Lefty has his shot at No. 1 … if he wants it

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Two hundred and sixty-three weeks, and counting.

For more than five years of his career, Phil Mickelson’s been No. 2 in the world golf rankings.

It’s an astonishing feat — more than double the number of weeks of the next man on the list, Nick Faldo — and reminds me a lot of Marv Levy’s Buffalo Bills teams from the early ’90s. They were roundly condemned as ‘Super Bowl Serial Killers’ after losing the big game four straight times, but what about the other side of the coin?

Was it not a colossal achievement just to have gotten to the last game of the year four consecutive years?

Or must history only remember the winners?

That the Bills lost those Super Bowls had much to do, too, with the caliber of the teams they faced, and that’s been Mickelson’s curse.

He’s had to contend in the Tiger Woods era.

Woods has spent 618 weeks of his career at No. 1. That’s almost 12 years. His current streak stands at 276 weeks.

But it’s true, too, that he’s been made to relinquish the crown.

Vijay Singh put Woods to the sword to take the world No. 1 away from him in 2005. Greg Norman, David Duval and Ernie Els also reigned during the Woods era.

But will Phil ever get there?

For the 12th time since he won the Masters in April, Mickelson will have a chance this week to unseat Woods, who for the first time in his professional career hasn’t qualified for a tournament and isn’t at the Tour Championship.

As the defending champion at East Lake, Mickelson needs to finish in no worse than a three-way tie for second to finally break through.

“I’d love to take advantage of the opportunity,” the Californian said Wednesday.

“I don’t follow the ranking points and so forth, but I know that I’ve had multiple opportunities for months, and I haven’t played well enough to do it. Hopefully, I do this week.”

But is he really hopeful of doing it this week?

I’ve long wondered if No. 1 is not just something Mickelson’s equipped for, but if it’s something he even wants.

Heavy lies the crown, to borrow from Jack Nicholson’s mangled Shakespeare in “The Departed.”

Beyond the responsibilities that go with No. 1, the truth is that Mickelson’s just never been consistent enough as a player to stay at the top even if he gets there.

He’s a high-wire act, either breathtakingly brilliant or a train wreck … and rarely in between.

This year he’s ranked 110th in ball-striking on the PGA Tour, in large part because he doesn’t hit many fairways, and is 118th in greens hit in regulation.

Yet he’s seventh in scoring average, which speaks to just how good his best golf is that it can offset the bad days.

It dawned on me listening to Mickelson at East Lake on Wednesday that he’s probably not as concerned about that No. 1 ranking as we think him to be.

Indeed, I got the distinct impression that he long ago achieved his goal for 2010.

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“The Masters kind of made the year for me,” he said of his fourth career major. “It meant a lot to us emotionally, it meant a lot to me personally.”

Mickelson’s wife, Amy, and his mother were both diagnosed with early stage breast cancer last year and, in that sense, the green jacket was a victory for the entire Mickelson family.

“I look back on the year, and it really comes down to that one event,” he said. “I mean, there were other events I played OK in, but, for me the year was kind of salvaged by that Masters win. That’s how much that tournament means to me.”

Mickelson was asked whether golf had been anticlimactic since April.

“I wouldn’t say that, but my performance certainly would lead you to believe it,” he said. “But I was excited about playing other events. I mean, I was really motivated and excited about the U.S. Open and the other majors, as well.

“But I wasn’t able to put together my best play.”

And maybe that’s Phil in a nutshell.

Maybe he’s content with the $50 million a year he pockets from sponsors and prize money; content with being a father and husband instead of a driven golfaholic.

Maybe he knows he’s 40 and that the psoriatic arthritis that’s been bothering him since June isn’t going to make golf any easier from here on out, and maybe he’s decided to focus on winning a few more big ones and not sweat the small stuff.

And maybe he’ll just smile and shrug if history calls him the best player never to have made it to No. 1.

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Eagles name Vick starting QB for Week 3

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Michael Vick has been named the Philadelphia Eaglesstarting quarterback, a day after coach Andy Reid said it was Kevin Kolb‘s job.

It wasn’t immediately known why Reid reversed his decision on Tuesday. The team announced the move in a text message, and Reid was to discuss it at a news conference later in the day.

Kolb missed the last six quarters because of a concussion, and Vick played well in his absence. Kolb was cleared to practice and was expected to run the first-team offense on Wednesday.

Vick threw for 175 yards and one touchdown and ran for 103 yards in a 27-20 season-opening loss to Green Bay. He had 284 yards passing and two TDs in a 35-32 win at Detroit on Sunday.

Kolb started two games in his first three seasons before he became the team’s No. 1 quarterback after Donovan McNabb was traded to Washington. Kolb struggled in the first half against the Packers.

Vick’s start against the Lions was his first in nearly four years. A three-time Pro Bowl pick during six seasons in Atlanta, Vick missed two seasons while serving an 18-month sentence in federal prison for his role in a dogfighting operation. He signed a two-year contract with the Eagles before last season, then played sparingly behind McNabb and Kolb.

Vick has completed 63.8 percent of his passes and has posted consecutive games with a passer rating above 100 for only the second time in his career.

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Bush’s return of Heisman is wrong move

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Nice try, Heisman Trust. You don’t get off that easy.

Good speech, Reggie Bush. Too bad you couldn’t have given it in person, many months ago, when it might have meant a little more.

This didn’t call for a vacation. Vacating the 2005 Heisman Trophy, won by Bush when he was an electric (but ultimately ineligible) running back at USC, is the easy way out. It’s a slick move to try to wipe the slate clean.

Not long ago Bush said it was “out of my hands” if he got to keep the trophy, which tells us this announcement probably ultimately was, too. The trust likely was going to take it away anyway in order to protect its brand.

But that’s the easy way out. Sometimes, it’s best not to shield one’s eyes. Sometimes, a brand shows its strength by the storms it weathers. By what it owns up to, and takes on.

Reggie Bush

Give it up, Reggie

Reggie Bush has relinquished the 2005 Heisman Trophy. Thayer Evans says the Heisman Trust should have stripped him of it.

One thing baseball’s performance-enhancing drugs scandal has taught us is that you can’t just wish these things away. They happened. Yes, those baseballs sailed over the fence. Yes, those sacred records were broken. Their shards are all over us, and there’s no putting them back.

There are some things king’s horses and king’s men can’t erase.

But the other thing baseball showed us is the power of the asterisk. If there’s no escaping what happened, put it in context. It’s a Yes, but …

Yes, they were national champions. But they cheated. And everyone remembers it, and will think of it every time the winners are listed. There will be no escaping it. Was it worth it? They will have to live on, in infamy.

It’s a heck of a thing, to live on in infamy. It’s some kind of punishment, to never allow anyone to forget.

And that’s what we would rather do — forget. We want to get ourselves off the hook when we blame everything on Reggie Bush. We want to move on, to wipe it all away. We want to live in our fantasy world, and I don’t blame us. I do, too. But an asterisk wouldn’t let us.

The asterisk does more than shame its recipient. The asterisk is for all of us.

It forces us to live with what happened. It makes us come to terms with what sports can sometimes be.

And that’s why having Bush give it back is the wrong move here. If there’s no escaping what happened, at least own it. Him. Them. Us.

In 2005, the Heisman Trophy winner broke the No. 1 rule in the book and would have, should have been ineligible.

Would have. Should have. But Reggie Bush won the Heisman. He won it. The outstanding player in college football that season was taking improper benefits. Cash and prizes. That’s college football, sometimes, and now the Heisman Trophy, too. We have to live with that. The Heisman Trust does, too.

Guys who took performance-enhancing drugs hold many of our most beloved baseball records. We have to live with that.

And so do they.

And Reggie Bush should have to live with this, too. No give backs. You own it — you own all of it — for keeps.

They can’t erase this, he can’t escape this, we can’t forget this. It’s not that easy. And it shouldn’t be. But nice try, Heisman Trust.

I love the Heisman Trophy. Love, love, love, love it. But by (air quotes) “protecting its honor” in this way, are we saying every other winner was so pristine? Do we really want to ask that question? Do we really want to set a precedent? Do we really want to open that door?

It’s a nice statement from Bush. And as someone pointed out to me, it should be, he’s had months to get the wording just right. (Hey. LeBron? Hire whomever Reggie just used.)

If he can truly “(turn) a negative situation into a positive one” it would be his biggest cutback since his amazing grace against Fresno State.

Bush did his best to end on an emotional note:

“I will forever appreciate the honor bestowed upon me as a winner of the Heisman. While this decision is heart-breaking, I find solace in knowing that the award was made possible by the support and love of so many. Those are gifts that can never be taken away.”

He’s right. It’s true. He did win it. Nothing can erase it. He’ll always have won that Heisman Trophy.

For good and ill.

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Heat dancer killed in motorcycle crash

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A brand-new Miami Heat dancer was killed when the motorcycle she was riding collided with a car, The Miami Herald reported.

Nancy G. Lopez-Ruiz 

Nancy G. Lopez-Ruiz, a 22-year-old native of Nicaragua, had just signed on for her first season as a Heat dancer.

FOXNews.com

Nancy G. Lopez-Ruiz, 22, of Plantation, Fla., was riding her 2003 Suzuki GSX R in Fort Lauderdale when the crash occurred at 9:30 p.m. Friday.

According to police, Mario Careaga of Fort Lauderdale had been driving his 2009 Mercedes behind Lopez-Ruiz. The car hit a median, then struck the motorcycle, knocking Lopez-Ruiz off the bike. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

Police opened a drunk driving investigation of Careaga, whose age was not known, The Herald reported.

Lopez-Ruiz had just signed on to dance with the Heat this season.

Eric Woolworth, president of business operations for the Heat, called Lopez-Ruiz ‘‘a lovely young woman with an upbeat personality.”

Lopez-Ruiz, a native of Nicaragua, moved to the United States as an infant and graduated from high school in Bradenton, Fla.

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Don’t be thick, go with Vick

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The teflon coach is now on the clock.

With Donovan McNabb banished to our nation’s capital, Philadelphia football fans have no choice but to examine the work of the man wearing the headsets.

Andy Reid is 0-1 today largely because he still can’t manage the clock, committed to Kevin Kolb as his starting quarterback with little supporting evidence and allowed an atrocious fourth-and-1 play-call late in Philly’s 27-20 loss to Green Bay.

Making matters worse is Reid watched Michael Vick‘s electrifying second-half performance and concluded Kevin Kolb is still the Eagles‘ starting quarterback (if he’s healthy).

Andy Reid is either clueless or blind.

In an NFL opening weekend filled with interesting twists and turns, nothing tops the unveiling of Michael Vick 2.0.

The Cowboys’ coaching blunders, the Texans’ thumping of the Colts and Calvin Johnson‘s stolen game-winning catch all take a backseat to the finest performance we’ve ever seen from Michael Vick.

I’m no Vick fan. Even during his Pro Bowl years in Atlanta, I contended Vick was a wide receiver masquerading as a quarterback. When he took over Sunday after Kolb suffered a concussion, I anticipated an interception, a fumble and a 41-10 Green Bay runaway.

I was shocked. I still am.

Vick looked like Steve Young, a real authentic quarterback, on Sunday. As best I could tell, Vick made one serious mistake. Down around the goal line, he forced a pass into the end zone when he could’ve pump faked and made a dash for the goal line. But that’s just nitpicking.

Vick completed 16 of 24 passes for 175 yards and one touchdown. He ran for 103 yards on 11 carries.

Philly was down 20-3 when Vick took control of the game.

Kolb, The Anointed One, picked up right where he left off in the preseason, connecting on half of his 10 passes for 24 yards and running for a yard. DeSean Jackson, Philly’s big-play receiver, didn’t catch a pass in the first half. Philadelphia’s offense went nowhere with Kolb.

Vick turned the momentum of the game on Philly’s second possession of the second half, hitting Jackson for 12 yards on third and five and setting up the Eagles for first and goal with a 31-yard scramble.

Vick put 17 points on the board in the second half and had a shot at 24 until Reid and offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg settled for a super-conservative QB isolation run on fourth and one at the Green Bay 42 with two minutes to play. The Packers stuffed Vick for no gain. As sharp as Vick was throwing and running Sunday, Philly should’ve spread the field, emptied the backfield and given Vick the freedom to improvise.

Green Bay simply kneeled on three straight plays, running out the clock, because Reid had burned all three of his timeouts on a Packers’ possession that started with 5:43 to play.

Yep. The best way to help a backup QB shaking off three years of rust is to send him on a potential game-tying drive with no timeouts.

Andy Reid coaches like he’s won three Super Bowls. And we, the media, talk about him like he’s won four.

What’s the difference between Andy Reid and Marty Schottenheimer? A hundred pounds, Ernest Byner’s fumble and different coaching specialties.

Late in Schottenheimer’s Kansas City tenure he had a choice between Rich Gannon and Elvis Grbac. Schottenheimer chose Grbac.

Elvis quit football at age 31. Between the ages of 34-38, Gannon earned four Pro Bowl berths, one league MVP and led the Raiders to the Super Bowl.

Reid has an easier decision between Kolb and Vick. One guy has an on-field resume and the other is just a draft-day theory.

I haven’t forgotten Vick’s past. He’s capable of doing something totally stupid off the field. Cross that bridge when it comes. He’s on the Philly roster. If Vick gets in trouble off the field, the Eagles are going to take the same public-relations hit whether he’s the starter or the backup. Reid might as well play Vick and justify the risk of signing him.

Vick’s teammates responded to his energy and big-play capability. The Eagles were clearly a more confident offense and defense with Vick in the lineup.

Andy Reid would be a fool to enter the Eagles locker room and tell 53 players Kolb is the starting quarterback. Reid had the guts to permanently dump McNabb. Why not bench Kolb (or use his concussion as an excuse) and let the Vick situation play out for at least another week?

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Top 10 story lines to shape NFL season

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We know the New York Yankees are good, that the Big Red Machine is back and that the Dodgers are in court.

But with Brett Favre headed to New Orleans on Thursday night, does anybody really care about baseball? "Past"-ime is a great name for that baseball thing because football is all about now, the present and what’s going to happen next.

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Here are 10 critical story lines that figure to shape the NFL’s 91st season.

1. How will Jets handle the braggadocious hex of Rex Ryan?

Some think that the Jets were pretty fortunate to finish 9-7 last year, considering they beat two teams at the end who were resting players while awaiting the playoffs. But all you heard on HBO’s “Hard Knocks” was how they were one game away from the Super Bowl (which is true) and how great they are, especially now with cornerback Darrelle Revis financially happy once again. You got to love Rex, though, for putting the bullet squarely on his team’s back. You can also bet that teams like New England can’t wait to knock them down a peg or two. Teams will play them like they really won the Super Bowl.

2. Can Steelers stay afloat without Big Ben?

With the game’s best safety in Troy Polamalu back, Pittsburgh will strike fear in opposing quarterbacks once again. The Steelers can strike from any angle. But young Dennis Dixon must produce points in those first four games if Pittsburgh is going to have a playoff chance. Ben Roethlisberger begged for playing time this summer in order to be sharp once he returns against Cleveland on Oct. 17. With no Santonio Holmes, guys like Rashard Mendenhall and Hines Ward have to produce big time.

3. Can Vikings protect Brett Favre and is there still enough magic in his tank?

Brett Favre is back

Not long after Brett Favre apparently told his Vikings teammates he will not return for the 2010 season, he changed his mind. Check out our full coverage.

We all know that the Saints are going to blitz him (even with safety Darren Sharper on the bench) frequently in the Thursday opener, hoping to apply a TKO. Favre has the bad ankle now and no Sidney Rice … and his best bailout receiver, Percy Harvin, is another migraine away from not playing his best. People in Minnesota have been talking all summer about those five turnovers against the Saints. Otherwise, the Vikings might have been champs. It’s difficult to keep turning back the clock and virtually impossible for Favre to duplicate last season’s ratio of 33 TD passes to only 7 interceptions. Plus, the Packers are saying there’s no way he will beat them twice this year. Minnesota can, though, if Adrian Peterson stays healthy and becomes a great third-down back.

4. With personnel virtually the same, why won’t Saints repeat?

Damn good question. They have a legitimate shot. You have to love the magic that Drew Brees and Sean Payton can create and New Orleans has a great shot at being the No. 1 offense all over again. Brees always seems to find the open man and his receiving corps is deep and talented. The defense will miss Sharper in the first half of the season, but the rest of the secondary is talented with two great cornerbacks in Tracy Porter and Jabari Greer. The schedule isn’t that tough, especially if Carolina and Tampa Bay have down years.

5. Will Cowboys live up to their hype and have a shot at hosting Super Bowl XLV?

Their schedule is awfully difficult (seven playoff teams from a year ago with a combined .543 winning percentage), so if they do win the mighty NFC East they will be battle-tested for a January run. However, the first-team offense looked bad in preseason, seemingly out of rhythm. But rookie Dez Bryant could be a Showtime player and Wade Phillips has his defense right where he wants it. But to be champs, Tony Romo must play like Roger Staubach or Troy Aikman. Hey, the Giants could have a very good defense and I still like Andy Reid without Donovan McNabb. They could easily not win the rugged NFC East.

6. Will another fast start and an easy division ruin the Chargers for the playoffs?

Well, San Diego opens at Kansas City, hosts Jacksonville, visits Seattle, then heads home to Arizona before road games at Oakland and St. Louis. Smells like 5-1, doesn’t it? No question that Philip Rivers laid an egg in the playoffs against the Jets last season and now he has no Vincent Jackson. But tight end Antonio Gates is finally healthy once again and Ryan Matthews sure doesn’t run like a rookie.

7. NFC scouts talk about how talented the Vikings and Cowboys are, but aren’t the Packers right there?

Green Bay finished last season 7-1 and looked like a world beater once QB Aaron Rodgers figured out that he should throw the ball away instead of taking so many sacks. Also, the coaches corrected a faulty protection scheme. The offensive line should be much improved, the defense will be better against the run and tight end Jermichael Finley already talks like a receiving star. The schedule breaks for them, too, with the first Minnesota game at home the week after the Vikings play the Cowboys.

8. Can Baltimore and Cincinnati really win with passing offenses in the black-and-blue AFC North?

The defense won’t take a back seat to Terrell Owens and Chad Ochocinco in Cincinnati, but Baltimore has surely put the team on Joe Flacco’s right arm after trading for Anquan Boldin and even adding T.J. Houshmandzadeh, a fading star. Baltimore does have some major injuries on the offensive line and in its secondary, which will put even more pressure on Flacco to score and score. And, believe it or not, nobody really believes T.O. and Ochocinco will undermine and cause the Bengals to self-destruct.

9. Do Tom Brady and Peyton Manning have enough around them to face each other in the playoffs again?

Manning definitely does, although his offensive line has had a major shakeup. Brady looked sharp this summer after his horrible playoff performance against the Ravens. Brady, though, has an unhappy Randy Moss, who is in the last year of his contract, and a defense that is very, very young and lacking the customary veteran interchangeable parts. They especially miss the front seven that helped the Patriots reach four Super Bowls in the past decade. No one really believes the Texans or Titans will scare the Colts, who swept those teams last season. Some things never change.

10. After missing the playoffs for seven straight seasons, are the 49ers really returning to the January party?

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With no Kurt Warner, plus some pivotal defensive stars missing in Arizona, the 49ers are being touted as the next NFC West champ because of linebacker Patrick Willis and a much improved offensive line. Still, you  have to wonder whether Alex Smith can really deliver when his two best receivers, Vernon Davis and Michael Crabtree, are fighting in the locker room. Davis didn’t like how Crabtree was nursing a neck sprain, declining to play in two preseason games. Imagine that. There is a lot to like about San Francisco, especially Frank Gore, but right now they are the favorite simply because the Cardinals have such a major quarterback reshuffle. Heck, Max Hall may end up the quarterback in Arizona. Yes, Max Hall.

Howard grants wish of dying woman

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Kay Kellogg had one wish before cancer claims her life — to meet Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard.

He granted it in a big way.

According to the Orlando Sentinel, Howard recently spent time with Kellogg, a 62-year-old Magic fan with stage 3 multiple myeloma. The cancer is inoperable and incurable, the newspaper reported — but Howard lifted her spirits and she ended up lifting his.

"Dwight Howard is just such a precious, wonderful kid," she told the Sentinel. "Whenever I watch him play, he just makes me feel good inside."

Kellogg’s daughter, Arian Clute, contacted the Magic several weeks ago about her mother’s wish to have a conversation with Howard, the two-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year. He was scheduled to visit her home for 30 minutes but stayed several hours, according to the Sentinel.

When he asked why he was the only item on her bucket list, she told him, "Because some people get a choir that sings them into heaven and some people get a chariot that rolls them into heaven. Not me. I want to be slam-dunked smack, dab into the middle of heaven by Dwight Howard."

They talked about life, love, death and divinity — laughing and joking much of the time, according to the Sentinel. When he left, the 6-foot-11 Howard bent down and hugged the 4-foot-11 Kellogg. "You are taller than me," he told her.

"That’s the silliest thing I’ve ever heard," she said.

"No," Howard said, "you are taller than me because your spirit lifts you up."

Jelena Jankovic upset by Kaia Kanepi at U.S. Open – News – FOX Sports on MSN

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Jelena Jankovic upset by Kaia Kanepi at U.S. Open – News – FOX Sports on MSN.

Body of son of boxing promoter found in Cascades – News – FOX Sports on MSN

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Body of son of boxing promoter found in Cascades – News – FOX Sports on MSN.

Michigan vs. Connecticut, Sept. 4 : FoxSports.com Photo Gallery

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Michigan vs. Connecticut, Sept. 4 : FoxSports.com Photo Gallery.

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