导出博客文章DURHAM, N.C. -- Duke wont have leading rusher Jela Duncan when the Blue Devils
play Virginia this week.Coach David Cutcliffe said Thursday that Duncan will be
out with an unspecified leg injury but that he hopes the length of time he
misses is shorter than longer.Duncan ranks eighth in the ACC in rushing,
averaging 78.5 yards. Cutcliffe says junior Shaun Wilson will make his third
career start and first of the season, with Joseph Ajeigbe (uh-JEE-bee) backing
him up.Wilson also is taking over kick-returning duties now that DeVon Edwards
tore two ligaments in his left knee and will miss the rest of his senior season.
Wilson returned a kickoff 96 yards for a touchdown in the Notre Dame
win.Cutcliffe says Wilson is obviously going to be a busy guy.---AP college
football website:
www.collegefootball.ap.org
Stan Smith Baratas .Y. - Free agent
outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury, fresh off winning the World Series with Boston,
reached agreement with the rival New York Yankees on a seven-year contract worth
about $153 million, a person familiar with the negotiations said Tuesday night.
Stan Smith España Baratas . The
judges scored it 48-47, 48-47, 49-46 for Jones (19-1). It was the champions
closest call. Despite the loss, it was a remarkable show by the confident
Swedish challenger, who had the best of the early rounds and then hung on in the
fourth and fifth.
http://www.stansmithbaratas.es/ . Jon
Montgomerys gold medal in skeleton at the Whistler Sliding Centre and his
subsequent auctioning off of a pitcher of beer in the village square elevated
him to folk-hero status.
Comprar Stan Smith
Baratas . Jim Rutherford, President and General Manager of the Carolina
Hurricanes, announced Wednesday that the team would assign Swedish forward Elias
Lindholm to his nations team for the upcoming tournament.
Stan Smith Baratas Online . --
Charline Labonte couldnt have asked for a better homecoming. CANASTOTA, N.Y. --
A look at the nine people to be inducted June 11, 2017 into the International
Boxing Hall of Fame and Museum:---MODERN CATEGORY (last bout no earlier than
1989):---MARCO ANTONIO BARRERA: Born Jan. 17, 1974 in Mexico City. ... nicknamed
The Baby Faced Assassin was a five-time Mexican national champion who posted a
56-4 amateur record before turning pro in 1989 at age 15. ... won his first 43
bouts and captured the NABF super flyweight title before winning world
championships in three weight divisions. ... in 1995 won the WBO super
bantamweight title with a 12-round victory over Daniel Jimenez and successfully
defended the title eight times, including knockout wins over Eddie Croft,
Kennedy McKinney, and Jesse Benavides. ... lost the crown to Junior Jones in
1996 (DQ 5) but rebounded to capture vacant WBO belt from Richie Wenton in 1998.
... lost the crown to Erik Morales in 2000 but remained champion after Morales
refused the belt. ... defended three times before vacating to go up to
featherweight to defeat Naseem Hamed in 2001. ... defeated Morales in a 2002
rematch for the WBC featherweight title, but refused the title. ... wins over
Johnny Tapia, Kevin Kelley, and Paulie Ayala preceded the 2004 rubber match with
Morales for the WBC super featherweight belt. ... added the IBF title in a
unification bout with Robbie Peden in 2005. ... lost the WBC title to Juan
Manuel Marquez in 2007. ... retired in 2011 with a record of 67-7 (44 KOs). ...
serves as an analyst for TV Azteca.---EVANDER HOLYFIELD: Born Oct. 19, 1962 in
Atmore, Georgia. ... nicknamed The Real Deal ... capped his 160-14 (75 KOs)
amateur career with a bronze medal at the 1984 Olympic Games and turned pro that
year at Madison Square Garden. ... in only his 12th fight defeated Dwight Qawi
for the WBA cruiserweight title and became unified champion with knockout wins
over IBF champion Rickey Parkey and WBC champion Carlos DeLeon. ... wins over
heavyweights James Tillis, Pinklon Thomas, Michael Dokes, and Alex Stewart set
up a 1990 WBC-WBA-IBF championship fight with Buster Douglas, which he won with
a third-round knockout. ... made successful defenses against George Foreman,
Bert Cooper, and Larry Holmes. ... lost the titles to Riddick Bowe in 1992 but
regained the WBA-IBF belts in the 1993 rematch in Las Vegas, which was
interrupted in the seventh round by a sky diver. ... dropped the titles to
Michael Moorer in 1994. ... in 1996 upset Mike Tyson for the WBA title and won
the rematch the next year when Tyson was disqualified for biting Holyfields
right ear. ... added the IBF title with a rematch win over Moorer in 1997. ...
after splitting unification bouts with Lennox Lewis in 1999, had three bouts
with John Ruiz, winning, losing and fighting to a draw in 12-round WBA title
bouts in 2000 and 2001. ... retired in 2011 with a record of 44-10-2 (29
KOs).---JOHNNY TAPIA: Born Feb. 13, 1967 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. ... learned
to box from his grandfather and compiled a 101-21 (65 KOs) amateur record. ...
turned pro in 1988 and captured the USBA and NABF super flyweight titles before
stopping Henry Martinez in 1994 for the vacant WBO super flyweight crown. ..
successfully defended the belt 13 times, including wins over Willy Salazar,
Arthur Johnson, Ivan Alvarez, and Hugo Soto. ... added the IBF belt with
12-round win over hometown rival Danny Romero in 1997. ... vacated the belts
after two title defenses to campaign as a bantamweight and captured the WBA
crown with a 12-round win over Nana Konadu in 1998. ... lost for the first time
when he dropped the title to Paulie Ayala in 1999. ... won the WBO bantamweight
title in 2000 and became a three-division world champion with a 12-round
decision over Manuel Medina for the IBF featherweight championship in 2002. ...
retired in 2011 with a record of 59-5-2 (30 KOs). ... died in May 2012 from
heart problems at age 45.---OLD-TIMER CATEGORY (last bout no earlier than 1943;
no later than 1988)---EDDIE BOOKER: Born Hilton Edward Booker on Nov. 5, 1917 in
Alto, Texaas.dddddddddddd. ... moved to California at age 10 and won numerous
local, state and national amateur titles there. ... turned pro in 1935 after
relocating to San Francisco and remained there throughout his career. ... won
both the California welterweight and middleweight championships. ... met Archie
Moore three times, drawing twice (1941, 1942), and became the first man to stop
Moore with an eight-round knockout in 1944. ... also went 1-1-1 against Hall of
Famer Holman Williams. ... scored wins over Lloyd Marshal and Harry Kid Matthews
before being forced to retire due to a detached retina in 1944. .. was never
stopped in his career despite the high caliber of opposition he met and finished
with a pro record of 66-5-8 (32 KOs). ... died in San Francisco in 1975 at age
57.---NON-PARTICIPANT CATEGORY:JIMMY LENNON SR.: Born James Frederick Lennon on
April 12, 1913 in St. Paul, Minnesota. ... began his ring announcing career in
1943, working a card at the Santa Monica Elks Club. ... assumed ring announcing
duties at Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles in 1949 and remained there until
1984. ... renowned for his style, elegant cadence, and precise pronunciation
when introducing boxers. ... became synonymous with the sport and his popularity
landed him roles in such motion pictures as Kid Galahad, Rocky III, Raging Bull
and The Main Event. ... Lennons son, Jimmy Jr., followed him into the ring
announcing world. ... died of heart failure in 1992 at age 79.---JOHNNY LEWIS:
Born John Alfred Lewis on March 18, 1944 in Sydney, Australia. ... boxed as a
teenager and assumed duties as a trainer at age 17. ... guided such notable
boxers as Joe Bugner and Paul Briggs, as well as world champions Gairy St.
Clair, Billy Dib, Jeff Harding, and Hall of Famers Jeff Fenech, Kostya Tszyu,
and Virgil Hill. ...also served as a fitness trainer for high-profile rugby
players in Australia.---JERRY ROTH: Born Gerald Howard Roth on May 12, 1941 in
Scranton, Pennsylvania. ... began working as a judge for the Nevada State
Athletic Commission in 1980. ... became one of boxings leading judges,
officiating 225 world title bouts, including Larry Holmes-Gerry Cooney, Julio
Cesar Chavez-Meldrick Taylor, Roy Jones Jr.-James Toney, Evander
Holyfield-George Foreman, Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Oscar De La Hoya, Lennox
Lewis-Holyfield, and the Riddick Bowe-Holyfield trilogy. ... judged his last
contest in 2015, the WBO featherweight title bout between Vasyl Lomachenko and
Gamalier Rodriguez.---OBSERVER CATEGORY:---STEVE FARHOOD: Born Feb. 15, 1957 in
Brooklyn. ... graduated from New York University with a degree in journalism in
1978. ... worked at Town & Village newspaper and upon graduating was hired
by London Publishing Company, which produced boxing and wrestling magazines. ...
in 1989 was named editor-in-chief of The Ring magazine and held the position
until 1997. ... freelanced for various boxing publications and also worked in
television, appearing on ESPN, SportsChannel, USAs Tuesday Night Fights, and
CNN. ... in 2001 became a boxing analyst on Showtime.---BARRY TOMPKINS: Born May
2, 1940 in San Francisco. ... began his broadcasting career in 1965. ... after
stints in New York City doing television and radio for NBC, left for HBO to take
over for Hall of Fame broadcaster Don Dunphy on World Championship Boxing
alongside Larry Merchant and Sugar Ray Leonard. ... called Marvelous Marvin
Hagler-Roberto Duran, Larry Holmes-Gerry Cooney, Sugar Ray Leonard-Hagler,
Alexis Arguello-Aaron Pryor, and Mike Tyson-Trevor Berbick. ... from 1988-96
called action on ESPNs Top Rank Boxing series. ... from 1995-2009 called Fox
Sports Sunday Night Fights and since 2012 has been blow-by-blow announcer for
ShoBox: The Next Generation on SHOWTIME. ... a four-time Emmy Award winner. ...
recipient of the 1992 Sam Taub Award for Excellence in Broadcast Journalism. ...
also appeared in Rocky IV as a ringside commentator. ' ' '