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Showing posts with label strong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strong. Show all posts

Friday, February 25, 2011

Golf star Lorena Ochoa swings strong in face of Mexico drug war (The Christian Science Monitor)

Mexico City – Nearly a year after retiring as the most celebrated golfer in Mexican history, Lorena Ochoa teed off Wednesday in her first Mayakoba Golf Classic, her star power lending a needed boost to sports events in violence-wracked Mexico.

Hailing from a country where golfers, especially women, were invisible next to soccer icons, the four-time LPGA Player of the Year became the first Mexican golfer to rank No. 1 in the world – and she kept that ranking for three consecutive years while also winning over Mexican fans with her unassuming manner and charity work.

Her tireless promotion of golf in Mexico now has an added advantage: Ms. Ochoa’s participation in Mexico’s only PGA Tour event “provides us with a very powerful tool to show the sense of safety that we have in Cancún,” says Jesús Almaguer, CEO of Cancún’s Tourism Promotion Trust, a corporate ally of the Mayakoba Golf Classic held in nearby Playa del Carmen, near Cancún.

IN PICTURES: Mexico's drug war

The sense of safety that Mr. Almagueris mentions does not exist everywhere. Earlier this month, the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LGPA) dropped April’s Tres María Championship in drug-plagued Morelia, Michoacán, citing the violence there. Shortly thereafter the United States issued a travel alert for Guadalajara, the city hosting LGPA’s Lorena Ochoa Invitational in November. Organizers reportedly said they are monitoring the situation but did not cancel the event.

This year Mexico will host more high-profile international games than it has seen in two decades, experts in the field say, even as drug-related violence spreads to major cities where the events will take place. Ochoa’s presence this week was seen by some as a promotion of these tournaments just as they come under scrutiny about security concerns related to the violent drug war.

Security scrutinized ahead of Pan Am GamesIn October, more than 40 countries from across the Americas will send some 6,500 athletes to Mexico’s second city, Guadalajara, for the Pan American Games. Security has become a hot topic after criminal groups blocked major streets by forcefully commandeering buses and trucks and setting them on fire in early February and later lobbed a grenade at a night club, killing six people.

In reaction, the US Consulate General in Guadalajara prohibited US officials from traveling after dark between the city and its international airport and recommended that US citizens consider similar precautions.

Organizers of the Pan Am Games, which take place every four years, are taking extensive security precautions, securing the athletes’ village with electrified barriers and video cameras. Federal police will patrol the city, which is reportedly requesting that civil protection personnel participate from other countries.

Sports stars fight bad press from drug warAnd just like Ochoa at Mayakoba, celebrities will do their part to promote the Pan Am Games and calm fears, says Hector Lopez Zatarain, a sports marketing consultant working for the Pan Am Games.

Guadalajara’s own Javier “Chicharito” Hernandez of Manchester United and Formula 1 champion Sergio Perez are on the list to campaign for the event. Ochoa, another Guadalajara native, will publicize her upcoming golf tournament, according to Mr. Lopez Zatarain. “They will help to promote the city as a safe city, as a nice place to visit,” he says.

The FIFA Under 17 World Cup will also hold games in Guadalajara, playing in June and July in seven Mexican cities, including troubled Morelia and Monterrey.

Killings during tennis' Mexico Open fuel concernsAll the preparation in the world, however, may do little to calm organizers’ jitters, which were on full display this week at the Mexican Open in Acapulco, the largest tournament in Latin America. The men’s Association of Tennis Professionals, or ATP, warned against traveling outside hotels and players were advised to leave the resort city right after being eliminated, The Associated Press reported.

"We [players] are a bit scared about this and we're trying to decide what to do," said Argentine athlete David Nalbandian.

This past weekend 12 taxi drivers and passengers were gunned down in Acapulco, local media said, just before the tournament opened Monday. Last month 15 headless bodies were scattered outside a mall.

Acapulco spring break reservations have since plummeted to 1,000, down from 9,000 last year, the Mexican daily El Universal reported, saying that other violent beach towns in Sinaloa and Sonora have taken major hits this year.

Calmer resorts like Cancún have not yet witnessed a drop in tourism, says Almaguer, the tourism promoter. And many hope that Ochoa's noted swing at the pro-am portion of the Mayakoba Golf Classic from Feb. 23-27 will help keep tourism strong.

"What she's done for golf in Mexico could never be repeated," golfing great Greg Norman said Tuesday before the tournament began. "She's been a great ambassador for the game of golf. She's represented her country as well as I've seen anybody represent their country."

Tournament Director Larson Segerdahl agreed. "Not only does she represent the very best in the game of golf but she represents the very best of Mexico," he said in a statement.

IN PICTURES: Mexico's drug war


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Monday, February 14, 2011

New poll gives Canada's Conservatives strong lead (Reuters)

TORONTO (Reuters) – Canada's ruling Conservatives took a strong lead in an opinion poll released on Monday, ahead of a March budget that will be the government's next big test.

The Ipsos Reid survey, summarized on the website of Canada's National Post newspaper, said 39 percent of voters supported the Conservatives, who have only a minority of seats in Parliament and need support of at least one opposition party to stay in power.

The Liberals, the second largest party, had the support of 25 percent of voters.

The previous Ipsos Reid poll last month put support at 34 percent for the Conservatives and 29 percent for the Liberals.

The government's next major test will come after it produces its next budget, probably in late March. If opposition parties combine to vote that down, the government falls and there is a new election.

"We've seen this before," pollster Darrell Bricker told the newspaper. "The more people talk about elections, the more it seems to move in favor of the government."

Ipsos Reid polled 1,001 Canadian voters between February 8 and Feb 10. It considers its results accurate to within 3.1 percentage points 95 percent of the time.

(Reporting by Janet Guttsman)


View the original article here