D6 ROUND OF 16
Uruguay 2 South Korea June 26
Ghana 2 United States June 26
1 1
Netherlands 2 Slovakia 1 June 28
Brazil 3 Chile 0 June 28
QUARTERFINALS Uruguay
Friday, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN) Ghana
Tuesday, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN)
Netherlands Brazil
Friday, 10 a.m. (ESPN) THIRD PLACE July 10, 2:30 p.m. (ABC) July 11, 2:30 p.m. (ABC)
S
KLMNO SOCCER
SEMIFINALS FINAL SEMIFINALS QUARTERFINALS Saturday, 10 a.m. (ABC)
Argentina Germany
Wednesday, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN) Saturday, 2:30 p.m. (ABC)
Paraguay Spain
Paraguay Japan June 29
(5) 0 (3) 0
Spain 1 Portugal 0 June 29
Call for World Cup replay growing louder world cup from D1
play. They should have the guts to do it right now.” McEnroe, who is following the
World Cup from Wimbledon, where he’s serving as a commen- tator for NBC Sports, has no ex- pertise in soccer and presumably even less standing with FIFA President Sepp Blatter. But as a former world-class athlete inti- mately familiar with bad calls, he was eager to add his voice to those arguing that the World Cup is far too important to continue turning a blind eye to technology — particularly goal line technol- ogy that can easily right referees’ wrongs. There are signs Blatter is lis-
tening.
With discontent building among players, fans and even ref- erees, Blatter conceded earlier this week that “it would be non- sense” for FIFA not to reconsider its refusal to employ technology as a tool of officiating. That dis- cussion could come as early as next month, when FIFA officials meet in Wales. That’s a dramatic turnabout for a man who just months ago rejected technology as disrupting and dehumanizing to a beautiful, if imperfect, game. Blatter also revealed that he had apologized to England for the error that led to the disal- lowed goal. He extended a simi- lar apology to Mexico for a goal that was improperly awarded to Argentina when the referee failed to note that Carlos Tevez was offside. Neither referee will receive another assignment dur- ing this World Cup, FIFA con-
CHRISTIAN CHARISIUS/REUTERS
England’s Wayne Rooney states his case after an apparent goal against Germany was unrecognized. firmed.
“I deplore the obvious refer- eeing mistakes we have seen,” Blatter told reporters Tuesday. “Still, it’s not the end of the com- petition, it’s not the end of foot- ball. With the denial of the use of technology, we have to accept mistakes.” Tennis, however, made a differ- ent choice in recent years, in- troducing instant replay at three of its four majors (Wimbledon and the Australian and U.S. Opens). By all accounts, the sport is better off for it. There were skeptics, to be sure, in a sport every bit as tradition-
SCOREBOARD TENNIS Wimbledon
At The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club Purse: $20.3 mil. (G.S.); Surface: Grass-Outdoor
Men’s singles quarterfinals
1st Serve Percentage ........................58 Aces.......................................................12 Double Faults ........................................6 Unforced Errors ..................................23 1st Serve Winning Pct. ......................82 2nd Serve Winning Pct. .....................44 Winners (including service).............51 Break Points ...................................... 4-6 Net Points....................................... 20-30 Total Points Won..............................127
Time of Match..................................2:35 Rafael Nadal (2) def.
Tomas Berdych (12) def. Roger Federer (1) 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 Berdych Federer 68 14 1
18 70 49 44
1-8
25-38 118
1st Serve Percentage ........................67 Aces.......................................................12 Double Faults ........................................3 Unforced Errors ..................................12 1st Serve Winning Pct. ......................69 2nd Serve Winning Pct. .....................61 Winners (including service).............31 Break Points ...................................... 5-9 Net Points......................................... 8-10 Total Points Won..............................121
Robin Soderling (6) 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (7-4), 6-1 Nadal Soderling 60 17 6
35 82 38 42
3-7
19-25 109
Yen-hsun Lu 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 Djokovic
1st Serve Percentage............. .............63 Aces........................................... ...............4 Double Faults........................... ...............3 Unforced Errors ...................... .............17 1st Serve Winning Pct. .......... .............85 2nd Serve Winning Pct. ......... .............75 Winners (including service). .............29 Break Points............................. ......... 5-15 Net Points................................. .......12-13 Total Points Won .................... .............94
1st Serve Percentage.............. ..........55 Aces ............................................ ..........14 Double Faults............................ ............2 Unforced Errors........................ ..........14 1st Serve Winning Pct............. ..........83 2nd Serve Winning Pct. .......... ..........63 Winners (including service).. ..........46 Break Points.............................. ...... 5-16 Net Points.................................. ....19-22 Total Points Won...................... ........145
Men’s doubles — Quarterfinals
Wesley Moodie, S.Afr./Dick Norman (7), Bel- gium, def. Bob and Mike Bryan (2), US, 7-6 (7-4), 7-6 (7-5), 6-7 (7-3), 7-5; Jurgen Melzer, Austria/ Philipp Petzschner, Ger., def. Rohan Bopanna, In- dia/Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, Pak., 6-4, 7-6 (7-3), 6-2. Women’s doubles — Quarterfinals Elena Vesnina and Vera Zvonareva, Rus., def. Serena and Venus Williams (1), US, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4; Vania King, US/Yaroslava Shvedova, Kaz., def. Kveta Peschke, Cz.Rep./Katarina Srebotnik (6), Slovenia, 3-6, 7-5, 6-3; Gisela Dulko, Arg./Flavia Pennetta (4), Ita., def. Julia Goerges, Ger./Agnes Szavay, Hungary, 6-2, 6-2; Liezel Huber and Beth- anie Mattek-Sands (5), US, def. Lisa Raymond, US/Rennae Stubbs (7), Australia, 6-4, 6-3.
LOCAL GOLF Senior League of No. Va.
Belmont/Piedmont 5, Dominion Valley 4 Hidden Creek 5, Army Navy 4 International 4 1 River Bend 5 1
⁄2 ⁄2 , Loudoun 3 1
, Evergreen 4 1 ⁄2
⁄2
Army Navy/Arlington — Fred Dunning and Peter Junghans won the senior two-man scramble with net 62.
Congressional — In the WGA member-guest, Cor- rie Tayman, Debbie Lintelman, Maggie Brady and Arline Hoffman won first gross. Shrdia Noonan, Sue Hawthorn, Mary M. Smith and Karen Day won first net. Jefferson Park — Rick Wehrheim won the senior nine-hole event with gross 34. Mt. Vernon - Cindy Langan won the LGA-9 ladies’ day with 30. South River — Gary Pierce and Kevin Wilson won the member-guest. Carol Wilson won the ladies’ nine-hole league event. In the five of clubs event, Tracy Parkerson won first gross. Shelly Ford won first net. Tantallon — In the senior firecracker 18 tourna- ment, Chuck Winwood won low gross with 70. Yo- ri Okuda won low net with 65. Turf Valley — Denny McCarthy won the Maryland state junior championship with 132.
Novak Djokovic (3) def.
Lu 62 4 2
16 65 33 13
0-0
5-16 58
Andy Murray (4) def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
(10) 6-7 (7-5), 7-6 (7-5), 6-2, 6-2 Murray Tsonga
65 14 8
37 66 51 57
1-6
44-80 120
TRANSACTIONS Major League Baseball
Detroit Tigers—Agreed to terms with RHP Patrick Cooper, RHP Jordan Pratt and RHP Jeff Barfield. Seattle Mariners—Sent C Eliezer Alfonzo to Taco- ma (PCL). Texas Rangers—Recalled RHP Omar Beltre from Oklahoma City (PCL). Arizona Diamondbacks—Selected the contract of RHP Barry Enright from Mobile (SL). Optioned RHP Carlos Rosa to Reno (PCL). Cincinnati Reds—Optioned LHP Daniel Ray Herre- ra to Louisville (IL). Houston Astros—Agreed to terms with RHP Jason Chowning and RHP Paul Gerrish. New York Mets—Agreed to terms with C Blake Forsythe and assigned him to the Mets (GCL).
NBA
Chicago Bulls—Waived F Rob Kurz and F Chris Richard.
Phoenix Suns—Announced C Amare Stoudemire has opted out of the final year of his contract.
NFL
Detroit Lions—Agreed to terms with CB Amari Spievey.
NHL
Anaheim Ducks—Bought out the contract of D Na- than Oystrick. Atlanta Thrashers—Re-signed D Noah Welch. Carolina Hurricanes—Announced the retirement of C Rod Brind’Amour. Columbus Blue Jackets—Claimed LW Ethan Mo- reau off waivers from Edmonton. Dallas Stars—Re-signed F Krys Barch and RW Francis Wathier to two-year contract extensions. Edmonton Oilers—Traded F Patrick O’Sullivan to Phoenix for D Jim Vandermeer. Minnesota Wild—Re-signed LW Matt Kassian to a two-year contract and D Nate Prosser to a one- year contract. New Jersey Devils—Re-signed RW David Clarkson to a multiyear contract. Philadelphia Flyers—Re-signed G Michael Leigh- ton to a two-year contract extension. Phoenix Coyotes—Named Mike Nealy chief oper- ating officer. Tampa Bay Lightning—Bought out the contract of LW Todd Fedoruk.
Colleges
Illinois State—Announced senior men’s basket- ball G Bobby Hill has been dismissed from the uni- versity after pleading guilty to criminal sexual abuse.
Marquette—Announced soph. men’s basketball F Jamil Wilson is transferring from Oregon.
RESULTS
SUMMER BASEABLL American Legion
Clinton Post 259 5, Calvert 1 Cal Ripken
Silver Spring-Takoma T-bolts 4, Alexandria Aces 2 S. Maryland Nationals 3, Baltimore Redbirds 2 Youse’s Orioles 7-8, Rockville Express 1-2 Bethesda Big Train 7-6, Herndon Braves 3-8 SUMMER BASKETBALL Kids First
T.C. Williams 64, Washington Latin 22 Kids First 60, Anacostia 46 Ideal 55, Blake 46
Spingarn 37, Don Bosco 35 Boys
Montgomery County Rec Cougars 50, Hornets 49
Hebrew Academy 51, St. Andrew’s 23 Fairmont Heights
Suitland 79, Forestville 36 Fairmont 35, Oxon Hill 25 DuVal 53, Spingarn 44 Eastern 54, Wise 50
Girls Montgomery County Rec
Glenelg 55, Magruder 21 Holy Cross 50, Wootton 33
Bethesda-Chevy Chase 40, Holton-Arms 25 Stone Ridge 38, Rockville 28 Bulldogs 30, Richard Montgomery 24 Good Counsel 45, Visitation 37 Poolesville 39, Clarksburg 29 Urbana 53, Vikings 34 Lady Jags 51, Damascus 37
BASKETBALL WNBA
Eastern Conference Team W L Pct GB
Atlanta ................................. 12 4 .750 — Connecticut ........................ 10 5 .667 1A Washington ......................... 10 5 .667 1A Indiana ................................. 9 6 .600 2A New York ............................. 7 7 .500 4 Chicago ................................ 6 9 .400 5A
Western Conference Team W L Pct GB
Seattle .................................. 14 2 .875 — San Antonio ......................... 5 8 .385 7A Minnesota ........................... 5 10 .333 8A Phoenix ................................ 5 10 .333 8A Los Angeles ......................... 3 11 .214 10 Tulsa ..................................... 3 12 .200 10A
Thursday’s games
Washington at Phoenix .......................................... 10 Minnesota at Atlanta ................................................ 7 Connecticut at Chicago ............................................ 8 San Antonio at Los Angeles ............................. 10:30
Tuesday’s late result Mystics 68, Fever 65
INDIANA (65) Catchings 5-8 6-8 17, Hoffman 2-7 0-0 4, Sutton-Brown 3-7 0-0 6, Douglas 5-8 1-2 13, Bevilaqua 1-4 0-0 2, Moore 0-4 0-0 0, January 2-5 3-4 9, Davenport 3-5 2-2 8, Morris 0-2 0-0 0, Zellous 2-4 2-2 6. Totals 23-54 14-18 65. WASHINGTON (68) Currie 1-5 1-1 3, Langhorne 7-9 0-0 14, Sanford 3-6 1-1 7, Smith 5-11 6-8 21, Har- ding 2-11 3-3 7, Ajavon 2-8 3-4 7, Coleman 3-5 1-1 7, Melvin 1-3 0-2 2. Totals 24-58 15-20 68.
Indiana ................................... 14 18 15 18 — 65 Washington ........................... 13 20 17 18 — 68
Three-point goals: Indiana 5-11 (Douglas 2-2, Jan- uary 2-3, Catchings 1-2, Morris 0-1, Hoffman 0-1, Bevilaqua 0-2), Washington 5-12 (Smith 5-7, Har- ding 0-1, Coleman 0-1, Langhorne 0-1, Currie 0-2). Fouled out: None. Rebounds: Indiana 27 (Catch- ings, Douglas, Hoffman 4), Washington 47 (Lang- horne 10). Assists: Indiana 14 (Douglas 5), Wash- ington 15 (Harding, Ajavon, Sanford 4). Total fouls: Indiana 25, Washington 16. A: 8,464 (10,100).
SOCCER
U.S. Open Cup Third round
Wednesday’s results
D.C. United 2...............................Richmond Kickers 0 Seattle Sounders at Portland Timbers .............Late Tuesday results
Chicago0 .....Charleston 0 (Charleston 3-0 on PKs) Chivas USA 1.........................................Austin Aztex 0 Columbus Crew 2 .......................Rochester Rhinos 1 Harrisburg City Islanders 1......NY Red Bulls 0 (OT) Houston Dynamo 1....................................Miami FC 0 Los Angeles Galaxy 2 ...........................AC St. Louis 0
MLS Eastern W L T Pts GF GA
Columbus ................... 7 2 3 24 18 11 New York .................... 8 5 0 24 17 16 Toronto FC .................. 5 4 3 18 15 14 Chicago ....................... 4 3 5 17 17 16 Kansas City ................ 3 6 3 12 11 16 New England .............. 3 8 2 11 13 21 Philadelphia ............... 3 7 1 10 14 22 D.C. United .................. 3 9 1 10 10 24
Western W L T Pts GF GA
Los Angeles ................ 10 1 3 33 22 4 Real Salt Lake ............ 7 3 3 24 22 11 Colorado ..................... 6 3 3 21 15 11 Dallas ........................... 4 2 6 18 15 12 San Jose ...................... 5 4 3 18 15 14 Houston ....................... 5 7 2 17 20 21 Seattle ......................... 4 7 3 15 15 20 Chivas USA ................. 3 9 1 10 14 20
Thursday’s game
Houston at Toronto FC .............................................. 7 Friday’s game
New England at Real Salt Lake ............................. 10 Saturday’s games
D.C. United at San Jose ........................................... 10 Chicago at Columbus ................................................ 8 Kansas City at Dallas ........................................... 8:30 Philadelphia at Chivas USA .............................. 10:30
Women’s Professional Soccer W L T Pts GF GA
FC Gold Pride ................ 7 3 1 22 15 10 Philadelphia.................. 6 3 3 21 20 15 Sky Blue FC.................... 5 4 2 17 12 13 Washington................... 4 3 3 15 17 14 Chicago .......................... 3 5 3 12 8 10 Boston ............................ 1 5 4 7 7 12 Atlanta............................ 1 5 3 6 5 11
Wednesday’s result WPS All Star Game
Marta’s XI at Abby’s XI .........................................Late Saturday’s game
FC Gold Pride at Atlanta ........................................... 7 Sunday’s games
Chicago at Washington ............................................ 6 Boston at Philadelphia .............................................. 4
World Cup Golden Boot Leaders
David Villa, Spain ....................................................... 4 Gonzalo Higuain, Argentina .................................... 4 Robert Vittek, Slovakia ............................................. 4 Landon Donovan, United States ............................. 3 Thomas Mueller, Germany ...................................... 3 Luis Suarez, Uruguay ................................................ 3 Luis Fabiano, Brazil ................................................... 3 Asamoah Gyan, Ghana ............................................. 3
laden as soccer — if not more so. Players fretted that the so- called Hawk-Eye technology on which replay was based wouldn’t be sufficiently accurate, recalls Pacific-10 Commissioner Larry Scott, who was chief executive of the Women’s Tennis Association at the time.
Others objected on principle, fearing that technology would make the game too robotic. “Tennis is a traditional sport
that has often been slow to evolve,” Scott said. “But at the end of the day, the sport’s power- brokers agreed that there was simply too much at stake. If the
technology exists that can abso- lutely tell you whether a shot was in or out, we felt a responsibility to utilize it.”
And in the case of tennis,
Hawk-Eye has become some- thing of a fan favorite, with spec- tators cheering and groaning, de- pending on their loyalty, as the giant replay board displays an electronically generated image of the ball’s path. “It was a win-win all around —
certainly for the athletes and for fairness and for integrity,” Scott said.
What FIFA is likely to consider is far more limited than the re-
play that’s employed on the fea- ture courts at Wimbledon and other majors, where players may challenge all line calls. Only goal line technology will be considered, Blatter indicated —not the broader use of video re- play to verify whether onside calls were correct (as in the Mexi- co-Argentina match) or whether fouls were properly assessed (as in the United States’ 2-2 draw against Slovenia, in which a po- tential game-winning goal by Maurice Edu was disallowed over a foul that was never explained). In the view of former U.S. na- tional team member Alexi Lalas, that’s precisely where FIFA should draw the line. “I’m 100 percent for goal line technology — but that’s it,” said Lalas, who is in South Africa as a commentator for ESPN. In fact, Lalas believes that goal line technology should have been introduced in the World Cup years ago, given the tournament’s significance. But he objects to ex- tending technology further, argu- ing that missed calls and contro- versy are the nature of soccer. Lalas even goes as far as argu- ing that the Americans oddly benefited from the suspect foul that stripped them of a third goal against Slovenia, with legions of supporters rallying behind U.S. Coach Bob Bradley’s squad over the perceived injustice. “There is that element I like about soccer,” Lalas says. “It is subjective to a certain extent. Just because it may offend our American sports sensibility doesn’t make it wrong or mean that it needs to be changed.”
clarkel@washpost.com
GOLF
Event’s short-term future is clear, then come questions
golf from D1
cided it needed two years off so it could first rebuild its greens and then host the 2011 U.S. Open. Tournament organizers, however, have tried to indicate their affinity for Washington even as the event moved away. Last month, Woods’s foundation announced the locations of cam- puses in the District for the Ti- ger Woods Learning Center, educational facilities serving underprivileged kids. And just after the tournament departed Congressional last year — when Woods won his own event — they announced that anyone with a driver’s license from the District, Maryland or Virginia could attend this year’s event at Aronimink for free.
“Since we brought the tourna- ment to Washington, we’ve said we did it because we thought it would be a perfect place to have an East Coast footprint,” said Greg McLaughlin, the tourna- ment’s director who also serves as the president and CEO of Woods’s foundation. “We think Philadelphia is a good fit, too, but I think we’re showing our commitment to Washington — opening the learning center — and have said that we want to be there for a long, long time.” The short-term future of the
AT&T National is clear: It will be held at Aronimink — a gem of a Donald Ross course that hosted the 1962 PGA Championship and the 1977 U.S. Amateur — this year and next, allowing Congressional to stage its third Open. The event will return to Congressional in 2012-14, a move approved in 2008. Back then, more than 1,500 of the club’s members cast ballots, and the measure passed by just 37 votes.
So the questions arise after
that. Congressional holds a three-year option, and after the 2013 tournament, the club’s membership will vote on wheth- er to bring back Woods’s event in 2015-17. Officials from the club and the tournament believe it’s too early to tell whether Congres- sional will host the event be-
AT&T. Since that’s central to one of our missions, if there’s an op- portunity to do that, we’re going to try to do it.” There remains, too, the com-
TIM SHAFFER / REUTERS
World No. 1 Tiger Woods is no longer the official host of the AT&T National tournament.
yond 2014. But in discussing golf ’s future in Washington on Wednesday, Finchem was quick to point out that the Champions Tour, for players 50 and over, is holding its Senior Players Championship in October at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm, the overhauled course that is all but adjacent to Congressional. That course, when it was known as TPC Avenel, hosted Washing- ton’s annual PGA Tour stop all but one year from 1987 to 2006. AT&T would also have to re- up, or Woods’s team would have to find a new sponsor, and the company has adjusted its own relationship with Woods since last year. When Woods’s wide- spread infidelity became a mat- ter of public record late last year, AT&T dropped its personal rela- tionship with Woods — its logo is no longer on his golf bag — but continued its sponsorship of this event because, as AT&T spokesman Adam Cormier said Wednesday, both AT&T and the Tiger Woods Foundation sup- port educational opportunities for children. “It’s tough to speculate where
we’re going to be in the future,” Cormier said. “Certainly, these types of events are great for us. The charities that we work with deal with education, which is the philanthropic thrust for
plex question of when a Wash- ington event might best thrive. The field, this year, is without 17 of the top 20 players in the world rankings; the top-ranked Woods, fifth-ranked Jim Furyk and No. 14 Robert Allenby are the exceptions. The July 4 week- end is a difficult one for many top players to fit into their schedules. Most of the top Euro- pean players have moved on to play in Europe in advance of the July 15-18 British Open, and some top American players are taking the week off before trav- eling across the Atlantic. To address scheduling con- cerns — which can result in weaker fields for some tourna- ments simply because of their places on the calendar — the PGA Tour has discussed moving some tournaments around from year to year. That concept, though, almost certainly wouldn’t be implemented until 2012 at the earliest, Finchem said. It’s possible the AT&T Na- tional would settle into a differ- ent date when it returns to Con- gressional — though some don’t believe the calendar drives the best fields.
“If you can put a good golf course out there and a good purse, the best players in the world are going to show up,” Fu- ryk said. “It’s not a secret.” Furyk counts himself among those who would play any event at Congressional because, as he said, “it’s dear to my heart.” But he also lavishly praised Aroni- mink, where he has never played. “This tournament’s always had a big-time feel to me,” Furyk said. “Obviously, this was a bit of an awkward year with questions about AT&T and Tiger and what would happen there, but you get to certain events, and there seems to be a little bit of height- ened awareness. That’s true here, and a lot of it has to do with his foundation and his in- volvement.”
svrlugab@washpost.com
ROUND OF 16
Argentina 3 Mexico 1 June 27
Germany 4 England 1 June 27
THURSDAY, JULY 1, 2010
United tops Richmond by 2-0 score
by Paul Tenorio
Jamie Moreno, MLS’s all-time leading scorer, has had to adjust to limited playing time for D.C. United this season. On Wednes- day night in United’s 2-0 win over the Richmond Kickers in the U.S. Open Cup’s round of 16, he was even asked to play a completely new position: left midfield. The 14-year veteran embraced the role, scoring in the 47th min- ute and assisting on Santino Qua- ranta’s strike in the 56th to guide United to the tournament quar- terfinals in front of 2,985 at George Mason University Stadi- um in Fairfax. “I know I haven’t played so
many games this year and when I have the opportunity I try to take the most of it,” said Moreno, 36, whose goal was the 13th of his ca- reer in U.S. Open Cup play. “It’s al- ways nice to be involved and just to win.” United forward Luciano Emilio was forced to leave the game in the 40th minute after being knocked unconscious in a colli- sion with Richmond goalkeeper Ronnie Pascale. After the game, United assistant coach Kris Kel- derman said Emilio would likely be further evaluated on Thursday. Playing on a saturated field,
United was slow to start against the Kickers of the USL2, the third tier of American professional soc- cer. After halftime, however, it took very little time for United to squeeze out any hope Richmond may have had of advancing. A quick counterattack in the
47th minute ended with Thabiso “Boyzzz” Khumalo finding Mo- reno on top of the box, and the Bo- livian deftly picked out the far corner with a cool finish. Nine minutes later, Khumalo sped down the right sideline and crossed to Quaranta, who touched it back out to Moreno. Moreno fed it back and Quaranta’s chip at- tempt deflected off a defender and in at the near post to double the lead.
tenoriop@washpost.com
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