TOKYO -- Venus Williams overpowered Mona Barthel of Germany 6-3, 6-1 on Sunday
to advance to the second round of the Pan Pacific Open.
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Williams needed just 1 hour, 4 minutes at Ariake Colosseum to dispatch Barthel
and set up a second-round matchup with top-seeded Victoria Azarenka, who has a
first-round bye. Williams is 2-0 in head-to-head matches against Azarenka. They
last met three years ago in the Dubai Duty Free final. "Ive watched many of her
matches," Williams said. "Especially the big matches against Serena. Watching
them at the U.S. Open was awesome, and hopefully that will help me." Top-ranked
Serena Williams, who won her 17th Grand Slam singles title with a three-set win
over Azarenka at the U.S. Open, pulled out of the $2.3 million tournament,
saying she needed time to recover from a busy summer playing schedule. No.
3-ranked Maria Sharapova also pulled out of the Tokyo tournament because of a
right-shoulder injury that kept her out of the U.S. Open. In other matches,
ninth-seeded Sloane Stephens of the United States beat Stefanie Voegele of
Switzerland 6-3, 6-2 while 12th-seeded Samantha Stosur of Australia came from a
set down for a 2-6, 6-4, 6-1 win over Alize Cornet of France. Kirsten Flipkens
of Belgium, seeded fourteenth, defeated Barbora Zahlavova Strycova of the Czech
Republic, 7-6 (4), 7-5. Sorana Cirstea of Romania beat Julia Goerges of Germany,
6-4, 6-4.
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.25 million option on reliever Jose Veras.
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. Halladay signed a one-day contract with the Toronto Blue Jays on Monday that
allowed the veteran right-hander to retire as a member of team with which he
broke into the majors and spent the bulk of his distinguished 16-year career.
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. The Dane followed up his first European Tour title last weekend with eight
birdies and just a single dropped shot on Thursday for a one-stroke advantage
over South Africas Allan Versfeld and Portugals Ricardo Santos.STANFORD, Calif.
-- Tyler Gaffney ran for 95 yards and two touchdowns, Anthony Wilkerson added 68
yards and another score, and No. 5 Stanford started strong in a 42-28 victory
over No. 23 Arizona State on Saturday night in the Pac-12 opener for both teams.
The defending conference champions controlled every facet of the game to turn
the only matchup between ranked opponents this week into a 29-0 halftime lead.
The Cardinal (3-0, 1-0) scored in the air and on the ground, forced two
turnovers, blocked two punts, tallied 10 tackles for loss and recorded three
sacks. Taylor Kelly threw for 367 yards, including three touchdown passes in the
fourth quarter, and Jaelen Strong caught 12 passes for 168 yards and a score in
an otherwise disappointing showing for the Sun Devils (2-1, 0-1). Arizona State
beat Big Ten champion Wisconsin in a controversial finish last week in the
desert. Stanford showed more diversity on both sides of the ball than it had in
solid, but not overwhelming, victories against San Jose State and Army. The
Cardinals funky formations and disguised defences had the Sun Devils dazed and
dizzy, again displaying the disparity between the past four league champions --
Stanford and Oregon -- and everybody else. Kevin Hogan completed 11 of 17 passes
for 151 yards and two touchdowns to Ty Montgomery to lift Stanford to its 11th
straight victory. Montgomery, held without a touchdown last season after being
slowed by a nagging knee injury, finished with four catches for 62 yards. He has
at least one touchdown in every game. Cardinal contributions came from all over.
Josh Mauro, making his first career start in place of injured defensive end
Henry Anderson, backed off his pass rush and stuck his left hand out to corral
Kellys pass for an interception. The play extended Stanfords streak of forcing a
turnover to 27 games -- the longest in the country -- and set up Montgomerys
17-yard touchdown catch. Gaffney ran for a short TD after Devon Cajustes diving,
34-yard reception.
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Wilkerson scampered 13 yards for another score, and Montgomery sliced up the
middle for an easy 30-yard touchdown. The Cardinal capped off the one-sided
start when Blake Lueders blocked his man into the punter. The ball deflected
into the end zone and was kicked out for a safety to give Stanford a 29-0
halftime lead. Ben Gardner blocked a surprise punt by Kelly, and Gaffney
followed with a 16-yard TD run to give Stanford a 39-7 lead late in the third
quarter. The worst news of the game for Stanford came when officials ejected
safety Ed Reynolds for a helmet-to-helmet hit on Kelly in the fourth quarter.
Under the new targeting rule, Reynolds could miss the first half of the next
game at Washington State unless the conference overturns the call. Kelly threw
touchdown passes to Chris Coyle (45 yards), Strong (7 yards) and Marion Grice (6
yards) in the fourth quarter to make the game look closer than it was. Kelly
completed 30 of 55 passes and threw an interception in a desperation heave to
the end zone on the final play. The late rally put a charge into Cardinal coach
David Shaw, who put Hogan and the offensive starters back in the game. But
Arizona State wasted its best chances to seize momentum earlier. Grices 2-yard
TD run finished off a 1:42 drive to open the second half. Then Robert Nelson
intercepted a pass from Hogan to give the Sun Devils the ball at Stanfords 34,
but the Sun Devils turned it over when Grice dropped a pass on fourth down. The
loss was another humbling setback for an Arizona State program trying to take
the next step under second-year coach Todd Graham. The Sun Devils began this
season by blowing out Football Championship Subdivision opponent Sacramento
State and then scored one of the programs biggest victories in recent years last
Saturday night in a 32-30 victory over then-No. 20 Wisconsin that ended with
Pac-12 officials getting publicly reprimanded.
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