Thursday, May 27, 2010

Spoilers:* Complete WWE Smackdown Results For 5/28

http://www.70ra.com/images/products/951260.png

Teddy Long announces that Big Show will be granted another shot at the WWE World Heavyweight Championship at the Fatal Four Way PPV. The two remaining spots will be determined in matches involving Kane vs. CM Punk and The Undertaker vs. Rey Mysterio.

- Drew McIntyre presented a letter to Teddy Long from Vince McMahon that stated Matt Hardy would be suspended after his actions at the Over The Limit PPV.

- Big Show & Kofi Kingston def. Jack Swagger & Drew McIntyre.

- CM Punk def. Kane to advance to the main event at Fatal Four Way.

- Christian & Hornswoggle def. Chavo Guerrero & Dolph Ziggler.

- The Undertaker def. Rey Mysterio to advance to the main event at Fatal Four Way. After the match, Jack Swagger took out Mysterio.

http://www.wrestlezone.com/news/article/spoilers-complete-wwe-smackdown-results-for-528-103061

*Spoiler* Fatal 4 Way World Heavyweight Title Match Set

On Monday's RAW, Edge, Randy Orton and Sheamus won Fatal 4 Way qualifying matches to determine John Cena's opponents.

At Tuesday's SmackDown! tapings, The Undertaker, Big Show and CM Punk won qualifying matches to determine Jack Swagger's opponents.

So the top 2 matches for WWE's Fatal 4 Way pay-per-view on June 20th:

Fatal 4 Way for the WWE Title
John Cena (c) vs. Edge vs. Randy Orton vs. Sheamus

Fatal 4 Way for the World Heavyweight Title
Jack Swagger vs. The Undertaker vs. Big Show vs. CM Punk

http://www.ewrestlingnews.com/stories/Spoiler_Fatal_4_Way_World_Heavyweight_Title_M.shtml

WWE DVD Releases, Over The Limit, Styles Tweets, More


-- According to Silvervision, the following DVD extras will be on the WWE Over the Limit DVD release…

~ Bret Hart vs. The Miz for WWE United States title 5/17 RAW
~ 5/17 Raw Commercials:
~ "The Most Irritating Man"
~ "Priceless"
~ "Awkward Blind Date"
~ "Compact Rental Car"

-- Here is the listing of upcoming WWE DVDs:

* Extreme Rules 2010 PPV: May 25th
* The Undertaker's Deadliest Matches: June 8th
* Over the Limit PPV: June 22nd
* Ricky Steamboat: Life Story of the Dragon: June 29th
* Satan's Prison: The Elimination Chamber Anthology: July 13th
* Fatal Four Way 2010 PPV: July 20th
* The Best of Raw Season One and Two: August 11th
* Money in the Bank 2010 PPV: August 17th

-- Joey Styles made the following comments on Twitter, in regards to Michael Cole vs. Daniel Bryan…

"I never knew Daniel Bryan had such a volatile temper. However, I know first hand that being new to WWE as a talent can do that to a man."

"Seriously, wrestlers have been physically abusing announcers (not me!) for decades and it is assault. Does that happen in any other sport?"

"I couldn't care less about "respecting the veterans" when it comes to being a man. Daniel Bryan was right to finally punk out The Miz on NXT"

http://www.ewrestlingnews.com/stories/WWE_DVD_Releases_Over_The_Limit_Styles_Tweets.shtml

Batista-WWE Note, Jon Lovitz Sued, Palumbo Update, & More

Batista, Tugboat and the late John "Earthquake" Tenta have all been added to the WWE.com alumni section.

-- Rich Tate sent this along: Jon Lovitz, who was the guest host for WWE's RAW broadcast on Monday, is among a large group of people being sued by the Los Angeles Dodgers for failing to pay for season tickets. The ticket broker filed the suit in Los Angeles on that same day Lovitz was in Toledo, OH, for RAW. You can read more about it at http://accessatlanta.com/

-- The San Diego Reader has an article up on Chuck Palumbo teaming up with The Horse Backstreet Choppers magazine for an eight-day cross-country charity ride from San Diego to Rockingham, North Carolina. The charity ride will be made into a documentary titled Every 60 Miles.

-- Shawn Daivari is writing new blogs every day, discussing his current tour of Canada. You can check those out at http://www.shawndaivari.com/

http://www.ewrestlingnews.com/stories/Batista-WWE_Note_Jon_Lovitz_Sued_Palumbo_Upda.shtml

Would Steve Austin Return To WWE?, WWE-MSG, & More

WWE returns to the Civic Complex in Cornwall, Ontario, Canada on September 12th for a Raw house show. Tickets go on sale June 23rd.

-- As noted earlier, WWE runs a Supershow in Madison Square Garden on June 19th. This will be the final WWE show there before the new renovations that are set to be made to the Garden get underway. The New York Post has a story up discussing the renovations, that will include premium seats in a sky bridge five stories above the center of the arena.

-- While promoting his upcoming movie projects, Steve Austin was again asked about a return to pro wrestling. Here is what he had to say… "There comes a certain point in every wrestler's career where they realize they need to get th

eir ass out of the ring. Professional wrestling will always be my first love and I will always be grateful for all of my fans and what I was able to accomplish in the ring. But now, acting is what I am focused on now. I realize that I'm back to being the ‘green' guy again but you just have to keep working at getting better, and I think that's what I'm doing. I am learning something new every day about working in Hollywood and it's a whole new game compared to what I was used to with the WWE."

http://www.ewrestlingnews.com/stories/Would_Steve_Austin_Return_To_WWE_WWE-MSG__Mor.shtml

This week's Ladder takes a look at the start of the build towards the Fatal 4 Way Pay-Per-View and some Over The Limit fallout.

I'm not putting Randy Orton in this spot because he did anything wrong, but I can't move him up based on the circumstances he is now in. Orton was injured in his match at Over The Limit but still made an appearance on RAW and got himself into the Fatal 4 Way Main Event. However, Orton didn't even appear until the final segment of the night and had no mic time. He probably won't be involved in any kind of physical confrontations leading up to the PPV, but both he and WWE know if he took any time off of TV it would kill his push. For now, he'll have to rely on his promo skills and hope he is ready to go for the next pay-per-view.


http://www.wrestlezone.com/editorials/article/the-raw-ladder-103171

WWE Star Batista Training For An MMA Career

WWE superstar Batista, who is parting ways with the wrestling promotion, is training for a possible career in Mixed Martial Arts.

WWE Hall of Fame announcer Jim Ross commented in his blog at JRsBarBQ.com about the news that Batista would be following in Brock Lesnar and Bobby Lashley’s footsteps. He wrote:

“I’ve heard some rumblings that when Batista gets healthy that he might try his hand in the MMA world. This rumor is FAR from official but I do know that Batista has been doing some MMA training and has a bona fide interest in the genre,” Ross said.

He added, “This would be a huge challenge for Batista if he indeed attempts to compete in MMA at a high level which, again, is not a done deal.”

see the video training

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5l0dXJTN524&feature=player_embedded


http://www.fightscoops.com/mma-news/wwe-star-batista-training-for-an-mma-career/

Messi: I won’t change my style for Argentina



Lionel Messi does not feel any pressure to deliver for Argentina at the World Cup, with the World Player of the Year saying he will not change his Barcelona playing style to suit his country.

Four years on from watching Argentina lose to Germany in the quarter-finals, Messi is a very different player from the 18-year-old who watched from the bench in Berlin that June afternoon.


This time around, Messi heads to the tournament in South Africa having won a string of personal honours and titles with Barcelona, scoring 47 goals last season for good measure.

“I don’t feel the pressure,” said Messi. “The truth is I’m arriving in good shape. I have a strong desire to do as well as I can, as do my teammates. We want to give our best for Argentina and we hope things turn out well.”


Diego Maradona, the national coach, has yet to capture Messi’s best form, with the forward’s performances for Barcelona seemingly on a different level to his international displays.

“I won’t change. I’ll keep playing in the same way,” Messi said. “I hope to be able to do what I do [in Barcelona] in the national team without my form suffering, because that [way of playing] is what has made me able to achieve everything I have.”

Maradona has an array of attacking talent in Diego Milito, Carlos Tevez, Gonzalo Higuain, Angel Di Maria and Sergio Aguero at his disposal. Argentina routed Canada 5-0 on Monday in their last friendly before the finals and Messi said: “I think Argentina is fortunate to have many top-quality forwards. That has been proven in this last year because if you look at all the important leagues, there is an Argentine there at the top. We are approaching the World Cup on very good form and that’s great news.”


Bizarrely, Messi has been forced to endure criticism in Argentina following some off-colour performances for his national side.

“The criticism on how I play doesn’t hurt,” he said. “If it’s because of my performances then I’m the first to criticise myself and the first to know I haven’t done things well enough – it’s not a problem. What hurts is when people talk about things unrelated to football. Things beyond football, things from outside.”


Such criticism has seen Messi accused of being concerned solely with money or not being interested in playing for his country.

“There is no doubt that winning a World Cup would be something unforgettable for the country, for me and for everybody,” he added. “I have also won everything individually and now I would like to do the same with Argentina.”

Real agree to replace Pelligrini with Mourinho

Real Madrid will replace Manuel Pelligrini with Jose Mourinho as their new coach as soon he negotiates an end to his contract with Inter Milan, the Madrid president Florentino Perez said yesterday.

Neither Mourinho nor Pellegrini was present at the news conference at the Santiago Bernabeu stadium when Perez made the announcement.

"We consider that we are at the right moment to give the club new impetus and to go for one of the best coaches in the world, and we now have the opportunity to do so," Perez said. He also thanked Pelligrini for his efforts, describing his work at the club as "impeccable."

"Everyone at the club is enthusiastic to be able to count on one of the best coaches in the world, we think he [Mourinho] is going to contribute a lot to our squad," Perez said.

Mourinho's move to Madrid was announced days after he led Inter to the Champions League title in the Spanish capital on May 22, beating Bayern Munich in the final. His team also won the Italian league and cup double in the same season.

Having enjoyed a successful spell coaching in England, Mourinho long ago announced his ambition to work in Spain and thus win trophies in another of Europe's major football leagues.

As the season drew to a close, Mourinho, who won the Italian league title in 2008-09, his first season with Inter, made his dislike of Italian football increasingly clear.

He told Sky Sports in March: "I am very happy at Inter; I am not happy with Italian football. Why? Because I don't like it and it doesn't like me."

http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100527/SPORT/100520869/1004

Tsonga unhappy with organisers



Jo-Wilfried Tsonga has made a passionate plea to French Open organisers to extend him the same kind of courtesy granted to Britain’s Andy Murray at Wimbledon after his preparations were upset by unexpectedly playing a day early.

Tsonga, seeded eighth in Paris, yesterday asked organisers if he could start his Roland Garros campaign either on Monday or Tuesday, but his request was turned down and the burly right-hander made his bow on Sunday’s low-key opening day programme.


He was lucky to make it through the opening day, pushed hard by Germany’s Daniel Brands in five sets, and Tsonga was not happy with the organisers.

“We are in France. I’m French. I’m French No 1. I would have thought it was legitimate for me to be listened to, that I would be given a choice,” he said in his post-match press conference after his 6-0, 6-1, 6-4 second-round win over Josselin Ouanna, his compatriot, yesterday.


“They should listen to me when I wanted to play or start.

“I had asked not to play on a Sunday because I had practised in such a way that I thought I wanted to play on a Monday or Tuesday, to be totally fit.

“But they imposed it on me. If you’re world No 80 and you’re not that important in the hierarchy, if I can say, loads of things are imposed on you in this case.

“What really bothered me is that, you know, if you look at [Andy] Murray, if he decides on a day or hour at Wimbledon, nobody is going to impose anything on him.”


Organisers were not immediately available for comment.

Richard Gasquet, his fellow Frenchman, also had his request to play on Monday or Tuesday denied by organisers and played his first-round match against Murray just two days after beating Fernando Verdasco in the Nice Open final. Gasquet won the first two sets in dazzling fashion before running out of steam, bowing out after a five-set battle.

“Twenty-four hours [of recuperation], it’s important. It would have made a difference but I knew I could play either on Monday or Tuesday,” said Gasquet. “I needed some luck. I did not get any.”


That kind of bad luck would not strike Roger Federer or other top names in the sport, according to Tsonga.

“For Federer in his country it’s the same,” he said. “In the US I suppose it’s the same thing for the best American players. I expected a bit more from the organisers.”

Tsonga will play either Gullermo Garcia-Lopez, the 32nd seed, or Thiemo De Bakker in the third round.

http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100527/SPORT/705269853/1173

Tsonga unhappy with organisers

Ronaldo carries the weight of a nation

The Portuguese public want to know whether Cristiano Ronaldo, the world’s most expensive player, will translate his tremendous club form into performances for his national side at the World Cup.

Almost a year since his £80 million (Dh424m) move from Manchester United to Real Madrid, Ronaldo can feel satisfied with his impact in Spain. Real ran Barcelona close to the Primera Liga title and ultimately ended the season without a trophy, but the Portuguese winger was their player of the season, scoring an outstanding 26 goals in 28 league games.


Real fans were quickly enamoured with Ronaldo’s desire to go past players and shoot on sight: he had 211 efforts on goal last season, Real’s next prolific shooter achieved 98.

That he also suffered 50 per cent more fouls than any other Real player illustrated how opponents view him as the Whites’ danger man. He did not touch the highs nor win the trophies of Lionel Messi, but unlike two of Real’s other expensive big name signings – Kaka and Karim Benzema – he vindicated the hype.


This is in marked contrast to his contributions for his country. Ronaldo’s last competitive goal for Portugal was against the Czech Republic in Euro 2008. In the seven World Cup qualifying games he started, the Portugal captain, 25, failed to find the net despite being supported by a talented band of attacking players including Simao Sabrosa, the vice-captain, Deco and Nani.

Portugal have not had a regular goalscorer up front and were dismal in qualification, winning just one of their first five group games before improving to scrape a play-off spot. They overcame Bosnia and Herzegovina 1-0 home and away to reach their third successive World Cup finals. History was not on their side.

Before 2002, Portugal had reached the World Cup just once since 1966’s great side starring Eusebio, the Benfica legend. Portugal are in a tough group with their former colony of Brazil, Ivory Coast and North Korea.

Semi-finalists under Luiz Felipe Scolari in 2006, they have been a force in international football over the last decade, raising expectations at the same time that their form began to dip.


Carlos Quieroz, their coach, is unpopular. He was booed by fans after Portugal’s friendly against China in Coimbra in March, with players complaining that his tactics are baffling and that he acts like a teacher rather than someone on their wavelength.

Older members of the squad pine for the happier atmosphere created by the genial Scolari, but the Portuguese federation appear content that Portugal are ranked 3rd in the world and have contracted Quieroz until 2012, so he is likely to stay.


His employers are sending out a confusing message though, with Gilberto Madail, the Portuguese Football Association president, publicly demanding that Portugal improve on their best-ever- performance – third place in 1966.

Ronaldo is one of the few players to enjoy a positive relationship with his coach. The pair worked fruitfully together at Manchester United, where Quieroz was the assistant coach, and the Mozambique-born manager has been a confidant and father figure since Ronaldo’s own father passed away.


Ronaldo led United to two consecutive Champions League finals and has the ability to be a match winner against the strongest opponents, but his own role in the national side is uncertain.

He has played on the wing in a 4-3-3 system with the naturalised Liedson, who was born in Brazil, at centre-forward. But sometimes he has played behind the striker in a 4-4-2 formation. Ronaldo was a peripheral figure in Monday’s embarrassing 0-0 draw against Cape Verde, ranked 117th in the world, in Covilha, but he was not concerned.


“We are only at the beginning, it was just a warm-up match to get us into shape,” Ronaldo told reporters after the game. “Of course we wanted to win, but I am sure that we will be better come the World Cup. We will improve both physically and psychologically, and we will show that we are an excellent side.”

His public are not convinced and expect much better in Portugal’s remaining friendlies against Cameroon and Mozambique before the World Cup in South Africa starts on June 11.

http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100527/SPORT/705269919/1004

Celtics’ Frontcourt and Momentum Are Shaken



ORLANDO, Fla. — Glen Davis attempted to pick himself up before falling again. He rose and, like a stunned boxer, staggered to midcourt before collapsing into the arms of the referee Joey Crawford.

The Boston Celtics were collectively beat and beaten. Boston needed not only to look up at the final score, a 113-92 loss to the Orlando Magic, to take stock of what occurred in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals Wednesday. They also needed to take inventory of injuries and attrition: two concussions and two blackouts (Davis and Marquis Daniels) and one ejection (Kendrick Perkins).

All of it equates to a Game 6 in Boston on Friday as the Celtics saw their hold on the series loosened to 3-2. The impact of Perkins’s ejection, the result of two second-quarter technicals, could affect that game as well. Perkins has now been tagged with seven postseason technicals, which draws an automatic one-game suspension.

The Magic brought the fight to the Celtics both literally and figuratively, whether it came in the form of Dwight Howard’s flying dunks or elbows.

A few days ago, the prospects for a Lakers-Celtics finals rematch of two years ago seemed certain. The Celtics departed here last week with thoughts of sweeping Orlando. Now, they are hoping to not return for a Game 7 with their season on the line.

As the series shifts, so does its momentum. The quick turnaround favors Orlando’s younger players, and Boston may still be reeling from Wednesday’s physicality. Orlando holds both the mental and physical advantages as the Celtics’ frontcourt and Howard’s primary defenders dwindled in numbers throughout the evening.

“I still look at it like we’re climbing a huge mountain here,” Orlando Coach Stan Van Gundy said. “But we’re playing better.”

After three sloppy efforts of putting Boston atop that mountain, Orlando is playing better without a game to spare. The Magic now resembles the team that earned the conference’s second seed and the one that Rivers announced in Boston’s training camp would stand in their path to the finals and not the Cleveland Cavaliers.

“We’ll show up and be ready at our place,” Rivers said of Game 6. “That’s why we earned the right to have this game, and we’re going to try and take advantage of it.”

It was more Orlando that earned the right. Howard complained about aggressive play earlier in the series, but he has since joined the fray.

In a bizarre sequence, Howard’s elbow collided into Davis’s head with Orlando holding an 84-75 lead and the third quarter nearing its end.

“I didn’t know that was legal, but anyway, he did,” Rivers said. “But listen, he’s a physical guy. We know that, and he should be. Honestly, that’s his gift.”

Davis, who lost a tooth, went to the locker room when the quarter ended. The team physician, Brian McKeon, said he had a concussion.

“We’re just trying to win,” said Howard, who had 21 points, 10 rebounds and 5 blocked shots. “Our intent is not to hurt anybody out there, but basketball is a physical game.”

The Magic’s lead never dipped below 8 points in the fourth quarter, and they led from the first quarter on. Daniels went into a series of moves inside against Orlando’s Marcin Gortat in the fourth quarter and crashed into Gortat’s chest, briefly blacking out with a concussion.

Both Rivers and Daniels will be evaluated Thursday.

With his frontcourt in disarray, Rivers inserted the seldom-used Shelden Williams, who had not played in the series, when Wallace, who also tweaked his back during the game, fouled out with less than five minutes remaining.

The daunting odds of winning the series has been discussed repeatedly, much to the annoyance of the Magic and the chagrin of Rivers. N.B.A. teams are 93-0 in series in which they lead by 3-0. It is foolproof as a mathematical equation until one team breaks free of the past.

The Magic used another simple mathematical formula Wednesday. Three points are worth more than 2. Jameer Nelson unleashed four 3-pointers, Matt Barnes made 3 and Mickael Pietrus and J. J. Redick delivered a pair of 3’s among Orlando’s total of 13 in 25 attempts. Orlando also outrebounded Boston, 43-26.

“At this point, we believe we can win the series,” said Nelson, who followed a stellar Game 4 with a game-high 24 points on Wednesday. “It can be done just one game at a time.”

The Celtics’ offense sputtered throughout the evening and never gained traction. Rajon Rondo, who struggled with muscle spasms in Game 4, scored 19 points and missed 6 of his 11 free throws. Paul Pierce scored 10 of his 18 points at the free-throw line.

Wallace ended with a team-high 21 points on 7-for-9 shooting.

“I want to say this the right way,” Van Gundy said. “I hate the guy. Same thing when I was in Miami — it’s like the guy never, ever, ever has a bad game against the team I coach.”

Rivers even juggled his rotation in search of a spark and played the little-utilized Daniels and Nate Robinson for stretches.

The Celtics’ unraveling started early as the Magic relocated its refined touch from beyond the 3-point arc. Six different Magic players combined for 9 3-pointers in the first half as Orlando surged to a 57-49 halftime lead.

Shortly before the half ended, the referee Eddie F. Rush compounded Boston’s troubles. He tagged Perkins with a foul as Perkins wrestled with Gortat for inside position. Perkins showed his dismay by jumping up and down, shouting, and walking away from Rush.

Rush quickly assessed Perkins with a technical for the outburst and another when the decision further agitated Perkins. The N.B.A. though will review the sequence, and there is a chance Perkins’s second technical may be rescinded with a decision expected by Thursday afternoon.

In all, referees handed out five technicals (three for Boston and two for Orlando).

Orlando rebounded from a day that had an ominous beginning.

Rashard Lewis, a non-factor with a total of 28 points in the first four games, revealed at Wednesday’s shootaround that he was playing through a viral infection in his stomach and felt drained early in games. He received intravenous fluid before Game 5 and responded with his best game of the series by scoring 14 points, including Orlando’s first 7 of the fourth quarter.

“Regular season, I probably would have sat out,” Lewis said. “Not to make no excuses, it is the playoffs.”

The N.B.A. also upgraded two Magic personal fouls to flagrant-1’s: Barnes shoving Kevin Garnett in the back, which caused Garnett to spill into Van Gundy in Game 3; and Howard’s pivot while rebounding that caught Garnett with an elbow in Game 4.



http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/27/sports/baseball/27yankees.html?ref=sports


Obama to Extend Drilling Moratorium

WASHINGTON — President Obama plans to announce Thursday that he is extending the moratorium on permits to drill new deepwater wells for six more months and will delay or cancel specific projects off the coasts of Alaska and Virginia and in the western Gulf of Mexico, a White House official said. Mr. Obama, who will discuss the decisions at a midday White House news conference, is taking the actions in response to the initial 30-day safety review of offshore drilling ordered after a BP rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico on April 20, killing 11 men and opening a gusher of oil that has yet to be stopped.

The latest moves come amid deepening frustration and criticism of the administration’s handling of the crisis. The president’s order is intended to halt further permits for new wells for six months, delay planned exploration in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas off the coast of Alaska, cancel an August lease sale in the western Gulf and cancel a lease sale off the coast of Virginia, said the White House official, who disclosed the decision on condition of anonymity to avoid upstaging the president.

The Virginia lease sale had drawn environmental concerns and objections from the Defense Department. The Alaska project will be delayed for six months while a new presidential commission studies how to regulate offshore drilling.

Mr. Obama will also announce standards to strengthen oversight of the drilling industry and enhance safety as the commission opens its inquiry. The commission will be led by former Senator Bob Graham, Democrat of Florida, and William K. Reilly, who was administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency under the first President Bush.

The effort to stem further drilling represents a marked turnaround for Mr. Obama, who just weeks before the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion had proposed to expand offshore oil exploration as a response to the nation’s continuing need for new energy sources. But it reflects the volatile and rapidly shifting political environment as Mr. Obama struggles to find a way to demonstrate leadership even as efforts to stop and clean up the spill falter.

After his news conference on Thursday, Mr. Obama plans to fly to Louisiana on Friday to look more closely into the efforts being made to counter the leak, his second trip to the region since the explosion. Critics who call the disaster Mr. Obama’s Hurricane Katrina point out that President George W. Bush traveled to the region more frequently in the early weeks after the hurricane that devastated New Orleans and the Gulf Coast in 2005.

Karl Rove, who was Mr. Bush’s senior adviser and deputy chief of staff during Hurricane Katrina, argued the case in his Wall Street Journal column on Thursday morning. “Could this be Mr. Obama’s Katrina? It could be even worse,” he wrote. Mr. Rove recalled Mr. Obama’s criticism of Mr. Bush’s handling of the hurricane and tried to throw it back at him. “Mr. Obama’s failure to lead in cleaning up the spill could lead voters to echo his complaint in Katrina’s aftermath: ‘I wish that the federal government had been up to the task.’ ”

The White House has rejected any comparisons with Hurricane Katrina and has bombarded reporters with daily briefings and updates on all the activity taken by the administration in response to the spill.

“I would say that his level of frustration is very high and that every moment that that hole is not plugged the president has a deep level of concern,” Bill Burton, the deputy White House press secretary, told reporters Wednesday. “And obviously this has been an all-hands-on-deck approach to what has been a pretty big catastrophe, and he’s going to continue to do everything that we can and bring in the best and brightest minds to figure out different ways that we can address this until the hole is plugged and until we’ve mitigated the environmental disaster in and on the water.”

How sweeping the president’s new orders will be remains to be seen. After he ordered his initial moratorium on permits for drilling new offshore oil wells and a halt to a type of environmental waiver that was given to the Deepwater Horizon rig, at least seven new permits for various types of drilling and five environmental waivers were granted, according to records. Since the April 20 explosion, the records show, federal regulators granted at least 19 environmental waivers for Gulf drilling projects and at least 17 drilling permits. The administration has said that the moratorium was meant only to halt permits for the drilling of new wells, not to stop permits for new work on existing drilling projects like the Deepwater Horizon.

A poll released by CBS News this week underscored the growing public impatience with the administration’s handling of the crisis. Forty-five percent of those surveyed disapproved of the way the administration has responded to the oil spill, compared with 35 percent who approved. Fully 70 percent disapproved of BP’s handling of the situation. At the same time, support for offshore drilling has cratered. While 64 percent favored increased drilling in 2008, just 45 percent do now, according to CBS, while those who say the risks are too great increased from 28 percent two years ago to 46 percent.

One major oil company, Shell Oil, had been hoping to begin a controversial exploratory drilling project this summer in the Arctic Ocean, which the new restrictions would put on hold.

Senator Mark Begich, Democrat of Alaska and a staunch supporter of drilling in the Arctic, said he was informed of the new restrictions by the Interior Department. Mr. Begich said he was frustrated because the decision “will cause more delays and higher costs for domestic oil and gas production to meet the nation’s energy needs.”

“The Gulf of Mexico tragedy has highlighted the need for much stronger oversight and accountability of oil companies working offshore, but Shell has updated its plans at the administration’s request and made significant investments to address the concerns raised by the Gulf spill,” Mr. Begich said in a statement. “They make an effective case that we can safely explore for oil and gas this summer in the Arctic.”

In his statement, Mr. Begich argued that the administration’s decision would cost Alaska jobs and money, and force the country “to export more dollars and import more oil from some unfriendly places, jeopardizing our economic and national security.”

Mr. Begich has been pushing for drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, a protected 19-million-acre area along the northeastern coast of Alaska, for some time. Earlier this month, he wrote a joint letter with two other Alaska congressmen urging the United States Fish and Wildlife Service to consider oil and gas exploration in a special, 1.5 million-acre section of the refuge called the “10-02” area, named after the section of a bill that expanded the refuge three decades ago.

“New technology can now facilitate both a better understanding of the oil and gas reserves within the 10-02 area as well as enable more environmentally responsible development,” he stated in the joint letter earlier this month. “Directional drilling techniques would allow extraction of oil and gas from some of the 10-02 area with no surface disturbance.”

Anahad O’Connor contributed reporting.


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/28/us/28drill.html?hp

BP Used Riskier Method to Seal Oil Well Before Blast

WASHINGTON — Several days before the explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig, BP officials chose, partly for financial reasons, to use a type of casing for the well that the company knew was the riskier of two options, according to a BP document.

The concern with the method BP chose, the document said, was that if the cement around the casing pipe did not seal properly, gases could leak all the way to the wellhead, where only a single seal would serve as a barrier.

Using a different type of casing would have provided two barriers, according to the document, which was provided to The New York Times by a Congressional investigator.

Workers from the rig and company officials have said that hours before the explosion, gases were leaking through the cement, which had been set in place by the oil services contractor, Halliburton. Investigators have said these leaks were the likely cause of the explosion.

The approach taken by the company was described as the “best economic case” in the BP document. However, it also carried risks beyond the potential gas leaks, including the possibility that more work would be needed or that there would be delays, the document said.

BP’s decision was “without a doubt a riskier way to go,” said Greg McCormack, director of the Petroleum Extension Service at the University of Texas at Austin. Several other engineers agreed with Mr. McCormack’s assessment of the BP document.

Andrew Gowers, a spokesman for BP, said that there was no industry standard for the casing to be used in deepwater wells and that the approach by the Deepwater Horizon had not been unusual. “BP engineers evaluate various factors for each well to determine the most appropriate casing strategy,” he said.

The role of financial and time pressures in the rig blast is one focus of a series of hearings by the Coast Guard and the Minerals Management Service that began Wednesday in Kenner, just outside New Orleans.

Douglas H. Brown, the chief mechanic for the Deepwater Horizon, testified Wednesday that he witnessed a “skirmish” on the rig between a BP well site leader and crew members employed by Transocean, the rig’s owner, the morning of the blast.

Mr. Brown said the disagreement followed BP’s decision to replace heavy drilling fluid with lighter saltwater before the well was sealed with a final cement plug.

“Well, this is how it’s going to be,” the BP official said, according to Mr. Brown.

Mr. Gowers declined to answer questions about workers’ accusations or about whether cost may have factored into the company’s decision to use the casing system it chose for the Deepwater Horizon.

BP executives will probably face tough questioning about cost-cutting measures on Thursday when they testify before the House Committee on Natural Resources. As more details come to light about the events that led to the explosion, investigators are trying to determine which decisions and incidents — or combination of them — may have led to the accident, which killed 11 workers.

For example, Representative Nick J. Rahall II, Democrat of West Virginia and the chairman of the committee, said BP executives would face questions about why they let workers from Schlumberger, a drilling-services contractor, leave the morning of the accident without conducting a special test on the quality of the cement work.

Engineers have described these tests, called cement bond logs, as an important tool for ensuring cement integrity.

The decision about the casings will also come up during the hearings.

Professor McCormack said that while the type of casing that BP chose to use was more expensive in the short term, it was ultimately the more cost-effective and versatile alternative because it would have allowed the company to more easily drill deeper in the same hole if they decide to do so later.

But, the BP records explain, the casing chosen by the company may also cause problems if drilling mud or cement is lost or pushed away from the well into porous rocks as it is pumped.

Federal and company records indicate that that is just what happened, on more than one occasion. The rig lost all of its drilling mud in an incident in March, and in the days immediately before the explosion, records show. The well experienced several other instances of minor losses of drilling fluid and gas kicks, according to interviews with workers from the rig.

The April 20 disagreement between the BP well site leader and Transocean officials is also a growing focus of the investigation.

At a briefing in Washington on Wednesday, investigators laid out a chain of events, beginning with an operational error, that appear to have led to the accident.

The findings are preliminary, and come from BP, which owns the lease on the well and has pointed fingers at other companies for the problems on the rig, including Transocean.

The BP officials said that rig workers apparently had not pumped in enough water to fully replace the buffer liquid between the water and the mud, which stayed in the blowout preventer, the stack of safety valves at the wellhead.

This thick liquid, which is about one-third solid material, may have clogged the pipe that was used for crucial “negative pressure” tests to determine whether the well was properly sealed. The result was a pressure reading of zero (because the pipe was plugged, not because there was no pressure in the well) and the workers apparently misinterpreted that result as indicating a successful test.

Rig workers declared they were “satisfied” with the tests and started to replace drilling mud in the pipe to the seabed with water. About two hours later, the blowout and explosion occurred.

Evidence began emerging Wednesday that BP officials may have had an incentive to proceed quickly.

A member of the federal panel investigating the cause of the blast said that before the explosion, the company had hoped to use the Deepwater Horizon to drill another well by early March, but was behind schedule.

BP applied to use the Deepwater rig to drill in another oil field by March 8, said Jason Mathews, a petroleum engineer for the Minerals Management Service.

Based on an estimate of $500,000 per day to drill on the site, the delay of 43 days had cost BP more than $21 million by the day of the explosion on April 20, Mr. Mathews estimated.

A Transocean official — Adrian Rose, the company’s health, safety and environmental manager — confirmed that BP leased the rig for $533,000 per day. He could not confirm where the Deepwater Horizon was planning to go next, but he said it was going to undertake another drill, probably for BP.

Reporting was contributed by Henry Fountain and Tom Zeller Jr. from New York, Robbie Brown from Kenner, La., and Matthew L. Wald from Washington.


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/27/us/27rig.html?hp