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Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada compete in the free dance portion of the ice dance competition.
Vancouver, British Columbia – Canada renewed its romance with skates on Monday night, as Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir won a gold medal for ice dancing by performing a love story of their own to Mahler's "Symphony No. 5."
Canadian ice dancers Scott Moir and Tessa Virtue tell WSJ's Phred Dvorak what's on their iPods and what they've been up to in Vancouver.
Following Sunday's loss to the U.S. in hockey, Canadian fans cheered wildly after a performance from Ms. Virtue and Mr. Moir in which the two completed complicated by-the-book rotational lifts and turns, all while managing to convey an intense emotional connection.
For their interpretation of the music, the judges awarded them 9.7 out of a possible 10 points – the highest of the night. Their final score of 221.57, based on the combination of performances across three nights at the Games, set a new record for ice dancing under its current generation of rules.
"We're proud to have gold in Canada," said Mr. Moir. Asked what he would do with the medal, he said he'd never take it off, joking "I'm probably going to wear it in the shower."
Olympics: Is Ski Cross Canada's Golden Chance?
8:18
Canada is seeing a golden opportunity in a relatively new sport called ski cross, WSJ's Kevin Helliker reports. Plus, Phred Dvorak explains why Japanese and South Korean figure skaters have emerged as dominant contenders, and curler Dean Hemmell talks about the intricacies of the sport.
Their win – the first ever for a North American couple -- ends a European streak of winning gold all of the ten times it has been held at the Olympics. The 2009 world champions Oksana Domnina and Maxim Shabalin took the bronze medal after a dark performance to "The Double Life of Veronique" that contrasted sharply with the Canadian love story.
Russian figure skaters could leave Vancouver without any gold medals, should they not win in women's singles skating on Thursday. South Korea's Kim Yu-Na is heavily favored to win gold in that event.
"I'm sure that everything will be ok with Russian figure skating. It won't go down," said Mr. Shabalin. Later, he added, "I think we have to take all the Russian coaches back to Russia."
Americans Meryl Davis and Charlie White won silver at the ice dancing on Monday, skating to "Phantom of the Opera." They took a one-point deduction from the judges for a lift that lasted longer than the sport's 6-second limit. That's possible when you're "in the moment," and having a good time, said Ms. Davis.
The night's results also marked a victory for younger skaters, including both the Canadians and Americans, who have grown up skating under the sport's new judging system. It assigns points for completing specific elements to a performance, and gives preference to choreography that clearly shows off those elements.
"I really do love this new system in ice dance, and how much more credibility it has given our sport," said Mr. Moir. "I feel like you get rewarded for exactly what you do and if you don't like your marks, you can see it there on a piece of paper and go home and improve on that."
tessa virtue and scott moir, canadian ice dancers, maxim shabalin, double life of veronique, vancouver british columbia, dance portion, domnina, gold medals, ski cross, final score, canadian fans, cross canada, golden chance, phred, american couple, wsj, free dance, dance competition, emotional connection, new sport
July 24, 2011 - 1659
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Ryan Malone and his U.S. teammates ripped Finland 6-1 in an Olympic hockey semifinal. They seek gold Sunday.
The U.S. men's hockey team advanced to the Olympic finals Friday, blowing out Finland 6-1 in a shocking display of offensive firepower for a team known more for solid goaltending and tight defense.
The rout had lots of hockey fans scratching their heads, except maybe U.S. general manager Brian Burke, who was charged with assembling a team of Americans capable of taking on the best hockey players in the world.
What Mr. Burke evidently knew, and some teams in this tournament didn't discover until it was too late, is that a six-game Olympic tournament can be won with a simple formula: great goaltending mixed with young, hungry players who hustle to every puck on the ice, play physically and leave their egos in the locker room.
First-period flurry
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The U.S. took control of Friday's game with six goals in the first 13 minutes of action. From top to bottom, Ryan Malone makes it 1-0 and Zach Parise scores on a power play to make it 2-0. Erik Johnson, Patrick Kane and Paul Stastny add goals for the Americans.
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Team USA has been swarming their opponents for over a week now, without it leading to flurries of goals. That could be because two of its games have been played against the hottest goaltender in the tournament—Switzerland's Jonas Hiller. The Americans scored four goals against Canada's Martin Brodeur, enough to cause Canada to bench the record-breaking veteran in favor of the younger Roberto Luongo. On Friday, the U.S. faced a possibly worn-out Miikka Kiprusoff.
Within minutes Friday, it was apparent that the older Finland team, which won the silver medal four years ago with many of the same NHL stars on the team now, wasn't equipped to handle the relentless pressure applied by the energetic Team USA. Finland winger Jere Lehtinen said he hadn't faced such a frenetic bunch since he was on the junior national team years ago. "They have a good four lines that can play all situations," he said after the game.
"They came into the game fully prepared to go on the attack and take care of any mistakes Finland would make," U.S. coach Ron Wilson said. Later, referring to Sunday's gold-medal match, he said, "I hope we haven't peaked two days too early."
Two minutes into the game, 22-year-old Phil Kessel darted down the ice after a puck that was going straight to Finland's goalie, Mr. Kiprusoff, who was skating out of the net. Some players in the NHL might have considered Mr. Kessel's hustle a waste of energy. But Mr. Kessel apparently rushed Mr. Kiprusoff, who got rid of the puck early. American Ryan Malone, also blazing down the ice, intercepted the pass and snapped it past the out-of-position Mr. Kiprusoff, putting the U.S. up 1-0. "We were socked after that," Finland coach Jukka Jalonen said.
The Americans never slowed down, continuing to skate with abandon, wearing down Finland and scoring five more goals in the process. Halfway through the first period, Finland replaced Mr. Kiprusoff with Niklas Backstrom of the NHL's Minnesota Wild.
It didn't matter. Mr. Backstrom barely got between the goalposts before he'd allowed two goals. Patrick Kane flicked in a wrist shot and Paul Stastny smacked one in, making the game 6-0 a mere 13 minutes into the game.
By the end of the first period, Finland had collapsed under the relentless U.S. effort. By the end of the second period, the U.S. had outshot Finland 22-11.
This American rout wasn't the result of fancy moves or sniper-like shots. The Americans simply refused to let a single loose puck go uncontested. They didn't conserve energy and at no point in the game did the U.S. give the Finns an inch.
To some extent, the Finns may have been too old to keep up with the Americans. Finland, like most smaller nations, has only a handful of elite players, and often those elite players develop in waves. Finland stars like Teemu Selanne and Saku Koivu peaked in 2006, when the team won the silver medal. Now, they have begun to age together. Throughout the game Friday, Finland looked like it was struggling to skate as consistently hard as the U.S.
The Americans, though, are on the opposite track. Their older generation of players—guys like Mike Modano—were where Finland is now in the 2006 Turin Games. Four years later, a new wave of young players is coming up and just reaching maturity.
Related
Olympic Men's Hockey Diary: U.S. 6, Finland 1
Canada Eliminates Russia in Hockey
Team USA Neutralizes Switzerland
Chasing the True Team Canada
The Americans also benefited from playing one less game than the Finns, a reward for beating Canada and gaining top seed in the tournament. Finland's goalie, Mr. Kiprusoff, is known in the NHL for being vulnerable when not given rest. He's already played 55 games this season for the Calgary Flames and had the extra game that the U.S.'s Ryan Miller didn't have. It didn't help Mr. Kiprusoff that he started the game off with a goal that looked to be caused by his poor decision-making. Mr. Kiprusoff, like many of the players on Finland, may have simply run out of gas.
The U.S. will play for the gold medal Sunday against the winner of the Canada-Slovakia semifinal game that hadn't ended by press time Friday. Team USA beat Canada earlier, 5-3, but a repeat would be difficult in an arena that on most days has been filled with loud hordes of Canadians. On Thursday, when Canada won the gold medal in women's hockey, the arena shook.
To win in the final, the American men will have to stick to their game plan of hard work, and Mr. Miller, their goalie, will have to play at least as well as he has all tournament. Luck would also help.
Write to Reed Albergotti at reed.albergotti@wsj.com and Ian Johnson at ian.johnson@wsj.com
jere lehtinen online, zach parise, miikka kiprusoff, roberto luongo, getty images, offensive firepower, patrick kane, national tea, ryan malone, olympic tournament, tight defense, energetic team, relentless pressure, nhl stars, brian burke, olympic hockey, goaltending, s martin, hockey players, hockey fans
Associated Press
Canada's Sidney Crosby waits for the puck to be dropped in a face-off against Slovakia.
VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Another young, fast team outdid a veteran-laden opponent to reach the finals of the Olympic men's hockey tournament Friday, as Team Canada defeated Slovakia 3-2 to set up a rematch with Team USA for gold Sunday.
"The guys are already looking forward to it," Canadian goalie Roberto Luongo said.
The game was much closer and more hard-fought than the U.S.-Finland game earlier in the day that was over in the first 10 minutes. But it followed a similar pattern. Canada, like the U.S., jumped out to an early lead, using its forecheck to bottle up the opposition and let its goalie escape barely tested.
The twist was that the Slovakians pushed Canada much harder, scoring two goals in the final period after the Canadians perhaps started listening to their delirious fans, who with 12 minutes left were already chanting "We want USA!"
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Canadian players celebrate after winning their semifinal game against Slovakia.
Like the Finns, the Slovakians were thinner on talent. That forced them to include older players, some of whom couldn't establish themselves in the National Hockey League or have since left it. Players like Jozef Stumpel (37 years old), Zigmund Palffy (37) and Richard Zednik (34) were once consistent scorers in the NHL but have moved back closer to home for the sunset of their careers. Others, like defenseman Martin Strbak, never made it that far, drinking a cup of coffee in hockey's best league years earlier.
But unlike the Finns and other opponents, the Slovakians still had some top-end talent in their prime, such as one of the best defensemen in the NHL, Zdeno Chara, one of the league's top scorers, Marian Gaborik, and one of the best all-around forwards, Marian Hossa.
They consistently made life difficult for the Canadians, forechecking relentlessly, with Hossa especially effective in pinning the Canadians deep in their end – perhaps a lesson to the U.S. team, which has employed a similar strategy on other teams. Mr. Gaborik was also tricky, occasionally tearing up the left wing and zinging shots on Mr. Luongo.
Related
Team USA Advances to Sunday's Gold-Medal Game With a Resounding 6-1 Victory
Canada Eliminates Russia in Hockey
Team USA Neutralizes Switzerland
Chasing the True Team Canada
Canada's strategy for scoring was simple: put pucks on net and screen the Slovakian goalie, Jaroslav Halak, an up-and-coming netminder in the NHL. At 6-foot, Halak isn't an ideal size for netminders in today's hockey. Canada smartly placed forwards in front of him to create screens.
When Mr. Chara was on the ice this didn't work. He easily cleared away the Canadian forwards. But when some of the lesser Slovakian defenders were on the ice they couldn't contain the bulkiest Canadian forwads.
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That led to goals early on by Patrick Marleau and Brenden Morrow, with Slovakian defender Lubomir Visnovsky victimized on both. Mr. Visnovsky, a power-play specialist with the Edmonton Oilers, was paired with Mr. Strbak, a big defender but not a great one. They were by far Slovakia's weakest defensive pairing early on.
Canada extended its lead in the third on a goal by Ryan Getzlaf in a goal-mouth scramble. But the Slovakians didn't give up. With Mr. Halak holding down the fort, it was up to two of its lesser lights to bring them within a goal.
First came Mr. Visnovsky, who made use of his rushing skills to charge up the ice and squeeze a backhand shot through a tiny space that Mr. Luongo had left – a goal that the netminder probably would have liked back. Then came a second by Michal Handzus, a big forward with the Los Angeles Kings, who batted in a goal after intense Slovakian pressure with 4:53 left.
But even after Slovakia pulled its goalie, it didn't quite have the firepower to score the equalizer and Canada held on, setting up a rematch with Team USA. Pavol Demitra had a chance to tie in the final seconds but missed an open net.
U.S. forward Patrick Kane said after his team's game that he was almost sorry that the game against Finland ended so quickly because it deprived his team of a chance to further test itself. "That was a great 15 minutes for us but it would have been nice to play a full 60," Mr. Kane said.
That's probably not a regret the Canadians had. The team looked chastened as the game ended and the fans began to chant "We want USA!" some more.
Write to Ian Johnson at ian.johnson@wsj.com
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Dusk. Chimney Bluffs State Park, NY
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Bulgarian Black Sea Coast in the south of Obzor- cherno More / Черно море / Schwarzes Meer / Black Sea - България / Bulgaria
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Este o rio So Francisco na divisa dos estados de Sergipe a Alagoas.
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Roanoke civic center Training Crit
Roanoke, VA, July 19th, 2011
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Tony Abbott listens to a question - Carbon tax forum addressed by Opposition Leader Tony Abbott, Customs House, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
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In the wake of the Casey Anthony trial, despite my outrage at the verdict, and my disgust at her actions, I also feel horrified at the notion that she can in fact have more kids. She is only 25 and has many child baring years ahead of her. What if she concedes to reproduce again?
I know abortion is a touchy subject, and an entire argument onto itself, but in her case, I would definitely be pro choice. I would rather she terminate within a few months of finding out she is pregnant than perhaps chose to terminate when the child is his first years of life. Yes, I am basing this on the assumption that she murdered her daughter.
For those who believe she is innocent of murder or manslaughter, it is indisputable that she in the least negligent. To extrapolate some key findings of this case, she did not know where her child was for an entire month. If I did not know where my daughter was for even a few minutes I would begin poking around looking for her in the other rooms. My daughter is the same age as Anthony’s daughter, so this case had a very sever effect on me. If this was my daughter nowhere to be found, and in harm’s way, I would be enraged, doing everything possible to find her. I would not be out partying only a few days after she was suspected to be missing.
I just cannot get past how a missing child was overlooked. If I had as much as a fish tank and one of the goldfish was not there for even a day, I would notice. A small child is far louder, and demands a lot more attention than a fish, or even any other pet. In my opinion, if Casey Anthony wants to raise something in the future, she should stick to houseplants. When her fern dies at least no one will be surprised.
But there is still that nagging voice in the back of my head that tells me there is nothing anyone can do to stop this woman if she did chose to have another child. Clearly she does not make the best decisions and cannot seem to cope with the outcomes. Will she give motherhood another try only to once again regret it? And how much will that child suffer once she once again figures out that, yes, children do interfere with your partying, drinking, and general mayhem. If something were to happen to that child will she finally get her due punishment?
How do you feel about Casey Anthony having more children?
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U.S. bank failures have slowed in 2011 from the flood of recent years, but a large reservoir of "problem" banks will keep the failure rate relatively high as regulators slog through the backlog.
In the first half of the year, there were 48 bank failures, down from 74 in the second half of 2010 and 86 in the first half of 2010, which included three large failures in Puerto Rico.
Total assets of failed banks also dropped sharply from a year earlier, down 73%, but were relatively steady compared with the second half of 2010. That is because smaller community banks are predominantly the ones still being closed.
On Friday, U.S. regulators announced the failure of two banks in Colorado and another in Illinois, pushing the country's tally this year to 51.
The first half of last year included the failure of 19 banks with more than $1 billion of assets, while there were just four such failures in the second half of 2010 and just three in the first half of this year.
More
Deal Journal: Bair Skips the Revolving Door
The biggest bank failures in the latest period were United Western Bank in Colorado, First Community Bank in New Mexico and Superior Bank in Alabama. But their combined assets, at $7.36 billion, still were far short of the largest failure in the year-earlier period: Westernbank Puerto Rico, with $11.94 billion of assets.
Timur Braziler, analyst and assistant vice president at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc., said the country is in about "the seventh inning" of this cycle of failures, which began in 2007. He predicted that the pace of failures is stabilizing and that the second half will have a similar number of failures as the first half did.
"It's really just the regulators working through the backlog" unless the economy or commercial real estate worsen, he said. "There's not going to be a new crop of problem banks."
Still, the backlog is significant. The number of banks on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s problem list—a quarterly tally of banks in greater danger of failing—was at the highest level yet for the current cycle when it was last released in May, at 888.
Though net additions to the list have fallen to a trickle, the number has yet to decline even as banks continue to fold.
Matthew Anderson, managing director at researcher Trepp LLC, said one factor keeping that number elevated is an elongating failure process. Trepp keeps its own Watch List of banks at elevated risk of failure, and Mr. Anderson said that year to date the median length a bank spent on its list before failing was nearly six quarters, about double what it was in 2008.
That is partly a function of more time having elapsed since the financial crisis, but Mr. Anderson said the main factor is that regulators are working with weakened banks more to help them raise capital.
KBW analyst Mr. Braziler also said the imminent dissolution of the Office of Thrift Supervision—thrift regulation will shift to Office of the Comptroller of the Currency this month as part of the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul—may be slowing down the process as well.
Yet given an expectation for failures' pace to hold steady for some time, clearing through the backlog is still a daunting prospect. Greg Hernandez, a spokesman for the FDIC, said historically 19% of the banks on the agency's confidential problem list end up failing. At the first half's rate, it would take nearly two years to work through that percentage on the latest list.
Mr. Hernandez also noted that this year so far "is basically what the FDIC anticipated it would be." The agency has said it believed 2010, with its 157 total failures, would be the peak.
Luckily for the FDIC, the costliness of failures has dropped as the failure rate slowed. In the first half, the estimated cost to the FDIC's fund was 20.5 cents for every dollar in failed-bank assets, down from 24.1 cents a year earlier.
Write to Joan E. Solsman at joan.solsman@dowjones.com
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Keep the Beat 2011 IPBeja2551
A 25 de Maio de 2011, o GAAD, Gabinete de Apoio Actividade Desportiva e o Laboratrio de Actividade Fsica e Desporto do Instituto Politcnico de Beja, realizaram mais uma edio “Keep the Beat” no campus do IPBeja e aberto a toda a comunidade.”
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Vivian Maiers style walk uk 2011
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