The Wall Street Journal
Asia Sports Main
The Wall Street Journal
Asia Sports Main
Brian Baker's upset of Gael Monfils was the latest chapter in the amazing sports comeback story of former tennis phenom.
The Angels recently continued an odd baseball tradition: hiring a relatively so-so hitter as the hitting coach.
A San Francisco team could bring home the championship for the third year in a row in the ancient Irish sport of hurling.
The NFL Players Association filed a complaint in federal court accusing the league of colluding to impose a secret salary cap during the 2010 season.
Mark Ramprakash was dropped by Surrey for last week's County Championship game against Somerset, and it might just presage the end of the 42-year-old's career.
Forty years after a famous fall, the 1,500 meters remains track's unofficial contact sport.
Simply put, the New York Knicks and Jeremy Lin, who will soon be a restricted free agent, complete each other, says Jason Gay.
Football players bristle at a new rule meant to slow them down. Plus: Will the Warriors stink less in San Francisco?; the L.A. Kings remain hockey's hottest team.
Oakland will lose its NBA basketball team to its well-heeled neighbor across the bay if the Golden State Warriors have their way, even as it struggles to keep its football and baseball franchises from leaving town.
How would Britain's best horse Frankel, who won Saturday's Lockinge Stakes in Newbury, England, fare if he raced against potential Triple Crown winner I'll Have Another?
Conference finals head back to Broadway tied 2-2 as New Jersey makes its early lead last.
After the Thunder eliminates L.A., talk of a major overhaul. Plus: The end of Stan Van Gundy; swapping families for baseball bonus money; and more.
A decade ago, Brian Baker was one of the best junior tennis players in the world. But then Baker's body abandoned him.
Roberto Di Matteo, Chelsea's interim manager, coached the club to an improbable Champions League title this weekend. Why hasn't he been hired on a permanent basis?
I'll Have Another overtook Bodemeister down the stretch to win the Preakness and keep alive his hopes of winning the Triple Crown.
The PGA Tour has a pace-ofplay policy that works well—for the PGA Tour, if not for the broader good of the game. The policy also punished Kevin Na, whose anguished slow play during the event has been the talk of golf.
On weekend afternoons throughout the summer, regulars and novices head to Manhattan's shoreline. Armed with rods and a free fishing license, each escapes Manhattan without ever leaving it, hoping to pull something from New York Harbor's surprising bounty.
On the latest Sports Retort, searching for deeper meaning in the schadenfreude the Yankees have earned with their slow start.
The former home of baseball great Babe Ruth in central Massachusetts has come on the market for $1.65 million, complete with an upstairs shrine to the Sultan of Swat.
On the latest Sports Retort, handicapping the Preakness. Plus: Why Detroit doesn't care about interleague play, why the CFL doesn't use the metric system and much more.
On the latest Sports Retort, paying tribute to beleaguered Devils fans and New Jersey fans in general. Plus, the perils of sleeping through jury duty and more.
The SEC and Big 12 conferences' announcement Friday of a bowl game between their champions revived the possibility of a "plus-one" title game after the bowls, Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott said.
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