AKRON, Ohio -- Noah Robotham and Antino Jackson combined to score 32 points and Akron won its sixth straight, romping past Division III Adrian, 95-41 on Wednesday night.Akron (6-1) opened with a 10-2 run and pulled away to take a 23-point lead at intermission, 44-21, and cruised to its 21st straight win at home. Keith Dambrot, now in his 13th year with the Zips, is five wins away from becoming the all-time winningest coach in Akron history.Robotham hit 7 of 9 from the field, including 3 of 5 from beyond the arc, and finished with 17 points. Jackson added another 15 as the Zips shot 61.7 percent from the field (37 of 60), including 51.9 percent (14 of 27) from distance.DaVonte Harris led Adrian with 17 points. The Bulldogs were just 14 of 56 from the field (25 percent), including 3 of 14 from three-point range. Fake Nike Shoes . Dusautoir, the former World Player of the Year, sustained a torn bicep playing for Toulouse in the Heineken Cup on Saturday. The flanker, who has played 65 times for France, is expected to be out for up to four months. Fake Shoes From China . Dusautoir, the former World Player of the Year, sustained a torn bicep playing for Toulouse in the Heineken Cup on Saturday. The flanker, who has played 65 times for France, is expected to be out for up to four months. http://www.fakeshoesforsale.com/ . Following a lopsided 5-2 loss against the New Jersey Devils on Wednesday night, Paul MacLean told reporters that "theres a lack of focus, theres a lack of leadership and theres a lack of preparation" with his struggling team. That came on the heels of Bryan Murray taking the unusual step of going into the locker room at the Prudential Center and addressing the players himself. Fake Shoes . Belfort (24-10) needed just 77 seconds to down Henderson in the headlining bout of Saturdays "UFC Fight Night: Belfort vs. Henderson" event at Goiania Arena in Goiania, Brazil. The fight served as a rematch of the pairs 2006 meeting, which Henderson won by decision. Fake Shoes Website . -- Patrick Reed got an early start in golf. EUGENE, Ore. -- The headlines say youth is being served on the U.S. Olympic track and field team.The numbers say thats nothing new.With the second half of Olympic track trials set to start Thursday, 35 of the 50 athletes (75 percent) who have already guaranteed themselves trips to Rio de Janeiro will be going to their first Olympics. That sort of turnover is pretty much the norm. Data supplied by USA Track and Field shows an average of 53 percent turnover from year to year on the most recent world championship and Olympic teams, which essentially award the same number of spots through the same qualifying process. When the gap is two years, the turnover rate is 60 percent.This years group of newcomers includes 18-year-old high jumper Vashti Cunningham, the world indoor champion, who will be the youngest U.S. track and field athlete to qualify for the Olympics since Carol Lewis in 1980. The team also includes high jumper Chaunte Lowe and sprinter Allyson Felix, both of whom are in their 30s and going for the fourth time.You look at the system we have and the depth of talent we have, and one thing thats fairly consistent is that well have an amazing team and amazing athletes, USATF CEO Max Siegel said. Its just a matter of who the stars are going to be. Its also the challenge of how we select them.The U.S. won 29 medals at the London Olympics four years ago. That number dwindled to 18 at last years world championships, raising alarm among some in track circles.Over the years, the USATF has settled on a system in which the top three finishers in each event make it, assuming they have met an Olympic qualifying standard. There are no exceptions for injuries or past performances the way there are in many countries, including Jamaica, where Usain Bolt will almost certainly be on the team despite pulling out of Jamaicas qualifier with a hamstring injury.It may be the fairest system, but, as decathlete Ashton Eaton said, if the goal is to send the best team, Im not sure the trials method is the best method.For instance, a tangle of feet in the stretch of the womens 800-meter final knocked out Brenda Martinez and Alysia Montano, either of whom wouldve contended for medals. Making it instead were three first-timers: Kate Grace, Ajee Wilson and Chrishuna Williams.Surreal, said Grace, who was ranked seventh nationally ccoming into trials but had a gold medal around her neck Monday night.dddddddddddd. Ive never podiumed at a national event, and now Im going to the Olympics. I knew I could run at this level even though Id never done it before.A few strange twists aside, most of these newcomers have been setting themselves up for success for years leading up to the Olympics. A look at some U.S. first-timers with the best chances of bringing home hardware from Rio:SAM KENDRICKS: The 23-year-old pole vaulter actually flew to Eugene in 2012, expecting to compete at the Olympic trials then. By the time he landed, he learned that hed been scratched from the field by a few late entrants who ranked higher than he did. He watched from the stands, and said that was the prime motivator to reach this point: Hes currently ranked second in the world.TORI BOWIE: The 25-year-old said her grandmother essentially rescued her as an infant by taking her in from a foster home. Bowies favorite sport was basketball, but her grandmother pushed her into track, a move that has paid off. She won the 100-meter bronze medal at world championships last year and should contend inE KOVACS: The 27-year-old is the defending world champion in shot put. He finished fourth at Olympic trials in 2012. Growing up, Kovacs was a football player who just used track and field to stay in shape. But then he started taking it more seriously. Kovacs shot put coach as a kid: his mother, Joanna.TRAYVON BROMELL: World-indoor champion at 60 meters and tied for bronze at 100 meters in Beijing. At 5-foot-9, will be looking up -- way up -- at the 6-foot-5 Bolt in the starting block. Bromells U.S. teammate, Justin Gatlin, is considered the biggest threat to the Jamaican, but the 20-year-old from Baylor ran 9.84 seconds in the trials, second