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Treasure Island's Bud Chapman may be the best 88-year-old golfer in the world

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By Rodney Page, Times Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

SEMINOLE — When it is suggested to Bud Chapman that he may be the best 88-year-old golfer in the world, he shrugs his shoulders.

"Gosh, I don't know. Maybe,'' Chapman says. "I used to play with some guys my age, but it got a little boring.''

That's because not many octogenarians carry a four handicap on regulation golf courses. Fewer still are able to shoot their age, as Chapman has done 2,151 times and counting.

"He's a freak of nature,'' Seminole Lake Country Club head professional Bruce Chaleff said.

Chapman can be found on most Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays at Seminole Lake, playing with a group of youngsters in their 60s and 70s. He can still hit it about 240 right down the center and knock approach shots near the cup.

On a good day he'll shoot even par. On a bad day he'll shoot in the upper 70s. And yes, he plays from the men's tees. Chapman, who lives in Treasure Island, plays mostly at Seminole Lake or St. Petersburg Country Club.

He first bettered his age when he was 68. Chapman shot a then club record 64 at Wentworth Golf Club in Tarpon Springs. It was broken a few months later by PGA pro John Huston.

Through five months this year, Chapman has played an average of five times per week, every week, for a total of 100 straight rounds of shooting better than his age. On May 21, Chapman got the 16th hole-in-one of his career on the seventh hole at Seminole Lake.

"That's really not that many when you think of how many rounds I've played,'' Chapman said.

Typical. Chapman is a self deprecating Minnesotan who happens to be a world famous artist and one of the most decorated amateur golfers in Minnesota history.

A life in golf

Chapman first picked up a golf club when he was 12. He caddied at Interlachen Country Club in Minneapolis. On Mondays caddies could play for free. In his first round ever, he shot a 166. Pretty soon, he was shooting even par.

After World War II, where he flew B-29s, Chapman returned to Minnesota and became a commercial artist. In 1972, he created a painting called Victoria Falls Golf Club, a fictional golf hole set in an impossibly difficult landscape. Over the next 10 years, he created 17 more holes and called them "Infamous Golf Holes.''

The paintings sold worldwide and gave him the freedom to play golf. He played often and was very successful. Chapman has been named the Minnesota Golfer of the Year in three different decades. He has played in U.S. Amateurs and the U.S. Senior Open. He shares the course record (64) at Minneapolis Golf Club. He has played in competition with Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino, Sam Snead and Gene Sarazen.

He first won Minnesota's Senior Men's Championship in 1978. He won the Grand Masters Championship for players 65 and older nine times since 1998, the last coming in 2009. He is in the PGA-Minnesota Golf Association Hall of Fame.

Chapman started wintering in Florida about 40 years ago. He used to return to Minnesota for the summer, but lately he has stayed year round. His wife, Mitze, is in a nursing home. He said he still continues to paint and is writing a book. But he makes sure to leave time for golf.

"Who knows what would happen if I wasn't playing golf,'' Chapman said. "Got to keep my body active.''

Infamous for the wrong reason

Chapman is well known in his home state for his paintings and his golf. But he also has one other dubious distinction: He is 0-for-60-something in trying to qualify for the U.S. Open. He's not sure of the exact number, except for the zero part.

He remembers first trying in 1944. Since then he has had some close calls. The closest was at a qualifier in Detroit. He's not sure of the year, but he does remember being in the lead of a sectional qualifier with two holes to go. He said he was four or five shots ahead of PGA pros Sam Snead and Frank Stranahan.

His caddie told him he should hit an iron on the par 4 hole since there was so much trouble. He sprayed the shot into some marsh. Then took several hacks to get out. Chapman took a 14 on the hole.

"The caddie did the right thing,'' Chapman said. "What I should have done was just re-teed the shot, but I thought I could hit it out of there. Oh well, I could still qualify.''

But on the final hole, a par 3, Chapman hit a shot he thought was going right at the flag. Instead, it embedded in a greenside hill. Back then, you could not remove an embedded ball.

"It was sitting up a little, so I choked up and just tried to punch it out,'' Chapman said. "But I kept burying it deeper and deeper. Finally I had to blast it out of there. I took an 11. Missed the cut by a shot.

"It would have to be the biggest choke in U.S. Open qualifying history. I was laughing about it right after it happened. I don't let things bother me.''

The last time Chapman tried to qualify was six years ago, at age 82. He still held an official handicap of 1.

"I wanted to try it one last time,'' Chapman said. "I didn't make it, but what else is new.''

Don't quit

your day job

While painting has been good to Chapman, he thought about making a living at golf.

"There was a time in my 40s or 50s where I was thinking about turning pro,'' Chapman said. "I remember being at Riviera Country Club (in Los Angeles) and I was watching Ben Hogan on the range. It was after his (auto) accident. I was watching him hit shots at his caddie, who was down on the range. He was hitting them right next to his caddie and he would throw them back.

"After about two hours, when he finished, I stopped him in front of the clubhouse. I said, 'Mr. Hogan, you were really hitting them well out there.' He said to me, 'If I hit them like that tomorrow, I'm withdrawing.' That's when I realized I could never compete with the tour players.''

Another reason is the steely nerves it takes to be a professional golfer. Chapman said he labors over his paintings so he can get every detail just so. But those kind of steady nerves don't transfer to the golf course.

"I can spend hours working on one small little detail in my paintings,'' Chapman said. "If you watched me doing it, it looks like my hand isn't even moving. But I'm moving ever so slightly. Then I get over a 3-foot putt and I'm shaking all over the place. Craziest thing.

"I was in Las Vegas once and there was a guy on the putting green practicing 3-footers. I noticed him and went over and tried to help him out. The next morning we met again and I tried to help him. Not sure I really did, but when it was over he said he had a show on the Vegas strip and he gave me tickets. I didn't know him, but when we showed up we were in the front row. Turns out he's one of the greatest jugglers in the world. He can't make 3-footers either!''

Never stop learning

Chapman has played thousands and thousands of rounds of golf. Part of what keeps him going is the hope that he will finally figure the game out. He is constantly tinkering with his putting stroke or making notes on the golf course.

"He jots things down as he's playing,'' playing partner Paul Bernard said. "They're his secrets, notes about how he's playing or something. He won't let you see them.''

Chapman is motivated by hope. Maybe today is the day everything falls into place. Every drive finds the fairway. Every approach shot cozies next to the hole. Every putt drops.

He has played golf for 76 years and has not had a day like that yet. But today is a new day.

"One thing I found was that whatever I wrote down, it never worked the next day,'' Chapman said. "If you were at my house you would see piles of old notes I've written to myself. I would look at them, then go out on the range and try it and it never works. One day, I'm going to find the Holy Grail.''


FC Tampa Bay notebook: Injuries, set pieces make for a tough loss

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Bryan Burns, Times Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Set pieces have consistently been a weakness for FC Tampa Bay — defending against them as well as pressuring the goal from offensive set pieces.

Tuesday's 4-0 debacle at FC Edmonton was more of the same, according to coach Ricky Hill.

Tampa Bay gave up the first goal in the 28th minute when a corner kick in Edmonton's half led to a three-on-one breakout for the host team. Nine minutes later, a failed clearance gave Edmonton a second uncomplicated goal.

"Those two fractures gave us a mountain to climb," Hill said. "It was an uphill battle the rest of the way."

Tampa Bay had opportunities to get back in the game, notably when Tsuyoshi Yoshitake hit the post off a header in the 53rd minute, but Edmonton scored twice more to end a nightmarish night.

"Our vulnerability is set pieces, with the ball and without the ball," Hill said. "… For whatever reason, we're not competing well enough in both boxes."

Compounding Tuesday's loss, three players left the game with injuries, which have overwhelmed the team in recent weeks. Midfielder Chad Burt (foot) and defender J.P. Rodrigues (knee) are the least likely to play in Saturday's home game against NASL league-leading Carolina. Forward Warren Ukah received a gash in his head that required five stitches but should play Saturday. Midfielder Shane Hill, who replaced Burt in the 35th minute, injured his ankle but has more of a chance of playing Saturday than Burt or Rodrigues.

Defenders Omar Jarun and Andres Arango stayed in Tampa, and their availability this weekend depends on their fitness during Friday's training session.

Kickin' it with | GK Jeff Attinella

How gratifying was it to win the NASL Defender of the Week award three weeks after your professional debut?

It was definitely exciting. I felt like lately I've been playing well and to have the league recognize that, I think it's hopefully a good start. I hope it's not the only time I win this season. I hope I have a couple more of them by the end of the year.

Do you feel any added pressure knowing a number of your friends and family are in the stands watching?

I think I enjoy it because being from the area, I think the people of Tampa are kind of rooting for me to succeed because they like the hometown kid story. It keeps me from slacking off, keeps me on top of my game knowing that people expect a lot from me.

You've experienced the highs and lows of a professional goalkeeper, having allowed four goals Tuesday while posting shutouts in your previous two starts. How do you keep games like the one vs. Edmonton from shaking your confidence?

As a goalie, you can only do so much. (Tuesday), truthfully, I thought I had a better game than I did in both shutouts. I thought I made the saves that I could. There's going to be shots in situations where you couldn't do anything better than you did. (The Edmonton game) was unfortunately one of those situations.

Where do you go in the bay area to relax and relieve the fatigue from daily training sessions?

My fiancee gets annoyed a little bit, but I'm big on going to other sporting events. I love the Tampa teams, and I'm a big supporter of all of them. I go to a ton of Rays games. I went to all the Lightning home games during the playoffs. I had my Stanley Cup tickets ready to go but I'll have to wait until next year, I guess.

Out of the box

FC Tampa Bay arrived back in the bay area late Wednesday, ending the longest road trip, in miles, the team will make all season.

The team departed Friday for Minneapolis, playing NSC Minnesota to a 0-0 draw on Saturday. Sunday, the team left for Edmonton with a layover in Denver. After Tuesday's result, the team spent all day Wednesday in airports, going from Edmonton to Chicago to Tampa.

All totaled, Tampa Bay traveled 5,481 miles during the six days.

Dr. Remote

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By Tom Jones, Times Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Mavs at Heat: 9 p.m. on Ch. 28. You get the feeling that if the Mavs are going to have a chance in this series, they have to steal tonight's Game 2.

The Long Home Run: 10 p.m. on ESPNU. The history and legacy of the men's baseball College World Series and its former home of Omaha's Rosenblatt Stadium.

Sports Connection: 11 p.m. on BHSN (Ch. 47). Host Rock Riley interviews Tampa Bay pro sports owners Stuart Sternberg, Bryan Glazer and Jeff Vinik.

Captain's Corner: Offshore fishing heats up in June, July

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By Steve Papen, Times Correspondent
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

What's hot: June and July offer some of the year's best offshore fishing, including red snapper, blackfin tuna, mahi-mahi, wahoo and sailfish.

Snapper: Target depths vary depending on the areas. If you are heading north of Clearwater, look in 70 feet on rock piles and ledges. If you are heading south, start at 120 feet. These fish are not picky when it comes to bottom structures. If there is bait, the snapper will likely be there. Use smaller baits such as sardines, pilchards or squid. Watch your bottom machine for large shows. Stop the boat over them and drop. If you don't get a hit in the first 30 seconds, look elsewhere. These are schooling fish, and because they are so aggressive, they should hit the bait before it hits the bottom.

Pelagics: June also marks the start of our trolling season. Recent trips to 130 feet and deeper have produced many blackfin tuna and a few mahi-mahi. So the rest of the season looks promising. The loop current is quite a bit south of our area right now but will push its way up here this month. It will bring much-needed nutrients to our waters; thus bringing great trolling. A simple trolling spread will do just fine. This will consist of running two smaller baits such as Billy Baits on either side about 50 yards behind the boat. These will be your tuna and mahi-mahi baits. Inside of them, you can run a couple of Islanders with ballyhoos short on either side. These baits are great for sailfish and wahoo.

Steve Papen charters out of Indian Shores and can be reached at (727) 642-3411 or www.fintasticinc.com.

White Sox 7, Red Sox 4

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Times wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

BOSTON — Fenway is a friendly park to the Sox — the White Sox.

Chicago won its seventh straight game at the 99-year-old home of the Red Sox as Paul Konerko hit a go-ahead single in the seventh and a two-run homer in the ninth in a 7-4 victory that completed a three-game sweep Wednesday.

"Playing three games here is not the same as playing in a lot of stadiums," Konerko said after a sellout crowd watched Boston cough up a 3-0 lead after two. "There's an energy you get that you don't get other places. So that is a help if you use it right."

Gavin Floyd settled down after a three-run second. "When you give up runs early, the game can go either way," he said. "You just try to keep your focus and have faith and just go out there like it's 0-0."

Chicago's winning streak at Fenway is its longest there since it won seven in 1958-59. The White Sox have won 13 of 15 overall against Boston.

"They've been playing good," David Ortiz said. "They weren't playing that good before they got here."

Nationals 2, Phillies 1

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Times wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Nationals 2, Phillies 1

WASHINGTON — Laynce Nix homered and made a diving catch in leftfield, helping Nationals starter John Lannan beat the Phillies for the first time in 14 tries. Lannan entered 0-10 with a 6.44 ERA against Philadelphia. Nix saved a 2-1 lead in the sixth when, with the bases loaded and two outs, he raced left to snare Domonic Brown's fly.

Astros 3, Cubs 1

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Times wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Astros 3, Cubs 1

CHICAGO — Brett Myers pitched six strong innings, Michael Bourn hit a two-run single in the seventh and the Astros finished off a three-game sweep. Myers won his sixth straight decision against the Cubs, improving to 12-3 with a 2.12 ERA in his career against them. Doug Davis was responsible for the decisive runs when Sean Marshall gave up Bourn's two-out hit.

Yankees 4, Athletics 2

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Times wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Yankees 4, Athletics 2

OAKLAND, Calif. — A.J. Burnett settled down after an early homer to snap an 11-start winless streak on the road, and Nick Swisher homered against his former team as the Yankees beat the Athletics for the 10th straight time. Derek Jeter got his 2,984th hit and Alex Rodriguez had an RBI for New York, which has its longest winning streak vs. Oakland since winning 14 in a row from 1956-57. Gio Gonzalez took his first loss since April.


Happy birthday

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Times staff, wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Tampa Bay Golf Tour

Looking for a place to find area public courses on one website? Tampabay.com/golf has you covered. The site has all public regulation and executive courses in Pinellas, Hillsborough, Pasco and Hernando counties. Each course has a video review, breakdown of yardage, greens fees and contact information.

Happy birthday

Palm Harbor's John Huston turned 50 on Wednesday, which means he is eligible for the Champions Tour. Huston will waste no time playing on it. He is in the field for this week's Principal Charity Classic in Des Moines, Iowa. Huston, who played at Dunedin High and Auburn, turned pro in 1988. He has won seven times on the PGA Tour, the last time in 2003.

Low-maintenance caddie

Steve Hulka filled in as Tampa resident Ryuji Imada's caddie for the final round of the Byron Nelson Championship on Sunday, and it raised the question: If Imada had won, would Hulka have gotten the Cadillac that goes to the winning caddie? Hulka had it figured out ahead of time: "All I wanted was four tires for my truck." It didn't come to that. Imada finished second.

Golf news and notes

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Times staff, wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Jack: Rest up, Tiger

Jack Nicklaus, above left, doesn't want Tiger Woods to break his record of 18 major championships. But he wants him to be healthy enough to try. Nicklaus told him as much Friday when Woods called to say that for the second time in four years, he wouldn't be able to play in Nicklaus' Memorial tournament, which begins today in Dublin, Ohio, because of an injury to his left leg. Woods missed the event in 2008 while recovering from surgery to clean out cartilage damage in his left knee. This time he has a minor knee sprain and an Achilles' problem, a combination that was bad enough to cause him to leave the Players Championship after nine holes May 12. Woods hopes to play the U.S. Open next month. "I don't know the extent of his injuries," Nicklaus said. "I told Tiger when I was on the phone with him — which is the same thing I've said to him a thousand times — 'Tiger, nobody ever wants their records to be broken … but I certainly don't want you not to be healthy and not have the opportunity to play to break records. I want you to get yourself healthy, do what you have to do to go play, get your golf game back in shape, and I wish you well."

Couples: Ditto

When he agreed to be Presidents Cup captain again, Fred Couples jokingly sent Tiger Woods a text message telling him to play his way onto the team so he won't have to be a pick. But given Woods' injuries, it might not be a joke. Couples isn't worried, though. He figures if Woods isn't good enough to make the team in September, or doesn't feel healthy enough to play the matches in Australia in November, he'll let Couples know. "If he's not ready to play, he'll be the one to tell me, 'Don't waste your pick on me,' " Couples said Wednesday. "I don't even know how much he'll play, but he doesn't have to prove a lot to any captain."

Quote of the day

"Most people thought I was a waiter."

Masters winner Charl Schwartzel, who, at the European Tour's request, wore his green jacket to last week's tour awards dinner, which was black tie

This week on tour

PGA: Memorial, Muirfield Village Golf Club, Dublin, Ohio. TV: Today-Friday, 3 p.m., Golf Channel; Saturday-Sunday, 3 p.m., Ch. 10

LPGA: ShopRite Classic, Seaview Dolce Seaview Resort, Galloway, N.J. TV: Saturday, 5 p.m.; Sunday, 4:30 p.m., Golf Channel

Champions: Principal Charity Classic, Glen Oaks CC, West Des Moines, Iowa. TV: Friday, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 7:30 p.m., Golf Channel

PGA Europe: Wales Open, Celtic Manor Resort, Newport, Wales. TV: Today-Friday, 9:30 a.m; Saturday-Sunday, 9 a.m., Golf Channel

Nationwide: Melwood Prince George's County Open, U of Maryland GC, College Park, Md. TV: Today-Friday, 12:30 p.m.; Saturday, 2:30 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m., Golf Channel

Times staff, wires

Royals 2, Angels 0

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Times wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Royals 2, Angels 0

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Billy Butler hit a two-run homer in the ninth for the Royals. Jeff Francoeur singled with one out off Scott Downs, then Butler hit a blast behind the outfield padding in left-center that bounced into play. The umpires ruled it a double before video review showed it to be a homer. Felipe Paulino, in his first start after 19 relief outings, pitched five innings and has gone 91/3 shutout innings since being acquired last week from the Rockies.

Tampa Bay Rays: Evan Longoria Rays' leading All-Star vote-getter; Rays plan three dress-up themes for long road trip

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By Rick Stroud, Times Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Rays at Mariners

When/where: 10:10 tonight, Safeco Field, Seattle

TV/radio: Sun Sports; 620-AM, 680-AM (Spanish)

Starting pitchers

Rays: RH James Shields (5-3, 2.15)

Mariners: RH Felix Hernandez (5-4, 3.19)

Watch for ...

Shields stingy: Shields has nine straight quality starts, and his nine-start streak of seven or more innings is the majors' longest this season. He has a career 3-3 mark vs. Seattle, and his 2.80 ERA against the Mariners is his lowest against any AL team.

King Felix: The Rays can only hope Hernandez, the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner, is gassed after throwing a career high-tying 128-pitches in seven innings Saturday against the Yankees in a game the Mariners won in the 12th. Hernandez has been tough on the Rays with a lifetime 2-1 record and 2.42 ERA.

Key matchups:

Mariners vs. Shields

Chone Figgins 10-for-27

Adam Kennedy 3-for-14

Ichiro Suzuki 11-for-30, HR

Rays vs. Hernandez

Johnny Damon 9-for-16, HR

Evan Longoria 3-for-8

Ben Zobrist 2-for-12

On deck

Friday: vs. Mariners, 10:10, Sun Sports. Rays — Andy Sonnanstine (0-1, 4.39); Mariners — Jason Vargas (3-3, 4.50)

Saturday: vs. Mariners, 4:10, no TV. Rays — Jeremy Hellickson (6-3, 2.80); Mariners — Doug Fister (2-5, 3.18)

Sunday: vs. Mariners, 4:10, Sun Sports. Rays — Wade Davis (4-5, 4.52); Mariners — Erik Bedard (3-4, 3.48)

Rick Stroud, Times staff writer

All-Star update of the day

Despite missing 26 games and batting .240, 3B Evan Longoria leads all Rays in American League All-Star voting, though he's third at his position behind the Yankees' Alex Rodriguez (945,127) and the Rangers' Adrian Beltre (755,551). Matt Joyce, second in the AL with a .361 average, is not among the top 15 vote getters in the outfield. In fact, he trails teammates Sam Fuld (13th, 310,520) and B.J. Upton (15th, 277,173).

Wardrobe change of the day

The Rays embark on a four-city, 11-game, 12-day road trip totalling 7,208 miles. It also will feature three different themes. The Rays wore grunge attire, left, for their trip to Seattle and will wear Beach Boys beach attire to Los Angeles and pajamas for the late night flight to Baltimore.

Xxxxxxx

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Orioles 2, Mariners 1

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Times wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Orioles 2, Mariners 1

SEATTLE — Adam Jones had three hits against his former team, including the go-ahead homer into the upper deck in the eighth, leading the Orioles. Baltimore left-hander Brian Matusz pitched 52/3 solid innings after coming off the disabled list to make his season debut. In the fourth, Miguel Olivo hit a drive deep to center and Jones made an over-the-shoulder basket catch in front of the wall. Kevin Gregg pitched the ninth inning to earn his ninth save.

Tampa Bay Rays up next: at Seattle Mariners

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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

>>up next

at Mariners

Today-Sunday

What's new: The Mariners (28-27) have used their solid starting pitching, anchored by American League Cy Young Award winner Felix Hernandez, to pull within 11/2 games of the Texas Rangers in the AL West. Seattle fell 2-1 to the Orioles on Wednesday at Safeco Field but have nonetheless won 11 of 14 and 12 of 16. Outfielder Ichiro Suzuki is batting .276, an off year so far by his standards. Former St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Brendan Ryan has added punch to the top of their lineup.

Key stat: 3B Chone Figgins, a Tampa native, is batting .190 with 12 RBIs and was benched for Wednesday's game against the Orioles.

Local connections: Figgins is a former Brandon High star. Rays 1B Casey Kotchman played for the Mariners last season, then became a free agent and signed with Tampa Bay.

Series history: The Mariners lead all-time 65-50, but the Rays went 7-2 against Seattle in 2010.

Rick Stroud, Times staff writer

Cards lose top pitcher, outfielder to injuries

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Times wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

ST. LOUIS — The Cardinals placed one of the NL's top winners on the disabled list and expect one of the league's best hitters to go on the DL, too.

RHP Kyle McClellan, who is 6-2 with a 3.86 ERA in his first season in the rotation, strained a hip flexor muscle in the first inning Monday when he landed awkwardly.

"You think maybe it's just a one-time thing," McClellan, 24, said. "By the time I realized it wasn't I was already in some hot water."

The Cardinals recalled RHP Lance Lynn from Triple-A Memphis to start tonight against the Giants, giving the rest of the rotation an extra day of rest.

LF Matt Holliday returned from a six-game absence with a left quadriceps injury Monday but was a lineup scratch Tuesday, striking out as a pinch-hitter. He's batting an NL-high .342 and is third in the league with a .433 on-base percentage and fifth with a .542 slugging percentage.

"Frankly it looks like it's getting better, but it's still something he feels," general manager John Mozeliak said. "It's just not going away."

Ex-Ray Aybar arrested

SEATTLE — Willy Aybar, who spent the past three seasons with the Rays, was arrested Sunday and accused of assaulting his wife at a hotel, KIRO-TV in Seattle reported.

The King County Sheriff's Office said detectives arrested Aybar at about 2 a.m. at the SeaTac Hilton. Aybar was found "extremely intoxicated" at the front entrance.

Police went to Aybar's room, where his wife was crying and holding a bloody towel to her face and had a cut lip and an abrasion on her forehead and cheek, police documents said.

STADIUM BEATING: The man accused in the vicious attack on a Giants fan at Dodger Stadium may be a suspect in a Nevada shooting, the Associated Press reported. Henderson police are looking at Giovanni Ramirez, 31, who authorities believe was the instigator in the March 31 beating of Bryan Stow, as a possible suspect in a January attempted murder outside Las Vegas, according to AP. Henderson police spokesman Keith Paul said there were no open warrants or charges filed against Ramirez in the city.

ANGELS: RHP Dan Haren cut short a bullpen throwing session after feeling lower back discomfort. Haren was scheduled to start Saturday, but manager Mike Scioscia said he's not sure that will happen.

CUBS: Former Rays RHP Matt Garza, on the disabled list with a right elbow contusion, won't be activated Friday when eligible and instead will throw bullpen sessions today and Saturday. … OF Marlon Byrd said he expects to return in four to six weeks from facial injuries suffered when he was beaned by Red Sox LHP Alfredo Aceves on May 21. … 3B Aramis Ramirez left the game in the seventh after getting hit in the face by a ground ball that took a bad hop.

ORIOLES: Utility man Jake Fox was designated for assignment when LHP Brian Matusz was activated off the 15-day disabled list to make his season debut.

PADRES: CF Cameron Maybin went on the 15-day disabled list with patellar tendinitis in his right knee. OF Aaron Cunningham was called up from Triple-A Tucson.

RED SOX: A disappointing bullpen took a hit when LHP Rich Hill left with a left forearm injury after facing one White Sox batter in the seventh inning. Hill had pitched eight scoreless innings for a bullpen that went into the game with a 4.28 ERA, 10th in the AL.

TIGERS: RF Magglio Ordonez, on the disabled list since May 11 with weakness in his surgically repaired right ankle, is scheduled to join Triple-A Toledo Friday for a rehabilitation assignment.

TWINS: C Joe Mauer, out since April 14 with leg weakness and an injured right shoulder, is scheduled to catch three innings today at an extended spring training game in Fort Myers.


Miami Heat's three stars don't mind boos, say no one can win NBA title alone

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By Stephen F. Holder, Times Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

NBA Finals

Heat 1, Mavericks 0

Game 1: Heat 92, Mavericks 84

Tonight: at Miami, 9, Ch. 28

Sunday: at Dallas, 8, Ch. 28

Tuesday: at Dallas, 9, Ch. 28

June 9: at Dallas, 9, Ch. 28 *

June 12: at Miami, 8, Ch. 28 *

June 14: at Miami, 9, Ch. 28 *

* If necessary

MIAMI — They have been jeered, ridiculed and openly hated because they chased the dream of every elite athlete.

But LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, the superstar trio that joined forces last summer on the Heat's roster in hopes of winning it all, aren't all that dissimilar from some great teams of the past.

Magic Johnson teamed with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, James Worthy and a host of others to build a dynasty with the Lakers. Larry Bird was part of, arguably, the game's greatest frontcourt, playing alongside Hall-of-Famers Kevin McHale and Robert Parish.

Six-time champion Michael Jordan needed the help of Scottie Pippen, one of the greatest swingmen in history, to revolutionize the game.

"Nobody in history has done it alone," said Bosh, his team leading the Mavericks 1-0 heading into tonight's Game 2 of the NBA Finals.

Why, then, has the Heat's collection of stars been booed mercilessly in arenas across the NBA? Much of it stems from "The Decision," the hyped-filled ESPN production during which James announced his move from Cleveland to Miami. But some presumably stems from the perception that none of the three could win consistently on his own and took the easy way out.

For that, the Heat's stars are unapologetic.

"You kind of look at past champions' rosters and you say, 'Man, they were stacked. They had a great team,' " said Bosh, who headed south from Toronto. "And when we got together, we pretty much felt like it was going to work because we think we're great players and we're coming together as a team. We're the best players, we feel, at our positions."

James accepts much of the blame for the scrutiny. His decision to leave his home state of Ohio, where he starred for the Cavaliers for seven seasons, was seen by many as the ultimate betrayal. As for James, he's over it.

"We've got a lot of flack this year mostly because of myself," James said. "And we've tried to use that as motivation every day we get on the basketball court."

Veteran Heat forward Juwan Howard sympathizes with his younger teammate and calls the treatment unfair. He added that despite the perception that James' decision was selfish, his oncourt demeanor is anything but.

"It just so happened he made a business decision to test the free-agent market and he signed elsewhere," Howard said. "When that day comes and everybody moves on, I might drink a glass of champagne to cheer, because I feel bad for the guy. He's a great teammate, a great person and he just wants to win, just like all of us.

"His game is not selfish at all. The numbers don't lie."

Still, some will continue to maintain James and company sold out. Former Heat forward and current ESPN analyst Bruce Bowen acknowledged James faced a difficult situation in Cleveland but said he greatly affected his legacy by leaving.

"He had to be perfect (in Cleveland)," Bowen said. "Every shot that he takes here is not (determining) them winning or losing. Now he has help."

Then, Bowen said, "But Magic went to the Lakers and stayed with the Lakers. That's the difference. (James) has to get more than three championships, I think, for (the decision) to be okay."

NOWITZKI OKAY: Mavs star forward Dirk Nowitzki wore a splint to protect the torn tendon at the tip of his left middle finger and said he will play tonight.

Tampa Bay Rays trying to keep mood light on challenging road trip

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By Rick Stroud, Times Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

ST. PETERSBURG — The Rays hit the road Wednesday hoping it doesn't swing back.

After their 3-0 loss to the Rangers, Rays players and coaches pulled on their themed grunge clothing for a long flight to Seattle, the beginning of a four-city, 11-game, 12-day road trip that could go a long way to deciding their place in the AL East.

The Rays begin a four-game series tonight in Seattle before playing three against the Angels in Anaheim, flying cross-country to Baltimore June 9 for a three-game series starting the next day and finishing with a makeup game in Detroit June 13.

"We're starting off with the grunge theme on the road. We've got to keep it light," manager Joe Maddon said. "When you're playing like this all over the place, a trip to the West Coast, the time zone factors, it does smack you after a couple days. So I think a big part of being successful is to keep it loose and make sure we keep an eye on everybody and rest guys appropriately and not grind people into the dirt on a road trip like this."

It may actually do the Rays some good to get on the road, considering they are only 14-16 at Tropicana Field this season.

"What would even be better I think is if it were Seattle, Oakland, Anaheim and then came home," Maddon said. "Once you get used to that time zone, just stay out there … all that bumping around takes its toll. The good side is we've been playing a lot better on the road the last couple years. Being a better road team, it may not bother us as much as it has in the past."

DON'T CALL HIM CLOSER: Kyle Farnsworth (2-0, 1.50) has recorded all 10 of the Rays' saves this season and is clearly comfortable in his closer role.

But that doesn't mean Maddon is willing to give him that title.

"No, because it's working really well right now," Maddon said. "It's all semantics anyway. Let's just leave it alone."

Farnsworth's command has been impressive. In 18 innings, he has walked only one while striking out nine.

"It's always fun to go out there and pitch in those situations," he said. "I enjoy the competition, so it is great to see what you can do and have fun with it."

In 12 previous seasons, Farns­worth's highest save total came in 2005 when he combined for 16 with Detroit and Atlanta. Why has he been so effective for the Rays this season?

"It's been a combination of location, velocity on his fastball, break on the cutter and then putting it where he wants to," Maddon said. "Using him the way we have and not abusing it, I think he's going to have a pretty good year."

KOTCH CLOSE: 1B Casey Kotchman, who has not played since spraining his right ankle Sunday against Cleveland, is improving and could return to the lineup Saturday against the Mariners, according to Maddon.

"We're missing Kotch," Maddon said. "That's a big part of our lineup, too. He would've presented our lineup different today by just being available. But not being available, we had to do different things.

"I don't have a specific date that he's going to be back doing normal stuff. But he's doing better."

MISCELLANY: The Rangers swiped four bases in the eighth inning Wednesday, one shy of the club record set in a 7-6 loss to Boston on April 20. … LHP David Price will pitch Monday in the first game against the Angels in Anaheim. … RHP Jeff Niemann is scheduled to make a rehab start Friday at Class A Port Charlotte and could rejoin the team in two weeks after two other rehab assignments. … DH Johnny Damon went 1-for-4 with a single in his last at-bat Wednesday to extend his streak of reaching base safely to 27 games. … The Rays will hold a predraft workout for invited prospects at the Trop today.

Gary Shelton: Upcoming road trip may show which path Tampa Bay Rays will take for season

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By Gary Shelton, Times Sports Columnist


Wednesday, June 1, 2011

ST. PETERSBURG — There has been no crash, no free fall, no mushroom cloud in the distance. Instead, it is as if the success has simply stopped. Quietly. Almost unnoticed.

Suddenly, the Tampa Bay Rays are sliding back down the mountain.

The Rays lost again Wednesday afternoon, losing a 3-0 decision to the Texas Rangers. They could not score. They could not hit. For crying out loud, they could not catch.

Again.

In baseball, there are slumps that are ugly, and slumps that are messy, and slumps where it looks as if a team will never win again. This is not one of those. This is more like failure has snuck up on the Rays. They are in the middle of a stealth slump, and their momentum is eroding.

Consider:

• The Rays have now lost 11 of their last 17 games, the worst record in the American League East over that span. Of the 14 AL teams, only Minnesota and Kansas City have fared worse.

• Since May 13, when the Rays had a two-game lead in the division, the Yankees have gone 11-6 and the Red Sox 10-8.

• The bats have disappeared again. In nine of those 11 losses, the Rays have scored three runs or fewer.

• The Rays continue to struggle behind the plate. For goodness sakes, the Rangers stole four bases on four pitches Wednesday. Lately, there have been so many passed balls that there are dents on the backstop.

And now, as they face an 11-game road trip, we will find out a little more about these Rays. Are they as resilient as they seemed when they made you forget about their 1-8 start? Are they legitimate contenders in the AL East race? And, given the grunge rags they were wearing as they left the ballpark Wednesday, how tattered might they look upon their return on June 14?

"I'm not happy with it," Rays manager Joe Maddon said of the recent struggles. "We need to do better.

"If you look at it, I think our pitching has been consistent. We've made a few errors lately, but I think we've played pretty good on defense. I just think our offense needs to be more consistent."

For the Rays, that's a familiar problem. As a franchise, the Rays have done a fine job developing their rotation (all five of their regular starters were drafted and developed by the Rays). And the Rays seem to have a eye for bargain shopping when it comes to the bullpen. But it's always a hard thing for a low-budget team to import a middle-of-the-order thumper. And when the Rays hitters struggle, winning becomes a little harder to obtain.

"It's frustrating," outfielder Matt Joyce said, "but it's a long season. You're going to have some ups and downs. You're going to struggle from time to time."

Ah, but how about from place to place? More than anything else, the Rays' recent skid makes their upcoming road trip seem even more important. They need to at least tread water in order to hang with the Yankees and Red Sox.

"If you can go 6-5, you would be really happy," Maddon said. "If you can come back plus .500 on a trip like this, it would be awesome. Then again, we have played well on the road (15-10), so it's possible. To stay in step with everybody else, you want to go 5-6 at the worst."

Yeah? How does 8-3 sound?

Maddon grins.

"If that were to happen," he said, "it would be time to break out the cabernet sauvignon."

Wine or whine, this is a key point of the season. True, the first two months have been a delightful stroll through overachievement, but now is when we start to get our first clues as to the durability of this team. Is this a harmless little backslide, the kind that even the good teams have? Or are these the early signs of a season starting to impose its will on a team that lost so much from a season ago?

"I know we played well there for a while," infielder Sean Rodriguez said, "but I don't think we've played our best yet."

In other words, no, it isn't too much to expect the Rays to hang around in the AL East race.

"Absolutely," Maddon said. "I really expect (the standings) to look like this for a long time."

In the days to come, as they crisscross the country, we will find out much about the Rays' staying power.

In the meantime, let's start with a simple question: Did anyone remember to pack the bats?

Tampa Bay Lightning's elimination is good news for Tampa Bay Storm

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By Brandon Wright, Times Correspondent
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

TAMPA — Now that the Lightning has been eliminated from the playoffs, carpet has replaced ice as the Storm got its first full week of practice inside the St. Pete Times Forum.

Tampa Bay previously practiced on a makeshift field at Tampa's Larry Sanders Progress Village Sports Complex. It had no nets or Arena League regulation goalposts.

"Any time you're able to practice on the same field where you play, it's an advantage," coach Dave Ewart said. "If you look at it like hockey, you can throw two nets up on Lake Michigan but it's not the same."

Ewart said all phases of practice will improve with the move indoors.

"The whole system will run better, and we'll have cleaner practices," he said.

"From the netting to spacing to the field markings, it will help."

Lighting it up: Georgia (6-5) enters Saturday's division game against the Storm (4-6) with a prolific passing attack.

QB Brett Elliot's 292.1 yards per game are sixth in the league and his 67 touchdowns third. Maurice Purify tops the league with 31 touchdowns and is seventh with 90 catches. And Larry Shipp needs just 75 yards to join Purify and CJ Johnson as the league's only three teammates with 1,000.

Transactions: The Storm signed OL George Bussey and activated DB Terrance Washington from the Refuse to Report list this week. Bussey, who was with Tampa Bay during training camp, will likely play right tackle with Jorge Guerra sliding over to left tackle.

Tampa Bay is without starting tackles Manny Akah and Tom Kaleita because of knee injuries.

Ballhawking secondary: The defensive front, which is tied for second in the league with 22 sacks, gets most of the ink. But the Storm's secondary has been instrumental in creating turnovers of late.

DB Michael Hawthorne has an interception in each of the past three games, and DB Deonte Bolden has caused or recovered a fumble in four of the past five.

Tampa Bay also has allowed a league-low 240.4 passing yards per game.

Edwards back? The Storm has not decided on activating WR Hank Edwards, who has been on injured reserve since May 6 with a broken bone in his hand, in time for Saturday's game.

Edwards, the Storm's leading receiver last season, was scheduled to visit with doctors Wednesday night and will try to play catch today in hopes of being in the lineup.

Tigers 4, Twins 2

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Times wires
Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Tigers 4, Twins 2

DETROIT — Miguel Cabrera hit a three-run homer in the third and Rick Porcello pitched into the seventh for the Tigers, who swept the three-game series and won their fourth straight. The Twins have lost 10 of 12 to fall to a majors-worst 17-37. Drew Butera hit a two-run homer in the seventh to pull Minnesota within two, but Al Alburquerque struck out Trevor Plouffe with the bases loaded to end the inning.

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