Introducing San Francisco History of the Tower of London Grand Central Station Visitors Guide

Wednesday, December 12, 2012


United States officials confirm that North Korea appears to have carried out the successful launch of a long-range rocket.
The move comes as a surprise to the international community, which has consistently called on North Korea to abandon its efforts.
Less than 24 hours earlier, the North Koreans had indicated they were grappling with "technical uncertainties" that forced them to extend the launch window to Dec. 29.
The secretive regime insists its efforts are part of a peaceful space program intended to place a satellite into orbit. But the U.S. and key Asian allies believe it is a thinly disguised attempt to test an intercontinental ballistic missile aimed at furthering development of the technology needed to mount a nuclear warhead on a long-range rocket that could one day reach the U.S.
National Security Council spokesman Tom Vietor called the launch a "highly provocative act that threatens regional security."
In recent weeks even China, North Korean's only remaining ally, sent a high level delegation into Pyongyang to convey a message of constraint. Today, China expressed "regret" over the incident. In the past, China has supported North Korea's right to develop its space program.
"The action is yet another example of North Korea's pattern of irresponsible behavior," read the National Security Council statement. "The United States remains vigilant in the face of North Korean provocations and is fully committed to the security of allies in the reg"At no time was the missile or the resultant debris a threat to North America," said NORAD.North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) acknowledged the launch initiated at 9:49 a.m. local time and followed its intended trajectory, traveling south between Korea and Japan.
Japan's emergency alert system – M-NET – recorded the rocket's flight path directly over Okinawa just after 10:00 a.m. Officials say they have located three points of debris: One in South Korea's Yellow Sea, a second location further down the country's west coast and the third point 180 miles north of the Philippines.
A South Korean military official confirmed that one of their three warships, equipped with the Aegis radar systemdetected the launch. The first stage fell just below Byeonsanbando, southwest of the Korean peninsula, exactly where it was supposed to, according to the official.
Increased attention focused on North Korea in recent weeks as satellite images showed action at the Tongchang-ri launch site. But on Monday, a statement from the Korean Committee of Space Technology claimed that scientists and technicians "found a technical deficiency in the first-stage control engine module of the rocket carrying the satellite." Satellite images also revealed that a new third-stage booster was delivered to the launch pad on Saturday.
A key issue is how far the rocket traveled and whether it was able to successfully separate its second and third stage rockets. If so, the capacity to travel long distances would be greatly enhanced.
The type of rocket is believed to be the Taepodong 2 missile. The North Koreans refer to it as the Unha-3, which in Korean translates as "Galaxy-3." The same type of missile has been previously tested three times in 2006, 2009 and 2012. Each time, the rocket failed soon after launch. It is believed to have the capacity to travel a minimum of 3,400 miles. That puts it well within striking range of the western U.S

New tarmacking of the Australian Phillip Island circuit has today been completed, after the track underwent an AUD $3 million upgrade after consultation with Casey Stoner.

Following 14 years of steady deterioration, the 4.445km track was resurfaced over a period of two days, following a 40mm layer being skimmed off the top the week before. The preparation for the project had been extensive, including numerous site surveys recommending the need for new asphalt run-off zones at Doohan Corner and at turn four. In addition to this, 1.3km of kerbs will also be removed and replaced, whilst drainage around the circuit will also be improved.
To help the circuit retain its unique character, former double MotoGP World Champion Casey Stoner was consulted before work began to advise which bumps to remove and which to retain. The Australian, who has now retired from the sport, is arguably one of the best racers to ask, having dominated at the track for the last six years in the premier-class, with his final race in front of his home crowd this October being no exception. His favourite corner on the track, Turn 3, was aptly named after him to honour his achievement at the circuit. 

Tuesday, December 11, 2012


The Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup starts its 7th season with 2 races at the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas in Austin Texas on April 20th and 21st.

The 14-round season will conclude with 2 races at the Grand Prix of Aragón at the end of September. During those 7 months the 24 teenagers will once more thrill the racing world with their intense dedication to improving their racing skills and showing themselves ready to move into the World Championship Grand Prix classes.
2013 sees not only a new race track, but new machinery as the Cup adopts the KTM 250 RBR 4-stroke Moto3 machine, finally saying goodbye to the 2-stroke KTM RC 125 that has powered so many on their way to GP careers.
The Rookies get their first chance to ride the new machines at 2 Jerez tests, a total of 4 days of pre season testing on February 22nd and 23rd and March 12th and 13th. The new machine is a very close brother to the 2013 factory Red Bull KTM that will be used by the Ajo Motorsport Team that starts the year as reigning World Champions through Sandro Cortese's title in 2012.
There could be no better machine for the Rookies for not only did the KTM take Cortese to 5 victories and a total of 15 podiums last year but it also gave team mates and ex Rookies Danny Kent 2 wins and put Arthur Sissis on the podium in his 1st GP season.
No greater inspiration than that is needed and the young riders that will assemble from across the globe know that they have everything they need to follow the trail to Grand Prix success.

2013 Rookies Cup Calendar
Feb 22-23, Spain, Jerez, Pre-season Test 1
Mar 12-13, Spain, Jerez, Pre-season Test 2

Apr 20-21, USA, Austin, Races 1-2
May 4-5, Spain, Jerez, Races 3-4
Jun 28-29, Netherlands, Assen, Races 5-6
Jul 13-14, Germany, Sachsenring, Races 7-8
Aug 24, Czech Republic, Brno, Race 9
Aug 31-Sep 1, Great Britain, Silverstone, Races 10-11
Sep 14, San Marino, Misano, Race 12
Sep 28-29, Spain, Aragon, Races 13-14

2013 Rookies Cup Entry List
3 Diego Perez (ESP)
6 Corentin Perolari (FRA)
7 Aris Michail (GER)
10 Felix Nässi (FIN)
18 Mario Tocca (ITA)
19 Tarran Mackenzie (GBR)
24 Marcos Ramirez (ESP)
27 Joe Roberts (USA)
28 Bradley Ray (GBR)
29 Stefano Manzi (ITA)
33 Enea Bastianini (ITA)
34 Jordan Weaving (RSA)
36 Joan Mir (ESP)
40 Darryn Binder (RSA)
45 Olly Simpson (AUS)
46 Yui Watanabe (JPN)
50 Lukas Trautmann (AUT)
54 Toprak Razgatlioglu (TUR)
64 Anthony Alonso (USA)
74 Soushi Mihara (JPN)
88 Jorge Martin (ESP)
95 Scott Deroue (NED)
96 Manuel Pagliani (ITA)
98 Karel Hanika (CZE)

Jon Stewart has revealed that he almost left The Daily Show because his holdover staff initially refused to take it the direction he wanted — as in, more satirical than Craig Kilbourne's fratty local news-style show. Think of what might not have been: without Stewart, we might understand George W. Bush a lot differently. We would not have been inspired to do Fox News supercuts on YouTube. We would not have Stephen Colbert. And Stewart explained that 13 years of history might not have happened: because of jerks.
Stewart took the gig in 1999, but didn't comprehend what he was in for: "What I did not realize is, a lot of the people who worked there were assholes," he said at the Wellmont Theatre in New Jersey during a fundraiser for the Montclair Film Festival Friday night. Stewart explained to Stephen Colbert that there was massive resistance to change, as Third Beat's Sharilyn Johnson reports:
"I had, before taking [the job], some conversations with the powers that be there about the direction I thought we could move the show…. I wanted it to be satirical in the classic sense of the word, not the Spy magazine sense of the word where you just add adjectives like 'pepperpot'..."
He thought the staff understood his ideas. He was wrong:
"I walk in the door, into a room with the writers and producers, and the first thing they say is 'this isn't some MTV bullshit'…. And then I was told not to change the jokes or improvise."
It took two and a half years for the "natural winnowing process" to purge The Daily Show of those "assholes," he said. Let that be a lesson, kids: it pays to have a thick skin and to wait out the jerks. The future of America might depend on it.

CAIRO (AP) — They showed a military-style precision: Crowds of bearded Islamists proclaiming allegiance to Egypt's President Mohammed Morsi and chanting "God is great" as they descended on tents set up by anti-Morsi protesters outside the presidential palace, swinging clubs and firing rifles. They set up a detention facility, interrogating and beating captured protesters.
The scene from bloody clashes outside the presidential palace a week ago hangs over Egypt's political crisis as a daunting sign of how much more violent the confrontation could become between Morsi's Islamist supporters and the opposition that has launched a giant wave of protests against him.
Opponents of Morsi accuse his Muslim Brotherhood supporters of unleashing highly trained cadres — fired up with religious slogans — to crush their political rivals. They fear last week's violence was a signal that the Brotherhood will use force to push its agenda and defend its political gains in the face of a persistent protest movement demanding that Morsi withdraw a draft constitution largely written by his Islamist allies.
Ahead of a new mass rallies planned by both sides Tuesday, masked gunmen attacked anti-Morsi protesters in Cairo's central Tahrir Square before dawn, firing birdshot at them and wounding nine. It was unclear who was behind the attack, said security officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the press.
Officials from the Brotherhood and its political party deny using violence to quell critics. Regarding the clashes last Wednesday, the worst violence yet in the crisis, they say Morsi supporters were defending the palace and accuse the protesters of starting the battles. They claim their side suffered more deaths and injuries during the clashes, which left at least eight people dead. More broadly, theBrotherhood accuses former regime supporters of paying thugs in an organized campaign to topple Islamists from power, pointing to a series of attacks on Brotherhood offices the past weeks.
"The group and the party don't use violence and have no inclination to the use of violence," said Mourad Aly, a Brotherhood party spokesman. He added, "We will never allow an attack or breach on the palace."
However, when last week's violence began, the only protesters outside the palace were around 100 conducting a sit-in in the tents, and the allegiances of those killed remain controversial. Opponents and rights lawyers charge that the Brotherhood has tried to convince some families to declare their deceased sons as Brotherhood.
Testimonies and videos that have emerged from the nearly 15 hours of street clashes show an organized group of disciplined Islamists, working in units and carrying out military-type exercises as they broke up the tent sit-in at the palace.
Opponents of the Brotherhood frequently accuse the group of running a "militia." The group is known for its tight discipline, and it acknowledges that many of its young members undergo organized martial arts training — but it vehemently denies forming any militias.
Tharwat el-Kherbawy, a former Brotherhood member and now an opponent of the group, said the Brotherhood's central organizational doctrine — calling on members to "hear and obey" their leaders — gives it a military-like structure.
When the Brotherhood met a stronger than expected protest movement, "they had no hesitation in hastening to implement their ideas and resorting to violence," he said. "If their empowerment project is facing resistance, this resistance must be quelled."
Wednesday's showdown was the fiercest display of the Brotherhood's strength, but similar, smaller attacks on opponents by Brotherhood members took place at least three times earlier this year when secular and liberal groups criticized the Brotherhood's grip on power.
During last Wednesday's fighting, nearly 140 anti-Morsi protesters were tortured and interrogated at a makeshift detention center set up by the Brotherhood along the walls of the presidential palace, according to witnesses. The detained protesters were filmed making forced confessions that they had received foreign funds, according to some who were held and an Egyptian journalist who snuck into the site.
One of the victims, Yehia Negm, an Egyptian diplomat, told The Associated Press he was dragged on the ground to the center where he was beaten. He is suffering from multiple injuries in the head, eye, nose, and ribs from beating and had remains of pellets in his forehead from gunfire during the clashes.
"When they found my ID that says a diplomat, they started accusing me of working with security agencies, of being a spy and of serving foreign countries," Negm said. "They rained beatings down on me. They started yelling at me, saying, 'You infidels, you want to burn the country down, you are not Muslims.'"
Around 20 Islamists manned the center, made up of metal barricades erected against the palace wall, said Mohammed Elgarhy, a local journalist with the daily Al-Masry Al-Youm who snuck in and spent nearly four hours there. Among them was a man he recognized as a well-known Brotherhood lawyer and two others he overheard speaking with a Brotherhood leader. The others, who he said he believed were Brotherhood members, carried out the beatings and interrogations.
"The Brotherhood were carrying out the job of the Interior Ministry," Elgarhy told AP. "They would arrest anyone they suspected ... asking them questions such as who paid for you to come here."
Troops from the Central Security Forces guarded the site, but did not interfere, he said. The Brotherhood has not addressed accusations about the detention center but says it did seize protesters and hand them over to police.
The violence came a day after hundreds of thousands marched on the palace in Cairo's upper middle class district of Heliopolis, demanding Morsi withdraw the draft constitution and sweeping powers that he had given himself in a series of decrees.
After the rally, around 100 protesters remained in the tent camp. In response, the Brotherhood called a "general mobilization" of its members, and its spokesman said the group will protect the legitimacy of the president and state institutions.
The next day, last Wednesday, thousands of Islamists lined up on a main boulevard near the palace, chanting "Power, Resolve, Faith, Morsi's men are everywhere," and threatening to douse the tents with gasoline, according to video of the scene posted on YouTube.
The Islamists then stormed the camp, chanting "God is great" and "Islamic law is fundamental in Egypt," as they tore down tents and chased away the protesters. They then ransacked the tents. Brotherhood supporters claimed they found evidence of drug use at the camp — though they never showed any — and that burnt charcoal and processed cheese in the tents proved the protest was foreign funded, without explanation. The accusations were reminiscent of those leveled by the regime of ousted President Hosni Mubarak against the protesters who rose up against his rule in early 2011.
As news of the attack spread, more anti-Morsi protesters arrived on the scene. Buses, shown parked nearby in videos, brought in Brotherhood supporters. By sunset a full-fledged street battle transformed Heliopolis into a war zone, spreading over at least three fronts near the palace. Protesters and witnesses put the number of Morsi supporters at up to 12,000 compared to several thousand protesters.
Bearded men in short robes waved sticks in the air as they chased groups of young men and women down darkened alleys while gunfire echoed in the background.
A resident of a building overlooking one front line said Morsi supporters appeared to be operating by what a well-rehearsed plan. They came prepared with metal sheets for barricades and motorcycles with small trailers attached brought loads of stones to pelt protesters with. The resident spoke on condition his name not be used for fear of retribution.
Some Morsi supporters were armed with rifles, firing from the edges of the front lines to avoid being detected, said Mahmoud Zaghloul, a 22-year old protester who got hit with a rock in his head. He also said many in the Morsi camp came prepared with helmets with plexi-glass face screens.
At least one video shown on a private TV station shows a man in the Morsi camp, wearing a full helmet, taking a professional shooter position, bending his knees and aiming with a rifle.
"One of the most disturbing things was how they chanted 'God is Great' as they aimed at us," as if they were firing at infidels, Zaghloul said.
Some in the anti-Morsi camp also had firearms, witnesses said. At least one amateur video circulating online that showed an anti-Morsi protester pointing a pistol from behind a barricade at the opposing camp.
The exact circumstances of the online videos could not be independently confirmed, but their contents were consistent with other AP reporting.

Monday, December 10, 2012


LONDON (AP) -- Fernando Torres scored his second double of the week and Chelsea's search for a Premier League win under Rafa Benitez ended with a 3-1 win at Sunderland on Saturday.
Mikel Arteta's pair of penalties secured Arsenal's victory over highflying West Bromwich Albion.
Chelsea halted a seven-game winless run in the league - three under Benitez.
Torres, who scored twice in midweek as the defending champions exited the Champions League, scored his first domestic goals in two months at Sunderland and then set up Juan Mata after the break.
Chelsea remains third but went seven points behind leader Manchester United, which is at second-place Manchester City on Sunday.
Arsenal rose from 10th to sixth after Arteta scored twice from the spot in a 2-0 victory over fifth-place West Brom.
Queens Park Rangers remains stuck at the bottom without a win after being held to a 2-2 draw at Wigan. But Southampton climbed out of the relegation zone and moved past Wigan on goal difference by beating Reading 1-0.
Aston Villa is between between Wigan and Southampton after being held to a 0-0 draw at home by Stoke, which had defender Ryan Shotton sent off in stoppage time for a second bookable offense.
Reading and QPR were joined by Sunderland in the drop zone after the northeast side helped Chelsea to bounce back from its European setback.
Unlike Torres' goals against FC Nordsjaelland, which couldn't help Chelsea progress in the Champions League, his double on Saturday were crucial.
The Spain striker volleyed the ball into the net with the studs of his boot in the 11th minute at Sunderland.
And he converted his first penalty kick in English soccer on the stroke of halftime after Seb Larsson had fouled Ramires as the ball was just about to go out for a goal kick.
Torres had seven goals in 21 matches in all competitions this season under Roberto Di Matteo, but has now scored four in five games under Benitez, his former manager at Liverpool who replaced the Italian last month.
At Emirates Stadium, Arsenal halted a three-game run without a win after fortuitously being awarded the first penalty, which Arteta converted in the 26th.
Santi Cazorla went down lightly under Steven Reid's challenge when his shin only appeared to be clipped slightly.
West Brom manager Steve Clarke said there was ''zero contact.''
''I'm not sure what the referee saw but it was a bad decision for us,'' he said. ''It changed the shape of the afternoon.''
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said his player told him there was contact.
''I'm sorry if it wasn't a penalty, but I have spoken to Santi and he said he had been touched and lost his balance,'' Wenger said.
No one disputed Arteta's second penalty in the 64th after Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain was brought down by Chris Brunt.
''I'm proud of the victory today because it's important for our season when our backs are to the wall, because our spirit has been questioned because of the flat performance last week,'' Wenger said.
Swansea, Arsenal's conquerors last weekend, lost for the first time in six weeks on Saturday as Norwich won 4-3 in south Wales.
A Swansea fan was later arrested for allegedly making a racial gesture toward Norwich defender Sebastien Bassong.
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FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) - Bayern Munich won 2-0 in Augsburg to extend its lead in the Bundesliga as defending champion Borussia Dortmund went down 3-2 with 10 men at home against Wolfsburg on Saturday.
Goals from Thomas Mueller and Mario Gomez helped to lift Bayern 11 points ahead of second-placed Bayer Leverkusen, which plays on Sunday in Hannover.
In Dortmund, the defending champion got off to a fast start, with Marco Reus scoring from a free kick in the sixth minute, but Wolfsburg pulled level half an hour later when Marcel Schmelzer was sent off for handling and Diego converted the resulting penalty.
Naldo volleyed Wolfsburg in front before half time, but Jakub Blaszczykowski canceled it out from the penalty spot in the 61st after Robert Lewandowski was pushed down by Simon Kjaer.
But Wolfsburg went in front again when Bas Dost slotted home past Roman Weidenfeller, and the team rose to 14th.
Vedad Ibisevic scored a hat trick for Stuttgart in a 3-1 victory over Schalke 3-1, which is winless in five matches and is now fourth, 16 points behind Bayern. Stuttgart pulled even on points with its third consecutive victory.
Both teams finished with 10 men, with red cards for Stuttgart's Gotoku Sakai and Schalke's Jermaine Jones. Both were sent off for rough tackles, although there appeared little contact when Jones was ruled to have upended Ibrahima Traore.
''Sorry for the red card!! But I'm not 100% on the ref side,'' Jones wrote on Twitter.
Also Saturday Freiburg beat Greuther Fuerth 1-0 and Nuremberg beat Fortuna Duesseldorf 2-0.
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BARCELONA, Spain (AP) - Malaga thrashed struggling Granada 4-0 at home on Saturday to provisionally rise into fourth place in the Spanish league.
Joaquin Sanchez and Javier Saviola scored in the first half, and Ignacio Camacho and Roque Santa Cruz were on target after the break.
Malaga is level on points with Real Betis, which hosts league leader Barcelona on Sunday. Granada is winless in four games and one point from safety in 17th place.
Real Sociedad defender Carlos Martinez scored an injury-time equalizer to secure a 1-1 home draw with Getafe.
Sociedad remained undefeated in five rounds and moved up into eighth place, two spots behind Getafe in sixth.
Real Madrid was at Valladolid in the late match on Saturday.
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Celtic cemented its place at the top of the Scottish Premier League with a 3-1 win at Kilmarnock on Saturday.
Captain Scott Brown fired Celtic in front in the 27th minute, before Joe Ledley and Georgios Samaras netted in the second half.
Former Celtic striker Cillian Sheridan grabbed a late consolation for Kilmarnock.
The defending champions have a three-point lead and a game in hand over Inverness, which beat third-place Hibernian 3-0.
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ROME (AP) - Atalanta beat Parma 2-1 Saturday to move into a tie for seventh place in Serie A.
German Denis put Atalanta ahead with a header four minutes in, and Federico Peluso doubled the lead in the 38th from a rebound of a shot from Denis. Amauri pulled one back for Parma on the stroke of half time.
Atalanta is tied with AC Milan, 14 points behind Italian league leader Juventus, which visits Palermo on Sunday in coach Antonio Conte's return from a four-month sideline ban.

Determined to alter the course of a stagnant franchise, bankrolled by what is expected to be a precedent-setting television contract and encouraged by new ownership to build bigger and better, the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday reached an agreement in principle to sign free-agent right-hander Zack Greinke for $147 million over six years, pending the results of his physical.
Zack Greinke split last season between the Brewers and Angels. (AP)Already having acquired nearly $300 million in contracts mid-summer in Adrian Gonzalez, Carl Crawford, Hanley Ramirez and Josh Beckett, extended Andre Ethier’s contract by $85 million and just over a year ago re-upped Matt Kemp for $160 million, the Dodgers have become the economic Goliaths of baseball.
Bound for years by the mismanagement and personal gluttony of Frank McCourt, who ultimately declared bankruptcy, the Dodgers under an ownership of Mark Walter and Magic Johnson are expected to have the highest payroll in baseball by a wide margin. The New York Yankees had held that distinction for some 15 years running.
The latest addition apparently will be Greinke, to a rotation that starts with Clayton Kershaw, arguably the best pitcher in the National League over the past two seasons. And the Dodgers still seek another starting pitcher.
Greinke had been considering the Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Angels as well. He’d recently visited all three clubs – the Dodgers and Angels in L.A., the Rangers in Florida, where he resides – and apparently came away very comfortable with Colletti and manager Don Mattingly. The Dodgers were impressed by Greinke’s demeanor and intellect.
Greinke, 29, was 15-5 with a 3.48 ERA in 2012, which he split between the Milwaukee Brewers and Angels. Over the past two seasons, he was 31-11 with a 3.63 ERA. He is consistently among the leaders in strikeouts-to-walk ratio.
Smart and aggressive, Greinke has thrown at least 202 innings in four of the past five seasons, including in 2009, when he was the American League’s Cy Young Award winner as a Kansas City Royal.
In the lead-up to his signing with the Dodgers, speculation had Greinke challenging the largest contract for a pitcher in history – CC Sabathia’s seven-year, $161 million deal with the New York Yankees – and certainly the largest ever for a right-hander pitcher, that being Matt Cain’s six-year, $127.5 million contract with the San Francisco Giants.
At $147 million in total value, Greinke’s contract is the second-largest ever for a pitcher and the 14th-largest – just behind Miguel Cabrera’s $152.3 million and ahead of Cole Hamels’ $144 million – among all players. In average annual value, just over $24.5 million, the contract ranks fifth all-time.
Kershaw is under team control for two more seasons and, barring health setbacks, could fetch more than Greinke either in a contract extension or in free agency. The Dodgers have not yet initiated talks with Kershaw’s agency, Excel, which also represents Greinke.
Greinke gives the Dodgers another ace to go with Clayton Kershaw. (AP)Greinke brought more than talent and statistics to free agency, however. He missed most of the 2006 season in Kansas City while suffering from depression and a social anxiety disorder. He later said he nearly quit the game. He appeared to regain his emotional footing in 2007 and '08, and by '09 was widely considered to be the foremost pitcher in the game. Increasingly unhappy in Kansas City, where the team was losing nearly 100 games every season, Greinke was traded to Milwaukee. The Brewers hoped to sign Greinke to a long-term contract. When that failed, they traded him last summer to the Angels for three prospects.
Introverted and circumspect, Greinke was believed to be seeking not every last dime in free agency, but comfort and familiarity. Reports suggested Greinke would be unhappy in large, media-hungry cities such as Boston, New York and Chicago, perhaps even Los Angeles. He appeared to enjoy his two months in Anaheim, however, and the Angels hoped he would return. A curiosity over his 13 starts for the Angels was an adherence to a somewhat strict pitch count, typically in the 110 range. Greinke refused to discuss the strategy and whether it was his idea or the club’s. Angels manager Mike Scioscia also was vague on the topic.
Still, Greinke was exceptional down the stretch for the Angels. In his final eight starts he was 5-0 with a 2.04 ERA.
He rode that into a winter in which there were no other elite starting pitchers in free agency and with several well-off franchises – both teams in Los Angeles, the Rangers and Washington Nationals – in the market for pitching. Flush with new ownership and the promise of the largest television deal in baseball history, the Dodgers sought a starter to slot after their own ace, Kershaw. The Angels traded away Ervin Santana and declined the 2013 option on Dan Haren’s contract, creating a hole in their rotation. The Rangers required an ace to lead their young-ish rotation, as did the Nationals. Greinke’s former teams – the Brewers and Royals – also were thought to have some interest, but weren’t likely to muster bids competitive with the others.


Milan turned on the style as the club came from behind to beatTorino 4-2 at Stadio Olimpico thanks to a potent display from their front line.
Goals from the attacking trio of Robinho, Stephen El Shaawary andGiampaolo Pazzini helped the Rossoneri cancel out Mario Santana's opener as they continued their resurgent form in Serie A.
The home side came close to scoring with its inaugural attack of the match when Santana was given room to take aim at Marco Amelia's goal, the Argentine rasping his effort just wide of the post.
Milan began to find its feet after the early scare and amassed a number of decent chances before falling behind.
Only an important block from Angelo Ogbonna prevented Ignazio Abate’s low center from picking out Pazzini, while Antonio Nocerino fired wide from outside the area and Pazzini also had a header clear the crossbar.
The visiting side's best chance to open the scoring fell to the in-form El Shaawary but he couldn’t hit the target when Pazzini cut the ball back for him inside the area.
Milan was made to pay for its profligacy and a mistake by Antonio Nocerino gifted Torino the lead on 28 minutes. The Milan midfielder attempted to play the ball back to his defense but could only watch on in horror as his loose pass was seized upon by Santana, who was given the freedom of the Rossoneri’s half as he bore down on goal and nonchalantly rounded Amelia before rolling home the opener.
Torino’s lead was short-lived however and Massimiliano Allegri’s side was able to level before the break through Robinho, who produced a moment of Brazilian flair to outsmart the Torino defense.
Mattia De Sciglio managed to get forward down the left flank once again and his pass into the box fell at the feet of the former Man City player whose irresistible dummy threw the last defender and afforded the forward the space to poke the ball into the roof of the net.
Milan took the lead shortly after the break when Nocerino atoned for his earlier mistake by nodding in from six yards.
El Shaawary worked his way into the box and chipped in an inviting ball which Jean-Francois Gillet could only parry onto the head of Nocerino who made no mistake, his relief in making up for his first half error evident in his celebration.
The visiting side strengthened its grip on the game when Pazzini added a third just after the hour mark in controversial fashion.
The former Inter man burst into the box but appeared to bundle over Salvatore Masiello as he battled to maintain possession but referee Andrea Romeo saw nothing untoward and Pazzini steadied himself before rifling past Gillet.
There were still more issues for the home team as El Shaawary grabbed a fourth to score in the seventh consecutive away match for Milan.

The striker pounced on the ball after Gillet had spilt Nocerino's harmless looking cross at his feet, rounding the grounded Belgian and slotting into an unguarded net. 

Rolando Bianchi grabbed a consolation for Torino with a powerful header as he rose to meet Valter Bisa's cross but Milan saw out the remainder of the game to keep pace with the teams above it in Serie A.

MANCHESTER-- Robin van Persie’s injury-time free kick inspired Manchester United to a 3-2 win over Manchester City in a barnstorming derby.
Wayne Rooney had put United two goals up after 28 minutes as United counterattacked in clinical fashion.
But Yaya Toure pulled one back for City to set up a thrilling last half hour, and Pablo Zabaleta sent the home support wild in the 86th minute when he made his club's relentless pressure count by shooting through a crowded goalmouth.
However, it was Van Persie, the player City tried to sign in the summer, who had the final say in a magnificent game with a deflected 25-yard free kick that nestled in the bottom corner.
United’s landmark victory in the biggest domestic match of the season so far condemned City to its first defeat at Etihad Stadium for nearly two years.
In a match that typified the passion, entertainment and commitment of the Premier League, Sir Alex Ferguson’s team will feel that justice was done, given that Toure’s strike came 60 seconds after Ashley Young had a goal disallowed for offside even though he appeared to be level.
United has now claimed four big scalps in the opening 16 matches of the season, having already won at Liverpool and Chelsea and beaten Arsenal at home.
With Hollywood royalty Tom Cruise and Robert Duvall watching on, Mancini sprung a surprise by opting to pair Sergio Aguero withMario Balotelli rather than Carlos Tevez.
For United, David De Gea got the nod to start in goal, Tom Cleverley was chosen to partner Michael Carrick and Antonio Valencia returned after three weeks on the sidelines.
City completely dominated the early exchanges but after Balotelli and Aguero had wasted good opportunities, Rooney’s classic sucker-punch goal put the visiting side 1-0 up.
A brilliant Van Persie chest down on the halfway line allowed Young to gallop down the left flank, from where he found Rooney in space on the edge of the box. The forward’s shot was poorly hit but it caught out an unmoved Joe Hart in goal, dribbling into the corner of the net.
The home fans were momentarily stunned, and there was another blow when skipper and defensive leader Vincent Kompany hobbled off after 20 minutes with what appeared to be a groin injury.
Curiously, Kompany was replaced not by Joleon Lescott but Kolo Toure, who was not deemed good enough to be selected for City’s Champions League squad.
Toure looked a nervous wreck every time the play was in his general direction and United soon took full advantage of City’s reshuffle.
After 28 minutes, Cleverley won an important tackle in midfield and David Silva failed to track Rooney’s central run. The striker greedily gobbled up Rafael’s cross from the right flank to unerringly side-foot his 150th league goal.
By the time the opening period ended, the home support had been quietened, City was running out of ideas and United looked in control.
Mancini waited until six minutes into the second half to replace the disappointing Balotelli with Tevez, by which time the visiting team had also been forced into a change with Chris Smalling taking the place of the injured Jonny Evans.
City got a foothold in the match at the hour mark, 60 seconds after Young had a goal ruled out for offside even though replays suggested he was level when he pounced on the re-bound from a van Persie shot that cannoned off the post.
A single City attack produced three saves from De Gea before Tevez teed up Yaya Toure to light the sky blue flare and put the home side back in the match.
With the two sides trading some breath-taking attacks, Silva was inches from equalizing after 78 minutes when his shot skimmed De Gea’s shoulder before whacking the crossbar.
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By now, City was pouring forward relentlessly. In a late piece of drama that is increasingly typical of Mancini’s team, Zabaleta appeared to have secured the draw with his first goal of the season.
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