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Atlanta Dream Name Fred Williams Head Coach and General Manager



ATLANTA, Aug. 27, 2012 -- The Atlanta Dream announced today that Fred Williams has been named Head Coach and General Manager, effective immediately. Coach Williams has served as Assistant Coach for the Dream for four years, and brings extensive coaching and scouting experience in the WNBA, NBA and the NCAA. Coach Williams replaces former Head Coach and General Manager Marynell Meadors. Joe Ciampi continues in his first year as Assistant Coach.

"As a team, we are unified in our drive to build on what we've achieved in our first five years," said Williams. "We want to acknowledge the strong contribution that Marynell Meadors made to this organization. Our franchise will continue to build on the tradition of speed, scoring and tough defense that has resulted in back-to-back Eastern Conference championships."

"Coach Williams bring a wealth of experience, a strong sense of teamwork, and demonstrated commitment to the role of Head Coach and General Manager," said Atlanta Dream Co-owners Mary Brock and Kelly Loeffler. "We have tremendous respect for her contribution to this sport and wish Coach Meadors the very best in her future endeavors."



article source: http://www.wnba.com/news/dream_coach_fred_williams_082712.html

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Perfect US NBA stars beat Spain to take gold


LONDON (AFP) - The United States Dream Team of NBA stars captured their second successive Olympic men's basketball gold medal and the 14th overall for America by beating Spain 107-100 in Sunday's final.
Running unbeaten through the tournament as they did in 2008 when they also beat Spain in the final, the US multi-millionaire lineup of NBA elite claimed their fifth crown in the past six Olympics.
"I'm on cloud nine. It's such a huge honour," US star Kobe Bryant said after his final Olympic bow.
"It's hard work and perseverance. I feel very fortunate to go to the Olympics twice and give it a go. I feel very lucky. It was nice."
The Americans improved to 62-1 since revamping the national team program after settling for Olympic bronze in 2004.
"It's a relief because if we don't come back winners it's a disaster," US assistant coach Mike D'Antoni said.
But reigning European champion Spain, routed by the US NBA stars in a pre-Olympic exhibition game last month in Barcelona, stayed with the defending champions to the very end, keeping within reach until the final minutes.
"We didn't want it to be easy," US star LeBron James said. "When it gets tight, our will and determination shines."
Kevin Durant led the US stars with 30 points while James had 19 and Bryant added 17.
Pau Gasol, Bryant's NBA Los Angeles Lakers' teammate, led Spain with 24 points while Juan-Carlos Navarro added 21 and Rudy Fernandez contributed 14.
Spain's only Olympic medals in the event have come with finals losses to US teams in 1984, 2008 and in London.
"It's a disappointing loss," Spanish NBA big man Gasol said. "Very proud of the way we competed. We fought. It's disappointing on one side because we couldn't reach the goal, because we had ou r chances.
"We were there pretty much the entire game, but we let them get away in the fourth and we couldn't come back."
The Americans led 83-82 entering the fourth quarter and opened a 12-3 run early in the period, Chris Paul scoring the first five points while Bryant had four.
Navarro hit a jumper and Fernandez added a tip-in to pull Spain within 97-91 but James answered with a slam dunk and followed a Marc Gasol dunk with a 3-pointer to put the Americans ahead 102-93 with 1:59 remaining.
US players began celebrating with hugs when James and others were pulled from the court with 37 seconds to play and late free throws sealed the triumph.
"Today was a dogfight," US veteran Carmelo Anthony said.
Spain used a new defensive scheme and for a time kept the explosive US offence contained, fading only at the finish.
"We didn't have a lot of practice on it and it didn't work at times," he said.
"The US are an amazing team. We were close at times but we couldn't play the perfect game we needed to beat them.
"It's a bittersweet feeling. We were close again against this team of excellent players. You have to have pretty much a perfect game to be able to beat them. I'm proud of our spirit and how close we were."
In the end, the Americans were celebrating with hugs and chest bumps and players walked off waving US flags, but in the chaos, Bryant found Pau Gasol to give his sympathy to his NBA teammate.
"It was a tough moment for me and Kobe came over to congratulate me," Gasol said. "He gave me a hug and told me to get some rest now and to get ready for the season. It was a great gesture from him."



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12BET | Sunderland make £10m Fletcher bid

The offer is understood to be under consideration, with Wolves waiting to see whether Aston Villa decide to firm up their interest in the 25-year-old.

Fletcher’s former club Burnley will be due 15% of any profit Wolves make on a player they paid £7m for in 2010.

Sunderland are short of attacking options following the departures of Asamoah Gyan and Nicklas Bendtner. Fulham and Stoke are also interested.

“We are not getting drawn on offers for players in or out,” Wolves chief executive Jez Moxey told the

“Our best players are not for sale; we want to keep them and build the strongest possible team for the season ahead. We will do everything we can to retain the players we want to keep and continue to look to strengthen with new signings.”

Sunderland suffered defeat by Hartlepool on Friday, with none of manager Martin O’Neill’s three strikers – Fraizer Campbell, Connor Wickham and Ryan Noble – able to find the net.

Fletcher has two years remaining on his contract at Molineux, leaving Moxey in a strong position to negotiate the best possible deal.

No Sunderland striker reached double figures in the goal tally last season, with Bendtner and Stephane Sessegnon the top-scorers with eight.

“We know where the problem is. You just need to look at our scoring record last season,” O’Neill said last week. “This puts pressure on other players to score, either from set-pieces or midfield.

“Eventually centre-forwards have to weigh in and, at the moment, you would want to know who and when someone is going to score 15 goals in a Premier League season.”


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