Random Links

Dwyane Wade is being sued by his estranged wife and the charges aren’t pretty. Well, they involve actress Gabrielle Union, who is pretty, but the allegations are not. The lawsuit alleges Union “engaged in sexual foreplay” in front of Wade’s young sons. It also claims that the boys received “medium size gifts” from Wade for Christmas last year, while Union got “the biggest gift of all.” There’s a joke there, but I’ll move on.
Refs Blow Another One
A soccer player was given a yellow card over the weekend because the referee thought he was taking a dive. It turns out the player was having a heart attack.
Great Gif
Game 2 Celtics vs Cavaliersm, Celtics general manager Danny Ainge threw a towel in the air to distract a Cleveland player who was in the middle of shooting a free throw. We should all be thankful for Ainge’s bush league move because it’s now spawned this gif.
Cleveland’s Concern

Few body parts in sports have generated as much buzz as LeBron James‘ right elbow. After shooting free throws left-handed in Game 1 of the Cavs series against the Celtics, speculation grew about the severity of James’ injury. A report with anonymous sourcing from BallinEurope.com says James is so banged up he shouldn’t even be playing. Another report says James will soon underdo a second MRI on the elbow. And most important, LeBron’s elbow has its own Twitter page.
Never A Dull Moment with Ozzie
Check out what the White Sox skipper did to pitcher Freddy Garica last night.
Cheers
Manofest.com has compiled the 10 funniest cheerleader bloopers of all time.
Jim Brockmire: The Greatest Sportscaster of our time
Thanks to Funny or Die we have (IMO) one of the funniest men in the world Hank Azaria portray great baseball announcer Jim Brockmire. If you care Dan Patrick, Joe Buck, and Rich Eisen are in the video too.Why they didn’t have Chip Caray in the mix is beyond me.
NBA: ‘Los Suns’ Statement Changes Focus
On an off day in Portland, Robert Sarver went to work with his basketball team. He put on a Suns’ T-shirt and black silk shorts. And as players mingled with the media on the main floor of the Rose Garden, Sarver began sprinting up the steps of the arena, one section at a time.
Some reporters were stunned. Was he that desperate for a workout? Or was he that desperate for attention?
Like it or not, the Suns owner has caused a huge stir this time around. His team will wear orange “Los Suns” jerseys Wednesday night in Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals against the Spurs, a maneuver designed to celebrate the NBA’s diversity and illustrate his displeasure with Arizona’s new immigration law.
“It’s two-fold,” Suns General Manager Steve Kerr said. “One, it is Cinco de Mayo. And, two, it is a political statement. We felt the law, however well intended, was not right.”
Sarver is a banker by trade, and his stance is as much about money as it is about civil rights. As a businessman, he does not want to see economic boycotts, cancelled conventions and big events removed from our region. That lowers the tide for everyone in Arizona, at a time when his basketball team is struggling to sell tickets for playoff games.
It’s also brilliant public relations. The move comes during peak visibility of the NBA season. The Suns and Spurs have all the ingredients – a history, a rivalry and a stunning contrast of styles – to guarantee great television ratings. This decision will help soften the national image of Arizona, countering all the body shots we’ve received from pundits, politicians and late-night comics.
It also will mute the scene expected outside US Airways Center before Game 2.
“We hear there will be some protesters outside the building,” Kerr said. “From what I gather, there will be a march from a local church to the arena. So there was going to be some hoopla anyway.”
Kerr said the idea occurred to Sarver during a recent road trip to Portland. The Suns quickly received an endorsement from the league, which doesn’t like anything interfering with potential customers and revenue streams.
Before the 2008 Beijing Olympics, LeBron James and other NBA players said they were going to speak out against the atrocities in Darfur, and bring attention to China’s history in human rights. The league effectively stifled that banter, reminding the players that they all had huge economic stakes in China, a market the NBA and Nike both consider an untapped gold mine.
Yet even with the NBA’s blessing, say this for Sarver: He had the good sense to ask his team for permission, and not jam it down its throat.
“They were all for it,” Kerr said. “We said, ‘Look, if this is going to be a distraction, you guys tell us and we won’t do it.’ For them, it means they answer some questions (Tuesday) and they wear orange jerseys (Wednesday night).”
To the contrary, the Suns seemed stoked to make such a bold statement. Amar’e Stoudemire said it was great to “let the Latin community know we’re behind them 100 percent.”
Then again, though most professional athletes prefer the politics of richness, the Suns are a bit different this way. Especially their point guard, who tends to care deeply about things such as global warming, human rights and gun control.
“I think it’s fantastic,” Steve Nash said. “I think the law is very misguided, and unfortunately, to the detriment of our society and our civil liberties. And I think it’s really important for us to stand up for things we believe in . . .
“It doesn’t feel good to have people around the world and around the country look at our state as less than equal, less than fair. So as a proud (resident) of this state, I want us to be held in the highest esteem. I think we have a lot of great attributes and a lot of great people, and I think we need to be very cautious in how we respect our civil liberties, and the tone we’re setting, and the precedent we’re setting going forward.”
The statement doesn’t come without risk. In his statement, Sarver called the immigration law “flawed,” and that won’t endear him to people who support the measure. And if the Suns stink up the place in Game 2, losing home-court advantage in the process, the entire organization will be criticized for distracting the great focus the team displayed in Game 1.
“Look, it’s a major issue here in Arizona,” Kerr said. “It’s much bigger than a basketball game. It doesn’t mean we’re crafting a new immigration bill. We’re not claiming to be politicians and we don’t have the answer. But there were Latino people who feel offended. A lot of people feel offended. I felt offended. I don’t think we should live in a country where you have to show papers wherever you are.”
Say this for the Suns owner: It’s a bold move. And much trickier than any of those steps he scaled in Portland.
NFL: Jackson has ‘wanted change’ but not now
Tavaris Jackson admits there have been times he thought a change might be best for him, but the Vikings one-time (and perhaps future) starting quarterback told Sirius NFL Radio on Tuesday that he never requested a trade after Brett Favre joined the Vikings last August.
“Being a competitor and knowing the business side of it you have to think about different situations like that or what they’re thinking,” Jackson said while appearing on a show with Adam Schein and former Vikings quarterback Rich Gannon. “If they’re thinking, ‘OK, we’ve had enough … we’ve got our guy,’ or whatever.
“You have to think everything through and think of different scenarios and just try to be ready for anything because you never really know what [coaches and front office people] are thinking. Honestly, it crossed my mind and I’ve wanted change, but change is not always good. The grass is not always greener on the other side. The Vikings are all I know right now and I’m just trying to do my best around here.”
Jackson and Sage Rosenfels find themselves in an extremely difficult situation this offseason. Many assume that Favre will return in 2010, despite last week’s report that he needs ankle surgery. However, if he doesn’t Jackson and Rosenfels likely will battle for the starting job and Vikings coach Brad Childress indicated at the NFL Owners meetings in March that Jackson would have the upper-hand entering that competition.
That means Jackson must prepare as if he’s going to be the starter, knowing full well he probably won’t be in that role on Sept. 9 when the Vikings open the regular season at New Orleans. Jackson’s approach this offseason has been to worry about himself and let everyone else concern themselves with the other things.
“One thing I learned from Brett is just be yourself regardless of the situation and the circumstances,” he said. “Just go out and be yourself today, every day and they [can] take it or leave it. That’s what I’m going to do and that’s how I’m approaching it. Just trying to get better every day like I always did, working hard. That’s all I can do and that’s how I’m going to take it.”
Jackson was candid in admitting that possibly being the starter isn’t the same as knowing you are the team’s choice: “It’s different when you know you’re the guy or when you kind of think you’ll be a backup. You can say you’re going to work as hard, but it’s a lot different when you know you’re going to be the guy and you’ve got those guys depending on you.”
Jackson, who is 10-10 as a starter since being selected in the second round of the 2006 draft by the Vikings, has traded messages with Favre this offseason but he hasn’t asked the veteran about his plans.

Asked if he feels the way the Favre situation is being handled by the Vikings is a “little bit wrong,” Jackson said: “That’s not for me to say. I’m not a head coach or GM or owner or anything. I look at it as everything happens for a reason and that’s the approach I always took and I will continue to take that approach. Whatever happens is going to happen and I can’t control it. Sage can’t control it. We just have to go out and do our part and pretty much just fight. Just do our thing. That’s all we can do.”
MLB: Is Greinke the Unluckiest Pitcher Ever?
After winning the Cy Young Award last year, Kansas City Royals ace Zack Greinke appears primed to make history of a different sort this season: unluckiest pitcher ever.

Mr. Greinke’s ERA of 2.27 is 79% better than the league average when adjusted for ballpark effects. Yet his record stands at 0-3. In baseball history, only 17 pitchers have won 15 games or fewer with an ERA at least 50% lower than average (minimum 32 starts and 200 innings pitched). None has won fewer than 12 games, and only two had losing records—Ben Sheets (12-14, 2004 Brewers) and Dave Roberts (14-17, 1971 Padres).
At the opposite end of the spectrum, fellow Cy Young winner Steve Carlton won 27 games for a 1972 Phillies team that finished 59-97. Mr. Carlton’s ERA that year was 80% better than average—almost identical to Mr. Greinke’s current pace. A big difference was Mr. Carlton’s completing 73% of his starts while Mr. Greinke has already seen his league-worst bullpen blow three would-be wins.
While Kansas City presently doesn’t rank last in a single key offensive category, the team has scored just 12 runs for Mr. Greinke in six starts. Perhaps former Yankee Mickey Rivers had it right when he famously said, “Pitching is 80% of the game. The other half is hitting and fielding.”
Uh, a Little Help Here Guys?
Here’s how Zack Greinke stacks up against the five unluckiest pitchers in baseball history based on their number of wins and how their ERA compared with the league average.*
| PLAYER/TEAM/YEAR | ERA | COMPARED WITH LEAGUE * | RECORD |
| Zack Greinke, Royals , 2010 | 2.27 | 79% better than average | 0-3 (so far) |
| Ben Sheets, Brewers, 2004 | 2.70 | 60% better than average | 12-14 |
| Tom Candiotti, Blue Jays/Indians, 1991 | 2.65 | 57% better than average | 13-13 |
| Lefty Grove, Athletics, 1926 | 2.51 | 67% better than average | 13-13 |
| Kevin Brown, Dodgers, 2000 | 2.58 | 67% better than average | 13-6 |
| Roger Clemens, Astros, 2005 | 1.87 | 124% better than average | 13-8 |
*min. 32 starts, 200 innings pitched; league ERA is adjusted for park effects Source: Baseball-Reference
NBA: Can Hill Stop Nash?
George Hill is going to have to pick up his defense against Steve Nash.
Or course, first he’ll have to pick up his pride, his ego and probably a considerable number of lost uniform parts that left him so very exposed out on the floor against Nash.

If the Spurs were visitors to Planet Orange for the opening game of the Western Conference semifinals, then Hill made a side trip to the village of Black-and-Blue considering the way Nash whipped and beat him in Game 1.
“I don’t know if I struggled,” Hill said.
Everyone else does.
You could tell from the shock and awe that Hill was wearing along with a bit of windburn on his face.
It was not just the 33 points and 10 assists that Nash hung up in the Suns’ 111-102 series-opening victory. It was the way that so many of them came with so easily, like a man floating down a stream while sipping an umbrella drink from a straw.
“You’ve got to make Nash work,” said Tony Parker, which is one reason that Parker and not Hill opened the second half as a part of the starting unit.
It’s early and the history of this blood feud between Phoenix and San Antonio tells us that there are at least a handful of flammable and bizarre occurrences lurking around the corner. But the first one told you that the Spurs will not be able to ultimately prevail against the Suns if Hill is not able to compete better against Nash.
Hill has been a revelation with his overall improvement and his poise from his rookie year. He’s one of the main reasons the Spurs were able to survive this season with Parker spending so much time on the shelf due to injuries. But he has got to do better than nine points on 2-for-9 shooting in 33 minutes.
“I couldn’t make a shot today,” Hill said. “That’s why it’s a seven-game series. We’ll watch film and get ready for the next one.
“Why did I struggle? I don’t know if it was a part of just struggling. I didn’t make shots. I had some open looks and that’s how it goes. I don’t think I really struggled. It just didn’t go my way.”
Things began similarly disappointing for Hill in the Spurs in the previous round in Dallas as he was victimized by Jason Kidd for 13 points and 11 assists. In the opening minutes of the second half, Hill went on a drive to the hoop and Kidd simply reached in and swiped the ball away. Mere seconds later, Hill was removed from the game and never returned. But Spurs and Hill did return in the series, which is how they wound up here in the desert seeking to advance their cause.
“He’s a great player and I felt like I let him be the aggressor instead of me being the aggressor on defense,” Hill said. “That’s something I’m going to get better at and do a better job on Wednesday. I feel like tonight he did a great job of picking us apart and being aggressive.
“He’s the head of the snake. He was phenomenal and we have to tip our hat to him.”
The Spurs will likely make more of a team-wide effort to get the ball out of Nash’s hands on offense.
“You never can do anything by yourself,” Hill said. “It’s always gonna be a team thing.”
But it will also be up to Hill to make Nash defend more by being more assertive with his own offense.
“I have to attach him a little bit more so he just don’t conserve his energy on the defensive end,” he said. We got to make him work on both ends.”
That was the message that the second-year point guard had delivered to him by the veteran Parker.

“I told George at halftime that you have to try to get Steve tired,” Parker said. “You have to attack him, go at him and that will tire him out. You can’t be letting him come down the court with all of his energy and going full speed. Steve Nash at full speed is tough and over the course of a game he’s going to get good results. George will play better. I have confidence in him.”
A question is whether Spurs coach Gregg Popovich might make a switch and put Parker back into the starting lineup.
“I’m not worried about that. I’m not thinking about that,” Hill said. “Whatever Pop decides will be the right thing and that will be fine with me.
“We’ll come back in here for Game 2 and things will be different, a lot of things ready to be better.”
Hill will be standing at the head of that line.
NCAAF: Alabama vs. Miami in a 2012 opener at the Georgia Dome?
Alabama played in the 2008 and 2009 Chick-Fil-A Kickoff Games at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta. Now there’s talk of the Crimson Tide returning in 2012.
Gary Stokan, president of the Chick-Fil-A Bowl, told the Miami Herald that he would like to match Miami against Alabama in the 2012 kickoff game. If not Alabama, he said, Auburn, Georgia or South Carolina would be opponents to consider.
Alabama defeated Clemson in the 2008 opener at the Georgia Dome and came back last season to defeat Virginia Tech in the Chick-Fil-A Kickoff Game.
Last week, it was reported that Alabama and Georgia Tech will postponed a home-and-home series. The two schools were scheduled to play in 2013 and 2014. Makeup dates have not been announced.
Miami athletics director Kirby Hocutt told the Herald that he wants to schedule a 2012 game at a neutral site. A game in Chicago against a Big East or Big Ten team also is being considered.
The 2012 Chick-Fil-A game would pay each participant $2.25 million, the Herald said.
“It’s something we would be interested in,” Hocutt told the Herald.
Tennessee and North Carolina State already are scheduled to play in one kickoff game at the Georgia Dome in the opening weekend of the 2012 season, according to the Herald. The proposed Miami game against Alabama or another Southeastern Conference team would be a second kickoff game that weekend.
Alabama defeated Miami 34-13 in the 1993 Sugar Bowl to win the 1992 national championship.
Alabama Man Wins $1 Million in MLB 2K10 Perfect Game Contest
When I heard 2K Sports was giving away $1 million to the first fan to pitch a perfect game in MLB 2K10 this year, it seemed like one of those things that would be almost impossible to win, particularly given the extensive rules about how the perfect game needed to be recorded.

Turns out I was very wrong and a perfect game was actually pitched in the first 24 hours of the contest. Never underestimate the determination of the gaming population at large.
2K Sports announced today that 24-year-old Wade McGilberry of Semmes, Alabama has won an unprecedented cash prize in the amount of $1,000,000 by being the first person to throw a verified perfect game in Major League Baseball® 2K10, the latest iteration of the popular Major League Baseball® 2K series.
According to Eric Fisher from SportsBusiness Journal, McGilberry used Braves pitcher Kenshin Kawakami (pictured above) to pitch his perfect game. (This is a real head-scratcher because real-life is 0-5 this season with a 5.47 ERA. I’ll be eager to hear why he picked this particular pitcher.)
If I’m reading Darren Rovell’s story correctly on CNBC, it only took McGilberry six tries to land his perfect game. Another fun note from Rovell’s piece: 2K Sports didn’t take out any insurance on this contest because companies couldn’t come up with odds. That can’t be good for the bottom line of a gaming company that has narrowed its offerings in the last few years.
MLB: America’s Pastimes: Baseball, Apple Pie and Political Flame Wars
Remember back during the Congressional hearings for baseball, when elected official spent their time, and therefore hard-earned taxpayer money, talking aboutbaseball, of all things? Baseball and politics…whodathunkit?
Now, we can’t seem to get away from it. The New York Daily Newshad a story – albeit under their News section and not Sports – focusing on a group called the Working Families Party, which has drafted a letter to Yankees owner George Steinbrenner and Mets owner Fred Wilpon asking the two New York teams to boycott the 2011 MLB All-Star game in Arizona if the state doesn’t repeal its new immigration law.
“Will Yankees pitcher Mariano Rivera have to show ID to take the mound next year?” asked Working Families Party director Dan Cantor in a letter to the labor-backed party’s 130,000 supporters.Arizona’s new law will require cops to ask for immigration documents from anyone suspected of entering the country illegally. Critics say it could lead to racial profiling, and opponents across the country have urged MLB to move the 2011 All-Star Game out of Phoenix.
“If New York’s baseball teams say they won’t go, they could become leaders in a national push to move the All-Star Game out of Arizona,” Cantor wrote.
Hugging Harold Reynolds profiled the article this morning and made the point most of us are probably thinking: “please, leave your politics out of my baseball.” But at this point, that’s nearly impossible. The comment from HHR even came a paragraph after pointing out that moving the All-Star game could cost the region “approximately $60 million” in revenue, much of which, the post asserts, would be going to the same undocumented workers the law was put in place to eradicate.
“Please leave your politics out of my baseball.” Maybe that should end with a question mark. In reading the NYDN story on the push for a boycott, the right side bar had a link to an opinion piece by S.E. Cupp with the headline, “Starting in left field, Keith Olbermann: He’s embraced by MLB and the NFL while Limbaugh was shunned.”
If you click through to Cupp’s byline you’ll see an error message as this is, presumably, the first article the bespectacled pundit has written for the paper. At the end of the slam piece, Cupp’s personal web address appears, and when clicking through, you are linked to a book she wrote called Losing Our Religion: The Liberal Media’s Attack on Christianity. So, is Cupp upset with Olbermann because he’s “liberal media” or is she upset because he’s a Yankees fan?
Look, I’m no fan of Olbermann’s heavy-handed style of broadcasting – no matter how much I agree or disagree with his politics – but holy cow talk about taking yourself too seriously. This is too fantastic not to quote:
Nothing says “America” like our national pastime. For a few yawning hours, chronological time becomes primordial time, and within those walls of sacred stadiums, space becomes holy. And the Boys of Summer do what they’ve been doing for nearly two centuries. They play ball.But over the years, nefarious characters have threatened to sully baseball’s good name. Chick Gandil persuaded the Chicago White Sox to throw a few games back in 1919. Peter Edward Rose had a bit of a gambling problem. And, of course, there’s everyone’s favorite recovering opportunist – Jose Canseco, the Danny Bonaduce of baseball – and the long line of performance-enhancing abusers from Mark McGwire to you-know-who.
Now there’s another menace lurking in the shadows of the dugout, someone so ugly, so vindictive, so polarizing that with every word he utters he is bastardizing whatever sanctity remains of the game.
His name is Keith Olbermann.
And that’s just the start. The NYDN unleashed this woman on Olbermann with the angle that Olbermann is such a hate monger at his day job at MSNBC that MLB, and the NFL if you consider his work on NBC for Football Night in America, should be ashamed to associate with him. And, to the point of the article, how dare they let Olbermann have a sports voice when Rush Limbaugh “can’t even buy his way into the NFL.”
Olbermann, thus far on his Twitter feed, has taken the high road. Here’s another gem from Cupp:
So let’s get this straight. Limbaugh is too conservative for football, evangelical minister the Rev. Franklin Graham is too Christian for the National Day of Prayer, and Islam is too touchy for “South Park.”Meantime, Olbermann’s misogyny, race-baiting and fear-mongering makes him a perfect voice for America’s national pastime?
Take me out to the ballgame…take me out with the crowd. Buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jacks…but you better make sure the person selling them to me doesn’t look like he’s from Mexico or I’m calling the cops.
So we’ll root, root, root for the home team…if they don’t win it’s a shame…but not as much of a shame as a former sportscaster having a blog on MLBlogs that anyone who wants to can create and write about baseball…
For it’s one, two, three strikes you’re out at the old…ball…game!
NCAAB: UK Basketball’s Poor Classroom Marks Mean … Wait, What Do They Mean Again?
The news popped up over the weekend that Kentucky men’s basketball put up a brick in the classroom during fall semester. The score? An overall GPA of 2.025.
The GPA of 2.025 is the lowest for the program since 2002. It was the worst of nine schools who released information to the Lexington Herald-Leader. It didn’t measure up to other college hoops blue bloods like Duke (3.01), Louisville (3.0) and Kansas (2.95).
This, of course, will bring the John Calipari bashers back out. On the surface, it’d be easy to speculate that such a large contingent of one-and-done players were responsible, but they can only be partially blamed. The Herald-Leader notes that two players had GPAs below 1.8 (1.667 and 1.765) and that players must have a 1.8 or better starting in their second year. (UK released only the individual averages, not the names of players who made the grades.) But it goes beyond those two unnamed players, according to UK senior associate athletic director Sandy Bell:
“It’s not the freshmen,” she said. “It’s not the seniors. It’s not any one group. It’s kind of across the board and for a lot of different reasons.”
On the positive side, GPAs were as high as 3.59. If you saw John Calipari interviewed about John Wall throughout the season, you probably heard him talking about the freshman point guard’s outstanding grades. But somewhere between Wall’s great year in the classroom and a few duds in the freshman class, you’re left with an overall GPA that’s pretty awful. So what does it mean?
Calipari reportedly graduated 19 of 22 players who played four seasons at Memphis. That’s a strong clip, particularly when you consider that many who left early probably did so to head to the NBA, earning more than 99 percent of college grads in their first job. This makes the GPA story a bit of a non-issue. Am I supposed to sit here and huff and puff that someone isn’t interested in a free education? Why bother? A lot of the players joining Calipari at Kentucky (and previously at Memphis) have a pro basketball career on the mind. They’re advancing toward what they believe is their future. I’m not saying I think it’s a good thing to be without fallback options, but unless those GPAs indicate players have somehow run afoul of the rules, why should we, as sports fans, even care whether they’re scoring a 2.0 or a 4.0? As DeMarcus Cousins said prior to the NCAA Tournament game against Cornell, “It’s not a spelling bee.“
Random Links

The dumbest tradition in sports — people wearing hideous hats to the Kentucky Derby — took place this past Saturday. Guysgirl.com has a thorough recap of the best and worst hats along with a look at celebrities who attended the event. Now, the reason I say this is the dumbest tradition in sports is simple: All the attractive celebrities wear those ugly hats with a conservative dress and it makes them look ordinary. Case in point: Marisa Miller. The event that should be covered more in-depthly is the gala that takes place the night before. That’s when the hot celebs, a la Maria Menounos look their best.
Speaking of Celebrities and Sporting Events
The A-listers (and some B-listers) also turned out for the Floyd Mayweather-Sugar Shane Mosley fight in Las Vegas Saturday night.
Who Knew This Was a Hazard of the Job?
First Round Fashion

ASternWarning.com has a round-up of the fashion trends that have dominated the NBA playoffs. The clear winner so far has been cardigans, which seem to be a favorite of Carmelo Anthony.
San Jose sees octopus, raises it with shark eating baby octopus?
the tradition of throwing things onto the ice at hockey games. Well, I don’t know if this will become a tradition, but the stakes have been raised by Sharks fans.
One More Fashion Item
Since fashion has been a big theme of this edition, I feel I should alert you to the brand-new U.S. Men’s National Team 2010 World Cup jersey. Playboy.com has the photos. The link is completely safe for work, but you may want to be careful if you plan on navigating other links on the site
Videos
During the Cavaliers’ 101-93 win against the Celtics Saturday night, point guard Mo Williams threw down a dunk. This left Cleveland coach Mike Brown at a loss for words. Literally.
Let’s see if I can explain this in a PG way without getting in trouble. Here goes… If you’re one of those guys who has trouble unhooking a female undergarment during intimate moments, the task has just got even more difficult thanks to this product.
NCAAB: NCAA Greenlights 68 Teams; What Will It Look Like?
If you missed the news Thursday afternoon, the NCAA board of directors approved NCAA Tournament expansion to 68 teams, a decision which brings me great joy. The one topic left to be figured out is how the NCAA will deploy those three additional opening round games. (I’ve always been one to call it the play-in game, but with four games now, at least they can pull off the illusion of saying it’s an opening round.)
It isn’t impossible that the NCAA will have another idea up its sleeve, but the two prevailing schools of thought go something like this: put the eight lowest-seeded teams in the play-in games or put the eight lowest-seeded at-large teams in games. That second scenario would generally feature teams around the Nos. 9-13 seed line.

As a mid-major alum, I can’t help but hate any scenario that puts the squeeze on the little guy in the NCAA Tournament. On the other hand, no No. 16 or 17 seed will put together a better resume than any No. 9/10/11/12/13, so I can’t see how its right to arbitrarily award them an easier road because they won a few games in March. My thoughts tend to line up with John Gasaway on this topic for many of the same reasons. We both agree that the likelihood of someone in that final at-large group winning a game is greater than a No. 16 or 17 seed. (Well, even if we didn’t agree, the numbers prove it because a No. 16 seed has never won an NCAA Tournament game, let alone made any meaningful run in the tournament.) I hate to say it, but I find my beliefs lining up with Jay Bilas, who often talks about getting the best teams into the field. Yes, a No. 12 vs. No. 13 is more compelling than a No. 16 vs. No. 17, but only marginally so. Is that bit of negligible Tuesday entertainment worth the imbalance created for the No. 4/5 seed that would get to play one of these teams?
More to the point, using the final eight at-larges could be incredibly problematic from a bracket perspective that might make it untenable to begin with. Look at the pool of teams who were the final at-larges this season and the range of seeds they encompassed: No. 12 UTEP, No. 12 Utah State, No. 11 Minnesota, No. 10 Missouri, No. 10 Georgia Tech, No. 10 Florida, No. 9 Florida State, No. 9 Louisville and No. 9 Wake Forest. If you put that range of teams, spanning four seed lines, into four games, where do you eventually seed them? Do you take a No. 9 like FSU, Louisville or Wake and downgrade them all the way to a No. 12 spot if you feed them into that line? While you could make the argument that a No. 5 seed gets an advantage by playing a “tired” team, that scenario would also present an argument that would really steam a lot of No. 5s for having to play a more difficult team that they would’ve otherwise.
Even if the NCAA goes with the more obvious and logical choice to feed the No. 16 vs. No. 17, there will be a scheduling matter to tackle. How committed is the NCAA to keeping its opening round games in Dayton? With the opening round winner traditionally playing a Friday game, the NCAA would face a scenario with none of its No. 1 seeds playing on Thursday. Would this also throw a wrench into how the NCAA gives favorable how venues for top seeds, forcing delays on venues about what days they’ll be hosting games? The simple answer would be to move the opening round games out of Dayton and to the cities where the teams would face No. 1 seeds, possibly playing at a smaller venue. Another venue could create a production nightmare for CBS/Turner, but would it be better than having a larger venue that is empty?
We won’t know the answer until this summer when the NCAA puts its head together to make a decision, but I imagine that unless there is a third option we aren’t thinking about, the only possible conclusion is featuring the No. 16/17 seeds in opening round games.
What is the Value of Value in Sports?
The news of Ryan Howard’s new contract could have been a blip on the radar of sports news, and for many people outside of baseball or outside of Philadelphia it was likely nothing more than that. But to someone like me, who likens himself as someone with a finger on the pulse of the Philadelphia sports world and, try-as-I-might, someone who keeps abreast of the goings on in baseball, this situation has been the most dominant and polarizing storyline I can ever remember on the Internet. That’s not an exaggeration either, Ryan Howard became the poster player for Stats vs. Eyes, taking a seat in baseball purgatory until 2016, with a club option for 2017.
And no, I’m not going to turn this into another long post about the contract extension that Howard received from the Phillies. It’s honestly not about that. It’s about the concept of value in sports. We linked to a post by Bill Baer at Crashburn Alley who adeptly assessed Howard’s performance on the field to project his level of play at the end of this contract extension and determined that, based on win above replacement, he’ll actually be costing the Phillies a significant amount of money, given the combination of his (projected) production and salary.

I thought about this for a long time. And while you can’t argue with Baer’s logic – the older a player gets, the less productive he is likely to become – he didn’t factor in the other value Howard provides for the team. He’s the mayor of Philadelphia at this point. He’s the city’s official sports ambassador, wearing a Phillies uniform. He’s not an Eagle or a Sixer or a Flyer. He’s a Phillie, and there’s value to that in the city. Howard will fill seats and sell jersey and, perhaps most importantly, keep people tuned in on the television and radio. The Phillies negotiated a deal they felt was fair, based on the value that Howard provides both on and off the field.
Value differs in different sports, too. Look at the NFL, where draft picks are treated like gold, but current players – especially those who command large salaries – are traded for virtually nothing. Santonio Holmes, transgressions included, was traded for a fifth round pick because that’s all he was worth to the rest of the league. The guy was a Super Bowl MVP and is in the prime of his career, but his off-the-field issues made him far less valuable to the Steelers organization. Dumping him, for whatever they could get, was worth more than letting him go for nothing, and clearly more valuable than keeping him.
Ben Roethlisberger, on the other hand, was reportedly being shopped for a top ten pick, despite the fact that his off-the-field value has to be lower at this point than anyone else in the league. Drew Brees, he is not. But Ben provides more value on the field than Holmes did, so the Steelers decided to put a higher premium on his services and keep him if their price wasn’t met.
When the Redskins traded away a second round pick for Donovan McNabb – that trade also comes with a mid-round pick next year based on McNabb’s success – they lost all leverage for a trade of their incumbent quarterback Jason Campbell. Campbell’s value was at it’s lowest, and the best they could do was a trade for a fourth-round pick in 2012. Speaking of fourth-round picks, the Cowboys traded their second round pick, 59th overall, to the rival Eagles for the 55th overall pick. The price? A fourth rounder. So, within the same division, theoretically, Jason Campbell is as valuable as moving up four spots in the draft…two years from now? The Cowboys drafted linebacker Sean Lee with the 55th pick, while the Eagles traded the 59th pick for a third and two fifths. Of course, they subsequently traded the third for more picks later in the draft. Clearly, they didn’t see the value in drafting anyone with those picks.
Obviously those are just a few of the many illustrations of value in football where potential – in the form of picks – is almost always more valuable than production. But nothing is as bad as the NBA, which trades in a currency we like to call the Expiring Contract. Jack Kogod shared the best example with me:
On February 19, 2008 Van Horn signed a three-year deal (only the first year guaranteed) with the Mavericks in order to help complete a blockbuster trade that sent Jason Kidd from the New Jersey Nets to the Mavericks and Devin Harris to the Nets. As expected, Van Horn didn’t play at all for the Nets and was waived on October 23rd, 2008.
The guy was traded and he wasn’t even playing anymore, which is just about as bad as a player who is added into a trade and immediately bought out so he can sit out 30 days and re-sign with the team that traded him. Zydrunas Ilgauskas…come on down!
Yes, in the NBA world, cap space to potentially sign players is more valuable than actually having players who will play for you. It’s a wonderful system, really.
And then, of course, there’s soccer, which has the most straight forward system of them all. Give us cash for our talent and you can have them.. The richest transfer in the history of the sport came when Real Madrid shipped more than 93 million euros to Manchester United for the rights to Cristiano Ronaldo. That’s before they paid him his annual salary, by the way. But clearly, Real Madrid felt that spending that much money on the rights to player would pay off in the form of championships…and financial gains. To have one of the best and most popular athletes in the world wear your jersey is a powerful pitch to potential jersey sponsors. Simply put, record transfers or not, they wouldn’t have made the deal if they thought they’d be losing money.
And that’s where I think things fall with the Phillies and Howard. They clearly feel he provides more than just the value on the field. So while his WARP3 may decline in the next five or six years, the team has to feel he provides a different kind of value that, perhaps, you can’t actually measure with advanced stats. David Montgomery, President and CEO of the Phillies, told 610WIP this week that, “The key for a player of Ryan’s stature is the length of the contract. This is a statement to our fans and everyone who follows us that you know who the first basemen is going to be for the next five, or hopefully six years.”
So to the team, stability is pretty valuable. There are many other examples in many other sports. Heck, it works in any kind of business. I got paid to write this post (I know, right, I’m stealing money with this gig, so don’t tell anyone) and the powers that be decided that I provide a certain value to their overall product. Much like the deal for Howard, my bosses determined what is a fair amount to pay me based on what the market dictates, what others before me have earned and balanced that with what they feel is an appropriate value for the amount of traffic my work garners. Much like Howard, it’s my job to deliver on their trust and produce to the level they expect. And no, I’m not making anywhere near $125 million bucks.
Please don’t think I’m saying that I’m the Ryan Howard of sports bloggers, although I do try to knock it out of the park every time I write (thank you, I’ll be here all week, don’t forget to tip your editors). And no, I don’t know my Value Over a Replacement Blogger (VORB). And yes, some of us are working on a way to actually calculate such things. It’ll revolutionize the way bloggers are hired, even if we acknowledge that there’s not always a scientific way to determine someone’s value.
Notre Dame’s Unspeakable, Terrible Music Video
For whatever unconscionable reason, and to whatever invidious end, Notre Dame has seen fit to loose the dogs of white rap upon the world to extol the wonders of Fighting Irish athletics. We are left wondering what we ever did to deserve such an abomination. I suppose one does not so endlessly mock Jimmy Clausen without repercussion.
Spencer Hall gives such a thorough and uproarious point-by-point breakdown of the video at Everyday Should Be Saturday, that we should all be shamed to even consider trying. It’s such an overflowing font of ridiculousness that the Insane Clown Posse will have to act fast to ensure that “Miracles” does not lose steam with the Internet snark factory. One message to the haters (some NSFW-ness at the link) is not enough!
MLB: Wagner, 38, plans to retire at season’s end
Billy Wagner will retire at the end of this season, the 38-year-old closer told Braves manager Bobby Cox on Friday.
Wagner, who is sixth all-time in saves with 387, wanted to reach 400 career saves and has it plainly in his sights. But with or without that mark, and whether he comes close to John Franco’s saves record for a lefthander at 424 , he’ll call it quits at the end of the 2010 season. He said he will not play out his $6.5 million option for next season, which automatically vests if he finishes 50 games.

He wants to spend more time with his family.
“I still like the competition, that’s why I do it,” said Wagner, who turns 39 on July 25. “I like going out and winning, that still drives me. But being home with them last year, I enjoyed it. There’s so much more to offer them at this age, and I need to be home.”
Wagner and his wife Sarah have three sons and a daughter: Will 11, Jeremy 9, Olivia 6, Cason 3. They live on a farm in Crozet, Virginia near Charlottesville. He got a chance to spend more time at home with them last season while he was rehabilitating from September 2008 elbow reconstruction surgery.
Wagner made his comeback with the Mets last year and was then was traded to the Red Sox for a playoff run. He thought about retiring at the end of last season but reconsidered. He was planning to pitch one more year, even as he signed a one year, $7 million contract with the Braves with an option for 2011.
“I told my kids I’d play one more year and that’s it, and the Braves just threw in the option,” Wagner said.
Wagner has only two saves in three opportunities this season. The Braves’ nine-game losing streak heading into the weekend series with the Astros has limited his opportunities. He’s optimistic the Braves team will turn things around, but becoming only the fifth reliever with 400 saves and trying to catch Franco provide him only targets, not determining factors anymore.
“I wanted a chance at 400, and that’s great,” Wagner said. “I didn’t want to have to chase everything. If it happens this year, great, if not, then so be it. Just try to make this one of those years to really enjoy and have a good time and maybe win a championship along the way. Plus Bobby, he’s always meant a lot to me, growing up. To play my final year and him being his final year – it was the right timing.”
Wagner said Cox told him he thought he had the stuff to continue playing a few more years. Wagner can still hit 97, 98 mph with his fastball.
“He’s had a great career,” Cox said. “Hopefully he can get a whole bunch of saves the rest of the way. I said ‘We’ll go out together, Billy.’”
Wagner earned his second save of the season Friday by preserving the Braves’ 4-2 win over the Astros. He faced just three batters in the ninth despite giving up a walk, by inducing a double play to end the game.
NBA: Oh my (Chris) Bosh: Unleashing a twitter frenzy
When you have 96,000-plus followers on Twitter . . . throwing out a provocative line or two is like tossing a lighted match on a pile of kindling.
On Friday afternoon, a prominent NBA player had a question for his group of followers.
“Been wanting to ask. Where should I go next season and why?
Why bother waiting until July 1? Silly, arbitrary date anyway. The author of the tweet happened to be the Raptors’ Chris Bosh, who will be one of the marquee free agents this summer.
Incredibly, Twitter did not collapse under the weight of frenzied responses to Bosh, seemingly dominated by tweeps from Houston and Chicago. And yes, a few Lakers fans.
Less than an hour later, Bosh spoke again:
“Ok … Let me rephrase the question. Should I stay or should I go?”
Never knew Bosh was a Clash fan.
The summer of 2010 has started. So what if it is a few weeks early?
NCAAF: New NCAA rule – two coaches per limousine, please
How many assistant football coaches does it take to meet with a high school guidance counselor?

That’s what the NCAA is trying to figure out. Thursday, the NCAA Legislative Council passed a rule that was first proposed in January to limit the number of assistant coaches a school can send to any one high school on any given day during the spring evaluation period.
Locally, this rule may go down as the “Tiger Prowl” rule, because it was Auburn’s coaching staff that took a not-uncommon practice of overwhelming the campus of five-star football prospects in numbers too big to ignore but throwing in the attention-getting twist of having those coaches arrive in a limousine.
Just this week, seven Georgia assistants showed up at Carver High in Columbus, Ga., on Monday, followed by six Auburn assistants on Tuesday, and four Florida State assistants on Wednesday.
They were not allowed any actual contact with recruits but were there, officially, to “evaluate” — look at transcripts, talk to coaches and teachers, and observe if prospects are participating in authorized high school activities.
As of Friday, in the future those visits will have to be limited to a maximum of two assistant coaches per school per day.
Oddly enough, the rule passed Thursday doesn’t make it illegal for coaches to show up in a bus or limousine. The “rationale” given by the NCAA for the rule did mention buses and limousines, but technically Auburn can continue to evaluate from the back seat of a stretch Hummer as long as only two assistants are doing the evaluating per school per day.
The bigger question is, why would a coaching staff even think to show up at the front door of a high school in a limo?
To get attention, of course; to send a subtle message to top recruits that this school and this staff does everything with style.
Style. Not substance.
Ironically, back when the old University of Miami program was under investigation by the NCAA for various rules violations in the 1980s, one of the accusations had to do with players traveling in limousines. Legend has it that crafty Miami defense attorneys representing “The U” actually got the NCAA to agree that limousine travel was just another form of public transportation.
But imagine what people would say if a Yellow Cab pulled up in front of Leeds High and six assistant coaches from Alabama got out. Or if a bus pulled up to the bus stop in front of Minor High and four assistants from Auburn all got off.
Those assistant coaches wouldn’t be bringing any less substance to the purpose of their visit. But they would certainly be arriving with a lot less style.
I’m told the rule was not actually aimed at Auburn. The legislation was sponsored by the Big East Conference in response to evaluation escapades in the great Northeast that a number of schools objected to.
But once again we’re reminded that the reason the NCAA rule book is — according to coaches — too thick and too hard to follow is because of the coaches’ own propensity to spend so much time trying to find loopholes in those rules.
Six coaches to meet with a high school guidance counselor? That sounds like too many men with too much time on their hands, if you ask me.
If coaches aren’t careful, they might just convince the NCAA that there isn’t really a need for a spring evaluation at all.
Boxing: Mayweather-Mosley is the true superfight
Let’s get this out of the way first: ”Who R U Pickin” is a ridiculous name for Saturday night’s 147-pound showdown between former pound-for-pound king and hall-of-fame trash talker Floyd Mayweather and ageless, relentless welterweight legend Shane Mosley.
I mean, I get it. It’s a bout between two champions with impeccable credentials, one matchup that’s bound to elicit discussion, speculation and predictions from boxing fans everywhere, but it doesn’t capture what’s really at stake here.
If the folks at Golden Boy were that hard up for titles they should have just called me and I would have provided several options…for a small freelance fee (hey, the write game is a business just like the fight game).
Why not call it “Legends Collide” or “At Last” or ” Legacy”?
What’s wrong with “Pound for Pound,” or ” Who’s the Man?” or “Finally”?
Nothing.
But for one reason or another a spectacular matchup is saddled with a pedestrian title.
So who am I picking?
More on that later, but first let’s understand that Mayweather-Mosely is 2010′s superfight.
I know there still exist plenty of conspiracy theorist who still believe the whole Clottey-Pacquiao-Mayweather-Mosley series is really a glorified publicity tour designed to build interest in a Pacquaio-Mayweather/Mosley megafight later this year.
Problem with that theory is that these pesky facts keep undermining it.
It’s a fact, for example, that Manny Pacquiao isn’t interested in the USADA drug testing Mayweather and Mosley underwent on the way to this bout. So if Mayweather defeats Mosley, the disagreement over drug testing that derailed Mayweather and Pacquiao in December would once again stand in their way.
It’s also a fact that Mayweather has a rematch clause in his contract with Mosley. So if Mosley wins — and he has a chance, even at 38 — he and Mayweather will dance once more, a project that will tie both of them down until early 2011, leaving Pacquiao without a partner.
And finally it’s a fact that this bout is a stand-alone superfight, one that deserves headlines and will generate huge pay-per-view numbers even without the prospect of the winner facing Pacquiao. This is a fight hardcore boxing fans have visualized since before Pacquiao even won his first belt. And while it may only have come together because Mayweather-Pacquiao fell apart, this bout is much more than a consolation prize.
It’s a fight between Mayweather, an undefeated welterweight who claims he’s better than Ali and Sugar Ray Robinson and Mosley, the resurgent veteran who when speaking to “Fighting Words” in January made a logical case for why the road to the pound-for-pound crown goes through him.
In short, it’s the highest revenue, highest stakes and highest skill level fight we’re likely to see in a while, so we need to savour it.
So who am I picking?
It’s tough
Mosley’s 38, but as Chi Ali pointed out years ago — age ain’t nothin’ but a number.
Sugar Shane looked young and hungry in dismantling Antonio Margarito 15 months ago, and I’ve always thought that he, more than any other fighter, possessed the skill set to cause Mayweather big problems: long arms and a strong jab, an uncanny blend of speed and strength, and concussive punching power.
The problem for Mosley is that Mayweather is not Margarito.
We all know that styles make fights and that while Mosley looked spectacular against Margarito, a straight-forward slugger who showed little interest in defending himself, he has struggled against skilled boxers.
While we’re discussing facts, the fact is that Mosley has been outboxed not only by Winky Wright, which is understandable, but by Miguel Cotto, which was damn near unforeseeable.
So when I look at this fight I have to wonder how Mosley will deal with the smartest fighter of a generation, a guy with just as much speed as Mosley but with better footwork and defense, the skills to fight inside (ask Ricky Hatton) and the smarts to solve any fighter set in front of him.
A lot of observers point out that Mayweather has never faced an opponent with Mosley’s skills, strength and experience, and that’s true.
But neither has Mosley faced a fighter as savvy, as smart, and as surprisingly strong as Mayweather is.
We’ve seen how well Mayweather adjusts to bigger, stronger opponents — witness the boxing lesson he administered to Oscar De La Hoya at junior welterweight in 2007.
But we’ve also seen how poorly Mosley adjusts to top flight fighters who commit to matching wits with him. Cotto is a fine and surprisingly versatile fighter but as a ring technician he’s no Floyd Mayweather, and if he could befuddle Mosley with a jab and a little movement you really have to question how Mosley will deal with Mayweather’s impressive array of skills.
So who am I picking?
I like Mosley’s chances. He’s one of the few fighters alive who can match Mayweather’s speed, but he also has a good enough jab to keep Mayweather distracted and the power to flatten anyone in the division. If anyone can beat Mayweather, it’s Mosley.
I just don’t think he’ll do it.
Mayweather is just that skilled and that smart. He’ll move without running, stick Mosley with his own jab and slow him down with body shots. He’ll fight on the inside just enough to keep Mosley honest, but over the course of 12 the defense, ring generalship and savvy will prove to be a little more than Mosley can handle.
So who I am picking is Mayweather by fairly close decision.
NCAAB: Recruiting: Portland’s Jones, Ross make it a big day for Washington
The final holdout amongst top 25 seniors finally made a decision Friday afternoon when Terrence Jones picked the University of Washington during a press conference held at Jefferson High School (Portland, Ore.).
As a senior, Jones poured in over 32 points per game and grabbed 13 rebounds for the Democrats to earn second team All-American honors from MaxPreps. He is ranked No. 6 among all senior prospects.
The highly-coveted Rose City star appeared to be making the decision on the fly.
“I guess now I will be picking one. No one knows because I haven’t made a decision yet,” Jones said before reaching for a black and purple Washington hat.
The 6-foot-9, 210-pound hybrid forward compiled one of the more impressive prep resumes in Oregon history, winning three state titles with the Democrats and earning 5A Player of the Year honors as a junior and senior.
Jones picked the Huskies over Kansas, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Oregon and UCLA. He managed to keep the media and fans in the dark about his decision to the final minute, helping build an audience of over 25,000 viewers to watch the announcement live on The Oregonian’s news site, oregonlive.com.
Jones was joined by teammates Terrence Ross, who also announced his intentions to attend Washington after days of speculation, Antoine Hosley (still deciding between California State-Bakersfield and Gardner-Webb) and Stephen Madison (signed with Idaho).
Ross played at Jefferson as a sophomore – teaming with Jones to win a state title – before transferring to Montrose Christian in Maryland. He returned to Jefferson mid-season as a senior but was denied an opportunity to rejoin the basketball team due to transfer rules. He is regarded as the No. 65 senior prospect by MaxPreps.

Madison, a versatile 6-6 wing/forward-type, posted over 18 points per game as a senior after joining the Demos from Prairie (Brush Prairie, Wash.).
Hosley and Jones were the mainstays for the only team in state history to capture three-straight state titles at the large-school (6A, 5A) level in Oregon.
MLB: Fallout from immigration law tars Arizona Diamondbacks
The Arizona Diamondbacks are like one of those fans in the lower deck at Chase Field who gets struck by a foul ball during a game. They didn’t see it coming.
Today at Chicago’s Wrigley Field and in just about every city the team visits, there is expected to be a protest outside the stadium against Arizona’s new immigration-enforcement law, Senate Bill 1070.
One of the people organizing and encouraging such protests is Tony Herrera, the Arizona representative for a national movement (it has a Facebook page) called “Boycott Arizona 2010.”
“This team is an ambassador for Arizona,” Herrera told me. “And the owner, Mr. (Ken) Kendrick, is a big supporter of Republican politics. This new law was a Republican bill. Until the law is changed, there should be protests.”
The Diamondbacks appear to have been caught off guard by such comments, even though it is well known that Managing General Partner Ken Kendrick and his family are major contributors to the Republican Party.
The team’s vice president for communications, Shaun Rachau, told me that the organization doesn’t believe that targeting the team is fair. He forwarded me the following statement:
“Although D-backs’ Managing General Partner Ken Kendrick has donated to Republican political candidates in the past, the organization has communicated to Boycott Arizona 2010 leader Tony Herrera that Kendrick personally opposes (Senate) Bill 1070. The team also explained that Kendrick is one of nearly 75 owners of the D-backs and none of his, nor do the other owners’, personal contributions reflect organizational preferences. The D-backs have never supported (Senate) Bill 1070, nor has the team ever taken a political stance or position on any legislation.”
To which you might ask, why not?
As one Internet blogger noted, “If the owners of the Diamondbacks want to underwrite an ugly edge of bigotry, we should raise our collective sporting fists against them. A boycott is also an expression of solidarity with Diamondback players such as Juan Gutierrez, Gerardo Parra, and Rodrigo Lopez. They shouldn’t be put in a position where they’re cheered on the playing field and then asked for their papers when the uniform comes off.”
Latino players make up a significant part of just about every major-league roster. Likewise, there are many, many Latino baseball fans.
Exactly how WOULD the team, the fans and the players react if a baseball star happened to be singled out and asked to produce his “papers” while in Arizona?
“There’s a protest we’re expecting outside of Wrigley,” the D-Backs’ Rachau said. “We’re unique in that we’re an Arizona company that travels around the country and plays baseball games. So any time we come to a large market the people in that city can put their focus on us. I understand that they’re not pointing at the team but saying that you represent Arizona.”
For Herrera, it’s a little more than that.
“The fact that Kendrick has supported the Republican agenda is significant to us,” he said. “We’re getting a lot of response from across the country. We’re asking for a meeting (with the team) on May 7 with people who are flying in from across the country. We want to talk to the team, but, you know, they do represent Arizona.” 
We all feel bad for the fan who gets beaned by a foul ball. Like that fan, the Diamondbacks didn’t think they were in the game.
But they were spectators in the stadium, like every other business in Arizona. At Chase Field, there are dozens of signs warning fans to look out for “flying objects” from the field.
If the team had been paying attention, it would have seen this ball coming.
The outrage over Arizona’s new immigration law has led to demonstrations and boycotts throughout the country, and today those opposed to the law will gather at Wrigley Field.
As of Thursday morning, 790 people said they planned to attend a protest outside of Wrigley Field as the Chicago Cubs take on the Arizona Diamondbacks Thursday afternoon, according to a Facebook event page for the protest.
“We are going to give the Arizona Diamondbacks a message to send back home,” the event’s organizers wrote on the page.
The demonstrators plan on bringing posters and marching, as well as handing out fliers to baseball fans that detail their opposition to the new law, according to the page. The group also asks anyone attending the game to wave posters condemning the law.
NCAAB; Report: NCAA Found Violations at UConn
The Wall Street Journal released a lengthy story Wednesday that indicates the following:
**A source told the paper that NCAA investigators have found violations at the school
**An NCAA report will be issued “in the near future”
**Head coach Jim Calhoun has yet to sign his contract extension
A year ago, Yahoo! Sports chronicled NCAA violations which occurred during UConn’s pursuit of recruit Nate Miles.
The Tampa Tribune later reported that Josh Nochimson, a former UConn student manager who became a sports agent, paid several thousand dollars for Miles to have surgery in December 2007.
“Could I have made a mistake? Sure.” Calhoun told Yahoo! Sports during the 2009 NCAA tournament. “The [rules] manual is 508 pages. Someone could’ve made a mistake.”
The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that the NCAA has told UConn that an investigation into the men’s basketball program uncovered rules violations and a report will soon be released.
The paper also said coach Jim Calhoun’s contract extension has not been signed and quoted a lawyer who suggested UConn would be wise to wait until the NCAA report before announcing the new deal. If the school announced the signing, the lawyer said, it might appear that UConn has decided how it thinks the case is going to turn out.
Calhoun told the Journal that the sides are “signatures away” from completing a four-year contract after an issue involving his role at the school upon retirement was recently resolved.
A UConn source also said Calhoun’s new contract will be signed soon and that the sides are still discussing some fine points, including Calhoun’s retirement package. The sides are also discussing Calhoun’s role in choosing his successor, although the source told The Courant that issue won’t be a sticking point.
Calhoun, who will turn 68 in May, is in the final year of a $9.1 million, six-year contract that expires June 30. Throughout this past season, Calhoun said the extension was close to completion and he did not plan to retire.
Last month, Calhoun issued a statement reiterating his intention to coach. A few days later, Calhoun told Courant columnist Jeff Jacobs that recruits were being misled about his future so he repeated that he was returning.
The Journal quotes the mother of Baltimore guard Josh Selby as saying there was concern about Calhoun’s future. Selby, a top-rated point guard, chose Kansas.
“In Josh’s mind, that was a concern — just how long [Calhoun is] going to be there,” Maishon Witherspoon said. 
But Calhoun said in the story that Selby never asked about the coach’s future during his recruitment. A school source said Selby’s mother seemed to have more interest in UConn than Selby showed during the recruiting process.
• Last Stand For UConn’s Jim Calhoun? [Wall Street Journal]
Calhoun has said other recruits inquired about his future, although players have told The Courant that the coach’s status had no bearing on their decision-making. Forward Roscoe Smith of Oak Hill Academy in Virginia told The Courant that he discussed Calhoun’s future with the coach before signing with UConn.
“When I talked to Coach Calhoun, he [already] had given me his word he wasn’t retiring,” Smith said. “Not just me, but any top national recruit will always worry about the coach because you’re putting your career and future in the hands of the coach. I had my doubts, but I just stayed positive with the whole situation and I trusted Coach Calhoun.”
NCAAB; Recruiting: CJ Leslie to NC State

Power forward Raleigh, North Carolina Word Of God Christian Academy AAU: Carolina Cobras South Ht:6'7" Wt:205 lbs Class:2010 (High School)
“I’m going to N.C. State,” Leslie, the No. 4 power forward in the Class of 2010, told NewsObserver.com. “It is a great school and we can be good there. And obviously, Coach [Sidney] Lowe is a great coach.”
Leslie visited UConn this past weekend and also considered Kentucky, where close friend Brandon Knight has committed.
“It was really up for grabs,” he told NewsObserver.com. “It was really close with the other two schools.”
Lisa Leslie, C.J.’s mother, previously aid her son has great respect for Lowe.
“He’s looking at N.C. State because he’s known Sidney Lowe for four or five years,” Lisa said previously. “He has a good relationship with him. I would say they are pretty high on the list.”
Review: Run Ricky Run

After something of a 30 for 30 hangover — taking a week off and skipping Silly Little Game after watching No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson — I was excited to jump back into the series with Run Ricky Run. Unlike a lot of these films, I’m able to really remember a lot of this news. So many of the events in the 30 for 30 predates my cognitive sports phase of life. While I’d had the screener DVD for a while, I didn’t actually watch it until it ran live on Tuesday night, but many of my media cohorts had already viewed the film and the reviews were pretty glowing. People were fawning over how it would completely shatter the way you looked at Williams. Was that the case when you actually watched it?
For me, the answer is no, with one major exception. It’s impossible to ignore the previously unreported (by the media) sexual abuse Williams endured at a young age. The story goes that when Williams was a 6-year-old boy, his father had him taking inappropriate pictures of him with a Polaroid camera. That incident shattered his home life and certainly changed the type of person Williams would grow up to be.
In a way, it’s tough to view the things Williams has done and not view them with that in mind — that Ricky was once a 6-year-old boy who went through something that would really mess someone up or leave them searching for some deeper answers in life.
So with that point allowed, did anything outside of that really blow up your previous perceptions about Williams? If they did, I’d be curious to hear what you thought of him before. I suppose if you thought Williams dropped his helmet and immediately went into a multi-year pot smoking free-for-all (looking at you, collected Around The Horn panelists), then yes, this probably changed your perception. But to anyone actually following his story over the last few years, it’s clear there’s always been a lot more than just that. Whether it was mental health or the search for enlightenment, it was never just about pot.
I don’t say any of that to say the film was bad or uninteresting, but perhaps the collective praise I heard coming into the thing skewed my expectations. The most revelatory thing to me is that the people closest to Williams barely understand him, so how could we ever really expect to know him based on the little sliver of public persona we consume? I imagine that’s true of a lot of athletes and not just Williams.
NCAAF: What’s Your Deal? For Stanford, a Wry, USC-Poking Ticket Promotion
Last fall, Stanford whipped USC, 55-21, a result shocking enough before you remember that Stanford maybe ran up the score a bit, and maybe made Pete Carroll a little mad. His “What’s your deal?” exchange with Jim Harbaugh made the rounds after that game, and amused those in the college football flock who found Carroll having to ask other coaches about running up the score rather beautifully ironic. 
This spring, Stanford’s turning the exchange into a promotion.
It’s genius, really: Stanford’s selling tickets to a group of games that includes the Cardinal’s home date against USC by marketing that phrase. That’s all. It’s a pun on deal and a nyah-nyah-we-won-last-year gesture, an atypical bit of gloating from a program that hasn’t been able to do a ton in recent years. But with Harbaugh at the helm, Stanford has been good enough to do a little bragging, and has an outside chance at a Pac-10 title this year, should Andrew Luck become the superb quarterback many suspect he can be.
The only reason to be at all miffed by this is because deference to Carroll apparently would have derailed the plan.
I’m told that Harbaugh thought about the “What’s your deal?” idea for several days and, along with a few department staffers, decided that it wasn’t in poor taste because Carroll has moved on to the Seahawks.Were Carroll still at USC, there’s no way Stanford would be doing this.
Stanford being scared about irritating an opposing coach is a tip-off that the Cardinal are new at this. For what it’s worth, our resident Stanford fan, The Baseline’s Eric Freeman, thinks it would have been funnier if Carroll were still in Los Angeles, and I agree.
But getting the wry joke in at USC’s expense is still fun. And lest we forget, USC’s now coached by Lane Kiffin; I’m sure if Stanford wins again, there will be a biting joke to be made in the aftermath of this year’s matchup.
NCAAF: NCAA’s New President A Playoff Sort Of Guy; Will It Matter?
So the NCAA’s new president isn’t Michael Adams, which is displeasing to Georgia fans but should get a thumbs up from everyone else. The new guy is Washington president Mark Emmert, and he’s going to get right on something or another right away:
“We want to continue the reforms that Myles and his colleagues got started,” Emmert said. “I do not have specific academic reform I’ll be championing in the next 30 days. … I don’t foresee revolutionary change in academic … it’s an evolution (from) where we are now.”
(Questionable ellipses in original. Academic what? Don’t know.) All right, then. Nothing on the docket.
With nothing about to explode, the inevitable first question: what about a college football playoff? Before he was selected, Emmert gave a quote that’s been cited allover the Internet today:
“I happen to be one,” insists University of Washington president Mark Emmert, “that thinks it’s inevitable we’ll have a playoff.”
Excitement! Cynical gremlin on your shoulder reminding you that opinions can change rapidly in these situations!
Point Gremlin. Emmert yesterday:
“We’ll join in those conversations [about a playoff],” he said. “I do not expect the NCAA to lead in that charge.”
Same as it ever was. Just like the barely (and possibly temporarily) averted move to 96 teams in the basketball tournament, the NCAA follows the lead of the people with the sponsorship dollars. When the possibility of delirious amounts of money overwhelms the entrenched interests currently offering up millions, then we’ll see a playoff broached and, eventually, implemented. It just takes one network making a preposterous offer.
There is one thing in the Emmert file that should encourage, though. In that same article cited above he dismisses “illusory arguments” like missed class time against a playoff. No more “think of the children” from the NCAA when the hockey schedule stretches from October to April and dozens of sports with zero pro potential have schedules far more demanding than the moneymaker. Heck, I-AA schools play up to 16 games.
Anyone who could cite class time as a reason not to have a college football playoff is an empty suit more concerned with maintaining the status quo than anything else. Emmert’s not that. Once that red herring is disposed of, a discussion of the relative merits of a playoff can be had. So at least there’s that.
NCAAB: Recruiting: Kadeem Jack to Prep School

Power forward New York, New York Rice AAU: New York Gauchos Ht:6'8" Wt:210 lbs Class:2010 (High School)
Kadeem Jack was set to announce his college choice Wednesday on SNY.tv, but instead appears headed to prep school, possibly South Kent (Conn).
“Kadeem said that he is not making any commitments to college. He is considering prep school,” Rice High School coach Maurice Hicks wrote in a text.
The 6-foot-9 Jack is considering UConn, Arizona, Arkansas, St. John’s and Miami. Instead, it appears he will spend a year prepping in order to mature physically and basketball-wise.
“I’ve reached out to the family and obviously I would love to have Kadeem at South Kent if that’s something he feels he would like to do,” South Kent coach Kelvin Jefferson said by phone.
South Kent has become a second home to many New York-area players, including Kevin Parrom (Arizona), Omari Lawrence (St. John’s), Louisville commit Russell Smith and Pittsburgh commit J.J. Moore.
Jack put up 21 points and 8 rebounds for the City Team in a 137-133 loss to the Suburban Team in the Jordan Brand Regional Game April 17 at MSG.
Jefferson said Paterson Catholic junior forward Derrick Randall was also headed to South Kent. The 6-8 junior is too old to play high school ball in New Jersey next season and Paterson Catholic recently announced it is closing in June.
Milwaukee Bucks’ Bango Continues to Laugh in the Face of Danger, Injury
After last year’s embarrassing incident during the NBA All-Star Game, where the Bucks’ mascot tore an ACL when he caught his leg falling through the rim, one might excuse Bango for dialing down some of the more dangerous antics used to please the crowd. Of course, we don’t even know if it’s the same guy in the costume, so perhaps those concerns don’t even enter into the equation.
Either way, same guy or not, the feats of mascot daredevilry have continued. During Game 4 of the Bucks-Hawks series Monday night, Bango pulled a reverse flip from the top step of a 16-foot-ladder into a dunk. And while there’s quite a bit of padding for him to land on, he also could have planted himself on the basket again, which would be most painful, even to someone inside a mascot costume. Thanks for the show Bango, but you take care out there. If you hurt yourself, who will go around Milwaukee randomly assaulting people in Al Horford jerseys?
Random Links

For those of you not on Twitter, or for those on Twitter but not following Chad Ochocinco, let me tell you something; he tweets A LOT. And because of that, a lot of gems get lost in the shuffle, so I’m here to give you the highlights from the past couple of days. He’s revealed what he needs from a woman; he’s invited all his followers to breakfast and offered to treat whoever showed up; he’s partially given out his phone number; told a story about how the cleaning lady at his hotel walked in on him while he was naked, and expressed his amazement at Ciara‘s dancing in this video. And that’s just in two days!
Speaking of Outspoken Football Players
Detroit Lions linebacker Zack Follett doesn’t have the track record of Chad Ochocinco, but based on this video, in which he buys a feminine hygiene product and Band-Aids for his opponents (while wearing his Lions helmet in the drugstore), he seems to be just as much of a character.
Soccer Shockers
What’s worse: this collision or this missed goal?
Let the Major League Comparison Begin
Via this story from Tauntr.com comes word that Brewers catcher Gregg Zaun could not throw the ball back to the pitcher last night.
Videos
You have to read this story first. Then watch the video below
It’s one thing if President Obama and Baba Booey have bad first pitches. But you’d expect a little more from a professional hockey player. That wasn’t the case for the Sharks’ Dany Heatleyat last night’s Giants game
NCAAB; Recruiting: Carson’s College Plan Coming Together

Point guard Mesa, Arizona Mesa AAU: Compton Magic Ht:5'10" Wt:170 lbs GPA:2.9 Class:2011 (High School)
LONG BEACH, Calif. - Jahii Carson de-committed from Oregon State earlier this month in part because he wanted to see which other schools would get involved and in only a few weeks things have taken off for the Mesa, Ariz., point guard.
It’s going just as Carson planned.
California, UNLV, Arizona, Oklahoma and Butler are some of the new programs involved with Carson, who finished with 16 points and at least eight assists in Compton Magic’s win against Organized Chaos Saturday at the Pangos Sweet 16.
Corona (Calif.) Centennial guard Mike Caffey had 18 points and Gabe York, a 2012 standout from Orange (Calif.) Lutheran, added 12 points. Memphis, Marquette, Arizona State and Washington have reached out to Carson as well.
“After de-committing, I was hoping Pac-10 and Big East schools would start to come, up-tempo schools, and what I thought was going to happen is happening,” said Carson, who plans to visit Arizona in early May.
“I started getting contact from schools that I wanted and the schools I was looking at but I still like Oregon State so I’m still trying to keep all the schools in the loop. I just want to keep my options open going into the spring and summer. I want to keep all my options open. I don’t want to give any school an edge over any other school.”
Despite backing away from his Oregon State pledge, Carson said the Beavers are still being considered especially since he has such a strong relationship with assistant coach David Grace.
“They’re still really in it,” Carson said. “They come see me whenever they can. Coach Grace still calls (Compton Magic coach) Etop (Udo-Ema) and I talk to him pretty much every day. I love him. He’s kind of like an uncle. He wants me for more than just basketball. He wants to help me become a young man.”
NCAAB: A Contrast in Coaching Searches: Oregon vs. Creighton
Oregon can’t claim the most protracted college hoops coaching search this offseason — that honor goes to UNC-Wilmington, which took nearly three months to hire Buzz Peterson. No, the Oregon search was just over one month, but the way it unfolded, it felt like the job had been open for years. Oregon has reportedly landed its next coach – Creighton’s Dana Altman – after being rejected by numerous other big names.

Altman is a fine college coach and had a great run with the Bluejays, going 327-176 in 16 seasons. He might not be “splash” that the Swoosh hoped for, but they could’ve done worse. So while Altman hasn’t even been introducedyet at Oregon, there are already reports that the Bluejays are on to their next coach: Iowa State’s Greg McDermott. Details via KCCI:
According to Action 3 News in Omaha, Greg McDermott has accepted the head coaching job at Creighton. The deal is reportedly worth $10 million over 9 years.
The transition from Northern Iowa, where McDermott went 90-63 with three NCAA Tournament appearances, to Iowa State has been less than smooth. McDermott hasn’t posted more than 15 wins in any season and the Cyclones have been near the bottom of the Big 12 the whole time. Perhaps even worse is the fact that he wasn’t able to make it work with Wesley Johnson, who went on to star at Syracuse, and Craig Brackins, who is also considered an NBA talent. Still, McDermott has ties to the region and a track record of success in the Valley. It’s a hire that makes sense if it indeed goes through.
The point being this: Creighton appears to have done everything Oregon failed to do. It identified a logical, attainable candidate and then went out and hired him. The Ducks spent their 41-day hunt like a hungry person who’d wandered into a grocery store with a lot of money and no list of what they wanted or needed. If Creighton goes on to seal the deal — and it could happen as soon as Tuesday, according to this report — they did an admirable job in creating a smooth coaching transition.
WTF: Mike Bacsik

Hidden Racist?
For those that don’t know who Mike Bacsik is, he’s a former Major League Baseball pitcher and the son of Michael James Bacsik, who was also a pitcher in the majors. He’s most famous though for giving up Barry Bonds 756th career home run, which broke the all-time record formerly held by Hank Aaron.
Bacsik currently is the producer on The Ticket 1310 in Dallas for Norm Hitzges and performs other fill-in duties however he allowed his hidden racism spill out onto Twitter after the Dallas Mavericks loss to the San Antonio Spurs in game 4, with his above tweet. Shortly thereafter he deleted his comment, hoping it would forever cease to exist and followed it up with a back handed apology.
Mike Bacsik’s tweet is probably a very accurate representation of how he really feels about certain races when he out of public’s eye, if not where does these feelings come from then?
Random Links

Among the many, many things said over the weekend about the NFL draft, this quote from Detroit Lions coach Jim Schwartz stands above the rest. “Some people watch adult videos on their computer. I go to YouTube and watch Jahvid Best highlight clips. That’s what gets me aroused.” There’s so much to analyze about Schwartz’s statement but I don’t think I can do it on SI.com without getting in trouble. I’ll just make one statement that hopefully someone can relay to Coach Schwartz. There’s no need to get stuck on extremes. It doesn’t have to be adult videos or Jahvid Best highlight clips. There are things like new Kristin Cavallari pics out there, as well.
No Need For a Dentist
Washington Capitals forward Eric Belanger had a tooth knocked loose after taking a high stick last Friday. So he did the natural thing and ripped the chopper out himself
Not Nice, LeBron
LeBron James tore up Chicago for a triple-double yesterday (37 points, 12 rebounds, 11 assists). But he wasn’t satisfied with just embarrassing the Bulls players. He also did this to one of the towel/equipment guys.
Of Course He Did Something Stupid

Matt Millen found himself in hot water over the weekend when he called Ron Jaworski a “polack” during ESPN’s draft coverage Saturday. He then made an absurd on-air apology, which has resulted in this great video by Tirico Suave.
Draft 2010 of the NFL; NFL Draft in Prime Time: Ratings up 30 Percent
The call has come and smile can not hide. Sam Bradford is officially the first pick in the 2010 NFL Draft.
Bradford gets the opportunity to earn a title immediately after his release Rams Marc Bulger few weeks ago.
Edition 75 of the Draft has started and the cameras are focused on Sam Bradford, who won the Heisman in 2009, an Oklahoma quarterback who is projected by many to go with the first selection.
Bradford became the first quarterback taken by St. Louis in a first round pick.
The shift is from Detroit.
Ndamukong Suh, Nebraska defensive tackle is the choice number two in the 2010 NFL Draft.
Suh won the award as the best defense in college, as well as the athlete of the year trophy in the United States.
With this choice, Detroit now has an excellent defensive lineman to line up with Kyle Vanden Bosch, his recent signing in free agency.
In addition, Suh and Vanden Bosch will automatically improve considerably one of the weakest points of a team in constant reconstruction.

Time is now for Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
The Bucs also were inclined to reinforce the defensive, taking in taking Gerald McCoy, a defensive tackle who has a lot of versatility, both defending the run, as penetrating the backfield to create chaos.
McCoy is visibly moved and tears did not wait, then that is destined to win the title inmedaita nearly so.
Roger Goodell, NFL commissioner, takes a huge hug from McCoy.
Time the Washington Redskins.
The call came and Trent Williams, who has raised the horn, left tackle from Oklahoma, who will be responsible for taking care of the Donovan McNabb’s blind side.
Rounding out the great day for the Sooners, Oklahoma has given its third listing in the first four selections.
Williams is a tremendous player with the versatility to play any line position that perfectly matches the zone blocking scheme that Mike Shanahan is expected to prevail in Washington.
Time is for Kansas City.
The first of the surprises, it was expected that the Heads Select to Russell Okung, offensive tackle, is Eric Berry, Tennessee Quie deep smiles in the room prospects.

Berry, excellent to make plays on the ball, maintaining the recent tradition of Kansas City defensive players taken in the first round.
Berry is an athletic player who automatically becomes the leader of a young defensive secondary. Berry is compared in their game with Ed Reed.
Seattle Time and his new coach, Pete Carroll.
Faced with the possible withdrawal of Walter Jones, Russell Okung, Oklahoma State left tackle is the selection of the Seattle Seahawks.
Okung will anchor an offensive line full of veterans and has struggled with injuries in recent seasons.
Cleveland, with the sixth pick, and without many needs that have been filled in free agency took Joe Haden, Florida cornerback.
Haden, who was not projected to be taken among the top 15 selections, surprised, after having a mediocre Combine.
With this selection, Mike Holmgren, president of Cleveland, show that is willing to risk his first draft in front of the Browns.
Raiders is to make your selection.
Oakland has made a wise decision to take Rolando McClain, an inside linebacker from Alabama.
After having a linebacking corps in decline and lack of speed, McClain heralds a new era with McClain.
Buffalo soon make his choice and took CJ Spiller, the best runner of his generation. Spiller reaches a crowded backfield with the presence of Fred Jackson and Marshawn Lynch.
The Jacksonville Jaguars defense held the trend shown by the draft so far, taking defensive tackle Tyson Alualu, California.
Jacksonville, known for his physical play has taken a huge player in the middle of the line that could bring them back into the limelight, after battling to contain the race the last two seasons.
San Francisco changed positions with Denver, and also sent his third-round pick.
The 49ers are on the clock and have decided to anchor their offensive line with Anthony Davis, the second time in three years that San Francisco making a tackle in the first round, joining Joe Staley.
Davis is scheduled to play on the right side of the line and could be instrumental in the running game in San Francisco.
Another change.
San Diego climbed 16 positions to change over Miami in the first round.
San Diego Chargers had an urgency to fill out LaDainian Tomlinson’s and have done with Ryan Mathews, Fresno State running back.
Obviously, San Diego had the need to secure a corridor and showed the change to anticipate so much for the second runner in the draft.
The Denver Broncos have re-engage in a change, to exchange positions with the Philadelphia Eagles.
With just as stellar lineman Trent Cole, the Eagles had the need to get a player who can pressure the quarterback and they got their man in Brandon Graham, Michigan defensive end.
Graham was a coveted player, leading Philadelphia to buy poara change.
The Seattle Seahawks are with their second pick of the first round.
The coach Pete Carroll has taken the 14th overall selection to Earl Thomas, Texas defensive secondary.
Thomas is a versatile player that will surely be used as a cornerback in the NFL because of his size.
It is an athletic player, aggressive and with great ability to follow the ball, a defensive anchor in Seattle.
New York Giants are about to announce his selection.
Jason Pierre-Paul, defensive end from the University of South Florida is the newest member of the New York Giants.
Compared with Jevon Kearse, Paul comes to a talented defensive line copada with Justin Tuck and Osi Umenyora. A guy can get coverage and pressuring the quarterback, is a defensive end will bring a lot in Tom Coughlin’s defense.
It’s Time for the Tennessee Titans.
The Titans are looking to supply the output of Kyle Vanden Bosch with Derrick Morgan, a player who slipped on the board, after having been projected to go in the first 10 of this draft.
Morgan specializes in going after the quarterback and will be of much help in a defense that struggled in that area in 2009.
San Francisco took the best guard available in the current draft Mike Iupati taking.
With the selection of Iupati, the focus of coach Mike Singletary is to harness the depth of the current generation on the offensive line, being the second choice in that position in the draft.
Time for Pittsburgh.
The Pittsburgh Steelers took a player who had observed consistently in central Florida, Maurkice Pouncey.
Pouncey, barely 20, is a physical player who fits perfectly into the style of play of the Steelers and is expected to address some of the problems he had Pittsburgh in that department.
Atlanta did not take long in deciding on Sean Weatherspoon, a linebacker from Missouri.
The Falcons battled their linebacking corps, perhaps the weakest position of all and the selection of Weatherspoon, automatically improved considerably.
The Houston Texans are now seeking their piece of his first trip to the playoffs.
Houston has taken Kareem Jackson, cornerback national champions, Alabama.
Jackson is a player with excellent technique, physical and knows how to tackle. It is a cornerback who covers well, but doubtful about the situation of tackle. Its strengths are deep and not playing near the line.
Good day for the Oklahoma Sooners, after Cincinnati took the best tight end available in Jermaine Gresham.
Gresham joins automatically an attack has become more explosive and vertical arrival. It represents a huge target for Carson Palmer.
Time for Denver, which changed positions with the New England Patriots.
The Broncos used their first-round pick to cover the departure of Brandon Marshall. But Marshall is not unlike another controversial host, which ruled to Dez Bryant.
Denver, instead of Bryant took Demaryius Thomas, Georgia Tech, a skilled receiver, agile and can enter the equation for the starting immediately.
Thomas is one of the most explosive players in the draft, however, a history of injuries caused to fly off the radar for a long time.
Green Bay is in charge.
The Packers got a bargain Brian Bulaga, a huge offensive tackle who will improve what was the worst offensive line catches in the NFL passer.
Bulaga start on the right side and protecting the passer as good as opening holes for running game suffered at times last season.
The Patriots are on duty. NO. Change from Dallas.
The Cowboys took Dez Bryant, the controversial and vocal Oklahoma State receiver, who now join the arsenal of Wade Phillips.
Bryant, a physical type, with large hands, but with many problems off the field, will be an important weapon in the Dallas passing game that already has Roy Williams, Miles Austin and Jason Witten.
Baltimore changed with the Denver Broncos, who continue to surprise in the draft.
And so far have been the biggest surprise, to take Tim Tebow, Florida’s famous pin.
Denver gave teams second, third and fourth rounds, to gain access to Tebow, who had an eye.
Tebow, controversial not because of his actions off the field, but by the mechanics of launching and coming collegiate program, the second pin is selected, against all odds.
Arizona has reinforced its defensive instead of giving depth to the quarterback position.
Dan Williams, a huge defensive tackle, perhaps the best nose tackle of his generation, will dumbbell Darnell Dockett to anchor a defensive line that needs improvement.
Much was expected from the selection of Arizona to take a quarterback with the departure of Kurt Warner and the question that Matt Leinart has been over his career.
Time for the Patriots, who maintained the defensive tendency to take one of the most volatile corners of his generation in the product of Rutgers, Devin McCourty.
McCourty is fast, agile and also one of the best players on special teams, could have an impact on that area of the game also.
It’s Time for Miami Dolphins, who originally had the position 12.
The Dolphins, with serious problems in their front seven, particularly after the departure of Jason Taylor, have reinforced this area.
Jared Odrick is the solution, or at least in the eyes of Bill Parcells, who has been selected in the first round.
Odrick, who could play defensive end in a 3-4 scheme, is able to dominate when covered man to man, but struggle in double coverage.
Tony Sparano has plenty of raw material and it is hoped will serve juice to a talented player, but still unpolished.
Time for the Jets, to the delight of the Radio City Music Hall.
Mark Sanchez’s team waited until the last minute waiting for some exchange offer that never came.
The hosts added to Rex Ryan Kyle Willson, a Boise State defensive secondary.
Willson is a true weapon on special teams as well as being very versatile with their coverage, is expected to be of much help in a defense full of talent and that was the best in the NFL last year.
Time for Minnesota, which changed its selection with Detroit to be chosen for the second time today.
Detroit Lions made some noise with the selection of Yahweh Best, a corridor waiting solve, or at least give depth to a position that has suffered much since Barry Sanders left long ago.
Best is an explosive runner, capable of making the big play, a pure sprinter certainly adds a new dimension to the Lions’ anemic attack.
The champions of the AFC, Indianapolis Colts, Jerry Hughes made the penultimate pick of the first round.
Hughes is an explosive type which is capable of pressuring the passer from the outside.
Hughes, as possessed of talent as anyone, he flew under the radar due to their short stature, which in the scheme of the Colts is not a problem, as exemplified by Dwight Freeney.
Drew Brees, pin champions New Orleans Saints announced the final selection of the first round.
Brees end of the first day of selections with the election of Patrick Robinson, a Florida State defensive secondary.
Robinson is a natural athlete, but is inconsistent, so it is a gamble for NFL champions, who were to strengthen its defensive secondary, especially draft for the second consecutive corners in the first round.
NFL Draft in Prime Time: Ratings up 30 Percent
The overnight ratings for the first NFL draft in prime time were up 30 percent from last year.
The overnight rating for the first-round of the draft held Thursday night at Radio City Music Hall was a combined 6.42. Coverage of last year’s draft started at 4 p.m. on a Saturday.
ESPN had a 5.47 rating, while the NFL Network posted 0.95. The overnight rating was 55 percent higher than the 2008 NFL draft.
The ratings, which measured 56 markets, represent the percentage of all households with televisions tuned into a program.
Louisville Announces Itself As Capital of Excess Thanks to the KFC Yum! Center
The city of Louisville is roughly 195 days from opening a new, previously unnamed, downtown arena that will seat 22,000 for Cardinals basketball. That name part has been taken care of as it will be known as the KFC Yum! Center. As if the name wasn’t silly enough, take a look at the artist’s rendering of how the arena will look.

Click this link for larger image
Yes, you are seeing that correctly. There will be multiple logos for Kentucky Fried Chicken, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut on this thing that looks vaguely like a PlayStation 3. Yum! Brands forked over $13.5 million for the 10 year rights deal. Why is it my mind keeps drifting to this website?
Perhaps Louisville hoops will be able to use this as a tool in recruiting. After all, that KFC Double Down sandwich has quite a bit of buzz on the web. Had they really wanted to capitalize on the hype surrounding the new KFC sandwich, they would’ve gone with this original artist’s rendering, exclusively obtained by TSB.

NCAAF; NCAAB: This Big Ten Expansion Thing Might Actually Happen, And Soon
It’s like a fire bell in the night: The Big Ten might really become the Big 14 or Big 16, and it might happen before you think.
High-ranking Big Ten representatives will meet Sunday in Washington to discuss expansion. The timing and location of the session make sense considering the Association of American Universities has its semi-annual meetings there through Tuesday and all 11 Big Ten schools are AAU members.…
If the conference can emerge from the meetings with a mandate to expand, Commissioner Jim Delany could take a substantial step next week at the annual Bowl Championship Series meetings outside Phoenix.
As laid out in the Big Ten’s Dec. 15 statement, Delany would “notify” the commissioners of the affected conferences before “engaging in formal expansion discussions with other institutions.”
…
That would allow the Big Ten more than a month to negotiate with schools before conference presidents and chancellors meet in Chicago during the first weekend in June.
That timetable also makes sense from a financial standpoint. The fiscal years of universities end on the last day of June, “so if you go past July 1, you have to wait an extra year,” one source said.
In five short months, we’ve gone from humorous scenarios and inexplicabletargets to talks that seem to be accelerating because the Big Ten wants to do something now.
Matt Hinton reads the tea leaves to mean that expansion is more or less a foregone conclusion, and that era of the superconferences is about to dawn. I’m not sure what other conclusions there are to draw, except that many rough beasts may be about to be born.
NFL: NFL needs more time to determine Roethlisberger punishment
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell joined the show to talk about the state of the NFL on draft week and where he stands on Ben Roethlisberger. 
Goodell was asked if reports that he would announce his suspension today or tomorrow were true. “There may be plenty of reports. I make the decision when I”m prepared to do so,” Goodell said.
Goodell was asked if there has been a violation of the NFL’s personal conduct policy.
“Yes, there has been a violation of that,” Goodell said. “The issue here is respect to a pattern of behavior … bad judgments.”
Goodell said he needed time to review all the facts. “Obviously there is a depute about the facts that occurred that night,” Goodell said.
Here are some of Goodell’s other takes:
– Goodell still wants to add two regular-season games. “We’re thinking of flipping two preseason games and making them regular-season games,” Goodell said. “It’s in response to our fans and better for the game. We would still be staying within our 20 games.”
– Goodell said he still wants a franchise in Los Angeles, but the NFL has to settle the CBA first.
– Goodell said Tim Tebow hasn’t let him know yet if he’ll be coming to the draft. Goodell said that Jimmy Clausen called him and he’s not coming so he can spend time with his family.
NFL: Sam Bradford said he hasn’t heard from St. Louis Rams
Quarterback Sam Bradford joined the show to talk about Thursday’s draft.
Bradford said he hasn’t started negotiating with the Rams. And he wanted to clear up any notion that he doesn’t want to go to the St. Louis Rams. He said the team hasn’t called him or his agent. And reports he didn’t want to negotiate with them aren’t true.
“People out there think right now that I’ve said no or my agent has said not,” Bradford said. “That’s not the case at all.”
Bradford said that he just wants to play in the NFL and didn’t specify any teams.
Bradford, who grew up a Steelers fan, also said that his agent and family did talk to him about the Ben Roethlisberger case. And he realizes he always has to be aware people around him have camera phones.
Random Links (4/16)

You may remember a few weeks ago Esquire.com ran a “Sexiest Woman Alive” bracket, which caused quite a buzz because Lane Kiffin (that’s right, Lane Kiffin, not his attractive wife, Layla) beat Natalie Gulbis in the first round. Well, voting for Round 2 is under way, and Kiffin has a lead against Danica Patrick in the “sports” region. I can get down with giving Kiffin a vote over Patrick, but if anyone but the Stacy Keibler comes out of the that region, it will be a travesty. In other newsworthy matchups, Minka Kelly has a lead on Heidi Klum (and let’s keep it that way). In a heated WAG battle, Adriana Lima is breezing by Gisele Bündchen. And Olivia Munn.
Pathetic Phillies Fan, Pathetic Human Being
I shouldn’t even refer to this animal, who is accused of INTENTIONALLY THROWING UP on an 11-year-old girl at Wednesday’s Nationals-Phillies game, as a human being.
Not All Phillies Fans Are Bad, Though
As proven by this guy.
Yankee-Red Sox Feud Intensifies

Jay-Z is suing David Ortiz. Hova claims that Big Papi stole the name of his night club, The 40/40 Club, for an establishment Ortiz opened in the Dominican Republic.
For The Facebookers
Here are five bizarre Facebook groups – if you are a fan of trivial NBA history — should join just for the hell of it. And, speaking of Facebook, we now live in a time when we find out a player has been traded via the social networking site.
Quiz Time
Anyone who has collected baseball cards knows about the infamous Billy Ripken “F— Face” card. But do you know who wrote that graphic phrase on Ripken’s bat? That’s just one question in this baseball card quiz.
Videos
This Capitals fan does NOT want the camera near him.
Determined To Remain on Top

Kim Kardashian, who clearly does not want disappear from this page, is now being linked to Real Madrid soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo. Meanwhile, BestWeekEver.tv wonders if we’ll soon see Kim in Sports Illustrated for Kids.
Stroke Of Genius?
Someone at Canadian sports Web site TSN.ca got overly excited about last night’s Devils-Flyers game.
For The Lost Fans
With just five episodes in the series remaining, I need to remind you to check out The Mandel Initiative, a podcast hosted by SI.com’s college football guru, Stewart Mandel. You should also check out Rangers pitcher C.J. Wilson hanging out with the Lost braintrust, Carlton Cuse andDamon Lindelof.
Photo Of The Day
What’s bigger than super size?
The Party Continues

Stories about major league baseball players using Miley Cyrus‘ Party in the U.S.A when they come up to bat got a lot of attention this week. Well, according to reader James Irwin, the Miley madness is going strong. He says, “OK, so I had the joy of watching my Twins beat up the Red Sox on a beautiful sunny day OUTSIDE at the greatest ballpark, Target Field. Everything was great, except for one thing: At the beginning of the game they asked the fans what song they wanted to hear later in the game, and there it was as choice No. 3, Miley Cyrus, Party in the U.S.A. Sure enough, it won with over 75 percent of the vote. Is this the new Rick Roll?”
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NCAAB: What Would A CBS/Turner NCAA Tournament Presentation Look Like? Please Let It Be This

SportsBusiness Journal has a piece today breaking the news that ESPN will not increase its bid for the NCAA Tournament, which paves the way for a joint bid by CBS and Turner. Yes, it would likely be a 96-team tournament.
CBS and Turner have a 14-year deal on the table that is worth more than the $710 million annual fee that CBS would have to pay over the last three years of the existing deal, source said. No deal has been formalized, though, and the NCAA still hopes to reengage ESPN in some way.
Here is the interesting part of a CBS/Turner joint venture:
The most likely scenario would have CBS and Turner telecasting each game nationally across at least four networks: CBS, TBS, TNT and truTV. Under this scenario, Turner and CBS would carry the Final Four in alternate years.
A few things: 1. We’d get an Olympic-style telecast setup where games would be spread out over a family of networks. 2. The national title game would actually be on Turner at some point. While the second point will be shocking to some, I’d like to focus on the first and what it means to your current viewing experience.
As it stands, your options are CBS, the DirecTV NCAA Mega March Madness package and March Madness On Demand on your computer. While the On Demand service on your computer would probably still exist, its reach would be somewhat hindered by all games being broadcast across those networks. You’d still pull all of the 9-to-5ers stuck at work, but what about Saturday and Sunday. No more worrying about watching on a small computer screen if you’re without DirecTV. Just flip over to one of the other networks. (If you’re balking at truTV, and I’m guessing a few of you are, SBJ‘s John Ourand points out the network is in 92 million homes and has a widely available HD channel.)
This would almost certainly mean the death of the Mega March Madness package, an idea that DirecTV must be none-to-thrilled about facing. As it stands, there’s no mention of DTV in the SBJ story. The only remaining feature not replicated over cable or broadcast would be the mix channel with four screens at once. Could that make its way to cable as well or would that be the lone value-added product on the DirecTV side of things? Presumably, the NCAA would make up that lost DirecTV revenue in whatever sort of increase they get from CBS/Turner. Still, DirecTV has really made a name for itself by differentiating itself from the competition by being the sports fan’s haven. This would be a blow to that sales pitch.
While I’d be incredibly disappointed that the field would expand to 96 teams, it gives me at least some consolation that networks would be footing the bill for Mega March Madness across the country rather than the consumers themselves. (No, I guess that doesn’t really lessen the sting of a 96-team tourney as much as I’d hoped it would.) You know what would make up for all of that? Create the greatest two man booth ever — Gus Johnson and Conan O’Brien — pictured at the top of the post.
NCAAB; Recruiting: Selby to Kansas? That’s the sign

Point guard Baltimore, Maryland Lake Clifton AAU: Baltimore Elite Ht:6'2" Wt:183 lbs Class:2010 (High School)
Fortunately, Selby is one of a host of players planning to announce his decision Saturday at the Jordan Brand Classic. Which way is he leaning? It was difficult to believe Selby would want to attend Kentucky now that he’d be stuck alongside Knight, but then again, Calipari not only got Eric Bledsoe and John Wall to work, he landed both of them in the NBA draft. Anything was possible. But, thanks to a column on John Calipari’s recruitment by SI’s always-excellent Luke Winn, we now have a pretty good idea of where Selby isn’t going: Kentucky.
When I asked Selby for his reaction on Knight, he said, “I didn’t know that it happened. I don’t have a reaction, because it doesn’t have any effect on where I’m going.”
What he meant by it not having any effect on him is that he feels he’s good enough to earn time in any backcourt, whether it be alongside Knight or the Jayhawks’ Tyshawn Taylor. But one could sense that Selby, who’s going to announce his college choice at halftime of Saturday’s Jordan game, wasn’t too interested in Kentucky. He mentioned that while he’d spoken with Kansas coach Bill Self a few days earlier, he hadn’t spoken with Calipari in a couple of months.
I asked if I should take that as a sign. Selby said, “Yeah, that’s a sign.”
Winn’s column has a lot more to do with Calipari than Selby; the theory here is that we’re focusing a bit too much of Kentucky’s spring recruiting haul and ignoring the host of very good players — Duke recruit Kyrie Irving, for one — that will have a much larger effect on the 2010 game than will either Knight or Kentucky’s other bigtime recruit, Enes Kanter. This is true.
Here’s another question worth asking: Is John Calipari perhaps relying too much on landing really good, really high-profile, really temporary recruits? Winn quotes Cal lamenting what would have happened if he could have kept this year’s team for three years. Bummer, right? There’s not much you can do except recruit the best players and hope they stay for more than eight months. But part of building a program is in finding those Robert Dozier anchor types — guys that are really good and can start for your elite team but that aren’t going to leave for the NBA after one year. Calipari has build those teams before. He hasn’t had enough time at Kentucky, but no doubt he’s working on it.
Anyway, rambling thoughts aside, Josh Selby appears headed to Kansas. At the very least, he won’t be forming Bledsoe-Wall 2.0 in Kentucky’s backcourt anytime soon. And so the dominoes continue to fall.
Selby said his mother, Maeshon Witherspoon, already has a strong opinion on the matter.
“I think my mom knows where she wants me to go, so she knows. But I just want to sit down by myself and think about it,” he said.
Point guard Brandon Knight of Fort Lauderdale (Fla.) Pine Crest announced Wednesday that he will attend Kentucky, but Selby said that decision would not necessarily impact his.
“I didn’t wait for him to commit,” Selby said. “I was going to commit here. I wasn’t waiting for Brandon to commit, Cory [Joseph] to commit because it don’t have [any] effect on which school I want to go to.”
NCAAB; Recruiting: DORON LAMB HEADED TO KENTUCKY

Shooting guard Mouth of Wilson, Virginia Oak Hill Academy AAU: New York Gauchos Ht:6'4" Wt:175 lbs Class:2010 (High School)
If you missed it on National Signing Day, John Calipari is rebuilding another monster at Kentucky. Right after five of his underclassmen went pro, he immediately landed Brandon Knight, the top senior PG in the country, and Michael Gilchrist, maybe the top player period in the 2011 junior class. In addition to them, Calipari has two blue chip commits in swingman Stacey Poole and Turkish big man Enes Kanter. It’s time to add one more. While All-American senior shooting guard Doron Lamb is formally announcing his decision tomorrow at the Jordan Brand Classic, we already know what it’s going to be. Doron Lamb is headed to Kentucky.
Choosing Kentucky over finalists Kansas, UConn, Arizona and West Virginia, we have confirmation from multiple sources that Lamb’s decision came down to the Wildcats and the Jayhawks, with him ultimately choosing to play next season in Lexington.
“I have a top five of Arizona, UConn, Kansas, Kentucky and West Virginia,” Lamb said.
But Doron said St. John’s came in “too late” to be considered.
After the former Bishop Loughlin (Brooklyn, N.Y.) standout spent the last two seasons at Oak Hill Academy (Mouth of Wilson, Va.), the New York native is making the right decision to head to Kentucky. Calipari, along with assistants Rod Strickland and Orlando Antigua, are new York guys, and Strickland is also an Oak Hill alumnus. The three of them paid a visit to Lamb at school last week and also met with his parents in New York.
At 6-4, 185 pounds, Lamb will fit in perfectly alongside Knight in the backcourt – akin to Eric Bledsoe playing alongside John Wall. And depending on where the chips fall, he could also be playing with explosive guard Josh Selby, who will also be announcing his decision tomorrow at the Jordan Brand Classic.
“I don’t even know, man. I think it’s too late,” he said. “They tried to reach out to me at Oak Hill. They talked to my parents, but I don’t know what happened with them. I think it’s too late.”
A Queens, N.Y. native, Lamb won MVP honors last August at the Boost Mobile Elite 24 game at the Gauchos Gym and hopes to have a similar performance on Saturday.
“Every time I play in New York City in an All-Star Game I always have a good game so I hope I have a good game this Saturday coming up,” he said. “I just want to play in front of my family and friends for the last time in a high school game.”
NCAAF: NCAA bans wedge blocks, eye black with messages
On Thursday, the NCAA’s Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved the three rules changes.
One year after the NFL banned wedge blocking on kickoffs because of safety concerns, the NCAA followed the lead. The new rule says that when the team receiving a kickoff has more than two players standing within two yards of one another, shoulder to shoulder, it will be assessed a 15-yard penalty — even if there is no contact between the teams.
The reason: NCAA studies have shown that 20 percent of all injuries occurring on kickoffs result in concussions.
“Everybody is looking to make sure we have a safe environment for the players,” said Grant Teaff, executive director of the American Football Coaches Association. “On kickoffs, you have a lot of steam on both sides and you usually have what is called a ‘wedge buster.’ This will eliminate some of that.”
The hope is it will reduce concussions, an issue that has received greater attention over the past year.
The NCAA deemed it so important that it made a rare rules change in an off-year of the normal 2-year process.
But it’s the taunting rule that will create the biggest buzz.
Currently, players who are penalized for taunting on their way to the end zone draw a 15-yard penalty on the extra point attempt, 2-point conversion attempt or the ensuing kickoff.
Beginning in 2011, live-ball penalties will be assessed from the spot of the foul and eliminate the score. Examples include players finishing touchdown runs by high-stepping into the end zone or pointing the ball toward an opponent.
Celebration penalties following a score will continue to be assessed on conversion attempts or the ensuing kickoff.
“I think one of the reasons it’s been looked at is that when a penalty occurs on the field, it’s normally taken from the spot,” Teaff said. “This was the only occurrence that it wasn’t taken from the spot, so they wanted to change that.”
Taunting has caused an annual debate among college football players, coaches and fans, and last season’s big controversy stemmed from Georgia receiver A.J. Green receiving a 15-year personal foul penalty after he caught a go-ahead touchdown pass late in a game against LSU.
The yardage from the penalty was assessed on the kickoff and helped LSU get into position to drive for the winning score. Southeastern Conference officials said later that there was no video evidence to support the flag on Green.
A third change bans the use of eye black containing symbols or messages, a trend that grew in popularity because of the use by Heisman Trophy winners Reggie Bush and Tim Tebow.
The rules committee also approved a change for new soccer fields. Those fields can be 70 to 75 yards wide and 115 to 120 yards long. All fields in current use have been approved and will not be required to change.
INDIANAPOLIS — Eye black with messages and wedge blocks will be banned from college football this fall, and taunting in the field of play will start costing teams points in 2011.
NCAAB: The 96-Team Bracket Will Kill The Tournament’s Opening Days
I wish the headline was a bit of personal hyperbole, but I don’t know how else I can really react to seeing this atrocity to the right. (Click here to see Joe Lunardi’s first pass at a full 96-team bracket.) 
I don’t want to overreact and say the NCAA Tournament as a whole will be ruined by such a bracket, but I can say this: the first days will be destroyed. Check out some of these outstanding matchups in one region alone. Alabama-Iowa State, ODU-Morgan State, Gonzaga-Ohio, Arizona State-Saint Louis, New Mexico-Pacific, Murray State-Virginia, Virginia Tech-Coastal Carolina, Michigan-Texas Tech. These are the kind of middling games most fans skip if there’s good scripted TV on in the middle of February, not the kind of games you skip two days of work for.
In this scenario, the first round has been reduced to NIT scraps and low-major conference winners. I remember our own Dan Shanoff lamenting that the only thing stopping people from caring about NIT games was the fact that they weren’t called NCAA games. After looking at these games, I could not disagree more. My Give-A-Damn meter isn’t even making the faintest blip for any game in the first round that doesn’t involve my alma mater. After an entire season of trying to watch the best teams rise to the top, I don’t want to sit through another two days of games featuring teams that never quite got it together.
Don’t get me wrong; there are good game starting in the second round, you know, that traditional round of 64. It will be sad when they likely announce 96-team tournament expansion on April 29 and I’m forced to not really care about the first two days of the NCAA Tournament.
Dallas Suburbs to Become Collection of Massive Stadiums
The suburban fringe of Dallas is already home to the most expensive stadium in the NFL, so why not add another outsize structure to serve on the high school level of the game? A proposal discussed for years to build a nearly $60 million stadium in the fast-growing suburb of Allen, who’s high school team is a powerhouse in the high-school-football-crazed state of Texas and ranks among the best in the nation, passed not long ago, with construction ready to begin soon.

Their current stadium holds 7,000, hardly enough to accommodate the teeming crowds. Last year, the team played at game at the new Cowboys Stadium before an attendance of 50,000. It was clear that the team could use an update of the venue they had been using since the ’70s, one built long before the surrounding area experienced a rapid population growth.
Next month in the booming north Dallas suburb, ground will be broken on a state-of-the-art, 18,000-seat facility that will feature two decks, a video scoreboard, four concession stands and 12 restrooms. It is scheduled to open in the fall of 2012.
To assuage those who will decry the misplaced priorities that awards that much money to the construction of a football stadium, planners point out that the stadium was part of a much larger bond package that will also lead to the creation of a new performing arts auditorium, new elementary schools, more school buses and various other educational improvement. Not to mention that the high school is one of the largest in the state and the only one in that particular district. So perhaps some of that excess was actually needed.
NCAAM: Is Reebok Hitching Its Future on John Wall?
Yahoo! has a story today that likely No. 1 pick John Wall could be joining LeBron James’ marketing firm. Now the my angle: deep in the story, there’s a mention about a potential shoe deal that is likely to send a few shockwaves. First, the details:
In the short term, they’ll be negotiating a sneaker deal that promises to invigorate a stagnant market for young players. Reebok is banking that Wall can be its product’s face with the demise of Allen Iverson, and multiple sources say the company’s prepared an offer that could be worth $3 million-$4 million annually. Here’s the test for LRMR: Does it have the chops to get Wall more than the traditional shoe deal?“Wall isn’t going to be LeBron, but he’s the most-hyped player to come since him,” a rival sneaker industry official said. “And, sometimes, hype is just as important as talent.”
Shock No. 1: They’re still giving out shoe deals worth this much? The last few years made it seem like shoe deals had really dried up. Shelling out that much for John Wall would be a big change of course. Judging from Darren Rovell’s tweet, it would be risky.
Shock No. 2: LeBron is going to let Wall be a part of Reebok? Wall has been a Nike guy for a bit now. He wore Hyperdunks at Word of God in high school. He switched between Hyperdunks, Hyperizes and LeBron VIIs at Kentucky this season. Now, ultimately there’s probably some division of labor. LeBron, the person, would probably love to have Wall rocking his kicks in the NBA, but LeBron, the business man who runs a marketing firm, has a responsibility to get Wall the best deal possible.
I can’t imagine Nike would pay marquee dollars to Wall. It’s not like they’re at a loss for big hoops endorsers. But Reebok? They could use Wall. Still, it’d be strange to see a Wall sneaker deal brokered by LeBron’s marketing firm with anyone other than Nike. Oh, and let’s not forget that Reebok reportedly offered LeBron more money than any other company coming out of high school, but he spurned them.
All I’m saying is this: If Reebok does spend big bucks on Wall, the first order of business should be getting him in some sort of viral video where he jumps over the EasyTone girl and dunks. I’ll wait for my check, Reebok.
NCAAM: Recruiting: McCallum, B. Knight, Zeigler to announce Wed. (4/14)
Ray McCallum, Trey Zeigler, & Brandon Knight to Announce their Commitment on ESPNU Signing Day Special
Trey Zeigler

Shooting guard Mount Pleasant, Michigan Mount Pleasant Ht:6'4" Wt:185 lbs Class:2010 (High School)
Mt. Pleasant High School senior basketball star Trey Zeigler announced via Twitter on Tuesday that he will announce his college basketball plans on Wednesday live on ESPNU.
The time of his announcement is expected to be around 4:45 p.m. and will coincide with the network’s coverage of National Signing Day for college basketball.
Along with his television announcement, Zeigler will hold a press conference on Thursday at 9 a.m. from Mt. Pleasant High School to sign his Letter of Intent and make things official.
Zeigler has left five schools as possible destinations. Those schools are Central Michigan, Michigan State, Michigan, UCLA, and Arizona State.
Rivals.com ranks Zeigler as the 26th best prospect in the country for this year’s recruiting class and he is ranked the fourth best shooting guar in the country for this class.
Mt. Pleasant guard Trey Zeigler, one of the nation’s top uncommitted basketball players, will play his college basketball at Central Michigan, the Mt. Pleasant Morning Sun and thewolverine.com reported today, citing unnamed sources.
Ray McCallum

Point guard Detroit, Michigan Country Day AAU: Team Detroit Ht:6'1" Wt:175 lbs Class:2010 (High School
Detroit Country Day School point guard Ray McCallum Jr., recruited by Arizona, Detoit Mercy, UCLA and Florida, will announce his decision Wednesday at 1 p.m., Tucson time, on ESPNU.
Most believe he will choose between Arizona and Detroit. Ray McCallum Sr. is the coach at Detroit and there is a high possibility that he’ll sign on to play with his father.
Brandon Knight
One of the best-kept secrets in high school basketball will be revealed Wednesday.
Pine Crest senior Brandon Knight will finally sign a college letter-of-intent live on ESPNU’s Signing Day Special Wednesday at 4 p.m. at the Pine Crest Auditorium.
It’s expected Knight will sign with either Connecticut, Florida, Kansas, Kentucky or Syracuse.

Point guard Ft Lauderdale, Florida Pine Crest AAU: Team STAT & Southeast Elite Ht:6'3" Wt:185 lbs Class:2010 (High School)
He finished his career as Broward County’s leading scorer with 3,515 career points — second in Florida history behind Cape Coral Mariner’s Teddy Dupay’s 3,744.
Knight, who averaged a career-best 31.9 points, 8.6 rebounds and 3.9 assists this past season, is a finalist for Gatorade’s Male High School Athlete of the Year award, which will be presented in July prior to the ESPY Awards.
NCAAM: Recruiting: St. John’s Reaches out to Doron Lamb
ZAGSBLOG first reported during the Final Fourthat St. John’s coach Steve Lavin would reach out to Oak Hill Academy guard Doron Lamb and now it has come to pass.
Calvin Lamb, Doron’s father, said Lavin called him shortly before 3 p.m. Tuesday to express interest in Lamb, the 6-foot-4 shooting guard ranked among the top five nationally in the Class of 2010.
“I just got off the phone with Coach Lavin like five minutes ago,” Calvin said
He just talked about the style of play that Doron could come in and start and be a floor general and be a good fit with the nine seniors that they have. He could be the one player that could get them over the hump to the NCAA tournament.”
Calvin said no meeting with Lavin had been set and that he had to huddle with Doron before making any future plans.
“I gotta talk to my son,” he said.
Lamb, a Queens, N.Y. native, originally said he would announce his college choice Saturday at the Jordan Brand Classic in New York and would choose from among Kentucky, Kansas, Arizona, UConn and West Virginia.
“This morning Ron and his father asked for their official release from St. John’s,” St. Peter’s Prep coach Mike Kelly said. “That was subsequent to a meeting [Monday] night with the coaching staff at St Peter’s Prep and his family. We were concerned that St. John’s coaching staff had no familiarity with Ron and it was in our best interest to move on.”
NBA: Review – No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson
Since the day the 30 for 30 series was announced, this was the film I’d been waiting for. How could it not be great? Steve James — most famous for Hoop Dreams — returns to his Virginia roots to look at the trial of Allen Iverson. (The trailer for the film is embedded below).
I suspect many basketball fans in their 20s — like me — only knew the fuzzy edges of the Iverson story. Something happened in a bowling alley, he went away for a while, but wound up playing at Georgetown, went on to be the No. 1 pick and it was all kind of history. To know those fuzzy edges is only to grasp a very small part of the story.
Listening to the interviews about the incident, the arrest and everything else in the film, sometimes you’re left to wonder whether the people in the film are even talking about the same events. While much of the white community — most often associated with Hampton High — wanted a strict letter-of-the-law ruling — the Bethel crowd — mostly black — wanted to be assured Iverson would get a fair trial. Whether that happened doesn’t even really appear up for debate. Why, as a 17-year-old, was Iverson charged as an adult in this incident? There was certainly a perception about Iverson, that he could get away with things like missing school or running with a certain crowd, but he didn’t have a criminal record. So why was he not only charged as an adult, but also denied bail? Sure, eventually the conviction was overturned, by if you go through that kind of thing as a 17-year-old, you’ve been changed. Conspiracy theories abound about why this happened, but I don’t want to spell those all out in this space, because they range from absurd to believable, so I’d rather not color your judgment with my own.
Eric Freeman is spending some time today on The Baseline talking about Hampton and the community, so I don’t want to steal too much of his thunder on that front. But this really isn’t a film about basketball or Iverson’s athletic exploits, so don’t go in expecting that. That isn’t to say there isn’t some great vintage Iverson footage. In addition to some of the football footage you’ve seen on YouTube, you also get some footage of Iverson on the basketball court at Bethel. The best footage in the film of a young Iverson isn’t in football or basketball, but rather him receiving his degree in a small, private ceremony among family and friends. I’m not sure that’s an Iverson a lot of people know or have ever seen.
The other component to the film is Steve James’ relationship with the Hampton community, where he played high school ball. (He notes he came up just a weebit short of Iverson’s high school accolades.) Even James, someone with a line into the community, had a hard time getting people to speak with him. You could understand Iverson’s reluctance to be involved, particularly given what he’s reportedly been going through off the court, but blacks on Iverson’s side and his white accusers almost unanimously turned down opportunities to throw in their two cents. Even though it’s been 17 years, perhaps there was a concern that putting all of it back out there on the table again would ignite racial fires that took years to douse when they first started.
No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson airs tonight at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN. Also, head over to The Baseline and read Eric Freeman’s thoughts on the film
NCAAF: Recruiting: Cats Get Start on 2011 Class Transfer joins football team along with mid-year juco signees…
The Arizona football recruiting class of 2011 got off to an early start when noted Big 12 receiver Dan Buckner transferred for the spring term and is enrolling in classes this week.
Buckner, 6-foot-4, 215 pounds, caught 49 passes in his first two years at the University of Texas.
An Allen. Texas, High School product who earned a starting nod in the 2008 U.S. Army All-American Bowl, he played as a true freshman for the Longhorns in 2008 and started seven contests in 2009. He has 26 games’ playing experience, with 526 receiving yards and six touchdown receptions.
Buckner will have to sit out the 2010 season and will have two years of eligibility beginning in 2011.
Meantime, UA’s initial 2010 newcomers, mid-year junior college transfers Derek Earl and Paul Vassallo, both linebackers, are settling into the off-season conditioning program and readying for their first spring when both are expected to push for starting roles. UA lost all three starting linebackers to graduation - Xavier Kelley, Vuna Tuihalamaka and Sterling Lewis.
Earls and Vassallo signed letters of intent in the December signing period. UA will sign its full 2010 class Feb. 3.
“Derek and Paul should be key for us in 2010 as we transition under new defensive coordinators Tim Kish and Greg Brown. They appear to be physically ready for Pac-10 play and we’ll get a quick look in spring ball,” said Coach Mike Stoops.
“Dan’s a proven player who will help us, and we’re glad to bring him into the program,” Stoops said. “His championship experience is something we can count on.“
Derek Earls – Linebacker – 6-3, 230, Junior – Waconia, Minn. (North Dakota State College)

Outside linebacker Wahpeton, North Dakota North Dakota State College of Science Ht:6'4
Enrolled at Arizona in January… First-team NJCAA honors as sophomore… First-team All-Midwestern Conference both years… SuperPrep Juco 100… Two-time MFC-West first-team all-region… 108 tackles, among Region 13 leaders, including 14 for losses, a sack and a forced fumble in 2009… 96 tackles as a junior, with 10 TFL and two sacks… Earned JCFootball.com preseason All-American defense second team entering his final juco year… Minneapolis Star-Tribune All-Metro RB/LB as a Waconia High School senior… Minnesota High School All-Star Football Game June 2008… 2007 AP All-State second-team honors as running back… Recruited by UA coach Tim Kish…
Paul Vassallo – Linebacker – 6-3, 240, Junior – Reno, Nev. (Sierra Community College)
Enrolled at Arizona in January… SuperPrep Juco 100… JCFootball preseason juco All-America… Missed seven 2009 games after a concussion, playing in four games and netting 16 tackles…
Outside linebacker Roseville, California Sierra C.C. Ht:6'3" Wt:230 lbs 40:4.65 secs Bench Max:320 Class:2010 (Junior College - Dec Grad)
Began at Nevada redshirting as a true freshman in 2007 but transferred to Sierra College in Rocklin, Calif. .. Recorded 87 tackles and 14 1/2 sacks and forcing five fumbles in his first season in 2008, All-Valley Conference first-team honors and all-California juco honors… Had three-sack game to earn J.C.Gridwire northern California player of the week honor in Sept. 2008… Prepped at Bishop Manogue High School in Reno… Team captain senior year… Second-team all-state as linebacker… Caught 11 passes for 157 yards and two TD in 2006 as a tight end, with 72 tackles, four sacks and two interceptions… Son of Pamela and the late Ben Vassallo… Born in Reno… Recruited by coach Jeff Hammerschmidt...
Dan Bucker – Receiver – 6-4, 215, Junior – Allen, Texas (Allen/Texas)
Transfer from the University of Texas who enrolled in January 2010 and will have to sit out a season… Will compete in spring 2010 ball for the Cats… University of Texas letterman 2008-09…
Appeared in 26 games at UT, catching 50 passes for 526 yards and six touchdowns in his career… Seven starts in 2009, with 45 grabs for 442 yards and four scores… Played in 12 games as true freshman in 2008, catching five passes for 84 yards and two scores… Enrolled at UT in January ’08… Member of UT’s Athletics Director’s Honor Roll in spring 2009… Career high three times: 6-86 receiving and a career-long 36-yard TD at Wyoming, matched high with 6-75 and a TD vs. Texas Tech, and 6-71 vs UTEP with career-best two TDs… Allen, Texas, High School, 2008… First-team 5A all-state selection by The Associated Press and the Texas Sports Writers Association as a senior … First-team All-District 9-5A and all-area … Started in the 2008 U.S. Army All-America Bowl and tallied three catches for 28 yards, including a nine-yard TD … First-team member of Dave Campbell’s Super Team … Three-year letterman and starter at wide receiver who helped his team to a 23-3 record over his last two seasons … Posted 2,511 yards on 146 receptions (17.2 ypc) and 33 TDs during his career … Helped lead the Allen Eagles to a 10-1 record and a second-straight district title by pulling in 53 receptions for 1,012 yards (19.1 ypc) and 17 TDs as a senior… .First-team all-district 9-5A and all-area honors as a junior … had 72 catches for 1,154 yards (16.0 ypc) and 13 TDs, while helping his team to the district championship and a 13-2 season … Second-team all-district as a sophomore … recorded 21 receptions for 345 yards (16.4 ypc) and three TDs … also participated in basketball as a freshman and sophomore…
First Look at Trailer for Michael Vick ‘Docu-Series’
10-part documentary series, The Michael Vick Project, will premiere on Feb. 2 at 10 p.m. ET on BET. Here’s a first look at the trailer, which tells you absolutely nothing.
OK, maybe we do learn one thing from the trailer. This won’t be a VH1 celeb-reality show a la T.O. It seems like it’ll take a more serious tone, which is appropriate given the circumstances.
But let me also take a moment to say a few words about exactly how poorly this show will premiere. The numbers will be catastrophically low and it has nothing to do with BET or Vick. Look at the date and the time. 10 p.m. ET on Feb. 2? There’s this little show called Lost on ABC. Ever heard of it? Yeah, its two-hour premiere is that night and this thing is going to air right as hour two begins. Any chance anyone tunes away after hour No. 1 to watch this thing? No way.
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Lets Go Saints; Playoff Links; Conan Videos; Venus Williams’ fashion; Jersey Shore;

Let me start by stating the obvious: Saints fans will root for New Orleans on Sunday. Vikings fans will root for Minnesota. And NFL media members will root for Brett Favre. But for the rest of you who don’t have rooting interest, I’m here to tell you that you’ll easily find yourself pulling for the Saints. Why? Not because of the Saintsation cheerleaders. And not because you want me to keep featuring Kim Kardashian. But because Prince just released the most horrifyingly bad song about the Minnesota Vikings.
In Other Music News
Prince hasn’t been the only one singing his heart out. Check out LeBron James doing some Eminem during the Cavs’ win against the Lakers last night.
Playoff Links
If the Jets beat the Colts, Rex Ryan will be allowed to participate in the Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest. … Each of the four playoff teams has a Jersey Shore character equivalent. … A lot of blogs are pointing out that the Jets have already put AFC champions gear on sale. NFL PR man Brian McCarthy says this is common practice and the Colts have done it, too.
Fashion Always Comes First

Venus Williams found herself at the center of a controversy earlier this week when questions arose about whether she was playing an Australian Open match sans undergarments. But thanks to the magic of Twitter, she cleared up the situation last night.
Fight!
This heated exchange between New York Rangers coach John Tortorella and New York Postwriter Larry Brooks during last night’s postgame press conference is all kinds of awesome.
Will the Truth Set Him Free?
I actually have no idea what that headline even means, but Sean Salisbury has finally admitted to taking a picture of his “private area” while not wearing any clothes and e-mailing it around.

Sorry about that unoriginal headline, but I had to do it. Anyway, is Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson strictly a family-movie guy now? When will he return to the WWE? What did he think about ESPN’s documentary The U? And, most important, how did he answer SI.com’s Cheerleader of the Week questionnaire? Find out in this Q&A with Johnson.
Hear, Hear
BroBible.com has compiled a ton of the always-entertaining “mic’d up” videos featuring several of the players we’ll see in action this weekend, including Drew Brees, Brett Favre and Peyton Manning.
Investigating Reporting at its Best
An Italian news reporter wasn’t completely convinced that David Beckham wasn’t, um, enhanced while appearing in Armani ads. So she decided to find out Beckham’s actual, um, size for herself.
Im Telling You the Tooth
The Flyers’ Ian Laperriere recently had some teeth stolen. Yes, stolen.
Gone Too Soon
Jersey Shore closed out its first season yesterday. There are rumors of a Season 2, but in the meantime we’ll just have to enjoy things like the Jersey Shore soundboard, wear our Jersey Shore T-shirts and watch the Jersey Shore tributes and parodies.
Videos
You must check out this collision (and great call by the play-by-play guy) between Blues forward Cam Janssen and Canadians goalie Carey Price.
His last show as host of the Tonight Show is today, but he made sure to have some fun at NBC’s expense Wednesday.
A reason to root against the Vikings: this tribute song using the Black Eyed Peas’ I Gotta Feeling.
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Mini Daddy.
I don’t want to spoil this clip, so I’ll just tell you that this isn’t your traditional Rick Roll.
In his quest to spend as much of NBC’s money as possible before his last show tonight, Conan bought 2009 Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Birdand had him watch restricted Super Bowl highlights.
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MLB: Angels send Matthews, cash to Mets
NEW YORK – Gary Matthews Jr. was traded from the Los Angeles Angels to the New York Mets on Friday for right-hander Brian Stokes.
Matthews hit .313 with 19 homers and 79 RBIs for Texas in 2006, when he made the AL All-Star team, then signed the big deal with the Angels that turned out to be the worst contract in the team’s history.
He slumped to a .252 average with 18 homers and 72 RBIs during his first season in Anaheim, then lost his center field job when the Angels signed Torii Hunter.
Matthews, who also endured some knee problems in Anaheim, had just 46 RBIs in 2008 and 50 last year, when he started 80 games. Now 35, he is the son of Gary Matthews, the 1973 NL Rookie of the Year.
Matthews expressed a desire to be traded last spring, and reiterated that request this offseason. Sources said that trading Matthews was a major priority for general manager Tony Reagins this winter.
SI.com reported in February 2007 that Matthews was sent human growth hormone by Applied Pharmacy in August 2004, an accusation Matthews denied. Major League Baseball concluded there was insufficient evidence to discipline him.
The 30-year-old Stokes was 2-4 with a 3.97 ERA last season, setting career highs for games (69) and innings (70 1-3). He spent the last two seasons with the Mets after making his big league debut for Tampa Bay.
With Matthews’ departure, the Angels still have Hunter, Bobby Abreu and Juan Rivera in the outfield, with Reggie Willits in reserve.
Hideki Matsui, who signed a one-year deal to be the Angels’ principal designated hitter, has said he would like to play some outfield this season after knee problems limited him to the DH role with the Yankees.
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Whites-only Basketball League? Nooooooo
Help us all.
Once in a while a story comes along that makes you feel as if you have stumbled into H.G. Wells’ time machine and traveled into the past.
A “Whites-only” basketball league is being formed by former wrestling promoter Don “Moose” Lewis, who hopes for representation in 12 Southeast cities. The All-American Basketball Alliance’s No. 1 requirement? ”Only players that are natural-born United States citizens with both parents of Caucasian race are eligible to play in the league.”
African-Americans and foreigners need not apply.
“There’s nothing hatred about what we’re doing,” Lewis told the Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle. “I don’t hate anyone of color. But people of white, American-born citizens are in the minority now. Here’s a league for white players to play fundamental basketball, which they like.”
Lewis added the league will emphasize fundamental ball instead of ”street-ball” played by “people of color.“
He said fans shouldn’t have to “worry about a player flipping you off or attacking you in the stands or grabbing their crotch.”
Are you kidding me? What is equally troubling is the amount of support the league is receiving, with cries of “finally” all over the Internet.
C’mon. Supporting, say, the NAACP or United Negro College Fund is not the same as supporting a league like this. One is about providing guidance to a historically disadvantaged population. The other is about exclusion and reinforcing negative thought processes.
The brilliance of this country is that is has long provided aid to the historically oppressed, whether it’s the NAACP or the Appalachian Regional Commission.
Go away AABA and go away Moose Lewis. We definitely don’t need your kind here.
NCAAM: Kentucky’s Calipari says he wants Wall to go pro if he’s No. 1
Kentucky coachJohn Caliparijoined the show to talk about his 18-0 start and more.
Calipari said several interesting things, including a very frank comment on freshman star John Wall. Calipari said he hopes Wall isn’t around for more than one year.
“If he came to me and said he was the No. 1 pick in the draft, and he wanted to come back, we’d probably be wrestling on the floor,” Calipari said.
Calipari said that he doesn’t advise most of his players to go early to the NBA, but Wall is an exception because he could go so high.
Coach Calipari came on when the Wildcats were 8-0 and said they should be 4-4. Dan asked what their record should be now.
“We’re 10-8,” Calipari said.
Calipari pointed to several games Kentucky could have lost. “We’re lucky we’re alive right now,” Calipari said.
Calipari said he told his team to practice like they’re 0-2, not undefeated. Calipari said that if you get confident, and don’t go for loose balls the same way.
Dan and Calipari talked about how intense coaching at Kentucky is. “This isn’t a 20-year run,” Calipari said.
Calipari said he doesn’t think he’ll have any trouble walking away from the job.
“If I’m still coaching after 10 years something happened. Something drastic,” Calipari said. “They’re not going to have on my tombstone how many wins I had.”
Calipari also had interesting comments on what it meant to leave Memphis in light of someone like Lane Kiffin leaving after one year at Tennessee. Calipari said he basically left his blood on the floor in Memphis. He gave everything he had.
Calipari said that college coaching is always going to be like that, unless they start putting in clauses that coaches can’t talk to other schools when they’re under contract.
Calipari also said that schools fire coaches — and sometimes they don’t pay them. Calipari said that Kentucky didn’t want to pay “the guy who left before him” (Billy Gillespie).
Calipari also talked about Hoops for Haiti and how he’s raising money to help relief efforts. He talked about auctioning off a dinner with him, his wife and Ashley Judd. He admitted people bid a lot for Judd, not him.
NFL: Report: Cowboys to Retain Wade Phillips
Despite an embarrassing 34-3 playoff loss in Minnesota Sunday, the Cowboys will reportedly bring Wade Phillips back for his fourth season as the team’s head coach.
ESPN’s Ed Werder, citing a high-ranking Dallas team source, reported Monday that Cowboys owner Jerry Jones plans to retain Phillips, whose contract includes a team-option year for the 2010 season.
Phillips’ fate has been up in the air all year, as Jones has opted not to offer him an extension. The Dallas owner has, however, voiced his support for Phillips on multiple occasions during the season — one in which Dallas finished 11-5, won the NFC East (for the second time in Phillips’ three years) and beat Philadelphia in a wild-card round playoff game.
“I really don’t know how you can sit here and make a change with the winningest-percentage coach that we’ve had in the history of the Cowboys,” Jones told reporters after Dallas’ Week 17 division-clinching win over Philadelphia.
Phillips is 33-15 in three years as Dallas’ head coach and 1-2 in the playoffs. For his NFL head coaching career, Phillips holds an 81-54 record — he has coached Denver, Buffalo and Dallas, in addition to brief in-season stints with New Orleans and Atlanta.
Dallas’ opening-round win over Philadelphia was Phillips’ first career postseason win. Following Sunday’s loss at Minnesota, he’s 1-5 all-time in the playoffs.
“It’s like the elevator falling from the top. It’s tough when it’s over,” Phillips said following Dallas’ season-ending defeat. “If you don’t win it all, you have not reached your goal.“
For now, it appears that Phillips will get at least one more shot to get Dallas over the top.
MLB: New York Mets, Scott Boras still bickering about Carlos Beltran’s surgery
No one seems willing to put aside the flap between the Mets and Carlos Beltran following the center fielder’s arthroscopic surgery last week. Perhaps the air is notso clear after all between the two sides, and bruised feelings linger.

Two days ago, GM Omar Minaya said the Mets have a “good relationship” with Beltran and weren’t unhappy with him, but with “the process” that led to the operation and not getting a chance to get an additional opinion on the diagnosis made by Beltran’s personal physician. Yesterday, Beltran’s agent, Scott Boras, said he wanted to “define the process.”
“This is an internal issue (for the Mets),” Boras said. “Carlos Beltran was not at fault. He followed the orders of the Met doctor, who told (Beltran’s doctor) to go ahead with the surgery (Wednesday morning).”
Boras said that Beltran’s physician, Dr. Richard Steadman, called Mets physician Dr. David Altchek on Tuesday afternoon and, “after hearing Steadman’s diagnosis, Altchek gave the OK.
“If Altchek and the Mets didn’t want the surgery and the Mets didn’t want the surgery, Altchek had the authority and control to direct Steadman not to do it.”
Boras noted that Beltran had called Minaya on Tuesday night to tell him about the surgery, and Minaya did not put the brakes on the operation.
“Omar spoke to Carlos after Dr. Altcheck made his decision and if the Mets chose to stop what Dr. Altcheck initiated, they had every opportunity to tell Carlos during that conversation or anytime that evening,” Boras said. “Altchek’s decision to proceed was the correct one as Steadman found 20-30 cartilage fragments in the knee and now Carlos has a chance to return early in the season.
“Without doing that, he may have been lost to the Mets for a substantial part of the season. Altchek did his job well. And Carlos is a dutiful employee.“
Minaya didn’t disagree with that assertion – “We have talked about this enough. As we’ve said, we have no issues with Carlos or the doctors. Our focus is getting Carlos back on the field,” he said in an e-mail – but the club’s actions tell a different story.
The Mets sent a letter to Boras outlining their unhappiness with what they maintain was a break in protocol, in order to reserve any legal rights they may have regarding Beltran’s contract. The Mets also have contacted Major League Baseball to discuss options, but the Players Association said last week the Mets have “no basis to assert Carlos Beltran violated his contract.”
It seems unlikely anything would happen with Beltran on the mend. He is supposed to resume baseball activity in 12 weeks. “His rehab is going well and he’s feeling very good about his prognosis to return to play,” Boras said.
MLB: Frank McCourt says divorce won’t affect Dodgers

The Dodgers have stayed on the sidelines of the free-agent market this winter and their season-ticket sales are down, but owner Frank McCourt said Friday that the fans he has spoken to stand firmly behind the team.
“I talk to fans too,” McCourt said in his first interview with The Times since it became public that he and his wife and former club president, Jamie McCourt, planned to divorce. “They’re very excited about the team. They’re very supportive of what we’re doing.”
McCourt declared the Dodgers are “headed in the right direction,” pointing to how they have reached the postseason in four of the last six seasons and settled on an organizational philosophy of building around a group of homegrown players.
“We’re going to do what it takes to put a winning team on the field,” he said. “We’re going to do that a smart way. We might not do it the way other people have done it. We’re going to do it our way.”
McCourt said that his team’s lack of activity in the free-agent market should not be interpreted as a sign that his team is facing financial difficulties as a result of his personal situation.
“My divorce has no bearing on the club whatsoever,” he said.
McCourt said the Dodgers will return a majority of the team that reached the National League Championship Series last season, and added, “We’re not through the off-season yet.“
McCourt was not specific on how much financial latitude General Manager Ned Colletti would have to sign players before the start of spring training next month. Jamey Carroll, who signed a two-year, $3.85-million deal last month, is the only free agent the Dodgers have signed to a major league contract this winter.
Alluding to recent high-priced free-agent signings such as Andruw Jones and Jason Schmidt who didn’t work out, McCourt cautioned that spending large amounts of money on players does not necessarily translate into victories.
“I’ve learned the hard way it’s not that easy,” he said.
So if the Dodgers cut their spending on free agents, does that mean they will allocate their resources elsewhere?
“I’m not going to get into a conversation with you on how we spend our resources,” McCourt said.

Kemp, Billingsley avoid arbitration
The Dodgers avoided salary arbitration with center fielder Matt Kemp and pitcher Chad Billingsley by agreeing to new deals.
Kemp was signed to a two-year, $10.95-million contract that buys him out of his first two years of arbitration. Kemp will earn $4 million this year.
Billingsley signed a one-year, $3.85-million contract.
In addition to Kemp, the Dodgers are looking to sign arbitration-eligible players such as Andre Ethier, Jonathan Broxton and James Loney to multiyear deals.
Loney’s agent, Joe Urbon, said his client is focused on signing a one-year deal.
Ethier, Broxton, Loney, Russell Martin, George Sherrill and Hong-Chih Kuo filed for arbitration Friday. They will trade salary figures with the Dodgers on Tuesday unless they agree to deals before then.
LA to Scout Sheets
The Dodgers are among the teams that will scout pitcher Ben Sheetswhen he works out for interested teams Tuesday, according to a club official who asked that their name not be used because they were not authorized to speak on this topic. Sheets, who missed the entire 2009 season because of elbow surgery, is believed to be asking for a contract worth $10 million a season. Sheets spent eight years with the Milwaukee Brewers before his latest injury.
NBA: For Amar’e, Suns Tenure Could Go Either Way
The agent for Amar’e Stoudemire, Happy Walters, will meet with Suns management soon to begin discussing a potential extension for the high-octane forward, reports Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic. The assumption from both outside and apparently inside is that the Suns and Stoudemire don’t have the same dollar figure in mind, and that could lead to the Suns thinking trade before the league’s February trade deadline.
Coro suggests Amar’e is looking for Pau Gasol, near max contract money. (Gasol recently signed an extension worth $57 million for three years during the Laker’s 30s.) The Suns have been so hot-and-cold on Amar’e that it’s almost assured that pricetag is too high. The gamble at that point is in betting that a free agent market focused on the ultra-stars this summer will leave Amar’e in a pickle, and will leave Phoenix open to bidding closer to their price come July. The flip side of that bet is that the team could lose its No. 2 player and No. 2 asset for nothing.
And while Coro comes off as pessimistic as to whether the trade offers which will come in February will be enough to entice Phoenix, I have no doubt they can only improve. By all accounts, Stoudemire’s defense is still problematic. But his rebounding has improved dramatically over last season’s rough campaign (he’s back to his career standard) and his scoring is still ultra-efficient. He’s a real catch, with less of the mitigating issues which sunk his value last season.
Pending Chris Bosh movement, Amar’e could also be the best chance for a non-2010 bonanza team to slip in and make a massive upgrade. Phoenix will obviously want talent in order to give up such a solid asset, but expiring contracts could also help the Suns become a minor player in this summer’s free agency. The Suns are on pace to have a payroll of $45 million if you don’t count Stoudemire’s certain-to-be-declined player option. The salary cap for 2010-11 is expected to fall somewhere around $55 million.
The question will be (should it come to this) just how much talent Phoenix wants to get back. I suppose that goes without saying, but after last year’s odd flirtation with trading Amar’e, it deserves to be mentioned.
NBA: Marbury to China
NEW YORK – Stephon Marburywill play professional basketball again.
In China.
The two-time NBA-All Star has agreed to play in the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA) with China’s Shanxi Club, according to a Reuters report.
Marbury, 32, hasn’t played since leaving the Boston Celtics after last year. The Shanxi team website (www.sxcba.com) said Marbury would arrive sometime next week.
“The aim of signing Marbury is to pay back our fans and try to win more games in the rest of the season,” Shanxi boss Wang Xingjiang said on the team’s website.
Wang also said that Marbury wanted to promote his “Starbury” shoes in China, the world’s most populated nation.
Former NBA player Bonzi Wells played for Shanxi last season, scoring 50 points in a game. But Wells did not return to the team after a holiday break in January.
“It was a big cultural shock to me for the first few weeks,” Wells said, according to Agence France Presse.
“Since I have been here it has been all business and I haven’t had any fun yet, so I am looking for some fun.”
Shanxi is currently 15th in the 17-team league and the arrival of Marbury is expected to boost ticket sales and the team’s prospects of making the postseason.
Marbury’s Twitter feed makes no specific mention of the China deal, but he did say, “I have some things that are brewing.”
And He Still Played A Great?; NFL Playoff Roundup; Jose Offerman Punch;

Reggie Bushreportedly told Kim Kardashianthat if the Saints win the Super Bowl, he would propose to her. Thanks to Bush’s performance Saturday, he’s now just two wins away from beingtied down by a ball and chaingetting engaged to the sexy reality star.
NFL Playoff Roundup
Shonn Greene mocked LaDainian Tomlinson‘s touchdown celebration. …Kurt Warner got LAID OUT while trying to block after an interception. …Jim Nantz called Haiti, “Haitia,“ during yesterday’s Jets-Chargers game. … Did Wade Phillips feel Jerry Jones ‘eyes burning into the back of his head yesterday?
He Punches Worst Then He Hits

Remember mediocre baseball player, Jose Offerman? You may remember than in 2007 he charged the mound with his bat and started swinging at the pitcher who hit him with a pitch. Well, over the weekend, Offerman, who now manages in the Dominican winter league, punched an umpire.
Videos:
AndPants on the Groundofficially jumps the shark and becomes the uncoolest thing you can ever reference and/or sing.
Thanks to this thing called the Internet, we can go back and listen to whatJay Leno had to say in 2004 about Conan O’Brien taking over the Tonight Show
MLB: Yankees unlikely to re-sign Damon
The Yankees have signed lefty reliever Royce Ring and outfielders Reid Gorecki and David Winfree to minor-league contracts. Meanwhile, their chances to re-sign Johnny Damon remained remote
The Yankees are telling agents they only have $2 million, at most, to spend on a left fielder. They figure Damon, even in a diminishing market, never would drop his demands that low.
The Yanks being the Yanks, of course, could always just create extra money in the budget as they did last year when GM Brian Cashman successfully lobbied Hal Steinbrenner to add Andy Pettitte’s $5.5 million base plus makeable incentives to the payroll.
Yankees management, however, clearly felt the the team needed Pettitte far more for the 2009 season than it needs Damon for 2010.
In addition, the Yanks were feeling a level of desperation last off-season having failed to qualify for the playoffs in 2008 and with a new stadium about to open in 2009.
After having won the World Series, ownership is not quite as compelled to blow up the budget again.
Hal Steinbrenner, after all, has shown a much greater willingness to hold to some financial guidelines than his father, George, did. For example, The Post has learned, the Yanks had a completed trade last July with Milwaukee for Mike Cameron, pending ownership’s blessing to take on the money. But Hal Steinbrenner refused to add the approximately $5.5 million in salary and luxury tax it would have cost for the rest of the season, so the deal was scrapped.
So unless ownership reverses course on the budget, the Yankees will continue to look at a supplementary player for left field rather than Damon. Specifically, the Yanks would like to find someone to start rather than Brett Gardner or serve as a righty-swinging complement to Gardner.
The player who most entices the Yankees is Xavier Nady, who, like Damon, is represented by Scott Boras. However, Nady is of interest to several teams and, therefore, might be too pricey for the Yankees.
Their next target is Reed Johnson because, of the remaining candidates, he is the one who projects best to being a help defensively while also having a history of hitting lefties well.
The other three free-agent possibilities, at the moment, are Rocco Baldelli, Jerry Hairston Jr. and Marcus Thames.
NBA: Bargain Players Making Big Impact
Keeping Shannon Brown has turned out to be a big boost for a Lakers bench that has, generally, struggled. What’s more is that Brown didn’t put much of a dent in the Lakers’payroll — he signed for just $2 million, plus an option for next year. But several of the league’s top teams were able to pick up key contributors this summer for less than $2 million. 
1. Channing Frye, Suns. Frye came to Phoenix on a two-year contract worth just $3.8 million, but he has become one of the best longe-range shooters in the league, averaging 12.4 points with a 3-point shooting percentage of 43.3.
2. Jason Williams, Magic. Orlando brought Williams out of retirement to be the backup point guard, for just $1.3 million. Williams played well when starter Jameer Nelson went down and is averaging 6.9 points and 4.6 assists.
3. Shannon Brown, Lakers. His defense and consistency have made him a Phil Jackson favorite.
4. Marquis Daniels, Celtics. Daniels will return from thumb surgery in the coming weeks, but he showed enough in his 19 games to make clear that he will be a key producer off the bench for the Celtics in the second half. Not bad for $1.9 million.
5. Juwan Howard, Blazers. Howard signed a one-year deal for $1.3 million, and did not expect to play a whole lot this year. He certainly did not expect to be a starter. But with Greg Oden and Joel Przybilla out, Howard has had to use his veteran know-how to hold down the middle.
NBA: Gilbert Arenas Wants to Cop a Plea
Washington Wizards player Gilbert Arenas and the U.S. Attorney are negotiating a plea bargain … law enforcement sources tell TMZ.
Our sources say Arenas’ lawyer and prosecutors are discussing a plea in which Arenas would cop to misdemeanor gun charges. We’re told a deal hasn’t been struck yet, but it could come as early as today.
Sources say the filing of charges would coincide with the plea, so it would all go down quickly. We do not know what they are discussing with respect to a sentence … the prosecutor would recommend a sentence but ultimately it’s the judge’s decision.
Arenas is under investigation for felony gun charges for the locker room incident last month.
As for what a plea would do to Arenas’ status as a member of the Washington Wizards, we’re told G.M. Ernie Grunfeld and Arenas were text messaging each other shortly after the incident. In one of the text messages, Grunfeld wrote that Arenas had violated his NBA contract which prohibits players from possessing a firearm in a team or league facility. As a result Grunfeld texted the team had a right to void his contract … worth $111 million.
Report; Arenas Owned Several ‘Hundred’ Guns
File with the “should we be surprised?” pile: WTOPreports today that disgraced Wizards guard Gilbert Arenas has “owned several hundred guns,” but moved most of those firearms out of his Virginia home before he brought guns into the Verizon Center over a month ago. All of Arenas’s firearms were reportedly legally procured, but we’re not just talking about some run of the mill weaponry here: 
The guns turned over to police include a so-called ‘Dirty Harry Revolver’ and a gold-plated Desert Eagle — which is so big and has such a powerful recoil — no law enforcement agency uses them.
Yowza. Revelations like this surely can’t help Arenas while an investigation into his locker room confrontation with Javaris Crittenton is still ongoing. Sure enough, TMZ is quoting anonymous sources who say that Arenas is attempting to plead down to misdemeanor gun charges, a deal that could happen as early as today. Such charges might still carry jail time, but would certainly spare Arenas the multiple-year sentence which had been suggested after the story first broke.
Wes Welker’s Woman; Conan Supporters Slap NBC on Facebook; College Hoops Situation, Colt Follow Up, Mean Fox Emporio Armani; Angry Tennessee Fans; Videos

CBS showed Wes Welker sitting next to a stunning brunette during Sunday’s Ravens-Pats game. I’m a pro and I did search around for some info on Monday, but came up empty. However, The Big Lead came through yesterday with all the details, and they’re quite interesting. It turns out that the woman in question, Anna Burns, was Miss Hooters International 2005. Congrats, Wes.
Conan Supporters Slap NBC on Facebook
Conan O’Brien‘s most loyal employees are refusing to abandon their leader — and have taken to Facebook to rally support for the guy NBC is treating like a redheaded stepchild.
Several people who work for “The Tonight Show” and NBC have united on the social networking site and changed their picture to an Obama-esque image of O’Brien that features the words, “I’m With COCO.”
The COCO craze is already spreading like wildfire on FB — and according to the guy who created the artwork, Mike Mitchell, the image has already been seen by Conan himself.
So far … no sighting of any “I’m with Chin” or “I Heart Peacock” artwork floating around.
College Hoops Situation
With college football in the rearview mirror and the NFL winding down, some of you may be ready to turn your attention to college hoops. To get you familiar with some key players, here’s a piece that compares those guys to Jersey Shore cast members.
Colt Follow Up
Earlier I wrote about Colt McCoy proposing to his girlfriend, Rachel Glandorf. Here’s an update on the story, with pictures from the actual propsal that took place at Texas Memorial Stadium.

They’re Just a Tad Upset at Tennessee

Lane Kiffinbasically caused Armageddon in Tennessee last night. Students rioted. They burned T-shirts. Assistant coaches allegedly are trying to steal recruits. Urban Meyer can’t stop laughing. But despite all of this lunacy, what do most people remain focused on? Layla Kiffin.
Gambling Story
The worst thing about the rise of Internet gambling is live in-game betting. At least that’s what I’ve heard from people who do Internet gambling. Anyway, if you don’t believe me, just check out this story.
Non Important Story of the Day, Megan Fox does Emporio Armani

Proving that she’s still one of the hottest chicks on the planet, here’s Megan Fox in a photoshoot for Emporio Armani Underwear & Jeans. I don’t see too many jeans in these pictures and I’m f@#king loving it. The girl is all most TOO perfect. In a way it’s kind of a good thing she’s still dating that Brian Austin Douche character, it makes her seem more attainable, it shows that she’s probably not the sharpest knife in the drawer and it gives hope to every man and lesbian that one day, they too can be Megan’s useless sidekick.
I feel I have no choice but to link it up.
Videos:
It doesn’t get much better than this “College Football Coaches 2009-10: In Memoriam” video.
his late-night mess is getting good now.Jimmy Kimmel did his entire show last night as Jay Leno. Embedded below is the opening.Here’s a linkto Kimmel (as Leno) doing a headlines segment and here’s Kimmel interviewing Elisha Cuthbert.
NCAAM: Pac-10 may be down, but it offers fascinating conference title race
Bashing the Pac-10 has been a sport within a sport this season, but I’m here to tell you something that may surprise you: This is going to be the most fascinating race inside any of the big six conferences.
The first reason I say this is that this thing could not be more wide open. It appears that no fewer than six of the league’s 10 teams have a legitimate chance to win this thing — and I’m not even including UCLA, which may have a little life in them yet.
Then there are the intriguing storylines to tickle our fancy. Can USC still contend for a title even though it is not eligible for the postseason? Will Arizona, which is off to a 2-2 start in the league, keep its nation’s-best 25-year NCAA tournament streak alive? Inquiring minds want to know.
I realize calling a league race “wide open” is the same as calling it “mediocre,” but you have to admit, the early results have been pretty wacky. Based on the first week of action, the only thing you can predict is unpredictability. Struggling UCLA clipped California in Berkeley by one point on Michael Roll‘s late jumper. Stanford got waxed on the road at Cal by 26 points and then swept the L.A. schools at home. Oregon, led by always-on-the-hot-seat coach Ernie Kent, sat atop the standings after the first week with a 2-0 record, but then the Ducks lost on Sunday night at home to Oregon State. That’s the same Oregon State team that last week lost to Seattle by 51 points.
You can’t make this stuff up.
But the main reason this league is going to be must-see TV is because everybody knows that NCAA tournament bids are going to be hard to come by. Personally, I think three bids (including the automatic) is the minimum, but it’s not out of the realm of possibility that the Pac-10 only puts two teams into the tournament. That will put a much greater urgency on finishing in the top tier that you won’t find in any of the other power conferences. And there’s nothing more fun than watching teams play that are desperate.
So keep bashing the Pac-10 all you want. Skip their late-night games and get your sleep. I, for one, plan to drink lots of coffee and set my DVR to catch as much of the action as I can. Who would have guessed that a bunch of games between mediocre west coast teams could be so much fun to watch?
NFL: Del Rio staying with Jaguars in ’10
After a profitable meeting with owner Wayne Weaver this morning in Jacksonville, Jaguars coach Jack Del Rio will stay in his current job for at least the 2010 season.But Weaver opted for something few owners in the league choose these days — stability. The Jaguars played 16 rookies this season, including both starters at tackle on offense, and 33 players appeared in their first games for Jacksonville in the 2009 season.
NCAAM: Gaddy chats with ‘my favorite coach’
Minutes after enduring the harshest fan treatment of his basketball career, Abdul Gaddy walked out of the Washington Huskies locker room to talk to the coach for whom he always wanted to play.
Lute Olson chatted with the freshman guard for a few minutes, wishing him well after the 87-70 shellacking by the Wildcats.
“My favorite coach I ever watched in college basketball,” he said after walking away from the UA legend. “I was hoping to play for him, but I didn’t get the opportunity. It was great seeing him.” 
It was Gaddy’s first positive interaction with an Arizona fan all day — although he did finish with a career-high 13 points.
The Tacoma, Wash., high schooler committed to play for the UA in August 2007, and stayed committed during the season, despite Olson’s taking a leave of absence and being replaced by Kevin O’Neill. He decommitted in May 2008 after Olson returned and changed assistants, but committed again in September 2008.
Five days after Olson’s retirement in October 2008, however, Gaddy announced he wouldn’t play for the Wildcats after all.
UA fans remembered Sunday.
When Gaddy was introduced before the game, he was greeted by a cacophony of boos.
“I think it put a chip on my shoulder,” he said. “I need to come out and play with my heart, really play hard.”
Every time he touched the ball the rest of the game, even late in the second half when the Wildcats were coasting to victory, Gaddy was booed. That never happened in high school, he said.
“I think the crowd respects me, and they’re trying to help the team out by trying to get in my head,” he said.
They didn’t. He finished with 13 points on 5-of-7 shooting, adding one rebound, one assist and three turnovers. UA coach Sean Miller said Gaddy “is going to be a terrific guard in our league,” and squirmed a bit when asked about the fan reaction.
“Our fans love the game, love the Wildcats and certainly appreciate what a good young player he is,” Miller said.
Washington coach Lorenzo Romar said the 6-foot-3-inch guard is improving after averaging 3.7 points per game this year.
“I thought that would have come a couple games ago,” he said. “That could have come at any point, and that’s why he’s a starter. We know what he’s capable of.”
Gaddy said it was surreal playing at McKale Center, where he once thought he would spend his college career.
“My teammates always say, ‘You coulda been playing here,’ ” he said. “It’s a fun environment, a great environment.
That‘s part of the reason why I wanted to come here. I think about it a lot.”
NCAAF: NCAA Finishes Probe of USC Football Program

After almost four years of investigation, the NCAA’s probe into the University of Southern California athletic program has reached a conclusion. Sources familiar with the investigation have told Yahoo! Sports that the NCAA’s Committee on Infractions will meet Feb. 19-21 to address what investigators uncovered at USC. According to typical NCAA procedures, if sanctions are necessary, they will be determined and then made public via a news conference within six to eight weeks of the February hearing.
NCAA spokeswoman Stacey Osburn declined comment. The NCAA’s website indicates the next meeting of the Committee on Infractions will occur Feb. 19-21 in Tempe, Ariz.
Neither USC nor Pac-10 officials could be immediately reached for comment.
The meeting will be the apex in the NCAA’s probe into USC’s athletic program, as it represents the first determination on whether sanctions should be leveled against the school. The determination on a hearing date also indicates USC has received a letter of allegations from the NCAA and that the school has responded in some way. According to NCAA procedures, schools informed of infractions have at least 90 days to respond. After the response period has expired, a case summary is completed and a date is set for the Committee on Infractions to meet and determine whether there is a basis for sanctioning.
The NCAA’s investigation of USC has been ongoing since April 2006, when a series of Yahoo! Sports reports detailed allegations of extra benefits given to running back Reggie Bush and his family by a failed sports marketing company. Since then, the probe has come to encompass former Trojans basketball star O.J. Mayo and the men’s basketball program, after a report by ESPN’s “Outside the Lines” detailed benefits that allegedly had been funneled to Mayo. Former Trojans basketball coach Tim Floyd abruptly resigned after a Yahoo! Sports report detailed an alleged $1,000 cash payment from Floyd to a man who had helped steer Mayo to USC. The investigation is believed to also include Trojans running back Joe McKnight, whose use of a 2006 Land Rover and ties to a marketing entrepreneur in Santa Monica also have come under scrutiny after a recent report in the Los Angeles Times.
Recent developments at USC, including its decision to self-sanction its basketball program, appear to have occurred after the Trojans received the NCAA’s letter of allegations. News of the hearing also indicates that former Trojans football coach Pete Carroll has been aware for weeks of the specific violations the NCAA may be alleging against his program. Carroll resigned as USC football coach on Sunday and has been named coach of the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks.
The NCAA probe has stretched beyond individual athletes, widening its focus to USC’s control of its sports programs, as well as various aspects of compliance and oversight, according to sources. It is expected to make conclusions on USC’s institutional control and whether the school had the proper checks and balances in place to oversee its athletes.
USC already sanctioned itself for NCAA violations during the 2007-08 season related to Mayo allegedly having accepted benefits from known sports agency runner Rodney Guillory. The penalties levied by USC included a ban on postseason play, a reduction of scholarships, recruiting restrictions and the vacation of all victories from the 2007-08 season. Both Mayo, through his agent, and Floyd have denied wrongdoing.
That‘s part of the reason why I wanted to come here. I think about it a lot.”
NFL: Report: Raiders To Fire Tom Cable Today
Oakland Raiders owner Al Davis is expected to fire coach Tom Cable today, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
A meeting between Davis and Cable was scheduled for today, and the newspaper reports Cable will be let go, but it’s uncertain for exactly what reason (the Randy Hanson scandal or the failure to win games and groom No. 1 overall pick JaMarcus Russell into a starting quarterback).
Just last week, Cable held a team meeting, met briefly with Davis and began roster evaluations with his assistants in a typical start to an offseason.
“All I know is I have a contract right now,” Cable told the Associated Press on Jan. 5. “Whether or not that’s honored is not up to me. I’m a ball coach. I’m a damned good football coach so things will work out. They always do.”
Cable has a 9-19 overall record since replacing Lane Kiffin early in 2008.
That‘s part of the reason why I wanted to come here. I think about it a lot.”
NCAAM: Doron Lamb Talks Arizona Visit; April Decision Looming

Shooting guard Mouth of Wilson, Virginia Oak Hill Academy AAU: New York Gauchos Ht:6'4" Wt:175 lbs Class:2010 (High School)
Oak Hill Academy guard Doron Lamb enjoyed his weekend visit to Arizona but says he likely won’t decide on a school until April.
“It was nice when I went out there,” the 6-foot-4 Lamb said Monday by phone. “It was hot. The team was good. I like the campus and everything and all that. I’m thinking about going there.”
Lamb saw the Wildcats fall to Washington State, 78-76, Friday night.
“They lost to Washington State on a buzzer-beater,” he said.
Lamb said Arizona coach Sean Miller told him he could come in and play 30-35 minutes a game in the backcourt and that Arizona had produced a large number of NBA players.
“He said I’d be playing the point,” Lamb said. “I could play 30-35 minutes and the ball would be in my hands.”
Arizona point guard Nic Wise is set to graduate this year, while Lamont “Momo” Jones, Lamb’s former Oak Hill teammate, is currently a freshman off guard.
Lamb also has a relationship with Arizona assistant Book Richardson but said that wouldn’t be a deciding factor for him.
“I’ve known him for a long time. He coached me in AAU,” Lamb said. “But that don’t mean anything (about a decision).”
Lamb is also considering Kentucky, Kansas, UConn and Oklahoma.
He said he was looking for “a good coaching staff, a winning program and somewhere that I feel like home and I feel comfortable.”
Asked when he might decide, Lamb said, “Probably April.”
Josh Selby, a combo guard out of Lake Baltimore (Md.) Clifton, came in on his Arizona visit after Lamb departed.
“He came in after I left. We’re cool,” he said.
Bruce Pascoe of the Arizona Daily Star reported that Selby was on court at the McKale Center shooting threes an hour after Sunday’s win over Washington.
“I know the student section wasn’t here but it still seemed like a real good crowd,”Maeshon Witherspoon, Selby’s mom, told Pascoe: “We know they’re [the Wildcats] kind of young.”
Asked if the two could play together, Lamb said, “I have no idea.”
That‘s part of the reason why I wanted to come here. I think about it a lot.”
NFL: Sources: Seahawks Reach Deal With Pete Carroll
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Pete Carroll has reached an agreement in principle with the Seahawks on a deal to be their next head coach, multiple NFL sources confirmed early Saturday morning.
Carroll was fully expected to be introduced by the Seahawks as early as Monday, assuming they comply with the Rooney Rule this weekend.
The hangup could be locating a candidate to interview that would put the Seahawks in compliance with the rule, which requires teams to interview a minority candidate for head-coaching and senior-football-operations hires.
On Friday, Jim Mora became the first Seahawks coach to be let go after one season.
Vikings defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier could agree to interview, but he is unwilling to do so if Carroll has been promised full control of the Seahawks — and multiple sources say he has.
Seahawks CEO Tod Leiweke told Frazier that Carroll definitely does not have Seattle’s job.
Believing Leiweke, Frazier will interview for the Seahawks head coach job Saturday morning.
Seattle also contacted the agent for Chargers defensive coordinator Ron Rivera, but as of Saturday morning nothing had been set up.
But the bottom line is, Carroll’s agreement with Seattle is “100 percent done,” one NFL source close to the situation said.
In a text message to ESPN’s Chris Mortensen on Friday, Carroll said, “You know I haven’t responded to a NFL question in two years.”
But a league source told Mortensen that Carroll was trying to persuade USC offensive coordinator Jeremy Bates to join him in Seattle — as opposed to Bates pursuing the same position with the Chicago Bears.
Carroll is no stranger to the NFL, having served as the head coach for the Patriots from 1997-99 and for the Jets in 1994.
He was the Jets’ defensive coordinator from 1990-93 after stints as the defensive backs coach for the Vikings (1985-89) and Bills (1984).
The ripple effect from Carroll’s pending move has reached beyond the NFL and college ranks.
When the news broke Friday that Carroll could be headed to Seattle, USC’s incoming freshman class at the U.S. Army All American Bowl in San Antonio began franctically calling USC’s assistant coaches.
For the rest of the day, not a single USC assistant returned a single phone call, according to sources at the game.
By now, calls might have been returned.
But witnesses to the scene said that players such as All-American wide receiver Kyle Prater and running back Dillon Baxter could not figure out what was unfolding with Carroll.
Baxter, for one, had verbally committed to USC as a high-school freshman and never looked at another school. But now that Carroll is expected to leave USC, other schools already have begun contacting the players scheduled to enroll there in the fall with hopes they will change their mind.
Meanwhile, the Seahawks’ search for a new general manager is also under way.
Giants director of college scouting Marc Ross will interview for the vacant position Wednesday, according to John Wooten, the chairman of the committee that oversees Rooney Rule compliance.
The panel, called the Fritz Pollard Alliance, agreed to allow the interview only after being given assurances Carroll would not have full control of Seattle’s organization, but rather only control over the 53-man roster.
That‘s part of the reason why I wanted to come here. I think about it a lot.”
NCAAM; Recruiting: Gilchrist Awaiting MRI Results
Small forward Elizabeth, New Jersey St. Patrick AAU: Team Jordan Ht:6'6" Wt:190 lbs Class:2011 (High School)
Elizabeth (N.J.) St. Patrick junior wing Michael Gilchrist underwent an MRI on his right knee Thursday and is expecting the results Friday, according to a report on The Star-Ledger’s website.
The 6-7 Gilchrist injured the knee Tuesday night during the Celtics’ 62-46 victory over Union.
“My heart dropped for him because he’s a kid,” Celtics coach Kevin Boyle told The Ledger Thursday after the team’s 66-44 win over Linden at Kean College. “You worry. As a team, obviously you don’t want to see anybody injured. You feel awful for the kid because he’s a junior. You only have so many games in high school and he’s so excited about the season.”
“A player like Mike Gilchrist, he can never be replaced,” said Duke-bound point guard Kyrie Irving, who poured in 31 points in the win. “Especially on our team, he’s definitely missed right now.”
Boyle said they would wait to hear from the doctors to learn when Gilchrist might return.
The No. 1 junior in the nation, Gilchrist was averaging 16.2 points before the injury.
Kentucky and Villanova are thought to be the leaders for his services, but other schools are involved as well.
Championship Breakdown, Great Hair Height, A+ for A-Rod,

Even though the BCS has more flaws than Tiger Woods has mistresses (thanks, I’ll be here all night!), there is a title game tonight between unbeaten teams. And sure, we’d all like to see the Texas-Alabama winner play Boise State, but a champion will be crowned nonetheless. For the nuts and bolts information about the game, I suggest you check out SI.com’s college football page. Our coverage is led by Stewart Mandel, who is doing battle with an orangutan. As for the important information regarding the matchup, here’s what you need to know: 1) Underdogs are 22-10 in covering the spread this bowl season. (It could be 23-10 depending on what line someone got on the Penn State-LSU game.) So you may want to think twice before backing Alabama. 2) Holy Taco gives us a look at some female fans from each school. 3) Co-Ed Magazine pits the Longhorn cheerleaders vs. the Crimson Tide Cheerleaders.
Great Hair Height
Props to Milwaukee Bucks rookie Brandon Jennings. He’s bringing back the high top fade.
A+ for A-Rod
If the Miami Herald is accurate, Alex Rodriguez has done a solid job in moving on from Kate Hudson
Read the Quickly

I say read this quickly because the Gilbert Arenas story continues to move at a rapid pace. Before getting to the newest details, here’s the story on how the NBA tried to get the photo above, from Tuesday night’s Sixers-Wizards game, taken off the World Wide Web. As for Arenas, a Washington Post story has sources that claim he was actually trying to cover for teammate Javaris Crittenton, who had his own loaded gun in the locker room. Oh, and on top of all this, Arenas is featured in a new PETA ad.
Broadcaster’s Best?
Fanhouse has posted its Super 7 Announcing Awards, in which it recognizes the seven best of 2009 in seven different categories. If you disagree with the choices — and I know you will — don’t e-mail me. E-mail them. Remember, I’m not the one who is saying thatJoe Morganis the second-best analyst in all of sports.
NBA: NBA suspends Arenas indefinitely
NEW YORK — The NBA suspended Gilbert Arenas indefinitely on Wednesday. The Wizards star admitted to bringing four unloaded guns into the Verizon Center locker room and is under investigation by local and federal authorities.
In written statement, commissioner David Stern said
“The possession of firearms by an NBA player in an NBA arena is a matter of the utmost concern to us. I initially thought it prudent to refrain from taking immediate action because of the pendency of a criminal investigation involving the office of the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia and the Metropolitan Police Department, and the consideration of this matter by a grand jury sitting in the District of Columbia. For the same reason, I directed the Wizards to refrain from taking any action. Wizards personnel continue to be interviewed by law enforcement authorities, some are scheduled for appearance before the grand jury and the investigation is proceeding with the intensity that one would expect for such a serious incident.
“Although it is clear that the actions of Mr. Arenas will ultimately result in a substantial suspension, and perhaps worse, his ongoing conduct has led me to conclude that he is not currently fit to take the court in an NBA game. Accordingly, I am suspending Mr. Arenas indefinitely, without pay, effective immediately pending the completion of the investigation by the NBA.”
NFL: Good people of Buffalo and Jacksonville… Los Angeles wants your teams.
Read Article: (sports.yahoo.com)
Moving an NFL team to Los Angeles has been a rumor for a while, and Majestic Realty Co. has been working on a plan to make it happen. Their latest idea is to start trying to steal teams from other cities that they believe don’t deserve an NFL team, essentially. Buffalo and Jacksonville are at the top of the list.
Majestic Realty Co. managing partner John Semcken said the company is still considering at least seven franchises for a new stadium some 25 miles east of Los Angeles.

They also include the San Francisco 49ers, San Diego Chargers, Minnesota Vikings, St. Louis Rams and Oakland Raiders.
But he said the Jaguars and the Bills are at the top of the list because they play in small markets that tamp down their earning potential and because they have little hope of building larger venues in their home regions.
There you go, Bills and Jaguars fans. LA doesn’t believe you deserve a team. The same LA that had multiple teams over the years and couldn’t keep them. Pot, meet kettle. You’re both black.
NCAAF: Apparently the BCS did something wrong, since Fiesta Bowl ratings were down a whole 35%. Maybe people wanted to see Boise State and TCU against the big boys.
Read Article: (www.usatoday.com)
From the article:
Consider Fox’s Boise State-Texas Christian matchup in Monday’s Fiesta Bowl. Coming from supposedly less-than-all-powerful conferences, their perfect records weren’t enough to get them into Thursday’s title game — with the unspoken assumption being they aren’t brand names that the masses really want to watch.
Maybe so. Boise State’s 17-10 win drew a respectable 8.6 overnight rating, which translates to 8.6% of TV households in 56 urban markets. But consider last year’s Fiesta Bowl, which pitted mediagenic Texas and Ohio State: Its overnight was 35% higher.
There are caveats. Last year’s game was on Sunday, TV’s most-watched night, and the Boise TV market isn’t included in overnights.
I think the real issue is that this game meant absolutely nothing. People wanted to see these two teams against the big boys from BCS conferences, and the BCS screwed over the fans. Sure, there might be other factors, but I think that was the biggest one.
Fox Coverage Issues; Rihanna &Matt Kemp having a Blast in Mexico, Chad Ochocinco quote of the Year, The Big Unit Retires, LeBron’s NY Shoes,

I’m back just in time to say a few things about Fox’s shaky BCS coverage before the network gets out of the college football business for good after tomorrow night’s championship game. One, whoever directed the Boise St.-TCU game had to have gotten paid by the bands for camera time. Two, just using your NFL guys to do the college games is weak. Three, Chris Myers normally does a very solid job, but the question he asked Iowa quarterback Ricky Stanzi after the game last night (“I know you’re from Middle America. Do you feel like sometimes you’re representing more than just a school or conference? Maybe an entire group of American citizens out there?”) was ridiculous. This led to Stanzi responding as if he was giving an old-school WWF promo, screaming out, “If you don’t love it, leave it, USA, number one.” Since Stanzididwin a bowl game, though, I figured he deserved some reward, so here are some, uh, patriotic photos he’ll enjoy.
Oops!
I thought I was done with all lists pertaining to last year, but I couldn’t pass this one up: The top 10 erroneous columns of 2009.
At Least He’s Wearing Dodger Blue
Monday I told you about Dodgers outfield Matt Kemp dating Rihanna. Well, it looks like the couple if having a blast in Mexico. At least, I thinkt hat’s them having a blast in Mexico.
Quote of the Day
Chad Ochocinco on his injured left knee: “I had sex yesterday. With some of the moves I did — I should be fine.” Hopefully he used one of these.
Kings Kicks
I’m not sure if this is real or not, but if this is indeed LeBron James‘ new sneaker, Knicks fans should be happy.
Randy Retires
Randy Johnson announced his retirement last night. The dominating lefty is a lock for Cooperstown based on his career, but as we all know, if there was a Hall of Fame for nicknames, he’d go in on the first ballot.
Videos:
DJ Steve Porter, who made the famous “Press Hop” video, is back with a new creation featuring a slew of NFL coaches.
Andy Roddick was giving an interview in Australia yesterday when two koala bears decided to pull a Chad Ochocinco. (For the full story and the video that features Roddick’s wife, Brooklyn Decker, click here.)
Beauty and the Beast; Random Links

There is this awesome rumor — Wladimir KlitschkoandHayden Panettiereare dating. The 6-6 Klitschko owns the IBF, WBO, and IBO world heavyweight titles and probably won’t get confused for Brad Pitt anytime soon. Panettiere stands a massive 5-foot-1 and has a misspelled tattoo running down her left side. I wish them a long and happy life together.
Sunday’s Greatest Hits
I feel bad forWes Welkerwho has bounced back from big hit after big hit throughout his career, only to see his season flushed down the toilet on the most innocuous of plays. But he wasn’t the only one to go down. Miami’sPat White was knocked cold trying dive for a first down against the Steelers and Oakland’sHiram Eugenewas knocked on his behind after this incredible stiff arm fromWillis McGahee. Speaking of McGahee, maybe Welker should give him a call for advice on painful and poorly timed injuries.
Most Reasons to Love Soccer Fans
Uncoached has a nice photo collection of crazy soccer fans including this guy. Can we make him the unofficial mascot for Team USA in June’s World Cup?
Isaiah and More Despicable Coaches

GQ put out a list of the 20 most despicable coaches in sports and Isiah Thomas made the list for his disastrous tenure with the Knicks. This gives me a chance to show off this 1986 photo of Thomas andBill Laimbeerhaving way too much fun in a bathtub.
Tough Season for Rams Fans
As if St. Louis’ 1-15 season wasn’t bad enough, these poor Rams fans took a nasty fall trying to grab the shoes of defensive tackle Clifton Ryan.
Random Links
Artie Lange, who has never been the model of health, was hospitalized in New Jersey over the weekend … The best-selling band of the 2000s was The Beatles … An Ohio woman punched through a McDonald’s drive-through window because they didn’t have chicken nuggets… The 10 most thankless jobs in porn( this is safe for work) … The most rented films of 2009.
Buzzer Beater
Lost amid yesterday’s NFL action was this incredible 75-foot heave by Florida’sChandler Parsonsto beat N.C. State, 62-61.
Chris Paul’s New Kicks Inspire Robbery. (Really?)
Has Chris Paul’s sneaker finally “arrived?” When people start breaking into stores to steal your kicks in advance, perhaps there’s some demand.
The video above comes from the Sun-Sentinel (via Darren Rovell) and also mentions other shoes that were stolen. While I’ve heard some positive reviews, CP3′s kicks have never really sold in a way that would lead to robberies and stick-ups. The Jordan XI Space Jams inspired that kind of uproar at a spot in Atlanta, but those shoes had 10-years of anticipation. I’ve got to think either A) these guys got there a few days late or B) they were just in to get whatever they could, and CP3′s newest Jordans just became an easy name peg in the story
NCAAM: Doron Lamb Talks Recruiting

Shooting guard Mouth of Wilson, Virginia Oak Hill Academy AAU: New York Gauchos Ht:6'4" Wt:175 lbs Class:2010 (High School)
Courtesy of Tim Brown and the folks at OregonLive.com, here’s an interview with Oak Hill guardDoron Lamb, who visits Arizona Jan. 7-9 and will watch the Wildcats host Washington State Friday.
“I’m talking to Kentucky, Kansas, UConn, Arizona and West Virginia right now,” he said. “I made four officials to Kansas, Kentucky, UConn and Oklahoma. I’m going on my last visit next week to Arizona.”
Watch highlights and listen in as we talk with Oak Hill Academy (VA) guard Doron Lamb about the development of his game, playing for Oak Hill and his college recruitment. Video by Tim Brown, OregonLive.com
Doron Lamb At Les Schwab InvitationalNFL: Sources: Bills, Cowher talk coaching job
Even before Buddy Nix was named the Buffalo Bills‘ general manager, league sources say there was a “stealth meeting” with Bill Cowher last week.
It is believed that owner Ralph Wilson Jr. joined team president Russ Brandon to gauge Cowher’s potential interest to return to coaching.
The Bills, who also met with Mike Shanahan after Dick Jauron was fired, believe talks with Cowher were very productive, the sources added, but gave no indication whether Cowher will take their head-coaching position if it is offered.
Cowher, currently a CBS Sports studio analyst, could not be reached but network executive Robin Brendle offered a “no comment” on the story.
A Bills spokesman did not respond to voice and text messages regarding the Cowher meeting.
Nix will interview interim coach Perry Fewell on Monday, as well as meet with other Buffalo assistant coaches.
NBA: McGrady, Rockets agree to part ways
BOSTON – The Houston Rockets and Tracy McGrady have agreed to part ways while the Rockets attempt to trade the seven-time All-Star forward, an NBA source confirmed to SI.com. McGrady was sent home before the Rockets game against New Jersey last week after complaining about playing time. McGrady missed the first 23 games of the season while recovering from microfracture knee surgery.
McGrady averaged 3.2 points in 7.7 minutes in six games with Houston this season but is expected to be a sought after commodity because of his $23 million expiring contract, the highest salary in the NBA this season.
It is likely that McGrady will return to Chicago to work out with trainer Tim Grover, who helped McGrady rehab his knee in the offseason.
NCAAF: TTU suspends Leach indefinitely
LUBBOCK, Texas – Texas Tech suspended Mike Leach on Monday while the school investigated complaints from receiver Adam James and his family about how the coach treated the player after a concussion.
James is the son of former NFL player and current television analyst Craig James. 
The school said in a release that defensive coordinator Ruffin McNeill will be the interim coach and lead the team in the Alamo Bowl on Jan. 2 against Michigan State.
Texas Tech officials declined to identify the player, but James’ family released a statement toThe Associated Pressidentifying Adam as the player involved.
“Mr. and Mrs. James took the step with great regret and after consideration and prayer to convey to the Texas Tech Administration that their son had been subjected to actions and treatment not consistent with common sense rules for safety and health,” the statement said.
“Over the past year, there has been a greatly enhanced recognition of the dangers of concussions and the potential for long term physical damage to players. At virtually every level of football coaching, cases where children and young men have sustained concussions have generated serious discussion of the importance of correct treatment and diagnosis.”
A person familiar with James’ case said James suffered a concussion during a Dec. 16 practice. The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity, was not authorized to speak publicly about the investigation.
Leach does not acknowledge player injuries to the media nor does he allow his players to do so.
Leach did not immediately return a call or a text message seeking comment. A message left on McNeill’s cell phone was not immediately returned.
McNeill will remain in charge of the team until the investigation is complete.
Craig James was scheduled to announce the Alamo Bowl from San Antonio, Texas. ESPN spokesman Josh Krulewitz said James no longer will work the game.
There’s been internal strife this season with the Red Raiders (8-4), and Leach has resorted to some tongue-lashing.
He chastised players after a loss to Texas A&M in October for listening to “their fat little girlfriends,” and thinking the Aggies were a pushover. And after the Red Raiders loss at then-No. 12 Houston in September, Leach suspended indefinitely starting offensive lineman Brandon Carter for violating team rules.
The loss to the Cougars was the second straight for the Red Raiders, who had fallen 34-24 at No. 2 Texas in an early Big 12 matchup. This season is the first since 2002 — Leach’s third season — that the Red Raiders dropped two of their first four games.
That same week Leach banned his players from having Twitter pages after linebacker Marlon Williams asked on his account why he was still in a meeting room when “the head coach can’t even be on time.”
Leach, who was the Big 12 Coach of the Year last season, and the university were at odds for months at the end of last year over negotiations for an extension to his contract following one of the program’s best season. The Red Raiders went 11-2 and beat then-No. 1 Texas and climbed to No. 2 in the nation.
At the end of the regular season, with contract talks stalled, Leach traveled to Washington to meet with university officials there who were looking for a new coach. Texas Tech athletic director Gerald Myers was not aware he’d gone.
In February, Leach and Tech agreed to a five-year, $12.7 million deal that could keep him at the school through 2013.
The contract includes a $250,000 bonus if Leach and Tech win the national championship, a $75,000 bonus if Tech participates in a BCS Bowl and a $50,000 bonus if Leach is picked as national coach of the year
If Tech terminates the contract, the school must pay Leach $400,000 for each year remaining on the agreement. There is no buyout amount.
Pursuit Of Perfection Petered Out, Random Links

So the Colts threw away a chance for an unbeaten season and the NFL world is up in arms. I don’t get it. The goal is to win a Super Bowl. A 16-0 regular season is meaningless. It’s also not the Colts’ job to help other AFC teams fighting for a wild card. However, I don’t blame fans of those teams and players on those teams for being upset. The Jets needed a kick return touchdown, a defensive touchdown and a half of Curtis Painter to pull out a win. So you can’t blame Texans offensive lineman Eric Winston for feeling this way. As for the angry Colts fans, maybe their cheerleaders can cheer you up.
NFL Rounup
Saints owner Tom Benson suffered premature celebration yesterday. … You probably won’t hear about this from most media members because it wasn’t Terrell Owens or Randy Moss, but Brandon Stokley got ejected from the Broncos-Eagles game after making contact with a referee while arguing a call. … Cowboys linebacker Keith Brooking really needs to take a lesson from Ray Lewis and Drew Brees on how to get your teammates fired up before a game without looking extremely awkward.
Nash Nails It
How could you not vote forSteve Nashto make the All-Star team after seeing this?
Best Thing You’ll See Today

Just sit back and enjoy Knicks center Danilo Gallinari singing Beyonce‘s Halo.
Not To Be Outdone By Gallinari..
Several members of the Sacramento Kings recently took to the microphone (in costume) to belt out some classics ranging fromDon’t Stop Believin’toPurple RaintoCareless Whisperand many more.
The Only Explanation
This is easily the best summary of the Urban Meyer situation.
Sports Video Of The Day
The Celtics had a 3-point lead with 20 seconds remaining against the Clippers last night. Check out what happened next. BINGO!!!!!!!!
Funny Kid Video Of The Day
This kid gets stuck behind the couch. His explanation is priceless. His parents, however, are not.
ImPressive:
Have you ever seen a running back knock over three defensive players in the open field before taking off for a touchdown? Well, if you click here, you will.
Nasty
TheCageDoctors.com have compiled the 2009 MMA Knockouts of the Year.
Heres a Sample:
Peeved Pam
Not only does ESPN make play by play announcerPam Wardthrow it to the “Flomax Bowl Update,” but now her frustration with an injured Marshall player has hit the ‘Net.
Videos:
NCAAF: ‘Cats Narrowing Focus for Holiday Bowl
Photo Gallery: UA visits the San Diego Zoo
Dec. 27, 2009
Sunday featured a crisp two-hour practice and a trip to the San Diego Zoo as game day quickly approaches.
SAN DIEGO - The Arizona football team’s eventful stay in San Diego for the Pacific Life Holiday Bowl continued on Sunday, with the fourth practice in as many days in this beautiful city and a trip to the world famous San Diego Zoo.
The Wildcats turned in a crisp two-hour workout at the University of San Diego, one that Arizona coaches felt was the team’s best of the bowl season. With kickoff quickly approaching, the Wildcats treated today’s workout like a typical “Wednesday of game week” practice, with emphasis on fast-paced action on both sides of the ball to emulate game-speed repetitions.
“This was one of the best practices we’ve had,” head coach Mike Stoops told his players after practice. “We have to stay humble and remember what got us to this point. We’ve worked way too hard to not see this thing through. We have to keep our intensity and continue to prepare for a very physical football game.”
Video: Coach Mike Stoops after practice
At this point, three weeks removed the regular season finale at USC, the game plan for the Holiday Bowl is completely in place. Coaches will now begin the task of keeping players focused on the business aspect of the trip, which is, quite simply, preparing to win a football game.
This is not just any normal football game, however. This is the team’s second consecutive bowl appearance and a trip the second-most prestigious bowl game affiliated with the Pac-10 Conference. A win puts the Wildcats at 9-4 on season and firmly amongst the nation’s Top 20 teams in the rankings.
But, the Wildcats do not seem to be putting any added pressure on themselves. Players have soaked in the sights and sounds of San Diego without compromising their focus at practices and in team meetings. The coming days will be telling as bowl week events continue and kickoff nears.
Earlier today, Arizona players, coaches and support staff visited the San Diego Zoo. A two-hour visit to the park allowed players to relax their minds and take in one of the most popular attractions in the city.
A handful of players were given an up-close look at some of the zoo’s most unique animals including a few different cats. The Wildcats were tamed a bit by their real-life peers, particularly safety Robert Golden who made sure to keep a safe distance from the frisky felines. He was joined by Apai Tuihalamaka, Corey Hall,Marcus Benjamin, Brooks Reed, and Chula Vista native Taimi Tutogi.
Next up on the schedule of events will be the Navy and Marine Corps Luncheon on the USS Makin Island. Arizona and Holiday Bowl foe Nebraska will join members of the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps aboard an active Naval vessel at 32nd Street, Naval Base San Diego for lunch, the presentation of the U.S. Grant Sharp Trophy and a tour of the ship.
Later in the day, the Wildcats return to practice to put the finishing touches on game preparations. Coaches were sure to let players know that the final tune-ups will be critical for Wednesday’s game.
“We have to stay focused on why we are here,” Stoops told the team. “We have to use our skill and diversity to win this game. We have to play well in all three phases of the game. When we have done that, we have been a very, very good team this season. The only way we do that is to practice, prepare and play as a team.”
Kickoff is scheduled for 5 p.m. on Wednesday at Qualcomm Stadium. The game can be seen live on ESPN.
NCAAF: Gators coach Meyer stepping down
Gainesville (AP) — Urban Meyer shocked college football Saturday by resigning as Florida’s coach after five seasons and two national titles because of health concerns that came to light when he suffered chest pains following the SEC championship game.
The 45-year-old Meyer will coach his final game at the Sugar Bowl against Cincinnati on New Year’s Day.
He leaves No. 5 Florida with a 56-10 record that includes a 32-8 mark in league play and a school-record 22-game winning streak that was snapped by Alabama in the Southeastern Conference title game Dec. 5.
“I have given my heart and soul to coaching college football and mentoring young men for the last 24-plus years and I have dedicated most of my waking moments the last five years to the Gator football program,” Meyer said in a statement. “I have ignored my health for years, but recent developments have forced me to re-evaluate my priorities of faith and family.”
He has scheduled a news conference in New Orleans on Sunday afternoon.
Meyer consulted with his family, doctors, school president Bernie Machen and athletic director Jeremy Foley before deciding it was in his best interest to focus on his health and family.
“Coach Meyer and I have talked this through and I realize how hard this was for him to reach this decision,” Foley said. “But the bottom line is that Coach Meyer needed to make a choice that is in the best interest of his well being and his family. I certainly appreciate what he has meant to the University of Florida, our football program and the Gator Nation. I have never seen anyone more committed to his players, his family and his program. Above all, I appreciate our friendship.”
Although reports quickly surfaced that Meyer was suffering from, among other things, a stroke and a defective heart muscle, a person close to Meyer said they were false. The person spoke on condition of anonymity out of respect for Meyer’s privacy.
“He just had a wake-up call,” the person said. “He got scared and realized he can’t do it anymore. His tank is empty.”
Last month, Sports Illustrated chronicled Meyer’s coaching career and reported that he suffered from persistent headaches caused by an arachnoid cyst that becomes inflamed by stress, rage and excitement.
Meyer told the magazine that since the diagnosis in the early 2000s he has tried to stay composed during games.
News of Meyer’s retirement stunned his peers.
“He is a first-class coach, and the success he’s had is unmatched in our profession, especially over the last five years at Florida,” Alabama’s Nick Saban said. “We hope he is able to regain his health and have the opportunity to coach again in the future. Urban Meyer is a great person as well as a great coach, and the game of college football is better with him as a part of it.”
“It’s a surprise to everybody,” said Florida State’s Bobby Bowden, who retired Dec. 1 after 34 years. “I hope he’s OK physically because he’s done as great a job at the University of Florida as has been done there, or anywhere else. I admire the way he handles himself and I really like his family. The college coaching profession will really miss him.”
A tireless recruiter and creative motivator, Meyer came to Florida from Utah in fall 2004 amid speculation he would end up at Notre Dame.
Meyer brought most of his staff with him — some of whom worked with him at Bowling Green (2001-02) and Utah (2003-04). Together, they restored the program to national prominence two years later with the school’s second national championship.
The Gators upset Ohio State 41-14 in Glendale, Ariz.; they won another one last January by beating Oklahoma 24-14 in Miami.
With just about his entire team returning this fall, Meyer spent all season coaching under intense pressure and sky-high expectations. He said he welcomed it all as the defending national champions tried to become just the second team in the last 14 years to repeat.
But the season was far from smooth. Florida dealt with distraction after distraction, prompting Meyer to call it “the year of stuff.”
It included preseason talk about perfection; flulike symptoms that ravaged the team; Tim Tebow’s concussion; linebacker Brandon Spikes’ eye-gouging incident; Meyer’s hefty fine for criticizing officials; defensive end Carlos Dunlap’s drunk-driving arrest; a few controversial calls; some close games; and what seemed to be a season-long offensive slump.
Indeed, the Gators went through just about everything in 2009. Still, the loss to Alabama was the most crushing blow – until this.
The Crimson Tide derailed Florida’s perfect season and left Meyer in a Gainesville hospital. Team officials initially said he was treated and released for dehydration. But players and coaches later said Meyer had chest pains. Meyer refused to talk about his hospital stay, but acknowledged that he needed to take better care of himself.
“He puts a lot on himself and he cares a lot and he takes a lot of the burden on himself,” Tebow said last week. “That’s something we talk about a lot. You’ve got to take care of yourself. Although we’re both very passionate, you can’t always let it all feel like everything is on your chest.
“And I think he’s doing a better job of doing that. But when you have guys kind of not doing the right thing and you get beat in a game like that, it can weigh on you a little bit. I think he felt a little bit of that. But I think he’s doing a little bit better now, though.”
Meyer has a wife and three children – the oldest recently started college at Georgia Tech — and has said repeatedly he would never stay in coaching long enough to match the tenures of Bowden or Penn State’s Joe Paterno.
Nonetheless, his tenure will be remembered.
“He leaves a lasting legacy on the field, in the classroom and in the Gainesville community,” Machen said. “I am saddened that Urban is stepping down, but I have deep respect for his decision.”
Minka Kelly – Kaley Cuoco Among the Decade’s Best, Random Links

In case you missed it, SI put together an extensive set of lists, photos and other fun stuff to celebrate the end of the decade. Here are some of the highlights:Peter Kinggave away some NFL awards andJoe Posnanskihonored some of the decade’s best in baseball. Jon Heymanalso had a fun baseball piece looking at the decade’s best trades, best/worst free agent acquisitions and more while Ian Thomsen did the same for the NBA. I also enjoyed the signature moments of the decade in college basketball which has a bunch of good videos. If failure is your thing, take a look at the biggest flops of the 2000s (cough, Barry Zito). I couldn’t disagree more withDamon Hack‘s decision to makePhil Jacksonthe coach of the decade overBill Belichick, though I’ll likely name my first son Bill Belichick Gray, so my opinion isn’t exactly neutral. But this is Hot Clicks, so if there’s one piece you must check out it’s the best moments in pop culture including the debut of Friday Night Lights starring the beautifulMinka Kelly(aka – the future Mrs. Jeter).
More Presents From the Past
Yesterday we showed you some of the top Christmas gifts of the 1990s. Not to be outdone, The Legend of Cecilio Guante looks at the best sports gifts of yesteryear, including my favorite beach game of all time,K adima.
For the Ladies
This locker room interview withDerek Fisher appears to be like every other locker room interview you’ve ever seen. Except for the sudden appearance of a full moon – courtesy ofShannon Brown– over the interviewer’s left shoulder. Between Brown and Tommy Kelly‘s accidental exposure, this has been a great week for the ladies.
Ugly Injury Watch
If you didn’t see the gruesome injury to Texas A&M senior guard Derrick Roland, I suggest you keep it that way (but if you need to look,here it is).If you are the type of person who can watch this stuff all day, Popcrunch has collected videos of the worst football injuries includingLawrence Taylor‘s famous 1982 sack ofJoe Theismann. As you can see above, the hit did not stop LT from making it to Canton.
Dane’s World
There are two kinds of people in this world — those who likeDane Cookand those who find him incredibly annoying. If you’re part of the latter group, you’ll be glad to know his Christmas tree wasinfected by poisonous spiders.
To get you in the Christmas mood, here are the 15 scariest Santas of all time … These are some awful Christmas ornaments … Good luck toDrew Stantonas he starts his first NFL game on Sunday. Let’s hope its nearly as much fun as he had in college…LeRoy Butlerhad some unpleasant things to say about his former teammate,Brett Favre… Here are10 Festivus foodsfor the holiday season.
Bad Idea of the Day Video
When I heard about theKarate Kidremake starring Will Smith‘s son, I thought it was a terrible idea. Judging by this trailer, my opinion hasn’t changed.

To that end, I present one of my favorites –Kaley Cuoco fromThe Big Bang Theory.She has nothing to do with sports, but it’s Christmas and if there’s one day of the year we can feature someone who has nothing to do with sports, this is it. So enjoy these shots of Kaley.























































