourth straight Ballon d’Or in January. Messi and Ronaldo are transcendent athletes worth treasuring, but while Messi is a slightly better player overall, in my opinion Ronaldo has edged him out for a better 2012. ± Tale of the Tape 2012 ALL NUMBERS ARE FOR CALENDAR YEAR 2012, THROUGH JUNE 24 LIONEL MESSI 25 27 BARCELONA CLUB REAL MADRID ARGENTINA COUNTRY 2008 44 35 7 INTERNATIONAL GOALS 3 36,806,685 0 (NO OFFICIAL ACCOUNT) FIVE GOALS VS. BAYER LEVERKUSEN MARCH 7 ANTONELLA ROCCUZZO PORTUGAL CLUB GOALS COPA DEL REY ELIMINATED IN SEMIFINALS BY CHELSEA $125 MILLION HOMETOWN SWEETHEART WORLD PLAYER/ BALLON D’OR CLUB TITLES CHAMPIONS LEAGUE EST. TRANSFER VALUE FACEBOOK FOLLOWERS TWITTER FOLLOWERS SIGNATURE 2012 PERFORMANCE SIGNIFICANT OTHER LA LIGA ELIMINATED IN SEMIFINALS BY BAYERN MUNICH $113 MILLION 45,767,395 10,939,623 (@CRISTIANO) HAT TRICK VS. ATLETICO MADRID APRIL 11 SI SWIMSUIT MODEL IRINA SHAYK T O N Y Q UIN N / I CO N SMI (M E S SI); H EN RY B R OW N E /AC T I O N IM AG E S / ZU M A P RE SS .CO M (R O N A L D O); F R A N C K FIF E /A F P/G E T T Y IM AG E S (R O CC UZ ZO); ED D IE K EO G H / REU T ERS (SH AY K) 2009, 2010, 2011 32 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | J U LY 2, 2012 CRISTIANO RONALDO AGE INSIDE NASCAR MIDSEASON REPORT Man on the Move Former Cup champ Matt Kenseth hasn’t lost a step, so why is he walking away from his longtime team? B Y L A R S A N D E R S O N T GEAR SHIFTS Miami Speedway on Nov. 18. Kenseth has piloted the number 17 Ford for RFR since his rookie year of 2000, but this season team owner Jack Roush has had trouble finding longterm sponsorship for that car. So instead of continuing to pay a hefty salary to Kenseth, whose contract with RFR expires at season’s end, Roush will elevate 24-year-old Ricky Stenhouse Jr., the ’11 Nationwide champion, to Kenseth’s seat in ’13. Kenseth is the first driver to be cut loose in NASCAR’s so-called Silly Season (below), and the move took the garage by surprise. While Kenseth is no longer viewed as Roush’s flagship driver (that distinction belongs to Carl Edwards, who finished second in the championship last season), he has 22 career wins and has qualified for the Chase seven times (which, along with Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart, is more than any driver other than Jimmie Johnson, who has made all eight playoffs). Kenseth’s hallmarks are his ability to gradually gain speed as the laps wind down—something he does as well as a nyone in the series—and to hit his marks through the turns, lap after lap after lap, with robotic consistency. Kenseth says he already has a contract in place with a new team for 2013 and beyond but was tight-lipped about specifics last Saturday at Kentucky Speedway, where he finished seventh behind winner Brad Keselowski. All indications are that Kenseth will move to Joe Gibbs Racing, where he likely will replace Joey Logano, who is in a contract year. The much-heralded Logano, 22, has struggled in his four Cup seasons with Gibbs—he has never finished higher than 16th in the standings and is currently in that spot this season— and Kenseth would be an ideal t With Matt Kenseth’s impending departure from Roush Fenway Racing, NASCAR’s Silly Season is just revving up. Here’s a look at three other high-profile drivers likely to be sporting new uniforms in 2013. KURT BUSCH RYAN NEWMAN JOEY LOGANO PHOENIX RACING STEWART-HAAS RACING JOE GIBBS RACING The notoriously hot-headed Busch, who was suspended earlier this season for one race after going off on a reporter, has one more chance left in the sport. He’ll likely get it with Stewart-Haas Racing, where he’d replace Ryan Newman. After winning only three races in three-plus seasons at StewartHaas, Newman will move to Richard Childress Racing and slide into the seat vacated by the aging Jeff Burton. If Gibbs can’t find funding for a fourth car—and so far the team hasn’t— Logano will stay at JGR and run full-time in the Nationwide Series, where he’s already won five races this season. 42 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | J U LY 9, 2012 C RYS TA L A M AC L EO D/A SP/C A L SP O R T M ED I A (K EN SE T H); S COT T H A L L ER A N / N A S C A R /G E T T Y IM AG E S (B US C H); DA NIEL SHIRE Y/ US PRE S S WIRE (N E W M A N); J EF F ZEL E VA N SK Y/ N A S C A R /G E T T Y IM AG E S (LO GA N O) hrough 17 races in 2012, Matt Kenset h is enjoying a d r e a m s e a s on in the Sprint Cup s e r i e s . He t o o k the checkered flag in the Daytona 500, le a d s t he c i r c u it i n a verage finish (7.6), has ba n ke d more i n w i nnings ($4,126,773) than any other driver and currently sits at the top of the point standings. By nearly every measure Kenseth, 40, the 2003 Cup champion, has been the top driver in NASCAR over the first half of the season. He will also soon be losing his job. Last week Roush Fenway R ac i ng a n nou nc e d t h at it would be severing its relationship with Kenseth (left) after the season finale at Homestead- INSIDE @LarsAndersonSI Tracking Down Some Answers With nine races to go before the start of the Chase, racing’s hottest issues are coming into focus BY LARS ANDERSON 1 WHO IS THE FAVORITE FOR THE CUP? 2 IS DALE EARNHARDT JR. A REAL CONTENDER? Jimmie Johnson, the five-time champ, looks to be right on track to take Cup number 6 in November. Currently third in the standings, he already has two victories (only Brad Keselowski, with three, has more), and he’s the only driver in the series who doesn’t have a weak track in the Chase. And, oh, yeah, he knows how to close the deal. NASCAR’s most popular driver is having his best season since 2004. He snapped a 143-race winless streak, he’s second in points and tied with Jimmie Johnson for most top 10s (13). To beat JJ and earn his first Cup, Junior will likely need at least two wins in the Chase. That’s a tall order, but he’s now positioned to use the next nine races to hone his Chase setup and give himself a shot. PARTING PAIR Kenseth has driven for no one but Roush (right) in his NASCAR career, yet racing economics have both looking elsewhere for 2013. for the rest of this year.” Indeed, lame-duck drivers typically struggle down the backstretch of the season because their crewmen, unsure of their own futures, start looking for new jobs, which in turn can cause a team to lose its edge. And in a sport where a 10th of a second per lap can be the difference between first and 15th, this can be a championship-killer. Kenseth remains adamant that he can maintain his current pace. Minutes after the news broke that he and RFR would be parting ways, he tweeted to his 106,000plus followers that he was as “committed as ever” to “chasing” a title. He’ll need to be, especially in the heat of the Chase, when the eyes of his engineers and pit crew will begin to wander. ± 3 WHO WILL BE THE CHASE WILD-CARDS? 4 IS DANICA PATRICK GETTING UP TO SPEED? 5 WHAT HAPPENED TO CARL EDWARDS? 44 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | J U LY 9, 2012 After the first 26 races the top 10 drivers in the standings make the Chase. Wild-card spots go to the two drivers in 11th through 20th with the most wins. Kyle Busch (car 18), currently 12th, with one win, and Kasey Kahne (5), 14th, with a victory, have both endured horrendous luck this season yet are still in the hunt. Both are also poised for strong stretch runs to the Chase. Absolutely. While Patrick, running her first full-time NASCAR season in the Nationwide Series, isn’t contending for victories, she now appears far more comfortable behind the wheel. In her last eight races she has finished 13th or better five times. Patrick is right on schedule to move to the Sprint Cup series in 2013 and drive for Stewart-Haas Racing. Edwards ended 2011 tied in points with Tony Stewart, losing the title only on a tiebreaker. (Stewart had five wins, Edwards one.) But this year Edwards has taken a shocking step back. He has just eight top 10s and after a 20th at Kentucky last Saturday sits 11th in points. Unless he can shake the emotional hangover from coming so close last year, his season may slip away. NI G EL KIN R A D E /AU TOS TO C K (K EN SE T H A N D R O USH); WA LT ER G A R C E /A SP/C A L SP O R T M ED I A (J O H N S O N); J EF F SIN ER /C H A RLOT T E O BSERV ER / M C T/ L A N D OV (E A RN H A RDT ); DAV ID J. G RIF FIN / I CO N SMI (B US C H A N D K A H N E); C RYS TA L A M AC L EO D/A SP/C A L SP O R T M ED I A (PAT RI C K); DAV ID J. G RIF FIN / I CO N SMI (EDWA RDS) veteran presence to team with current Gibbs drivers Denny Hamlin (age 31) and Kyle Busch (27), both proven race winners who have struggled with their consistency in the championship hunt. “Matt would become the leader of Gibbs the moment he got there,” says one veteran crew chief. “It was a head-scratcher to a lot of us that Roush and Matt would pa r t w ay s when t he y ’re doing so well. You don’t get a chance to win a championship very often, and this certainly won’t help Matt FOLLOW INSIDE FOLLOW @MichaelFarber3 NHL Lonesome Coyote Shane Doan has been with Phoenix since the team’s days in Winnipeg, but if the ownership situation remains murky, he may bolt B Y M I C H A E L F A R B E R DAV ID E . K LU T H O (D OA N); JIM M C IS A AC (A L F REDSS O N); J ER O M E MIR O N / US PRE S S WIRE (I G IN L A); DAV ID E . K LU T H O (EL I A S) D uring the hol id a y s last December, Rangers broadcaster Dave Maloney and Coyotes general manager Don Maloney were catching up by phone, Dave regaling his brother about one of the Rangers’ cast-of-thousands Christmas parties at the Boathouse in Central Park. Then he asked, “How was your party?” Don replied, “A couple of sixpacks and a six-foot sub.” Phoenix’s hand-to-mouth NHL-owned team is now trying to re-sign a noncomestible hockey hero, Shane Doan. Doan, 35, is a free agent. Ideally he would like to stay with the Coyotes and finish his career in Glendale. His agent, Ter r y Bross, a nd Ma loney have discussed parameters of contracts that range in length from three to five years. But before re-upping with the only franchise he has represented (Doan was a rookie in 1995–96, the team’s last season in Winnipeg), the right wing, who earned $4.55 million in the final season of a five-year deal in 2011–12, seeks something beyond money and term: clarity. Specifically, Doan wants to know that the club’s ownership mess will soon be resolved and the franchise will remain in the desert. Even as some impediments to the eventual sale of the club seem to be vanishing—it is now unlikely there will be a referendum question on the November ballot in Glendale that could void the team’s 20-year, $300 million arena lease deal— prospective buyer Greg Jamison, the former Sharks CEO, has not closed on the $170 million sale. Doan originally said he would wait until July 9 before entertaining other offers, but now, three weeks after the freeagent signing period began, no time line exists. Six teams have made written proposals to Doan (among them, reportedly, are San Jose, the Kings and the Canucks), and another 10 had expressed interest. When asked if Doan would re-sign with Phoenix at a hometown discount, Bross said the Coyotes “would have to be in-line” with the market. “The thing that makes this so difficult is Shane’s not a typical free agent,” Bross says. “He’s a big cog. His children never have known any other place. He has Veterans Benefits Including Shane Doan, three of the league’s eight longest-tenured veterans became free agents this month: Devils goalie Martin Brodeur, 40, re-upped with New Jersey (for whom he’s played for 19 seasons) through 2013–14; Red Wings forward Tomas Holmstrom (15 seasons), 39, still hasn’t made a decision, though he says if he doesn’t play for Detroit, he’ll retire. Next summer, three more from the group of eight are due to enter free agency, including two of the top scorers in recent NHL history. DANIEL ALFREDSSON PATRIK ELIAS SENATORS DEVILS JAROME IGINLA FLAMES 16 SEASONS 16 SEASONS 15 SEASONS CAREER STATISTICS CAREER STATISTICS CAREER STATISTICS 416 GOALS, 666 ASSISTS 361 GOALS, 533 ASSISTS 516 GOALS, 557 ASSISTS TWILIGHT, ZONA? Doan (above) has very deep roots in the Phoenix community, but his agent says he will not accept a hometown discount. a ranch here with [Phoenix equipment manager] Stan Wilson. In some ways the franchise is [also] his family.” Doan, who has averaged 24.6 goals during his past 12 NHL seasons, scored five in the playoffs last spring. After carrying a lot of water for the troubled franchise—publicly Doan has always drawn a smiley face on the Coyotes’ woe begone saga—he helped carry the team to the conference finals, the first time the franchise had won a playoff series since 1987. “For an organization looking for something to grab on to, Shane epitomized that,” Coyotes coach Dave Tippett says. “The thing he wants most is a level playing field. This team has been at such a competitive disadvantage [because of the ownership situation], and he wants that settled.” If the sale to Jamison stalls, a reluctant Doan might be done in the desert. ± J U LY 2 3 , 2012 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | 41 INSIDE FOLLOW @Andy_Staples COLLEGE TKA FOOTBALL SECond Rate A few programs have a (long) shot at ending a certain conference’s BCS dominance BY A NDY S TA PL E S I t’ll be everywhere. On television. On the Web. On all the social-networking apps on your mobile device. S-E-C! S-E-C! The conference whose name is synonymous with pigskin superiority hosts its football media days in Hoover, Ala., this week. With no other power conference holding its gathering until the following week, expect to be reminded time and again how the SEC has won the last six national titles. And expect to hear coaches and players from LSU, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia and South Carolina explain how they’ll make it seven. For fans tired of such domination, there’s a sliver of hope. Several programs have positioned themselves to break the SEC’s stranglehold on the national title. Dream Teen Vegas was buzzing about more than Team USA last week. Meet Andrew Wiggins B Y S E T H D A V I S T he present and future of American basketball descended on Las Vegas last week. While the U.S. national team practiced at UNLV’s Mendenhall Center in preparation for the London Olympics, nearly 100 of the top high school players convened seven miles away at Rancho High, site of the LeBron James Skills Academy. James might be the best player on Team USA, but the top player at his camp hailed from north of the border: Andrew Wiggins, a 6' 7", 195pound rising junior from Concord, Ont. Steve Nash is the undisputed patron OREGON MICHIGAN STATE The Trojans’ starters—on both sides of the ball—match up comparably with any SEC team’s. Senior quarterback Matt Barkley (above) has a pair of stellar receivers in Robert Woods and Marqise Lee, while safety T.J. McDonald and cornerback Nickell Robey roam the secondary. But depth is an issue: Because of NCA A sanctions, USC is limited to 75 scholarship players, 10 fewer than usual. An injury or two could wreck the Trojans’ title hopes. The three-time defending Pac‑12 champ has seen its title hopes dashed by an SEC team each of the past two seasons. Has coach Chip Kelly learned and adjusted? Will an older, wiser tailback De’Anthony Thomas (above), who had 2,235 all-purpose yards last year as a freshman, prove too elusive even for SEC speed? To find out, Oregon will have to reach the BCS title game. That will likely entail beating USC twice, so the Ducks will have plenty of experience dealing with elite athleticism. The Spartans might not be the best team in the Big Ten: Wisconsin has played in two consecutive Rose Bowls and has star running back Montee Ball returning. Still, Mark Dantonio’s flashy Spartans match up best with the SEC’s heavyweights. Alabama would love to have defensive end Will Gholston (above), and cornerbacks Johnny Adams and Darqueze Dennard would look at home in LSU uniforms. Meanwhile, 238-pound tailback Le’Veon Bell is sturdy enough to stand up to any SEC front seven. saint of Canadian basketball, but Wiggins is far, far more developed than Nash was at the same stage; a Canadian newspaper recently described him as “likely the best 17-year-old hoopster Canada has ever produced.” Let’s take the paeans one giant step further: He is the consensus top player in the class of 2014. In order to find top competition, Wiggins had to come south. After his freshman season of high school, he transferred to Huntington Prep in West Virginia, where he was the state’s Gatorade player of the year following a sophomore season in which he averaged 24.2 points, 8.5 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 2.7 blocks. Wiggins shone at the Nike Hoop Summit in April in Portland, scoring 20 points in the World team’s 84–75 win over Team USA. His offensive arsenal, powered by a 44‑inch vertical leap, was on full display at the LeBron academy, where he scored on a variety of three-pointers, slashing drives and acrobatic layups. Those athletic gifts are not especially surprising. His father, Mitchell, played six years in the NBA, and his mother, Marita, won two silver medals for Canada in track at the 1984 Summer Olympics. Because his father played for Florida State and remains close friends with Seminoles coach Leonard Hamilton, the buzz in Vegas pegged FSU as the early favorite to land the son (for a year, anyway). Wiggins insists that his recruitment is a long way from heating up, and he wants to check out Syracuse, Duke, Kentucky and North Carolina, among others. For now, visions of gold, not scholarships, are dancing in his head. Pointing out that two Canadians (Tristan Thompson and Cory Joseph) were chosen in the first round of last year’s NBA draft, and a third (Texas point guard Myck Kabongo) could go in next year’s first round, Wiggins credibly predicts that “2016 is going to be a great year for Canada.” That’s big news for a country whose hoops team has not qualified for the Games since 2000. ± NO BORDERS The pride of Canada, who can score inside and out, has college options all over the map. PE T ER RE A D MIL L ER (BA RK L E Y ); R O B ER T B EC K ( T H O M A S); C H RIS WIL L I A M S / I CO N SMI (G H O L S TO N); S A M F O REN C I C H / N BA E /G E T T Y IM AG E S (WI G G IN S) COLLEGE BASKETBALL USC THIS ONE TIME AT CAMP The popular NFL narrative had no one losing in the 2011 lockout, but the uncertainty of the 135-day stoppage scuttled what would have been Season 7 of HBO’s Hard Knocks reality show. After a 23-month hiatus, the miniseries is back on Aug. 7. Season 7’s subjects, the Dolphins, reported to camp on July 27 full of story lines: new coach Joe Philbin, a QB battle and the return of Hard Knocks favorite Chad Johnson. This year, more than ever, HBO will be prepared to put some pep in your preseason. 2001 RAVENS 60 15 8 900 2012 DOLPHINS TOTAL NFL FILMS STAFF CREW LIVING WITH TEAM CAMERAS HOURS SHOT 100 30 13 *1,250 *Estimated 250 per episode tRYAN TANNEHILL FACESINTHECROWD | Edited by ALEXANDRA FENWICK LATANNA STONE VALRICO, FLA. > GOLF < Latanna, 10, a homeschooled sixth-grader, became the youngest player to earn a spot in the U.S. Women’s Amateur (eclipsing eight golfers, including Lexi Thompson, who were tied for that distinction at age 12) with a victory at the Florida qualifying tournament. She shot a two-under-par 70 to win by one stroke over a field of 66 competitors at the Wanderers Club. A two-time Florida junior tour winner, Latanna was runner-up in the 13–15 age group at the 2012 North Florida Junior PGA Championship. AHMED BILE PHILANTHROPY Market Driven An übercompetitive Wall Street decathlon raises cash for a worthy cause While the planet’s greatest athletes were going headto-head in London, another series of competitions on Sunday established the top sportsman of a much smaller jurisdiction: Wall Street. More than 100 financial workers participated at Columbia’s Wien Stadium in the RBC Decathlon, a charity fund- ANNANDALE, VA. > TRACK AND FIELD < Ahmed, who graduated from Annandale High in June, won the 800 meters at the New Balance outdoor nationals in Greensboro, N.C., with a personal-best 1:49.85. In the spring he won the 1,600 (4:13.12) and the 800 (1:51.52) to lead the Atoms to a share of the Virginia 3A state title. A two-time Gatorade state cross-country runner of the year, he was also the 2012 winner in track. Ahmed, who will compete for Georgetown, is the son of Somali Olympian and former 1,500 world champion Abdi Bile. ANGEL PICCIRILLO HOMER CITY, PA. > TRACK AND FIELD < SAM WEATHERHEAD GRAND RAPIDS > GOLF < Sam, who will be a senior at West Catholic High, shot rounds of 69 and 67—with two eagles in the final round—at Michigan State’s Forest Akers East golf course, to win the Division 3 individual state championship by four strokes. Nine days later he earned an entry in his first U.S. Junior Amateur tournament with a five-under 139 to beat a field of 42 at the Indiana and Michigan sectional qualifier tournament at Island Hills Golf Club. At the end of June, Sam was named Michigan’s Mr. Golf. ALLY FREI BRANCHVILLE, N.J. > SOFTBALL < Ally, as a sophomore righthander at High Point Regional High, threw an 11-inning shutout to lead the Wildcats to a 1–0 win over Kingsway for the team’s first Group III state championship in school history. Her 26–0 season included three perfect games, a no-hitter and five one-hitters. Ally, who also had a 0.43 ERA with 362 strikeouts and 32 walks in 179 innings, owns every softball pitching record at High Point and was named the New Jersey Herald’s player of the year. AUSTEN RANDECKER MILL HILL, PA. > FLY-FISHING < Austen, a recent graduate of Central Mountain High, caught 68 trout—the longest measuring 37 cm (14.6")—to win the youth nationals in Cherokee, N.C., in June. He then won a bronze medal in July at the International Sport Flyfishing Federation’s youth world championship in France, where he was the top American finisher and led the U.S. (with a collective 95 brown trout, grayling, roach, perch and pike) to a silver in team competition. Austen will attend Penn State. Nominate Now To submit a candidate for Faces in the Crowd, go to SI.com/faces. For more on outstanding amateur athletes, follow @SI_Faces on Twitter. 26 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | AU G UST 6 , 2012 J O EL AU ERBAC H /G E T T Y IM AG E S ( TA N N EHIL L); M A R C FA D ER (P U L L- U P E V EN T ); C H RIS W EIRD O (S TO N E); DAV ID RI C E (B IL E); B O B PI CC IRIL LO (PI CC IRIL LO); CO U R T E S Y O F T H E W E AT H ERH E A D FA MILY (W E AT H ERH E A D); J E A N NIE KO B IS (F REI); CO U R T E S Y O F T H E R A N D EC K ER FA MILY (R A N D EC K ER) Angel, a 2012 graduate of Homer-Center High, set a Class 2A 800-meter record (2:09.42) and an all-levels Pennsylvania record in the 1,600 (4:39.42) at this year’s state meet. Her 1,600 time, the fastest in the nation this season, is the seventh-best in U.S. high school history. Also this year, Angel— who has 10 state titles overall and is a two-time mile winner at the Penn Relays—was runner-up in the Adidas Grand Prix’s Dream Mile. A two-time state cross-country champion, she will run at Villanova. raiser that pits participants against one another in NFLcombine-inspired events such as bench press, pull-ups (above) and vertical jump. The winner was Barclays Capital analyst Mark Rubin, a 26-year-old former Penn State safety, who was competing for the first time. For topping a field that included a raft of other former Division I athletes—including All-America Florida distance runner Stephen Zieminski, AllAmerica USC sprinter Jason Price and Columbia linebacker Justin Nunez, the defending champ—Rubin received a trophy, a tailored suit and a bottle of champagne. But the greatest haul went to the Memorial SloanKettering Cancer Center, which took in $1.2 million from the participants’ rivalrous philanthropy— easily doubling the 2011 event’s total. “We all love to compete, whether it’s cards or Monopoly or business,” Rubin says. “Here it’s a very supportive environment, but everybody loves to win.” —Dan Greene INSIDE FOLLOW @LarsAndersonSI LINE DANCE Johnson (48 and below) and crew celebrated his fourth victory at the Brickyard and his 58th career Cup win. NASCAR He’s a Brickhouse With a dominant win at Indy, Jimmie Johnson served notice that he’ll be tough to beat as he chases his sixth Sprint Cup title B Y L A R S A N D E R S O N J (4.758 seconds) in the 19-year history of the event. For everyone else in the Cup series this is very bad news, because how a driver performs at Indy usually portends how he’ll fare in the Chase (see chart). Why? Two reasons: Teams bring their newest equipment— featuring the latest technological bells and whistles—to the Brickyard 400, which is considered one of NASCAR’s four majors. (The others are the Daytona 500, the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway and the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.) And Indy’s 2.5-mile oval is one of the most challenging tracks on the circuit; every turn requires different entry and braking points. A driver who is fast at the Brickyard has the car control to be fast anywhere. “This is the turning point of the season,” said Denny Ham- 34 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | AU G UST 6 , 2012 Indy Rock A NASCAR driver’s performance at Indianapolis Motor Speedway has been an accurate gauge of his Sprint Cup title chances. Why? Because teams always bring their best equipment—featuring the most up-to-date technology—to the Brickyard 400, one of NASCAR’s marquee races. Here’s a look at how the Cup winners in the Chase era have run at Indy. YEAR 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 CHASE CHAMPION Kurt Busch Tony Stewart Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Tony Stewart INDY RESULT 10th 1st 1st 39th (crash) 1st 1st 22nd 6th NI G EL KIN R A D E /AU TO S TO C K (C A R); B RI A N C ZO BAT/AU TO S TO C K (J O H N S O N) immie Johnson leaned against his car in the garage at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, smiling brilliantly, swapping stories w it h his crew and appearing as if he didn’t have a worry in the world. The start of the Brickyard 400 was still 24 hours away, but Johnson already e xuded an air of confidence—the same look he’s boasted during the three seasons in which he’s won at Indy and then gone on to take the Sprint Cup championship. “Over the years this track has been really good to me,” Johnson said before Sunday’s race. “I’ve really figured out how to drive the track.” Indeed he has. In the most dominating performance of the 2012 Cup season, Johnson took the checkered flag after leading for 247.5 of the race’s 400 miles, winning by the largest margin lin, who finished sixth. “Everyone has got their [Chase] cars prepared, bringing them to the racetrack, tuning them up, and that’s when you want to start running good.” Johnson certainly is. The five-time Cup champion, who finished sixth in the standings in 2011, has now won three of the last 10 races this season (he also took the checkered flag at the series All-Star race at Charlotte in May) and has six top five finishes over that stretch—both series highs. In their previous title runs, Johnson and his crew chief, Chad Knaus, have typically revved up in midsummer and then peaked at the start of the 10race playoff in September. Up and down pit road after Johnson won for the fourth time at the Brickyard, every driver and crewman seemed gripped by a here-we-go-again feeling. “Jimmie,” said Greg Biffle, who came in third, “was unreal.” Johnson struggled at the start of the season: He finished 42nd in the season-opening Daytona 500, and after six events he was in 10th place. But now with six races left in the regular season he’s up to fourth, and he’ll enter the Chase as one of two favorites to win the title. The other will be his Hendrick Motors ports teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. After finishing fourth at the Brickyard, Earnhardt seized the overall points lead for the first time since 2004, surpassing Matt Kenseth, who crashed on Lap 132 and finished 35th. “I feel like we’re very, very capable of winning the whole thing,” Earnhardt says. “But we’re going to have to deal with Jimmie. That’s the reality.” One that was made clear at Indy. ± RAISING THE BAR World records in track and field often come down to hundredths of a second and fractions of an inch. But since the first modern Olympics, in 1896, small improvements have, in some cases, amounted to great change, especially among female athletes—look no further than these four events (whose current records survived the London gold rush). 300% 100% 75% 45% 15% % change in world records since 1896 110.1% Men 76.0% 56.8% Women 35.0% 17.7% 248.2% 24.3% 22.6% 1,500 meters Triple Jump long jump shot put FACESINTHECROWD | Edited by ALEXANDRA FENWICK SHAWN BARBER KINGWOOD, TEXAS > TRACK AND FIELD < Shawn, a recent graduate of Kingwood Park High and this year’s Texas 4A state pole vault champion, cleared 18' 31⁄2" to break the national high school record by half an inch at the AAU National Junior Olympics in Humble, Texas. A dual citizen of the U.S. and Canada, he cleared 18' 21⁄2" to win bronze for Canada at the World Junior Championships in July. The winner of this year’s Texas Relays, Great Southwest Classic and New Balance Nationals, Shawn will attend the University of Akron. ZANA MUNO FOOTBALL In Need of A Reprieve A detention camp’s famous football team could be playing its final season Last week, while Camp Kilpatrick football coach Derek Ayers held practice on a dusty field to prepare his squad for its Aug. 24 opener against Grace Brethren High, the Los Angeles County Probation Department announced that this season could be the Mustangs’ last. The juvenile detention facility—the first in the U.S. HERMOSA BEACH, CALIF. > VOLLEYBALL < Zana, who will be a sophomore at Notre Dame High (Sherman Oaks), won the AAU Best of the Beach 16-and-under tournament in Santa Monica in three sets alongside partner Gianna Guinasso (Huntington Beach), to become the first athlete to win the AAU Triple Crown of junior beach volleyball. In her hometown in July, she won the 16-and-under titles in the two other major tournaments on the AAU tour, the nationals and the Junior Olympics, with two other partners. MARC ARNOLD NEW YORK CITY > CHESS < KALLIE MYERS ST. CLAIRSVILLE, OHIO > SOAP BOX DERBY < Kallie, who will be a senior at Bridgeport High, won the 75th annual All-American Soap Box Derby’s Super Stock division (10- to 17-year-olds) in Akron with a 29.4-second final-heat finish on the 989-foot track. Competing in her final year of eligibility, she had to repair a broken rear axle and replace her wheels in under an hour when a competitor lost control and rammed her after she had crossed the finish line in the first heat. Kallie came back to defeat 127 drivers for the title and a $5,000 scholarship. CHARLES ANTHONY SWANSEA, MASS. > GOLF < Charles, a recent graduate of La Salle Academy (Providence), shot an ace on the 18th and final hole of the Rhode Island Junior PGA Championship to win the title by one stroke. Trailing runner-up Steve Letterle by two going into the par-4, 304-yard final hole at Montaup Country Club, he finished with a 22-over 164. As team captain at La Salle, Charles led the Rams to an undefeated season (14–0), including wins at the McCampbell Cup and Challenge Cup. He will compete at Bentley University. CARLY BEDINGHAUS COLUMBUS, OHIO > EQUESTRIAN < Carly, a recent graduate of Hilliard Darby High, won the Western Rider of the Year title at the Interscholastic Equestrian Association nationals in Oklahoma City. Riding for the Dare Equestrian Team, she took first in the varsity open horsemanship event and was sixth in open reining to earn overall high points, beating out 11 other riders. The president of her 4-H Club and vice president of the Franklin County Junior Fair Board, Carly will attend the Mount Carmel College of Nursing. Nominate Now To submit a candidate for Faces in the Crowd, go to SI.com/faces. For more on outstanding amateur athletes, follow @SI_Faces on Twitter. 28 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | AU G UST 20, 2012 M AT T D U N H A M /A P (HI G H J U M P ER); CO LU M B I A PI C T U RE S / PH O TO F E S T (G RID IR O N GA N G); S CO T T TAT E PH O TO G R A P H Y (BA RB ER); M A RY A N SEL M O (M U N O); B E T S Y C A RIN A DY N A KO (A RN O L D); DA NIEL M A IN ZER (M Y ERS); T R AC Y A N T H O N Y (A N T H O N Y ); B O B B I B ED IN G H AUS (B ED IN G H AUS) Marc, a recent graduate of Columbia Prep, won the 2012 U.S. Junior Championship in St. Louis, ranking No. 1 in the preliminaries before defeating Alec Getz (also of New York City) in a two-match final. His win earned him a spot in next year’s U.S. Championship. The week before, Marc tied for third at the World Open in Philadelphia, the largest tournament in the U.S. Already an international master, he currently holds a 2540 FIDE rating, the 30th best in the world among juniors. He will attend Indiana. with a state-sanctioned high school sports program and the focus of the 2006 film, Gridiron Gang (above)—will halt athletics in November. Kilpatrick is being relocated during a three-year construction project, and the program’s future is uncertain. Ayers, a probation officer and former UCLA receiver, insists that sports saves lives at Kilpatrick: “Gang members who would have been shooting if they saw each other on the street— they’re picking each other up in practice and giving high fives.” Two former Mustangs have gone on to play in the NFL, including second-year Bengals defensive end DeQuin Evans. But going pro—and winning games— has never been the point. “It’s about motivating kids and seeing something through,” says Ayers, who fears that the athletic program may never return if it’s suspended completely. “[We teach the kids] at Camp Kilpatrick, we don’t deal with excuses,” he says. “We find a way to get things done.” —A.F. SI T WIT TER Follow SI on Twitter @SInow Peter King @SI_PeterKing Can’t believe how many people are asking, “Who takes a shot on Chad next?’’ I mean, who exactly other than Miami had been lining up? David Epstein @SIDavidEpstein Is USC athletics counting “PROFESSIONAL SINCE HIGH SCHOOL” Allyson Felix in their medal count? Hmm . . . college counting paid athletes. . . . COMMENTARY COLLEGE FOOTBALL PR EV IEW Are you ready for some (college) football? A Saturday-afternoon party? SI.com previews each of the major conferences, with senior writers Andy Staples and Stewart Mandel providing video commentary of your favorite players and teams. Plus . . . The Mandel Initiative: Stewart Mandel and Mallory Rubin host a weekly podcast that offers their take on the latest buzz, issues and trends in the sport. Surprise teams? Stew’s got it. Likely flops? Mallory knows. Breakout players? Stew . . . you get the idea. SI DIGITAL ACCESS FREE AND EASY SIGN-UP Access to SI editions on the iPad and other tablets*, smartphones and the Web, at SI.com/magazine for print subscribers your account number 1label.Find on your SI magazine mailing The account number is printed above your name. Activate Your Acco un t 012468 30 03 2 Go to SI.com/access 2information. to validate your account After clicking , you 3a password. will be prompted to create Then click next add the digital magazine . *For specific instructions on how to access SI on the NOOK, visit SI.com/devices 4 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | AU G UST 20, 2012 SI DIGITAL BONUS HEAVYMEDAL The London Games brought an end to the dazzling career of the most decorated Olympian of all time. Relive each moment of the 22 medals won by Michael Phelps from start to finish. PHOTOGRAPH BY HEINZ KLUETMEIER Gambling and Sports The NCAA and America’s four major sports leagues are suing the state of New Jersey to block legalized sports wagering in that state. They’re all asserting that the state’s decision to allow sports betting violates federal law. When it comes to gambling, our sports leagues act like you can stop the rain by closing your eyes and thinking really hard about sunshine. . . . Read more of Rosenberg’s take on why the leagues should simply butt out at SI.com F O O T B A L L P L AY E R S F R O M L E F T: R E Y D E L R I O ; J O H N G R E E N ; P E T E R R E A D M I L L E R ; G R E G N E L S O N ; D O U G L A S J O N E S / U S P R E S S W I R E ; A P/ D AV E M A R T I N ; M I C H A E L P I M E N T E L / I S I P H O T O S ; M E L L E V I N E (K I N G , E P S T E I N); E R I N R O S E N B E R G (R O S E N B E R G); H E I N Z K L U E T M E I E R (P H E L P S) Campus Union: Holly Anderson blogs her countdown to the kickoff of the new season and lets you in on the favor last year’s Arizona coaching staff did newcomer Rich Rodriguez by redshirting quarterback Matt Scott. MICHAEL ROSENBERG ON . . . SI T WIT TER Follow SI on Twitter @SInow Peter King @SI_PeterKing Forgot to mention Andrew Luck on why he’s not on Twitter, which as he told me yesterday, is basically because he has nothing to say. Andy Staples Chase for the Cy Young @Andy_Staples How does LSU not have this class? RT @AUtitude: At Auburn I got to pet a Tiger from the Atlanta Zoo. He was sedated for surgery. SI VIDEO Winning last year’s AL Cy Young was like taking candy from a baby for Justin Verlander. This year, the babies grew up a bit. Can the Tigers’ ace heat up and bring home the hardware? Will the Giants’ Matt Cain find a perfect ending to his season in the NL? Go to SI.com for Cliff Corcoran’s weekly MLB Awards Watch to find out who’s in the running for the biggest prize in pitching. Plus . . . Power Rankings: The Dodgers played themselves into sole possession of first place in the NL West last week, while the Diamondbacks won four straight games to close to within 41⁄2 games of the Giants, and are now the highest-ranked NL West club on our list. SI DIGITAL ACCESS FREE AND EASY SIGN-UP Access to SI editions on the iPad and other tablets*, smartphones and the Web, at SI.com/magazine for print subscribers your account number 1label.Find on your SI magazine mailing The account number is printed above your name. Activate Your Acco un t 012468 30 03 2 Go to SI.com/access to 2information. validate your account After clicking , you 3a password. will be prompted to create Then click next add the digital magazine . *For specific instructions on how to access SI on the NOOK, visit SI.com/devices 2 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | AU G UST 2 7, 2012 SI DIGITAL BONUS CONFERENCE ALIGNMENT This week SI Video goes on the gridiron with senior writers Stewart Mandel and Andy Staples for a close look at the movers and shakers in college football’s major conferences, including Badgers running back Montee Ball. Can Ball lead Wisconsin to a third straight Big Ten title? BA SEBA L L IL LUS T R AT I O N BY A L E XIS S A N C H E Z ; J O H N B IE V ER (V ERL A N D ER, BA L L); B R A D M A N G IN (C A IN); M EL L E V IN E (KIN G) Jay Jaffe’s Hit and Run Blog: In what’s been announced as Chipper Jones’s final season, the 40-yearold third baseman has been hitting .339/.414/.614 since the beginning of July, tops among the Braves’ regulars. Doesn’t sound like the retiring sort to me. . . . Washington, D.C.’s Friendship Collegiate Academy, once a symbol of violence and despair among the city’s high schools, is now a place of hope and promise for youth in the nation’s capital. Last year, 19 of the school’s football players received Division I scholarships. Go to SI.com/underdogs for more on Friendship and other schools that have bounced back from the brink in the new, 10-week SI Video series Underdogs. SI T WIT TER Follow SI On Twitter @SInow Grant Wahl @GrantWahl Quietly hoping that Apple-Samsung verdict will require Chelsea to use Apple as new shirt sponsor. George Dohrmann Back in the Game Chris Burke’s Audibles Blog: Rashad Jennings’s success at running back for the Jaguars in the preseason is kicking a leg out from under rushing champion Maurice Jones-Drew, who is losing bargaining power as he holds out for a new contract. What’s Your Fantasy? Manage your Fantasy team by checking SI’s top 200 players list every week. You can also find sleepers, position-byposition breakdowns, likely bust candidates and nightmare matchups. SI DIGITAL ACCESS FREE AND EASY SIGN-UP SI DIGITAL BONUS Access to SI editions on the iPad and other tablets*, smartphones and the Web, at SI.com/magazine For Print Subscribers your account number 1label.Find on your SI magazine mailing The account number is printed above your name. Activate Your Acco un t 012468 30 03 2 Go to SI.com/access to 2information. validate your account After clicking , you 3a password. will be prompted to create Then click next add the digital magazine . *For specific instructions on how to access SI on the NOOK, visit SI.com/devices 2 | S P O R T S I L L U S T R AT E D | SEP T EM B ER 3 , 2012 In May 2011 a tornado ripped through Joplin, Mo., killing 161 people. The Joplin High football team has spent the past year trying to rebuild its program and lift the spirits of an entire city. Go to SI.com/underdogs for more on Joplin and other high schools that have battled adversity in the SI Video series Underdogs. SI COMMENTARY PETER KING ON . . . The Jets I think they look worse than they did last winter, when they lost their last three games by an average of 14 points. Mark Sanchez is having accuracy issues again, and his receivers aren’t helping. (I mean you, Stephen Hill.) Now tight end Dustin Keller has an ouchy right hamstring. And I do not see how they keep right tackle Wayne Hunter. His nonblock allowed Tim Tebow to get sacked in the fourth quarter against Carolina. Hunter’s not an NFL-caliber player. . . . Read more of King’s Things I Think I Think at SI.com P H O T O IL LUS T R AT I O N BY A L E XIS S A N C H E Z ; N A M Y. H U H (M A N NIN G); DAV ID B ER G M A N (WA H L); MI C H A EL Z AGA RIS (D O H RM A N N); M EL L E V IN E (KIN G); C H A RL IE RIED EL /A P (J O PL IN) Do you think Peyton Manning is ready to lead the Broncos deep into the playoffs after sitting out last season? While all eyes in the Mile High City will be on Manning, senior writer Don Banks believes DE Mario Williams will have just as much impact in Buffalo, where he’ll help the Bills end their 12-year playoff drought. Go to SI.com for more of Banks’s “20 Bold Predictions” and for our blowout NFL Preview coverage, including . . . @georgedohrmann It is a rebuilding year [for Notre Dame], and anything less than five losses would be a HUGE achievement. So let the young guys play, learn, get better. inside soccer Edifice Complex MLS has been obsessed with stadiums since the league’s launch in 1996. Thankfully, most teams have left cavernous NFL venues and are in facilities that work better for soccer. Here’s a look at each team’s situation Opened: 2006 touch logo for more TOYOTA PARK chicago fire Capacity: 20,000 2012 average attendance: 14,087 The $98 million facility is poorly situated in suburban Bridgeview, about 15 miles southwest of downtown Chicago. Train riders must transfer at Midway Airport for a shuttle bus. Dav id Ba n k s /G e t t y Im ag e s 3 of 3 inside soccer Edifice Complex touch logo for more MLS has been obsessed with stadiums since the league’s launch in 1996. Thankfully, most teams have left cavernous NFL venues and are in facilities that work better for soccer. Here’s a look at each team’s situation 3 of 3 The Other Half Of the Story By Melissa Segura Photog raph by ROBERT BECK TOO OFTEN FORGOTTEN IN THE NFL CONCUSSION DEBATE ARE THE WIVES AND GIRLFRIENDS WHO BEAR THE BURDEN OF CARING FOR SUFFERING PLAYERS—AND WATCHING THE MEN THEY LOVE SLOWLY SLIP AWAY LAURIE NAVON AND JIM MCMAHON Laurie takes copious pictures and keeps a journal to remind Jim of moments and commitments he increasingly forgets. Photog ra ph b y ROB E R T B E CK ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY N EXT STORY ≥ TH E WOM EN BEH I N D TH E M EN THE NOTEBOOK is pink and purple, his favorite colors. His girlfriend picked it up at a Phoenix-area HomeGoods store eight months ago. She shuttles it between their home office and a desk in their kitchen, jotting down things she knows her 53-year-old boyfriend, two-time Super Bowl–winning quarterback Jim McMahon, won’t remember. PAGE 3 of 14 ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY PODCAST HOSTED BY RICHARD DEITSCH THIS WEEK’S GUEST MELISSA SEGURA STAFF WRITER TH E WOM EN BEH I N D T H E M EN N EXT STORY ≥ May 28, 2012 Told JM about golf out in Mississippi for [country musician Steve] Azar. From Azar’s heading to M ario’s [Lemieux] event. A few pages later: On 6/5 told Mac we need to start to get organized for Azar’s event and for Mario’s. Looked at me like I have five heads. And he said, “I didn’t think we were going to Azar’s.” After a few minutes, he looked at me and said, “Baby, you’re right. Sorry. I forgot.” Laurie Navon started the log to help McMahon, who played for the Bears and six other NFL teams between 1982 and ’96, recall everything from which charity golf events he was scheduled to attend to why the plumbers were at the door. (Plumber was here. Said we need to change our two toilets.) Many of the other wives and girlfriends who care for retired professional football players—who, according to a 2009 University of Michigan study, may be five times more likely than other men their age to suffer from dementia—can relate to Navon’s log. Its details might be unfamiliar, but overall it tells a familiar story. Theirs. Navon, 46, is part of an unofficial sorority whose members meet at the occasional team reunion dinner or charity golf tournament. They recognize each other by the burdens they share and by the familiar characteristics of their mates: the slow shuffle, the empty stare, the non-sequitur replies to simple questions. Like Junior League members swapping recipes, the women trade tips for managing their partners’ memory loss and mood swings. Over the course of the last year, more than 140 lawsuits have been filed by players and their families against the NFL alleging that the league had concealed information about the dangers of repeated blows to the head. (The suits are in the process of being consolidated into one, which will be heard in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia. In response, the NFL, which has moved to dismiss the suits, said in a statement, “The NFL has long made player safety a priority and continues to do so. Any allegation that the NFL intentionally sought to mislead players has no merit. It stands in contrast to the league’s actions to better protect players and advance the science and medical understanding of the management and treatment of concussions.”) The damages the plaintiffs allege include “loss of consortium,” PAGE 4 of 14 SPUNKY QB McMahon never shied away from a hit, but the uninhibited style with which he played for 15 years in the NFL came with a cost: He suffered at least four concussions and was laid out countless times. Photograph by ANDY HAYT ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY MARY LEE KOCOUREK Caring for her husband has led to a lonely existence. “When you’re not a couple, you’re not included in many things,” she says. TH E WOM EN BEH I N D T H E M EN N EXT STORY ≥ a nebulous legal phrase that really means a life tethered to a cellphone for fear of missing a call from a confused partner who is standing outside a house he no longer recognizes; a sense that the couples’ golden years have been taken away; and, for some of the women, a daily dose of antidepressants to help them withstand their partners’ senseless rage. These women are not only their partners’ caretakers but also their voices and advocates. They led the fight for the NFL 88 Plan, a fund to help families pay for the care of former players with dementia. They have testified before Congress about the dangers of concussions. And they have served as the primary contacts for lawyers representing the former players in their battle with the league. Three such women are Navon, Mary Lee Kocourek and Mary Ann Easterling. They fell in love with men who played in the NFL in different decades, and they now find themselves bearing the burden of their partners’ dementia in different ways. Each of them gave SI a glimpse into her life, revealing harsh realities that too often are part of life after football. The Beginning B IL L F R A K E S T wo years ago Laurie Navon would walk into the bedroom of the Scottsdale house she shares with McMahon and find him lying on the bed watching the ceiling fan go round and round. He slept so much—“hibernating,” she joked—that she began to call him This Old Bear, not knowing that he was showing the first signs of dementia. When he did get out of bed to go to the mailbox or the hardware store, McMahon would kiss Navon goodbye, but 20 minutes later she’d find him in the kitchen, keys still in hand, struggling to remember where he wanted to go. Then there were the times he’d get up, stumble on something and accuse Navon of having rearranged their furniture in the middle of the night. Or the morning on the road when she woke up in the hotel bed to hear McMahon calling PAGE 6 of 14 DAVE KOCOUREK Dave (83) didn’t display symptoms until 30 years after his career ended. When her own health began to fail, Mary Lee had to put him in a nursing home. Photograph by HY PESKIN ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY TH E WOM EN BEH I N D T H E M EN N EXT STORY ≥ out for their Doberman, “Teddy. Teddy.” When she rolled over to ask why, he told her, “Teddy will guide me to the bathroom.” “But we’re not home,” she said. He looked around blankly. “That’s right,” he said. McMahon today differs dramatically from the man Navon met at a golf tournament in Florida seven years ago. “I fell in love with him the minute I met him,” she says. “There was something charismatic about him. He sparkled. He glowed. He was sweet and confident and funny and warm and compassionate. Total opposite of everything I’d ever heard about him.” That glow began to dim after an event for McMahon’s foundation before the Super Bowl in 2009. “That was the last time I saw Jim light, not heavy,” Navon says. “Sometimes it looks like the weight of the world is on his shoulders.” Navon dismissed McMahon’s early symptoms as normal aging until 2007, when, on the eve of the Super Bowl, she caught a TV special featuring a discussion of brain trauma by Ann McKee and Chris Nowinski of the Sports Legacy Institute in Boston. Shortly after that program Navon called Nowinski to say, “I think Mac’s got some serious issues going on.” Brain scans and other tests recommended by Nowinski confirmed that McMahon was suffering from early-onset dementia, a condition the couple connects to the four documented concussions that McMahon suffered during his 15-year career, including a 1986 s eason-endingbody slam by Green Bay’s Charles Martin. That year a Chicago Sun-Times story had predicted facetiously that McMahon would one day wear the phrase brain-damaged on his famous headbands. His diagnosis turned that joke into a grim reality. These days Navon and M cMahon play backgammon to keep his mind active. She printed a card with his vital statistics and her phone number and stuck it in his wallet lest he ever get lost. She also programmed their car’s GPS with their address and her phone number. Navon makes sure the home alarm is on at all times in case he tries to wander off alone, and she tries to travel with him as much as possible—especiallysince he called her four years ago after accidentally boarding a flight to Tampa PAGE 8 of 14 ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY TH E WOM EN BEH I N D T H E M EN N EXT STORY ≥ instead of Chicago. She has their picture taken frequently, in case he wakes up one day and no longer remembers her. “He could stay like this for the next 20 years, which I would take,” Navon says. “I can handle it.” But in recent months Navon has noticed a new symptom in McMahon. He drops to his knees, breaks into a cold sweat and turns a ghostly white, complaining of a pain that he compares to having an ice pick in his brain. It lasts a minute. All Navon can do is watch. The Middle T he first sign of trouble for Mary Lee Kocourek was that her husband, Dave, was forgetting things and sleeping more than usual. Dave, a four-time Pro Bowl tight end in the 1960s with the Chargers, Dolphins and Raiders, was her high school sweetheart. For years he’d arranged his shoes by color and function, but around 1999 he began to seem disorganized. He frequently misplaced his wallet or his AFL championship ring. She took him to a doctor in 2002, and Dave, then 64, was given a diagnosis of early dementia. In 2005, Dave took the couple’s dachshund, Tootsie Roll, for a walk near their house on Marco Island, Fla., only to end up at a police station looking for his other dog—although the couple did not have one. In a three-day period in 2010, police twice had to be called in to help search for Dave. (Once, Mary Lee says, they prepared to dispatch search-and-rescue boats into the Gulf of Mexico.) The first time, he turned up, with Tootsie Roll, in the lobby of a Marriott two miles from their house; the next time, in a church parking lot. “When you see a man that was so big and so strong, and he doesn’t know the difference between a toothbrush and a razor . . . ,” Mary Lee says, crying. “He could have cut his mouth wide-open.” PAGE 9 of 14 ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY B IL L F R A K E S MARY ANN EASTERLNG After Ray began showing signs of anger, Mary Ann said that she felt like she had to “walk on eggshells” around him. TH E WOM EN BEH I N D T H E M EN N EXT STORY ≥ Mary Lee became even more vigilant after she walked in on Dave preparing to brush his teeth with a razor. “When you see a man that was so big and so strong and so nice and gentle, and he doesn’t know the difference between a toothbrush and a razor . . . ,” Mary Lee says, crying. “He could have cut his mouth wide-open. After [he] got progressively worse, I had to watch everything he did. I couldn’t let him take a shower or do any of the things you need to do every morning without me being there. I couldn’t chance it.” Mary Lee, a real estate broker, began taking Dave to work with her. The office managers assigned him a desk while Mary Lee worked on her listings. At home she relished his nap times. “This is terrible to say, but it was sort of a help that he did sleep, because then I could do other things around the house,” she says. By 2008 Mary Lee, exhausted by the round-the-clock care, persuaded her husband to attend thrice-weekly adult-day-care sessions by telling him that the program administrator, a family friend, needed his help. The day care helped, but in August 2010 Mary Lee needed back surgery, which would entail a lengthy recovery during which she wouldn’t be able to care for Dave. That meant putting him in a nursing home. The heartbreaking decision to place a loved one in institutional care is not limited to NFL families, of course. But the process is often made even more difficult by the simple fact that traits that are considered a virtue in professional football players—towering size, hulking frames—are liabilities to nursing homes and the companies that insure them. The wife of one former player struggled to find a facility with a bed big enough to fit her husband, a former offensive lineman. The NFL does help defray the $76,000 per year it costs Mary Lee to keep Dave in a nursing home, but she still feels the financial strain. Her husband never earned more than $35,000 in a season. She bristles at message-board postings and call-in radio chatter suggesting that plaintiffs in the concussion litigation are motivated by greed rather than need. “They should PAGE 10 of 14 R AY EASTERLING Ray (32) played through pain with the Falcons, but, Mary Ann believes, he couldn’t bear the prospect of slipping deeper into dementia. Photograph by SCOTT HARMS/AP ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY TH E WOM EN BEH I N D T H E M EN N EXT STORY ≥ have told us something about repeated head injuries,” Mary Lee says between tears. “I’ve lost the love of my life. These are supposed to be our golden years, but they certainly are not. I’ve gone into a deep depression, and I’m on medication. I had to put my husband in a home. . . . I just flipped.” Much of Mary Lee’s social circle has vanished. “When you’re not a couple, you’re not included in many things,” she says. Even if she wanted to take Dave to a restaurant, she couldn’t because he wears adult diapers. Trying to go to a doctor’s appointment is often complicated by Dave’s refusal to get in the car. “Sometimes I have to get some people in the street to help me,” she says. Their time together is mostly limited to Mary Lee’s nightly stops at the nursing home for a happy hour of apple juice and chips with her husband. She does her best to talk to him, but sometimes he speaks only gibberish, indecipherable even to the woman who’s been married to him for 54 years. He doesn’t know the day of the week, the month or the president—though he has been heard singing his alma mater’s fight song, On, Wisconsin! “I’m lonely, and I’m sure it’s lonely for him, too,” Mary Lee says. “I just wouldn’t want anyone else to go through this.” The End M ary Ann Easterling heard her husband, Ray, say it time and time again: No nursing home. Which is why on April 18, the day before he took his own life, Ray, 62, was grilling his primary-care physician about how long it would be before what remained of his mind would wither. “Three years,” the doctor said. On the car ride home Ray, a member of the Falcons’ Gritz Blitz defense that in 1977 set an NFL record for fewest points allowed in a season, turned to Mary Ann and said, “I don’t believe what he said.” Mary Ann had decided to take him to the doctor following an episode earlier in the week. Her cellphone had rung while she was at her job as an administrator and teacher at a homePAGE 12 of 14 ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY TH E WOM EN BEH I N D T H E M EN N EXT STORY ≥ school collaborative near their house in Richmond. She heard Ray’s voice on the other end, frantic. He was on his way to the post office but suddenly didn’t recognize his surroundings. Trying to keep her voice from registering any emotion, Mary Ann helped him divine his location: He was outside the building they had lived in for a decade, years ago, directly across the street from the post office. “This was another step along the road,” Mary Ann says of the incident. “We had been stepping down like that for three years. In my heart I was sad for him because I knew he [would no longer] feel right about going out by himself.” Mary Ann first noticed Ray’s decline in the late 1980s, about a decade after he retired from an eight-season pro career. The normally vibrant, devoted man she’d met at a Thursday-night Bible-study class in 1975, the man who prayed with her every day, had become sullen and depressed, and he began having outbursts of blistering anger. “Little things would set him off,” Mary Ann says. “You feel like you’ve got to walk on eggshells.” By the 1990s Ray, who’d had a successful career in financial services, began making impulsive and risky decisions, a hallmark, some scientists say, of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a deterioration of the brain believed to be linked to repeated blows to the head. He took out a line of credit on their house and invested in a nutrition business. More troubling to Mary Ann, Ray didn’t do what he usually did before making a big decision: pray with her. The business failed, and they were forced to sell their home and live in the office across from the post office—the building that Ray later wouldn’t be able to recognize. As the years passed, Mary Ann’s fears grew. Ray was combative with co-workers, and by 2008 he could no longer make business presenta- “Every day was like going to war,” Mary Ann says of Ray’s last days. “And not physically. It was all mental and emotional.” PAGE 13 of 14 ≤ PR EV IOUS STORY TH E WOM EN BEH I N D T H E M EN N EXT STORY ≥ tions without losing his train of thought or button his shirts without Mary Ann’s help; the fine motor skills in his hands were all but gone. In the last year of her husband’s life, Mary Ann listened to him tell wild stories about people following him as he jogged and complain that she didn’t care about him when she left the house for work. Then while surfing the Internet one evening in 2010, Mary Ann found a report suggesting a link between her husband’s symptoms and his football career. Three months later a battery of tests confirmed a diagnosis of early-onset dementia. “Although I was very sad,” Mary Ann says, “it was also a huge relief to know that it was something organic that was wrong.” On the morning of April 19, Mary Ann found Ray’s lifeless body next to a handgun. That his b ehavior—and his decision to take his life—stemmed from brain damage he might have incurred as a football player gives her, oddly, a sense of peace. “It’s a disease that eats at the brain,” she says, “and the player can’t help it.” Not long after Mary Ann buried Ray, a woman from their church whose husband suffered from Alzheimer’s approached her to say, “Do not feel guilty about feeling relieved.” “It was a relief,” Mary Ann admits, “because every day [with Ray] was a conflict. Every day was like I was going to war— and not physically; it was all mental and emotional.” She finds comfort in her faith and in Ray’s final words to her in the note he left: I am ready to meet my Lord and savior. The last three decades have made her tougher, Mary Ann says. Which explains in part why, even after Ray’s death, she presses on in her legal battle against the NFL, intent that the league create the kind of medical-monitoring program that could have benefited her late husband. Ray’s framed Falcons jersey, his old football helmet and an old game ball still sit in his home office, exactly as he left them. On the ball are written the words you paid the price. Mary Ann looks at it occasionally, knowing that the inscription applies to many other men—and so, too, to the women who love them. ± PAGE 14 of 14 horse racing Let’s All Have another another thing coming Just as he did at the Derby, the champ (9) won by charging down Bodemeister on the home stretch. Photog ra ph s b y bi l l fr a k es preakness A generation of American adults is nearing middle age without having seen a Triple Crown winner. I’ll Have Another will need all the speed and stamina he showed in the Preakness to end the 34-year drought By Ti m L ay d e n I t was in the last few days before the race that he began to think beyond the Preakness, even before it was won. Doug O’Neill was caught in that odd, yet predictable, hailstorm of sudden celebrity and scrutiny that falls upon any trainer whose horse wins the Kentucky Derby. Public appearances. Repetitive interviews. Everything that is good and bad about racing tossed onto his shoulders like the roses across his colt’s withers at Churchill Downs. But through it all there was the horse. In the mornings at Pimlico Race Course on the north side of Baltimore, I’ll Have Another would gallop powerfully around the loamy oval, swallowing up the course in front of him and effortlessly spitting it out behind, seemingly unwearied by his Derby win on May 5 or the two victories that came before it, back preakness home in California. O’Neill would stand by the rail with his backstretch posse, a rollicking collection of friends, family and advisers known as Team O’Neill, and study his horse. “He kept telling me he was ready to roll,” says O’Neill. “I couldn’t believe how good he was doing.” As the sun rose over Pimlico, O’Neill would settle into a chair in his temporary office in the tack room at the west end of Barn D, a long, green clapboard building with a metal roof, and flip open a spiral notebook with a picture of his family on the cover: his wife, Linette; son, Daniel, 10; and daughter, Kaylin Dixie, 7. Inside were the names of the 80 horses in the O’Neill stable, with rows of small boxes for recording daily workouts. Each day O’Neill would pencil in I’ll Have Another’s box, usually with a simple g, for gallop. (For the Ken tucky Derby he wrote a capital r, for race, a smaller w for the morning’s walk and a tiny, innocuous win, in the lower right corner, as if it were the sixth at Holly wood.) As the stout gallops a ccumulated last week, “The last race,” says trainer bob baffert, who has had three near misses at the belmont, “is the toughest one.” just one more O’Neill (with Kaylin Dixie) relished the win by I’ll Have Another; now he’ll deal with the buzz that’s sure to follow. Photog ra ph b y u pi / l a n d ov preakness O’Neill began to cast his eyes to the right of the page, where May turned into June. “I started to think about the next race,” O’Neill says. “After this one.” He started to think about the Belmont Stakes. A generation of American adults is approaching middle age without having seen a horse win the Triple Crown. It has been 34 years since Affirmed outdueled Alydar to take the 1978 Belmont and wrap up racing’s third Triple Crown in six years, a streak that started with the great Secretariat in ’73 and included Seattle Slew in ’77. It was so long ago that it no longer seems an active part of sports culture, but rather an artifact consigned to a steamer trunk with double knit pullover baseball jerseys, wooden hockey sticks and butt-hugging basket ball shorts, a vague oddity slowly fading into the fog of history, losing eyewitnesses with each passing day. Eleven times since 1978 a horse has won the first two legs of the Triple Crown and fallen short in the Bel mont, which has been a cornucopia of disappointment. “The last race,” says trainer Bob Baffert, who trained three of the near-missers, “is the toughest one.” I ’ll Have Another will be the next to try. He won the Preakness the same way he won the Derby: by wearing down the speedy, front-running Bodemeister (who was the 2–1 favorite; I’ll Have Another was the second choice, at 3–1), this time just three strides from the finish. Unlike in Louisville, the Baffert-trained Bodemeister didn’t set a punishing pace—47.68 seconds preakness for the half mile and 1:11.72 for three quarters, versus 45.39 and 1:09.80 at the Derby—but I’ll Have Another caught him just the same, a remarkable athletic effort. “I don’t understand how I got beat,’’ said Bodemeister’s jockey, Mike Smith. “I feel dumbfounded, to be honest with you.’’ Smith’s counterpart on I’ll Have Another, Mario Gutierrez, 25, duplicated his near-perfect Derby ride, timing his move to the finish perfectly and further validating his sensational rise from the obscurity of H astings Park in Vancouver to the cusp of the Tri ple Crown. (He could not be less overwhelmed by all of this. Asked to describe his soft hands and veteran’s timing, Gutierrez said, “I’ve been riding horses my whole life. I just know this stuff.’’) Direct mortgage tycoon J. Paul Reddam named I’ll Have Another because of his weakness for cookies— although his slender wife, Zillah, spiked that narrative during Preakness week by saying, “We really don’t eat cookies often; they’re not good for you.” The colt is so formidable because he has a useful combination of natural speed (he was never more than four lengths behind Bodemeister last Saturday) and stubborn car diovascular endurance. He is a modest-sized, muscular chestnut, just under 16 hands (a hand is roughly four inches; for comparison, the great mare Zenyatta is about six inches taller), and a little under 1,100 pounds, a running back rather than a linebacker. O’Neill trains I’ll Have Another almost exclusively with long, seven- preakness furlong runs rather than short sprints. “He gallops intensely in the morning,” says O’Neill’s assistant, Jack Sisterson, 27. “And in the afternoon [at the races] he just grinds and grinds and grinds.” Possession of this developing skill set means two things. First, I’ll Have Another’s value is skyrocketing. He was sold as a yearling for the bargain-basement price of $11,000 and bought by Reddam for a cheap $35,000 in spring 2011. Now, though, he will command a heavy fee when it is time to put him out to stud. Second—and treading lightly here on the eggshells of history—he is a major threat to win the Belmont. “If he’s not a mile-and-a-half horse,” says O’Neill’s brother, Dennis, who selected I’ll Have Another for purchase, “then there are no mile-and-a-half horses. He gets bet ter the longer he runs.” Bodemeister, a horse that is potentially distancechallenged and who has also run six tough races in just 124 days, will not be in the field at the Belmont. There according to o’neill’s brother, i’ll have another should thrive at the belmont: “He gets better the longer he runs.” preakness will be no Affirmed-Alydar redux. The most significant challenge is likely to come from Union Rags, a hulk ing specimen who was sensational as a 2-year-old but has run into lousy racing luck in three of his last four starts, including a horrific sideways break from the gate in the Kentucky Derby. An hour after the conclusion of the Preakness, Union Rags’s trainer, Michael Matz, stood watching a re play on a monitor that hung from the ceiling in the grandstand. He wore a sharp tan suit, surrounded by disheveled railbirds who were beaten down by a long day at the windows. “He’s a really nice horse,” said Matz of I’ll Have Another, and then he smiled. “I’m sure going to try to beat him.” Horse racing historians will loosely compare Union Rags’s quest with that of Easy Goer, another long-striding monster who needed Belmont’s long, arcing turns to gallop nimble DerbyPreakness winner Sunday Silence into submission, ending a Triple Crown bid in 1989. It is also expected that Derby third-place finisher Dullahan, a stretchrunner who, like Union Rags, will be well-rested at the Belmont after skipping the Preakness. Yet it is not just opposition that will torment I’ll Have Another, but the task itself: 12 furlongs of hell, under a microscope. Even though previous failures have taken many forms, it is foolish to call them coincidental. “You get to the Belmont at the end of a long campaign, with a bull’s-eye on your back,” says John Servis, who trained Smarty Jones. “I know I felt a lot of pressure. The first gutierrez further validated his sensational rise from the obscurity of Hastings Park in Vancouver to the cusp of the Triple Crown. born to run As he did in the Kentucky Derby, the 25-year-old Gutierrez rode a nearly flawless race at Pimlico, then shrugged off his precociousness, explaining, “I just know this stuff.” preakness two races, they were fun. Winning the Derby was great. But I didn’t enjoy that last race nearly as much.” T he pressure on O’Neill will be even more in tense. Racing is under withering scrutiny that centers on illegal drug use and horse break downs. B etween the Derby and the Preakness, SI was among several news organizations to report that, according to the Association of Racing Commissioners, O’Neill has been fined or suspended 14 times in 14 years for drug violations (one more, from 2010, remains under appeal). The New York Times also produced research that showed O’Neill’s horses break down at twice the national average. (“I’d by lying if I said it hasn’t been a troubling and upsetting week,” O’Neill told SI a week before the Preakness. “I wish the focus could be on the present.”) The press will inquire further about these things and possibly even about the financial problems facing the New York Rac ing Association, which hosts the B elmont—and with which O’Neill has zero connection, except in larger presentations on the problems of racing. Yet O’Neill is wired in such a way that he will handle the scrutiny better than most. He is extroverted and conversationally facile. The racing public seems to con nect with his rumpled, Family Guy vibe. (His wife, who met O’Neill at St. Monica High in Santa Monica, Calif., says, “I knew he liked the horse racing stuff. I never imagined he could make a living doing it.” In February, preakness after I’ll Have Another won the Robert B. Lewis Stakes to stamp himself a potential Derby horse, Doug came home excited and the O’Neills had dinner with new neighbors who pulled out their best Scotch to toast the horse’s future.) Before the Preakness, as O’Neill walked from the barn to the saddling paddock along the homestretch rail, wearing an ill-fitting fedora, fans hoisted cans of Bud Light and shouted at him: All three, Doug! “Is this bitchin’ or what?” O’Neill said. “Once in a lifetime.” When it was over he arrived back at Barn D to find a raucous celebration in high gear. Outside the tack room he embraced I’ll Have Another’s groom, Inocencio Diaz, who is half a foot shorter and 100 pounds lighter than O’Neill. “Did he drink up?” O’Neill asked, gesturing toward the horse’s stall. “Mucho Agua?” Diaz laughed and nodded. On Sunday morning O’Neill would open his notebook and enter Saturday’s result. A little r, a big w, a little win. Twenty-one spots to the right sits June 9, an empty square awaiting history. ± The opposition will torment I’ll Have Another at the belmont, but so will the task itself: 12 furlongs of hell, under a microscope. preakness Triple trouble: A long history of coming up short Seven horses in the last 15 years have gone to the Belmont with a chance to win the Triple Crown. None has succeeded 1997 1998 real quiet Jockey Kent Desormeaux moved too early and lost at the wire, trainer Bob Baffert’s second straight heartbreak. 1999 silver charm Charismatic Jockey Gary Stevens had the lead 50 yards from the wire but lost by three quarters of a length to Touch Gold. The 2–1 favorite was in third place when he suffered a broken leg on the homestretch, ending his racing career. preakness 2002 war emblem simon b ru t y (f u nn y c ide); hein z k lu etmeier (big b r ow n) He was doomed by a stumble out of the gate, clearing the way for 70–1 long shot Sarava to win. 2004 2003 funny cide Ow ned by an ordinary-Joe consortium, the people’s choice finished 5 1⁄4 lengths behind Empire Maker. 2008 smarty jones BIg Brown The 1–5 favorite fell to 36–1 Birdstone, whose trainer apologized for ruining such a feel-good story. Seemingly dominant, he was mysteriously eased in the stretch, allowing 38–1 long shot Da’ Tara to win. golf power and grace long-range Taking advantage of his tremendous length, Watson played the par‑5s in eight under, hitting short irons into the 13th and 15th holes on Sunday. Photog ra ph b y rob e r t b e ck the masters Ridiculously long, sublimely creative, yet absolutely just a regular guy, Masters champion Bubba Watson has a story that will bring you (and him) to tears By al an sh i pn u ck B ubba Watson is the right Masters winner for these turbulent times. Augusta National may be a bastion of the 1%, but Watson is a down-home guy with a homemade golf swing whose dream car is the General Lee, the hot rod from The Dukes of Hazzard, which he recently bought at auction and has been tooling around in ever since. In the moments after Watson’s unlikely victory at the 76th Masters, he thanked, in order, the Georgia Bulldogs (his alma mater), Jesus Christ (“my Lord and savior”) and the host club’s African-American locker room attendants, members of the 99% that make up Watson’s core constituency. A native of the Florida panhandle town of Bagdad, ol’ Bubba got himself in a pickle last summer when he played a tournament in Paris and couldn’t quite summon the names of the famous monuments he had visited, alluding to “an arch” and a museum the masters that “starts with an L.” He’s not exactly a student of golf history, either. Once asked about Tiger Woods’s pursuit of Jack Nicklaus’s various records, Watson said, “I’m not sure how many Masters Tiger has won. Actually, I’m not sure how many Jack has, either.” He did add, helpfully, “I know it’s a whole mess of ’em.” Bubba’s fans (450,000 and counting on Twitter at @bubbawatson) eat up this stuff. When he’s not raising money for charity or acting like golf’s Jackass—have you seen the video in which he hits a ball over his house into the hot tub?—he can be found showing off his prodigious chest hair by wearing nothing under his overalls in a goofy boy band spoof on YouTube called Golf Boys. (We watched it so you don’t have to.) It’s delicious that Watson kicked down the door at the Masters because no one takes themselves more seriously than the lords of Augusta. They imbue their club and tournament with an absurd solemnity, but Bubba knows that golf is supposed to be fun, and he plays with a childl ike wonder. At 313.1 yards, he is the PGA Tour’s longest hitter by almost six yards. He swings a driver with a macho pink head and shaft for cancer awareness, and for all four rounds at the Masters his attire was all-white, in support of children with disabilities. Self-diagnosed with attention deficit disorder, Watson never hits the same shot twice. The PGA Tour abounds with tall tales of his massive cut shots around lakes and screaming draws over distant bunkers. “I don’t like to go to the center of the greens,” Watson says. “I want to hit the incredible shot. Who doesn’t?” the masters Fittingly, he won this Masters out of the trees. On the second playoff hole against a game Louis Oosthuizen, the lefthanded Watson hooked his drive into a forest of pines off the fairway of Augusta National’s 10th. Two holes running he had missed 18- and 12-foot putts that would have won the Masters, but Bubba never stopped strutting around as if he were Boss Hogg. Watson’s motto has always been, “If I got a swing, I got a shot.” He located a gap in the trees and off the pine straw and with a gap wedge he whipsawed what he called a “40-yard hook” to within 15 feet of the hole, a small miracle that thoroughly spooked Oosthuizen. Curving a shot such a distance is remarkable by any standard, especially with today’s engineered golf balls; Bubba pulled off the 155-yard shot with a short iron off a dicey lie. Never mind the pressure. Oosthuizen, the runaway winner of the 2010 British Open at St. Andrews, failed to get up and down from in front of the green, and just like that, it’s delicious that watson kicked down the door at the masters, because no one takes themselves more seriously than the lords of augusta. lost cause Oosthuizen (right) opened the door for Watson when his par putt at the second playoff hole just missed. Photog ra ph b y a l t i e l e m a ns the masters one-on-one with bubba watson lasting impressions of the tournament golf had its first genuine folk hero since John Daly emerged from the backwoods of Arkansas to win the PGA in 1991. Watson’s wife, Angie, is already predicting that Bubba will serve In-N-Out burgers at next year’s champions’ dinner. Oosthuizen, who dueled with Watson for 20 holes, was still trying to digest what had befallen him: “That’s really entertaining to play with him, to see the shots that he’s taking on and shots that I don’t really see or I would ever hit.” Watson, 33, may be a trick-shot artist, but he’s not a fluke. He has gotten better every year on Tour—he has won four times in his last 39 starts, including twice in 2011, and, remarkably, has become one of the game’s most consistent performers, finishing no worse than 18th in eight starts b ri a n sn y d er / reu t ers the masters right and wrong this year. He also has proved to Mickelson, back by only a be a regular threat in the mastroke to start the final round, jors, including a playoff loss at was undone by a bizarre triple bogey at the par-3 4th. the 2010 PGA Championship. Now he’s the top American in the World Ranking, at No. 4. The Masters seems uniquely suited for Bubba Ball. As Jim Furyk said on Sunday, “The most important thing at Augusta is creativity, and Bubba can do that as well as anyone. Phil Mickelson has a great short game, dominant length and great creativity, and it’s worked out well for him here.” Like Forrest Gump, Watson can be accidentally profound. He was asked in the champion’s press conference how good he can be. “That’s the best part about history—we don’t the masters know what’s going to happen,” he said. “We don’t know the future. We don’t know anything.” Actually, we do know this: Golf just got a whole lot livelier. B ubba’s heroics capped a Masters that was defined by the improbable. Woods roared into town two weeks removed from his first PGA Tour victory since before he ran over a fire hydrant in November 2009. He arrived w ith a remade swing that had propelled him to the top of the Tour’s total driving stat, which takes into account length and accuracy. But his preparation for the Masters had been complicated by the publication of a tell-all by his former swing coach Hank Haney, who wrote candidly of Tiger’s fear of hitting the driver. Sure enough, Woods began his Masters with a snap-hook that settled on the edge of the 9th fairway. It was the big miss, and then he did it again on the next tee, two frightful swings that haunted him for the rest of the tournament. During a second-round 75, he plainly had no idea where the ball was going, and Woods sullied the Cathedral in the Pines by kicking a discarded nine-iron and swearing oaths audible to a national TV audience. (“Goddam!” was a particularly inspired choice on Good Friday.) Woods would finish 40th, his worst Masters showing as a pro, but he wasn’t the week’s only dud. Rory McIlroy had spent the preceding 12 months insisting he was not scarred by throwing away a four-stroke lead during last year’s final round. That was easy to believe after he opened 71–69 to get within a stroke of the lead held by Fred Couples and the masters Jason Dufner. But on Saturday, golf’s boy wonder again seemed overwhelmed, shooting a front-nine 42 to blow himself out of the tournament. McIlroy is only 22, and it’s comforting to think he’ll have other opportunities, but you can lose the Masters only so many times before the hurt metastasizes. Ask Tom Weiskopf. Or Johnny Miller. Or Greg Norman. Or Ernie Els. All were once phenoms being fitted for green jackets, but they never got it done. McIlroy’s demise created a vacuum of star power on the third-round leader board until Mickelson blitzed the back nine in 30, which his caddie, Jim (Bones) Mackay, called the second best nine holes Mickelson has played, behind the iconic Sunday back-nine 31 at the 2004 Masters, when he won his first green jacket. Mickelson’s 66 left him a stroke behind surprise leader Peter Hanson of Sweden, but that was considered a mere inconvenience; Sunday was to be a coronation as Mickelson would tie his idol, Arnold Palmer, with four Masters wins and supplant Woods as the king of Augusta. (Tiger has four green jackets too, but none since “My dad taught me everything I know,” watson says. “It’s not very much, but that’s all I know.” j o h n b ie v er the masters molly cuddling 2005.) The only words of caution Watson got emotional came from Steve Loy, Mickelson’s while sharing a hug agent and onetime college coach. “I with his mother. get nervous when they start handing out trophies when there’s still 18 holes to go,” Loy said. In fact, it took Phil only one swing to dig a hole from which he would not recover. With a front-left pin placement on the tough par-3 4th, Mickelson’s preferred miss was long and a bit left, but he overdid it—his ball clanged off a railing in the bleachers into a bamboo thicket on the edge of the property. It was the most unlucky carom since Jean van de Velde doinked a grandstand during j o h n b ie v er the masters his famous meltdown at t he 1999 British Open, and it left Mickelson no place to take a drop for an unplayable lie. Phil the Thrill does everything but golf righthanded and has a long history of switch- hitting when unable to take his normal stance. “He won the Sun Devil C l a s sic f or u s h it t i n g righthanded from under an oleander bush to an island green,” Loy says. This time it took Lef t y two jabs from the wrong side of the ball to escape the thicket, leading to a fitting end The first-time champion homely triple bogey. He was happy to slip into the wou ld never aga in get most famous blazer in golf— whatever the size. closer to t he lead t han two strokes. Mickelson’s misadventure was only the second-mostdramatic moment in the early going of the final round, as on the par-5 2nd hole Oosthuizen stirred the ghost of Gene Sarazen by holing his second shot for an albatross that vaulted him to 10 under and a two-stroke lead. With apologies to McIlroy, Oosthuizen may have the sweetest the masters swing in the game. “Unfortunately, he doesn’t have Rory’s desire,” says Oosthuizen’s swing coach, Pete Cowen. “If Louis wanted it a little more, he could easily be the best player in the game.” W atson has the opposite problem—he cares too much, and the big question for this highstrung, jumpy competitor was whether he could calm his nerves on Masters Sunday. A three-putt on the 1st hole wasn’t promising, especially since Watson had declared following his second round, “I am not a very good putter.” Five strokes off the lead after his playing partner’s double eagle, Watson rallied to birdie the 2nd and 5th holes. His charge to victory began at number 13, where he hit a nine-iron (!) into the par-5 and made birdie. He made another at 14 thanks to a gorgeous approach, cutting his deficit to a stroke, and Watson matched Oosthuizen’s birdie at 15 when he reached the par-5 with seveniron, what counts as a long iron for him. He finally pulled even with a pressure-proof eight-footer on 16, his fourth straight birdie in a finishing kick that evoked Charl Schwartzel’s flourish of last year. W hen Watson finally dispatched Oosthuizen in the playoff, he started to break down even before he pulled his ball out of the more action from the 2012 masters the masters si photographers at the masters fred vuich: the augusta national clubhouse al tielemans: shooting phil mickelson hole. Then he dissolved into tears in the arms of his mom, Molly. Turns out that for all his swagger, Watson has a soft heart. On Easter Sunday he got misty at any mention of his newly adopted son, Caleb, or his late father, Gerry, a Green Beret who was forever admonishing his son to swing harder at the Wiffle balls he batted around in the family’s backyard. “My dad taught me everything I know,” Watson says. “It’s not very much, but that’s all I know.” A willingness to laugh at his own goofiness is what makes Watson so endearing. When he came out on Tour he was so hard on himself, he scared people away with his brooding. As he has learned to minimize the negativity—he credits his wife’s steadying influence and being born again the masters in 2004 with altering his perspective—Watson has made deep friendships, which explains why Aaron Baddeley, Ben Crane and R ickie Fowler followed the playoff on foot. (Like Watson, all are regulars at the Tour’s Bible-study sessions.) Noticeably absent was Angie, who is usually a towering presence in Bubba’s gallery. A onetime WNBA player, she stands an inch taller than her 6' 3" hubby. Angie had stayed in Florida to tend to Caleb, who is only six weeks old. Still, there was a definite family vibe when the Watson entourage gathered in Butler Cabin on Sunday night. Baddeley’s two daughters were scampering around the cabin, which is decorated in a style best described as Southern masculine. “They call him Uncle Bubba,” Baddeley said. “He’ll be a great dad because he’s just a big kid himself.” There was a bartender in the corner, but everybody was drinking soda—like Bubba, his friends and family are teetotalers. The general feeling in the room was dazed disbelief. Watson’s caddie, Ted Scott, said to no one in particular, “I can’t believe he gets to come back here for the next 40 years.” A club employee walked through the cabin with a green jacket on a hanger. Fowler looked at it longingly. “Please?” he asked. It wasn’t for him. The jacket was a 43 long to replace the bigger one Watson had originally slipped on. “I’m more than happy with either one,” Watson said. He was then led to the traditional champion’s dinner with the Augusta National membership, a collection of the richest and most powerful men in the country. These are not exactly Bubba’s people, but his seat at the table came the old-fashioned way: He earned it. ± Baseball a lyric to the little bandbox 100 years of wall-itude Fenway’s centennial season began when the Red Sox hosted the Rays on—fittingly, for a ballpark that has so often seemed starcrossed—Friday the 13th. Photog ra ph b y da m i a n s t roh m e y e r f en way t u rn s 100 From the moment it opened in April 1912, Fenway Park has been a muse for poets and a monster for pitchers and modernists. What, you never thought it would see its 100th birthday? It might have 100 more By ste ve r ush i n W hen a retired theater manager named Abraham Stoker expired in England at age 64, after a series of strokes, the international news reports that he was dead and gone weren’t entirely accurate. Stoker was dead, certainly, but not gone. Or rather gone, but not Dead. For Bram Stoker had already staked (if you will) his claim to immortality, creating a deathless count from the Carpathian Mountains in an 1897 novel called The Un-Dead, a title that was changed on the eve of publication to Dracula. And though Bram Stoker, through Count Dracula, never really died, he was emphatically declared dead at number 26 St. George’s Square, London, on April 20, 1912, the curtain ringing down on one celebrated existence just as it was rising on another. For that debut, we have to cross the Atlantic—not an easy eri c k w. r a s co f en way t u rn s 100 task on April 20, 1912, as passengers steaming for New York City aboard the SS Bremen would attest. In the frigid waters that day they reported “many piteous sights,” including three lifeless figures clinging to a single steamer chair; empty life rings afloat in the water; and the stiffened body of a woman in a nightdress, baby still clasped to her breast. All had been passengers on the RMS Titanic, which struck an iceberg six days earlier en route to New York. If not for that tragedy, the Titanic would have launched its return voyage to England that very day—at noon on April 20, 1912—an exceedingly inauspicious date to be setting out on a long journey. The only baseball player to embark on a major league career that day—the unforFrom tunate Benny Kauff, who Fenway: A fascinating first century, debuted for the New York published by Sports Illustrated Highlanders—would be Books. Copyright 2012 Time Home banned from the game Entertainment Inc. Available wherever books are sold and at for life in 1921 by commisSI.com/fenwaybook sioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis, for alleged ties to an auto-theft ring. Kauff would never be reinstated to the game, despite his unambiguous acquittal in a court of law. Two ballparks were born on April 20, 1912, with very different life expectancies. J . WA LT ER G REEN /A P Tiger Stadium opened in Detroit, money players The Monster wasn’t initially named Navin Field, and painted its trademark would survive into a beautiful bluecolor until 1947, six years after Dom DiMaggio rinsed old age, finally passing after slid into third against 87 years in a kind of crumbling the Tigers—but it was figuratively green long grandeur. before that, thanks to The other park born that day, the ads that covered it for Fenway’s first 35 years. would not, it appeared, be so lucky. Malevolent forces were trying to do away with the fledgling Fenway Park in Boston as early as October 1918, only six years after it opened. America was gripped by a new austerity following its entry into World War I when the owner of the Red Sox, Harry Frazee, joined manager Ed Barrow in inspecting Braves Field only weeks after the Sox had won the 1918 World Series. Frazee was considering sharing that park with the National f en way t u rn s 100 League’s Boston Braves. Maintaining two ballparks in Boston for limited summertime use seemed “out of harmony with the systems of efficiency in vogue at present,” as The Boston Daily Globe put it that Halloween, an apposite date for this horror-born ballpark near Kenmore Square. In the end Frazee did nothing quite so karma-fraught as abandoning Fenway, and made do instead with selling Babe Ruth to the Yankees. When the Great War could not kill Fenway, Mother Nature took a stab. Three separate fires in 1926 consumed the wooden bleachers that ran along Fenway’s leftfield line. The park would be rebuilt—and refurbished, and reconfigured, for the rest of the 20th century—but by the end of the millennium, when Tiger Stadium closed in 1999, Fenway Park was finally declared unfixable. “It would be easier to straighten the Leaning Tower of Pisa,” Red Sox owner John Harrington said that season, when the park hosted its valedictory All-Star Game, which in turn hosted Fenway’s greatest star, Ted Williams, who for decades, fenway would be stalked by baying mobs bearing metaphorical pitchforks, wanting to do away with the beast. f en way t u rn s 100 later would himself prove remarkably resistant to conventional modes of death. Thirteen years later, the Leaning Tower still leans in Pisa, and Fenway Park in Boston remains upright, flourishing at 100, impossible to kill by fire, by old age or even by its own hand. As ballparks go, it is The Un-Dead, though devotion to it has seldom been undying. B y the time Tom Yawkey purchased the Red Sox, for $1.5 million in 1933, the ballpark was already familiar with near-death experiences, and was sinking into a deep decrepitude at age 21. Yawkey set about rebuilding Fenway entirely that winter, but in the course of doing so, on Jan. 5, 1934, another fire spread from a building across the street and burned the ballpark for five hours. The new grandstand in leftfield was ravaged, as were the centerfield bleachers, requiring $575,000 in repairs and the construction of steel-and-concrete replacements. The park’s walls were likewise fireproofed in tin and concrete, including the new leftfield wall, built to a height of 37 feet. Tom Yawkey had, albeit unwittingly, done what Bram Stoker did 37 years earlier: He had created a timeless monster. Only nobody called it that yet. The wall wouldn’t be painted until 1947, giving birth to its nickname, the Green Monster, a mythological creature from some Gothic novel. Every decade for the next half century, Fenway Park would be stalked by baying mobs—of real estate developers, government officials and even its own proprietors—bearing metaphorical torches and pitchforks, wanting to do away f en way t u rn s 100 with the beast. That same year, 1947, seven light towers were installed, the first step in Fenway’s becoming, like Stoker’s count, a largely nocturnal creature, often unloved and forever under siege. And so what nature could not achieve with fire, man set out to do. The willful demolition of Fenway Park was being proposed since at least its early middle age. In 1958, when the Giants and the Dodgers left New York in part for want of parking near their urban ballparks, the president of the Metropolitan Coal Company in Boston proposed to build a domed “dream stadium, [an] ultramodern sports palace” on Route 1 in Norwood, Mass. The financial backers of this privately funded Xanadu would move ahead only if the Red Sox agreed to serve as tenants in this stately pleasure dome. Had the dream come to pass, Ted Williams would have ended his career not in “a lyric little bandbox of a ballpark,” as John Updike famously described Fenway in 1960, but beneath a synthetic sky, spectators ensconced in $5,000-ayear “delux boxes,” in a suburban redoubt replete with a 100-tee driving range and “bowling alleys with glassed-in nurseries” for “pin-minded mothers.” Think of Williams, in his final at bat, hitting a home run and refusing to do what the stadium could—which is to say, doff its cap. For this was to have been a retractable-roofed Red Sox park, to replace the obsolescent Fenway, which was 48 years old and with scant parking, and thus doomed in the automotive utopia of Eisenhower’s America, with its carhops and drive-ins and nascent interstate highways. dream team After a lengthy franchise malaise, the Impossible Dream Red Sox of ’67 brought excitement back to Fenway, if not a World Series title. That would have to wait another 37 seasons. Photog ra ph b y Neil Leifer f en way t u rn s 100 T he Sox stayed, of course, but the dream of the dome would not die. In the 1960s—the decade in which America resolved to visit the moon—the Greater Boston Stadium Authority planned another dome, suitably space-aged, near South Station. That stadium and an adjacent arena would be home not just to the Sox but also the Patriots, Bruins and Celtics, ridding the city of blighted Fenway and the benighted parquet of Boston Garden with one progressive sweep of the wrecking ball. The new ballpark would resemble the other state-ofthe-art stadia going up in St. Louis, Atlanta, Oakland and Washington, D.C., big, round symmetrical quadruplets, multipurpose and multi-parking-spaced, without Monsters or Pesky Poles or hand-operated scoreboards. In the absence of winning teams, these dream proposals were lovely to contemplate, and so such proclamations were issued—almost exactly—at 10-year intervals. In 1969 the club considered a $40 million proposal to expand Fenway to 50,000 seats by “knocking out the leftfield wall,” vanquish- by the late 1990s, the red sox had decided that renovating fenway was inadequate: there would be no band-aids on updike’s bandbox. f en way t u rn s 100 SI.COM | Digital fenway GIGAPAN fred v ui c h Get a panoramic view of Opening Day 2012 at Fenway ing the Monster within the monster, killing the vampire by staking its heart. A decade later, in ’79, the Sox made a veiled threat to Boston mayor Kevin White that the club would move to a multiuse stadium in suburban Wilmington. By the late 1980s, the Sox planned a $50 million “revitalization” of Fenway that included a five-deck parking garage. Fenway, built four years after the introduction of the Model T, never had a place to put the auto-mobile. More than an ancient joke, “Pahk the cah in Hahvad Yahd” was sound advice for anyone foolish enough to drive to Fenway Park. And so the Sox spent the final decade of the 20th century trying with renewed vigor to kill this ancient creature. There was the proposed “Megaplex,” a sports-and-convention center on Northern Avenue. There were various plans to build a new park next to Fenway (and a new Pats stadium next to that) with parking for both suspended above the Massachusetts f en way t u rn s 100 Turnpike. In 1995 two Cambridge architects proposed putting not the parking garage but the new ballpark itself above the Mass Pike, evidently on the grounds that if you couldn’t drive to a Red Sox game, you could at least drive under one. The team had by then decided that renovating Fenway was inadequate. There would be no Band-Aids on Updike’s bandbox. The team announced its intention in 1995 to have a new home by that futuristic year of 2001. Harrington told a state commission that Fenway would remain structurally sound only until ’05 or so, but was already “economically obsolete,” rendering the team unable to compete with his luxury-boxed brethren in the Bronx and elsewhere. And so a new stadium site was being pushed, in South Boston, to be developed by a Boston real estate magnate. That project died, like all those before it, in a thicket of politics, red tape and residential opposition, and the thwarted developer would go on to buy the Dodgers. Frank McCourt proceeded to plunge that franchise into bankruptcy, suggesting that Fenway had dodged a bullet, a silver bullet, as the ballpark was by now a horror-movie monster—apparently immortal but almost certain to die in the final reel. One thing was certain: The new Fenway Park—whatever it was, wherever it was—would not be called Fenway Park but something more remunerative. “If AT&T or New England Telephone want to pay $50 million and name the park after them,” a Sox executive told the Globe in 1996, “tell ’em to come talk.” The 1999 All-Star Game, then, seemed a farewell to Fenway. The latest $300 million park being proposed on 14 acres adjacent to the ballpark was to have the Green Monster f en way t u rn s 100 transplanted into it and the brickwork facade transplanted onto it, creating a Frankenstein’s monster of old and new. The stake was on the heart, and the mallet was being raised when, in December 2001, John Henry and Tom Werner bought the Red Sox and set about straightening the Leaning Tower of Pisa. They at once renovated the park and the team, neither of which had seen a world championship since the fall of 1918, when Frazee celebrated by making that first fumbling attempt to flee Fenway. You know the rest of the story: How the Sox, in 2004, with a ritual shedding of blood, finally won the World Series again based in a revamped—a revampired?—Fenway Park. The victory came as a great relief to countless fans, among them Stephen King, the most renowned horror novelist since Bram Stoker, to whom he is tied not just through genre but through Fenway, a monster every bit as unkillable as any other conjured by man. ± the red sox’ new owners pledged in 2001 to renovate the park and the team. in ’04, boston—and the revamped fenway—finally had another title.