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A.C. Milan

Milan
AC Milan crest
Full name Associazione Calcio Milan S.p.A.
Nickname(s) i Rossoneri (The Red and Blacks)
il Diavolo
(The Devil)
Casciavit
(Lombard for: Screwdrivers)
Founded 16 December 1899
Ground San Siro, Milan
(Capacity: 80,074)
Owner Silvio Berlusconi
President Vacant
Head coach Massimiliano Allegri
League Serie A
2009–10 Serie A, 3rd
Website Club home page

Home colours
Away colours
Third colours
Current season
Associazione Calcio Milan, commonly referred to as A.C. Milan or simply Milan (Italian pronunciation: [ˈmiːlan]), is a professional Italian football club based in Milan, Lombardy. It was founded in 1899 by English lace-maker Herbert Kilpin and businessman Alfred Edwards among others. The club has spent most of its history in Serie A, the top-flight of Italian football, having played only two seasons in Serie B in the early 1980s.
Milan has won 18 officially recognized UEFA and FIFA international titles, and remains tied with Boca Juniors as having won the most in the world. Milan has won four world titles more than any other club in the world, having won the Intercontinental Cup three times and the FIFA Club World Cup once. Milan has won the European Cup/Champions League on seven occasions; only Real Madrid has exceeded this total. The club has also won the UEFA Super Cup a record five times and the Cup Winners' Cup twice.
Domestically, Milan has won 17 league titles, making the club the third most successful in Serie A behind local rivals Internazionale (18 titles) and record-holder Juventus (27 titles). The club has also won the Coppa Italia five times, in addition to five Supercoppa Italiana triumphs. The Europa League remains the only major competition for which the team are eligible to compete that they have never won: in this competition they have lost two semifinals, in 1972 and in 2002. Milan was a founding member of the G-14 group and the European Club Association that was formed following the first organization's dissolution.
Milan's home games are played at San Siro, also known as the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza. The stadium, which is shared with Inter, is the largest in Italian football, with a total capacity of 80,074 The owner of the club is Italian Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi while the vice-president is Adriano Galliani. Milan is one of the wealthiest clubs in Italian and world football.


A black and white picture of Herbert Kilpin, the first captain of A.C. Milan
Herbert Kilpin, the first captain of A.C. Milan
Natasha

Celtics–Lakers rivalry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Boston Celtics – Los Angeles Lakers
Boston Celtics logo  Los Angeles Lakers logo
History
First Meeting November 9, 1948
Latest Meeting February 10, 2011
Number of Regular Season Meetings 274
Regular Season Series 153–121 (.558) Boston[1]
Largest Margin of Victory 131–92 Boston
(Game 6 2008 NBA Finals)
Post Season History
Post Season Meetings 43–31 (BOS)
1959 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–0
1962 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–3
1963 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–2
1965 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–1
1966 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–3
1968 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–2
1969 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–3
1984 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–3
1985 NBA Finals Lakers won, 4–2
1987 NBA Finals Lakers won, 4–2
2008 NBA Finals Celtics won, 4–2
2010 NBA Finals Lakers won, 4–3
The rivalry between the Boston Celtics and Los Angeles Lakers involves the two most storied basketball franchises in National Basketball Association (NBA) history. The rivalry had been less intense since the retirements of Magic Johnson and Larry Bird in the early 1990s, but in 2008 it was renewed as the Celtics and Lakers met in the Finals for the first time since 1987, with the Celtics winning the series 4-2. The two teams faced off once again in the 2010 NBA Finals which the Lakers won in 7 games. The two teams have won the two highest numbers of championships, the Celtics 17, the Lakers 16; together, the two teams' 33 championships account for more than half of the 64 championships in NBA history.

Overview

Following the 2010 NBA Finals, the Lakers and Celtics have met a total of 12 times. To date, Boston has won nine and LA three (with the Celtics having won the first eight meetings).
Year Winner Series
1959 Boston Celtics 4–0
1962 Boston Celtics 4–3
1963 Boston Celtics 4–2
1965 Boston Celtics 4–1
1966 Boston Celtics 4–3
1968 Boston Celtics 4–2
1969 Boston Celtics 4–3
1984 Boston Celtics 4–3
1985 Los Angeles Lakers 4–2

2010 NBA Finals

This was the third straight year in which the L.A. Lakers advanced to the NBA Finals. These two teams last met in 2008, when the Celtics beat the Lakers 4–2. Paul Pierce was named series MVP in 2008. Much of both rosters have been kept intact, and the Celtics' veterans Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen, and Rasheed Wallace looked to add to their championship résumés, while Kobe Bryant and the Lakers looked to even the score against the Celtics. The Lakers were the defending champions, having beaten the Orlando Magic 4–1 in the 2009 NBA Finals.
This was the first NBA Finals to go the full seven games since 2005, and only the fourth since the NBA switched the Finals to a 2–3–2 format in 1985. The home team has won Game 7 ever since. This was the fifth Game 7 between the Lakers and Celtics. Boston had won all previous Game 7 match-ups between the two teams. However, for the first time in franchise history, the Lakers won Game 7 against the Celtics, with a final score of 83–79. Game 7 was the second most-watched game in NBA history, with 28.2 million viewers (No. 1 being Game 6 of the 1998 NBA Finals). Game 7 was watched by an average audience of 1.1 million viewers on TSN, making it the largest Canadian audience ever recorded for an NBA game. This was also the first time since 2002 that a team has won back-to-back championships; that team was also the Lakers.
Natasha

April 20, 2011 |  7:30 pm

Lakers1_600 An odd game, even a perplexing one.
Little of that will be remembered in the long term after the Lakers earned a split of the opening two games of their playoff series against the Hornets by winning, 87-78, on Wednesday night at Staples Center.
Though Andrew Bynum led the Lakers with 17 points and 11 rebounds, the emotional catalyst was Lamar Odom, who had 16 points off the bench, punctuating his selection the NBA’s sixth man of the year. That award was announced Tuesday.
Game 3 of the series will be on Friday at New Orleans, with Game 4 there on Sunday.
Game 2 was anything but easy at the start as the Lakers once trailed by nine points in the first quarter. Former Laker Trevor Ariza had a game-high 22 points for the Hornets, and point guard Chris Paul finished with 20 points and nine assists, well off his dazzling Game 1 performance of 33 points and 14 assists.
Kobe Bryant didn’t reach double figures until late in the fourth quarter, finishing with 11 points, and seemed to find an extra level of ire after he received a technical foul in the fourth quarter. Pau Gasol continued to struggle from the field, going two for 10 for eight points.
But the Laker reserves made the difference, outscoring the Hornet bench, 27-13. In Game 1, the New Orleans bench had the decided edge, 39-21. 
Lakers 72, Hornets 59, (7:04 remaining)
Apparently, the Lakers reserves must have heard the talk.
How they were outplayed by the Hornets’ bench in Game 1. They had to listen to all that and then some starting on Sunday night and continuing through Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
They helped extend the Lakers' lead in the fourth quarter. Look at it this way: Lamar Odom and Matt Barnes had combined for 22 points, compared to 11 from Pau Gasol and Kobe Bryant.
That’s what everyone thought would happen, right?
Lakers 63, Hornets 56 (End of third quarter)
The Lakers got some help from the Hornets in the final minute and a half of the third quarter when Aaron Gray missed two free throws and Willie Green had turnovers on back-to-back possessions.
But Chris Paul cut the Lakers' lead to seven with a three-pointer with 1.4 seconds remaining.
The Lakers were keeping Paul in check, at least compared to Game 1. He had 15 points, six assists and three rebounds through three quarters.
Still, the Lakers managed to hang on despite a combined 11 points from Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol. Gasol is two-for-10 shooting from the field with six points and three rebounds.
Andrew Bynum has 15 points and eight rebounds, Ron Artest has 12 points and Lamar Odom has added 12 points off the bench.
Lakers 57, Hornets 49 (4:00 remaining, third quarter)
This suddenly turned into an ugly-looking game, more typical of a run-of-the-mill night in December rather than a key playoff game.
About halfway through the third quarter, the Lakers and Hornets combined for nine points. Yes, nine points.
In any event, the crowd seems fully engaged. Even if the teams are not.
--Lisa Dillman
Lakers 47, Hornets 41 (end of first half)
The Lakers played very good defense in the second quarter, swarming all over  the New Orleans Hornets.
The Lakers held the Hornets to 18 second-quarter points.
But Chris Paul made a three-pointer just before the halftime buzzer to give the Hornets momentum going into the second half. Paul made his shot with Kobe Bryant trying to defend him.
Paul had nine points and five assists in the first half.
Andrew Bynum had 12 points and four rebounds in the first half.
Pau Gasol had six points and one rebound.
Bryant had just three points on one-for-four shooting in the first half.
The Hornets shot 44.4% from the field in the first half.
Lakers 35, Hornets 31 (5:43 left in the second quarter.
Andrew Bynum played hard and with passion in the early part of the second quarter.
After Bynum scored down low and was fouled by Emeka Okafor, Bynum pumped his fist twice.
Bynum had 10 points on five-for-seven shooting.
Okafor had three fouls and had to take a seat on the bench.
Lakers 29, Hornets 29 (8:13 left in second quarter)
The Lakers had too many turnovers early in the second quarter and that allowed the Hornets to tie the score.

Matt Barnes scored twice and Lamar Odomscored once early for the Lakers.
Lakers 23, Hornets 23 (end of first quarter)
Lamar Odom gave the Lakers a big lift in the first quarter, scoring six points on three-for-four shooting.
Odom, the NBA's sixth man of the year, was aggressive as soon as he entered the game with 4:35 left in the first quarter.
Kobe Bryant didn't score in the first, missing his only shot.
The Lakers shot 43.5% in the first quarter.
The Hornets shot 56.3% from the field.
Hornets 22, Lakers 16 (2:30 left in first quarter)
 The Lakers trailed by as many as nine points, 20-11, late in the first quarter.
Hornets center Aaron Gray, who was questionable because he sprained his right ankle during in Game 1, scored on his first shot and he had four rebounds in eight minutes.
Through 2:30 of the first quarter, the Lakers shot only 36.8% from the field, while the Hornets shot 64.3%.
Hornets 14, Lakers 11 (5:19 left in first quarter)
The first adjustment the Lakers made was having Kobe Bryant defend against New Orleans point guard Chris Paul.
That left Derek Fisher on 6-foot-5 Hornets guard Marco Belinelli.
The Lakers also went inside to Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum early.
Gasol scored two points on one-for-four shooting in the first several minutes.
Bynum had four points on two-for-three shooting.
Paul had six points, on two-for-two shooting, and one assist in the early going.
Pregame
After practice Saturday, Coach Phil Jackson said the Lakers' focus was "so-so" heading into Game 1 of the first-round Western Conference playoff series against the New Orleans Hornets.
And it showed in the Lakers' play in their loss in Game 1 on Sunday at Staples Center.
Jackson was asked what his team's focus was like after two days to practice and prepare for Game 2 on Wednesday night against the Hornets at Staples Center.
"Our team focus is back in the right spot, I believe," Jackson said. "It felt right today and we felt like we were attentive and we're industrious too."
Jackson also said Steve Blake, who has been out for a week while recovering from chickenpox, will play.
Blake will be needed to help slow New Orleans point guard Chris Paul.
The Hornets said backup center Aaron Gray will play despite spraining his right ankle in Game 1.
-- Broderick Turner
Photo: Lakers guard Kobe Bryant defends Hornets point guard Chris Paul in the first half of Game 2 on Wednesday night at Staples Center. Credit: Lucy Nicholson / Reuters
Natasha


Boston Celtics
2010–11 Boston Celtics season
Boston Celtics logo
Conference Eastern Conference
Division Atlantic Division
Founded 6 June 1946
History Boston Celtics (1946–present)
Arena TD Garden
City Boston, Massachusetts
Team colors Green, White, Black, Gold                    
Owner(s) Boston Basketball Partners L.L.C.
General manager Danny Ainge
Head coach Doc Rivers
D-League affiliate Maine Red Claws
Championships 17 (1957, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1974, 1976, 1981, 1984, 1986, 2008)
Conference titles 21 (1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1974, 1976, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 2008, 2010)
Division titles 20 (1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1992, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011)
Retired numbers 21 (00, 1, 2, 3, 6, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, LOSCY, 19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 31, 32, 33, 35, MIC)
Official website

Kit body basket in white.png
Home jersey
Kit shorts blanksides2.png
Team colours
Home
Kit body basket with white.png
Away jersey
Kit shorts whitesides.png
Team colours
Away
The Boston Celtics are a National Basketball Association (NBA) team based in Boston, Massachusetts. They play in the Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference. Founded in 1946, the team is currently owned by Boston Basketball Partners LLC. The Celtics play their home games at the TD Garden, which they share with the Boston Blazers (NLL), and the Boston Bruins of the NHL. The Celtics' 17 NBA Championships are the most for any NBA franchise, with their Western Conference rival, the Los Angeles Lakers, following behind with 16 NBA Titles. From 1957 to 1969, the Celtics dominated the league winning 11 championships in 13 years, and eight in a row (1959–1966), the longest consecutive championship streak of any North American pro sports team.
The Celtics dominated the league during the late 50s and through the mid 80s, with the help of many Hall of Famers which include Bill Russell, Bob Cousy, John Havlicek, Larry Bird and legendary Celtics coach Red Auerbach, combined for a 795–397 record that helped the Celtics win 16 Championships. During that span the Celtics met the Lakers 12 times in the Finals during the mid 1950s and 80s with the Celtics winning nine and Lakers winning three. Before the retirement of the “Big Three”, who included Larry Bird, Robert Parish and Kevin McHale, thanks to some creative maneuvering by Auerbach, the Celtics had drafted second overall pick Len Bias but the team fell into decline as the college star died two days after he was drafted. Later, the team suffered another tragedy when their star player Reggie Lewis died of a heart attack in his prime.
The franchise returned to prominence during the 2007–2008 season when Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen joined Paul Pierce and the new "Big Three" led the team to its 17th championship. Four Celtics (Bob Cousy, Bill Russell, Dave Cowens and Larry Bird) have won the NBA Most Valuable Player Award for an NBA record total of 10 MVP awards.

Natasha
0427-kobe-bryant-dunk-608.jpg
Kobe Bryant's dunk on Emeka Okafor in Game 5 might have been his most important hoop all night.
Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images
Posted Apr 27 2011 10:05AM  
LOS ANGELES -- "Some injury," Hornets swingman Trevor Ariza said after Game 5.
Some injury, indeed.
It was nasty. Video A mighty collision of wills at the rim, and doctors will be removing pieces of Kobe Bryant from Emeka Okafor's posterized face for days. There could even be some basketball-leather shrapnel. It was just nasty.
Oh, the other injury. Yeah, never mind.
Bryant played 29 minutes on the sprained left ankle that forced him to hobble out of New Orleans Arena on crutches two nights earlier and required nonstop treatment to get him ready for Tuesday at Staples Center. He had a team-high 19 points, making eight of 13 shots.
Bryant didn't just heal. He got into the way-back machine. He saw a lane to the basket from the perimeter, then he saw Okafor coming to defend, and then he performed like Kobe of old (and not old as in last weekend, when health wasn't giving the Lakers something to worry other than the Hornets).
"It looked like he was going to challenge me at the rim," Bryant said. "I accepted the challenge."
Bryant throwing down on Okafor. Bryant throwing down on Father Time.
Same difference.
The Lakers are where they want to be, heading back to Louisiana for Game 6 on Thursday with a 3-2 lead, because Bryant is where he needs to be. Not in perfect health or probably close to it, but seizing every challenge and making it his own. If he must will inconsistent teammates into the semifinals by poking them with crutches, dumping ice buckets and heat packs on their heads and clipping the electronic-stimulation wires for his ankle to their hearts, so be it.
In some ways, the Lakers' 106-90 win was Bryant at his best without being close to his best. He was hurting bad enough that coach Phil Jackson said before the game he would bench his superstar if it Bryant was dragging down the team, and then Jackson later called him a liability in the first quarter. If Kobe had set the whole thing up to sandbag the Hornets and wasn't really in such bad shape, his coach was either in perfect sync with the script or faked out himself. (The other possibility, as suggested by Bryant: Typical Jackson chain-yanking.)
Either way, Bryant's teammates still lack the necessary postseason focus and he used the game to push them more than he pushed himself. Actually, he used one play.
The Staples Center crowd, nervous when the Hornets took a nine-point lead in the first quarter, erupted with new energy when Bryant thundered to the basket in a way he rarely does anymore. It shook the fans with passion and, more importantly, his teammates -- who went up by three at halftime and never trailed again.
"It's a message for us that this is important," Bryant said of the dunk on Okafor. "It's time to raise up and do what we gotta do. They know I save those. I don't have much of those left anymore."
One of the reporters in the interview room mentioned that reserve guard Shannon Brown said Bryant had an afro the last time he dunked like that. Yeah, Bryant came back, Brown was about 2. That's how much he saves those dunks.
"That's what he does," Hornets coach Monty Williams said when asked if Bryant's dunk was a galvanizing play for the Lakers and all those around them who needed the sign of reassurance.
"Did it look like his ankle was hurting? OK, then. So that's why I don't even get into all that. He made a spectacular play. In my opinion, when we went to the basket tonight, they were putting us on the ground. At some point, you have to know how to make a playoff foul.
"Whether it comes from this experience with our team, we have to learn how to not allow him to get that play off, because our guys are going down when they go to the basket. So galvanizing? I don't know what it is. He could have laid it up tonight and the crowd still would have screamed."
Not like this. The crowd understood the rare sighting of an acrobatic Bryant, just as they thrilled at another dunk and the move in traffic to snake around Carl Landry and Okafor for a twisting layup. The plays themselves were worth so much more than two points.
"He had a couple of spectacular dunks," Pau Gasol said. "Spectacular. Extremely aggressive and athletic and a hundred percent. We were all happy to see that and excited to see that, and I think everybody was. That was good because I think those kinds of plays give+ you confidence on your body no matter what you're going through."
Some -- yes -- galvanizing play. Some throwback moment.
Some injury
Natasha
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Leighton Meester
Background information
Birth nameLeighton Marissa Meester
BornApril 9, 1986 (1986-04-09) (age 25)
Fort Worth, Texas, U.S.
GenresElectropop, dance, country music
OccupationsActress, singer-songwriter, model
Years active1999–present
LabelsUniversal Republic
Associated actsCobra Starship
Websitehttp://leightonmeestermusic.com/

Leighton Marissa Meester (born April 9, 1986)[1] is an American actress and singer. Meester gained fame for playing the role of Blair Waldorf in the CW young-adult television series Gossip Girl. She most recently appeared in the 2010 country drama film Country Strong and the 2011 thriller The Roommate. As of 2011, she is set to appear in another two big screen movies: Monte Carlo, and The Oranges.

Early life

Meester was born in Fort Worth, Texas, the daughter of Constance (née Haas) and Douglas Meester. At the time, her mother was serving a federal prison sentence for her involvement in a drug ring that smuggled marijuana from Jamaica to the United States. She was able to give birth to Leighton in a hospital and nurse her for three months in a halfway house, before returning to prison to complete her sentence. At this time Leighton's grandmother cared for her.
Meester has maintained that her parents gave her a normal upbringing and, despite their criminal past, are good people with experience that has only made Meester more open-minded and non-judgmental, "It made me realize that you can't judge anyone—especially your parents—for what they've done in their past, because people change." Meester has joked, "Look, I could've turned out a lot worse". She has cited her mother as her style icon.

Meester grew up in Marco Island, Florida, where she participated in productions at a local playhouse. When she was 11 years old, Meester and her mother moved to New York. Meester attended the Professional Children's School and also began working as a model with Wilhelmina, booking a Ralph Lauren campaign shot by Bruce Weber and working with then photographer (now film maker) Sofia Coppola as well as many commercials including Tamagotchi toys and Clearasil. Meester made her television acting debut as a murder victim's friend on an episode of Law & Order. At 14, Meester moved to Los Angeles, California, wanting more stable work, and attended Hollywood High School and Beverly Hills High School. She then transferred to a small private school and graduated a year early.
Meester's last name is a Dutch name which means "master" or "teacher."