The bottom line
December 1, 2005
Robinson making a case for Rookie of the Year
Seattle native Jamaal Crawford scored 28 points, and former Husky Nate Robinson added 14 points to lead the New York Knicks over the Chicago Bulls, 109-101, last night. Robison's play has improved greatly since the season started and many have taken notice.
In his last five games, Robinson has been averaging 12.6 points per game. The 5-foot-9 player has been impressing critics and scored the game-winning basket at the buzzer against Philadelphia. One analyst called Robinson the best point guard playing for the Knicks.
Robinson will back in Seattle when the Sonics face the Knicks next week.
Australia freezing qualifying grass
Australian national soccer team officials have moved forward to freeze the spot where John Aloisi kicked the winning penalty shot against Uruguay, which gave Australia its first World Cup finals appearance.
Australia took Uruguay to penalty kicks and won 4-2 to qualify a few weeks ago.
Officials have said that the divot will be dry-frozen to get rid of any moisture. After a few weeks, the spot will be prepared and put on display for all Australian soccer fans to see.
Comments
Post a comment
You are not currently logged in. You must log in using your Facebook account to post a comment. It's fast, easy, and we don't store any of your personal information, except your first and last name when you post a comment.
Why?
Our old comment system was abused to leave racist, sexist, fradulent, or simply useless comments. We're hoping this verification step will improve the quality of our comments.
I don't have a Facebook account. I'd like to verify my identity using my MySpace/Google/Yahoo!/OpenID/SSN/주민등록번호/MasterCard.
Let us know. We're open to suggestions. Over the next few weeks, we'll be testing other authentication methods.
The FBI/CIA/TSA/CoS/Emmert is out to get me! I need to stay anonymous!
We're working on a way to allow this. If you have any ideas, email us.
I think this website is ugly.
It's going to be a work in progress all summer, so it may look and act differently from week to week. If you want to influence this process, email us. We read every email, and respond to most of them.