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Chinese Officials Listed Nine US Athletes As Potential Troublemakers In Beijing

USA Today is reporting that the Chinese government listed nine United States athletes and one assistant coach as potential troublemakers during the recent Beijing Olympics. Chinese officials felt this group of people posed a threat to ignite demonstrations against the country during the Games.

The names included softball players Jennie Finch and Jessica Mendoza and soccer player Abby Wambach, who broke her leg and missed the Olympic Games. It also included two Paralympians, one athlete who wasn't a member of the 2008 softball team and a top female collegiate golfer. Golf is not an Olympic sport.

"We viewed these concerns as being entirely unjustified and unwarranted," USOC spokesman Darryl Seibel said in an e-mail Wednesday. "As such, we rejected the request to address this with our athletes or transmit the letter to them. We saw absolutely no need to burden the athletes with this."


Here is the entire list: Softball players Finch, Mendoza, Natasha Watley, Amanda Freed, assistant softball coach Karen Johns, women's soccer player Abby Wambach, cyclist Jonathan Page, paralympic basketball player Jen Howitt, paralympic wheelchair racer Cheri Blauwet and golfer Laura Goodwin.

Abby Wambach's Broken Leg Devastates U.S. Women's Soccer Team

After losing to Brazil in the semifinals of the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup, the U.S. women's soccer team was hoping to get its revenge in Beijing at the 2008 Olympics. It appears, however, that those hopes just took a huge hit.

U.S. forward Abby Wambach suffered a broken left leg last night during a warm-up friendly against Brazil and will miss the Olympics. Wambach suffered fractures to the tibia and fibula in a collision with a Brazilian defender in the 31st minute.

Wambach has scored 99 goals in 126 caps, which ranks her fifth on the all-time U.S. women's soccer team scoring list, just one goal behind Tiffeny Milbrett. Losing her for the Olympics leaves a huge hole at forward for Pia Sundhage's squad. Natasha Kai and Amy Rodriguez will likely be called upon to pick up the scoring slack for the U.S.

On the bright side, though, the U.S. scored two 1-0 wins in its warm-up friendlies against Brazil this week. For the record, Hope Solo was in goal for both of those matches. I don't think Sundhage is going to bench her for Brianna Scurry like Greg Ryan did.

Abby Wambach's Broken Leg Devastates U.S. Women's Soccer Team

After losing to Brazil in the semifinals of the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup, the U.S. women's soccer team was hoping to get its revenge in Beijing at the 2008 Olympics. It appears, however, that those hopes just took a huge hit.

U.S. forward Abby Wambach suffered a broken left leg last night during a warm-up friendly against Brazil and will miss the Olympics. Wambach suffered fractures to the tibia and fibula in a collision with a Brazilian defender in the 31st minute.

Wambach has scored 99 goals in 126 caps, which ranks her fifth on the all-time U.S. women's soccer team scoring list, just one goal behind Tiffeny Milbrett. Losing her for the Olympics leaves a huge hole at forward for Pia Sundhage's squad. Natasha Kai and Amy Rodriguez will likely be called upon to pick up the scoring slack for the U.S.

On the bright side, though, the U.S. scored two 1-0 wins in its warm-up friendlies against Brazil this week. For the record, Hope Solo was in goal for both of those matches. I don't think Sundhage is going to bench her for Brianna Scurry like Greg Ryan did.

Can Abby Wambach Carry a Soccer League?

A new women's soccer league announced today that it will begin play in 2009, and although it's a seven-team league with dozens of players, whether it succeeds or fails may be about one player: Abby Wambach.

Wambach is the best women's soccer player in America, and it's clear that Women's Soccer LLC hopes that this month's Women's World Cup and next year's Olympics can make her a Mia Hamm-type star in time for the league to start play in a year and a half. Wambach sounds ready:

"A league was the most important component to getting me completely prepared to play at the next level," said Wambach, the leading scorer for the U.S. women's national team. "What this means is that more women will have more opportunity to not only play at the next level, but also fulfill lifelong dreams of being a professional athlete."

The 1999 Women's World Cup was the height of popularity for women's soccer in America, and the WUSA wasn't able to capitalize on that success. I'm extremely skeptical that any women's pro soccer league can become a financial success in the United States. But Wombach has a year to become the kind of star who can carry a league.

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