Sports

No Image

NFL Reinstates 2 Patriots Employees At The Center Of Deflategate

The New England Patriots fans perform a card stunt commemorating their Super Bowl win before their season opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers last week.

The New England Patriots fans perform a card stunt commemorating their Super Bowl win before their season opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers last week. Gregory Payan/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Gregory Payan/AP

The NFL said today the New England Patriots can reinstate the two employees at the heart of the deflategate scandal, allowing John Jastremski and Jim McNally to return to work.

Jastremski, the team’s equipment assistant, and McNally, the officials locker room attendant, were accused of deflating footballs below league standards during last season’s AFC championship game against the Indianapolis Colts.

The two were suspended by the team during the investigation, which uncovered texting communication in which McNally referred to himself as “the deflator.” The Patriots said that he was referring to weight loss.

Quarterback Tom Brady was also suspended for the first four games of the season, although a judge overturned that suspension earlier this month.

Last week, the Patriots requested that Jastremski and McNally be allowed to return to the team and today the NFL issued a statement approving their reinstatement.

“The Patriots have satisfied the league’s requirements for reinstatement and the league has granted permission for the employees to return,” it said.

Reinstated they may be, but Ian Rapoport of NFL network and NFL.com reported that the two are prohibited from handling footballs.

Jastremski is prohibited from handling footballs & McNally is barred from being a locker room attendant for officials or handling equipment

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) September 16, 2015

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

The Giant Foam Finger: If Serena Williams Loses, Is It Still The U.S. Open?

Serena Williams serves to Roberta Vinci during their Women's Singles Semifinals match of the 2015 US Open on Friday.
7:38

Download

Serena Williams serves to Roberta Vinci during their Women’s Singles Semifinals match of the 2015 US Open on Friday. Alex Goodlett/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Alex Goodlett/Getty Images

When Gene Demby and I were planning this week’s sports discussion, we didn’t say, “We should sit down Monday to discuss the U.S. Open.” We’d planned to discuss Serena Williams, the most dominant player in women’s tennis, who was expected to complete a rare Grand Slam in Saturday’s final. (To win a Grand Slam, a player must win the Australian Open, the French Open, Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in a single calendar year. The last woman to accomplish the feat was Steffi Graf in 1988, though Williams had technically won all four majors in a row leading up to this year’s U.S. Open.)

But Williams ended up losing in a shocking upset Friday, falling to unranked Italian Roberta Vinci. This set up an all-Italian final match between Vinci and fellow underdog Flavia Pennetta, who’d shocked another dominant player, the No. 2-ranked Simona Halep, en route to the final. Suddenly, what looked like a history-making coronation was a battle of little-known underdogs — two women who’d known each other since childhood, and were at the tail-end of their careers. (Pennetta announced her retirement shortly after winning.)

So instead of talking about Serena Williams for an entire segment, Gene and I examine the double-edged sword that is rooting for an underdog, lament sports announcers’ insistence upon psychoanalyzing athletes, and try to unpack what makes us root for and against dynasties in sports. Along the way, we take on the myth of athletes winning because they believe in themselves — when Vinci was asked when she realized she might actually beat Williams, Vinci replied, “Never” — and even spend a minute or two acknowledging Sunday’s gripping men’s final between top-ranked powerhouses Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

Novak Djokovic Beats Roger Federer, Wins U.S. Open Men's Final

Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates after defeating Roger Federer of Switzerland during of their 2015 US Open Men's singles final match on Sunday.

Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates after defeating Roger Federer of Switzerland during of their 2015 US Open Men’s singles final match on Sunday. Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

Novak Djokovic won the U.S. Open final, defeating Roger Federer and taking home his third major title of 2015.

Federer was off to a rocky start from the start of the match. Djokovic, for his part, took a hard fall on his right arm in the first set, which left him bleeding, but still took the first set.

Federer tied it up with his old rival when he won the second set. But he couldn’t keep up with the world No. 1 in the third and fourth sets, and Djokovic won, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4.

The crowd, numbering more than 20,000, was vocally — even raucously — pro-Federer. The Swiss superstar has won the U.S. Open five times, and has 17 majors under his belt, but his last Grand Slam championship was in 2012.

His Serbian opponent, for his part, had been runner-up in four previous U.S. Opens, and won that title only once before. With his win today, Djokovic has won a career total of 10 majors.

The men’s final match was delayed by rain for more than three hours, a pause so long that it left some worrying that the final would be pushed to Monday — as happened every year from 2008-2012.

But if all goes according to plan, this will be the last U.S. Open that leaves fans eyeing rain clouds with concern: There’s a new retractable roof rising over Arthur Ashe stadium. While the partially-finished structure couldn’t keep the court dry on Sunday, it should be operational by the 2016 U.S. Open, the U.S. Tennis Association says.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

Flavia Pennetta Beats Roberta Vinci To Win U.S. Open, Promptly Retires

Flavia Pennetta celebrates after defeating Roberta Vinci in the women's singles final at the U.S. Open on Saturday.

Flavia Pennetta celebrates after defeating Roberta Vinci in the women’s singles final at the U.S. Open on Saturday. Clive Brunskill/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

Flavia Pennetta has defeated Roberta Vinci to win the U.S. Open, in a women’s final that was an all-Italian affair.

The two women have more in common than their nationality. They were opponents and doubles partners as kids, the Associated Press reports. It was the first major final for both. And they were both outperforming expectations just by being there: Vinci was unseeded, and Pennetta was the 26th seed.

And, of course, they had already surprised the crowd at Arthur Ashe Stadium by who they weren’t. Neither woman was Serena Williams — whose bid for a calendar Grand Slam ended on Friday in an astonishing game against Vinci.

While Vinci ended Williams’ run, she wasn’t able to take the title home: Pennetta won 7-6 (7-4), 6-2 on Saturday. It’s Pennetta’s first Grand Slam title — and, at 33, she’s the oldest first-time Grand Slam champion of the Open era.

After her victory, Pennetta announced that this U.S. Open had been her last. She is retiring, she said — going out in dramatic fashion, “with this big trophy.” The BBC reports that Pennetta later said she will play through the end of the year before retiring.

Vinci, for her part, said she wanted that trophy for herself, and pretended to steal Pennetta’s check. It was a bit of fun between close friends, reports The Associated Press:

They grew up 40 miles (65 kilometers) apart in coastal towns in Puglia, a region on the heel of Italy’s boot-shaped peninsula, and have been facing each other on court for two decades – with the stakes much lower, of course. They shared some laughter and tears in the locker room together Friday while watching a video of a TV interview they did back in 1999, when they won a junior doubles title at the French Open.

And when Saturday’s match ended, after Pennetta flung her racket overhead, she went up to the net to find Vinci, not for a handshake but for a lengthy hug. Vinci patted her pal on the back repeatedly, while Pennetta cried. Then they sat on adjacent sideline chairs and chatted, just a couple of foes and friends, sharing a special moment.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

NYPD Releases Video Of Officer Throwing Tennis Star James Blake To The Ground

[embedded content]
YouTube

The video released Friday by the New York Police Department shows retired tennis star James Blake leaning against a column outside his Manhattan hotel. Suddenly a plainclothes officer runs up to him, throws him to the ground and handcuffs him.

As the Two-Way reported earlier this week, the officer mistakenly identified Blake as a suspect in an ongoing investigation of identity theft.

James Frascatore, the officer who arrested Blake, has a history of excessive-force allegations. As WNYC reports, he was “named in five civilian complaints during one seven-month period in 2013.” And according to the Associated Press, Frascatore is part of two federal civil right cases “involving men who claim they were beaten, pepper-sprayed and falsely arrested.”

Though both New York Police Commissioner William Bratton and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio have since apologized to Blake, he said in a statement today that he is “determined to use [his] voice to turn this unfortunate incident into a catalyst for change in the relationship between police and the public they serve.” Blake’s full statement read:

“Just before noon on Wednesday, September 9, 2015, while I was standing on a sidewalk outside my hotel in midtown Manhattan waiting for a car to take me to the U.S. Open, a plainclothes New York City Police officer tackled me to the ground, handcuffed me, paraded me down a crowded sidewalk, and detained me for ten minutes before he and his four colleagues realized they had the wrong man.

“The officer, who was apparently investigating a case of credit card fraud, did not identify himself as a member of law enforcement, ask my name, read me my rights, or in any way afford me the dignity and respect due every person who walks the streets of this country. And while I continue to believe the vast majority of our police officers are dedicated public servants who conduct themselves appropriately, I know that what happened to me is not uncommon.

“When this incident was reported in the news media, Mayor de Blasio and Commissioner Bratton both called me to extend their personal apologies, and I greatly appreciate those gestures. But extending courtesy to a public figure mistreated by the police is not enough.

“As I told the Commissioner, I am determined to use my voice to turn this unfortunate incident into a catalyst for change in the relationship between the police and the public they serve. For that reason, I am calling upon the City of New York to make a significant financial commitment to improving that relationship, particularly in those neighborhoods where incidents of the type I experienced occur all too frequently. The Commissioner has agreed to meet with my representatives and me to discuss our ideas in that regard, and we very much look forward to that meeting.”

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

Beyond Brady: What To Expect In Tonight's NFL Season Opener

The last time the New England Patriots played the Pittsburgh Steelers was Nov. 3, 2013. The Patriots won 55-31.

The last time the New England Patriots played the Pittsburgh Steelers was Nov. 3, 2013. The Patriots won 55-31. Charles Krupa/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Charles Krupa/AP

Football is back.

Tonight at 8:30 p.m. ET the New England Patriots will play host to the Pittsburgh Steelers in Foxborough, Mass. The contest’s prevailing narrative is sure to focus on the Patriots’ quarterback Tom Brady, whose suspension for his alleged role in the Deflate-gate scandal was overturned last week. But there’s more to this game than the return of one man.

It’s possible tonight could mark the burial of the Deflate-gate saga. Beyond that, here’s what you need to know:

  • Suspensions for both teams will be a factor. Patriots running back LeGarette Blount, Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell and Steelers wide receiver Martavis Bryant are all suspended for violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy. With Blount and New England wide receiver Brandon LaFell also benched due to injury, Brady will be left with limited options. Luckily for him, star tight end and twerk-master Rob Gronkowski will be one of them.
  • The Patriots are favored to win. Las Vegas odds favor the Pats by 7, up from the 2.5-point favorite they were before Brady was exonerated last week. But what we saw from Brady’s preseason performances doesn’t inspire much confidence. He completed 10-22 passes for a measly 107 yards, and threw for one touchdown in three preseason games. Still, that’s based on a relatively small sample size.
  • The Steelers boast an impressive offensive combo. Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger and wide receiver Antonio Brown are one of the most potent offensive duos in the league. Last season, Roethlisberger was No. 2 in the league for passing yards with 4,952. He also threw for 32 touchdowns. Brown led the league in receiving yards, recording 1,698 along with 13 touchdowns. Especially with former Patriots corner back Darrelle Revis gone to the Jets, the New England defense will likely have its hands full.
  • Roger Goodell won’t be in attendance. Claiming that he doesn’t want his presence to distract from the football, the beleaguered NFL commissioner (who issued Brady’s since-overturned four game suspension) will break tradition and watch the season opener on TV.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

2 Female Italian Players Advance At The U.S. Open

Italian player Flavia Pennetta after beating Petra Kvitova, of the Czech Republic, in a quarterfinal match at the U.S. Open on Wednesday at Arthur Ashe Stadium.

Italian player Flavia Pennetta after beating Petra Kvitova, of the Czech Republic, in a quarterfinal match at the U.S. Open on Wednesday at Arthur Ashe Stadium. David Goldman/AP hide caption

itoggle caption David Goldman/AP

Yes, Serena Williams’ quest for the tennis Grand Slam is exciting. No one has won all four major tournaments in the same calendar year since Steffi Graf did it in 1988. And now that Williams is in the semifinals at the U.S. Open, she’s only two wins away from the rare feat.

But for those who hunger for some ABS news (Anything But Serena) from New York …

There are two Italian players in the women’s semis — reportedly the first time in the Open era that two women from Italy made it that far in the same major tournament.

(That era began in 1968, when pros were allowed to compete in the majors.)

Wednesday at Flushing Meadows, Flavia Pennetta came back from a set down and beat fifth-seeded Petra Kvitova, a two-time Wimbledon singles champion. The final score was 4-6, 6-4, 6-2. Pennetta did a better job of dealing with the energy-sapping heat, since Kvitova has been battling mono since the summer. And Pennetta also overcame the difficult afternoon shadows on the Arthur Ashe Stadium court, which she called “a disaster.”

With the win, she reached her second U.S. Open semifinal in the last three years.

A day earlier, countrywoman Roberta Vinci also took three sets to beat Kristina Mladenovic and qualify for her first major tournament singles semifinal. That’s the good news. The bad? She’ll be playing Serena Williams.

The presence of two Italians in the semis is more than coincidence, according to Pennetta.

“We [Italian players] did a lot of good things in the last 10 years,” she said after beating Kvitova. “I start in 2009 with a top 10 [ranking], and then Francesca [Schiavone] won Roland Garros [the French Open in 2010] and Sara [Errani, World No. 16 and Italy’s top player] come. Everyone was pushing the other one and I think it was really important for us to have someone before us, to try to catch [up] all the time.”

Pennetta will play No. 2 seed Simona Halep of Romania in the one semifinal Thursday. As far as the other matchup, Pennetta has some advice for Vinci against the Williams Grand Slam express. “You just have to go on court and try … EVERYTHING,” Penetta says, dramatically pausing before the last word. “She [Vinci] has to believe she can make it. Because if you go on the court and you are not that sure or you’re thinking, it’s done, I’m OK like this … it’s gonna be bad.”

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

Kansas State Imposes Sanctions In Halftime Show Controversy

In this photo from November 3, 2012, the Kansas State Wildcats marching band perform during a game against the Oklahoma State Cowboys.

In this photo from November 3, 2012, the Kansas State Wildcats marching band perform during a game against the Oklahoma State Cowboys. Ed Zurga/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Ed Zurga/Getty Images

Kansas State’s marching band is in trouble for what some saw as getting too “creative” with a halftime show.

During KSU’s Saturday football home-opener against South Dakota, the band injected some levity into the performance by poking a bit of fun at rival University of Kansas. The band grouped itself into the shape of the Kansas mascot, a Jayhawk, getting attacked by a spaceship.

But it didn’t look like a space ship to a lot of spectators. Instead, people say, it looked phallic — and that the full formation appeared to show the Jayhawk performing a sex act. You can watch the video here and decide for yourself.

The resemblance was striking enough that Kansas State implemented self-imposed sanctions that included suspending the marching band director for one game, paying a $5,000 fine to the Big 12 Conference and requiring that future band programs be submitted for review.

Despite the punishments, the school showed support for the band and its members. As Kansas State’s president, Kirk Schulz, wrote to them in an email today, the show was judged “completely out of context” on social media.

“As many of you know, I love social media; however, it is also an opportunity for people to post hurtful and uninformed comments. I appreciate your dedication to excellence and ask that you simply ignore these comments.”

But Schultz went on to scold the band for depiction of the Jayhawk at all, which he felt crossed the line.

“The Big 12 Conference has a clear policy on sportsmanship, and our conference commissioner felt that the use of another university’s mascot was inappropriate and did not uphold the spirit of sportsmanship that we strive for in our conference.”

So, the message is clear: marching bands, resist the urge to imitate rival mascots…and spaceships, too.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

Williams Sisters Both Win Easily; Set Up U.S. Open Quarterfinal

Serena Williams serves to Madison Keys during their Women's Singles Fourth Round match on Day 7 of the 2015 U.S. Open. Serena will play her sister Venus in the tournament's quarterfinals.

Serena Williams serves to Madison Keys during their Women’s Singles Fourth Round match on Day 7 of the 2015 U.S. Open. Serena will play her sister Venus in the tournament’s quarterfinals. Chris Trotman/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Chris Trotman/Getty Images

No need for any extra practice for Serena Williams after this performance.

Plus, it’s not as if she needs to study too hard to figure out how to deal with her next opponent.

Playing far better than she did earlier in the U.S. Open as she chases a calendar-year Grand Slam, Williams set up a quarterfinal against older sister Venus with a 6-3, 6-3 victory over 19th-seeded Madison Keys on Sunday.

“A Williams will be in the semis, so that’s good,” the No. 1-seeded Serena said after needing only 68 minutes to dismiss Keys, a 20-year-old American with formidable serves and forehands who simply was outplayed.

Already a winner of the past four major tournaments, including last year’s U.S. Open, Serena is trying to become the first tennis player to win all four Grand Slam titles in the same season since Steffi Graf in 1988.

Venus, at 35 the oldest woman to enter the field, was on court even less time than her sibling, overwhelming 19-year-old qualifier Anett Kontaveit of Estonia 6-2, 6-1.

Venus’ match came first in Arthur Ashe Stadium, so then she had to decide whether to watch Serena play.

“I get very nervous, because even if I have to play Serena, I still want her to win, so I have a hard time watching unless she’s winning. Then it’s easy to watch,” said Venus, who won U.S. Open titles in 2000 and 2001, but had lost in the third round or earlier each of the past four years. “So it depends on how my nerves are.”

Serena acknowledged having a bout with the jitters before her second-round match, when she double-faulted 10 times, made another two dozen unforced errors and needed to come back over and over just to claim the opening set against a qualifier ranked 110th. Afterward, she took pointers from coach Patrick Mouratoglou and headed out to the practice court right away.

Then, in the third round, against someone ranked 101st, Serena dropped the first set and was two games from defeat in the second before turning things around. Again, she put in more work to fix things.

“I’m so proud that I was able to serve a lot better. Obviously I had to,” she said after winning 22 of 28 first-serve points and never facing a break point against Keys. “I was like, ‘Serena, it’s now or never. You’ve got to get that serve together.'”

As for whether she’d need to head out for a training session with Mouratoglou this time, Serena said: “No, not today. I’m going to take the rest of the day off and relax and just enjoy it.”

Another women’s fourth-round match scheduled for Sunday was scratched when 25th-seeded Eugenie Bouchard withdrew with a concussion, two days after slipping and falling in the locker room. The 21-year-old Canadian, the runner-up at Wimbledon last year, was supposed to play Roberta Vinci of Italy.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

Before Superstardom, Williams Sisters Stunned On Compton's Courts

Sisters Serena, left, and Venus Williams shake hands after a match in 1991 in Compton, Calif.
4:36

Download

On Stockton Street, in Compton, Calif., there’s a small white stucco house with a chain-link fence and an old tree out front.

There’s isn’t a sign or plaque in the yard, and there aren’t any tour groups taking photos. There’s nothing here to indicate that this house, in this quiet neighborhood, was the childhood home of two of the best athletes of all time.

Sisters Serena, left, and Venus Williams shake hands after a match in 1991 in Compton, Calif. Paul Harris/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Paul Harris/Getty Images

Long before the U.S. Open this week, before the Nike and Gatorade sponsorships and before the stardom, a young Venus and Serena Williams were given their first tennis rackets here.

Next door, Maria Gomez leans up against her blue pickup truck. She’s lived in this house since 1974, so she knew the Williams family. She says she remembers Venus and Serena running around the house and playing in the tiny backyard next door.

The girls cut their teeth on courts around Compton. And to this day, the Williams sisters are a source of pride in the city.

“To be able to say that they’re from the town that you grew up in — who wouldn’t be inspired by them?” says Janna Zurita, a Compton councilwoman. She was born and raised in Compton, and says she used to watch the Williams sisters train.

“A lot of the little kids here in the community, they look up to them and they think they’re great. I mean, they’re two beautiful women that changed the whole life of tennis,” Zurita says. “And they’re straight outta Compton.”

Their dad, Richard Williams, was their coach back then. He was known for being tough and pushing his daughters to perfection on the court — hours on the courts, day in, day out.

Some of the places where they’d practice were in rough neighborhoods, like East Rancho Dominguez Park, formerly known as East Compton Park. Today, the courts are repaved and there’s a new recreation center — but that’s not how it used to be.

Andre Barbee says the last time he stood on the courts at East Rancho Dominguez, gang members would hang out on park benches just outside the fence.

“You see them thugged out, drinking, smoking their weed,” he says. “But they never messed with us. So I never had a problem with nobody here.”

Barbee was a 21-year-old limo driver and part-time tennis coach when Richard Williams invited him to train with his daughters.

“Tennis was a passion,” he says.

Barbee was a tennis prodigy himself, so when he faced Venus and Serena on the court, he had finally met his match.

“Man, it was unbelievable,” Barbee says. “Never seen nobody that good. It was something I’d never seen before in my life.”

Venus wasn’t even a teenager yet.

Training meant hitting hundreds of balls with enough force to break the strings on their racquets.

“Every other day, I was restringing my racquets,” he says. “My shoes, once a week. A hole right in my foot of my shoe. Used to tape them up.”

They’d run drills up and down the court, honing their power at the baseline.

Andre Barbee met Venus and Serena Williams on the tennis courts at East Rancho Dominguez Park in Compton. He was 21 years old when Richard Williams invited him to train with his daughters.

Andre Barbee met Venus and Serena Williams on the tennis courts at East Rancho Dominguez Park in Compton. He was 21 years old when Richard Williams invited him to train with his daughters. Daniel Hajek/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Daniel Hajek/NPR

This year, Serena has been unstoppable. If she wins the U.S. Open, she’ll be the first since Steffi Graf in 1988 to win all four grand slam titles in the same year.

Older sister Venus, once dominant in the sport, is on an upswing. On Friday, she advanced to the fourth round of the U.S. Open when she beat 18-year-old Belinda Bencic.

Playing in Compton is a distant memory now: The Williams family moved to Florida in 1991. But this is where Venus and Serena learned the game’s fundamentals.

“I love them like my little sisters,” says Barbee. “And Richard Williams, I loved him like a father. He was like a dad, you know? I miss training with them. At the time, I didn’t have a high school diploma. And [Richard] told me, ‘Promise me that you get your high school diploma.’

“Richard? I kept my promise,” he says. “I have my high school diploma.”

Barbee doesn’t play much tennis these days. But on this court, I can see him reliving that year he spent training with Venus and Serena Williams.

And for the record, the last time he played Serena, they never finished their match.

“She didn’t beat me yet,” Barbee says. “So Serena, if you’re hearing this, you still owe me a match. I can still play. It’s just, I can’t play long. I can play a set. Come on Serena, give me one set.”

Barbee starts laughing.

He’s ready for a rematch on the tennis courts at the corner of Compton Boulevard and Atlantic Avenue, where it all started.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.