D6 coaches from D1
principal, Dan McMahon, ac- knowledged it was at least in part because of Baucia’s tutoring of Dancel. Attempts to reach Breslin for comment were unsuccessful. “It was a huge stink,” one per- son familiar with the situation said on the condition of anonym- ity because the topic created such tension at the Hyattsville school. “How that happened, it was be- yond a lot of people. There were a lot of questions, a lot of unhappy people. A lot of people, I guess the best word I can use, were ex- tremely [ticked] off.” Baucia, a 1986 DeMatha gradu-
ate and former scholarship foot- ball player at Virginia Tech who has coached football and taught physical education and health for nearly two decades at his alma mater, declined to comment for this story. He did make changes to the
Quarterback Factory after the season.
A release form that players
must fill out prior to attending the Quarterback Factory now stipulates, “No player may be ac- cepted or attend this program if they attend a WCAC private school. DeMatha Catholic HS has deemed this a conflict of interest and will not allow Coach Baucia to train a player that attends a WCAC high school.” Although the situation created considerable concern among coaches and administrators at the two schools, the players said they saw nothing wrong with be- ing coached by an opposing team coach.
Zach Dancel said he consid- ered working with Baucia to be “more like a personal coach, than DeMatha’s coach.” Similarly, sec- ond-team All-Met Kevin Hogan of Gonzaga, who also was once trained by Baucia, said he did not see a problem with the arrange- ment. Gonzaga is also a longtime DeMatha rival. “He was just helping a bunch of
us out,” Hogan said, noting that Baucia occasionally held work- outs in the DeMatha gymnasium. “I didn’t really think it was that big a deal.”
According to coaches and play- ers, the marketplace for personal football instruction is rapidly growing. At the same time, high school coaches — who often are paid small stipends for their work — have found a potentially lucrative way to supplement their income with position-specific training. The amount of available and qualified coaches, however, is small enough that conflict-of- interest concerns like what hap- pened in the WCAC last season may be inevitable. “In basketball, in addition to high school coaches, there are lots of people involved who can
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES
Ilya Kovalchuk remains an unrestricted free agent after his front-loaded, 17-year, $102 million contract was denied.
NHL fights back in contract battle
Kovalchuk’s deal is rejected, leaving ‘loophole’ in question
by Tarik El-Bashir The longest contract in NHL JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST
Zach Dancel, who was tutored by DeMatha offensive coordinator Chris Baucia, passed for 186 yards and one touchdown in helping Good Counsel to a 14-7 win over DeMatha in the 2009 WCAC title game.
SCOREBOARD CYCLING
Tour de France Standings (After 16 stages)
1. Alberto Contador, Spain, Astana, 78 hours 29 minutes 10 seconds.
2. A. Schleck, Lux., Team Saxo Bank, 8 sec. behind. 3. S. Sanchez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 2:00. 4. Denis Menchov, Russia, Rabobank, 2:13. 5. J.V. Den Broeck, Belgium,O.Pharma-Lotto, 3:39. 6. Robert Gesink, Netherlands, Rabobank, 5:01. 7. L. Leipheimer, USA, Team RadioShack, 5:25. 8. Joaquin Rodriguez, Spain, Katusha, 5:45. 9. A. Vinokourov, Kazakhstan, Astana, 7:12. 10. R. Hesjedel, Canada, Garmin-Transitions, 7:51. 11. R. Kreuziger, Czech Rep., Liq.-Doimo, 7:58. 12. Ruben Plaza, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, 8:02. 13. L. Sanchez, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, 8:19. Thursday’s stage — The final mountain stage, is a 108.1-mile ride from Pau to Col du Tourmalet, featuring Category 1 climbs to Col de Marie- Blanque and Col du Soulor followed by a finishing Hors Category climb to Col du Tourmalet in the Haute-Pyrenees.
FOOTBALL
Canadian Football League Thursday’s Game
Hamilton at Montreal ............................................7:30 Friday’s Game
B.C. at Toronto....................................................... 7:30 Saturday’s Games
Edmonton at Winnipeg ........................................ 6:30 Saskatchewan at Calgary.................................... 9:30
Arena Football League Friday’s Game
Chicago at Spokane ................................................... 8 Saturday’s Games
Oklahoma City at Orlando................................... 7:30 Alabama at Tampa Bay........................................ 7:30 Arizona at Tulsa .......................................................... 8 Jacksonville at Bossier-Shreveport................... 8:05 Milwaukee at Iowa................................................ 8:05 Utah at Dallas......................................................... 8:30
LOCAL GOLF
Army Navy/Arlington — In the senior men’s ABCD scramble, Paul Cunningham, Will McKenney, Paul Black and Bob Thompson won with net 59. Belle Haven — In the 18-hole ladies member’/ guest, Pam Oetgen, Donna Skrobala, Michellle Boggs and Lori Farro won first net wth 126 while Heidi Smith, Randa Paver, Mary Leahey and Lori Marsengill won first gross with 147. CC of Fairfax — In the women’s club champi- onship, Connie Shevlin defeated Mary Cabriele 1-up.
Chevy Chase — In the Connecticut Avenue clas- sic, Lynda Murphy, Thayer Baine, Colleen Wil- liams, Kim Hume and Meredith Fulton won with 195.
Congressional — In the Jean Pohanka tourna- ment, Maggie Brady won first gross with 90 and tina Brinsfield won first net with 79. Herndon Centennial — In the HLGC Jack Walker memorial tournament, Flo Benkovic won with net 65.
Mount Vernon — In the LGA nine event, Cindy Lan- gan won with 29. In the 18-hole bandits points event, Ginny Barlow won low net with 11 and Becky McCullough won low gross with 19. Kenwood — Harriet Moss, Kaye Mopsik, Dana Pe- terson and Joann Peck won the KWGA mini mem- ber/guest. Patuxent Greens — Russ Stoneman won the indi- vidual by flight tournament. Tantallon — In the MISGA mixer with Hobbit’s Glen, Fairway Hills and Crofton, Walt Smith, Chuck Dunsey, Pete Sorge and Joe Short won with 120.
SOCCER
U.S. Open Cup Quarterfinals
Wednesday’s Result
D.C. United 2 ................Harrisburg City Islanders 0 Semifinals
Wednesday, Sept. 1
Columbus Crew at D.C. United............................7:30 Chivas USA at Seattle Sounders............................ 10
Major League Soccer
Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF GA Columbus ...................... 9 3 4 31 22 13 New York ....................... 8 6 2 26 18 19 Toronto FC ..................... 6 5 4 22 18 17 Chicago .......................... 4 5 5 17 18 19 Kansas City ................... 4 8 4 16 13 20 Philadelphia .................. 4 8 2 14 18 26 New England ................. 4 9 2 14 15 26 D.C. United ..................... 3 11 3 12 12 28
Western Conference W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles ................. 12 2 3 39 27 8 Real Salt Lake ............... 9 4 3 30 28 13 Dallas .............................. 6 2 7 25 19 13 Colorado ........................ 6 4 5 23 17 14 San Jose ......................... 6 4 4 22 18 16 Houston .......................... 5 7 4 19 21 22 Seattle ............................ 5 8 4 19 18 24 Chivas USA .................... 4 9 2 14 17 21
Thursday’s Game San Jose at Los Angeles..................................... 10:30
Women’s FIFA U-20 World Cup In Germany Group Play
Korea Republic .................... 0 0 — 0 United States ....................... 1 0 — 1
First half — Sydney LEROUX (21’) assist by Amber Brooks.
Statistics: KOR / USA
Shots: 7 / 9; Corner Kicks: 2 / 7; Yellow Cards: 0 / 0; Lineups
KOR: 1 MOON So Ri [GK], 2 SEO Hyun Sook, 5 LIM Seon Joo, 6 JEONG Yeonga, 7 KWON Eun Som, 9 JUNG Hae In, 11 LEE Hyun Young (10 JI So Yun 46’), 15 LEE Young Ju (13 LEE Min A 64’ ), 17 KANG Yumi, 19 JEOUN Eun Ha (14 KIM Jin Young 56’), 20 (C) KIM Hye Ri. USA: 1 Bianca HENNINGER [GK], 2 Toni PRESSLEY, 3 Rachel QUON, 4 Crystal DUNN, 5 Kendall JOHN- SON, 9 Kristie MEWIS, 11 Christine NAIRN,12 Zaki- ya BYWATERS ( 7 Courtney VERLOO 69’), 16 Maya HAYES (10 Teresa NOYOLA 57’), (C) 19 Sydney LE- ROUX (14 Meg MORRIS 86’), 20 Amber BROOKS.
Women’s Professional Soccer W L T Pts GF GA
FC Gold Pride .............. 11 3 1 34 26 13 Philadelphia .................. 6 5 3 21 21 19 Sky Blue FC.................... 5 6 3 18 12 16 Washington................... 4 5 5 17 20 19 Chicago .......................... 4 6 5 17 11 12 Boston ............................ 4 6 4 16 15 17 Atlanta............................ 3 7 4 13 9 19
Wednesday’s Results
FC Gold Pride 2 ......................................... at Boston 1 at Atlanta 1................................................... Chicago 0 Saturday’s Games
FC Gold Pride at Washington................................... 7 Sky Blue FC at Philadelphia...................................... 7
RESULTS
SUMMER BASKETBALL Kidsfirst
Northwestern 35, Ideal 31 TC Williams 53, Don Bosco 22 Kidsfirst 52, Spingarn 51 McKinley Tech 20, Cardozo 16 MCRD Girls
Good Counsel 55, Visitation 36 Holy Cross 78, Lady Jags 17
BASKETBALL Women’s
TENNIS National Basketball Association
Eastern Conference W L Pct GB Indiana ....................................13 7 Washington ............................13 7 Atlanta ....................................14 9 Connecticut ...........................12 9 Chicago ...................................11 11 New York ................................10 10
.650 — .650 —
.609 A .571 1A .500 3 .500 3
Western Conference W L Pct GB Seattle .....................................19 2 Phoenix .....................................8 12 Minnesota ................................7 12 San Antonio ..............................7 13 Los Angeles ..............................6 15 Tulsa ..........................................4 17
.905 —
.400 10A .368 11
.350 11A .286 13 .190 15
Wednesday’s Result
at Washington 82 ......................................Atlanta 72 Thursday’s Games
Los Angeles at Indiana .............................................. 7 San Antonio at Minnesota ........................................ 8 Phoenix at Tulsa ..........................................................8 Friday’s Game
New York at Chicago ............................................ 8:30
Mystics 82, Dream 72
Atlanta Min FG FT O-T A PF Pts. McCoughtry 34:14 9-20 3-4 5-6 0 5 23 Lyttle 36:31 3-5 3-4 1-8 1 4 9 Desouza 25:00 5-10 1-2 5-6 2 5 11 Castro Marq. 38:25 4-14 7-8 0-2 6 3 17 KMiller 22:50 1-6 0-0 0-3 2 1 2 Leuchanka 8:14 0-1 1-2 1-3 0 2 1 Price 23:44 3-4 1-4 2-6 1 5 7 Bales 10:15 0-2 2-2 1-3 0 2 2 CMiller 0:47 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 25-62 18-26 15-37 12 27 72
Percentages: FG .403, FT .692. 3-Point Goals: 4-12, .333 (McCoughtry 2-3, Castro Marques 2-5, Price 0-1, K.Miller 0-3). Blocked Shots: 3 (Desouza 2, Bales). Turnovers: 18 (Castro Marques 5, Leu- chanka 4, Price 4, Desouza 2, McCoughtry 2, Lyt- tle). Steals: 8 (Castro Marques 2, K.Miller 2, De- souza, Lyttle, McCoughtry, Price). Technical Fouls: None.
Washington Min FG FT O-T A PF Pts. Currie 17:03 1-6 4-5 3-6 0 3 6 Langhorne 36:09 10-15 4-6 5-15 2 4 24 Sanford 17:37 3-4 0-0 0-4 1 3 6 Smith 25:10 2-6 0-0 2-3 5 4 6 Harding 32:50 2-6 0-2 1-2 4 2 4 Melvin 26:14 4-7 4-4 3-3 2 3 12 Ajavon 24:47 4-12 6-7 1-2 1 4 15 Coleman 20:10 3-9 1-2 0-2 4 2 9 Totals 200 29-65 19-26 15-37 19 25 82
Percentages: FG .446, FT .731. 3-Point Goals: 5-14, .357 (Smith 2-3, Coleman 2-4, Ajavon 1-4, Currie 0-1, Harding 0-1, Langhorne 0-1). Blocked Shots: 2 (Harding, Melvin). Turnovers: 15 (Harding 4, Lang- horne 3, Currie 2, Smith 2, Ajavon, Coleman, Mel- vin, Sanford). Steals: 9 (Ajavon 3, Coleman 2, Cur- rie 2, Harding, Smith). Technical Fouls: None.
Atlanta ................................... 16 13 19 24 — 72 Washington ........................... 21 20 21 20 — 82
A: 14,347 (10,100). T: 1:57.
TRANSACTIONS NBA
Golden State Warriors —Signed G Jeremy Lin. Milwaukee Bucks —Traded F Darnell Jackson and a 2011 second-round draft pick to Sacramento for F Jon Brockman. Philadelphia 76ers —Signed C Tony Battie. Portland Trail Blazers —Signed G Wesley Mat- thews.
San Antonio Spurs —Re-signed G Richard Jef- ferson.
ATP International German Open At Rothenbaum Sport; In Hamburg, Germany Purse: $1.46 mil. (WT500); Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles — Second Round
Andreas Seppi, Italy, def. Michael Berrer (16), Germany, 6-2, 7-6 (7-4); Pere Riba, Spain, def. Al- bert Montanes (8), Spain, 6-4, 5-7, 7-6 (7-4); Jur- gen Melzer (3), Austria, def. Eduardo Schwank, Argentina, 6-4, 6-1; Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. Nicolas Almagro (5), Spain, 7-6 (7-5), 7-6 (9-7); Julian Reister, Germany, def. Victor Ha- nescu (12), Romania, 7-6 (7-4), 6-4; Jeremy Char- dy, France, def. Philipp Petzschner (13), Germany, 6-3, 6-3; Thomaz Bellucci (7), Brazil, def. Simone Bolelli, Italy, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3; Philipp Kohlschreiber (10), Germany, def. Juan Ignacio Chela, Argenti- na, 2-6, 6-2, 6-4.
ATP Atlanta Championships A U.S. Open Series event
At The Atlanta Athletic Club; In Johns Creek, Ga. Purse: $600,000 (WT250); Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles— Second Round
Taylor Dent, United States, def. Horacio Zebal- los (4), Argentina, 4-6, 6-2, 6-0; Michael Russell, United States, def. Rainer Schuettler, Germany, 1-6, 6-2, 7-5.
WTA Nuernberger Gastein Ladies At TC Wels 76; In Bad Gastein, Austria Purse: $220,000 (Intl.); Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles— Second Round
Anastasija Sevastova (8), Latvia, def. Simona Halep, Romania, 5-7, 6-1, 5-0, retired; Timea Bac- sinszky (2), Switzerland, def. Ekaterina Dzehalev- ich, Belarus, 4-6, 6-3, 6-3; Sandra Zahlavova, Czech Republic, def. Lesya Tsurenko, Ukraine, 6-2, 6-4; Anastasia Pivovarova, Russia, def. Ioana Raluca Olaru, Romania, 6-1, 2-6, 6-4.
WTA Banka Koper Slovenia Open At SRC Marina;In Portoroz, Slovenia Purse: $220,000 (Intl.); Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles— Second Round
Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, def. Tamira Pas- zek, Austria, 7-5, 6-4; Polona Hercog (7), Slovenia, def. Katarina Srebotnik, Slovenia, 6-4, 6-7 (7-3), 6-3; Vera Dushevina (6), Russia, def. Virginie Raz- zano, France, 4-6, 7-5, 6-2; Anna Chakvetadze, Russia, def. Sara Errani (4), Italy, 6-1, 6-2.
WTA Tour Money Leaders (Through July 18) 1. Serena Williams.....................................$4,266,011 2. Venus Williams ......................................$2,223,556 3. Francesca Schiavone............................$1,830,946 4. Jelena Jankovic......................................$1,587,133 5. Sam Stosur..............................................$1,504,745 6. Justine Henin..........................................$1,401,960
Eastern Conference W L Pct. GB N.Y. Sportimes......................... 8 5 .615 — Washington.............................. 8 5 .615 — Boston........................................ 7 6 .538 Philadelphia ............................. 6 7 .461 N.Y. Buzz ................................... 2 11 .153
World Team Tennis
1 2 6
Western Conference W L Pct. GB xSpringfield.............................. 8 4 .667 — xKansas City............................. 7 5 .583 xSacramento............................ 6 6 .500 St. Louis..................................... 6 7 .461 xNewport Beach...................... 5 7 .417 x-Late Game.
1A 3
Wednesday’s Results
at Washington 19 ..................................... St. Louis 17 at Philadelphia 24 ..................................N.Y. Buzz 17 Springfield at Newport Beach............................ Late Sacramento at Kansas City................................ Late Thursday’s Matches
Washington
..................................................at Boston N.Y. Buzz
.....................................................at St. Louis N.Y. Sportimes
..........................................at Newport Springfield
..........................................at Sacramento Philadelphia
.........................................at Kansas City
washingtonpost.com
1 2
history lasted all of 24 hours. The league on Wednesday formally rejected Ilya Koval- chuk’s 17-year, $102 million con- tract with the New Jersey Dev- ils, one day after the all-star left wing signed it and was in- troduced at a Prudential Center news conference in Newark. The NHL’s contention is that the structure of the contract — Kovalchuk was due to earn $98.5 million of the contract’s value in the first 11 seasons — was in place to get around the salary cap. In recent years, a number of long contracts aimed at lower- ing a player’s cap hit while pro- viding the team with future fi- nancial flexibility have been ap- proved. But Kovalchuk’s landmark deal, which wouldn’t have expired until he was 44, pushed the boundaries of what’s acceptable and what’s not — and the NHL decided it was time to push back. Under the terms of the reject- ed contract, Kovalchuk’s salary started at $6 million annually, escalated to $11.5 million, then dropped to $750,000 and again to $550,000 in each of the final five years of the deal — when it is possible, if not likely, that he will have retired. The dramatic drop in salary at the end of con- tract would have lowered Ko- valchuk’s annual cap hit to $6 million. “I don’t like the structure of the deal,” Washington Capitals owner Ted Leonsis said Tuesday on Jim Rome’s syndicated radio show. “I don’t think it’s right, but I don’t have a say in it. But I don’t know of other wings that are playing when they’re 44 years old, so we’ll see what hap- pens.” Under Leonsis, the Capitals
have signed stars Alex Ovech- kin and Nicklas Backstrom to 13- and 10-year extensions, re- spectively. Those deals, how- ever, increase in value over the length of the contract. The NHL Players Association
has five days to decide whether to file a grievance, in which case the union and the league will choose an arbitrator to uphold or overturn the decision. A union spokesman said in a statement that it was “evaluat- ing the options available to us.” If the players’ union does not
file a grievance, or an arbitrator rules in favor of the league, Ko- valchuk will remain an unre- stricted free agent. The Devils also have the option to negoti- ate a new contract with Ko- valchuk and submit it to the league for approval. Until then, however, the Russian winger “is not entitled to play under the contract,” Deputy Commission- er Bill Daly said Wednesday in a statement. One sports business expert said the league will have a tough time proving to an ar- bitrator that the Devils did any- thing wrong. “If they
circumvented the
spirit of the CBA, and that’s all they did, that’s fine,” said How- ard Bloom, publisher of Otta-
MIKE SEGAR/REUTERS
Devils GM Lou Lamoriello believes there is precedent for Kovalchuk’s long-term deal.
wa-based sportsbusiness-
news.com. “Did they do some- thing that’s slightly unethical? Did they do something that’s still legal? That’s the question. As far as I can tell, they figured out a way that the player could count $6 million a year against the salary cap. If it’s a loophole that the league left in there and [Devils General Manager] Lou Lamoriello figured out a way to exploit that loophole, all power to Lou.” Lamoriello said in a state- ment on Wednesday: “We are extremely disappointed that the NHL has decided to reject the contract of Ilya Kovalchuk. The contract complies with the terms of the Collective Bargain- ing Agreement.” Interestingly, a day earlier
Lamoriello expressed reserva- tions about the deal’s structure, telling reporters, “we shouldn’t have these” kind of contracts. Lamoriello also pointed out there is plenty of precedent for the Devils’ deal with Kovalchuk. Marian Hossa’s 12-year contract with Chicago ends when he’s 42 and drops from $7.9 million to $750,000 in the final two sea- sons. Henrik Zetterberg’s 12- year contract will keep him in Detroit until he’s 40 and de- scends from $7.75 million to one million in the last two sea- sons. Chris Pronger’s
seven-
year contract in Philadelphia ends when he’s 42 and declines from $7.6 million to $525,000 in the final two seasons. Rober- to Luongo’s 12-year extension with Vancouver gradually de- clines from $10 million to $1 million in the final two years. Luongo will be 43 when the contract expires. Kovalchuk’s contract, though, surpassed all of those in length and in front-loaded money. The Russian winger was the best player available in free agency this summer, perhaps the best to ever hit the open market. A dynamic scorer who has topped 40 goals each of the past six seasons, he was courted by New Jersey, Los Angeles, the New York Islanders and a team in Eastern Europe’s Kontinen- tal Hockey League. Kovalchuk amassed 41 goals and 85 points last season with New Jersey and Atlanta, the team that dealt him in February after he rejected a 12 year, $101 million offer to remain with the Thrashers. Bloom said he believes the
next round of collective bar- gaining in two years will pre- vent teams from excessively front-loading contracts. “This is simply a loophole
that should be corrected,” Bloom said, “and it will be.”
elbashirt@washpost.com
S HIGH SCHOOLS Private tutoring can create in-season conflicts
set themselves up [as private coaches], but in football you have a much more limited pool,” Mc- Mahon said. “That, of course, leads to all sorts of interesting po- tential problems down the road. To what extent are you coaching and helping kids who you are competing against in your pri- mary job? That’s a problem.” Some coaches, such as Episco-
pal offensive coordinator Bryson Spinner, say they are not con- cerned about the potential con- flicts of interest. Spinner, a for- mer All-Met at the Alexandria school who played at Virginia, does quarterback training for Perfect Performance, which was founded four years ago by three former Howard University foot- ball players, including former NFL tight end Leonard Stephens. Spinner said roughly half of his
20 current clients are in high school and that last year he worked with the quarterback at one other Interstate Athletic Con- ference school, Ryan Sehrer of Al- exandria rival St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes. “It’s not about the schools, it’s about the kids,” Spinner said. “Kids that come to our company, they’re trying to get better. The kid’s high school, the coach’s high school, we leave that to the side. What high school they’re playing for and we’re coaching, it doesn’t matter.”
Because individual instruction during the offseason is a rela- tively new industry that has at- tracted mainly private school coaches, it has not received atten- tion from state high school ath- letic regulating agencies. “Obviously, it’s not against our
rules for kids to go out and get private coaches or private tutors,” said Ned Sparks, executive direc- tor of the Maryland Public Sec- ondary Schools Athletic Associa- tion. “We haven’t thought much about it. [It’s] one of those things where the people involved don’t give it much thought until it actu- ally happens.”
Since Baucia made the deci- sion to turn away players from other WCAC schools, Hogan said he has not had enough time to find another teacher, though Gonzaga first-year coach Aaron Brady said he was looking to pro- vide Hogan with more opportuni- ties to improve.
“If your high school doesn’t bring you an adequate answer, kids are going to do those things,” Brady said.
barrj@washpost.com
KLMNO
THURSDAY, JULY 22, 2010 HOCKEY
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