Division I Men’s Basketball Committee issues reprimand to Illinois assistant

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Illinois men’s basketball assistant coach Jamall Walker received a public reprimand and a two-game tournament suspension for his misconduct during the 2013 Division I Men’s Basketball Championship.

Specifically, Walker made inappropriate contact with a game official and verbally confronted the game officials and a police officer following Illinois’ loss to Miami (Fla.) on March 24 in the third round of the East Region. Walker’s misconduct led the Division I Men’s Basketball Committee to issue him a two-game NCAA postseason championship suspension. The suspension shall apply to the next NCAA postseason opportunity that Walker will have as a coach, regardless of what school he represents.

NCAA guidelines define misconduct as “any act of dishonesty, unsportsmanlike conduct, unprofessional behavior or breach of law, occurring from the time the championship field is announced through the end of the championship that discredits the event or intercollegiate athletics.”

“Coach Walker’s behavior violated the expectations that championship participants act in a manner that represents the highest standards of sportsmanship,” said Ron Wellman, chair of the Division I Men’s Basketball Committee and athletic director at Wake Forest. “The nature of his actions led us to issue the two-game postseason suspension.”

Tennis players harassed over Twitter; gambling possibly a factor

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It’s no secret that the Internet’s full of idiots — not you, dear reader, never you — and that plenty of keyboard tough guys love to vent at celebrities, athletes and other public figures from behind a wall of anonymity on Twitter. But as Slate notes this week, plenty of tennis players are getting some inexplicable criticism.

Take, for example, Alex Kuznetsov. The virtually anonymous player, ranked 171st in the world, played his way into the French Open … where he proceeded to lose in the first round. So what, right? Guy made it to a major, that’s more than most of us will ever do. But of course that wasn’t enough for some Twitter folk. A sample:

And Tim Smyczek, who lost in a French Open qualifying draw, caught heat as well. Here’s one of his retweets of a fan:

“The most plausible explanation for the attacks leveled at Kuznetsov and his little-known tennis-playing ilk is that there’s money on the line,” writes Slate’s Ben Rothenberg. “Oddsmakers had made Kuznetsov a marginal favorite against Lucas Pouille. When he lost, he faced the wrath of those who had bet on him. While not all insulting post-defeat tweets mention gambling directly, tennis players believe that’s typically the motivation.”

What’s interesting is how many of the tweets come from Eastern Europe, where online gambling is legal and tennis gambling is omnipresent. And tennis offers the angry gambler the tempting target of a single human being: you can’t yell at a horse, a deck of cards or a lottery ticket for falling short, after all.

It’s an ugly sidelight to social media, and one that’s not likely to change anytime soon. We’ve always behaved badly; now we can do it in front of the entire world.

Just be careful, cyber-tough guys. You might just anger some athlete or celebrity enough that they come hunt you down.

Rangers rock Verlander, give Darvish 10-4 win

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Justin Verlander flopped in his Texas showdown with Yu Darvish. The Japanese star was about to do the same until he settled down after the pitching duel fizzled.

Geovany Soto ended Verlander’s night with a three-run homer that capped a seven-run third, and Darvish needed a career-high 130 pitches to get through eight innings in the Texas Rangers’ 10-4 win over the Detroit Tigers on Thursday.

Darvish gave up a home run to Jhonny Peralta, the first batter he faced after the Texas outburst that sent a shell-shocked Verlander to the Detroit dugout in his shortest outing in nearly three years. The drive made it three straight games with two homers allowed for Darvish, and pulled Detroit to 8-4.

Then the right-hander retired 15 of the final 16 Tigers he faced, including 10 straight.

”The thing about Yu Darvish, he bends but he never breaks,” Rangers manager Ron Washington said. ”That’s a tremendous lineup he went through. After that third inning, he settled in and found something that was working and he continued to pitch.”

Soto’s drive just over the wall in left field came after Verlander walked in two runs – he had three previous bases-loaded walks in his career. Mitch Moreland’s two-out double broke a 3-all tie before Soto’s drive put Texas ahead 8-3.

”It wasn’t much of a night to begin with but I’d definitely say the whole game kind of carry-over from my last start,” said Verlander, who was coming off his worst outing of the year in a loss to Cleveland. ”I’m not somebody who is going to go home and pout about this, I’m somebody who is going to figure it out and figure it out in a hurry.”

Darvish (7-1) won his fifth straight decision despite allowing two home runs for the third start in a row. Baseball’s strikeout leader matched his season low with six strikeouts, and didn’t get the last one until Washington decided to bring him back out for the eighth even though he’d already thrown 115 pitches.

”Wash asked me if I could go longer and he seemed like he wanted to go a little bit longer,” Darvish said. ”And I felt really good so I wanted to go. The bullpen guys were pretty used up in that last series so I wanted to go.”

Verlander (4-4) gave up six hits with two walks and three strikeouts in 2 2-3 innings, his shortest outing since going two innings in a 14-6 loss to the New York Mets on June 22, 2010.

The 2011 AL MVP and Cy Young winner had allowed just four earned runs in four previous starts at Rangers Ballpark. It was actually the second time in Verlander’s last 16 starts dating to last season that he’s allowed eight runs, his career high. He did it in a 9-8 loss to Kansas City last August.

”It was one of those where I think everybody in the world was looking for the matchup and it didn’t turn out too good,” Detroit manager Jim Leyland said. ”Those two guys out there and there were 12 runs scored – I don’t think anybody expected that. We probably let down the audience a little bit.”

Two nights after hitting two home runs in Oakland, Moreland had two doubles and three RBIs and pushed his batting average to .296 less than a month after he was hitting .157.

Darvish ran into trouble first when five of the first six Detroit hitters in the third inning reached, starting with Don Kelly’s first home run of the season into the lower porch in right field. Torii Hunter and Victor Martinez had sacrifice flies to put the Tigers ahead 3-1.

Verlander, the AL’s strikeout leader the past two years, gave up consecutive singles to start the first and third innings. The Rangers scored just once in the first, but the right-hander couldn’t survive the third once his control escaped him.

After Verlander hit Ian Kinsler with a curveball to loaded the bases, Elvis Andrus walked to score a run before Lance Berkman struck out on check swing on a pitch so high it bounced off the bricks behind home plate and came straight back to the catcher Kelly. Adrian Beltre walked to tie the score, and the hits from Moreland and Soto came after one of three strikeouts by Nelson Cruz, who hit his 11th homer.

Between them, Verlander and Darvish threw 74 pitches in the third inning and allowed 12 base runners and 10 runs. It wasn’t quite the duel fans expected in Arlington’s most anticipated pitching matchup since Nolan Ryan beat Roger Clemens 2-1 in 1989.

”They both had a bad third inning,” Leyland said. ”Justin was just quite worse than his but his wasn’t too good either. We really grinded out our at-bats and they did, too. That’s one thing this club does and that’s one thing we do, too.”

NOTES: The Rangers landed in Texas about 1:30 a.m. Thursday, following an afternoon game in Oakland after their charter flight was diverted to Albuquerque, N.M., because of severe storms in the Dallas area. At least six people died after tornadoes struck Granbury, about 50 miles southwest of Arlington. … The Tigers sent RHP Al Alburquerque to Triple-A Toledo to work out issues with his control. He has 26 strikeouts in 14 1-3 innings, but has walked 13 and thrown six wild pitches. RHP Evan Reed was called up and made his major league debut in the sixth. … Rangers C A.J. Pierzynski (strained oblique) took batting practice Thursday and could go on a short rehab assignment starting Sunday. He’s eligible to come off the disabled list Tuesday. … Kinsler tied the Rangers record held by Rafael Palmeiro with his 54th hit by pitch when Verlander plunked him on the shoulder with a curveball.

Texas A&M’s Kevin Sumlin on modern recruiting, NCAA Football 14 and more

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It feels like a lifetime ago that Texas A&M head football coach Kevin Sumlin stood at SEC Media Days and answered question after question about whether the Aggies were ready for the conference. It felt like an attempt at an initiation, except it was apparent both then and now that the new guy was fully prepared for what he was getting into.

Now, after a win at Alabama, a Heisman, a Cotton Bowl blowout, and a scorching start on a 2014 recruiting class that includes arguably the nation’s top quarterback in Kyle Allen, it’s the rest of the SEC that’s wondering how ready it was for A&M. I had a chance to speak briefly with Coach Sumlin.

Jason Kirk: This time of year, what’s your recruiting schedule like?

Kevin Sumlin: Twenty-three hours a day.

JK: And is this when it’s busiest?

KS: I’ll tell you what we have. We’ve got two solid weeks of camps going on. We had a one-day high school camp on Sunday. We had a youth camp just finishing up [Wednesday]. We’ve got a O-line, D-line, quarterback, wide receiver academy that starts Thursday. We’ll have another one-day camp Sunday. We’ve got a kicking camp coming up, and then we’ll have a youth camp.

So we’ve got two straight weeks, and we’ll have 1,500 kids come through this whole place over the next two weeks. And that’s recruiting in itself, with young kids, trying to create a brand with them and a feel for Texas A&M. And a lot of the high school kids, a lot of them, it’s their first real feel for our coaching staff or the place. In addition to all the regular recruiting that goes on.

So even though we’re not practicing, our coaches are still out there in the heat, working. And that’s a great thing for future Aggies.

And our players are all on campus now, for summer school, which started Monday. They’re working out with [strength and conditioning coach Larry] Jackson, so we got a lot going on right now.

JK: The exchanges you and your staff have with recruits in new places — what’s struck you the most about their perception of A&M, and is it changing at all?

KS: Every place is new for us, ’cause we just got here a year ago. We approached this the same way when we got here. We’re a SEC program, and it starts for us in our state of Texas and Louisiana. But we’ve been national since we’ve been here, and I don’t think that’s ever gonna change.

JK: Moving into year two in the SEC, what would you say is the biggest advantage A&M as a program has over the rest of the conference?

KS: I don’t know that we have any advantage. We’re new. You just said we’re in year two. Not just as a coaching staff, but in the SEC. It’s hard to say we have any advantage over anybody at this point. We finished third in the division. We like how our season ended up, we got a great experience in the [Cotton] Bowl, but we’ve still got a ways to go to catch up with the top of our league.

JK: What about your presence in Texas, as a recruiting advantage?

KS: Well, we should be recruiting well in the state of Texas. We’re in Texas. Just like Alabama and Auburn would have an advantage in Alabama and LSU has an advantage in Louisiana.

JK: So last year Johnny Manziel went from an unknown to a Heisman to a national celebrity. Where do you think he is in June on the spectrum between a freshman and what you want him to be, as a player and leader?

KS: Oh, I think he’s continuing to get better. Anybody who saw the spring game saw he continues to improve.

He’s very, very hard on himself. He wants to play football at the next level and is working at his weaknesses and trying to refine his game. He’s a great competitor and is gonna continue to work to get better. The guy’s played one year of college football. He’s got a lot he can improve on, and he understands that.

JK: Are there any new players or players who didn’t get many snaps last year who remind you of Johnny last year?

KS: We didn’t choose a starting quarterback until two weeks before the season. So at this point last year, contrary to public opinion, we did not have a starting quarterback. So we went into two-a-days in fall camp with competition at all those positions, and the end result was Johnny winning the job, not us just picking him.

We’ll have a number of players who’ll come in in the fall, and I’ll have a better idea who’ll be those young guys who’ll get a chance to play.

JK: We’re talking to you today because of NCAA Football 14. You have four kids and I’d assume some nieces and nephews. How familiar are you with football video games?

KS: With four kids, and two boys that play NCAA all the time, I used to play against my 11-year-old, and I stopped playing once he started beating me. I kinda gave it up after that, had to move it back to the nine-year-old. He’s about to start beating me pretty quick. So I’m retired from the game.

Our players play constantly. We travel, you know, whether it’s bus, plane, in the hotel. We play a lot of night games. Guys sitting around, they play it a lot. It’s something that our current players utilize, our prospects utilize, and our kids utilize.

And to be a part and to chime in on certain aspects of the game is really kinda fun for me.

JK: West Virginia consulted with EA about some of the new recruiting features. Did A&M get any input there?

KS: Yeah, we talked today about a lot of different things, about what’s important.

That’s really kinda what sets the game apart. It’s really more than just playing the football game itself. It’s managing the roster. It’s scouting players. It’s finding players that fit your system. Even hiring and picking what kind of offensive and defensive coordinators you want, and when those guys move on to other jobs, having to hire other guys. It’s extremely realistic.

JK: Coaches these days have to be up on Twitter and Instagram and talk about playingMadden and NCAA and Call of Duty with recruits. Is anybody on A&M’s staff playing games with kids?

KS: Aw yeah. I would say a lot of guys do. You do home visits with prospects. There’s time to sit down and play NCAA or Madden with guys at their house or when they come on campus. I know that happens all the time.

Kentucky Basketball: The 5 Best Single-Game Performances in Wildcats History

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To say Kentucky basketball has seen a couple of impressive single-game performances is an understatement. When stars like Dan Issel, Anthony Davis, Antoine Walker and Kenny Walker wearing the blue and white, the history is storied.

However, as there is with any list, there can only be so many that make the cut. This slideshow will take a look at the five greatest single-game performances in the Wildcats history. Will fan-favorites Tayshaun Prince and Nerlens Noel make the cut?

Mercury News boys badminton player of year: Burlingame’s Jan Banquiles overcomes pain

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Jan Banquiles consistently made short work of his opponents on the badminton court this season.

He had to, out of necessity.

The Burlingame High senior has Osgood-Schlatter disease in his right knee. The ailment is common among teens “who participate in sports that involve running, jumping and swift changes of direction,” according to MayoClinic.com. Badminton is such a sport.

“When I put my knee brace on, it sort of helps with decreasing the pain,” Banquiles said. “But (my knee) gets more painful as the game progresses.”

Banquiles overcame his knee troubles to capture the Central Coast Section boys singles title this season. For that reason, he is the Mercury News boys badminton player of the year.

The CCS runner-up a year ago, Banquiles might have won two titles had his condition not derailed his bid. Entering the 2012 section final, Banquiles’ right knee was hurting badly enough that his father, Salvador, who is also Burlingame’s coach, advised him not to risk major injury pursuing a championship — especially since he would have had to beat his opponent, Saratoga’s Bryan Chow, twice to win.

“My dad told me that if anything starts hurting, try not to continue so nothing bad happens,” Banquiles said.

Although Banquiles has devoted a great deal of time to strengthening the leg muscles that support his right knee, pain still starts to kick in when he’s on the court for a long

time. Having played a number of three-set matches in 2012, he knew his senior season might be cut short if the same thing happened this year.

So Banquiles made it a point to regularly dispatch his opponents as quickly as possible. He didn’t drop a single set en route to capturing the CCS crown. Banquiles’ ability to anticipate and react to opponents’ shots, which he considers his best skill, kept him from having to scramble much and risk a knee injury. He played his longest set of the season in the CCS championship match, a 15-12, 15-5 win over Saratoga’s Derek Chao. When that match was over, Banquiles seemed more relieved than thrilled.

“I felt I had an obligation to get it this year,” Banquiles said. “Everybody was talking — ‘You have to get it this year. This is your last chance. You’re a senior. This is your time to shine.'”

Banquiles plans to attend College of San Mateo this fall.

Close-knit UM tennis team relies on depth, positivity during successful season

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One of the consistently best athletic programs on the University of Miami campus quietly goes about its business in the shadow of the national spotlight cast on teams such as men’s basketball and football — its accomplished coach so driven that players have transferred to escape the intensity.

“At least one a year usually transfers because they can’t handle me or I can’t handle them,” said women’s tennis coach Paige Yaroshuk-Tews, already a member of the UM Sports Hall of Fame.

After last year it was feisty Israeli Liat Zimmerman, who left to play at Rice, despite telling her coach she liked her.

“Paige is harder than the army,” Zimmerman said last season. “Maybe I should have gone to the army.”

As the sixth-ranked Hurricanes prepare to open the Round of 16 against No. 11 Northwestern on Friday at the NCAA tennis championships in Urbana, Ill., it’s almost astonishing to learn that the Canes are off to their eighth consecutive Sweet 16 without a player ranked higher than 60th.

Also amazing, according to Yaroshuk-Tews: Every player will return next season.

“I’ve never coached a team that hasn’t had a superstar at No. 1,” she said. “If we looked back statistically to the amount of matches we won prior to this season, 85 to 90 percent of the time our No.1 player would pull in a point.

“Now, the points come from every position.”

The carousel of past UM stars includes Bianca Eichkorn, ranked sixth in 2011; NCAA 2009 singles finalist Laura Vallverdu, now the Hurricanes’ volunteer assistant coach; 2007 national champion Audra Cohen; and top-ranked Megan Bradley in 2005.

But this team, whose No. 1 player, freshman Stephanie Wagner of Amberg, Germany, is a star in the making, has something more important than a No. 1 phenom. It has players at all six singles spots who can earn a point against any competition.

In college tennis, the first team to four points wins the match. Each singles victory is worth one point, and the team that wins two out of three doubles matches also earns a point.

UM’s depth has served it well this season, as the Canes (22-5) won the Atlantic Coast Conference title for the first time, defeating then-No. 2 North Carolina in the process.

Besides freshman Wagner, named the Intercollegiate Tennis Association’s Southeast Region Rookie of the Year, there’s freshman Kelsey Laurente of Miramar at the No. 2 spot, sophomore Lina Lileikite at No. 3, freshman Clementina Riobueno at No. 4, sophomore Monique Albuquerque at No. 5 and junior Melissa Bolivar at No. 6.

Brittany Dubins of North Miami Beach, a junior, teams with Wagner to form the No. 3 doubles team, while freshman Deborah Suarez rounds out the squad.

Yaroshuk-Tews this week was named the Southeast Region Coach of the Year, and assistant Alex Santos the Southeast Region Assistant Coach of the Year. Both are up for national honors.

“This is an amazing team,” Dubins said. “Everyone is just really positive, and we’re like a family.”

Added Laurente: “We’re so blessed that we all get along.”

Wagner, who Yaroshuk-Tews said would have been ranked much higher had she not been sidelined by mononucleosis and other ailments in the fall, is described by her coach as “stubborn as a rock — a boulder.”

“Unbelievably sweet girl, but she doesn’t want to lose at arguments and she sure as heck doesn’t want to lose a match,” she said.

Yaroshuk-Tews said Laurente has “an edge. On the court she is an unbelievable competitor, one of the best that has ever played at this school. She fights from beginning to end.”

The coach described Lileikite as “stoic — tough to read,” Riobueno as “our little magician who has every shot in the book,” Albuquerque as “so nice that we’re trying to get her a little meaner on the court,” Bolivar as “crafty, athletic and mature,” and Dubins as “the mother hen who always sees the positive in every situation.

“This is the closest group I’ve ever had.”

Miami was the national runner-up in 2006 but has never won the title.

The Canes were eliminated by now top-ranked Florida in the quarterfinals of last year’s NCAA tournament and lost 4-2 to Northwestern (20-8) at national indoors in February.

Friday’s winner will advance to Sunday’s quarterfinal against the winner of No.3 Texas A&M vs. 14th-seeded Virginia.

“At this point everybody is good,” Vallverdu said. “To win it all will require us to stay intelligent in how we respond to everything that happens.”

Beckham to retire from football at end of season

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David Beckham is retiring from soccer, ending a career in which he transcended the sport with forays into fashion and a marriage to a pop star that made him a global celebrity.

The 38-year-old former England captain, who recently won a league title in a fourth country with Paris Saint-Germain, said Thursday he will retire after the season.

“It’s a good way to go out,” Beckham said in Paris. “It’s every athlete’s dream, every footballer’s dream to go out on the top — on top form or winning a trophy … leaving as a champion.”

Beckham, whose curling free kicks and pin-point crosses became his signature as a player, has two more matches left at PSG against Brest on Saturday and at Lorient on May 26. He has been giving his salary to a children’s charity.

Asked what led to his decision, Beckham replied with a laugh: “Probably when (Lionel) Messi was running past me in that home game,” referring to PSG’s Champions League match against Barcelona last month.

Beckham started his career with Manchester United and also played for Real Madrid and the Los Angeles Galaxy, winning titles with all those clubs and also making a record 115 international appearances for an England outfield player.

FIFA President Sepp Blatter described the midfielder as “one of the most iconic figures in global football.”

“It’s the end of a chapter of an amazing story,” Blatter wrote on Twitter. “David grew up as a football loving child & achieved his dreams, and unquestionably inspired millions of boys & girls to try & do the same.

“Whatever he chooses to do next I’m sure he’ll approach with the same dedication & good grace he displayed the last 21 years.”

Beckham’s fame went beyond the field, with his haircuts and clothing scrutinized as often as his play, earning him a string of lucrative sponsorship deals.

“Sometimes that has overshadowed what I have done on the pitch or what I have achieved on the pitch,” Beckham said in a television interview conducted by former United teammate Gary Neville. “And as much as I say that doesn’t hurt me, of course it does.

“I am a footballer that has played for some of the biggest clubs in the world and played with some of the best players in the world, played under some of the biggest and best managers and achieved almost everything in football.”

Beckham was even immortalized on the silver screen in the 2002 film “Bend it Like Beckham,” which told the story of a British teenage girl of south Asian heritage struggling with family pressures and cultural expectations to play the sport she loves.

Beckham’s retirement led to a flood of tweets dubbing the day “End it Like Beckham.”

“If you had told me as a young boy I would have played for and won trophies with my boyhood club Manchester United, proudly captained and played for my country over one hundred times and lined up for some of the biggest clubs in the world, I would have told you it was a fantasy,” said Beckham, who also played on loan at AC Milan. “I’m fortunate to have realized those dreams.”

It was his appearances with England’s national team that raised his profile internationally.

“To this day, one of my proudest achievements is captaining my country,” Beckham said. “I knew every time I wore the Three Lions shirt, I was not only following in a long line of great players, I was also representing every fan that cared passionately about their country.

“I’m honored to represent England both on and off the pitch.”

Beckham is now living in London with his wife Victoria, a former “Spice Girls” singer, and their four children.

“I wouldn’t have achieved what I have done today without my family. I’m grateful for my parents’ sacrifice, which made me realize my dreams,” he said. “I owe everything to Victoria and the kids, who have given me the inspiration and support to play at the highest level for such a long period.”

Victoria Beckham said the couple is “excited about the next chapter in our lives.”

“The children and I are so proud of David. It’s been an incredible journey for us all as we have watched him play at clubs all over the world throughout the last 15 years,” she said.

“Myself and the children have cheered him from the stands, as he has held high trophies … this was not an easy decision to make, and to me and the children he will always be an amazing sportsman and a devoted husband and father. ”

With United between 1992 and 2003, Beckham won six Premier League titles, the Champions League, two FA Cups and the Intercontinental Cup.

Beckham left United in 2003 shortly after manager Alex Ferguson accidentally struck Beckham’s eye with a football boot. Ferguson announced his retirement from Manchester United last week.

Beckham spent four years in Madrid — winning the 2007 Spanish title before making the surprise move to Major League Soccer, where he won the title twice.

“I just want people to see me as a hardworking footballer,” Beckham said. “Someone who is passionate about the game, somebody who every time I have stepped on the pitch I have given everything that I have.”

There were highs and lows in Beckham’s international career. He was blamed for England’s elimination from the 1998 World Cup for his red card against Argentina, but scored the winning goal against the same team at the World Cup four years later.

Beckham responded to jeering at the 2000 European Championship with an obscene hand gesture to England fans, but was lauded by the same supporters little more than a year later when his last-minute free kick against Greece secured a place at the 2002 World Cup.

England dropped Beckham in August 2006 in an effort to renew the team with younger players after a quarterfinal exit at that year’s World Cup. England coach Steve McClaren recalled him the following year after a poor run of form, and he returned for the remainder of England’s unsuccessful attempt to qualify for the 2008 European Championship.

His last England appearance came against Belarus in October 2009, and he missed the 2010 World Cup because of an Achilles injury. He still went to South Africa as part of Fabio Capello’s backroom staff.

“I want to thank all my teammates, the great managers that I had the pleasure of learning from,” Beckham said. “I also want to thank the fans who have all supported me and given me the strength to succeed.”

Beckham had already started planning for his post-playing career earlier in the season, becoming an ambassador for Chinese football.

“Nothing will ever completely replace playing the game I love, however I feel like I’m starting a new adventure and I’m genuinely excited about what lies ahead,” Beckham said. “I’m fortunate to have been given many opportunities throughout my career and now I feel it’s my time to give back.”

Beckham played a key role in helping London win the bid to host the 2012 Olympics. He also was involved in England’s unsuccessful bid to host the 2018 World Cup, and the English Football Association wants to utilize his influence and star power in the future.

“He is an iconic figure in the game and produced wonderful performances for his clubs, particularly Manchester United,” FA chairman David Bernstein said. “When you look at his playing and work for England, no one would ever accuse him of being unpatriotic and not giving everything for his country.

“He is a real loss to the game and I am sure the FA will want to embrace him and to get him closely associated with the organization.”

Beckham’s retirement comes a week after the 71-year-old Ferguson ended his managerial career.

“In the week following Sir Alex Ferguson retiring, which came as a bit of a shock, now we have the iconic David Beckham coming out of the game,” Bernstein said.

Florida’s key returnee: Patric Young

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The aftermath of Andrew Wiggins’ announcement on Tuesday has been enlightening.

Had he picked Kentucky, then many would have maintained their assumption the Wildcats would be the juggernauts of the 2013-14 season.

By choosing Kansas, however, Wiggins cast some doubt on that notion.

Next season will be bigger than Kentucky basketball. That’s always been the case, but it’s just more obvious now that the No. 1 recruit in America has selected a program outside of Lexington.

Michigan State, Michigan, Arizona, Kansas, Duke, North Carolina and Louisville will certainly be in the national title picture. And Florida should be in that mix, too.

The Gators lost Kenny Boynton, Mike Rosario and Erik Murphy. And freshman guard Brandon Ogbueze left the program this week.

But transfers Dorian Finney-Smith (6.3 PPG and 7.0 RPG for Virginia Tech in 2011-12) and Damontre Harris (6.8 PPG, 5.5 RPG and 2.3 BPG for South Carolina in 2011-12) will be eligible next season. Plus, Billy Donovan’s recruiting class features McDonald’s All-AmericansKasey Hill and Chris Walker. Scottie Wilbekin is back, too.

The anchor of this group, however, is veteran big man Patric Young — the top returnee for the program.

The 6-9 forward averaged 10.1 PPG, 6.3 RPG and 1.6 BPG. He had a 58.6 effective field goal percentage last season, 73rd nationally per Ken Pomeroy. He was ranked fifth in the SEC with a 6.87 block percentage (KenPom.com).

His return to the Gators’ program potentially signals a philosophical switch for Donovan. In past years, the coach relied on explosive guards who occupied his strong and deep backcourts. His perimeter options tend to be perennially plentiful.

Boynton, Rosario, Bradley Beal and Erving Walker have given Donovan a variety of contributors on the perimeter in recent years.

Next season, however, the Gators will have more answers and options inside.

Finney-Smith and Harris are two big bodies who will make Florida’s frontcourt one of the strongest units in America. Will Yeguete, who averaged 5.5 PPG and 5.8 RPG last season, will help, too.

Young has to be the leader of this crew.

Is he more than just a rugged cleanup man and dunk machine for the Gators?

There’s nothing wrong with that role.

He’s been a critical contributor under Donovan. He’s been vital in the team’s three consecutive Elite Eight appearances.

But next year — more than past years — I believe Young will have to be a more dynamic player. He has to be a versatile player on both ends of the floor. The SEC is stacked with inside-outside threats that he’ll be asked to defend. It’s also a league that will welcome Julius Randle and feature Tennessee’s Jarnell Stokes.

Playing in the paint will be a nightly battle in the SEC.

Last year, Young’s assists, rebounds, free-throw percentage and field-goal percentage were down compared to the previous season. He has to be a more consistent and efficient athlete for Florida.

But if he gives Florida last season’s production, the Gators still boast enough talent to make another run.

That, however, is not the expectation for Young. Can he take his game to the next level? That’s the question he must answer.

The 2013-14 campaign could be one of the most competitive seasons in recent history. The landscape will include multiple teams with legit NCAA title aspirations.

Balance will be vital for any program that ultimately finishes with the crown in Arlington.

Young’s presence will enhance Florida’s flexibility.

If he develops a more diverse post game, a better jump shot and an expansive defensive skill set, then Young might be the reason that Florida breaks through the field and reaches the Final Four.

But he has to touch the ball to be effective.

He averaged 7.1 field-goal attempts in both 2011-12 and 2012-13. Cody Zeller averaged 9.8 field goal attempts last season.

No, he’s not Zeller. This is a different team.

I get it.

Zeller, however, understood his role and could anticipate touches in ways Young could not in previous seasons because of Donovan’s guard-heavy rotation.

One night, he’d take 10 shots. The next night, he’d take two.

Young can’t reach his ceiling alone. Yes, he has to work hard this offseason to address his weaknesses. But he also needs his teammates to feed him.

State badminton: Johnson blanks Harding in East Side final

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St. Paul’s East Side dominance in badminton has belonged to Johnson and Harding high schools the past eight years, with each winning four state championships in a row.

Harding won the title from 2006-09, and Johnson has won it every year since, its latest a 7-0 victory over Harding in the title match Wednesday at Burnsville High School.

The top-seeded Governors capped a 17-0 season by winning 20 of 21 individual matches during the two-day state tournament.

“To win four state championships is pretty amazing,” said senior Ka Lia Her, Johnson’s No. 1 singles player. “When I started playing varsity as a freshman, I never imagined we could be so successful.”

In the past four seasons, Johnson has a combined 57-3 record, with one loss in each of the past three seasons.

“This team is a coach’s dream,” Johnson coach Mark Fischbach said. “This run of dominance has been incredible, and the girls deserve all of the credit. They showed up at practice every day, ready to work. I can’t say enough good things about them.”

You can already pencil Johnson in as the favorite to win No. 5 in a row next year with the return of 10 underclassmen who played on the varsity this season. The Governors had a combined 113-7 record in singles and doubles matches this season.

Even Harding coach Tracy Hrouda, whose team lost three times to Johnson this season, was impressed.

“Their run is very comparable to ours,” she said. “We were that team back then that was doing it

to other teams. It’s really special to be a part of that kind of success.”

Johnson clinched its latest championship at No. 2 doubles with Song Fang and Genda Lee’s 21-19, 21-9 victory over Harding’s Shawnee Theng and Julia Lee. That gave the Governors an insurmountable 4-0 lead. Her made it 5-0 with a 21-15, 21-14 victory over Harding’s Panyia Vue.

Her moved to St. Paul from Wausau, Wis., in 2006. She was happy to make the move partly because she knew Minnesota offered badminton as a high school sport and Wisconsin did not.

“I was super happy coming to Minnesota,” she said. “I’m so glad I started this sport when I was a little girl. In Minnesota, I’ve had the opportunity to improve so much and to experience the joy of winning.”

Her said she would love to continue playing badminton in college but is unaware of any schools that offer it as a competitive sport. She plans to attend the University of Minnesota to get a degree in education and to coach badminton.

“I want to give back and help, just the way I was helped when I came to Minnesota,” she said.

Her is seeded No. 2 in singles when the tournament switches to individual competition Thursday at Eden Prairie. Central’s Law Law is the favorite and No. 1 seed in singles after losing in the championship match last year. Highland Park’s Gao Lee, the defending champion, is nursing a knee injury and won’t decide until Thursday if she can play. If she does, she will be the No. 3 seed.

Burnsville defeated Edina 5-2 in the third-place match.