Sunday, October 27, 2013

Montana: SF made 'terrible effort' to keep 49ers

Montana: SF made 'terrible effort' to keep 49ers
October 26, 2013, 9:00 am ピンG25フェアウェイウッド
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Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Montana spent 13 seasons in San Francisco and led the 49ers to four Super Bowl titles. (AP)
 
LONDON -- Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Montana did not get sentimental when asked Saturday about the 49ers moving out of San Francisco.
Montana, instead, placed the blame on San Francisco politicians for the 49ers’ relocation to Santa Clara. The 49ers, of course, will remain as the San Francisco 49ers, but their home stadium will move 39 miles to the south.
Candlestick Park is scheduled to be demolished shortly after the current season, and the 49ers will move into Levi’s Stadium for the 2014 season. The 49ers' team offices are also located in Santa Clara.
“I understand people’s concern about them leaving San Francisco,” said Montana, speaking at an NFL forum that featured questions from European fans of football.
“I don’t think there was enough of an effort by people in power at the time to try to keep them there. To me, they made a terrible effort to try to keep them in San Francisco.”
After nine years of working on a plan to build a new stadium on Candlestick Point, the 49ers announced in November 2006 it was shifting its focus to Santa Clara. At the time of the announcement, San Francisco hoped a possible new stadium would help draw the 2016 Olympics to the Bay Area.
In explaining why Santa Clara became the focus of the new stadium plans, the 49ers said San Francisco officials were repeatedly warned about problems with the Candlestick plan and those in power, including then-Mayor Gavin Newsom, did not act.
So while the 49ers' home stadium will no longer be in San Francisco, it could've been a lot worse, Montana said.
"It's not like it went to Oakland," he quipped.

Serena Williams beats Li Na for WTA titl


Serena Williams beats Li Na for WTA title


AP - Sports

Serena Williams beats Li Na for WTA title
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ISTANBUL (AP) -- The way the season has gone for Serena Williams, there was only one fitting way for it to end.
Williams capped a career year in style Sunday, earning her 11th title by coming from behind to beat Li Na 2-6, 6-3, 6-0 for her second straight WTA Championships crown.
Williams became the eighth woman to win 11 or more titles in a year and the first since Martina Hingis had 12 in 1997. The American also is the first to repeat as champion at the season-ending WTA Championships since Justine Henin in 2007.
''It was an awesome year of tennis,'' said Williams, who sank to her knees after firing a backhand winner on her second match point.
The victory brought Williams' prize money total for the year to $12,385,572. The only player, male or female, to earn more in a year was Novak Djokovic with $12,803,737 in 2012 and $12,619,803 in 2011.
Williams won the event for the fourth time, having captured the elite tournament for the top eight players also in her debut in 2001 and in 2009 and 2012.
Williams has won 78 of 82 matches this year and will finish the year as the top-ranked player for the third time in her career after 2002 and 2009. Williams' titles this year included the French and U.S. Opens for a total of 17 Grand Slam crowns. Her winning percentage of .951 is the best on the tour since 1990. Martina Navratilova had an 86-1 record and a .989 percentage in 1983.
Still, Williams said she would have preferred to have won at least one more Grand Slam title.
''I live to win slams. I mean, obviously I'm so excited to be the WTA champion,'' Williams said. ''I can't say it's the best (season). I can't say it's not the best. I don't know. I really don't know.''
Li was in her first WTA Championships final and will finish the year at a career-high No. 3.
The final featured two players above the age of 30 for the first time in the championships' 43-year history. Williams is 32 and Li is 31 but both are playing some of their best tennis.
Li got off to a better start over a sluggish-looking Williams, who struggled a day earlier to beat Jelena Jankovic and complained later of being exhausted after a long season.
''I felt good this morning, much better than I did yesterday, but then in practice I was like, 'Oh, no.' I was a little worried, but I just hung in there and just kept going and going,'' Williams said.
The Chinese player was quick to break serve for a 2-1 lead and rolled through the first set, which ended with Williams netting a forehand and hitting a backhand passing shot wide.
Williams won a key game at the start of the second set that went to nine deuces and lasted nearly 12 minutes as the American fended off two break points before finally prevailing with a service winner.
''I guess looking back it was definitely a very important game for me to win,'' Williams said. ''She had been on a real roll. I guess I was determined to win that game at any cost.''
Li blasted an ace, her only one of the match, to level at 3-3. But she produced a double-fault and a forehand error to give Williams a chance to serve out the set. Williams needed three set points to close it out.
''After a set and a half, I was feeling no more energy left. It's a tough tournament, because I played five days in a row,'' Li said. ''Every opponent (is in the) top eight, so you never have an easy match in this tournament.''
It was another double-fault by Li that gave Williams a break of serve at the start of the third and the American pulled away.
Williams did have to save five break points, the last one with her sixth ace, before wrapping up the title.
Li, the 2011 French Open champion, fell to 1-10 against Williams. She lost a set at 6-0 for the second straight time they played. She won only three games in her loss to Williams in the semifinals of the U.S. Open.
''I have a little bit bad taste, because it's at love, but I still feel more positive things,'' Li said.
After three years in Istanbul, the tournament moves to Singapore for the next five years.