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Wednesday's Sports Wire

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Pistons’ Stuckey cleared for exercise

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — The Detroit Pistons say three doctors have cleared Rodney Stuckey for exercise after a heart evaluation.

Stuckey collapsed on the bench during Friday’s game at Cleveland and was taken away on a stretcher. He missed Sunday’s game against Houston and will be out again Wednesday against Utah.

Stuckey missed two games last season after experiencing dizziness during a game.

The third-year pro from Seattle is averaging 17 points, five assists and four rebounds for the rebuilding Pistons.

 

 

 

Garciaparra retires as a Boston Red Sox

Associated Press

FORT MYERS, Fla. — Nomar Garciaparra has retired as a member of the Boston Red Sox.

The two-time batting champion and 1997 Rookie of the Year signed a one-day contract with his former team Wednesday. He then announced he’s ending his 14-year career at age 36. Garciaparra will become an analyst for ESPN.

The shortstop played parts of nine seasons in Boston, winning batting crowns in 1999 and 2000. He is also set in Red Sox lore for being part of a four-team deal in 2004 that helped the club win its first World Series championship in 86 years.

Garciaparra spent the past five seasons with the Cubs, Dodgers, and A’s. The six-time All-Star had a .313 career average with 229 home runs and 936 RBIs.

 

GM Hendry lashes out at Bradley

MESA, Ariz. — Cubs general manager Jim Hendry says Milton Bradley should stop blaming the team, manager and fans for his failure to produce during his tumultuous season in Chicago.

Hendry said Wednesday that signing Bradley to a three-year, $30 million contract before last season was “a mistake.” He said the atmosphere of the organization has improved since the outfielder was traded to Seattle.

 

Sullingers win

Naismith Awards

COLUMBUS — A father and son have won Naismith Awards as the top prep boys coach and player in the country.

Jared Sullinger, a 6-foot-9 senior who led Columbus Northland High School to an undefeated season, was honored Wednesday as the top player.

His father and coach, James “Satch” Sullinger, received the award as the top boys high school coach.

Northland (21-0) is ranked No. 1 by USA Today. The younger Sullinger, who has signed to play at Ohio State next year, led the Vikings to the state title a year ago.

Cypress (Texas) Fairfax senior Chiney Ogwumike won the girls award and the top girls coach was Sean Casey of The Peddie School in Highstown, N.J.

The awards are presented by The Atlanta Tipoff Club.

 

Marion Jones signs with WNBA’s Shock

TULSA, Okla. — Former sprinter Marion Jones has signed on to play with the WNBA’s Tulsa Shock, hoping to launch a new career after losing five Olympic medals for using performance-enhancing drugs,

Jones was a star at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney but admitted two years ago that she had taken a designer steroid known as the “clear.” She was stripped of her medals, including three golds.

She also spent about six months in a Texas federal prison for lying about doping and her role in a check-fraud scam.

 

Economic times forcing teams to seek new sponsors

HAMPTON, Ga. — Kevin Conway is a walking billboard for — how can we say this delicately? — better performance in the bedroom.

“That’s kind of the elephant in the room,” he says with a mischievous grin, wearing a race suit with the word “ExtenZe” around his neck, across his chest and back, and down the sides of both legs.

All giggling aside, the sponsorship deal for the No. 37 car shows how teams must look beyond conventional sponsors in these tough economic times. This is a sport that requires more than just a fast car and a talented driver; someone’s got to be willing to foot the bill with a lot of zeros on the check.

Which brings us to Conway, a 30-year-old, college-educated rookie who knew he’d need more than just a heavy right foot to break into the Sprint Cup series.

Like anyone who’s had trouble sleeping, he’d seen one of those bawdy ExtenZe infomercials sandwiched between pitches for stay-at-home jobs that will turn you into an instant millionaire and video collections for long-ago television shows.

Hmmm, he thought, wonder if ExtenZe would be willing to sponsor a stock car?

“If you look back a few years ago, there was no such thing as an energy drink. Red Bull kind of created that category, much the same way ExtenZe has done for the male enhancement category,” said Conway, who majored in marketing at UNC Charlotte.

“It’s the heart of America,” said Robert Wilhovsky, the company’s director of motorsports marketing. “You reach a real loyal, passionate customer base that sticks with you. They appreciate and understand your involvement in their sport, their way of life, and it resonates well with them. They, in turn, thank you at the counter.”

Conway, however, has had a tough time as a Cup rookie. He wasn’t approved to race in the season-opening Daytona 500 because of a lack of superspeedway experience, and he hasn’t finished higher than 31st in his three starts. The team needs to be in the top 35 to maintain its automatic spot in the field after the next event at Bristol; Conway is 40th.

Although he said there was some resistance at first from NASCAR officials it didn’t take much of a selling job. After all, the series once had a car sponsored by Viagra.

“If you look back historically, particularly in the last 10 years, NASCAR has attracted a broad spectrum of sponsors,” said Ramsey Poston, the series’ managing director of corporate communications. “We’ve seen more sponsors coming into the sport, which is encouraging.”

Especially at a time when many teams have folded or merged because of a lack of sponsorship dollars. NASCAR, like every other major sport, has felt the sting of the economic downturn, though Poston said some recent deals indicate the worst is over.

To pay the bills, teams have been forced to look beyond the base of beer companies, home improvement stores and package delivery services.

For last weekend’s race at Atlanta, Greg Biffle was sponsored by the U.S. Census Bureau in the first of a three-race, $1.2 million package.

“Get those Census forms in,” Biffle quipped. “If you don’t send your form back, I’m going to be at your doorstep.”

Although it might be difficult to tell from the potpourri of logos at a NASCAR track, Poston said there are standards when it comes to approving sponsors.

First, the product must be legal.

“Absolutely, there are limits,” he said. “We have a lot of casinos that are title sponsors and car sponsors. But right now, the gray area is online gaming.”

There’s no such gray area with Conway’s sponsor. That hasn’t stopped the junior-high-level humor, so the company decided it was best to go along with the joke (in contrast to Viagra, which refused to make light of its product during its stint in NASCAR).

The team sells shirts on its Web site and from its merchandise trailer that turns up at the track each week.

“Everybody’s had a good time with it,” Conway said. “And everybody just wears us out for samples.”

 




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