Former WNBA player Margo Dydek, 37, died after suffering a heart attack a week ago and being placed in a medically induced coma.
COLLEGES: Rutgers-Camden first baseman C.J. Mooney won a national Gold Glove in Division III.
Temple senior Bob Keogh (Archbishop Wood) earned a spot in the NCAA championships hammer-throw finals with a seventh-place qualifying throw of 205 feet, 10 inches.
NFL: The St. Louis Rams contributed $25,000 to relief efforts from the tornado that devastated Joplin, Mo., this week and damaged parts of St. Louis County last month.
The NFL and the Dallas Cowboys asked a federal court judge to dismiss the class-action suit filed on behalf of Super Bowl ticket holders who wound up with no seats for the game.
An animal-rights group bought Michael Vick's former dogfighting compound and plans to turn it into a rehabilitation center for chained and penned dogs.
SOCCER: FIFA placed its president under investigation in a bribery scandal days before Sepp Blatter faces re-election against Mohamed bin Hammam. With both candidates under investigation, it is unclear whether Wednesday's election will proceed.
GOLF: Second-ranked Luke Donald of England, Italian teenager Matteo Manassero, and Alvaro Quiros of Spain were tied for a 2-shot lead after the second round of the BMW PGA Championship in England.
Ryan Palmer and Sergio Garcia share the second-round lead at 8-under 132 at the Byron Nelson Championship in Texas. Rory Sabbatini, who missed the cut after shooting a 12-over 82, has withdrawn from next week's Memorial.
Kiyoshi Murota shot a 5-under 67 to take a 4-stroke lead in the Senior PGA Championship in Kentucky over a glittering scoreboard that includes Nick Price, Hale Irwin, and Tom Watson.
LACROSSE: Maryland women tallied a 14-8 semifinal victory over Duke to put the Terrapins in Sunday's championship game against Northwestern, which advanced with an 11-10 win over North Carolina.
CYCLING: The head of Switzerland's anti-doping lab denied claims that Lance Armstrong had a positive drug test at the 2001 Tour de Suisse that was covered up.
OLYMPICS: Three-time Olympian Todd Hays was hired to coach the U.S. women's bobsled team.
JURISPRUDENCE: U.S. prosecutors charged the tattoo-parlor owner who bought Ohio State football memorabilia with drug trafficking and money laundering. - Staff and wire reports