into the NHL as a 21-year-old last season. Seasone...
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into the NHL as a 21-year-old last season. Seasoned with experien
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lili,
2014/06/12 07:24AM
Latest post: 2014/06/12 07:24AM, Views: 340, Posts: 1
Latest post: 2014/06/12 07:24AM, Views: 340, Posts: 1
lili
PRAGUE, Czech Republic -- The Czech Republic is one win away from retaining the Fed Cup after Lucie Safarova and Petra Kvitova won the opening singles in straight sets against first-time finalist Serbia on Saturday. Safarova gave the Czechs a flying start on the indoor hard-court at the O2 Arena by beating Ana Ivanovic 6-4, 6-3, and Kvitova doubled the advantage with a 6-4, 6-1 win over Jelena Jankovic. The eighth-ranked Kvitova, who led the Czechs to victory over Russia in the final last year, pumped her fist after securing her 11th consecutive victory in Fed Cup singles. She showed no sign of the bronchitis that forced her to withdraw from last weeks WTA Championships. "Unbelievable," said Kvitova, who hit 28 winners compared to 15 by Jankovic. "Actually, I was surprised by how I played. I didnt know what I can expect from myself on the court." It was the first Fed Cup loss in two years for Jankovic, a former No. 1. Kvitova double-faulted to drop serve in the fifth game before breaking twice to take the first set. Applying her big forehand and serve, she then raced to 5-0 in the second. She converted her second match point when Jankovics backhand sailed long. "She was really on a roll," Jankovic said about Kvitova. "I had chances in the first set but she came up with really some unbelievable shots. There was nothing I could do at times. She had a great day." Kvitova could clinch the title on Sunday in the first reverse singles match against Ivanovic. The Serb leads their head-to-head record 3-1, but Kvitova won their last meeting in the Australian Open. "Shes got nothing to lose," Kvitova said about Ivanovic. "But I boosted my confidence and hope to succeed again." Safarova is also scheduled to take on Jankovic, then the final ends with the Czech pair of Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka, who reached the U.S. Open and Wimbledon finals this season, against Bojana Jovanovski and Aleksandra Krunic. Safarova was pleased to win the opener before an ecstatic sell-out home crowd. She improved to 4-2 against Ivanovic. "After I lost both matches in the final last year, I desperately wanted to win," Safarova said. "We were both nervous at the start but I got rid of it. I was improving throughout the match. It was very important to win." Ivanovic, another former No. 1, looked frustrated and was unable to find her rhythm throughout their match, hitting eight double-faults and making 32 unforced errors. "Im very very disappointed that I didnt manage to get the first point for our team," she said. "I had plenty of opportunities but I just wasnt executing when it was important. It was very frustrating." The Czechs won their first title last year since Czechoslovakias split in 1993. Czechoslovakia won five times, including three straight from 1983-85. coach outlet . And it may be that Mourinho has finally gone too far. After waves of criticism from fans and players alike as Madrid slumped to a 3-2 loss in the game, the question arises whether Perez has reached the limits of his support for the often successful, yet equally abrasive, Mourinho. coach outlet online . Mazzola, 26, played in 98 games for the Goldeyes last season. He finished tied for third in the American Association with 18 home runs and fifth in slugging percentage at . http://www.coach-factoryoutl... . The 21-year-old was named the U.S. Soccer Young Male Athlete of the Year in 2010. Toronto was one of six MLS teams in Thursdays lottery and held a 57. [url=http://www.coach-factoryoutletstoreonline.com/]cheap coach handbags . Harden had 31 points and seven assists to lead the Rockets to a 104-92 victory over the New Orleans Hornets on Wednesday night. coach factory outlet .J. -- The New Jersey Devils signed free-agent forward Krys Barch to a two-year contract on Tuesday.TORONTO – Mike Kostka realizes that his ambitions are not particularly unique as it pertains to the game of hockey. "Ive still never played in the NHL," said Kostka, an engaging personality born in the Toronto suburb of Etobicoke and raised in not-so-distant Ajax. "Its still a dream of mine, thats still my goal." The now 26-year-old defender was on the cusp in the Sunshine State last fall, among the final cuts at training camp for the Florida Panthers. "They were like Yeah you did a great job, you outplayed some of our D that we have here, but theyre on one-way [contracts]. Theyre like Go down, youll get called up, youll get a ton of games, dont worry about it. And then in two months I was traded." He eventually landed with the Norfolk Admirals, the American League affiliate of the Tampa Bay Lightning, a club whose dominance last season included not only a Calder Cup – defeating the Toronto Marlies no less – but a ridiculous 29-game winning streak. Undrafted out of the University of Massachussetts-Amherst, Kostka might just be your prototypical late blooming defenceman. The shaggy-haired local product began his pro career with two inconsistent seasons in Portland before breaking out in full offensive force with Rochester in 2010-2011, blasting 16 goals and 55 points from the blueline. While not quite as strong statistically last season – he ranked 15th among defencemen in the regular season – Kostka wrapped up the American League post-season in superb form, totalling more points than any other defender. "I still feel like Im getting better," he said. "Its funny, [I see] a lot of 21-year-olds on the [Marlies], Ill be 27 in November, but Im in the best shape of my life, I feel like my game is still improving, theres always room for improvement." Kostka was of course most notorious in these parts for his one in a million overtime goal in Game 3 of the final against the Marlies, bouncing a puck off the corner stanchion for the third win in an eventual series sweep. It was less than one month later that he joined the hometown enemy. His phone rang with an offer from Toronto no more than five minutes into the free agency blowout, the organization keen on snatching a defenceman whose progress theyd monitored closely over the previous three seasons. "We played them in the final and theyre the enemy for that time, but I grew up just down the street," said Kostka with a ggrin.dddddddddddd"Its always trying to weigh the balance between the offer financially and what you see for opportunity of yourself moving up. A combination of both helped me make that decision; happy I did." The Marlies have a pretty good idea of what theyre getting in Kostka, first and foremost from their most recent head-to-head experience, but also from the small-world familial ties within the game. Gord Dineen, an assistant coach and the man charged with spearheading the defence, rang up his brother for insight; Kevin Dineen, now the head coach of the aforementioned Florida Panthers, had coached Kostka in Portland. "The one thing that Kevin always said about him is that hes got a real high hockey IQ," said Dineen, noting Kostkas strong fitness testing scores as an indication of his work ethic. "Hes not a real riverboat gambler out there, he makes high percentage decisions and he moves the puck quickly. Thats the way youve got to play the game nowadays." Kostka has evolved into an effective point-producer from the back-end, but its not a skill-set that was immediate to him, rather one that he worked to polish. Granted steady opportunity in Rochester, he also progressed into a wily quarterback on the powerplay. "Maybe hes been a guy that early on, it took him a little while to develop the skill to be a top-end American Hockey League player which he is now," said Dineen. "…we feel like he can evolve into an NHL player in the same regard." Its hardly unusual for defencemen to progress at slower speeds, no better a recent example than Jason Garrison, the newly-minted Vancouver Canucks blueliner who broke out in earnest as a 27-year-old with Florida. The Leafs dont boast an especially deep defence, keeping open the prospect of Kostka as a darkhorse when and if the lockout lifts this season. Jake Gardiner, his current defence partner and the organizations crown jewel is more exception to the rule, a defender who burst into the NHL as a 21-year-old last season. Seasoned with experience, Kostka continues to chase the familiar dream. "The hockey world is crazy," he said. "You talk to any guys that have gone through it, no ones alone in their pursuit of their goals and the ups and downs and sometimes more downs than ups. The biggest thing is staying focused on where you are now. You cant control where youre not, all you can do is take care of your business." ' ' '
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