h1 a:hover {background-color:#888;color:#fff ! important;}
div#emailbody table#itemcontentlist tr td div ul {
list-style-type:square; padding-left:1em; } div#emailbody
table#itemcontentlist tr td div blockquote { padding-left:6px;
border-left: 6px solid #dadada; margin-left:1em; } div#emailbody
table#itemcontentlist tr td div li { margin-bottom:1em;
margin-left:1em; } table#itemcontentlist tr td a:link,
table#itemcontentlist tr td a:visited, table#itemcontentlist tr td
a:active, ul#summarylist li a { color:#000033; font-weight:bold;
text-decoration:none; } img {border:none;} The Sport Review: “Defending
champion Clijsters gaining New York momentum” plus 2 more

- Defending champion Clijsters gaining New York momentum
- Renault ‘consider buying back Formula 1 team’
- One round, three days, and 40 degrees: things hot up in NY
Defending champion Clijsters gaining New York momentum

Posted: 02 Sep 2010 01:05 PM PDT


Reigning US Open champions Kim Clijsters eased into the third round at
Flushing Meadows with a comfortable 6-2 6-1 victory over Australia’s
Sally Peers.
Temperatures court-side eclipsed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, but difficult
conditions failed to hamper the Belgian as she dropped just three games
on her way to victory. Peers, a 19-year-old qualifier, did twice manage
to break Clijsters on the Arthur Ashe court, but aside from these
momentary lapses, the No2 seed was dominant.

The 2005 and 2009 champion took just 56 minutes to set up a clash with
the 27th Czech seed Petra Kvitova in round three. Despite the manner of
her victory however, Clijsters remains grounded over her prospects of
defending her title and admits she is still trying to recover form.

“I just had to find my footing again a little bit,” said the
27-year-old, who is seeded second this year behind Denmark’s Caroline
Wozniacki, the player she beat in last year’s final.

“I felt as the match went on I got to read her game a bit better and
moved a bit better, but I still have a little further to go before I
play my best tennis.”

Renault ‘consider buying back Formula 1 team’

Posted: 02 Sep 2010 12:56 PM PDT


Renault are rumoured to be considering a bid to buy back their Formula
1 team less than a year after selling a majority of it.
Following the 'Crashgate' scandal that almost destroyed the team's
reputation last year, the manufacturer considered pulling out of F1 as
title sponsor ING swiftly pulled the plug on the French team, forcing
Renault to sell a reported 85 per cent of the company to
Luxembourg-based investors Genii Capital, while continuing to provide
engines to Red Bull.

Under new management, Renault have fared well despite losing
long-standing team principal Flavio Briatore and chief technical
officer Pat Symonds as well as being short of sponsors.

Renault are currently fifth in the constructors' championship, chasing
Mercedes GP for fourth place with lead driver Robert Kubica seventh in
the drivers' standings with three podium finishes for the Enstone-based
team.

New team principal Eric Boullier's best decision was to snap up Kubica
from BMW Sauber after the German manufacturer announced it was pulling
out of F1, leaving Kubica with few options for 2010. With no drives at
Ferrari, McLaren, Red Bull or Mercedes, a move to Renault was the best
option for the Pole – and one which seen Kubica's stock rise
significantly.

Such has been Kubica's performance so far this season he has been
regularly linked with a move to Ferrari to partner former Renault man
Fernando Alonso – a move that seemed unlikely after Ferrari confirmed
Felipe Massa alongside Alonso until 2012 back in June. The rumour,
however, resurfaced at Spa last week with talk of a swap deal that
would see Massa head up the Renault challenge for 2011.

With Renault SA's car sales picking up, and the performance of the
Renault team on the track, the manufacturer's return to the sport would
come as new names enter negotiation with the brand for sponsorship for
2011.

One round, three days, and 40 degrees: things hot up in NY

Posted: 02 Sep 2010 05:23 AM PDT


It has taken almost three days, but the first round of the men's draw
at the US Open is complete.
The New Yorkers have a unique approach to scheduling that is unlike any
other Slam. It shares out the pleasures between the daytime crowd and
the night-time shift—double the tickets, double the money—and that
extends the first round into the second round, and will eventually butt
half of the quarterfinals right up against the semi-finals. They, in
turn, are played the day before the final.

Factor in the fast, unforgiving courts, temperatures that have already
hit close to 45 degrees, and two back-to-back Masters in the preceding
weeks, and this becomes one of the toughest tennis challenges of the
year.

Flushing Meadows has, indeed, already taken a heavy toll. The biggest
loss was No 7 seed Tomas Berdych, lately Wimbledon finalist and tipped
to be 2010's Juan Martin Del Potro at the Open. But he picked up a leg
strain at the Cincinnati Masters and was clearly not at his sharpest
against Michael Llodra.

The 30-year-old left-handed Frenchman has enjoyed some success already
this season, picking up two ATP titles and his highest ranking in two
years. His flowing all-court game, his serve and volley tactics, and
his elegant single-handed backhand proved highly effective in breaking
the solid baseline hitting of Berdych. It's a style of play that is
enjoying something of a Renaissance.

A quick look at Roger Federer confirms that the new attacking style he
introduced in Toronto is here to stay and is improving with each match.
He took barely an hour and a half to win his first match with a
graceful attack reminiscent of a stiletto blade in the ribs. It's so
sharp and elegant, you barely notice the damage until it's over.

Then there are Philipp Kohlschreiber, Feliciano Lopez, and Tommy
Robredo: all-court players with a penchant for the serve and volley,
and all first-round winners.

Andy Murray continued he excellent hard-court form with a
straight-forward, straight-sets win over Lukas Lacko. His tennis is
still uninhibited, still attacking and aggressive, and is still full of
touch around the net and accurate cross-court winners. Murray will be
pleased to see the Berdych result: the Czech was scheduled to meet him
in the quarterfinals.

Murray's next major hurdle, though, will be Stanislas Wawrinka, who
sailed through his first match. Further into the draw, another
all-courter of considerable flair, the No 12 seed Mikhail Youzhny, was
also a straight-sets winner, while Nicolas Almagro and Sam Querrey each
dropped a set on their way to the second round.

In the bottom half of the draw, the first-round news focused on major
seeds who survived big scares.

Novak Djokovic looked for all the world as though he was going out at
two sets and a break-of-serve down against fellow Serb Victor Triocki.
He was scheduled for the heat of the afternoon—not Djokovic's favourite
conditions—and looked all in.

But he is a player who seems to draw on huge reserves of self-belief
when things get tough, and he started to find some outstanding ground
strokes and not a few devastating drop shots. That was enough to change
the momentum of the game but it was a close run thing. The difference
in points, after four hours, was just one.

It was a similar story for Robin Soderling, who squeaked past the
little-known Austrian Andreas Haider-Maurer in five sets, but made
fewer winners and more unforced errors. If Soderling makes it to the
quarterfinals, he will have to find another gear against Federer.

Also in this half of the draw, the in-form American Mardy Fish survived
a see-sawing five-setter with one of the more bizarre scorelines of the
tournament so far: 6-0, 3-6, 4-6, 6-0, 6-1.

Arnaud Clement took five sets to get the better of No16 seed Marcos
Baghdatis and Paul-Henri Mathieu also went the distance in beating
former champion Lleyton Hewitt .

Thus far, then, some things have strained belief while some things have
preserved the status quo. The top five seeds are intact, with Federer,
Murray and Nadal apparently in cruise control. But are there any new
sleepers who might disrupt proceedings come week two?

Well the form of Nikolay Davydenko took a turn for the better in a
resounding straight sets win. Gael Monfils played superb tennis in
beating Robert Kendrick. And another former champion, Juan Carlos
Ferrero, showed similar panache, losing just four games in his straight
sets victory.

Round two was already under way before the final results of round one
were in. So Djokovic knows that one of his key challengers, home hero
Andy Roddick, has fallen. With the revelation just weeks ago that
Roddick was recovering from glandular fever, it may not have been a
huge surprise, but with seeds Juan Monaco and Baghdatis already out of
that quarter, it opens up the Djokovic draw nicely.

The temperatures are set to soar again as Federer and Nadal face the
prospect of their first daytime matches. Will they, like Djokovic and
Soderling, flag in the heat, or will they sizzle a la Murray?
You are subscribed to email updates from The Sport Review
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. Email delivery
powered by Google Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610

--
Posted By Mas Item Arekjowo to The Sport Review at 9/03/2010 12:10:00 AM

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Gugukluhayat" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/gugukluhayat?hl=en.

Cevap