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Phillies GM defends club’s treatment of Howard

PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia Phillies general manager Ruben Amaro defended the club’s treatment of Ryan Howard in response to a newspaper report that questioned the use of cortisone on the star slugger last season.

Ryan Howard

Howard

The Phillies treated an injury to Howard’s left foot last Sept. 18 with a cortisone shot, an ailment the club termed as bursitis. Less than three weeks later, Howard tore his left Achilles tendon while running to first base after his final at-bat of the season.

That injury has kept the three-time All-Star and former MVP, who signed a five-year, $125 million extension in 2010, out all season.

“I wanted to clear up some of the insinuations regarding a cortisone shot,” Amaro said Sunday during Philadelphia’s game against Boston. “The cortisone shot was treated for some (other) issue he had. It was not part of the Achilles injury. We didn’t feel it was an issue. That was resolved by the time he had his injury. One thing had nothing to do with the other.”

Amaro was responding to a story in Sunday’s Philadelphia Inquirer suggesting that the cortisone shot may have contributed to the Achilles injury.

A doctor in the Inquirer report was quoted as saying, “When it comes to the risk of an Achilles tendon tear, I’m concerned about cortisone.”

Amaro said the Phillies always put their players first.

“We’re probably one of the most conservative clubs in baseball in administering treatment, and we always want to make sure we have the player’s best interest,” Amaro said.

Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press


Munoz wins match play after controversial semi

GLADSTONE, N.J. — Azahara Munoz beat Candie Kung 2 and 1 on Sunday to win the Sybase Match Play Championship, a title that was set up when Morgan Pressel was penalized for slow play while in control of their semifinal match.

It was the first LPGA Tour win for Munoz, but this one is going to be shrouded in controversy. It also will put more focus on pace of play in golf.

[+] EnlargePressel

Pressel appeared to take a 3-up lead with a par at the 12th hole at the Hamilton Farm Golf Club. But before she could tee off on No. 13, tour official Doug Brecht informed her that she had violated the tour’s pace of play rule and lost the hole, dropping her lead to 1-up and changing momentum.

Pressel, seeking her first tour win since 2008, appealed to referee Marty Robinson before her next tee shot, but the penalty stood and her lead went from 3 up to 1 up.

Munoz evened the match with a birdie putt at No. 15, a stroke that was delayed when Pressel contended the Spaniard touched the line of her putt before striking the ball.

Robinson had two committee officials away from the 15th review the videotape of the one camera angle they had of the hole. Robinson said they could not see any evidence of a rule being broken. Munoz then made her putt.

Pressel lost the match 2 and 1 when she bogeyed the next two holes, missing a 3-foot par saver at No. 17.

Pressel refused to be interviewed by an on-course television reporter after the match. An Associated Press photographer heard her tell the reporter “Not a chance” when he asked for an interview.

Munoz was in tears while being interviewed after the match against her friend.

“It’s an unfortunate situation,” said Heather Daly-Donofrio, the senior vice president of tour operations. “This is one of those days where it is very tough to be an LPGA official. It’s not an easy thing to deliver a pace of play penalty to a player in a situation like this.”

Daly-Donofrio said two other players have been penalized for slow play this year compared to five all last year. Pressel was the only one disciplined in this tournament, although two others face fines for slow play.

When asked about officials deciding events instead of the players, Daly-Donofrio said that USGA rules have to be upheld. Rule 6-7 says players must play without such delays and it’s up to the tour to apply its policy.

Daly-Donofrio said slow play is a concern throughout golf, which was evident on the PGA Tour last week when Kevin Na was very slow at The Players Championship.

Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press


Dufner’s clutch birdie putt on 18th wins Nelson

Dufner Wins Byron Nelson

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IRVING, Texas — Jason Dufner made a 25-foot birdie putt on the final hole Sunday for a one-stroke victory in the Byron Nelson Championship, his second win in four weeks.

The winning putt wrapped up a closing 3-under 67 for an 11-under 269 total, one ahead of Dicky Pride.

Dufner got his first PGA Tour victory at New Orleans on April 29, then took a week off to get married. He also led alone by one stroke after the second and third rounds at the TPC at Four Seasons course.

[+] EnlargeJason Dufner

Pride, whose only PGA Tour victory in a 20-year professional career came in 1994, was at 10-under with a par-saving 22-foot putt at No. 18 after hitting his drive into the water.

Moments later, Dufner made a putt that was only a few feet longer but on virtually the same line as the one Pride made to finish his round of 67.

J.J. Henry, who had an early hole-in-one, was in the lead at 11-under after consecutive birdies at Nos. 15 and 16, overcoming a bad tee shot on the first and a greenside bunker on the second.

But Henry, in the final group with Dufner, hit his tee shot at the par-3 17th over the green. The former TCU star lost the lead with a double bogey after a 4-foot putt slid just outside the cup.

After watching Henry’s meltdown, Dufner made a tap-in par at No. 17 and then hit a big drive on No. 18 in the middle of the fairway. He hit his approach to the middle of the green, avoiding a playoff with the long putt and joining Hunter Mahan as the only two-time winners this season.

Pride had made a 13-foot birdie putt at No. 17.

Joe Durant, who was the final alternate added to the Nelson field, shot a 65 to finish in a tie for third at 271 with Henry (68), Marc Leishman (66) and rookie Jonas Blixt (66).

Phil Mickelson, making his first Nelson start in five years, had four consecutive birdies on the front nine and went on to a round of 66 to finish four strokes back. He tied for seventh with Ken Duke, who also had a string of four birdies in a row in his own 66.

While Henry and Dufner were playing the 17th hole, Pride drove his tee shot at No. 18 left into the water. After his drop, Pride hit his approach to 22 feet and made that par-saving putt to remain at 10-under, letting out a scream when the ball dropped into the hole.

Pride, who went to the University of Alabama, then watched the final group play the 18th hole and waited to see if he would be in a playoff. Even he had to applaud on the clinching putt by Dufner, who went to rival Auburn.

Matt Kuchar, the fifth-ranked player who won The Players Championship a week earlier, had a 70 and finished at 276 in a tie for 15th. He was trying to become the first PGA Tour player since Tiger Woods in 2009 to win in consecutive weeks.

Byron Nelson Championship Leaderboard

1. Dufner (-11)
2. Pride (-10)
T-3. Blixt (-9)
T-3. Durant (-9)
T-3. Henry (-9)
T-3. Leishman (-9)

• Complete scores

Henry’s ace came at the 154-yard No. 5 hole, when he hit a pitching wedge. When the ball rolled back into the cup, Henry thrust both of his arms in the air, then had an emphatic uppercut and he celebrated with the gallery.

After Henry’s drive at the 504-yard 15th was way right and under a tree, he hit his approach to the middle of the green and made a 32-foot birdie putt that led to another, though more subdued fistpump. His approach at the easier par-5 16th went in a greenside bunker, but he blasted inside 2½ feet for a birdie to get to 11-under.

Then came the tee shot at No. 17 that carried over the green on the opposite side of the hole.

Dufner had consecutive bogeys at Nos. 2 and 3, but quickly responded with consecutive birdies on the following two holes.

After a bogey at No. 11 following a bad tee shot, Dufner got back to 10-under with his birdie at the par-5 16th, when he blasted out of a greenside bunker to 6 feet.

The last of Mickelson’s four birdies in a row came when he holed a 30-footer at the 461-yard eighth hole. That got him at 6-under at about the same time the final group of Henry and Dufner were finishing at No. 1, both at 8-under.

Mickelson was 8-under after a birdie at the par-5 16th, but his 3½-foot par putt at the following par 3 circled the cup and rolled back toward him for his first bogey of the day. He finished with another bogey at No. 18, though that could have been worse after his approach from the rough went into the water. After his drop, his 54-foot par-saving putt rolled over the cup, banged into the edge but didn’t drop.

Vijay Singh, a 34-time PGA Tour winner whose last victory was in 2008, was within two strokes of the lead after his third-round 66. But he hit his first tee shot Sunday into the rough and his second into a greenside bunker on way to bogeys on his first three holes and a 71 for a ninth-place tie at 275.

Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press


Perez says Indians fans should support team

CLEVELAND — Chris Perez is throwing some heat at Cleveland fans.

The All-Star closer didn’t back down Sunday from comments made Saturday questioning why fans are not turning out to see the first-place Indians and why some in the sparse crowds boo the home team.

“The fans are going to come, I know that,” Perez said. “It’s just a slap in the face when you’re in first place and last in attendance. Last. Not 25th or 26th. Last.”

The right-hander said he has been frustrated by small crowds for a long time and that it came to a head Thursday when he was booed because two men reached base while he eventually saved a win over Seattle.

“That was the last straw,” said Perez, an outspoken, gregarious team leader who regularly uses social media to interact with fans.

Perez

Nobody wants to play in front of 5,000 fans. We know the weather stinks, but people see that (low
attendance). Other players know that.

– Indians closer Chris Perez

“I got a lot of messages and some of it was funny,” Perez said of overnight reaction by fans.

While the Indians encourage Perez’s aggressive style of challenging opposing hitters, the confrontational comments did not sit well.

Team president Mark Shapiro said the organization differs with the way Perez spoke, adding that the Indians do get fan support. Shapiro said the reliever’s words come from a desire to win and get more fans to come to the ballpark.

“We clearly disagree with him about our fans,” Shapiro said. “We appreciate our fans. We respect our fans.”

Shapiro said the 26-year-old’s comments were likely borne from frustration combined with a desire to succeed.

“He’s been one of the more dominant closers,” Shapiro said. “What drives him to succeed in that role are emotion and competitiveness and passion, and I think a lot of that was behind what he said.

“It’s clear that what’s behind the emotion is how great he feels our situation is — how incredible he feels the team is, the ballpark is, and his desire for more people to experience it.

“He’s saying, ‘Pay attention. Look what we’ve got here.’”

After earning his 13th save Saturday by striking out the side on 10 pitches to clinch a 2-0 win over the Miami Marlins, Perez criticized fans who boo the home team and said negative vibes are a reason big-name free agents such as Carlos Beltran don’t sign with Cleveland.

It came after the season’s second-largest crowd, 29,799. Including a sellout of 43,190 for the April 5 opener, the Indians’ 15,188 average through 22 home dates is a far cry from the team-record 455 consecutive sellouts in the late 1990s.

“Nobody wants to play in front of 5,000 fans,” said Perez on Saturday. “We know the weather stinks, but people see that (low attendance). Other players know that.

“You had a choice of playing in St. Louis where you get 40,000 like Beltran chose to do, or you can come to Cleveland.”

Perez said Sunday he hadn’t spoken to Beltran or others who signed elsewhere, adding that in conversation with teammates, opponents and a few former Indians, he drew the consensus that Cleveland is not now a popular place to play.

“Baseball is supposed to be fun,” Perez said. “It is like that in Philadelphia every day. It helps you. You draw energy from the fans.”

Shapiro countered by pointing out that several current Indians enjoy the city and have signed long-term contracts to stay. He thinks the current controversy will blow over and hopefully not impact Perez or the ballclub.

“I really feel like it’s a moment in time, a story for right now,” Shapiro said. “If you polled our players, by and large, what you’d see is a largely universal appreciation for our fans.”

Perez said he had no ulterior motive for his comments and he isn’t trying to draw attention to himself.

“It’s just so frustrating,” Perez said. “I’ve been here since 2009, was one of the first guys in the (rebuilding) trades. If this was 2010, I wouldn’t say anything. We deserved to be booed, we were bad.”

Cleveland went 65-97 in 2009 and 69-93 the next year, then spent much of last season in first place until fading to finish 80-82. They entered play Sunday 23-17.

Perez has done his part to boost sagging attendance. He has bought six season tickets to give away, understanding how the area has been hit hard by the economy and that some fans can’t buy tickets. He doesn’t, however, comprehend the overall apathy.

“I don’t understand the negativity, in general,” Perez said. “Why? We have a first-place team. How many teams in the country would want that right now?

“You think the Tigers are happy? The Tigers are in third place. We’re in first place. Enjoy it.”

Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press


Sandbagging in Sprint All-Star race annoys fans

Johnson Wins All-Star Race

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CONCORD, N.C. — It didn’t take teams very long to figure out their best shot at winning the All-Star race would be in the first 20 laps.

What few predicted, though, was that the new format would encourage drivers to take it easy for portions of Saturday night’s $1 million race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Now fans are upset winner Jimmie Johnson essentially sandbagged for 60 or so laps before turning it up for a final charge to his third All-Star race victory.

“Everybody knew if you could win that first segment, you could control the night,” said Johnson, who indeed won the first of four 20-lap segments.

Under the format for this year’s race, the winners of each of the first four 20-lap segments lined up 1-through-4 for the mandatory trip down pit road. Once there, it was a race to simply be the first drivers to get back on the track for the final 10-lap sprint to the finish.

So Johnson claimed the first segment, then faded to the back of field for next three segments. Matt Kenseth joined him at the rear after winning the second segment, and although Brad Keselowski was reluctant to follow the same strategy, he also went to the back when his team insisted it was the best strategy after the third segment.

“Obviously there was a debate whether or not to run hard or conserve your stuff,” Keselowski said. “I hate conserving race cars. They’re meant to run hard. I just wanted to make sure that everybody on my team was on the same plan, and they were. So I’ve got to do what they tell me.”

Johnson

Everybody knew if you could win that first segment, you could control the night.

– All-Star race winner Jimmie Johnson

It wasn’t all that popular for race fans, who seemed nonplussed by the three-wide racing through the pack that accentuated several of the opening segments. Instead, many seemed annoyed that Johnson, Kenseth and Keselowski had no incentive to race once they won their segments.

Johnson, who claimed “when the rules came down, every crew chief in the garage area realized the importance of that first segment,” was reluctant to criticize the latest All-Star race format. It was the eighth change to the format since the race was created in 1985.

“That’s going to be tough for me to knock the system after how our night went because it just worked out exactly how we’d hoped,” he said.

But NASCAR has long touted its All-Star event as the only one in professional sports where the participants actually try hard, and Saturday night managed to discredit that theory.

It was clearly difficult for runner-up Keselowski, who made a solid attempt at sugarcoating the strategy of just riding around at the back of the field. He didn’t seem all that believable, though, following his second-place finish.

“I’ll race whatever rules you have,” he said. “I’ll race as hard as it takes to win. That was what it took to win. So, you know, I can’t say I feel great about it. Happy that we were good enough to win one of the segments.”

There are also new questions about the length of the final segment.

The idea of making it just 10 laps was obviously to create a frantic, all-out, sprint to the $1 million prize. But Carl Edwards proved last year that if a driver can get a good start, he can build enough of a lead that can’t be overcome in 10 laps.

After Johnson won the race down pit road on Saturday night, he, too, got a good restart and checked out from the rest of the field. Nobody had a chance to catch him in such a short sprint, but Keselowski said Johnson was so good, he wouldn’t have been able to catch him in 100 laps.

Kenseth, who restarted second and finished third, thought 10 laps gave Johnson a decided advantage.

“You got somebody as fast as him out front, there was no way I was going to have a shot in 10 laps,” Kenseth said. “Ten laps is kind of short, but yet the fastest car was out front. It was hard to beat that.”

Regardless of the format, the consensus among drivers seemed to be that the best car won the race. And for Johnson, it put him alongside the late Dale Earnhardt and teammate Jeff Gordon as the only drivers to win three All-Star races.

Johnson’s win came a week after he gave team owner Rick Hendrick his 200th Cup victory with a win at Darlington. With five Sprint Cup championships on his resume, this latest All-Star win was yet another feat in Johnson’s bid to rewrite the record books.

“I’ve got a lot of years left ahead of myself,” he said. “I want to leave my mark in this sport when I hang up my helmet. We’re doing a great job of that.”

Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press


Carpenter ensures full 33-car field for Indy

2012 Indianapolis 500
It’s time for the 96th running of the Indianapolis 500. New stars, new cars and the venerable Indianapolis Motor Speedway come together again as a great tradition enters its 101st year.
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Features

• Oreovicz: Briscoe puts Penske on pole
• James: Indy 500 on Danica’s mind
• Oreovicz: Pole Day surprise?
• Oreovicz: Young guns taking charge
• Oreovicz: Storylines to watch at Indy

News Notes

• Briscoe wins Indy 500 pole | Starting grid
• Food Network’s Fieri to drive pace car
• American drivers impress in practice
• Andrettis split up for Indy race-day radio calls
• Jay Penske needs engines for two cars at Indy
• Dario Franchitti to run No. 50 at Indy
• Herta Autosport chooses Honda
• Pagenaud hits bird during practice
• Jim Nabors to miss Indy 500

Video

• Analysis: Indy 500 qualifying
• Pole Day: Briscoe stars for Penske
• Indy 500 memories: Unser vs. Goodyear
• Indy 500 memories: Mears joins elite club
• Indy 500 memories: Foyt wins fourth
• Indy 500 memories: Sullivan spins and wins

Track Schedule

It’s the month of May in Indianapolis and that means on-track action. Check out the schedule for every time cars will be on the track in the buildup for the 96th running of the Indianapolis 500 (Sunday, May 27, noon ET on ABC). All times are local.

May 16: Indy 500 Practice
($10 admission, 12 and under free)
Practice, noon-6 p.m.

May 17: Indy 500 Practice
($10 admission, 12 and under free)
Practice, noon-6 p.m.

May 18: Fast Friday
($10 admission, 12 and under free)
Practice, noon-6 p.m.

Pole Day Qualifications Draw, 6:15 p.m.

May 19: Pole Day
($15 admission, 12 and under free)
Practice, 8-10 a.m.
First qualifying segment, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
Fast Nine pole qualifying, 4:30-6 p.m.

May 20: Armed Forces Bump Day
($15 admission, 12 and under free)
Practice, 10-11 a.m.

Qualifying, noon-6 p.m.

May 24: Firestone Freedom 100 Practice, Qualifying
(Free to the public)
Practice, 9 a.m.-noon

Qualifying, 1:15-2:15 p.m.

May 25: Carburetion Day
($20 admission, 12 and under free)
Final Practice, 11 a.m.-noon

Firestone Freedom 100, 12:30 p.m. (40 laps).
IZOD Indy 500 Pit Stop Challenge, 1:35 p.m.
Carb Day concert with Lynyrd Skynyrd, 3:30 p.m.

May 27: Indianapolis 500
(Admission starts at $30)
96th running of the Indianapolis 500, noon (200 laps).

Indy 500 Rewind

• 2011 Flashback: Wheldon’s Cinderella story
• 2010 Flashback: Dario’s all the way back
• 2009 Flashback: Castroneves wins again
• 2008 Flashback: Quiet Dixon makes noise
• 2007 Flashback: Franchitti comes up big
• 2006 Flashback: Hornish gets his “Holy Grail”

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Chats Insider

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Rangers coach Tortorella rips Devils’ tactics

Lundqvist Blanks Devils

NEW YORK — In a heated Hudson River clash that is threatening to become pretty nasty, the gloves were officially dropped Sunday when Rangers coach John Tortorella ripped the Devils, accusing them of selling penalty calls and skirting the rules.

Livid with Devils coach Pete DeBoer’s postgame comments about Rangers tough guy Brandon Prust — DeBoer said Prust was “head-hunting” on an elbowing play that left Devils defenseman Anton Volchenkov shaken up — Tortorella rattled off his own litany of complaints.

Eastern Conference Playoffs


Get all the news and commentary on the Rangers-Devils matchup on ESPN.com’s matchup page.

• Burnside: Series preview
• Predictions: Experts | You tell us!
• Playoffs schedule | Cross Checks blog
• Rangers blog | Devils blog | ESPN NY

He began with two incidents involving Devils players — a hit from Dainius Zubrus on Anton Stralman in the first period and Zach Parise‘s on Michael Del Zotto in the third — and didn’t stop there.

“I look at Zubrus’ elbow to Stralman, I look at Parise launching himself into Del Zotto,” Tortorella said. “Maybe if our players stay down on the ice, we’ll get something.”

Tortorella said his players are instructed not to embellish and hinted that he doesn’t feel the same about the Devils.

“We tell our players ‘Don’t stay down on the ice, get up.’ I hope … I’ll leave it at that,” he said.

Tortorella also said he feels the Devils are using moving screens to free up Ilya Kovalchuk while on the power play.

“The picking on the power play, set plays, picking on the power play. We want to start discussing officials with the media, I have a long list here,” he said. “That’s a set play by Jersey, picking so we cant get to Kovalchuk to block a shot. You want some more …?”

DeBoer was tight-lipped Sunday when told of the accusations directed toward his team.

In one word, DeBoer responded: “Comical.”

Tortorella referenced Kovalchuk’s first-period power-play goal in Game 2, in which the star sniper had a clear shooting lane. As Devils defenseman Marek Zidlicky swung the puck from the point to Kovalchuk at the left circle, defenseman Dan Girardi got entangled with Devils forward Patrik Elias as he tried to shift with the play. After the goal, which gave New Jersey a 1-0 lead, Girardi threw up his hands in frustration and skated over to the nearest on-ice official, presumably to complain about what he felt to be a missed interference penalty.

“I brought this up already. It’s a set play,” Tortorella said. “They know we’re trying to block shots on a pretty good shooter by them. It happened to Danny. I hope we look for it.”

This isn’t the first time the fiery coach has blasted an opponent. Tortorella, who has also been fined $50,000 for criticizing officials in two incidents earlier this season, engaged in a vicious verbal battle with DeBoer back in March.

The two coaches barked at each other both before and after the teams’ final regular-season meeting on March 19 over an orchestrated opening-faceoff line brawl that featured six players dropping the gloves three seconds into play of the Rangers’ 4-2 win.

DeBoer called Tortorella a “hypocrite” after that debacle.

Wrapping up his rant Sunday, Tortorella openly admitted his intent in unleashing his fury through the media.

“So there’s some gamesmanship right there, huh?”

ESPN.com’s Scott Burnside contributed to this report.


Katie Strang

ESPNNewYork.com

Strasburg homers, K’s 8 as Nats knock Orioles

Strasburg Homers In Nationals’ Win

WASHINGTON — Stephen Strasburg took a swing and looked in amazement as the baseball carried over the left-field wall.

If Strasburg’s first major league homer came as a surprise, his performance on the mound did not. With Strasburg leading the way, the Washington Nationals beat the Baltimore Orioles 9-3 Sunday to avert a three-game sweep.

In addition to his 2 for 2 performance at the plate, Strasburg (4-1) struck out eight in five innings before being lifted by manager Davey Johnson, who said the pitcher mentioned tightness in his biceps.

“I don’t care who it was, if I find out they have tightness, they’re out,” Johnson said. “I talked to him later in the game. He said it relaxed a bit and was a lot better. I’m not as concerned when it’s in the biceps.”

Strasburg attributed the soreness in part to working too hard in the days following his previous start.

“The biceps is fine,” he said. “It’s just throwing a lot of pitches early, then we put up a lot of runs and stuff. I just got a little tired, got a little tight, but that’s nothing different than any other outing.”

Strasburg sent an 0-2 pitch from Wei-Yin Chen into the Baltimore bullpen in the fourth inning to put the Nationals ahead 5-3. After dusting off his home run trot and returning to the dugout, he responded to a curtain call by waving to the crowd of 41,918.

“Shocking, that’s for sure,” Strasburg said of his clout. “I feel like in (batting practice) I have to swing a lot harder to hit it out. I just somehow ran into one.”

He was almost embarrassed about his trip around the bases and subsequent climb up the dugout steps.

“I’m not big for going out there and showboating,” Strasburg said. “It was great, but I know my place. I’m not a real hitter out there so I’m not going to go out there and act like I do it all the time.”

The hard-throwing Strasburg had five hits in 40 big league at-bats before Sunday. He singled and scored in the third inning, then followed a shot by Jesus Flores with one of his own in the fourth.

“I didn’t expect Stras to hit a breaking ball,” Johnson said. “He doesn’t usually see breaking balls. (Third base coach) Bo Porter came in after and said we found a left fielder.”

Known more for his pitching than his hitting, Strasburg excelled at both. The right-hander allowed three runs, one earned, four hits and a walk in his first career appearance against Baltimore. He retired the last 10 batters he faced.

Since returning from elbow ligament replacement surgery last September, Strasburg is 5-2 with a 1.99 ERA in 14 starts.

Danny Espinosa also homered, and Bryce Harper drove in two runs and scored three for the Nationals.

Chen (4-1) yielded six runs and eight hits in 4 1/3 innings and absorbed his first major league loss. The Taiwan native was vying to become the first Baltimore starter to begin his Orioles career with five straight wins since Jimmy Key in 1997.

“This is baseball. Sometimes you have a good day, sometimes you have a bad day,” Chen said through a translator. “Definitely, I had a terrible start today.”

The loss ended Baltimore’s five-game winning streak and nine-game road run. The Orioles scored the game’s first three runs but got only two hits after the second inning — both in the ninth.

“If you came in today thinking you’d get their starting pitcher out of the game after five innings, you’d like your chances,” manager Buck Showalter said

Baltimore went up 1-0 in the first when Xavier Avery walked, advanced on a fly ball and scored on a single by Nick Markakis.

The Orioles added a pair of unearned runs in the second after Harper drifted from center to left field to chase down a wind-blown fly ball, then dropped it. Robert Andino drove in a run with a groundout and Avery added an RBI single before Strasburg struck out J.J. Hardy with two outs and runners on second and third.

Harper made amends in a three-run third. Strasburg singled, Espinosa doubled and Harper hit a liner to right that a diving Markakis gloved but lost when he hit the ground. The triple scored two runs, and Harper scored on a groundout by Ian Desmond.

Flores gave Washington a 4-3 lead with his first homer since Aug. 18, and that only served as a prelude to Strasburg’s drive.

Desmond chased Chen with an RBI single in the fifth, and Espinosa homered with a runner on during a three-run eighth.

Game notes
Orioles C Matt Wieters, who had the day off after a night game, will have to wait until Monday to try to snap an 0-fror-18 slump. … Tommy Hunter (2-2) takes the mound for Baltimore on Monday night in the opener of a three-game series against visiting Boston. … Gio Gonzalez vies for his sixth win when the Nationals open a nine-game road trip Monday in Philadelphia. … Avery got his first major league stolen base.


Coyotes stay alive as Smith shuts out Kings


Coyotes stay alive as Mike Smith shuts out Kings

Melrose On Coyotes-Kings Game 4

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LOS ANGELES — The Clarence Campbell Bowl was in Staples Center for the first time, waiting to be presented by Commissioner Gary Bettman to the NHL’s Western Conference champions. The Los Angeles Kings‘ long-suffering fans gathered downtown shortly after dawn, eager to witness a series sweep and a coronation.

And then Captain Coyote and his goalie crashed the party for a win that suggests this series is far from finished.

Shane Doan scored two goals, Mike Smith made 36 saves in his third playoff shutout, and the Phoenix Coyotes emphatically avoided playoff elimination with a 2-0 victory in Game 4 of the conference finals on Sunday.

Ray Whitney and Antoine Vermette had assists for the Coyotes, who avoided the sweep by snapping the eighth-seeded Kings’ eight-game winning streak and canceling Los Angeles’ plans to celebrate its first berth in the Stanley Cup finals since 1993. With their backs against the glass, the Coyotes soundly outplayed an opponent that had been on an 11-1 run through the postseason.

“We recognize we put ourselves in a tough position, (but) we also know it has been done,” said Doan, Phoenix’s captain since 2003 and the sole remaining member of the Winnipeg Jets team that moved to the desert in 1996.

“I guess that’s what sports are all about, trying to do something that someone hasn’t done for a while, try to do things (when) the odds are kind of stacked against you,” Doan added. “Nobody wants to be in the position we’re in, but everybody wants to prove they can answer that call.”

Phoenix still must win three more games to become just the fourth team in NHL history to rally from an 0-3 series deficit, but the Coyotes finally regained the form they showed in knocking off Chicago and Nashville in the first two rounds.

Game 5 is Tuesday night in Phoenix. Los Angeles is 7-0 on the road in the playoffs, but the Coyotes can’t wait to see another whiteout in their stands.

“Two ways to look at it: They’re either due to lose, or we’ve got to find a way to stop them,” Doan said. “Law of averages says you’re going to lose eventually on the road, so it happens. Next game wouldn’t be a bad one to lose.”

Doan scored on a power play in the first period and on a deflected shot in the second, silencing the crowd at the Kings’ first loss since April 18. Smith, who has all three of his shutouts on the road, made several impressive saves while outplaying Jonathan Quick for the first time in the series.

“We had nothing to lose,” Smith said. “We had to make sure we played our best game. That would give us a chance to win. We obviously had a huge game from Doaner, and it trickled down through our lineup. He was unbelievable. He was such a great leader tonight. Every guy knew that they were going to do their part to try to force this series to Game 5.”

Quick stopped 19 shots with little help from his Los Angeles teammates, who were shut out for the first time in the postseason while hitting a bump in what had been one of the most impressive playoff runs in NHL history.

The Kings have reached the Cup final just once in 44 seasons of existence, but their worst game of the postseason prevented them from claiming just the second conference title in franchise history — and becoming just the second No. 8 seed to win three playoff rounds.

“Phoenix played a really good game and came out hard,” Kings defenseman Matt Greene said. “They got a big power-play goal against us there, and they got a big faceoff goal. Smith was awesome tonight. They played well, and we can play better. We need to respond better than that.”

The resilient Coyotes are no strangers to adversity after making the playoffs in three straight seasons without an owner or impressive fan support. Asked by Doan and coach Dave Tippett to show their pride in Game 4, the Coyotes showed they’re not done with the longest playoff run in franchise history.

“We’re going to go home feeling like we can grab some momentum out of this game,” Tippett said. “There’s some areas we can certainly embrace that we did better in this game than the other games in this series. You go home and try to push it along again. We’re in the same situation.”

The scene was set for a Kings crowning at Staples Center, but they’ll have to have to fly to Phoenix after practice Monday. Los Angeles probably should work on its power play, now in a 3-for-60 slump after going 0 for 6 in Game 4.

“Do I like going back on the road tomorrow? No, absolutely not,” Kings coach Darryl Sutter said. “But that’s the way it works. That’s why it’s four out of seven. Did we think, as not a home-ice team, we weren’t ever going to lose a game? No, it’s that simple. You’re supposed to play 28 games, not 12 or 13, four or five.”

With its fans standing and cheering from pregame warmup onward, Los Angeles showed only flashes of its usual aggressive forechecking and speed in Game 4. Phoenix managed just two shots in the first 14 minutes, but Doan still put the Coyotes ahead late in the period, skating out from behind the net and flicking a backhand past Quick.

Doan’s first goal in five games snapped Phoenix’s 0-for-22 power play drought and ended the Kings’ streak of 30 straight penalties killed, dating to Game 5 of the first round against Vancouver on April 22. Los Angeles also fell behind in a game for just the second time since the second-round opener against St. Louis.

Doan scored again midway through the second period with a deflected shot after Vermette won a faceoff. Doan’s shot ricocheted off the camera inside the net, and play briefly continued while the Coyotes raised their arms.

The Kings were awful in the second period, with a failing forecheck and poor passing. Smith nearly gifted a goal to the Kings with a turnover behind his net, but the 40-year-old Whitney dived to deflect Dustin Brown‘s shot on an open net.

“When you have nothing to lose, you just throw it all out there and see what happens,” Whitney said. “You could see we were a little less nervous with the puck.”

Although a confluence of big sporting events in downtown Los Angeles threatened to affect the day for Kings fans, they weren’t deterred by the traffic nightmares threatened by the Tour of California cycling race outside and a Clippers evening playoff game.

Thousands of black-jerseyed faithful formed lines outside pubs and thronged the streets outside Staples. Most of the seats were already filled by the warm-up, which began at almost the exact moment Peter Sagan won the Tour’s final stage on the street outside.

The NBA worried a multiple-overtime playoff game might force a delay of the Clippers’ Game 4 against the San Antonio Spurs, or even force a postponement to Monday.

The Coyotes avoided all overtimes — and all celebrations.

Game notes
Martin Hanzal returned to the Coyotes’ lineup after sitting out Game 3 under suspension for boarding Brown. Veteran D Adrian Aucoin also returned for Phoenix after missing the series’ first three games with an injury. Aucoin went to the dressing room in the third period, but the Coyotes made no injury announcement. … Several Kings greats watched the game together in a luxury suite, including Rogie Vachon, Butch Goring, Glen Murray and Ian Turnbull. … Rainn Wilson, Matthew Perry and David Beckham attended the game.


LeBron drops 40 as Heat tie series with Pacers


LeBron James drops 40 as Heat even series with Pacers

Heat Bounce Back

VIDEO PLAYLIST video

INDIANAPOLIS — Miami’s season, the one that’s supposed to end in an NBA championship and vindication, was slipping away.

LeBron James brought it back.

And this time, Dwyane Wade helped him.

James scored 40 points, Wade added 30 — 22 in the second half — and Miami’s dynamic duo took over after halftime to get the Heat even in the series with a 101-93 win over the Indiana Pacers in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals Sunday.

With Chris Bosh injured and back in Florida, the James-Wade tandem saved the Heat, who will host Game 5 on Tuesday night at AmericanAirlines Arena.

“Just survival,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “This is what the playoffs are about.”

James was at his MVP best, adding 18 rebounds and nine assists and refusing to let Miami’s season slip away.

“It’s still going to be a dogfight,” James said. “It’s a three-game series now.”

Wade rebounded from the worst playoff game of his career, shaking off a 1 of 8 shooting start and adding nine rebounds and six assists.

Danny Granger scored 20 to lead the Pacers, who had the Heat down but couldn’t put the defending conference champions away.

Down by 10 points in the third quarter, the Heat were in danger of having their championship dreams obliterated by an Indiana team outworking them at both ends and backed by a towel-waving fans.

James would have none of it.

Wade either.

Wade, who scored five points in Game 3 and yelled at coach Erik Spoelstra on the sideline during a third-quarter timeout in Miami’s 19-point loss, came alive in the third when he made all six shots and scored 14 points.

“I’ve been doubted before. I’ll be doubted again,” Wade said.

James added 14 as well in the period as the pair landed a 1-2 punch on the Pacers’ chin.

“We had a terrible performance in Game 3,” James said. “We wanted to redeem ourselves.”

Granger’s 3-pointer had given Indiana a 61-51 and the Pacers, outhustling the Heat to loose balls, appeared poised to take a commanding lead in the series.

But that’s when James and Wade put on a jaw-dropping spectacle, combining for all but two points in a 25-5 run that put Miami up 76-66.

During one sequence, Wade lost his balance and fell and was lucky to push the ball toward James near the top of the key. As Wade scrambled to his feet, James alertly passed him the ball and he calmly knocked down a 3-pointer to give the Heat a 64-63 lead. The pair made easy shots, tough ones and did everything in their power to steer Miami away from a 3-1 hole.

Only eight teams in league history have overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a best-of-seven series. That’s what the Heat were staring at with a loss in Game 4.

The Heat took a 76-70 lead into the fourth, and every time Indiana got close, either Wade or James responded.

Miami also got a huge lift down the stretch from Udonis Haslem, who hasn’t been a factor in the series but made four big jumpers in the final six minutes despite playing with a large bandage over his right eye after being elbowed by Indiana’s Tyler Hansbrough.

Granger’s 3-pointer got the Pacers within 96-91 with 1:33 left, but Haslem hit another short shot and James closed the Pacers out with three free throws in the last 16 seconds.

Leandro Barbosa dropped a layup just before the horn to give the Pacers a 54-46 lead at halftime, closing a second quarter that included another altercation involving Granger.

Wade was fouled hard on a drive with 12.6 seconds left by Hibbert. After the whistle, Miami’s frustrated star slapped off the Indiana center’s arm after the two got tangled. Granger didn’t like that and he confronted Wade nose-to-nose in the foul lane.

Wade turned to one official and pleaded to “get him out of my face.”

Granger was slapped with a technical foul for the second straight game, and as Wade lined up to shoot his free throw, Indiana’s forward kept jawing at him.

“I’m right here,” Granger said, standing near mid-court.

Wade got the message, and he and James returned one of their own in the third.

His team’s dynamic disrupted without Bosh, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra changed his starting lineup for the fourth time in four games, putting Ronny Turiaf at center and starting Shane Battier up front with James for the second straight game. The switch did nothing to stop the Pacers from getting off to another strong start.

Indiana was up 9-0 in a blink and led 19-11 after Granger dropped a 3-pointer.

James, though, got things going for the Heat and had them within 25-18 after one, a deficit that could have been much worse if not for the Pacers missing several wide-open 3-pointers.

Game notes
The national anthem was performed on harmonica by 85-year-old Carl Erskin, who pitched for the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1948-59. Erskin is an Indiana native. … James passed time before the game reading “Hunger Games” in the Heat’s locker room. … Heat owner Micky Arison was asked for his autograph by several fans sitting near the Miami bench. “You must be desperate,” he cracked.