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Venus Williams has pulled out of Wimbledon because of a lower back injury, her agent Carlos Fleming said. (File, Michel Euler / The Associated Press)
Venus Williams has pulled out of Wimbledon because of a lower back injury, her agent Carlos Fleming said. (File, Michel Euler / The Associated Press)
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TENNIS: Injury knocks Venus Williams out out of Wimbledon
by Howard Fendrich, Associated Press Tennis Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views | 0 0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Venus Williams has pulled out of Wimbledon because of a lower back injury, her agent Carlos Fleming said. (File, Michel Euler / The Associated Press)
Venus Williams has pulled out of Wimbledon because of a lower back injury, her agent Carlos Fleming said. (File, Michel Euler / The Associated Press)
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After 16 consecutive years of always showing up at Wimbledon, winning five titles along the way, Venus Williams pulled out of the grass-court Grand Slam tournament Tuesday, citing a lower back injury.
Williams, who turned 33 on Monday, never had missed Wimbledon since making her debut there in 1997, although she lost in the first round a year ago. She won the singles trophy — it happens to be called the Venus Rosewater Dish — in 2000-01, 2005 and 2007-08, to go with two more major championships at the U.S. Open in 2000-01.
But Williams has been dealing with a bad back for a while, playing only three matches in the last two-plus months. She was clearly hampered by the injury during a three-set, three-hour loss to 40th-ranked Urszula Radwanska of Poland in the first round of the French Open last month, then cited her back when she and younger sister Serena withdrew from the doubles competition in Paris.
The older Williams said after the singles loss at Roland Garros — her first opening-round exit there in a dozen years — that the inflammation in her back made it painful to serve hard, limiting one of the best parts of her game.
Once ranked No. 1, Williams is currently No. 34. Still learning to live as a professional athlete with an energy-sapping autoimmune disease, Sjogren’s syndrome, she has two first-round losses in the past four Grand Slam tournaments. That includes her defeat at Wimbledon last year, the first time she’d left a major championship that early since she lost in the first round of the Australian Open in 2006.
“With what I’ve gone through, it’s not easy. But I’m strong and I’m a fighter. You know, I don’t think I’m just playing for me now. I think I’m playing for a lot of people who haven’t felt well,” Williams said after her loss to Radwanska. “I think for me today, it’s a positive to be able to play three hours. I’m constantly finding ways to get better and to feel better.”
Play begins at Wimbledon next Monday.
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Blackhawks right wing Marian Hossa (left) was a late scratch Monday from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals against  the Boston Bruins because of an “upper body” injury. (File, Scott Eisen / The Associated Press)
Blackhawks right wing Marian Hossa (left) was a late scratch Monday from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals against the Boston Bruins because of an “upper body” injury. (File, Scott Eisen / The Associated Press)
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NHL: An injury ‘culture’: Right wing Hossa was a late scratch from Monday’s Game 3
by Jimmy Golen, Associated Press Sports Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views | 0 0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Blackhawks right wing Marian Hossa (left) was a late scratch Monday from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals against  the Boston Bruins because of an “upper body” injury. (File, Scott Eisen / The Associated Press)
Blackhawks right wing Marian Hossa (left) was a late scratch Monday from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals against the Boston Bruins because of an “upper body” injury. (File, Scott Eisen / The Associated Press)
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BOSTON — Marian Hossa is one of the Chicago Blackhawks’ top scorers, with three game-winning goals already this postseason.
And then, suddenly, he wasn’t in the lineup for a team that needed all the scoring it can get.
Hossa’s surprise scratch from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals — and the one-word explanation, “upper,” for the part of his body that was injured — is part of a long-running cat-and-mouse game NHL teams play on the theory that any information about injuries is a competitive disadvantage.
“I think that’s self-explanatory,” said Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville, declining to explain why he declined to explain the secrecy surrounding Hossa’s injury.
Tuukka Rask stopped 28 shots from the depleted Blackhawks to help the Bruins win 2-0 on Monday night and move two wins from their second Stanley Cup title in three seasons. Game 4 is Wednesday night in Boston before the series returns to Chicago for a fifth game.
Hossa is expected to play in Game 4, Quenneville allowed, but only after making clear that “I’m not going to get exactly what the injury is or where it occurred.”
“It’s sort of a secret society in the hockey world and in the injury world,” Blackhawks forward Dave Bolland said. “You don’t want other teams having any injury information at all.”
Asked if he had seen Hossa or had a chance to talk to him, Bolland said, “I don’t know.”
You don’t know if you’ve seen him or talked to him?
“I don’t know if I’ve seen him,” Bolland repeated with a sly smile.
Hossa’s mysterious injury may have been a turning point in Game 3, but it is hardly unusual in the secretive world of hockey injuries. Players and coaches say they just don’t talk about what’s hurting, partly because they don’t want to seem weak in a sport where they hit each other for a living.
But mostly, they don’t want let the other team know where to aim.
“If I’m going out to battle and I have an injury to any part of my body, I don’t want the other side to know what it is,” Bruins forward Shawn Thornton said.
Injury information can also help the opponent strategize. Quenneville was so concerned about giving the Bruins advance notice of even a few minutes that he didn’t let substitute Ben Smith skate in the warmup even though there was a chance he would need to play.
“I just didn’t want to tip our hand that there’s something going on,” the coach said.
“Ben was ready. I knew he was doing everything,” Quenneville said. “We were hopeful that Hoss was playing, and Ben was doing everything to get ready. He was ready.”
It worked.
“I’m still surprised,” Thornton said. “I don’t know what happened to him.”
No hard feelings, Bruins coach Claude Julien said. After all, he would do — and has done — the same thing.
“I respect that from other teams. When you’re playing against each other, you know exactly where everybody is coming from,” Julien said.

“There’s times where you have to protect your players, and I understand it. I know it’s frustrating for you guys as media. You’re trying to share that information. The most important thing for us, we can take the heat for that, is protecting your players.”

So, how to tell if an injury is minor?

When a team actually admits it exists.

“I’ll share one with you: Yesterday in a warmup, Zdeno Chara fell down, got a cut over the eye,” Julien said, making light of the mishap in the way that only a coach two wins from an NHL title will do. “I’ll let you know about that. That’s not a hidden injury.

“If it’s something that doesn’t put your player in danger, I don’t see why you shouldn’t talk about it,” he said.

Players say they don’t have to be told not to discuss injuries; it’s as much a part of the culture as Canadian accents and playoff beards. Blackhawks forward Patrick Sharp said he doesn’t remember when he first learned the subject was off-limits, but it was long before he reached the NHL.

And hockey players are not alone.

“It’s not just here,” Thornton said. “I don’t think Bill Belichick is (listing) all the injuries they have, either.”

But even the notoriously uncommunicative New England Patriots coach is required by NFL rules to say what body part is injured. NHL coaches have to narrow it only to “upper body” or “lower body,” which means a player with a concussion and one with a broken finger would have the same diagnosis.

During the playoffs, information is even scarcer.

“It’s that time of year where everybody’s kind of battling. I would say that not just injuries, strategy, all that kind of information we’re not going to talk about,” Sharp said. “It’s all part of being this close to the ultimate goal.”

And does he have any injuries he cares to mention?

“No comment.”
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Jimmie Johnson passes off his daughter Genevieve Marie to his wife Chandra during a visit Tuesday to Chase Avenue Elementary in El Cajon, Calif. Ready to thrill a few hundred school kids as part of a visit tied to his Jimmie Johnson Foundation/Lowe's Toolbox for Education Champions Grant, the hometown hero hopped into the car to fire up the engine, but the battery was dead. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
Jimmie Johnson passes off his daughter Genevieve Marie to his wife Chandra during a visit Tuesday to Chase Avenue Elementary in El Cajon, Calif. Ready to thrill a few hundred school kids as part of a visit tied to his Jimmie Johnson Foundation/Lowe's Toolbox for Education Champions Grant, the hometown hero hopped into the car to fire up the engine, but the battery was dead. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
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Venus Williams has pulled out of Wimbledon because of a lower back injury, her agent Carlos Fleming said. (File, Michel Euler / The Associated Press)
Venus Williams has pulled out of Wimbledon because of a lower back injury, her agent Carlos Fleming said. (File, Michel Euler / The Associated Press)
slideshow
TENNIS: Injury knocks Venus Williams out out of Wimbledon
by Howard Fendrich, Associated Press Tennis Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views | 0 0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Venus Williams has pulled out of Wimbledon because of a lower back injury, her agent Carlos Fleming said. (File, Michel Euler / The Associated Press)
Venus Williams has pulled out of Wimbledon because of a lower back injury, her agent Carlos Fleming said. (File, Michel Euler / The Associated Press)
slideshow
After 16 consecutive years of always showing up at Wimbledon, winning five titles along the way, Venus Williams pulled out of the grass-court Grand Slam tournament Tuesday, citing a lower back injury.
Williams, who turned 33 on Monday, never had missed Wimbledon since making her debut there in 1997, although she lost in the first round a year ago. She won the singles trophy — it happens to be called the Venus Rosewater Dish — in 2000-01, 2005 and 2007-08, to go with two more major championships at the U.S. Open in 2000-01.
But Williams has been dealing with a bad back for a while, playing only three matches in the last two-plus months. She was clearly hampered by the injury during a three-set, three-hour loss to 40th-ranked Urszula Radwanska of Poland in the first round of the French Open last month, then cited her back when she and younger sister Serena withdrew from the doubles competition in Paris.
The older Williams said after the singles loss at Roland Garros — her first opening-round exit there in a dozen years — that the inflammation in her back made it painful to serve hard, limiting one of the best parts of her game.
Once ranked No. 1, Williams is currently No. 34. Still learning to live as a professional athlete with an energy-sapping autoimmune disease, Sjogren’s syndrome, she has two first-round losses in the past four Grand Slam tournaments. That includes her defeat at Wimbledon last year, the first time she’d left a major championship that early since she lost in the first round of the Australian Open in 2006.
“With what I’ve gone through, it’s not easy. But I’m strong and I’m a fighter. You know, I don’t think I’m just playing for me now. I think I’m playing for a lot of people who haven’t felt well,” Williams said after her loss to Radwanska. “I think for me today, it’s a positive to be able to play three hours. I’m constantly finding ways to get better and to feel better.”
Play begins at Wimbledon next Monday.
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Blackhawks right wing Marian Hossa (left) was a late scratch Monday from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals against  the Boston Bruins because of an “upper body” injury. (File, Scott Eisen / The Associated Press)
Blackhawks right wing Marian Hossa (left) was a late scratch Monday from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals against the Boston Bruins because of an “upper body” injury. (File, Scott Eisen / The Associated Press)
slideshow
NHL: An injury ‘culture’: Right wing Hossa was a late scratch from Monday’s Game 3
by Jimmy Golen, Associated Press Sports Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views | 0 0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Blackhawks right wing Marian Hossa (left) was a late scratch Monday from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals against  the Boston Bruins because of an “upper body” injury. (File, Scott Eisen / The Associated Press)
Blackhawks right wing Marian Hossa (left) was a late scratch Monday from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals against the Boston Bruins because of an “upper body” injury. (File, Scott Eisen / The Associated Press)
slideshow
BOSTON — Marian Hossa is one of the Chicago Blackhawks’ top scorers, with three game-winning goals already this postseason.
And then, suddenly, he wasn’t in the lineup for a team that needed all the scoring it can get.
Hossa’s surprise scratch from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals — and the one-word explanation, “upper,” for the part of his body that was injured — is part of a long-running cat-and-mouse game NHL teams play on the theory that any information about injuries is a competitive disadvantage.
“I think that’s self-explanatory,” said Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville, declining to explain why he declined to explain the secrecy surrounding Hossa’s injury.
Tuukka Rask stopped 28 shots from the depleted Blackhawks to help the Bruins win 2-0 on Monday night and move two wins from their second Stanley Cup title in three seasons. Game 4 is Wednesday night in Boston before the series returns to Chicago for a fifth game.
Hossa is expected to play in Game 4, Quenneville allowed, but only after making clear that “I’m not going to get exactly what the injury is or where it occurred.”
“It’s sort of a secret society in the hockey world and in the injury world,” Blackhawks forward Dave Bolland said. “You don’t want other teams having any injury information at all.”
Asked if he had seen Hossa or had a chance to talk to him, Bolland said, “I don’t know.”
You don’t know if you’ve seen him or talked to him?
“I don’t know if I’ve seen him,” Bolland repeated with a sly smile.
Hossa’s mysterious injury may have been a turning point in Game 3, but it is hardly unusual in the secretive world of hockey injuries. Players and coaches say they just don’t talk about what’s hurting, partly because they don’t want to seem weak in a sport where they hit each other for a living.
But mostly, they don’t want let the other team know where to aim.
“If I’m going out to battle and I have an injury to any part of my body, I don’t want the other side to know what it is,” Bruins forward Shawn Thornton said.
Injury information can also help the opponent strategize. Quenneville was so concerned about giving the Bruins advance notice of even a few minutes that he didn’t let substitute Ben Smith skate in the warmup even though there was a chance he would need to play.
“I just didn’t want to tip our hand that there’s something going on,” the coach said.
“Ben was ready. I knew he was doing everything,” Quenneville said. “We were hopeful that Hoss was playing, and Ben was doing everything to get ready. He was ready.”
It worked.
“I’m still surprised,” Thornton said. “I don’t know what happened to him.”
No hard feelings, Bruins coach Claude Julien said. After all, he would do — and has done — the same thing.
“I respect that from other teams. When you’re playing against each other, you know exactly where everybody is coming from,” Julien said.

“There’s times where you have to protect your players, and I understand it. I know it’s frustrating for you guys as media. You’re trying to share that information. The most important thing for us, we can take the heat for that, is protecting your players.”

So, how to tell if an injury is minor?

When a team actually admits it exists.

“I’ll share one with you: Yesterday in a warmup, Zdeno Chara fell down, got a cut over the eye,” Julien said, making light of the mishap in the way that only a coach two wins from an NHL title will do. “I’ll let you know about that. That’s not a hidden injury.

“If it’s something that doesn’t put your player in danger, I don’t see why you shouldn’t talk about it,” he said.

Players say they don’t have to be told not to discuss injuries; it’s as much a part of the culture as Canadian accents and playoff beards. Blackhawks forward Patrick Sharp said he doesn’t remember when he first learned the subject was off-limits, but it was long before he reached the NHL.

And hockey players are not alone.

“It’s not just here,” Thornton said. “I don’t think Bill Belichick is (listing) all the injuries they have, either.”

But even the notoriously uncommunicative New England Patriots coach is required by NFL rules to say what body part is injured. NHL coaches have to narrow it only to “upper body” or “lower body,” which means a player with a concussion and one with a broken finger would have the same diagnosis.

During the playoffs, information is even scarcer.

“It’s that time of year where everybody’s kind of battling. I would say that not just injuries, strategy, all that kind of information we’re not going to talk about,” Sharp said. “It’s all part of being this close to the ultimate goal.”

And does he have any injuries he cares to mention?

“No comment.”
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Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Jimmie Johnson passes off his daughter Genevieve Marie to his wife Chandra during a visit Tuesday to Chase Avenue Elementary in El Cajon, Calif. Ready to thrill a few hundred school kids as part of a visit tied to his Jimmie Johnson Foundation/Lowe's Toolbox for Education Champions Grant, the hometown hero hopped into the car to fire up the engine, but the battery was dead. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
Jimmie Johnson passes off his daughter Genevieve Marie to his wife Chandra during a visit Tuesday to Chase Avenue Elementary in El Cajon, Calif. Ready to thrill a few hundred school kids as part of a visit tied to his Jimmie Johnson Foundation/Lowe's Toolbox for Education Champions Grant, the hometown hero hopped into the car to fire up the engine, but the battery was dead. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
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