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--  作者:liamin
--  发布时间:2015-4-21 18:50:20
--  were short-handed, so everybody carried their load." Bayless finished with 17 points, and the six-foot-three guard added six rebounds
TORONTO - As soccer star Christine Sinclair was announced as an inductee to Canadas Walk of Fame on Tuesday, she marvelled that her gutsy performance at the 2012 London Olympics is still being talked about. "For it to still be relevant is still shocking to me," she said. Sinclair joins legendary cancer activist Terry Fox, music producer Bob Ezrin, actor Victor Garber, pianist Oscar Peterson, actor Alan Thicke and human-rights advocates Craig and Marc Kielburger as the latest honorees to join the Walk of Fame. Sinclair — who led Canada to a bronze medal at last summers Olympics — said the Walk of Fame recognition is a reflection of what she and her teammates achieved in London. "It helped put womens soccer on the map," Sinclair, 30, said of Canadas performance. "And for mothers to come up to us after the Olympics and tell us, my daughter wants to play soccer because she thinks she can win a medal at the Olympics — thats incredible." Sinclair, along with the Kielburger brothers, are younger than most Walk of Fame inductees. But she doesnt want it to be a lifetime achievement award. "Ive got a long way to go still," Sinclair said, laughing. Craig Kielburger said his induction only fuels his own advocacy work, founding Free the Children and Me to We. "So much of our work is trying to get young people to follow their passions," said Kielburger, 30. "To be celebrated at a young age for the work that we do, I hope that it sends a symbol to other people not to wait." For 15 years, Canadas Walk of Fame has celebrated Canadians who have excelled in music, sport, film, television, as well as the literary, visual, performing arts, science and innovation, for at least a decade. But while Kielburger doesnt quite fit into that range, it is a reflection of a national identity. "Part of what I think makes us Canadian is our compassion," said Kielburger. "Celebrating that at the highest level is a wonderful ideal, because it shows young Canadians that that is quintessentially Canadian." Dan McGrath, chair of Canadas Walk of Fames board of directors, takes great pleasure in the range of people the Walk recognizes. "Weve got a great balance of Canadians from many disciplines. We dont just focus on just music, or just the arts, and its really people who have made a difference in Canada," he said. Typically, the Canadian Walk of Fame honours one posthumous inductee with the Cineplex Legends award, but this year two are being welcomed: Fox and Peterson. "We decided to have two this year because we wanted to have a special recognition of Terry Fox as part of our 15-year anniversary," said McGrath. "Terry is just an incredible, incredible individual who inspired the entire country." With the introduction of smartphone voting, McGrath said participation for this years slate spiked, with nearly 30,000 Canadians from 130 countries submitting a nomination. Pop star Carly Rae Jepsen of Mission, B.C., was announced as the fourth winner of the Allan Slaight Award, which recognizes young and inspirational Canadians. Past recipients include the rapper Drake and jazz-pop singer Nikki Yanofsky. Jepsen will be performing at the award ceremony on Sept. 21 at the Elgin Theatre. This year also marked the first year the Walk of Fame has awarded the $25,000 RBC Emerging Artist Music Mentorship Prize, which gives up-and-coming musicians an opportunity to learn from established Canadian talent. Last week, Taylor Kurta, a 20-year-old self-taught guitarist and singer from Thornhill, Ont., won the cash prize and the chance to be mentored by Gord Sinclair of the Tragically Hip. The names of this years Walk of Fame inductees will be engraved on stars and displayed with those bearing the names of previous winners along King Street West and Simcoe Street in Toronto. Past inductees include rocker Bryan Adams, TV host Alex Trebek, comedian Phil Hartman and hockey great Bobby Orr. The induction ceremony will be broadcast nationally on Global Television and Slice this fall. http://www.frsportchaussures.com/nike-roshe-run/nike-roshe-run-hyperfuse.html . Parker, playing for the first time since Jan. 29, is averaging six points in 18 games. Celtics centre Jermaine ONeal missed his second straight game with a sprained left wrist. He remained in Boston and will be examined by doctors Wednesday. Adidas Zx Flux Pas Cher . Born in Sault Ste. 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Nike Roshe Run Oreo For Sale .J. -- The New York Jets have downgraded wide receiver Jeremy Kerley and linebacker Garrett McIntyre from doubtful to out for the teams game against the Ravens at Baltimore. NEWARK, N.J. -- DeMar DeRozan took over as soon as the third quarter started. DeRozan scored 19 of his 27 points in the second half, leading the Toronto Raptors to a 94-73 victory over the New Jersey Nets on Sunday night. With injuries playing a role in their 7-14 start, the Raptors received a huge lift from DeRozan. He made eight of 12 shots, and 11 of 16 free throws. "The key was patience," he said. "I watched a lot of film and I didnt want to force a lot of things. Lately we get kind of slow coming out in the third quarter, so I tried to be aggressive and get things going." Raptors coach Dwane Casey was impressed by DeRozans effort. "I thought DeMar DeRozan did a heck of a job attacking the basket," Casey said. "Hes too athletic and too quick to not get to the rim." Toronto led 46-41 when it scored 10 straight to go up by 15 points. DeRozan scored four free throws in the run, and Jerryd Bayless scored a couple of baskets. "The guys played like they believed," Casey said. "They knew that we were short-handed, so everybody carried their load." Bayless finished with 17 points, and the six-foot-three guard added six rebounds and six assists. He also spent his 34 minutes playing defence on Deron Williams. Williams came in averaging 19.4 points, scored 24. But he had to worrk for them.dddddddddddd He made only eight of 20 shots and just three of 10 from outside the arc. "Coach wanted me to come out and play defence as hard as I could," Bayless said. "Everybody in the league knows hes a great player. But I think our defence played its best game of the year, honestly. Ed (Davis) and Amir (Johnson) really helped out and made my job easier." The game continued to be easy for Toronto after it build the 15-point cushion. New Jersey never got closer than 11 the rest of the way, and the margin reached 23 at one point. The result left both teams with records of 7-14, tying them for third place in the Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference. The Raptors put together a 12-1 run midway in the second quarter, going from two points down to nine up at 40-31. They took a 44-39 lead into the half. Bayless led the stretch, driving for one basket and making three of four free throws. Eleven points by DeRozan in the third quarter really broke things open. "We didnt have any energy on either side of the floor," Nets coach Avery Johnson said. "(Toronto) came in, theyre a hungry team, and DeRozan had a big night. Unfortunately we just had a bad offence and bad defence." Notes: Toronto shot 51.5 per cent to New Jerseys 36.5, and outscored the Nets from the free-throw line 21-12. cheap jerseys cheap nfl jerseys \' \' \'