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...predicting a first-quarter loss, and Ford followed this month by downgrading its 2005 profit forecast. Chung is determined to keep the pressure on. He's moving Hyundai's product line away from its traditional small cars into larger, higher-profit vehicles. In October, Hyundai unveiled a small sport-utility vehicle, the Tucson, and later this year, the company will launch a new high-end sedan for the U.S. market, the Azera. Down the road Hyundai plans to roll out a larger SUV and its first hybrid gas-electric vehicle. In addition, the company is opening manufacturing plants around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hyundai Revs Up | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

...goalie from Columbus, watching two women's teams play the violent and, in the U.S., wholly unappreciated game that has captured his imagination. A fast and not very subtle cross between basketball and soccer, it looks wrong to the basketball-educated eye, explains Telthorster, who hopes to coach the sport professionally, because you may take three full steps before and after dribbling. And, yes--here three or four bodies splat together and hit the floor--because very aggressive body checking is permitted. "Awright, way to deck her, Sandra!" yells a 6-ft.-tall woman athlete in pink shorts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Young Faces Were the Point of It All | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

Five minutes of watching a field hockey game on the L.S.U. campus produces a quick and no doubt prejudiced rejection of the sport: clotted misery, so constipated by defense, whistle blowing and too many players that a successful scoring drive seems accidental. A stroll to the archery field, where Rick McKinney and Darrell Pace, the two best archers in the world, are shooting at the same target 50 meters away. After 1 ½ days of drawing and letting fly, Pace is ahead, 717 to 712. In two more days, McKinney manages to pull three points nearer, but Pace wins...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Young Faces Were the Point of It All | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

Long after his career ended at 42 in 1928, Cobb complained about the decline of his sport. "The fabric of baseball is crumbling, "he warned. "I'd want players less interested hi a bonus, a business manager and a bowling alley than in fighting to win." But he was surprisingly modern in his self-interest. Like Rose he became a player-manager with a mouthful of statistics, mostly about his own achievements. Like Rose he was a headlong competitor whose determination made him exceed more gifted men. And like Rose he grew wealthy with shrewd investments, a high salary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Failures Can't Come Home | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

There were better weeks than last for canceling a sport. Couldn't strikes be timed to follow a good drug bust, or any of the disgraces that once were rare intrusions in the sports pages but now are staples? Russell Baker has noticed that sportswriters hardly ever gush anymore, but the problem has to do with all the grim details in the piece. The cranky voices of lawyers and agents are growing as familiar as Vin Scully's. They argue over dreary words. This time arbitration, last time compensation. When do they get to calcification...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Benefits Not in a Contract | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

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