NEW YORK -- Washington Wizards guard Bradley Beal was fined $15,000 by the NBA on Sunday for grabbing at Orlando Magic swingman Evan Fourniers throat.Beal was assessed a technical foul with 7:40 left in the Wizards 94-91 road victory Friday night.Hector Bellerin Jersey . -- Arizona raced out to a big lead and did not back off, hitting the accelerator instead. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang Jersey . Varlamov made 33 saves and Ryan OReilly had a goal and scored in the shootout as the Avalanche beat the New Jersey Devils 2-1 on Thursday night. http://www.arsenalsoccerproshop.com/Authentic-Ainsley-Maitland-Niles-Arsenal-Jersey/ . PAUL, Minn. Aaron Ramsey Jersey . -- An ugly goal by Nick Bonino helped the Anaheim Ducks overcome the defensive-minded Phoenix Coyotes on a night when their ragged power play continued to struggle. Carl Jenkinson Arsenal Jersey .Y. -- Syracuse has turned up the defence at the right time all season, and when High Point threatened to pull off a monumental upset the second-ranked Orange did what they do best with their quick hands and savvy play.I am Australian. And I love cricket. So it is probably going to seem strange that the player I hate to love is Steve Waugh.But Australia is a complex nation, made up of six states and two territories and, as I sit here typing on the afternoon of the first match of the 2016 State of Origin series, I need to explain the depth of the rivalry between tonights combatants, Queensland and New South Wales, and hence why Steve Waugh and many of his Blues brethren have been hard to accept, if not love.Each Australian state has its own characteristics, its own culture, its own way of life, and Queensland is… well, Queensland is Queensland. With its beaches and its surfing and its fishing and its grand timber homes on stilts and its laid-back way of life and its XXXX beer and its cane-cutters cordial (or Bundaberg Rum) and its maverick politicians like Joh (for decades) and Bob Katter (more recently) and its great sporting heroes like Wally The King Lewis and Heals and Haydos and AB (who has morphed into a Queenslander to become one of our own), it is beautifully, distinctively, cavalierly, unashamedly Queensland.And to live in Queensland is to believe in Queensland. To believe in its way of life, and to have serious doubts about life beyond its borders.When sportsman, punter and (acclaimed) educator Matt OHanlon was growing up in the 70s, one of eight kids in a classic Catholic family from Rockhampton in central Queensland, his father would drive them to Sydney to visit relatives for the holidays. As they were crossing the border from Coolangatta to Tweed Heads he would turn to his flock in the back and yell, Suck in the big ones, kids. Youll be breathing New South air for the next fortnight.The OHanlons were a progressive family. Many Queenslanders wouldnt consider leaving Queensland. What for? theyd ask - and mean it.Queenslanders love their own, but they are consumed by suspicion when it comes to anyone from Down South. Sydney is no good - their clubs pinch all the good Queensland rugby league players. Melbourne is no good - its full of Victorians. And Canberra is the absolute pits. Queenslanders just want to govern themselves. Secession is not out of the question.When it came to cricket, Queenslanders were consumed with two deep frustrations in the 1970s and 80s: our cricket team couldnt win the Sheffield Shield, and our best players were consistently overlooked for Test selection. It was a miracle for a Queenslander to don the baggy green.And we were always stiff in the Shield. Wed be a game or two clear each Christmas and then the summer wet would set in. Washout after washout would force us down the Shield table. Not even Viv Richards could arrest the tropical lows that would sit in Moreton Bay and bucket down on the Gabba.In the 1980s we had the imports Greg Chappell and Thommo and AB. But they played alongside a squad of local talent, brought up on mangoes and seaming couch-grass pitches. Batsmen had to develop outstanding technique to survive if not prosper. But could these master craftsmen get a run in the Australian side? Robbie Kerr. Andrew Courtice. Trevor Barsby. Brett Henschell. They could all play.But as they were putting together a string of masterful knocks, another teenager would be picked for New South Wales and you just knew hed be anointed as the next great thing and would be playing for Australia by the end of the ssummer.ddddddddddddIn December 1984, Stephen Rodger Waugh made his first-class debut for the Blues against Queensland. His bowling figures were 23-12-34-0. He batted at No. 9.This Waugh, they said in the public bar of the Pineapple Hotel just up the road from the Gabba, hes modelled himself on Ewen Chatfield.Hes okay, they said, but hes no Glenn Trimble.People took more notice of SR Waugh in the Shield final against Queensland that season. He made an important 71 and 21 in a match where the Blues snuck home by a wicket.Hes a slogger, they said.Queensland had been denied again.The following season ME Waugh made his Shield debut, along with MA Taylor, and we all sat in the pub.You watch, they said. These clowns will all play for Australia.Kerr and Courtice are the best since Hobbs and Sutcliffe, they said. But will they get a look in?Steve Waugh made a couple of Shield hundreds. But he was cruising.Setting himself up for a 20-year career, they said at the Pineapple. Bowling within himself. Not chasing too hard. Self-preservation.Whats Steve Waugh got that Greg Ritchie hasnt? they asked.And sure as theres corruption and vice in Sin City, Steve Waugh got picked for Australia for the Boxing Day Test. He made 13 and 5.The next summer he made a duck in the first Test, at the Gabba. Hes cemented his spot, they said, sipping on their XXXX.Is he a bowler? we asked. Is he a batsman? we wondered.Is he a No. 3? Is he a No. 7? we speculated.Or is he just the Bob Cunis of Australian cricket?Hes no good, that Steve Waugh, they said when he was selected to tour England in what was regarded as an ordinary squad. Hell never make a Test hundred.SR Waugh wasnt dismissed until Edgbaston, the third Test, by which time hed made 393 runs and Australia led 2-0.But the antipathy did not subside. As the years rolled by and they made Taylor the skipper and the best cricketers in Australia were never given an opportunity, the voices grew louder.What about Stuey Law and Martin Love? What about Jimmy Maher? What about Kasper and Andy Bichel? they said. Its a bloody conspiracy, they said. Not only do they not play Kasper, they make him 12th man. Thats so he cant play for Queensland.Steve Waughs standing didnt improve Up North. Red ink, mate, they said. Its about keeping that average above 50. Look how he bats with the tail.Of course he had a long and successful career. He made a lot of runs, he played in many Test victories. I had mixed feelings about it all. He wasnt my sort of cricketer. I was a fun-of-the-game man, a joy-of-sport man. He was too hard for me. But, I came to realise, thats what sport is about for a lot of Australians. Fierce competition. And pushing yourself to get the best from your ability.I respected him; I respected his determination and the demands he placed firstly on himself, and then on others. I came to acknowledge that it was just plain silly of me to expect everyone to be like Lord Lindsay in Chariots of Fire or Roger Federer or John Eales. But I also knew there was Fortune in top sport and Steve Waugh kept some mighty fine players out of the Australian side.And after he retired, and the Australians struggled, and I realised we missed him, I even forgot he was from New South Wales. But only for a moment. ' ' '