On the Internet, everyone knows you're throwing a match:

An Internet bookmaking firm has contacted tennis authorities about unusual betting patterns after hefty sums were bet on a first round match at

Wimbledon won by Britain's Richard Bloomfield.

The alert was raised by the online betting exchange Betfair after up to 340,000 pounds ($619,300) were traded on world number 89, Argentina's Carlos Berlocq, to lose just hours before he went down 6-1 6-2 6-2 to Bloomfield, ranked 259, in Tuesday's match.

It's actually surprising that this sort of thing doesn't happen more often, as these sites allow more and more betting on more and more obscure things. If Roger Federer had lost in the first round with a lot of money on him, that's one thing, but when #259 in the world pulls and upset, there's usually less riding on it.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

Just a week before the Tour de France starts, there's more drug news:

The Tour de France has asked the Astana-Wurth team to pull out of this year's race because of a doping scandal in Spain.

Tour organizers were also considering whether to urge contender Jan Ullrich to withdraw after reports suggested he was involved in Spain's doping scandal, according to his T-Mobile team.

The Ullrich thing is a big development -- he's been implicated in the ongoing Spanish doping investigation that also precipitated the Astana-Wurth situation. Stay tuned, because this one could get really bad really fast.

Update: Ullrich will be allowed to compete. "For the Tour de France, for now, there is no problem with Ullrich," Tour spokesman Philippe Soudres said.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

Back in September, I wrote at Wired.com about allegations of drug use that Lance Armstrong faced, based on a report in L'Equipe, a French sports newspaper. That report accused Armstrong of using EPO, which increases the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood, in 1999, the year he won his first Tour de France.

The testing references in the story was done for research; it's supposed to be anonymous. But L'Equipe was able to find tracking numbers that seemed to link the samples to Armstrong, who denied the report.

Well, today, a Dutch investigator who was appointed by the International Cycling Union issued a report that exonerated Armstrong, and was sharply critical of the international groups who enforce anti-doping rules.

Samples may be used in a research program only if all information tracing them to an individual is removed, Emile Vrijman [the investigator] said, but this was not the case.

Discussing some of his criticism of the laboratory's practices, he added, "Sometimes with doping cases you can say it was a technicality. These are not technicalities, these are fundamental issues which should have been done completely differently."

The World Anti-Doping Agency, the laboratory and the French ministry in charge of it all failed to provide documents and fully cooperate in his investigation, he added.

This is really damning stuff, couched in the polite phrasing of the career bureaucrat. There's been an alarming trend of athletes who have had their careers ruined without the sort of process that you'd like to see (Tyler Hamilton, for one). Dick Pound, the director of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) seems increasingly like a tyrant, and not someone who's policing sports while also respecting athlete's rights.

Just look how Pound reacts to the report today.

"It's clearly everything we feared," Pound told The Associated Press from Montreal. "There was no interest in determining whether the samples Armstrong provided were positive or not. We were afraid of that from the very beginning.

"Whether the samples were positive or not, I don't know how a Dutch lawyer with no expertise came to a conclusion that one of the leading laboratories in the world messed up on the analysis. To say Armstrong is totally exonerated seems strange," Pound said.

That "Dutch lawyer with no expertise" actually ran the Dutch anti-doping agency for 10 years.

This is classic rhetorical smokescreening. Notice that Pound doesn't address any of the issues that the report raises about WADA, but instead sets up strawmen to rail against. He doesn't respond to the allegation that WADA didn't cooperate with the investigation, instead he comes up with an inaccurate insult about the investigator.

In an official statement, WADA then complained that "elementary courtesy and professionalism would have dictated that WADA should have been provided with a copy of the report before interviews were given to the media." Because that's the real issue for Pound here -- appearances, and not fairness.

Update: Velonews has a good story, an augmented version of the AP write-up, and also a PDF of the full report. Also, official statements from the UCI, Armstrong, and WADA.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

The next time you hear someone complain about the crowd at your usual American sporting event, you can take some solstice in the fact that, at least, crowds aren't chanting racial slurs.

Earlier this month, Hungary's soccer federation fined Ujpest FC $23,250 because its fans chanted anti-Semitic slurs during a league match. The federation also suspended the referee for failing to take action.

Last month, Messina's Ivory Coast defender Marc Zoro was reduced to tears by Inter Milan fans' racist slurs and boos in the Italian league and threatened to walk off the field. Some Inter Milan supporters shouted racist abuse again in the next match.

This sort of thing is the not-so-secret shame of European soccer. HBO's Real Sports did a story on this a few months ago where they spoke with Thierry Henry, one of the world's top players, who was near tears describing some of the insults he's had to withstand. You haven't really been shocked by behavior at a sporting event until you've seen video of fans throwing bananas at black players or making monkey noises when they touch the ball.

FIFA, the world governing body of soccer, has been vowing a crackdown. But just last week, Lazio forward Paolo Di Canio made a fascist salute during a match. he was given a one-match ban. Sepp Blatter, the head of FIFA, is looking for more.

Blatter said legal experts at world soccer's governing body would decide in January what measures are needed to strengthen FIFA's anti-racism laws. National soccer federations will then vote on the proposed regulations at FIFA's annual congress next year.

"We need to start to deduct points from the team," Blatter said Tuesday. "It could also mean suspension. It could also mean exclusion."

Soccer for much of its history has been an outlet for feelings and opinions that can't be expressed in normal settings. But the same can be said of sports in America, and somehow we don't still have this problem.

Race is still a huge, huge problem here. But at least in this one area, we seem to be at least a little bit ahead of the game.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

NASCAR has invested a great deal of time and energy cultivating a family-friendly public image. So it's a problem for them when Kurt Busch, the defending series champ, has a little run-in with cops near the Phoenix International Raceway, site of this past weekend's race.

Busch was taken into custody for suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol after a Maricopa (Ariz.) sheriff's deputy pulled him over for driving roughly 60 mph in a 45-mph zone and running a stop sign, Lt. Paul Chagolla, a Maricopa County sheriff's spokesman, told the Associated Press on Saturday. Busch refused to perform standard sobriety tests on the scene, was verbally abusive to the deputy and was taken into custody, according to Chagolla. After officials were unable to perform a blood-alcohol test because the machine malfunctioned, Busch was cited for reckless driving and released.

Busch has been suspended for the remainder of the season--all of two races. I had just seen an interview with Busch on HBO's Real Sports, where he tried to understand why he's so unpopular with the series' traditional southern fans.

Maybe this is the sort of thing that could bring them around.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

Forgot to highlight my latest Wired News column on Formula 1 and its proposed rule changes:

The other big problem in F1 (and where it pales in comparison to NASCAR) is the simple fact that there's not much passing in an F1 Grand Prix. A race without passing is more correctly called a procession, and doesn't make for compelling viewing.

The issue is that the exquisitely tuned aerodynamics of an F1 car are designed for clean, undisturbed air. But when you put one car behind another, the car in back has to deal with the huge turbulence kicked up by the leader, and its handling and speed degrade dramatically.

Last week, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile, which administers Formula 1, proposed a solution. It proposed a new design that incorporates a "Centreline Downwash Generating Wing." Instead of the traditional rear wing on the car, which generates "downforce" that helps keep the car on the road, the CDG wing design consists of two smaller wings over each of the rear wheels.

Lots of discussion on the story page....

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

My latest Wired News column is up: I spend it talking about a bike I just bought on eBay, a 1983 Colnago Super with Campagnolo Nuovo Record parts.

Cyclists are a fickle lot, and we're generally willing to sell our soul for the lightest, most aerodynamic, craziest tech we can find. After all, when you're chugging up a hill, every gram you can cut off your bike is one less gram you have to haul to the top of the climb.

We're addicts -- just like golfers, or tennis players, or skiers -- we're chasing the piece of equipment that will make us better, or stronger, or faster. Catalogs filled with the latest gear stack up in our houses, dog-eared and well-thumbed, as we fantasize about our latest purchase.

But sometimes, it's important to step back and realize that what's essential and true about a sport isn't the equipment or the technology, but the activity, the act itself. Taking a spin on an old bike, with old parts, reminds you that it's not about the bike, but about the ride.

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AuthorMark McClusky

God, this is a shock. Bill King, the voice of the Oakland A's, has passed away due to complications from hip surgery. King was one of the greats. Few broadcasters can work different sports effectively -- they're just so different to call. But King was not only the A's lead radio announcer for 25 years, he was also the Golden State Warriors and Oakland Raiders play by play guy for 20 years each.

There will never, ever, be another one like him. His intellectual reach, and his stunning vocabulary, his distain for fools and love of the games he called made him unique. For anyone who cherishes the art of calling a game, I hope you heard Bill at least once.

UPDATE, 10/19/05: KNBR has a nice tribute package with lots of audio available online.

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AuthorMark McClusky

It's been hard to cobble together enough time to sit down and write at length about Kate, who is about the best thing that's ever happened to me. When we were at the hospital and they handed her to me, I started crying as I was overcome with the realization, both liberating and a little sad, that my life and the priorities in it had completely changed in just that millisecond. Kristen is doing well, and we're settling into a little routine. Kate's healthy, and has put back on the weight she's lost after birth, which is good.

Much, much more on the baby later.

Meanwhile, my latest column at Wired News addresses the issue of golf balls. Specifically, how can we contain the distance that today's balls afford professional players?

Our best games have a geometry of their own -- 10 feet to the basket, 90 feet from the plate to first base, eight feet by eight yards for a soccer goal. As technology advances, that geometry can become distorted, and golf is a stern test for that advancement. Which will we choose: the geometry that enchants us, or the technology that awes us?

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesKid, Sports

My latest column for Wired News is live. I start off by discussing the rumors surround Lance Armstrong, and the story published by L'Equipe earlier this month.

The opinion you form after digesting all this information is more a Rorschach test than anything else. If you're inclined to believe that Armstrong doped, these test results can serve as confirmation. If you're inclined to believe his denials, they're further proof of a vendetta against Armstrong by the French.

But what the situation really points out is the futility of the drug-testing regime in place today. New drugs appear all the time, leaving testers playing a never-ending game of catch-up. Athletes find themselves smeared by innuendo. Rumor and recrimination are the order of the day.

One thing we can be sure of: The technology of athletes who want to cheat will always outpace that of those people charged with catching them. Is there another way?

I ended up arguing, at least guardedly, that maybe we should just give up on trying to win this arms race. I was surprised to find myself coming around to this position--it was one of those pieces that as you write it, you end up in a very different place than you expected.

Unsurprisingly, not everyone who has read it has agreed, or been convinced. I'm not even sure I am, 100%. But I am sure of one thing; it's how I ended the column:

Athletes will always do what they can to find an edge, even if it endangers their health. And people will always thrill to the performance of these elite athletes. Until one of those things changes, the debate, and the uncertainty, will continue.

Posted
AuthorMark McClusky

Lance Armstrong's former personal assistant claims that she helped him dispose of a bag of used syringes, and gave him makeup to cover needle marks on his arms. Armstrong is denying the allegations, and is starting libel proceedings against the book's authors.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

As if Lance Armstrong didn't have enough going for him -- his sponsors have started working together to provide him with better technology. Nike's developed a new skin suit that will help his aerodynamics, and there's been a lot of wind tunnel testing done as well. Smart of the US Postal Service team to get their sponsors working together in this way.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

Tiger Woods is spending some time training at Fort Bragg, N.C., where his father was trained as a solider in the Vietnam era. I wonder if the drill sergeants there can help him with his long irons.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

Well, there's one side effect of having a big telecommunications company as the naming sponsor of your ballpark. The Giants will offer free wireless internet access at SBC Park. I'm trying hard to imagine how I'd ever use this, but there are probably some stats folks who will love to be able to surf and watch the game, not to mention the business guys who will now be able to safely check their mail from their luxury box.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

CNET is reporting that Major League Baseball has signed deals with Microsoft and America Online to distribute content through them. The MSN deal will allow Microsoft to see subscriptions to MLB content, while the AOL deal seems to be one where AOL will give their broadband account holders access to audio streams. I wrote about MLB's aggressive stand on gamecasts for Wired News back in November. These most recent deals are more indication that MLB is maybe the most effective of the four major sports when it comes to presenting their content online. Any deal where a league is getting decent money from a place like MSFT is doing something right.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports

As a Sports Illustrated alum, I was sad to hear that Sid James died yesterday. James was the first editor of SI, although the magazine didn't reach its stride until Andre Leguerre took over after James. Contrary to the Times obit, the magazine wasn't an immediate success.

That said, it's still sad to lose a link to history like this. If you're looking to learn more about the early days at SI, there's a pretty good history, The Franchise, that you should pick up.

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AuthorMark McClusky
CategoriesSports