Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Agent Scott Boras said Carlos Beltran is happy playing in San Francisco and might consider returning to the Giants beyond this year

Boras says Beltran might want to stay

Agent Scott Boras said Carlos Beltran is happy playing in San Francisco and might consider returning to the Giants beyond this year.


Boras, speaking before the "Moneyball" premiere in Oakland, planned to have lunch with his client today in Los Angeles and said he'll know more about what Beltran wants after that, including how many years he might seek in a deal.


Since joining the Giants in a July 28 trade from the Mets, Beltran is batting .333 with five home runs and 16 RBIs.


Basketball: Katie Douglas scored 21 points and Tamika Catchings added 17 to help the host Indiana Fever beat the New York Liberty 72-62 in Game 3 to advance to the WNBA's Eastern Conference finals against Atlanta. ... Candice Dupree's putback with 1.9 seconds remaining lifted Phoenix to a 77-75 series-clinching win over the defending champion Seattle Storm and into the Western Conference finals.


-- UCLA forward Jasmine Dixon will miss the season after rupturing her right Achilles tendon.


Sunday, July 31, 2011

Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-California) said of the negotiations to the NY Times

Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-California) said of the negotiations to the NY Times, "Sausage making is not pretty. But the sausage we have, I think, is a very different sausage from when we started." World markets have been watching and worrying over our debt ceiling crisis; the WSJ notes, "Asian markets opened sharply higher, with the Nikkei 225 in Japan up 165 points, or 1.68%, at 9 p.m. in Washington, shortly after the president announced a deal had been struck," but the ordeal has, per the Times, "eroded America's already diminishing aura as the world's economic haven and the sole country with the power to lead the rest of the world out of financial crisis and recession."
The WaPo's Chris Cilizza offers some more winners and losers—winners include the Tea Party, Obama, and, uh, David Wu "Has a member of Congress forced to resign amid a sex scandal ever drawn less media attention? Somewhere, Anthony Weiner is grimacing." And some more details about the deal from CBS News—"About $1 trillion over 10 years would be cut now from the federal budget. In addition, a new special congressional committee made up of members from both parties and both houses of Congress would be tasked with coming up up with $1.8 trillion in cuts by Thanksgiving."