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"Sometimes I still make a few mistakes in a row and this cannot happen again." Nadal, who handed Ljubicic his fourth straight-sets defeat on clay in as many meetings between the two, struggled in his first two matches at Roland Garros against low-key opponents. However, he did make light work of Croatian qualifier Antonio Veic in the previous round. Nadal was threatened only once by Ljubicic when it was 5-4 to the Croat and the score 30-30 on the Spaniard's serve. The nine-times grand slam champion then reeled off 10 out of 11 points to bag the opening set. "I played badly, then I was much better and he started to make a lot of mistakes," said Nadal. The world number one clinched victory when Ljubicic, who struggled with his opponent's high-bouncing forehands, returned long. According to Ljubicic, Nadal's HAMPTON BEACH, N.H. -- The Coast Guard is searching for a 12-year-old Massachusetts girl who was swept out to sea by a rip tide off the coast of Hampton Beach. Authorities say the girl from Lawrence and her older brother were swept out just before 8 p.m. on Sunday. The Hampton Fire Department rescued the brother, but couldn't find the girl. Two Coast Guard boats as well as a helicopter were involved in the search in waters with temperatures at about 55 degrees. e one time he would race Secord up to the CN Tower (Toronto), and he beat him up there. No matter what he did, he always did it with everything he had. I'll always remember E.J. for that."NHL senior director Jack Gerien, who aides the scouts in the technological aspects of the Scouting Combine, remembered the day McGuire even was too fast for a computer."E.J. was not a good typist and so we thought we'd get a computer dictation program for him to use, and he tried it, but no computer in the world could keep up with him," Gerien said. "It was an admirable effort, but even computers failed him. He took the steps to make sure technology played a role in Central Scouting so that the guys would be able to spend more time doing the things they needed to do … which was scouting."The McGuire family, including wife Terry and daughters Jacqueline and Erin, has been overwhelmed with the support they've received at a time of tremendous sorrow."E.J. had a great wit and I admired his intelligence," said Central Scouting's Hockey-East scout and the longest-tenured member of McGuire's scouting group, Gary Eggleston. "I think, probably as much as anything, I admired E.J.'s humanity. He was a great person and a great influence on me, even at my age."Chris Edwards, Central Scouting's Ontario Hockey League scout, remembers E.J.'s lighter side."I never once in my life seen him wear a jacket in minus-35 degree weather in Saskatchewan," Edwards said, laughing. "He was in dress shoes and dress clothes and his suit jacket. He used to call that thing his horse blanket and he carried that bag that must have weighed 80 pounds. He had everything he owned in that thing, but he never would leave without it."Peter Sullivan, one of Central Scouting's Western Hockey League scouts, said running Central Scouting was like coaching for McGuire, saying he "got to coach our team." Fellow WHL scout B.J. MacDonald said McGuire turned the entire group on to the computer age."He'd come in every mo