Newsday (N.Y.): Kuchar back in spotlight after long climb back

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- He was the kid with the big smile and great future. Matt Kuchar won the 1997 U.S. Amateur, made the cut in the Masters -- when he was paired with a defending champion named Tiger Woods -- and looked like the next American star in the golfing galaxy.

Then, as Kuchar said ruefully, golf happened.

"I went through some stretches of not having it," said Kuchar, now either a young 32 or an old 32 depending on his mood. "But I have kind of dug way out.''

He's certainly had it in this bizarre 92nd PGA Championship at Whistling Straits, some 60 miles north of Milwaukee, a tournament that depending on climatic conditions could last until the 12th of Never.

Kuchar was one of the 78 golfers who didn't finish Thursday's first round until Friday -- a different 78 won't finish Friday's second round until Saturday -- because of a second straight fog delay. He came out Friday morning, birdied the first hole he played to take the lead and he never let it go.

Beginning at the sixth hole, his 15th, Kuchar played the final four holes of his first round in 1 under par for a 5-under 67. In the afternoon he shot a 69 for a 36-hole, 8-under 136 total, a shot ahead of Nick Watney.

Tied for third at 5-under 139 are seven golfers: Jason Dufner, who had a tournament low 6-under 66 after a 73; Rory McIlroy, the Northern Irishman who shot a 63 in the British Open a month ago; Dustin Johnson, who led the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach after three rounds; 2007 Masters winner Zach Johnson; Bryce Molder, a teammate of Kucher's at Georgia Tech; Simon Kahn of England, who bogeyed the final three holes and Seung Yui Noh of Korea.

Bubba Watson and Francesco Molinari, first-round co-leaders at 68, as well as Tiger Woods, began their second rounds late Friday as wind grew and darkness loomed. Watson began at 6:15 p.m. EST and was 1-over through eight holes, while Molinari started at 6:57 and was even through five.

Woods, who was 1-under for the first round, completed six holes of his second round at even par before the horn sounded to halt play at 7:27 p.m., earlier than Thursday because of a mist off Lake Michigan.

"It was tough out there,'' said Woods, who scrambled for pars on two, three and five. "Had to hang in there and did a good job with that.''

So did Kuchar, who at Georgia Tech played very well until his junior year, then rebounded as a senior.

"I turned pro,'' he said, "earned my card and a sponsor exemption straightaway my first year and in seven events earned enough to keep myself on Tour through 2002. Then I had a win in 2002 and another dip down. Since 2005 it's been a steady climb up.''

This year he has six top 10s, including a sixth in the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach.

"I think there's a maturing process. I thought out of school, Bryce [Molder] was the best hands-down player in college golf. I thought he's going straight to the big leagues.''

Instead, he went straight to the Nationwide Tour, unable to make the PGA Tour until the end of 2006.

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RealClearSports: Tiger Steps Out of Fog and Controversy

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- Of course Tiger Woods will be on the Ryder Cup team. Whether Corey Pavin told Jim Gray that Tiger would or whether Corey Pavin didn't tell Jim Gray he would begs the issue.

With the interest in Tiger, NBC television, commercial involvement of billion-dollar companies, the sport of golf and even Woods himself, it is a given he will play if chosen by Pavin.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

Newsday (N.Y.): Tiger finds a bit of his game

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- "Welcome to golf,'' Tiger Woods said. "It is what it is, a fickle game.''

For Tiger, it should have been "Welcome back to golf.'' Like the supposed Mark Twain comment of his demise, reports of the death of Woods' game have been greatly exaggerated.

Woods hadn't broken par his previous seven rounds, but Thursday, with a birdie on his final hole, he shot a 1-under 71 on the opening day of the 92nd PGA Championship at Whistling Straits.

"Got off to a quick start,'' said Woods. He started at the 10th hole and began birdie-birdie, "and all of a sudden I felt like I could shoot something in the 60s.

"Didn't quite happen. Lost a few shots out there, but I made a nice birdie on nine [his 18th] and finished under par for the day.''

That, he said, was his goal. It left him three shots behind several co-leaders. It left him thinking positively, maybe even thinking about winning his first major since the 2008 U.S. Open.

When asked if his driving was better, Woods answered, "Everything was better.''

Including his mood. When he finished Sunday at the WGC Bridgestone with a 77, equaling his worst closing round in 13 years as a professional, Woods seemed ready to hurl his clubs into a trash barrel. But a couple of days of practice changed everything.

And that debate between U.S. Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin and TV announcer Jim Gray, over whether Pavin told Gray he would select Woods for the team, seemed inconsequential.

If Woods plays well, he could be an automatic qualifier. The difference between this week and last?

"Just one week,'' Woods said. ''That's the way it goes. I mean everyone has bad weeks.''

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Newsday (N.Y.): Bubba Watson, Molinari emerge from fog to lead PGA Championship

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- It was golf's Unfinished Symphony, a round that for the longest time couldn't get out of the fog and never did get to the end.

It was Day One of the 92nd PGA Championship, which when the weather cleared offered Tiger Woods' return from the depths and two disparate sorts, Bubba Watson and Francesco Molinari, temporarily on top of the leader board.

They came in with 4-under- par 68s, but still out on the Whistling Straits course when darkness moved in were two others at 4 under, Ernie Els and Matt Kuchar.

Play had had to be delayed 3 hours, 10 minutes at the start Thursday because the shoreline along Lake Michigan looked like something along San Francisco Bay, pea-soup stuff through which golfers couldn't see 100 yards.

That meant the late starters had no chance to get in a full 18, and with more fog forecast this morning, there's a feeling this tournament might last for days.

Woods, who was to go at 8:20 a.m., finally hit his first shot at 11:30, which since he shot a 1-under 71 -- he made birdie at his last hole, the ninth -- didn't prove to be detrimental. On the contrary, his play was greatly improved from his awful finish last weekend in the WGC-Bridgestone.

Phil Mickelson, who didn't begin until around 4:45 p.m., was 1 under par through 11 holes when play was called.

Watson, like Mickelson, a lefthander, contended he was not bothered by the delay. "I get excited about playing golf,'' Watson said. "So I stayed up late [Wednesday] night when I should have been going to bed. My wife was yelling at me to go to bed. I was up playing games on my phone . . . I wasn't myself this morning when I woke up. So maybe the delay helped, since I didn't have much energy.''

Molinari, from Italy, said of Whistling Straits: "It seems like some courses in Europe, but it's a lot softer, and I like the course. And watching Graeme McDowell [U.S. Open] and Louis Oosthuizen [British Open] win, we [Europeans] think we can win a major as well.''

"It played like an American course today,'' said Charles Howell III (69) of Whistling Straits, which looks like a British links but requires different shots. "It was a bit bizarre.''

Howell got up at 5:30 a.m. for what he thought would be an 8:50 a.m. start that evolved to a noon start at the 10th tee. He quickly birdied 11, 12, 13 and 14.

"I had breakfast three times,'' said Howell, as Woods said he did. "To have the start I did was beneficial because it calmed me down a bit.''

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Newsday (N.Y.): Whistling Straits: Links course that isn't

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- With money one can do almost anything, including turning a shoreline along Lake Michigan into a bit of British links land.

Herb Kohler, 71, the plumbing fixtures magnate whose net worth is estimated at $4 billion and who became a golfer late in life, became enamored with the links courses in Scotland and England, several of which are used as venues for the British Open.

So he hired architect Pete Dye, purchased Camp Haven -- a former airfield used as an anti-aircraft center -- and with 17,000 dump-truck loads of quarried sand built mounds, dunes and traps. Voila, Whistling Straits, where for a second time, starting today, the PGA Championship will be held.

The course plays at more than 7,500 yards and is full of wild grass and dangerous slopes. When the 2004 PGA, won in a playoff by Vijay Singh, was held at the Straits, dozens of spectators suffered bruises and broken bones slipping as they attempted to follow play.

It's no less challenging for the golfers, although for the most part they walk along level but twisting fairways.

"I think it's fun,'' Phil Mickelson said of Whistling Straits. "What's interesting to me is that it's a Scottish-looking course that plays like an American course. It doesn't play like a course in Scotland, yet it has all the aesthetics of one.

"And so that actually takes a little bit getting used to, the fact you see fescues and the sand and the dunes and the pot bunkers and so forth. You think there are openings in front and think you can fun balls up. It just doesn't work. The ground is too soft, and the ball stops, so you have to fly the balls onto the greens. That takes getting used to, especially when we're just coming from the British Open.''

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Newsday (N.Y.): PGA Championship is filled with question marks

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- So golf faces the famous cliché used when people in sports don't have a clue what may happen next, to wit, "Now what?''

The 92nd PGA Championship starts today at Whistling Straits, along the western shore of Lake Michigan, an hour's drive from Milwaukee, and at a huge 7,514 yards a place where big drives are needed from the tees.

It's a major championship, the final one every year, but this year with the decline of Tiger Woods and rise of internationals such as Graeme McDowell, Louis Oosthuizen and Rory McIlroy, it is shadowed by that question, "Now what?''

Is the game in trouble because television ratings, negatively affected by Tiger's troubles and victories by previously unheralded players, have plummeted?

Is there an American capable of winning, or as in three of the last four majors, starting with Y.E. Yang stunning Woods the final day of the 2009 PGA, does the trophy end up in the hands of someone from Korea, Northern Ireland, South Africa or another country?

Is U.S. Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin being candid when he says, as he did Wednesday, there was no certainty Woods would be on the team. The Golf Channel's Jim Gray, who reported Pavin told him "of course'' Woods be selected, challenged Pavin, stuck a finger in his chest, called him a liar and growled, "You're going down.''

For sure, this is the first time in 13 years a major is being held with Woods in the field and he is not the prohibitive favorite.

After the worst four-round event of his pro career -- the WGC-Bridgestone that ended Sunday with Woods tied for 78th among 80 players -- Tiger is second behind Phil Mickelson in the odds.

Yet Mickelson, who said he is recovering from psoriatic arthritis, also played poorly in the Bridgestone; Lee Westwood, third in the world rankings behind Woods and Mickelson, has withdrawn because of a calf injury; and as far as McDowell, the U.S Open winner, and Oosthuizen, British Open champ, it's rare to win two majors in a calendar year, unless you're Woods or Padraig Harrington.

Steve Stricker, a Wisconsin native, is No. 4 in the world, and said: "You always think you can win a tournament, going into a tournament.'' But he never has won a major.

Pavin won the 1995 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. He went to UCLA and was called, in a nickname borrowed from one of the school's Rose Bowl teams, "The Gutty Little Bruin.'' After a contentious news conference involving him and European Ryder captain Colin Montgomerie, he needed the courage.

Gray, emboldened by a Golf Channel statement supporting his report, approached Pavin and wife Lisa, who claims she recorded the exchange on her cell phone.

At one point Gray, who years ago had a memorable faceoff with Pete Rose about Rose's gambling, raised his hand to keep Lisa from intervening. Pavin pushed it away.

After the exchange, Pavin again insisted he never told Gray that Woods was assured of a spot on the team for the Oct. 1-3 matches in Wales. Gray defended his report and said Pavin was being "disingenuous.''

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RealClearSports: Humbled Tiger Still Able to Laugh

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- The man still can laugh. And make us laugh. In a season which surely has had its tears and most likely some fears -- finishing next-to-last in a tournament he won seven times previously would make even the strongest among us cringe -- Tiger Woods hadn't lose his sense of humor.

Or, he wants us to believe, his ability to be a champion once again.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

Newsday (N.Y.): Mickelson receiving treatment for form of arthritis

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- Phil Mickelson has been receiving treatment for psoriatic arthritis, a form of the disease in which the person also has psoriasis of the skin.

Mickelson, ranked No. 2 in the World Golf Rankings, revealed his ailment Tuesday after a practice round for the 92nd PGA Championship.

"It's probably going to get out,'' said Mickelson, "so I want to clear it up. About five days before the U.S. Open [in early June] I woke up, and I had some intense pain in some areas of my body, some joints and tendons and so forth; so much so, that I couldn't walk. And it progressively got worse.''

Mickelson, 40, visited a doctor and then after last month's British Open went to the Mayo Clinic. He began treatment and said "things have been great the last couple of weeks, and I've been able to practice full-bore, I guess, starting last Monday. It's been only about a week now.''

He had a chance to overtake Tiger Woods at No. 1 in the rankings last weekend at the WGC-Bridgestone, but Mickelson shot a final-round 78 and tied for 46th.

"I hadn't able to work out the last seven weeks,'' said Mickelson of his physical routine. "Last week I was able to start working out. I'm about 80 percent of the weight I was before, so things look good. And I've been able to put in some longer workdays practicing here this week.''

Mickelson won the Masters in April, his fourth major, then was erratic in both the U.S. and British Opens, although he tied Woods for fourth in the U.S. at Pebble Beach.

"I didn't play well at the British,'' said Mickelson, "or last week, but I believe the game's coming around."

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Newsday (N.Y.): Tiger tries to find his old game

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- The goatee is gone. Quite possibly the confidence is, too. But for Tiger Woods, the questions remain.

What's happened to his game? What's happened to his life? And when does one or both return to what might be judged normal?

The 92nd PGA Championship, the final major golf tournament of the year, starts Thursday at Whistling Straits, a faux-links course created along the shores of Lake Michigan some 60 miles north of Milwaukee.

Hunter Mahan, who won the WGC-Bridgestone last weekend -- and who Tuesday played a practice round with Woods -- is the hot golfer. Phil Mickelson, Graeme McDowell and Louis Oosthuizen are winners, respectively, of the year's Masters, U.S. Open and British Open.

Yet all anyone seems to care about is Tiger, who at the Bridgestone Invitational last week had his worst-ever four-round finish as a pro, a tie for 78th, next to last.

Woods, without a swing coach since the departure of Hank Haney in May, asked Mahan's coach, Sean Foley, to video his swing during their practice round here and conceded it was a "possibility'' the Orlando-based Foley might begin to work with him.

Woods also said he would play in the Ryder Cup the beginning of October, if he makes the team as a qualifier or a Captain's pick.

Woods implied it wasn't only what happened with his clubs that has made his game a mess, that fallout from his self-admitted sexual infidelities and subsequent estrangement from wife Elin Nordegren have had considerable effect.

" . . . With all that's going on, on and off the golf course, I feel I have to look at the positives and keep pushing myself to go forward and keep trying to get better,'' Woods said. "And that just doesn't mean hitting good golf balls.

"Life in general the last nine months has been very difficult. But my dad always said, 'Just keep living.' That's something I have taken to heart quite a bit. And there were quite a few times that I definitely have said that to myself.''

Woods had hair on his chin during the Bridgestone. Not Tuesday. "Well,'' he offered, "I just didn't have any clippers, and I was too lazy. So I decided to shave it.''

The failing confidence? "I've been through periods where I've hit it bad,'' he said. "And yeah, is your confidence not where it needs to be? Of course, I've been there . . . and that's one of the things I am excited about, the last few days I've made some good progress.''

Woods said he had been moving his head off the ball, a problem during his career, which caused the club to go off line on the downswing. He believes that has been corrected. His putting speed has been bad all year.

"I've learned a lot,'' said Woods of his life, "more so as a person than a golfer. I think that's a private matter on how I'm going to look back at it.''

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Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): Keyshawn works, hangs out at Hall

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


CANTON, Ohio -- No one from the Jets or Giants went into the Pro Football Hall of Fame this year, but former Jet Keyshawn Johnson, now working for ESPN, managed to attend.

Before working yesterday's telecast, Johnson attended an invitation-only party Friday night at the McKinley Grand Hotel with dozens of other former players, many of whom (Steve Young, Elvin Bethea and Warren Moon) are in the Hall.

Johnson, a wide receiver from USC, was the No. 1 pick in the 1996 draft by the Jets. He went on to the Bucs, Cowboys and Panthers before retiring after the 2006 season.

Trippi makes the trek
Among the 80 or so Hall of Famers in attendance for the weekend was Charlie Trippi, 88, who played in the 1943 Rose Bowl game for Georgia, went into the military and returned after World War II to play two more years for Georgia.

Trippi, a running back, was drafted in 1947 by the Cardinals, then in Chicago, and signed what one newspaper called "the unheard-of sum of $100,000." That season he led the Cardinals to the NFL title.

Blinded by the light
The Bengals, who play the Cowboys here today, toured the Hall of Fame and Terrell Owens walked by, wearing sunglasses in the indoor shrine.

Berman receives award
ESPN's Chris Berman was given the Pete Rozelle radio-television award at the Friday night ceremonies. Peter Finney Sr. of the New Orleans Times-Picayune got the McCann Award of the Pro Football Writers.

McDonald shows old moves
When introduced Friday night, Tommy McDonald, the 5-9 former receiver (1957-1968) with Philadelphia, Dallas, the Rams, Atlanta and Cleveland, danced up the runway and then embraced each of the seven inductees from this year.

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Newsday (N.Y.): All-time leaders Rice, Smith lead 2010 class into Hall

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


CANTON, Ohio -- Some called it the greatest class ever enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. That can be debated, but there is no question that the group that was honored yesterday -- seven men, including the all-time rushing and receiving leaders -- was outstanding.

The class was led by Emmitt Smith of the Dallas Cowboys, who ran for 18,355 yards, and Jerry Rice of the San Francisco 49ers, who caught 1,549 passes. Also enshrined were Russ Grimm, Rickey Jackson, Dick LeBeau, John Randle and Floyd Little.

Grimm, a guard, was part of The Hogs, the Redskins' offensive line of the 1980s. Jackson, a linebacker for New Orleans, was a sack master. LeBeau, now 72, played defensive back for Detroit and now is the Steelers' defensive coordinator. Randle, an undrafted free agent, was an All-Pro defensive tackle. Little, 68, while a member of the Denver Broncos of the late 1960s and early '70s, led the league in rushing three times with a last-place team.

"If I stopped to think about it," Grimm said, "my eyes started to tear up. I just tried to blame it on the humidity. I say to myself, am I sitting here, a grown man, 51, with the emotions coming over me?"

Those previously inducted and sitting around the stage, individuals such as Franco Harris, Deacon Jones, Bob Lilly and Harry Carson, had bets among themselves about which inductee would be the first to break down during his scheduled 10-minute speech.

"Everyone was pointing to me as the one," Rice said. "I already cried when they called me to tell me I was going in."

LeBeau, who like Little was chosen by the veterans committee, said, "This means everything in the world to me. What could you ever ask for? I'm trying to comprehend what this means."

Little knew what it meant: recognition of what he achieved.

"I knew when they were calling me," he said when notified by the Hall, "it wasn't to let me know they overlooked me again. I didn't want to go in posthumously. As I sat there and hugged my wife, I said, 'It's our time. It's the minute we've been waiting for, and I'm still standing.' "

Jackson had said he deserved to enter the Hall at an earlier date, having retired from the game 10 years ago.

"I think it's because the Saints weren't very good for all those years," Jackson said. "But I set all kinds of records. Nobody had my combination of hitting and speed. I hit quarterbacks. I made interceptions."

The majority of spectators at a packed Fawcett Stadium, adjacent to the Hall itself, were Cowboys and 49ers fans, lured respectively by Smith and Rice. One T-shirt on sale had the word "Triplets" and images of Smith, Michael Irvin and Troy Aikman, all former Cowboys now in the Hall of Fame.

Would Smith have had big yardage in the current two-back offense? "I did what I did," he responded, "and I'm not going back on it."

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RealClearSports: Aubrey Huff Finds Home in San Francisco

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


Funny how life treats us. And how we treat life. Aubrey Huff was the man nobody wanted, the man of whom it was written in one of those blogs, "he cannot perform at the dish.'' For someone whose baseball reputation was as a hitter, that's about as bad as it gets.

His career had been spent with bad teams, Tampa Bay in the early 2000s, the Orioles in the late 2000s. He had publicly called Baltimore a horsespit town, or something close to that. He was known as only an ordinary defensive player.

And in the opening days of January 2010, he was a free agent.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

RealClearSports: Favre Doggin' Us in Dog Days of Summer

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


Either Brett Favre is not going to play football this season or Brett Favre is going to play football this season. Right now, he's playing the media for the dolts we are. Then again, you want another story on how A-Rod can't get to 600?

But why does it have to be this way every summer? Why all these cryptic dispatches and this speculation? E-mails to his teammates? Denials from his coach?

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

SF Examiner: Challenges await Bay Area schools

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


SAN FRANCISCO — At Cal, the picture is going to shrink. At Stanford, the bar is going to be kept in place. And at San Jose State, well, when the new coach’s first game is at Alabama, what can anyone do other than muddle through?

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 SF Newspaper Company

RealClearSports: Raiders Need to Become Relevant Again

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


NAPA, Calif. -- You want to know what's worse than being a loser? It's being irrelevant.

It's reaching a point when nobody cares what you do, when there's no griping or moaning, when people talk of you, if they talk of you, in the past tense, as if you didn't exist any longer.

As if you had become the Oakland Raiders.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

RealClearSports: Maria Is Just Fine; How's Serena?

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


STANFORD, Calif. -- It's easier to get information out of Washington than the WTA, which used to be called the Women's Tennis Association, an organization which keeps secrets with ways the White House only wishes it could.

The ladies are in Northern California this week, at the Bank of the West Classic on the Stanford campus, where if the importance doesn't quite equal that of Wimbledon or the upcoming U.S. Open, the setting is far more enticing.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

SF Examiner: Giants rookie busting out in a big way

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


SAN FRANCISCO — We’re already down to a first-name only basis: “Buster.” That’s enough. For the Giants, for their fans, that’s plenty.

They’ve been waiting for this, waiting for a player like Buster Posey, a player who’s their own, a player who evokes memories even as he presents possibilities.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 SF Newspaper Company

RealClearSports: Exorbitant Salaries? Just Supply and Demand

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


In Britain, where austerity is in vogue and government budget cuts affect the health system, schools and other vital services, Liverpool of the Premier League signed free-agent soccer star Joe Cole for four years at $7.4 million a year. Hardly austere.

On this side of the Atlantic, the New Jersey Devils, based in Newark, a city with an unemployment rate of more than 13 percent, happily re-signed Ilya Kovalchuk to a 17-year, $102 million contract. Even though rejected by the National Hockey League, it disturbed many citizens.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

SF Examiner: New ownership for Warriors a good place to start

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


SAN FRANCISCO — Coming from the entertainment industry, where he was the poobah of National General, the late Gene Klein was used to having things his own way, which is what happens when you are successful in business. In fact, that is what makes you successful in business.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 SF Newspaper Company